Metzger J D, Dusbabek K
United States Department of Agriculture, Agricultural Research Service, Biosciences Research Laboratory, State University Station, Fargo, North Dakota 58105.
Plant Physiol. 1991 Oct;97(2):630-7. doi: 10.1104/pp.97.2.630.
Field pennycress (Thlaspi arvense L.) is a species with a cold requirement for the initiation of reproductive development (thermoinduction). Work in this laboratory has been focused on elucidating the biochemical and molecular mechanisms underlying the bolting or rapid stem elongation response that is an intricate part of reproductive development in this species. In the present paper the cellular basis for thermo-induced stem growth was determined. Evidence is presented indicating that bolting results from the production of new cells that elongate to their original length before thermoinduction. This increase in cell division occurs in the pith and cortex approximately 0.5 to 5.0 millimeters below the stem apex. For at least the early stages of thermo-induced stem growth, enhanced cell elongation does not appear to be a factor because average lengths of pith cells from stems of thermo-induced plants were similar or less than noninduced controls. In addition, both the amount of increase in the production of new pith cells and stem growth were positively correlated with the length of the cold treatment. Two other lines of evidence are presented corroborating previous assertions (JD Metzger [1985] Plant Physiol 78: 8-13) that gibberellins mediate thermo-induced stem growth in field pennycress. First, treatment of noninduced plants with gibberellin A(3) completely mimicked the effects of a 4-week cold treatment on mitotic activity in the pith and cortex. Second, very little increase in the production of new cells was observed in the pith and cortex of thermo-induced plants of a gibberellin-deficient dwarf mutant of field pennycress. It is also shown that the influence of photoperiod on stem growth is mediated by an effect on the final length that cells ultimately attain.
田野碎米荠(遏蓝菜,学名:Thlaspi arvense L.)是一种在生殖发育起始阶段需要低温诱导(感温)的物种。本实验室的工作重点是阐明该物种生殖发育复杂过程中抽薹或茎快速伸长反应背后的生化和分子机制。在本文中,确定了热诱导茎生长的细胞基础。有证据表明,抽薹是由新细胞产生导致的,这些新细胞在热诱导前伸长至其原始长度。这种细胞分裂的增加发生在茎尖下方约0.5至5.0毫米处的髓和皮层中。至少在热诱导茎生长的早期阶段,细胞伸长增强似乎不是一个因素,因为热诱导植物茎的髓细胞平均长度与未诱导的对照相似或更短。此外,新髓细胞产生的增加量和茎生长都与冷处理的时长呈正相关。还提供了另外两条证据,证实了先前的论断(JD Metzger [1985] Plant Physiol 78: 8 - 13),即赤霉素介导田野碎米荠的热诱导茎生长。第一,用赤霉素A(3)处理未诱导的植物完全模拟了4周冷处理对髓和皮层有丝分裂活性的影响。第二,在田野碎米荠赤霉素缺陷型矮化突变体的热诱导植物的髓和皮层中,未观察到新细胞产生有很大增加。研究还表明,光周期对茎生长的影响是通过对细胞最终达到的最终长度的作用来介导的。