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1.
Phytochrome-mediated cellular photomorphogenesis   总被引:3,自引:2,他引:1       下载免费PDF全文
Red light-induced cell elongation and division in intact, etiolated oat (Avena sativa cv Lodi) seedlings have been assessed. The middle of coleoptile was especially responsive in the very low fluence range whereas the region immediately below the coleoptile tip and the two regions just above the coleoptilar node were more responsive than the entire organ in the low fluence range. These responses in the coleoptile are both the result of an increase in cell elongation. Coleoptile cell division is slightly inhibited in the very low and slightly stimulated by red light in the low fluence range.

The one-sixth of the mesocotyl closest to the node is more suppressed in its growth than is any other region in the very low fluence range. However, the low fluence response involved the entire mesocotyl equally. In the apical one-sixth of the mesocotyl, a strong suppression of cell division and a weak suppression of cell elongation occurs. In the lower five regions of the mesocotyl, red light in both fluence ranges suppresses only cell elongation. Apparently, the difference between red light-induced oat growth stimulation and suppression primarily involves differences in the response of the cell elongation process.

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2.
F. Waller  P. Nick 《Protoplasma》1997,200(3-4):154-162
Summary In seedlings of maize (Zea mays L. cv. Percival), growth is controlled by the plant photoreceptor phytochrome. Whereas coleoptile growth is promoted by continuous far-red light, a dramatic block of mesocotyl elongation is observed. The response of the coleoptile is based entirely upon light-induced stimulation of cell elongation, whereas the response of the mesocotyl involves light-induced inhibition of cell elongation. The light response of actin microfilaments was followed over time in the epidermis by staining with fluorescence-labelled phalloidin. In contrast to the underlying tissue, epidermal cells are characterized by dense longitudinal bundles of microfilaments. These bundles become loosened during phases of rapid elongation (between 2–3 days in irradiated coleoptiles, between 5–6 days in dark-grown coleoptiles). The condensed bundles re-form when growth gradually ceases. The response of actin to light is fast. If etiolated mesocotyls are transferred to far-red light, condensation of microfilaments can be clearly seen 1 h after the onset of stimulation together with an almost complete block of mesocotyl elongation. The observations are discussed in relation to a possible role of actin microfilaments in the signal-dependent control of cell elongation.  相似文献   

3.
Moritoshi Iino 《Planta》1982,156(5):388-395
Brief irradiation of 3-d-old maize (Zea mays L.) seedlings with red light (R; 180 J m-2) inhibits elongation of the mesocotyl (70–80% inhibition in 8 h) and reduces its indole-3-acetic acid (IAA) content. The reduction in IAA content, apparent within a few hours, is the result of a reduction in the supply of IAA from the coleoptile unit (which includes the shoot apex and primary leaves). The fluence-response relationship for the inhibition of mesocotyl growth by R and far-red light closely resemble those for the reduction of the IAA supply from the coleoptile. The relationship between the concentration of IAA (1–10 M) supplied to the cut surface of the mesocotyl of seedlings with their coleoptile removed and the growth increment of the mesocotyl, measured after 4 h, is linear. The hypothesis that R inhibits mesocotyl growth mainly by reducing the IAA supply from the coleoptile is supported. However, mesocotyl growth in seedlings from which the coleoptiles have been removed is also inhibited by R (about 25% inhibition in 8 h). This inhibition is not related to changes in the IAA level, and not relieved by applied IAA. In intact seedlings, this effect may also participate in the inhibition of mesocotyl growth by R. Inhibition of cell division by R, whose mechanism is not known, will also result in reduced mesocotyl elongation especially in the long term (e.g. 24 h).Abbreviations FR far-red light - IAA indole-3-acetic acid - Pfr phytochrome in the far-red-absorbing form - Pr phytochrome in the red-absorbing form - R red light  相似文献   

4.
Abstract Optimal conditions for studying the elongation response to a 1 mmol m?2, 2-min pulse of red light in subapical coleoptile sections from dark-grown oat (Avena sativa L. ev. Lodi) seedlings have been determined. A technique for obtaining standard-length coleoptile sections without exposing either seedlings or sections to any light has been developed, and is described. The optimal conditions found were: sampling time, 12 h after irradiation; buffer conditions, 5 mol m?3 potassium phosphate with 5% (w/v) sucrose (pH 5.9). The optima were determined by obtaining the time course for light-induced growth under various conditions. The red light-induced growth response is linear until 12 h after irradiation, when it undergoes an interruption. Optimal incubation conditions were determined by varying the buffer contents systematically and measuring the responses at the optimal lime determined. The results indicate a distinct difference between auxin-induced and light-induced growth responses. Even with variations of basal growth rate and several incubation conditions, the red light-induced elongation appears to be of a constant magnitude, to persist for a constant time period. and to exhibit a constant lag period between irradiation and the onset of response. The use of sections that were produced and handled in complete darkness yielded an unusual response to fusicoccin. A linear, high growth rate in response to I mmol m?3 FC was observed for more than 12 h, both in the irradiated sections and in the dark controls.  相似文献   

5.
Bleiss W  Smith H 《Plant physiology》1985,77(3):552-555
Continuous recordings were made using a linear displacement transducer to investigate short-term growth responses of intact dark-grown wheat (Triticum aestivum L. cv Maris Huntsman) seedlings to red light. To eliminate any effect of light prior to the experimental treatments, the seedlings were grown and mounted on the transducer apparatus in total darkness. The growth kinetics after irradiation were complex and appeared to consist of three successive phases of growth deceleration. When the tip of the intact coleoptile was irradiated with red light from two opposite fiber bundles (fluence rate: 2 × 64 micromoles per square meter per second) for varying periods of time (10 seconds, 1 minute, 5 minutes, continuous), a decrease in extension rate was detectable after a latent period of 8 to 10 minutes. Up to 30 minutes after the start of the irradiation treatment, there was no difference in the kinetics of inhibition (about 20 to 25% inhibition) between the different lengths of irradiation. Extension rate reached a minimum (65% inhibition) at about 85 minutes, after which growth acceleration toward the dark control rate was observed. Far-red reversibility of the rapid effect of red light on growth was not observed, even when far-red light was given only 4 seconds after the end of 10 seconds red light. Short (15 seconds) far-red light did not induce a response.  相似文献   

6.
Abstract. Three responses (mesocotyl and coleoptile elongation and anthocyanin accumulation in the coleoptile) to end- of-day far-red irradiation in light-grown corn show rapid failure of the reciprocity law such that short, high fluence rate irradiations are much more effective than long, low fluence rate ones of the same fluence (reverse reciprocity failure). The reciprocity failure cannot be explained by escape from photoreversibility, a change in sensitivity to Pfr, reciprocity failure for photoconversion, or a high irradiance response taking over for long irradiation times. Fluence–response curves measured by varying irradiation time at a low fluence rate show the threshold fluence shifted to higher energy in comparison with fluence–response curves obtained at a high fluence rate. Red reversal of these responses also shows rapid reciprocity failure in the same direction, a process which can be only partially explained by escape. These responses to end-of-day far-red and red illumination are distinguished from high irradiance reactions by their low fluence requirements and ready reversibility. These same characteristics are similar to those of classical phytochrome- mediated, induction-reversion responses in etiolated tissue, but it is difficult to explain the rapid, reverse reciprocity failure in terms of standard phytochrome dogma.  相似文献   

7.
The elongation of etiolated Avena mesocotyls is inhibited by red light (660 mμ). Immediately after exposing mesocotyl sections to varying doses of red light the ensuing concentrations of phytochrome in the far-red absorbing form (P730) were measured. The extent of mesocotyl inhibition observed 5 days later is proportional to the logarithm of P730 concentration in mesocotyl tissue at the time of red light exposure.

The inhibition of mesocotyl growth by red light can be reversed partially by subsequent exposure to far-red light (730 mμ). Increasing doses of far-red light result in decreasing concentrations of P730 as compared with the original P730 level due to the preceding red light exposure. The reduced mesocotyl inhibition of seedings which had been exposed to red and far-red light is proportional to the logarithm of P730 concentration remaining in the tissue at the end of the two light exposures.

This indicates that the same correlation exists between P730 concentration and growth response whether the seedlings had been exposed to red light only or to red followed by far-red light.

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8.
Blue light induces a long-term suppression of epicotyl elongation in red-light-grown pea (Pisum sativum L.) seedlings. The fluence-response characteristics are bell-shaped, indicating the possibility of two different blue-light responses: a lower fluence response causing suppression and a higher fluence response alleviating the suppression. To determine if two responses are in effect, we have grown pea seedlings under dark conditions hoping to eliminate one or the other response. Under these growth conditions, only the lower fluence portion of the response (suppression of elongation) is apparent. The kinetics of suppression are similar to those observed for the lower fluence response of red-light-grown seedlings. The response to blue light in the dark-grown seedlings is not due to the excitation of phytochrome because a pulse of far-red light large enough to negate phytochrome-induced suppression has no effect on the blue-light-induced suppression. Furthermore, treatment of the dark-grown seedlings with red light immediately prior to treatment with high fluence blue light does not elicit the higher fluence response, indicating that the role of red light in the blue high fluence response is to allow the plant to achieve a specific developmental state in which it is competent to respond to the higher fluences of blue light.  相似文献   

9.
Diffusible auxin levels were measured in coleoptiles and mesocotyls of dark-grown seedlings ofavena sativa (cv. Spear) andZea mays (cv. Golden Cross Bantam) using theAvena curvature bioassay. The coleoptile tip was confirmed as the major auxin source in etiolated seedlings. Auxin levels were found to decrease basipetally in sequent sections of theAvena coleoptile but not to decrease in apical sections of increasing length. An inhibitor capable of inducing positive curvatures ofAvena test coleoptiles was discovered in diffusates from the mesocotyls of oat and corn seedlings. The amount of this inhibitor was correlated with the cessation of mesocotyl growth of oat seedlings grown in darkness, and with the inhibition of mesocotyl growth of corn seedlings exposed to red light.  相似文献   

10.
Iino  Moritoshi  Briggs  Winslow R.  Schäfer  Eberhard 《Planta》1984,160(1):41-51
Unilateral irradiation with red light (R) or blue light (BL) elicits positive curvature of the mesocotyl of maize (Zea mays L.) seedlings raised under R for 2 d from sowing and kept in the dark for 1 d prior to curvature induction. The fluenceresponse curve for R-induced mesocotyl curvature, obtained by measuring curvature 100 min after phototropic induction, shows peaks in two fluence ranges, designated first positive range (from the threshold to the trough), and second positive range (above the trough). The fluence-response curve for BL is similar to that for R but shifted two orders of magnitude to higher fluences. Blue light elicits the classical first positive curvature of the coleoptile, whereas this response is not found with R. Positive mesocotyl curvature induced by either R or BL is eliminated by R given from above just before the unilateral irradiation, whereas BL-induced coleoptile curvature is not eliminated. The above results collectively offer evidence that phototropic curvature of the mesocotyl is induced by R-sensitive photosystem(s). Mesocotyl curvature in the second positive range is reduced by vertical far-red light (FR) applied after phototropic induction with R, but is not affected by FR applied before R. Unilateral irradiation with FR following vertical irradiation with a high R fluence leads to negative curvature of the mesocotyl. It is concluded that mesocotyl curvature in the second positive range results from a gradient in the amount of the FR-absorbing form of phytochrome (Pfr) established across the plant axis. Mesocotyl curvature in the first positive range is inhibited by vertical FR given either before or after phototropic induction with R. Since the FR used here is likely to produce more Pfr than the very low fluences of R eliciting the mesocotyl curvature in the first positive range, it is assumed that FR reduces the response in this case by adding Pfr at both sides of the plant axis. By rotating seedlings on a clinostat with its axis horizontal, the kinetics of mesocotyl curvature can be studied in the absence of a counteracting gravitropic response. On the clinostat, the R-induced mesocotyl curvature develops after a lag, through two successive phases having different curvature rates, the late phase is slower than the early phase. Negative curvature of the coleoptile can be induced by either R or BL; the BL-induced negative curvature is found at fluences higher than those giving positive curvature. The clinostat experiments show that the negative coleoptile curvature induced by either R or BL is a gravitropic compensation for positive mesocotyl curvature.Abbreviations BL blue light - FR far-red light - Pfr phytochrome in the far-red-absorbing form - Pr phytochrome in the red-absorbing form - R red light C.I.W.-D.P.B. Publication No. 824  相似文献   

11.
  1. Under continuous irradiation, the growth of intact rice coleoptilewas strongly inhibited by red light, and somewhat preventedby blue and far-red light. The inhibitory effect of red lighton coleoptile elongation was caused by a low-energy brief irradiation,and a single exposure of 1.5 kiloergs cm–2 incidentenergy of red light brought about the 50% inhibition. This photoinhibitionof growth was observed only after the coleoptile had elongatedto about 10 mm or longer. The red light-induced effect was reversedby an immediately following brief exposure to far-red light,and the photoresponses to red and far-red light were repeatedlyreversible. The escape reaction of red lightinduced effect tookplace at a rate so that 50% of the initial reversibility waslost within 9 hr in darkness at 27. The inhibition by bluelight and reversal by far-red irradiation was also achievedrepeatedly with successive treatments of the coleoptiles. Theevidence for a low intensity red far-red reversible controlof coleoptile growth, indicative of control by phytochrome,seems clearly established in etiolated intact seedlings.
  2. Incontrast, the elongation of apically excised rice coleoptilesegments was promoted by a brief exposure to red light in 0.02M phosphate buffer, pH 7, and the effect was almost completelynullified by an immediately subsequent exposure to far-red light.It becomes evident that the growth of intact coleoptiles wasinhibited by a exposure to red light, while that of excisedsegments in a buffer was rather promoted by red irradiation.The direction of red light induced responses, either promotiveor inhibitory, depends upon the method of bioassay using intactcoleoptiles or their excised segments.
(Received July 24, 1967; )  相似文献   

12.
13.
Decapitation or red light irradiation (R) inhibited growth and Golgi-localized glucan synthetase (GS I) activity in the mesocotyl of intact maize (Zea mays L.) seedlings. Applied auxin (indole-3-acetic acid) prevented the effects of R and of decapitation on both growth and GS I. Auxin applied several hours after irradiation prevented any further decline in GS I but did not restore it. Mesocotyl segments incubated in solution elongated in response to auxin but lost GS I with time regardless of the presence of exogenous auxin. An attached seed was necessary for maintenance of GS I in the dark-grown mesocotyl.Abbreviations GS glucan synthetase - IAA indole-3-acetic acid - R red light  相似文献   

14.
When dark-grown maize (Zea mays L.) seedlings were exposed to red light (R), Golgi-localized glucan synthetase activity in the mesocotyl began to decrease within 1 h, and fell by approx. 70% in 12 h. The response required at least 10-2 mol m-2 R and saturated at 100 mol m-2. Far-red light (FR) alone inhibited glucan synthetase, and FR reversed the inhibition by R back to the level caused by FR alone. Density gradient fractionation indicated that of the major membrane markers only the Golgi-localized glucan-synthetase activity was affected by R. Golgi-localized latent inosine-diphosphatase activity was unaffected. The kinetics of the response, the photon fluence dependence, and the reversibility by FR all correlated with the inhibition by light of elongation of the mesocotyl, indicating that light inhibits growth and glucan synthetase activity by a similar mechanism.Abbreviations FR far-red light - GS glucan synthetase - IAA indole-3-acetic acid - R red light  相似文献   

15.
Red light controls cell elongation in seedlings of rice (Oryza sativa L.) in a far-red-reversible manner (Nick and Furuya, 1993, Plant Growth Regul. 12, 195–206). The role of gibberellins and microtubules in the transduction of this response was investigated in the rice cultivars Nihon Masari (japonica type) and Kasarath (indica type). The dose dependence of mesocotyl elongation on applied gibberellic acid (GA3) was shifted by red light, and this shift was reversed by far-red light. In contrast, coleoptile elongation was found to be independent of exogenous GA3. Nevertheless, it was inhibited by red light, and this inhibition was reversed by far-red light. The content of the active gibberellin species GA1 and GA4 was estimated by radio-immunoassay. In the mesocotyl, the gibberellin content per cell was found to increase after irradiation with red light, and this increase was far-red reversible. Conversely, the cellular gibberellin content in japonica-type coleoptiles did not exhibit any significant light response. Microtubules reoriented from transverse to longitudinal arrays in response to red light and this reorientation could be reversed by subsequent far-red light in both the coleoptile and the mesocotyl. This movement was accompanied by changes in cell-wall birefringence, indicating parallel reorientations of cellulose deposition. The data indicate that phytochrome regulates the sensitivity of the tissue towards gibberellins, that gibberellin synthesis is controlled in a negative-feedback loop dependent on gibberellin effectiveness, and that at least two hormone-triggered signal chains are linked to the cytoskeleton in rice.Abbreviations D darkness - FR far-red light - GA3 gibberellic acid - GC-SIM gas chromatography-selected ion monitoring - R red light This work was supported by a grant of the Human Frontier Science Organization to P.N. Advice and organizational support by Prof. M. Furuya (Hitachi Advanced Research Laboratory, Hatoyama, Japan) and Prof. N. Murofushi (Department of Agricultural Chemistry, University of Tokyo, Japan) is gratefully acknowledged. Seeds of both rice cultivars were kindly provided by Dr. O. Yatou (Institute for Radiation Breeding, Hitachi-Ohmiya, Japan), and the antiGA1 Me-antiserum for the radio-immunoassays by Dr. I. Yamaguchi (Department of Agricultural Chemistry, University of Tokyo, Japan).  相似文献   

16.
Diffusible auxin levels were measured in coleoptiles and mesocotyls of dark-grown seedlings ofavena sativa (cv. Spear) andZea mays (cv. Golden Cross Bantam) using theAvena curvature bioassay. The coleoptile tip was confirmed as the major auxin source in etiolated seedlings. Auxin levels were found to decrease basipetally in sequent sections of theAvena coleoptile but not to decrease in apical sections of increasing length. An inhibitor capable of inducing positive curvatures ofAvena test coleoptiles was discovered in diffusates from the mesocotyls of oat and corn seedlings. The amount of this inhibitor was correlated with the cessation of mesocotyl growth of oat seedlings grown in darkness, and with the inhibition of mesocotyl growth of corn seedlings exposed to red light.  相似文献   

17.
Mesocotyl elongation in 4 day old etiolated seedlings immediately following 3 hours of white light (3 h W) is reversibly controlled by phytochrome. Time-lapse video measurements were made of the 5 millimeter zone just below the coleoptile which is the main growth region of the mesocotyl. The growth kinetics were determined for five contiguous 1 millimeter zones subtending the coleoptile node for nonirradiated seedlings, for seedlings given 3 h W, and 3 h W followed by terminal far-red (FR) or red subsequent to the far-red (FR/R) irradiation. Each zone in nonirradiated seedlings exhibits exponential elongation kinetics during the early stages of elongation. This finding suggests that during elongation, a growth limiting factor is also exponentially increasing. Following 3 h W differences in the kinetic responses were found for each zone. In all zones, the inhibitory effect following the 3 h W is totally FR reversible. The effect of FR is reversed by R. The upper zone exhibits the fastest response and is the most plastic in its growth response. The three upper zones all exhibit spontaneous and sharp recoveries with time. It is suggested that the control by phytochrome is not inductive but rather continuous, the controlling factor being either the level of the far red-absorbing form of phytochrome (Pfr) or the ratio Pfr to total phytochrome.  相似文献   

18.
The growth of rice seedlings (Oryza satira L.) in the presence of ethylene caused a change in the response to light of coleoptile elongation. In plants grown in air without added ethylene coleoptile elongation was promoted by red, far-red and yellow-green light only in very young seedlings; in older plants irradiation inhibited the growth of the coleoptile. The effect of growing plants in the presence of ethylene was to prolong the period during which light promoted coleoptile growth. Elongation of the first internode was inhibited by light whether or not the seedlings were grown in the presence of ethylene. A correlation existed between the growth effect of an irradiation and the initial decay rate of phytochrome which was established by the treatment. Regardless of wave length, light sources whose intensities were adjusted to produce a decay rate of about 10% per hour or less induced a moderate rate of coleoptile elongation which persisted for a relatively long period. Irradiation with red or yellow-green light of higher intensity which produced a higher rate of phytochrome decay induced a higher rate of coleoptile elongation, but growth stopped after several hours. Other observations, however, showed that one cannot establish a general simple correlation between the rate of elongation of rice coleoptiles under light and the status of measurable phytochrome in the plant.  相似文献   

19.
Light-induced coleoptile stimulation and mesocotyl suppression in etiolated Avena sativa (cv. Lodi) has been quantitated. Etiolated seedlings showed the greatest response to light when they were illuminated 48 to 56 hours after imbibition. Two low-irradiance photoresponses for each tissue have been described. Red light was 10 times more effective than green and 1,000 times more effective than far red light in evoking these responses. The first response, which resulted in a 45% mesocotyl suppression and 30% coleoptile stimulation, had a threshold at 10−14 einsteins per square centimeter and was saturated at 3.0 × 10−12 einsteins per square centimeter of red light. This very low-irradiance response could be induced by red, green, or far red light and was not photoreversible. Reciprocity failed if the duration of the red illumination exceeded 10 minutes. The low-irradiance response which resulted in 80% mesocotyl suppression and 60% coleoptile stimulation, had a threshold at 10−10 einsteins per square centimeter and was saturated at 3.0 × 10−8 einsteins per square centimeter of red light. A complete low-irradiance response could be induced by either red or green light but not by far red light. This response could be reversed by a far red dose 30 times greater than that of the initial red dose for both coleoptiles and mesocotyls. Reciprocity failed if the duration of the red illumination exceeded 170 minutes. Both of these responses can be explained by the action of phytochrome.  相似文献   

20.
Either 5-[3H]indole-3-acetic acid (IAA) or 5-[3H]indole-3-acetyl-myo-inositol was applied to the endosperm of kernels of dark-grown Zea mays seedlings. The distribution of total radioactivity, radiolabeled indole-3-acetic acid, and radiolabeled ester conjugated indole-3-acetic acid, in the shoots was then determined. Differences were found in the distribution and chemical form of the radiolabeled indole-3-acetic acid in the shoot depending upon whether 5-[3H]indole-3-acetic acid or 5-[3H]indole-3-acetyl-myo-inositol was applied to the endosperm. We demonstrated that indole-3-acetyl-myo-inositol applied to the endosperm provides both free and ester conjugated indole-3-acetic acid to the mesocotyl and coleoptile. Free indole-3-acetic acid applied to the endosperm supplies some of the indole-3-acetic acid in the mesocotyl but essentially no indole-3-acetic acid to the coleoptile or primary leaves. It is concluded that free IAA from the endosperm is not a source of IAA for the coleoptile. Neither radioactive indole-3-acetyl-myo-inositol nor IAA accumulates in the tip of the coleoptile or the mesocotyl node and thus these studies do not explain how the coleoptile tip controls the amount of IAA in the shoot.  相似文献   

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