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1.
Jennifer F. Jones  Hans Kende 《Planta》1979,146(5):649-656
1-Aminocyclopropane-1-carboxylic acid (ACC) stimulated the production of ethylene in subapical stem sections of etiolated pea (cv. Alaska) seedlings in the presence and absence of indole-3-acetic acid (IAA). No lag period was evident following application of ACC, and the response was saturated at a concentration of 1 mM ACC. Levels of endogenous ACC paralleled the increase in ethylene production in sections treated with different concentrations of IAA and with selenoethionine or selenomethionine plus IAA. The IAA-induced formation of both ACC and ethylene was blocked by the rhizobitoxine analog aminoethoxyvinylglycine (AVG). Labelling studies with L-[U-14C]methionine showed an increase in the labelling of ethylene and ACC after treatment with IAA. IAA had no specific effect on the incorporation of label into S-methylmethionine or homoserine. The specific radioactivity of ethylene was similar to the specific radioactivity of carbon atoms 2 and 3 of ACC after treatment with IAA, indicating that all of the ethylene was derived from ACC. The activity of the ACC-forming enzyme was higher in sections incubated with IAA than in sections incubated with water alone. These results support the hypothesis that ACC is the in-vivo precursor of ethylene in etiolated pea tissue and that IAA stimulates ethylene production by increasing the activity of the ACC-forming enzyme.Abbreviations ACC 1-aminocyclopropane-1-carboxylic acid - AVG aminoethoxyvinylglycine, the aminoethoxy analog of rhizobitoxine - IAA indole-3-acetic acid - SAM S-adenosylmethionine - SMM S-methylmethionine  相似文献   

2.
The red-light(R)-absorbing form of phytochrome (Pr) was detected spectrophotometrically in a 20,000 g particulate fraction prepared from a 1,000 g supernatant fraction from epicotyl tissue of pea (Pisum sativum L.) seedlings grown in the dark and only briefly exposed to dim green light. The difference spectrum of phytochrome in this fraction was essentially the same as that of soluble phytochrome from the same tissue. When the non-irradiated 20,000 g particulate fraction was incubated in the dark at 25° C, an absorbance change (decrease) of Pr after actinic red irradiation was found only in the far-red (FR) region. When the 20,000 g particulate fraction was irradiated with R and then incubated in the dark, the FR-absorbing form of phytochrome (Pfr) disappeared spectrally at a rate about half that in the soluble fraction, and the difference spectrum of the Pr which became detectable after dark incubation of the 20,000 g particulate fraction was markedly distorted. In contrast, Pfr in a 20,000 g particulate fraction prepared from tissues irradiated with R did not change optically during dark incubation at 25° C for 60 min, while Pfr in the soluble fraction from the same tissue disappeared in the dark. No dissociation of either Pr or Pfr from the 20,000 g particulate fraction was indicated during a 60-min dark incubation at 25° C, but Pfr in a 20,000 g particulate fraction prepared in vitro from R-irradiated 1,000 g supernatant fraction in the presence of CaCl2 disappeared spectrally and the difference spectrum of Pr in the 20,000 g particulate fraction became quite distorted during the dark incubation.Abbreviations Pr red-light-absorbing form of phytochrome - Pfr far-red-light-absorbing form of phytochrome - FR far-red light - FR1 first actinic far-red light - FR2 second actinic far-red light - R red light - R1 first actinic red light - 1kS 1,000 g supernatant fraction - 20kS 20,000 g supernatant fraction - 20kP 20,000 g particulate fraction  相似文献   

3.
Jörg R. Konze  Hans Kende 《Planta》1979,146(3):293-301
Homogenates of etiolated pea (Pisum sativum L.) shoots formed ethylene upon incubation with 1-aminocyclopropane-1-carboxylic acid (ACC). In-vitro ethylene formation was not dependent upon prior treatment of the tissue with indole-3-acetic acid. When homogenates were passed through a Sephadex column, the excluded, high-molecular-weight fraction lost much of its ethylene-synthesizing capacity. This activity was largely restored when a heat-stable, low-molecular-weight factor, which was retarded on the Sephadex column, was added back to the high-molecular-weight fraction. The ethylene-synthesizing system appeared to be associated, at least in part, with the particulate fraction of the pea homogenate. Like ethylene synthesis in vivo, cell-free ethylene formation from ACC was oxygen dependent and inhibited by ethylenediamine tetraacetic acid, n-propyl gallate, cyanide, azide, CoCl3, and incubation at 40°C. It was also inhibited by catalase. In-vitro ethylene synthesis could only be saturated at very high ACC concentrations, if at all. Ethylene production in pea homogenates, and perhaps also in intact tissue, may be the result of the action of an enzyme that needs a heat-stable cofactor and has a very low affinity for its substrate, ACC, or it may be the result of a chemical reaction between ACC and the product of an enzyme reaction. Homogenates of etiolated pea shoots also formed ethylene with 2-keto-4-mercaptomethyl butyrate (KMB) as substrate. However, the mechanism by which KMB is converted to ethylene appears to be different from that by which ACC is converted.Abbreviations ACC 1-aminocyclopropane-1-carboxylic acid - IAA indole-3-acetic acid - KMB 2-keto-4-mercaptomethyl butyrate - SAM S-adenosylmethionine  相似文献   

4.
The stem elongation responses of etiolated peas (Pisum sativum L.) to fluorescent light (35–45 mol.mt-2.s-1) were recorded using high resolution position transducers. Continuous fluorescent light decreased growth by 70% within 9 min. The growth rate declined to 5% of the control over the next 2 h and remained at this level for 7 h. Pulses of fluorescent light ranging from 8 s to 34 min led to partial suppression of growth and resulted in a complex kinetic response. The distinctive kinetics of blue and red light inhibition were apparent as components of the responses to non-saturating levels of fluorescent light. The rapid suppression of growth by blue light was not affected by concomitant red light. The lag time for the onset of red light inhibition was not affected by concomitant blue, but the rate of inhibition appeared accelerated.  相似文献   

5.
The transport of [14C]phenylacetic acid (PAA) in intact plants and stem segments of light-grown pea (Pisum sativum L. cv. Alderman) plants was investigated and compared with the transport of [14C]indiol-3yl-acetic acid (IAA). Although PAA was readily taken up by apical tissues, unlike IAA it did not undergo long-distance transport in the stem. The absence of PAA export from the apex was shown not to be the consequence of its failure to be taken up or of its metabolism. Only a weak diffusive movement of PAA was observed in isolated stem segments which readily transported IAA. When [1-14C]PAA was applied to a mature foliage leaf in light, only 5.4% of the 14C recovered in ethanol extracts (89.6% of applied 14C) had been exported from the leaf after 6.0 h. When applied to the corresponding leaf, [14C]sucrose was readily exported (46.4% of the total recovered ethanol-soluble 14C after 6.0 h). [1-14C]phenylacetic acid applied to the root system was readily taken up but, after 5.0 h, 99.3% of the recovered 14C was still in the root system.When applied to the stem of intact plants (either in lanolin at 10 mg·g-1, or as a 10-4 M solution), unlabelled PAA blocked the transport through the stem of [1-14C]IAA applied to the apical bud, and caused IAA to accumulate in the PAA-treated region of the stem. Applications of PAA to the stem also inhibited the basipetal polar transport of [1-14C]IAA in isolated stem segments. These results are consistent with recent observations (C.F. Johnson and D.A. Morris, 1987, Planta 172, 400–407) that no carriers for PAA occur in the plasma membrane of the light-grown pea stem, but that PAA can inhibit the carrier-mediated efflux of IAA from cells. The possible functions of endogenous PAA are discussed and its is suggested that an important role of the compound may be to modulate the polar transport and-or accumulation by cells of IAA.Abbreviations IAA indol-3yl-acetic acid - NPA N-1-naphthylphthalamic acid - PAA phenylacetic acid - IIBA 2,3,5-triiodobenzoic acid  相似文献   

6.
D. A. Morris 《Planta》1977,136(1):91-96
Dwarf pea plants bearing two cotyledonary shoots were obtained by removing the epicotyl shortly after germination, and the patterns of distribution of 14C in these plants was investigated following the application of [14C]IAA to the apex of one shoot. Basipetal transport to the root system occurred, but in none of the experiments was 14C ever detected in the unlabelled shoot even after transport periods of up to 48 h. This was true both of plants with two equal growing shoots and of plants in which one shoot had become correlatively inhibited by the other, and in the latter case applied whether the dominant or subordinate shoot was labelled. In contrast, when [14C]IAA was applied to a mature foliage leaf of one shoot transfer of 14C to the other shoot took place, although the amount transported was always low. Transport of 14C from the apex of a subordinate shoot on plants bearing one growing and one inhibited shoot was severely restricted compared with the transport from the dominant shoot apex, and in some individual plants no transport at all was detected. Removal of the dominant shoot apex rapidly restored the capacity of the subordinate shoot to transport apically-applied [14C]IAA, and at the same time led to rapid cambial development and secondary vascular differentiation in the previously inhibited shoot. Applications of 1% unlabelled IAA in lanolin to the decapitated dominant shoot maintained the inhibition of cambial development in the subordinate shoot and its reduced capacity for auxin transport. These results are discussed in relation to the polarity of auxin transport in intact plants and the mechanism of correlative inhibition.Abbreviations IAA Indol-3-yl-acetic acid - TIBA 2,3,5-triiodobenzoic acid - 2,4D 2,4-dichlorophenoxyacetic acid - IAAsp Indol-3-yl-acetyl aspartic acid  相似文献   

7.
J. S. Boyer  Gloria Wu 《Planta》1978,139(3):227-237
The ability of water to enter the cells of growing hypocotyl tissue was determined in etiolated soybean (Glycine max (L.) Merr.) seedlings. Water uptake was restricted to that for cell enlargement, and the seedlings were kept intact insofar as possible. Tissue water potentials ( w) were measured at thermodynamic equilibrium with an isopiestic thermocouple psychrometer. wwas below the water potential of the environment by as much as 3.1 bars when the tissue was enlarging rapidly. However, w was similar to the water potential of the environment when cell enlargement was not occurring. The low w in enlarging tissue indicates that there was a low conductivity for water entering the cells.The ability of water to enter the enlarging cells was defined as the apparent hydraulic conductivity of the tissue (Lp). Despite the low Lp of growing cells, Lp decreased further as cell enlargement decreased when intact hypocotyl tissue was deprived of endogenous auxin (indole-3-acetic acid) by removal of the hypocotyl hook. Cell enlargement resumed and Lp increased when auxin was resupplied exogenously. The auxin-induced increase in Lp was correlated with the magnitude of the growth enhancement caused by auxin, and it was observed during the earliest phase of the growth response to auxin. The increase in Lp appeared to be caused by an increase in the hydraulic conductivity of the cell protoplasm, since other factors contributing to Lp remained constant. The rapidity of the response is consistent with a cellular site of action at the plasmalemma, although other sites are not precluded.Because the experiments involved only short times, auxin-induced changes in cell enlargement could not be attributed to changes in cell osmotic potentials. Neither could they be attributed to changes in turgor, which increased when the rate of enlargement decreased. Rather, auxin appeared to act by altering the extensibility of the cell walls and by simultaneously altering the ability of water to enter the growing cells under a given water potential gradient. The hydraulic conductivity and extensibility of the cell walls appeared to contribute about equally to the control of the growth rate of the hypocotyls.  相似文献   

8.
When [14C]indol-3yl-acetic acid was applied to the apical bud of 5-day old dwarf pea seedlings which possessed unbranched primary roots, a small amount of 14C was transported into the root system at a velocity of 11–14 mm h-1. Most of the 14C which entered the primary root accumulated in the young lateral root primordia, including the smallest detectable (20–30 mm from the primary root tip). In older (8-d old) seedlings in which the primary root bore well-developed lateral roots, 14C also accumulated in the tertiary root primordia. In contrast, little 14C was detected in the apical region of the primary root or, in older plants, in the apices of the lateral roots.Abbreviations IAA indol-3yl-acetic acid  相似文献   

9.
The effect of auxin on cell wall mass in the epidermis of third internodes of Pisum sativum L. cv. Alaska grown in dim red light was investigated using epidermal peels, to determine whether epidermal peels reflect the behavior of the outer epidermal cell wall. In contrast to the outer epidermal wall itself, where auxin caused thinning in proportion to growth (M.S. Bret-Harte et al, 1991, Planta 185, 462–471), auxin promoted an increase in wall mass in epidermal peels from treated internode segments in the absence of exogenously supplied sugar. The percentage gain in mass was smaller than the percentage elongation, however, so mass per unit length decreased in peels from auxin-treated segments. Epidermal peels from auxin-treated segments gained more wall mass than control peels even when adhering internal tissue at the basal end of the peel was removed. Epidermal peels also had a gross composition different from that of the outer wall alone (M.S. Bret-Harte and L.D. Talbott, 1993, Planta 190, 369–378). These discrepancies can be explained by the observation that the outer wall makes up only 30% of the mass of the epidermal peel. It appears that the inner walls of the epidermis, and walls of the outer layer of cortical cells that remain attached to the epidermis during peeling, nearly maintain their thickness by biosynthesis while the outer wall loses mass as previously described (Bret-Harte et al. 1991). These results indicate that epidermal peels may not be a good system for examining the biochemical and physiological properties of the outer epidermal cell wall.I would like to thank Dr. Peter M. Ray, of Stanford University, for the use of experimental facilities, helpful discussions, and technical and editorial assistance, Dr. Winslow R. Briggs, of the Carnegie Institute of Washington, for helpful discussions and for the use of experimental facilities, Dr. Paul B. Green, of Stanford University, for financial support, and Dr. Wendy K. Silk, of the Department of Land, Air, and Water Resources, University of California, Davis, for financial support. This work was supported by a National Science Foundation Graduate Fellowship, National Science Foundation grant DCB8801493 to Paul B. Green, and the generosity of Wendy K. Silk in the final writing.  相似文献   

10.
Correlatively inhibited pea shoots (Pisum sativum L.) did not transport apically applied 14C-labelled indol-3yl-acetic acid ([14C]IAA), and polar IAA transport did not occur in internodal segments cut from these shoots. Polar transport in shoots and segments recovered within 24 h of removing the dominant shoot apex. Decapitation of growing shoots also resulted in the loss of polar transport in segments from internodes subtending the apex. This loss was prevented by apical applications of unlabelled IAA, or by low temperatures (approx. 2° C) after decapitation. Rates of net uptake of [14C]IAA by 2-mm segments cut from subordinate or decapitated shoots were the same as those in segments cut from dominant or growing shoots. In both cases net uptake was stimulated to the same extent by competing unlabelled IAA and by N-1-naphthylphthalamic acid. Uptake of the pH probe [14C]-5,5-dimethyloxazolidine-2,4-dione from unbuffered solutions was the same in segments from both types of shoot. Patterns of [14C]IAA metabolism in shoots in which polar transport had ceased were the same as those in shoots capable of polar transport. The reversible loss of polar IAA transport in these systems, therefore, was not the result of loss or inactivation of specific IAA efflux carriers, loss of ability of cells to maintain transmembrane pH gradients, or the result of a change in IAA metabolism. Furthermore, in tissues incapable of polar transport, no evidence was found for the occurrence of inhibitors of IAA uptake or efflux. Evidence is cited to support the possibility that the reversible loss of polar auxin transport is the result of a gradual randomization of effluxcarrier distribution in the plasma membrane following withdrawal of an apical auxin supply and that the recovery of polar transport involves reestablishment of effluxcarrier asymmetry under the influence of vectorial gradients in auxin concentration.Abbreviations DMO 5,5-dimethyloxazolidine-2,4-dione - IAA indol-3yl-acetic acid - NPA N-1-naphthylphthalamic acid - TIBA 2,3,5-triiodobenzoic acid This work was supported by grant no. GR/D/08760 from the U.K. Science and Engineering Research Council. We thank Mrs. R.P. Bell for technical assistance.  相似文献   

11.
1. The uptake of indol-3-yl acetic acid ([1-14C]IAA, 0–2.0 M) into light-grown pea stem segments was measured under various conditions to investigate the extent to which mechanisms of auxin transport in crown gall suspension culture cells (Rubery and Sheldrake, Planta 118, 101–121, 1974) are also found in a tissue capable of polar auxin transport. — 2. IAA uptake increased as the external pH was lowered. IAA uptake was less than that of benzoic acid (BA), naphthylacetic acid (NAA) or 2,4 dichlorophenoxyacetic acid (2,4D) under equivalent conditions. TIBA enhanced net IAA uptake through inhibition of efflux, and to a lesser extent, also increased uptake of NAA and 2,4D while it had no effect on BA uptake. — 3. Both DNP and, at higher concentrations, BA, reduced IAA uptake probably because of a reduction of cytoplasmic pH. However, low concentrations of both BA and DNP caused a slight enhancement of IAA net uptake, possibly through a reduction of carrier-mediated IAA efflux. In the presence of TIBA, the inhibitory effects of DNP and BA were more severe and there was no enhancement of uptake at low concentrations. — 4. Non-radioactive IAA (10 M) reduced uptake of labelled IAA but further increases in concentration up to 1.0 mM produced first an inhibition (0–10 min) of labelled IAA uptake, followed by a stimulation at later times. Non-radioactive 2,4 D decreased, but was not observed to stimulate, uptake of labelled IAA. In the presence of TIBA labelled IAA uptake was inhibited by non-radioactive IAA regardless of its concentration. — 5. Sulphydryl reagents PCMB and PCMBS promoted or inhibited IAA uptake depending, respectively, on whether they penetrated or were excluded from the cells. The penetrant PCMB also reduced the promotion of labelled IAA uptake by TIBA or by high concentrations of added non-labelled IAA. — 6. Our findings are interpreted as being consistent with the diffusive entry of unionised IAA into cells together with some carrier-mediated uptake. Auxin efflux from the cells also appears to have a carrier-mediated contribution, at least part of which is inhibited by TIBA, and which has a capacity at least as great as that of the uptake carrier. The data indicate that pea stem segments contain cells whose mechanisms of trans-membrane auxin transport fit the model of polar auxin transport proposed from experiments with crown gall suspension cells, although differences, particularly of carrier specificity, are apparent between the two systems.Abbreviations IAA indol-3-yl acetic acid - BA benzoic acid - NAA 1-naphthylacetic acid - 2,4-D 2,4-dichlorophenoxyacetic acid - TIBA 2,3,5-triiodobenzoic acid - DNP 2,4-dinitrophenol - PCMB p-chloromercuribenzoic acid - PCMBS p-chloromercuribenzene sulphonic acid This work was performed in Cambridge during the tenure of a sabbatical leave by P.J.D. Supported by a grant for supplies from the American Philosophical Society to P.J.D.  相似文献   

12.
The biosynthetic basis for the high rates of ethylene production by the apical region of etiolated pea (Pisum sativum L.) seedlings was investigated. The ethylene precursor 1-aminocyclopropane-1-carboxylic acid (ACC) was quantified in extracts of various regions of seedlings by measuring isotopic dilution of a 2H-labelled internal standard using selected-ion-monitoring gas chromatography/mass spectrometry. The ACC levels in the apical hook and leaves were much higher than in the expanded internodes of the epicotyl. The capacity of excised tissue sections to convert exogenous ACC to ethylene was also much greater in the apical region, reflecting the distribution of soluble protein in the epicotyl.Abbreviations ACC 1-aminocyclopropane-1-carboxylic acid - FW fresh weight - GC/MS coupled gas chromatography/mass spectrometry - HPLC high-performance liquid chromatography  相似文献   

13.
Galactoglucomannan-derived oligosaccharides (GGMOs) (degree of polymerization 4–8) isolated from the wood of poplar (Populus monilifera Ait.) were shown to be inhibitors of the 2,4-dichlorophenoxyacetic acid-stimulated elongation growth of pea (Pisum sativum L. cv. Tyrkys) and spruce [Picea abies (L.) Karst] stem segments. A dependence on the concentration of GGMOs (between 10-5-10-10M) as well as plant species was ascertained. Pea stem segments were much more sensitive (10-10M) than spruce (10-8M). The GGMOs did not exhibit toxicity even at high concentrations and during long-term bioassays. The timing of the action of GGMOs and auxin in the growth process was also studied.Abbreviations 2,4-D 2,4-dichlorophenoxyacetic acid - d.p degree of polymerization - GGMOs galactoglucomannan-derived oligosaccharides This research was supported by the Slovak Grant Agency for Science.  相似文献   

14.
The gross composition of the outer epidermal cell wall from third internodes of Pisum sativum L. cv. Alaska grown in dim red light, and the effect of auxin on that composition, was investigated using interference microscopy. Pea outer epidermal walls contain as much cellulose as typical secondary walls, but the proportion of pectin to hemicellulose resembles that found in primary walls. The pectin and hemicellulose fractions from epidermal peels, which are enriched for outer epidermal wall but contain internal tissue as well, are composed of a much higher percentage of glucose and glucose-related sugars than has been found previously for pea primary walls, similar to non-cellulosic carbohydrate fractions of secondary walls. The epidermal outer wall thus has a composition rather like that of secondary walls, while still being capable of elongation. Auxin induces a massive breakdown of hemicellulose in the outer epidermal wall; nearly half the hemicellulose present is lost during 4 h of growth in the absence of exogenous sugar. The percentage breakdown is much greater than has been seen previously for whole pea stems. It has been proposed that a breakdown of xyloglucan could be the basis for the mechanical loosening of the outer wall. This study provides the first evidence that such a breakdown could be occurring in the outer wall.M.S. Bret-Harte would like to thank Dr. Peter M. Ray, of Stanford University, for helpful discussions and for technical and editorial assistance, Dr. Winslow R. Briggs, of the Camegie Institude of Washington, for the use of experimental facilities and for helpful discussions, Dr. Wendy K. Silk, of the University of California, Davis, for helpful discussions and financial support, Dr. Paul B. Green for financial support, and Drs. John M. Labavitch and L.C. Greve, of the University of California, Davis, for performing the -cellulose analysis on short notice, in response to a request by an anonymous reviewer. This work was supported by a National Science Foundation Graduate Fellowship to M.S. B.-H., National Science Foundation Grant DCB8801493 to Paul B. Green, and the generosity of Wendy K. Silk (Department of Land, Air, and Water Resources, University of California, Davis) during the final writing.  相似文献   

15.
Phenylacetic acid (PAA), a naturally-occurring acidic plant growth substance, was readily taken up by pea (Pisum sativum L. cv. Alderman) stem segments from buffered external solutions by a pH-dependent, non-mediated diffusion. Net uptake from a 0.2 M solution at pH 4.5 proceeded at a constant rate for at least 60 min and, up to approx. 100 M, the rate of uptake was directly proportional to the external concentration of the compound. The net rate of uptake of PAA was not affected by the inclusion of indol-3yl-acetic acid (IAA) in the uptake medium (up to approx. 30 M) and, unlike the net uptake of IAA, was not stimulated by N-1-naphthylphthalamic acid (NPA) or 2,3,5-triiodobenzoic acid. At an external concentration of 0.2 M and pH 4.5, the net rate of uptake of PAA was about twice that of IAA. It was concluded that the uptake of PAA did not involve the participation of carriers and that PAA was not a transported substrate for the carriers involved in the uptake and polar transport of IAA. Nevertheless, the inclusion of 3–100 M unlabelled PAA in the external medium greatly stimulated the uptake by pea stem segments of [1-14C]IAA (external concentration 0.2 M). It was concluded that whilst PAA was not a transported substrate for the NPA-sensitive IAA efflux carrier, it interacted with this carrier to inhibit IAA efflux from cells. Over the concentration range 3–100 M, PAA progressively reduced the stimulatory effect of NPA on IAA uptake, indicating that PAA also inhibited carrier-mediated uptake of IAA. The consequences of these observations for the regulation of polar auxin transport are discussed.Abbreviations IAA indol-3yl-acetic acid - DMO 5,5-dimethyloxazolidine-2,4-dione - NPA N-1-naphthylphthalamic acid - PAA phenylacetic acid - TIBA 2,3,5-triiodobenzoic acid  相似文献   

16.
Novel cDNA clones encoding putative auxin influx and efflux carriers have been isolated and characterized from etiolated lupin (Lupinus albus L) hypocotyls. The full length of LaAUX1 and LaPIN1 and the partial length of LaPIN3 were obtained and the deduced amino acid sequence revealed a high degree of identity with the corresponding auxin carrier proteins from several species. The expression of these genes depended on the tissue, the hypocotyl zone and seedling age. LaAUX1 and LaPIN3 were expressed in stele and outer tissues, while LaPIN1 was restricted to the stele. From the above-mentioned results and taking into account the role proposed for the efflux carrier PIN1, it is suggested that LaPIN1 could mediate the basipetal auxin transport already described in this organ. LaAUX1 might facilitate auxin influx in the transport cells. The expression of the three genes decreased down the hypocotyl. The basipetally decreasing gradient in the expression of LaPIN1 coincides with previous results showing a similar gradient in the intensity and polarity of auxin transport. The decisive role ascribed to PIN1 in polar auxin transport due to its localization in the basal end of transporting cells and the existence of such a gradient in the expression of LaPIN1 support the hypothesis of a barrier effect (generated by decreasing auxin transport) previously proposed by our research group as being responsible for the auxin gradient, which controls the growth pattern in etiolated lupin hypocotyls. José Sánchez-Bravo, Manuel Acosta and Carlos Nicolás contributed equally to the paper. Nucleotide sequence database accession numbers: LaAUX1: AM235387; LaPIN1: AM235388; LaPIN3: AM407405.  相似文献   

17.
The effect of red (R) and far-red (FR) light on stem elongation and indole-3-acetic acid (IAA) levels was examined in dwarf and tall Pisum sativum L. seedlings. Red light reduced the extension-growth rate of etiolated seedlings by 70–90% after 3 h, and this inhibition was reversible by FR. Inhibition occurred throughout the growing zone. After 3 h of R, the level of extractable IAA in whole stem sections from the growing zone of etiolated plants either increased or showed no change. By contrast, extractable IAA from epidermal peels consistently decreased 3 h after R treatments. Decreases of 40% were observed for epidermal peels from the top 1 cm of tall plants receiving 3 h R. Brief R treatments resulted in smaller decreases in epidermal IAA levels and these decreases were not as great when FR followed R. In lightgrown plants, end-of-day FR stimulated growth during the following dark period in a photoreversible manner. The uppermost 1 cm of expanding third internodes was most responsive to the FR. Extractable IAA from epidermal peels from the upper 1 cm of third internodes increased by 30% or more 5 h after FR. When R followed the FR the increases were smaller. Levels of IAA in whole stem sections did not change and were twofold greater than in dark-grown plants. In both dark- and light-grown tall plants, IAA levels were lower in epidermal peels than in whole stem segments. These results provide evidence that IAA is compartmentalized at the tissue level within the growing stem and that phytochrome regulation of stem elongation rates may be partly based on modulating the level of IAA within the epidermis.Abbreviations IAA indole-3-acetic acid - R red light - FR farred light We thank Yu-Xian Zhu for helping to develop methods for IAA analysis, James Reid for supplying the genetic lines of Pisum and Richard Cyr for the use of microscopy equipment. This work was supported by NSF grant DCB-8801880 and by Hatch funds from the College of Agriculture and Life Sciences at Cornell University. The gas chromatograph-mass spectrometer was funded by NSF grant DMB-8505974 and funds from the College of Agriculture and Life Sciences at Cornell University. A preliminary report of some of these experiments has appeared in Plant Growth Substances, 1991 (Behringer et al. 1992 b).  相似文献   

18.
Addition of Polyethylene glycol(PEG) to the nutrient medium of wheatseedlings led to a rapid cessation of leaf growth and shrinkage, measured withahighly sensitive growth sensor, followed by a partial restoration of extensionin the subsequent 40 min. This osmotic shock resulted in IAAaccumulation in the shoots. Leaf extensibility, measured by addition of 5g as a counterweight to an extensiometer, did not change for 20min after the start of the treatment, but then increased andbecametwice as high as the initial value. Changes in leaf extensibility coincidedwitha restoration of leaf growth. Leaf shrinkage, which was observed immediatelyafter addition of the osmoticum, suggests that the initial growth response wasdue to a water deficit, which led to a decrease in cell turgor. Howeverrestoration of growth during water stress could be due to changes in cell wallrheological properties, which could be triggered by IAA accumulation.  相似文献   

19.
Stahlberg R  Cosgrove DJ 《Planta》1992,187(4):523-531
Excision of the epicotyl base of pea (Pisum sativum L.) seedlings in air results in a fast drop in the growth rate and rapid transient membrane depolarization of the surface cells near the cut. Subsequent immersion of the cut end into solution leads to a rapid, transient rise in the epicotyl growth rate and an acropetally propagating depolarization with an amplitude of about 35 mV and a speed of approx. 1 mm · s–1. The same result can be achieved directly by excision of the pea epicotyl under water. Shape, amplitude and velocity of the depolarization characterize it as a slow-wave potential. These results indicate that the propagating depolarization is caused by a surge in water uptake. Neither a second surge in water uptake (measured as a rapid increase in growth rate when the cut end was placed in air and then back into solution) nor another cut can produce the depolarization a second time. Cyanide suppresses the electrical signal at the treated position without inhibiting its transmission through this area and its development in untreated parts of the epicotyl. The large depolarization and repolarization which occur in the epidermal and subepidermal cells are not associated with changes in cell input resistance. Both results indicate that it is a transient shut-down of the plasma-membrane proton pump rather than large ion fluxes which is causing the depolarization. We conclude that the slow wave potential is spread in the stem via a hydraulic surge occurring upon relief of the negative xylem pressure after the hydraulic resistance of the root has been removed by excision.Abbreviations and Symbols GR growth rate - Px xylem pressure - Rin cell input resistance - SWP slow wave potential - Vm membrane potential - Vs surface potential This work was supported by grants to D.J.C. from the National Science Foundation and the U.S. Department of Energy.  相似文献   

20.
Ethylene and auxin both enhance cell elongation growth in the rachis of the frond of Regnellidium diphyllum. Measurements of the stress relaxation modulus of the walls of methanol-killed rachis segments show that both auxin and ethylene cause an increase in cell wall extensibility, that the effects are additive, and that they occur in the presence of hypertonic solutions of mannitol that preclude cell elongation. The results are taken as evidence for the operation of two separate mechanisms for cell wall loosening.Abbreviation IAA indol-3yl-acetic acid  相似文献   

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