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Comparison of Endogenous Gibberellins and of the Fate of Applied Radioactive Gibberellin A1 in a Normal and a Dwarf Strain of Japanese Morning Glory
Author(s) -
G. W. M. Barendse,
Anton Lang
Publication year - 1972
Publication title -
plant physiology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 3.554
H-Index - 312
eISSN - 1532-2548
pISSN - 0032-0889
DOI - 10.1104/pp.49.5.836
Subject(s) - gibberellin , germination , hypocotyl , elongation , dwarfism , biology , strain (injury) , phytochrome , botany , gibberellic acid , horticulture , biochemistry , red light , anatomy , materials science , gene , metallurgy , ultimate tensile strength
The effect of application of GA(3) on hypocotyl growth, the endogenous GAs, and the metabolism of applied (3)H-GA(1) were investigated in relation to dwarfism and light-mediated growth inhibition in the normal (tall) strain Violet and the dwarf strain Kidachi of Japanese morning glory (Pharbitis nil). GA(3) applied in a wide concentration range (10(-9) to 10(-3)m) to 4-day-old seedlings caused great extension of the hypocotyls in light-grown plants of both the normal and the dwarf strain. However, the dwarf strain did not attain the same length as the normal one at any given GA(3) concentration, even when saturation was reached. Dark-grown plants of the dwarf strain responded to GA(3), although relatively much less than light-grown ones; dark-grown plants of the normal strain showed no GA(3) response at all.The levels of free GAs in both strains remained more or less constant in both dark- and light-grown plants up to 18 days after germination. The levels of bound GA in dark- as well as light-grown plants of both strains increased after germination, reached a maximum at the 9th day after germination, and then rapidly declined again. The period of increase coincided with rapid elongation of the hypocotyl and the expansion of the cotyledons.The dwarf strain, Kidachi, contained less endogenous gibberellins, particularly bound gibberellins, than the normal strain, Violet. Dark-grown plants of both strains contained less bound GAs than light-grown plants.Applied (3)H-GA(1) was metabolized to the same extent in both dwarfs and normals, on the one hand, and in both dark- and light-grown plants, on the other. This metabolism involved binding as well as breakdown of the (3)H-GA(1).

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