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Photoresponses of transgenic tobacco plants expressing an oat phytochrome gene
Authors:Alex C. McCormac  Joel R. Cherry  Howard P. Hershey  Richard D. Vierstra  Harry Smith
Affiliation:(1) Department of Botany, University of Leicester, LEI 7RH Leicester, UK;(2) Present address: Department of Horticulture, University of Wisconsin-Madison, 53706 Madison, WI;(3) Present address: Agricultural Products Department, E.I. du Pont de Nemours & Co., P.O. Box 80402, DE 19880-0402 Wilmington, USA
Abstract:The physiological responses of transgenic tobacco (Nicotiana tabacum L.) plants that express high levels of an introduced oat (Avena sativa L.) phytochrome (phyA) gene to various light treatments are compared with those of wild-type (WT) plants. Seeds, etiolated seedlings, and light-grown plants from a homozygous transgenic tobacco line (9A4) constructed by Keller et al. (EMBO J, 8, 1005–1012, 1989) were treated with red (R), far-red (FR), or white light (WL) with or without supplemental FR light, revealing major perturbations of the normal photobiological responses. White light stimulated germination of both WT and transgenic seed, but addition of FR to the WL treatment suppressed germination. In the WT, all fluence rates tested inhibited germination, but in the transgenics, reduction effluence rate partially relieved germination from the FR-mediated inhibition. It is suggested that the higher absolute levels of the FR-absorbing form of phytochrome (Pfr) in the irradiated transgenics, compared to the WT, may be responsible for the reduced FR-mediated inhibition of germination in the former. Hypocotyl extension of dark-grown seedlings of both WT and transgenic lines was inhibited by continuous R or FR irradiation, typical of the high-irradiance response (HIR). After 2 d of de-etiolation in WL, the WT seedlings had lost the FR-mediated inhibition of hypocotyl extension, whereas it was retained in the transgenics. The FR-mediated inhibition of hypocotyl extension in the transgenic seedlings after de-etiolation may reflect the persistence of an, FR-HIR response mediated by the overexpressed oat PhyA phytochrome. Light-grown WT seedlings exhibited typical shade-avoidance responses when treated with WL supplemented with high levels of FR radiation. Internode and petiole extension rates were markedly increased, and the chlorophyll aratiob ratio decreased, in the low-R: FR treatment. The transgenics, however, showed no increases in extension growth under low-R: FR treatments, and at low fluence rates both internode and petiole extension rates were significantly decreased by low R ratio FR. Interpretation of these data is difficult. The depression of the chlorophyll aratiob ratio by low R ratio FR was identical in WT and transgenic plants, indicating that not all shade-avoidance responses of light-grown plants were disrupted by the over-expression of the introduced oat phyA gene. The results are discussed in relation to the proposal that different members of the phytochrome family may have different physiological roles.Abbreviations FR far-red light - PAR photosynthetically active radiation - Pr, Pfr red- and FR-absorbing forms of phytochrome - Ptot total phytochrome - PhyA (PhyA) gene (encoded protein) for phytochrome - R red light - WL white light - WT wild typeThis work was supported by an Agricultural and Food Research Council research grant to H.S. and A.C.M.; the production of the transgenic seed was funded by the U.S. Department of Energy (DE-F602-88ER13968) to R.D.V., and by E.I. du Pont de Nemours; Dr. G.C. Whitelam is thanked for the provision of monoclonal antibodies for the immunoblot analyses.
Keywords:Gene (oat phyA)  Light (red   /content/n515q3323v361620/xxlarge8758.gif"   alt="  ratio"   align="  BASELINE"   BORDER="  0"  > far red ratio)  Nicotiana (transgenic, photoresponses)  Phytochrome  gene (in transgenic plant)
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