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1.
Cultures in vitro of Betula pendula Roth were subjected to light of different spectral qualities. Photosynthetic capacity was highest when the plantlets were exposed to blue light (max recorded photosynthesis, 82 mol CO2 dm–2 h–1) and lowest when irradiated with light high in red and/or far-red wave lengths (max recorded photosynthesis, 40 mol CO2 dm–2 h–1). Highest chlorophyll content (2.2 mg dm–2 leaf area) was found in cultures irradiated with blue light, which also enhanced the leaf area. Morphometric analysis of light micrographs showed that the epidermal cell areas were largest in plantlets subjected to blue light and smallest in those subjected to red light. Morphometric analysis of electron micrographs of palisade cells, showed that the functional chloroplast area was largest in chloroplasts of leaves subjected to blue light and smallest in those exposed to red light. We suggest that light quality affects photosynthesis both through effects on the composition of the photosynthetic apparatus and on translocation of carbohydrates from chloroplasts.  相似文献   

2.
A. Ritter  E. Wagner  M. G. Holmes 《Planta》1981,153(6):556-560
The spectral control of hypocotyl elongation in light-grown Chenopodium rubrum L. seedlings has been studied. The results showed that although the seedlings responded to changes in the quantity of combined red and far-red radiation, they were also very sensitive to changes in the quantity of blue radiation reaching the plant. Altering the proportion of red: far-red radiation in broad waveband white light caused marked differences in hypocotyl extension. Comparison of the responses of green and chlorophyll-free seedlings indicated no qualitative difference in the response to any of the light sources used, although photosynthetically incompetent plants were more sensitive to all wavelengths. Blue light was found to act primarily of a photoreceptor which is different from phytochrome. It is concluded that hypocotyl extension rate in vegetation shade is photoregulated by the quantity of blue light and the proportion of red: far-red radiation. In neutral shade, such as that caused by stones or overlying soil, hypocotyl extension appears to be regulated primarily by the quantity of light in the blue waveband and secondarily by the quantity of light in the red and far-red wavebands.Abbreviations B blue - FR far-red - k 1, k 2 rate constants for photoconverison of Pr to Pfr and Pfr to Pr, respective - k 1/k 1 +k 2= phytochrome photoequilibrium - k 1 +k 2= phytochrome cycling rate - Pr=R absorbing form of phytochrome - Pfr=FR absorbing form of phytochrome - Ptot Pr+Pfr - PAR photosynthetically active radiation = 400–700 nm - R red - WL white light  相似文献   

3.
After a pre-treatment with red light, hair formation at the growing tip of the siphonaceous green alga Acetabularia mediterranea Lamour. (= A. acetabulum (L.) Silva) can be induced by a pulse of blue light. Red light is needed again after the inductive blue-light pulse if the new whorl of hairs is to develop within the next 24 h. In order to investigate the role of this red light, the duration of the red irradiation was varied and combined with periods of darkness. The response of hair-whorl formation was dependent on the total amount of red light, regardless of whether the red irradiation followed the blue pulse immediately or was separated from it by a period of darkness. Furthermore, periods of exposure to the photosynthesis inhibitor 3-(3,4-dichlorophenyl)-1-1dimethylurea had a similar effect to darkness. Both observations indicate that this red irradiation acts as a light source for photosynthesis. Whether or not the red light had an additional effect via phytochrome was tested in another type of experiment. The dependence of hair-whorl formation on red-light irradiance in the presence of simultaneous far-red irradiation was determined for the pre-irradiation period as well as for the irradiation period after the blue pulse. In both experiments, far-red light caused a small promotion of hair-whorl formation when low irradiances of red light were used. However, these differences were attributable to a low level of photosynthetic activity (which in fact was measurable) caused by red light reflected in the growth chamber. Furthermore, lowering the proportion of active phytochrome by far-red light would be expected to suppress hair-whorl formation. The influence of far-red light was also tested in a strain of Acetabularia mediterranea that developed hair whorls in about 20% of cells even when kept in complete darkness after the blue-light pulse. Far-red irradiation had no effect. These results strongly indicate that phytochrome is not involved in hair-whorl formation. Rather it is concluded that the effects of red light are caused by photosynthesis.Abbreviation DCMU 3-(3,4-dichlorophenyl)-1,1-dimethylurea  相似文献   

4.
There has been persisting controversy over the role of photosynthesis in the stimulation of the plasma membrane H+-ATPase and growth of dicotyledonous leaves by light. To investigate this, we compared the effects of light on growth, H+ net efflux and membrane potential (Vm) of strips which contained either only chlorophyll-free (white) mesophyll cells or chlorophyll-containing (green) cells cut from variegated Coleus leaves. White mesophyll cells responded to white, blue and red light with a hyperpolarization of Vm, an acidification of the apoplast and a promotion of growth, all of which began after a lag of 2–7 min. In contrast, green mesophyll cells showed a biphasic light response in which the hyperpolarization and the acidification were preceded by a rapid depolarization of Vm and an alkalinization of the apoplast. Nevertheless, green and white tissues showed comparable growth promotions in response to light. The light response of the leaf mesophyll is a composite of two separate photosystems. The initial depolarization and alkalinization are mediated by photosynthesis and blocked by 3-(3,4-dichlorophenyl)-1,1-dimethylurea. The slower hyperpolarization, acidification and growth response, on the other hand, are clearly in response to light absorption by pigments other than chlorophyll. Received: 11 February 2000 / Accepted: 2 May 2000  相似文献   

5.
Summary Changes in culture conditions caused strong changes in the pigment composition in the blue-green alga Anacystis nidulans. Under normal illumination (white light; 0.6·103 erg/cm2·sec) the relation between the amounts of chlorophyll a and phycocyanin was 1:6.6. In a high light intensity (20.8·103 erg/cm2·sec) the phycocyanin content was reduced and the relations thus changed to 1:1.9. Growing the algae in red light of high intensity (20·103 erg/cm2·sec) increased the phycocyanin content; the chlorophyll a: phycocyanin relation was then 1:12.1.The action spectrum of apparent photosynthesis showed a minimum at 473 nm in all three cultures. The maximum of photosynthesis in low light cultures fell in the absorption region of phycocyanin at 621 nm. The action spectrum of the red light culture showed a reduced rate of photosynthesis in the same region. The strong light culture had an action spectrum similar to that of the red light culture with a maximum at 651 nm. The differing action spectrum of the low light culture may be a result of interruption in the energy transfer from phycocyanin to chlorophyll a within pigment system II.The transients of CO2 exchange are independent of the pigment composition. Two different types of transients were found depending on the wavelength of the incident light. In red light of 550–650 nm a higher stationary rate was reached after a maximum of photosynthesis at the beginning of the illumination period. In blue and far red light a lower rate was found after the first maximum. Following a illumination period in blue or far red light a CO2 evolution in the dark was observed. On the other hand, this CO2 evolution was not found after illumination with red light. These effects are possiblt caused by a decarboxylation reaction (photorespiration) which occurs only in blue and far red light.  相似文献   

6.
Mohr  H.  Ohlenroth  K. 《Planta》1962,57(6):656-664
Summary Under conditions of identical rate of photosynthesis (measured by dry weight increase under steady state conditions) growth and differentiation of the gametophytes of ferns (e.g.Dryopteris filix-mas) are completely different in red and blue light. In the blue light normal growth and morphogenesis take place and normal two or three-dimensional prothallia are formed (Fig. 3). In the red, however, the prothallia look very similar to those growing in complete darkness: they grow as one-dimensional filaments (Fig. 1).It has been shown in this paper that photosynthesis, which is important as a source of organic material and free energy, has no influence at all on morphogenesis. Morphogenesis, i.e. the formation of normal prothallia instead of filaments, is controlled by a photoreactive system which depends on blue light of suitable intensity and which is not related to photosynthesis as such. If no blue light is present no morphogenesis occurs in spite of high photosynthetic activity.In our opinion theprimary products of photosynthesis are the same in all wavelengths. But now the photomorphogenic light reaction which depends on blue light apparently directs the flow of metabolites. In this way even the same initial products of CO2 fixation may lead subsequently to rather different photosynthetic products and consequently to the very great difference between prothallia growing with or without blue light.The addition of sucrose has practically no influence on growth and morphogenesis under our conditions. On the basis of our results we cannot agree with the general conclusions drawn byMiller andMiller (1961) who regard photosynthesis as a photomorphogenetic system in these gametophytes of ferns.Mit 6 Textabbildungen.Herrn Professor Dr.E. G. Pringsheim in Verehrung zum 80. Geburtstag.  相似文献   

7.
Unrooted strawberry cv. `Akihime' shoots with three leaves obtained from standard mixotrophic cultures were cultured in the ``Culture Pack'-rockwool system with sugar-free MS medium under CO2-enriched condition. To examine the effect of superbright red and blue light-emitting diodes (LEDs) on in vitro growth of plantlets, these cultures were placed in an incubator, ``LED PACK', with either red LEDs, red LEDs1blue LEDs or blue LEDs light source. To clarify the optimum blue and red LED ratio, cultures were placed in ``LED PACK 3' under LED light source with either 100, 90, 80, or 70% red + 0, 10, 20, 30% blue, respectively, and also under standard heterotrophic conditions. To determine the effects of irradiation level, cultures were grown under 90% red LEDs + 10% blue LEDs at 45, 60 or 75 mol m–2 s–1 . Plantlet growth was best at 70% red + 30% blue LEDs. The optimal light intensity was 60 mol m–2 s–1. Growth after transfer to soil was also best after in vitro culture with plantlets produced were 70% red LEDs + 30% blue LEDs.  相似文献   

8.
CO2 exchange were measured on pea seedlings (Pisum sativum L. var. Bördi) cultivated from seeds imbibed either in water (C-plants) or in gibberellic acid (GA3) at the concentration of 25 g/1 (GA-plants), and then grown under 17 W/m2 blue light (B-plants) or 11 W/m2 red light (R-plants).When measured under the same light conditions as during growth the net photosynthesis (APS) rate in B-plants was about twice higher than that in R-plants. Dark respiration (DR) rate was 70% higher in B- than in R-plants. Red light retarded the development of photosynthetic activity, but GA3 suppressed this effect. The hormone enhanced net photosynthesis and dark respiration to the same extent.When measured under saturating white light net photosynthesis rate of C-plants was also two times higher in B-plants than in R-plants. Growth conditions had only a slight effect on the APS of GA-plants under white light. APS rates of GA-plants grown under red light were higher under white light than those of C-plants, but lower than those of plants grown under blue light.We assume that blue light induced formation of plants that were adapted to higher light intensity: red light had an opposite effect, whereas gibberellic acid induced formation of plants that were adapted to medium light intensity.  相似文献   

9.
We determined the effects of various light spectra (white, green, blue, and red) on the growth rate, biochemical composition, and fatty acid content of Tisochrysis lutea (Haptophyta, Isochrysidales) maintained in batch cultures. The growth rate peaked with white and blue light, and the lowest rate was observed with green and red light. The chlorophyll a content differed significantly between light spectra and growth phases—higher values were recorded with blue and red light in both growth phases. The proximal composition varied significantly with growth phases and light spectrum. In the exponential growth phase, protein content was significantly greater with blue light and in the stationary phase with green light. The level of carbohydrates in the exponential growth phase was significantly higher for white light, but unchanged in the stationary growth phase between light spectra. The lipid percentages were similar in the exponential phase but differed significantly in the stationary growth phase. The lipid percentages peaked in the stationary growth phase with red and green light. The highest eicosapentaenoic acid (EPA) levels were seen in white light in the exponential growth phase and under green light in the stationary growth phase. Docosahexaenoic acid (DHA) levels were greatest in the exponential growth phase with red light and in the stationary growth phase with green light. Blue light increased the DHA content in both growth phases. We conclude that T. lutea alters its metabolic pathways and experience shifts in growth rate, proximate composition, and fatty acid content, depending on the type of light used.  相似文献   

10.
H. Clauss 《Protoplasma》1979,99(4):341-346
Summary Additional irradiation with blue light of low intensity ofAcetabularia mediterranea cells, pretreated by prolonged irradiation with red, induces an increase of photosynthetic activity. This induction is accompanied by the appearance of rhythmic changes of the O2 production. Maxima are found about 6, 30, 54, 78, ... hours after the onset of blue light irradiation. Thus blue light not only induces an increase of the rate of photosynthesis but also acts as a Zeitgeber for the circadian rhythm of photosynthesis inAcetabularia.
  相似文献   

11.
A. Wildermann  H. Drumm  E. Schäfer  H. Mohr 《Planta》1978,141(2):211-216
After sowing, mustard (Sinapis alba L.) seedlings were grown for 48 h in white light (25°C). These fully de-etiolated, green seedlings were used as experimental material between 48 and 72 (84) h after sowing. The question researched was to what extent control by light of hypocotyl elongation is due to phytochrome in these seedlings. It was found that the light effect on hypocotyl growth is very probably exerted through phytochrome only. In particular, we found no indication for the involvement of a specific blue light photoreceptor pigment.Abbreviations HIR high irradiance reaction - Pfr far-red absorbing, physiologically active form of phytochrome - Pr red absorbing, physiologically inactive form of phytochrome - Pot total phytochrome, i.e. [Pr]+[Pfr] - [Pfr]/[Ptot] - red red light - fr far-red light - wl white light - bl blue light - di dichromatic irradiation - l hypocotyl length  相似文献   

12.
Temperate forests are characterised by variable light quality (i.e. spectral composition of light) at or near the forest floor. These understory environments have a high concentration of green light, as red and blue light are preferentially absorbed by upper canopy leaves. Understory species may be well-adapted for using green light to drive photosynthesis. Angiosperms have been shown to use green light for photosynthesis, but this ability has not been demonstrated in shade-dwelling bryophytes. In this study, net photosynthetic rate (PN) of three temperate understory species of moss (Dichodontium pellucidum (Hedw.) Schimp., Leucobryum albidum (Brid. ex P.Beauv) Lindb. and Amblystegium serpens (Hedw.) Schimp.) was measured under green, red?+?blue, and red?+?blue?+?green light to assess green light use efficiency. All three species were capable of photosynthesising beyond their respiratory demands using solely green light, with higher green light use efficiency measured in plants collected from areas with greater canopy cover, suggesting growth in a green light concentrated environment increases green light use efficiency. Each species was also collected from sites differing in their degree of canopy cover and grown under three light treatments (high light, low light, and green light). Photosynthetic efficiency (chlorophyll fluorescence), tissue nitrogen and carbon isotope concentrations were assessed after a short growth period. Growth conditions had little effect on leaf chemistry and monochromatic green light did not significantly degrade photosynthetic efficiency. This study provides the first evidence to date of positive net ‘green light photosynthesis’ in mosses.  相似文献   

13.
Several studies have described that cyanobacteria use blue light less efficiently for photosynthesis than most eukaryotic phototrophs, but comprehensive studies of this phenomenon are lacking. Here, we study the effect of blue (450 nm), orange (625 nm), and red (660 nm) light on growth of the model cyanobacterium Synechocystis sp. PCC 6803, the green alga Chlorella sorokiniana and other cyanobacteria containing phycocyanin or phycoerythrin. Our results demonstrate that specific growth rates of the cyanobacteria were similar in orange and red light, but much lower in blue light. Conversely, specific growth rates of the green alga C. sorokiniana were similar in blue and red light, but lower in orange light. Oxygen production rates of Synechocystis sp. PCC 6803 were five-fold lower in blue than in orange and red light at low light intensities but approached the same saturation level in all three colors at high light intensities. Measurements of 77 K fluorescence emission demonstrated a lower ratio of photosystem I to photosystem II (PSI:PSII ratio) and relatively more phycobilisomes associated with PSII (state 1) in blue light than in orange and red light. These results support the hypothesis that blue light, which is not absorbed by phycobilisomes, creates an imbalance between the two photosystems of cyanobacteria with an energy excess at PSI and a deficiency at the PSII-side of the photosynthetic electron transfer chain. Our results help to explain why phycobilisome-containing cyanobacteria use blue light less efficiently than species with chlorophyll-based light-harvesting antennae such as Prochlorococcus, green algae and terrestrial plants.  相似文献   

14.
To understand how light quality influences plant photosynthesis, we investigated chloroplastic ultrastructure, chlorophyll fluorescence and photosynthetic parameters, Rubisco and chlorophyll content and photosynthesis-related genes expression in cucumber seedlings exposed to different light qualities: white, red, blue, yellow and green lights with the same photosynthetic photon flux density of 100 μmol m?2 s?1. The results revealed that plant growth, CO2 assimilation rate and chlorophyll content were significantly reduced in the seedlings grown under red, blue, yellow and green lights as compared with those grown under white light, but each monochromatic light played its special role in regulating plant morphogenesis and photosynthesis. Seedling leaves were thickened and slightly curled; Rubisco biosynthesis, expression of the rca, rbcS and rbcL, the maximal photochemical efficiency of PSII (Fv/Fm) and quantum yield of PSII electron transport (ФPSII) were all increased in seedlings grown under blue light as compared with those grown under white light. Furthermore, the photosynthetic rate of seedlings grown under blue light was significantly increased, and leaf number and chlorophyll content of seedlings grown under red light were increased as compared with those exposed to other monochromatic lights. On the contrary, the seedlings grown under yellow and green lights were dwarf with the new leaves etiolated. Moreover, photosynthesis, Rubisco biosynthesis and relative gene expression were greatly decreased in seedlings grown under yellow and green light, but chloroplast structural features were less influenced. Interestingly, the Fv/Fm, ФPSII value and chlorophyll content of the seedlings grown under green light were much higher than those grown under yellow light.  相似文献   

15.
Summary On illumination with blue light the O2-uptake of Chlorella pyrenoidosa (211-8b) in which photosynthetic O2-liberation has been suppressed by 10-5M DCMU initially decreases, but in the course of 5–10 min increases over that in preceding darkness (Fig. 1). Whereas an enhancement of O2-uptake is already induced by traces of blue radiation and saturated at about 1.5x10-10einsteins cm-2sec-1, the initial inhibition of O2-uptake can be measured only after application of more than 1.5×10-10einsteins cm-2sec-1 (Fig. 2).The long induction time that passes before a steady enhancement in O2-uptake is reached, the low energy requirement of the enhancement, and its spectral dependence with greatest efficiency of wavelengths around 455 nm and 375 nm and no effect of wavelengths beyond 520 nm (Fig. 3) resemble the corresponding data found earlier for an enhancement of respiration by light in a chlorophyll-free, carotenoidcontaining Chlorella mutant. It is therefore likely that the increased O2-uptake in DCMU-poisoned cells of wild type Chlorella depends on an increase in respiration. The pigment involved is not known, but from the action spectrum it could be a flavin or a cis-carotenoid.In contrast to the increase the initial decrease in O2-uptake does not show up in strong blue light only, but is also present in red light in which it stays constant throughout the period of measurement of 20 min (Fig. 4). Its intensity dependence is similar in blue and in red light; the lower efficiency of blue, which appears in Fig. 5, is at least partially due to the time interval of 5 min chosen for its determination: in these first 5 min after the beginning of blue illumination the slow increase in respiration already begins. The spectral dependence of the decrease in O2-consumption in the red part of the visible spectrum yields greatest activity around 680 nm, a slow drop towards 525 nm and a steep one towards 743 nm (Fig. 6). From that and the absence of any after-effect of red light on the O2-consumption in following darkness (Fig. 8), which might be expected if phytochrome action were involved, we think chlorophyll to be the pigment responsible for light-dependent inhibition of O2-uptake. A mutant of Scenedesmus, Bishop's Nr. 11, which is unable to evolve photosynthetic oxygen, behaves just like DCMU-poisoned Chlorella (Fig. 7). We therefore consider the decreased O2-consumption in the light to result from a partial inhibition of respiration and not from remaining photosynthesis unaffected by 10-5M DCMU. As photosystem I still operates in Bishop's mutant 11 as well as in DCMU-poisoned Chlorella, illumination might lead to an accumulation of ATP by cyclic photophosphorylation and thus to a lowering of the cellular ADP level. This could result in a slowing down of glycolysis and consequently of respiratory O2-uptake.  相似文献   

16.
M. G. Holmes  E. Schäfer 《Planta》1981,153(3):267-272
Detailed action spectra are presented for the inhibition of hypocotyl extension in dark-grown Sinapis alba L. seedlings by continuous (24 h) narrow waveband monochromatic light between 336 nm and 783 nm. The results show four distinct wavebands of major inhibitory action; these are centred in the ultra-violet (max=367 nm), blue (max=446 nm), red (max=653 nm) and far-red (max=712 nm) wavebands. Previous irradiation of the plants with red light (which also decreases Ptot) causes decreased inhibitory action by all wavelengths except those responsible for the red light inhibitory response. Pre-irradiation did not alter the wavelength of the action maxima. It is concluded that ultra-violet and blue light act mainly on a photoreceptor which is different from phytochrome.Abbreviations B blue - D dark - FR far-red - HIR high irradiance reaction - HW half power bandwith - Pr R absorbing form of phytochrome - Pfr FR absorbing form of phytochrome - Ptot total phytochrome=Pr+Pfr - R red - UV ultra violet  相似文献   

17.
Daphne Vince 《Planta》1967,75(4):291-308
Summary The ability of gibberellic acid (GA3) to prevent the light inhibition of stem elongation in peas was examined for several varieties under a wide range of irradiation conditions.A saturating dose of GA3 largely prevented the inhibitory effect of red light on total stem height in Duke of Albany (tall), Alaska (medium) and Meteor (dwarf) although a small, but statistically significant, effect persisted in all varieties after 3 days of light. The growth of the second internode was, however, markedly inhibited by red light even with a saturating dose of GA3. With gibberellin there was no difference between the effects of continuous red light and 15 minutes per day on height but the second internode was much shorter in the former treatment. The number of internodes present was the same in both cases and, therefore, the upper internodes in continuous light were as long or longer than in the 15-minute treatment. The number of internodes was only slightly fewer in darkness than in light so that, with GA3, the effect of red light was transient and only the growth of the lower internodes was inhibited. Without GA3 overall height was less in both red light treatments than in darkness for all three varieties.In blue light, on the other hand, there was no difference depending on whether height or internode length is considered, and even with a saturating dose of GA3 the growth rate remained depressed in continuous blue light. There was, however, some interaction between blue light and GA3.Red/far-red reversal experiments showed that in the varieties Alska and Duke of Albany the far-red stimulation of elongation persisted in the presence of a saturating dose of GA3 while for the dwarf variety Meteor there was a significant interaction between far-red and GA3.At least a quantitative difference was found between tall and dwarf peas in their response to light. Tall varieties showed a much greater effect of a prolonged exposure to blue and a smaller effect of a short exposure to red than dwarf varieties. Increasing the duration of exposure to red increasingly inhibited the growth of tall varieties. The medium variety Alaska grew to approximately the same height in continuous red and blue light.  相似文献   

18.
T. H. Attridge  M. Black  V. Gaba 《Planta》1984,162(5):422-426
An interaction is demonstrated between the effects of phytochrome and cryptochrome (the specific blue-light photoreceptor) in the inhibition of hypocotyl elongation of light-grown cucumber (Cucumis sativus L.) cv. Ridge Greenline seedlings. At certain fluence rates of blue light the total inhibition response is greater than the sum of the separate responses to each photoreceptor. The threshold for response to blue light is reduced at least 30-fold by additional red-light irradiation. The synergistic effect is demonstrated for two different fluence rates of red light. Synergism is mediated by phytochrome in both the cotyledons and the hypocotyl.Abbreviations and symbols BL blue light - FR far-red light - Pfr far-red-absorbing form of phytochrome - R red light - photostationary state of phytochrome - c calculated   相似文献   

19.
M. R. Turner  D. Vince 《Planta》1969,84(4):368-382
Summary A number of differences in the responses of Great Lakes lettuce seedlings to blue and far-red light indicate that more than one photo-sensitive pigment is involved in the photo-inhibition of hypocotyl elongation under highenergy conditions. In far-red light the inhibitory effect is restricted to young seedlings and is of limited duration; after 24 hours in far-red a rapid growth rate similar to that of plants maintained in darkness is resumed, despite continued irradiation. The onset of inhibition is relatively slow. Blue light, in contrast, exerts a strongly inhibitory effect on elongation at any age, and a slow rate of growth persists throughout the entire irradiation period. The onset of inhibition is very rapid. Furthermore, even when the inhibition in far-red had already been exhausted after prolonged exposure, transfer to blue light resulted in a prompt reduction in growth rate. Also the effect of far-red is almost completely lost after a pre-irradiation with red light which does not affect the response to blue. It is concluded that the responses to blue and far-red light in Great Lakes lettuce are not mediated by a single pigment system and that a distinct blue-sensitive pigment is present in addition to phytochrome. Red light has a number of different effects depending on conditions: (1) a pretreatment with red light almost completely prevents the inhibitory effect of a subsequent far-red irradiation, (2) a brief terminal treatment with red increases the inhibitory effect of either far-red or blue light; this is reversed by far-red, and (3) prolonged exposure to red light given alone increases the growth rate relative to darkness, because the more rapid elongation rate characteristic of young seedlings continues for longer with red light than in plants grown in darkness throughout.  相似文献   

20.
H. D. Payer 《Planta》1969,86(2):103-115
Summary In fern gametophytes (= sporelings) there is a strong correlation between the degree of blue light mediated photomorphogenesis and the protein content of the organism (cf. Mohr, 1963). In a previous paper (Payer et al., 1969) we have shown that blue light specifically increases the rate of protein synthesis in the fern sporelings over the rate which is maintained under red light. — In the present paper blue light mediated protein synthesis has been dealt with further using one representative amino acid, alanine, which was labelled with 14C from 14CO2 under steady state conditions of photosynthetic 14C incorporation under blue or red light.Synthesis of free alanine is proportional to the rate of photosynthesis (Table 1). For a number of reasons we conclude that alanine is derived directly from primary photosynthetic products. Since the pool size of the thoroughly 14C-labelled pool of free alanine is much less than the actual, pool size of this amino acid, (Table 1), and since the specific activity of the isolated 14C-alanine is much below the value we can expect on the basis of the specific activity of the 14CO2 applied we conclude that there are separate pools of free alanine; active (with respect to protein synthesis) and inactive pools which do not mingle. Taking into account this possibility of compartmentation of pools of free amino acids we have calculated in the case of 14C-alanine the rate of protein synthesis for two extreme instances (Table 2). A comparison of the theoretical values with the actual data indicates that indeed protein synthesis is fed from active pools of amino acids while the inactive pools are possibly located in the vacuoles. The total pool of alanine is much larger in red grown than in blue grown sporelings while the active pools seem to have the same size under both conditions. The cells of the red grown sporelings have much larger vacuoles than the cells of the blue grown sporelings.The rate of protein synthesis is under our conditions 1.8 times higher in blue light than in red light. The rate of turnover of the total protein is 0.29% per hour in the blue and 0.23% in the red light. The absolute turnover of protein is 1.5 times higher in blue light than in red light. It is concluded that the blue light mediated increase of protein synthesis is very real. Blue light must act specifically at the level of polypeptide synthesis.  相似文献   

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