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1.
Endogenous levels of cambial region abscisic acid (ABA) were quantified by immunoassay and assessed together with cambial growth activity in poplar (Populus nigra L. × P. maximowiczii Henry, clone Kamabuchi) over the course of a growing season. The level of cambial region ABA increased from spring to late-summer but decreased sharply in autumn. Cambial growth activity, measured as the radial number of undifferentiated cambial cells and enlarging xylem cells, also increased from spring to summer and decreased sharply in autumn, indicating the onset of cambial dormancy. Exogenous ABA, applied laterally to poplar stems at two times within the growing season, enhanced cambial growth activity, as the radial number of undifferentiated cambial cells increased in ABA-treated trees subsequent to the two application times. Xylem cell development was also affected by exogenous ABA as fibre length increased significantly in ABA-treated trees at both application times. The positive correlation of cambial region ABA and cambial growth activity as well as the positive effects of exogenous ABA application thereon sheds new light on the role of this hormonal growth regulator.  相似文献   

2.
Summary The current notion that hormonal level and cell response are clearly correlated has often been challenged recently. During the period of cambial activity, auxin content seems to control the intensity of mitosis and some features of the resulting wood, but not the duration of the active period itself. During cambial rest, the indole-3-acetic acid (IAA) level often remains high in the cambium, but the cell sensitivity to auxin is low. The decrease of auxin transport in autumn is sometimes interpreted as a major qualitative change affecting the pattern of transport, and sometimes as a secondary change occurring later than rest onset. The causes of the seasonal variation of cambial response remain unknown. A hypothesis is proposed that accounts for the structural-functional changes occurring in cambial cells during the onset of dormancy. Abscisic acid (ABA) may reduce wood production and xylem cell enlargement in late summer. An important amount of ABA may be present in the cambial zone in autumn after drought stress and in spring in the young growing shoot. Changes in ABA level do not appear to be clearly correlated with the different steps of cambial rest and activity. Beyond the role of ABA as a stress mediator, its participation in the annual regulation of cambial activity remains unclear. Its distribution in the most alkaline compartments may account for the particularities of its seasonal activity. The involvement of IAA and ABA in cambial growth is discussed within the scope of a possible annual alternation of two different metabolisms in the cambial cell.Abbreviations ABA abscisic acid - DPA dihydrophaseic acid - GA gibberellic acid - GC-MS gas chromatography-mass spectrometry - IAA indole-3-acetic acid - PA phaseic acid - RNA ribonucleic acid - SICM single ion current monitoring - SIM selected ion monitoring  相似文献   

3.
Following cation and anion exchange chromatography, 1-aminocyclopropane-1-carboxylic acid (ACC) was converted to the 2,4-dinitrophenyl derivative and then purified by high-performance liquid chromatography (HPLC). After three HPLC steps, endogenous ACC was identified by GCMS in the vascular cambium on the lower side of Pinus contorta Dougl. ssp. latifolia branches in association with compressionwood differentiation, but ACC was not detected in the opposite wood cambial region on the upper sides of the same branches.

The possibility that ACC and ethylene have physiological roles in cambial activity and compressionwood tracheid differentiation is discussed.

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4.
Trinexapacethyl (TriEt), an acylcyclohexanedionetype inhibitor of gibberellin (GA) biosynthesis, was applied to 3-year-old Eucalyptus globules saplings by localised injection near the base of each stem. The objective was to alter cambial region GA levels and to study the effects on secondary xylem fibre development. Seven weeks later wood samples, with bark and cambial region intact, were removed 10 and 30 cm above the point of injection. Fusiform cambial cell dimensions were compared with those of fibre-tracheids in the most recently formed 100 um of secondary xylem. Increasing TriEt applications from 5 to 5 000 mg active ingredient significantly reduced average fibre length, and to a lesser extent average fusiform cambial cell length. Also reduced was the number of cells in the cambial zone and the number of differentiating fibres with primary walls. However, no trends were evident for changes in fibre diameter, the proportion of vessel elements or the ratio of cambial ray cells to fusiform cambial cells. Two gibberellins (GA1 and GA20), indole-3-acetic acid (IAA) and abscisic acid (ABA) were quantified in cambial region tissues by gas chromatographymass spectrometry using stable isotope labelled internal standards. Increasing TriEt application reduced both GA1 and GA20 levels. Effects on IAA and ABA were not significant, although their levels tended to be lower at the highest TriEt application rate. The elongation of secondary xylem fibres was positively correlated with higher levels of endogenous GA1 (rs= 0.74, P < 0.01) and GA20 (rs= 0.72, P < 0.01). These results support a causal role for GA1 in cambial cell division. They are also consistent with the hypothesis that the elongation of differentiating secondary xylem fibres in woody an–giosperms is dependent on GA1 levels in the cambial region.  相似文献   

5.
The regulation of cell-division activity in the vascular cambium and of secondary xylem and phloem development is reviewed for temperate-zone tree species in relation to auxins, gibberellins, abscisic acid, cytokinins, and ethylene. Representatives of the first four of these PGR classes (IAA, GA1, GA4, GA7, GA9, GA20, ABA, Z, ZR, DCA) have been identified conclusively by mass spectrometry in the cambial region in some Pinaceae, but not in any hardwood species. Endogenous ethylene has yet to be definitively characterized in this region in any species. Evidence concerning the source and metabolism of cambial PGRs is scanty and inconclusive for both conifers and hardwoods.Most cambial PGR research has focused on IAA. Much evidence indicates that this PGR is transported primarily in the cambial region at a rate of about 1 cm h–1, and that the transport is basipetally polar. GC-MS measurements have established that endogenous IAA levels in the cambial region of Pinaceae are highest during earlywood development, and that cambial IAA levels may be considerably lower in hardwoods than in conifers. IAA appears to be involved in the control of cambial growth in conifers and hardwoods in at least three specific ways, viz. maintenance of the elongated form of fusiform cambial cells, promotion of radial expansion in primary walls of cambial derivatives, and regulation of reaction wood formation. In addition, it is well established that exogenous IAA promotes vessel development in hardwoods. In both conifers and hardwoods, exogenous IAA stimulates cambial growth in 1-year-old shoots treated late in the dormant period or after the start of the cambial growing period. However, exogenous IAA has little effect on cambia that are older or are in what is hypothesized to be the resting stage of dormancy. Thus it is uncertain whether IAA is directly involved in the control of cambial growth, or acts indirectly through a process such as hormone-directed transport.It is not yet clear if gibberellins play a role in the control of cambial growth in conifers. However, in hardwoods, there is evidence that they inhibit vessel development and act synergistically with IAA in promoting cambial activity and fiber elongation. In both conifers and hardwoods, foliar sprays of gibberellins increase the accumulation of biomass above-ground, particularly in the main axis, while decreasing it in the roots.There are as yet no definite conclusions to be drawn concerning the involvement of ABA, cytokinins, and ethylene in the regulation of cambial growth in conifers or hardwoods. In conifers, ABA may antagonize the promotory effect of IAA on cambial cell division and tracheid radial expansion under conditions of water stress, but high endogenous ABA levels do not appear to be associated with the formation of latewood or the onset of cambial dormancy. Some evidence suggests that exogenous cytokinins enhance the promotory effect of IAA on cambial growth, particularly ray formation, in both hardwoods and conifers. However, exogenous cytokinins, by themselves, appear to be ineffective. In hardwoods, ethylene-generating compounds satisfy the chilling requirement of the dormant cambium and promote the formation of wood having an apparently greater content of lignin and extractives. Ethylene-generators also affect wood development in conifers and accelerate cambial growth at the application site in both hardwoods and conifers.  相似文献   

6.
Seasonal measurements of IAA,3 made using GC-MS, 4 indicatedthat in Q. robur the spring initiation of cambial activity andonset of visible bud outgrowth in the canopy is preceded byan increase in cambial region IAA. The effects of notch-girdlescut into the bole indicated that IAA in the cambial region laterwas present in separate physiological pools, with only the polar-transportedfraction affecting epicormic bud outgrowth. The stage in thespring when the epicormic buds grew out coincided with an increaseboth in cambial region IAA and in the capacity of cambial explantsfor IAA polar transport. Thus the stimulus needed by the epicormicbuds to overcome inhibition by polar-transported IAA appearedto be self-generated. The observed effects of exogenous hormoneson epicormic bud outgrowth from stem explants indicated thatthis stimulus might be cytokinin. The seasonal changes detectedin cambial region ABA3 were consistent with a role for stress-inducedABA in the induction of epicormic bud dormancy after canopydevelopment during the summer. No consistent effects of standthinning on cambial region IAA, ABA, water potentials or watercontents were detected, although polar transport of exogenousIAA by cambial region explants removed in the spring was reducedby thinning. Key words: Epicormic buds, cambium, hormones  相似文献   

7.
Background and Aims In temperate regions, trees undergo annual cycles of cambial growth, with periods of cambial activity and dormancy. Environmental factors might regulate the cambial growth, as well as the development of cambial derivatives. We investigated the effects of low temperature by localized cooling on cambial activity and latewood formation in two conifers, Chamaecyparis obtusa and Cryptomeria japonica.Methods A plastic rubber tube that contained cooled water was wrapped around a 30-cm-wide portion of the main stem of Chamaecyparis obtusa and Cryptomeria japonica trees during seasons of active cambium. Small blocks were collected from both cooled and non-cooled control portions of the stems for sequential observations of cambial activity and for anatomical measurements of cell morphology by light microscopy and image analysis.Key Results The effect of localized cooling was first observed on differentiating tracheids. Tracheids narrow in diameter and with significantly decreased cambial activity were evident 5 weeks after the start of cooling in these stems. Eight weeks after the start of cooling, tracheids with clearly diminished diameters and thickened cell walls were observed in these stems. Thus, localized low temperature induced narrow diameters and obvious thickening of secondary cell walls of tracheids, which were identified as latewood tracheids. Two months after the cessation of cooling, a false annual ring was observed and cambium became active again and produced new tracheids. In Cryptomeria japonica, cambial activity ceased earlier in locally cooled portions of stems than in non-cooled stems, indicating that the cambium had entered dormancy sooner in the cooled stems.Conclusions Artificial cooling of stems induced latewood formation and cessation of cambial activity, indicating that cambium and its derivatives can respond directly to changes in temperature. A decrease in the temperature of the stem is a critical factor in the control of cambial activity and xylem differentiation in trees.  相似文献   

8.
Cambial division continued in decapitated Xanthium plants without concomitant xylem fiber differentiation. The application of indoleacetic acid to these plants did not affect the production of cambial derivatives or induce xylem fiber differentiation. When naphthaleneacetic acid was applied either to the second internode or to the stump of a lateral shoot, xylem fiber differentiation was induced in the newly formed cambial derivatives on the xylem side of the cambium in the stem. When naphthaleneacetic acid was applied unilaterally, xylem fiber differentiation was restricted to that side of the stem in the first internode and hypocotyl. Naphthaleneacetic acid also enhanced the production of cambial derivatives. Gibberellic acid enhanced cambial derivative production but did not affect the differentiation of xylem fibers. Similar numbers of cambial derivatives were produced in some naphthaleneacetic acid-treated plants in which xylem fiber differentiation was induced and in gibberellic acid-treated plants which did not differentiate xylem. When naphthaleneacetic acid was applied 72 hours after decapitation, the oldest of the cambial derivatives on the xylem side failed to develop into fibers although younger cells did. These results suggest that auxin has its direct effect on the induction of xylem differentiation rather than the induction of divisions prerequisite to differentiation.  相似文献   

9.
The seasonal change of free abscisic acid (ABA) and indole-3-acetic acid (IAA) and their relationship with the cambial activity in Eucommia ulmoides trees were investigated by ABA and IAA immunolocalization using primary polyclonal and rhodamine-red fluorescing secondary antibodies, ABA and IAA quantification using high performance liquid chromatography (HPLC), and systematic monitoring of vascular cell layers production. ABA and IAA clearly displayed opposite annual distribution patterns. In the active period (AP), both immunolocalization and HPLC detected an abrupt decrease of ABA, reaching its lowest level in the summer. During dormancy, ABA started increasing in the first quiescence (Q1) (autumn), peaked in the rest (winter), and gradually decreased from the onset of the second quiescence (Q2) (the end of winter). IAA showed a reverse pattern to that of ABA: it sharply increased in AP, but noticeably decreased from the commencement of Q1. Longitudinally, the ABA distribution increased apico-basally, contrasting with IAA. Laterally, most of the ABA was located in mature vascular tissues, whereas the IAA essentially occurred in the cambial region. The concomitant IAA-ABA distribution and seasonal changes in vascular tissues greatly correlated with xylem and phloem cell production, and late wood differentiation and maturation. Interestingly, the application of exogenous ABA to quiescent E. ulmoides branches, in a water-culture system, inhibited external IAA action on cambial activity reactivation. These results suggest that, in E. ulmoides, ABA and IAA might probably interact in the cambial region. The annual cambial activity could be influenced by an IAA:ABA ratio; and ABA might play a key role in vascular cambium dormancy in higher plants. The relationship between hormonal changes and the (particular) annual life cycle of E. ulmoides is also discussed.  相似文献   

10.
To study the involvement of potassium in wood formation, poplar plants ( Populus tremula L. x Populus tremuloides Michx.) were grown over a period of one growing season, under different potassium regimes. Seasonal changes in cambial potassium content, osmotic potential, and cambial activity correlated strongly throughout the season, increasing from spring to summer and decreasing from summer to autumn. Moreover, changing the potassium supply during the growing season affected the seasonal changes of these parameters in a similar way. Low potassium supply markedly reduced cambial activity, the number of expanding cambial cell derivatives, the seasonal rate of radial wood increment, and the vessel frequency. The possible effect of hormones on potassium-dependent cambial growth was investigated and revealed that abscisic acid (ABA) strongly decreased the potassium content within the cambial zone and reduced cambial activity, as well as the number of expanding cambial cell derivatives. In summary, our results indicate a key role for potassium in the regulation of cambial growth and wood formation due to its strong impact on osmoregulation in expanding cambial cells. They also demonstrate involvement of ABA in regulation of potassium-dependent cambial growth.  相似文献   

11.

Background and Aims

Cambial reactivation in trees occurs from late winter to early spring when photosynthesis is minimal or almost non-existent. Reserve materials might be important for wood formation in trees. The localization and approximate levels of starch and lipids (as droplets) and number of starch granules in cambium and phloem were examined from cambial dormancy to the start of xylem differentiation in locally heated stems of Cryptomeria japonica trees in winter.

Methods

Electric heating tape was wrapped on one side of the stem of Cryptomeria japonica trees at breast height in winter. The localization and approximate levels of starch and lipids (as droplets) and number of starch granules were determined by image analysis of optical digital images obtained by confocal laser scanning microscopy.

Key Results

Localized heating induced earlier cambial reactivation and xylem differentiation in stems of Cryptomeria japonica, as compared with non-heated stems. There were clear changes in the respective localizations and levels of starch and lipids (as droplets) determined in terms of relative areas on images, from cambial dormancy to the start of xylem differentiation in heated stems. In heated stems, the levels and number of starch granules fell from cambial reactivation to the start of xylem differentiation. There was a significant decrease in the relative area occupied by lipid droplets in the cambium from cambial reactivation to the start of xylem differentiation in heated stems.

Conclusions

The results showed clearly that the levels and number of storage starch granules in cambium and phloem cells and levels of lipids (as droplets) in the cambium decreased from cambial reactivation to the start of xylem differentiation in heated stems during the winter. The observations suggest that starch and lipid droplets might be needed as sources of energy for the initiation of cambial cell division and the differentiation of xylem in Cryptomeria japonica.  相似文献   

12.
13.
Indole-3-acetic acid (IAA) and abscisic acid (ABA) were identified by combined gas chromatography-mass spectrometry (GCMS) in fractions obtained by diffusion and extraction from bark peelings of Sitka spruce. A procedure is described for the quantitative analysis of IAA and ABA levels in the same extract using the GCMS technique of single-ion current monitoring. This procedure was used to measure the diffusible, free, and bound fractions of IAA and ABA in the cambial region of Sitka spruce throughout one year; the range in concentration for these fractions was 0.06–0.30, 0.46–3.85, and 0.04–0.20 g/g oven-dry weight, respectively, for IAA, and 0–0.08, 0.03–2.21, and 0.13–0.66 g/g oven-dry weight, respectively, for ABA. Movement in the cambial region was found to be polar for endogenous IAA and nonpolar for endogenous ABA. Recoveries of [14C]IAA internal standards showed that 73–99.5% of the IAA was lost during purification, and that there could be up to 5-fold differences in recovery between purifications, indicating that IAA loss shold be measured in quantitative analyses.Abbreviations ABA aoscisic acid - GCMS combined gas chromatography-mass spectrometry - IAA indole-3-acetic acid - PVP polyvinylpyrrolidone - SICM single ion current monitoring - TMS trimethylsilyl  相似文献   

14.
A simple and rapid technique was developed to synthesize abscisic acid glucose ester. The free acid of abscisic acid (ABA) was combined with CsHCO3 to form the Cs salt of ABA. The Cs salt of ABA was then combined with acetobromo-α-d-glucose tetraacetate, and the tetraacetate derivative of abscisic acid glucose ester was formed. Acetate groups were selectively removed from the glucose moiety with a crude enzyme preparation derived from Helianthus annuus seeds. Abscisic acid glucose ester was purified via silica gel column chromatography and identified by micro NMR.  相似文献   

15.
The major auxin of Scots pine (Pinus silvestris L.) which is transported basipetally into agar strips from the cambial region of the stem was quantified by the Went Avena coleoptile curvature assay before and after reversed phase C18 high performance liquid chromatography (HPLC), and then identified by full spectrum gas chromatography-mass spectrometry (GC-MS) as indole-3-acetic acid (IAA). The IAA was subsequently quantified by GC-MS-selected ion monitoring (SIM) using an internal standard of [13C]-(C6)-IAA. The amount of IAA collected into 22-millimeter long agar strips during 10 minutes of contact with the stem cambial region was estimated by GC-MS-SIM and the Went bioassay to be 2.3 and 2.1 nanograms per strip, respectively. The GC-MS technique thus confirmed the results obtained by the Went curvature assay. The Avena curvature assay revealed the presence of at least one other, more polar (based on HPLC retention time) auxin that diffused into the agar strips with the IAA. Its bioactivity was only 5% of the IAA fraction. Its HPLC retention time was earlier than IAA-glucoside, IAA-aspartate, or IAA-glycine, but the same as IAA-inositol. No significant amounts of inhibitors or synergists of IAA activity on the Avena assay were found in extracts corresponding to one or five strips of agar. Thus, the direct bioassay of the agar strips immediately after their removal from the cambial region of P. silvestris stem sections reflects the concentration of the native IAA. For both P. silvestris and lodgepole pine (Pinus contorta) a wavelike pattern of auxin stimulation of Avena curvature was found in agar strips exposed for only 10 minutes to the basal ends of an axial series of 6-millimeter long sections from the cambial region of the stem. This wavelike pattern was subsequently confirmed for P. contorta both by Avena curvature assay and by GC-MS-SIM of HPLC fractions at the retention time of [3H]IAA. The wavelike pattern of auxin diffusing from the cambial region of Pinus has thus been determined to consist primarily of IAA and this pattern has now been quantitated using both the Went Avena curvature assay and GC-MS-SIM with [13C]-C6-IAA as an internal standard.  相似文献   

16.
p-Aminobenzoic acid (pABA) plays important roles in a wide variety of metabolic processes. Herein we report the synthesis, theoretical calculations, crystallographic investigation, and in vitro determination of the biological activity and phytotoxicity of the pABA salt, 2-hydroxyethylammonium p-aminobenzoate (HEA-pABA). The ability of neutral and anionic forms of pABA to interact with TIR1 pocket was investigated by calculation of molecular electrostatic potential maps on the accessible surface area, docking experiments, Molecular Dynamics and Quantum Mechanics/Molecular Mechanics calculations. The docking study of the folate precursor pABA, its anionic form and natural auxin (indole-3-acetic acid, IAA) with the auxin receptor TIR1 revealed a similar binding mode in the active site. The phytotoxic evaluation of HEA-pABA, pABA and 2-hydroxyethylamine (HEA) was performed on the model plant Arabidopsis thaliana ecotype Col 0 at five different concentrations. HEA-pABA and pABA acted as potential auxin-like regulators of root development in Arabidopsis thaliana (0.1 and 0.2 mM) and displayed an agravitropic root response at high concentration (2 mM). This study suggests that HEA-pABA and pABA might be considered as potential new regulators of plant growth.  相似文献   

17.
18.
19.
Changes in the concentrations of bioactive gibberellins and abscisic acid in the cambial region of white poplar (Populus alba L.) were investigated in 1-year-old plants, to highlight how these phytohormone signals are modulated in response to water deficit. Plants were cultivated in pots outdoor and, at the time of maximum cambial growth (T 0), irrigation was withdrawn for 8 days, inducing a mild water deficit, thus mimicking a condition that is recurrent in Mediterranean climates when white poplar attains its maximum growth rate. The water deficit was suspended by resuming irrigation (T max) throughout a recovery period of 2 weeks (T rec). Cambial tissues were sampled at T 0, T max, and T rec. Significant changes of leaf and stem relative water content, leaf water potential, stomatal conductance, transpiration, carbon assimilation, stem shrinkage, and leaf number were induced by soil water shortage, which also negatively affected cambium development. Nevertheless, these responses were almost fully reversed following the resumption of irrigation. Water deficit induced the accumulation of large amounts of abscisic acid in cambial tissues, but the hormone was brought back to pre-stress levels after the recovery period. With regard to bioactive gibberellins, GA1 was several folds more abundant than GA4 and reached the greatest level in the plants recovering from the water status imbalance. The possible functions of gibberellins and abscisic acid in the response of cambial tissues to water deficit are discussed in view of the known physiological roles and molecular mechanisms of action of these hormonal signals.  相似文献   

20.
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