首页 | 本学科首页   官方微博 | 高级检索  
     


Floral-stimulus activity in tobacco stem pieces
Authors:Carl N. McDaniel  Laura K. Hartnett
Affiliation:(1) Plant Science Group, Department of Biology, Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute, 12180-3590 Troy, NY, USA
Abstract:The growth patterns of axillary buds of dayneutral tobacco (Nicotiana tabacum L. cv. Wisconsin 38) plants were assessed by using expiants of single buds attached to leafless stem cuttings and allowing the buds to grow to flowering without additional manipulation. Buds located 5, 10 and 15 nodes below the inflorescence were employed. For a given bud position, when a cutting had few internodes the growth pattern of a bud tended to fall into one of two groups: buds that produced few-noded shoots and buds that produced many-noded shoots. For example, in a group of 13 cuttings composed of bud 5 with 2 associated internodes, 11 buds produced 14.2 nodes (range, 11–17) and 2 buds produced 32.0 nodes (range, 30–34). As the number of internodes on the cutting increased, the number of buds producing few-noded shoots increased and the number of nodes produced decreased (e.g. in contrast to the data above, all 5th buds with 6 internodes produced 12.8 nodes; range 11–15). When cuttings from the 3 positions had the same number of internodes, the more apical cuttings had buds that produced fewer nodes (e.g. for cuttings with 6 internodes all 5th buds produced 12.8 nodes, all 10th buds produced 15.5 nodes and 85% of 15th buds produced few-noded shoots with 19.3 nodes). The number of nodes produced by a bud was a function of the original position of the stem piece and not the original position of the bud. That is, bud 5 associated with the 6 internodes below it produced 12.8 nodes and bud 10 associated with essentially the same 6 internodes (i.e. the 6 above it) produced 12.9 nodes while bud 10 associated with the 6 internodes below it produced 15.5 nodes. Thus, the number of nodes produced by a bud was dependent upon the original main-axis position of the cutting as well as the number of internodes on the cutting. Buds forced to grow out in situ on main axes devoid of leaves produced substantially more nodes than similar buds on cuttings. Buds isolated without associated internodes produced many-noded plants with a number of nodes similar to that of plants grown from seed. The simplest interpretation of these data is that stem pieces contain floral-stimulus activity and that this activity is present in a gradient with the highest activity being located in the apical part of the stem.We thank Susan Smith and Harry Roy (Rensselaer) for comments, and the National Science Foundation for financial support (IBN-9003739 to C.N.M.).
Keywords:Floral stimulus  Flowering  Nicotiana (flowering)
本文献已被 SpringerLink 等数据库收录!
设为首页 | 免责声明 | 关于勤云 | 加入收藏

Copyright©北京勤云科技发展有限公司  京ICP备09084417号