Polyamine Content and Action in Roots of Zea mays L. in Relation to Aerenchyma Development |
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Authors: | Jackson, Michael B. Hall, Keith C. |
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Affiliation: | Department of Agricultural Sciences, University of Bristol, Long Ashton Research Station, Bristol BS18 9AF, UK |
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Abstract: | Roots of Zea mays L. developed more aerenchyma (cortical gas-filledspace) when partially deficient in oxygen (3 kPa) than whensupplied with air (20·8 kPa oxygen) in association withfaster production of ethylene (ethene). The possibility wastested that the additional ethylene production resulted fromdecreases in spermidine (spd) and spermine (spm) which share,with ethylene, a common precursor, S-adenosylmethionine. However,no decreases in spd and spm were seen in root tissue up to 4d-old. Removing oxygen completely also had little effect onspd and spm, but strongly suppressed both ethylene productionand aerenchyma formation. Partial oxygen shortage (3 kPa) increased the concentrationof putrescine (put), the precursor of spd and spm. This increasewas not a response to the extra ethylene formed by such rootssince ethylene treatment did no reproduce the effect. Applicationof inhibitors of put biosynthesis, difluoromethylarginine anddifluoromethylornithine, led to increased aerenchyma formation.Exogenous put inhibited the development of aerenchyma whilestimulating rather than inhibiting ethylene production, whentested in either air or 3 kPa oxygen. Thus, put appears to limitaerenchyma formation by suppressing ethylene action rather thanits production.Copyright 1993, 1999 Academic Press Ethylene, ethene, roots, aerenchyma, polyamines, oxygen shortage, anaerobiosis, environmental stress, Zea mays |
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