The Arabidopsis thaliana hypocotyl is widely used to study the effects of light and plant growth factors on cell elongation. To provide a framework for the molecular-genetic analysis of cell elongation in this organ, here we describe, at the cellular level, its morphology and growth and identify a number of characteristic, developmental differences between light-grown and dark-grown hypocotyls. First, in the light epidermal cells show a characteristic differentiation that is not observed in the dark. Second, elongation growth of this organ does not involve significant cortical or epidermal cell divisions. However, endoreduplication occurs, as revealed by the presence of 4C and 8C nuclei. In addition, 16C nuclei were found specifically in dark-grown seedlings. Third, in the dark epidermal cells elongate along a steep, acropetal spatial and temporal gradient along the hypocotyl. In contrast, in the light all epidermal cells elongated continuously during the entire growth period. These morphological and physiological differences, in combination with previously reported genetic data (1. Desnos, V. Orbovic, C. Bellini, j. Kronenberger, M. Caboche, j. Traas, H. Hofte [19961 Development 122: 683-693), illustrate that light does not simply inhibit hypocotyl growth in a cell-autonomous fashion, but that the observed growth response to light is a part of an integrated developmental change throughout the elongating organ.
Freshly harvested seeds of Arabidopsis thaliana, Columbia (Col) accession were dormant when imbibed at 25°C in the dark. Their dormancy was alleviated by continuous light during imbibition or by 5 weeks of storage at 20°C (after-ripening). We investigated the possible role of reactive oxygen species (ROS) in the regulation of Col seed dormancy. After 24 h of imbibition at 25°C, non-dormant seeds produced more ROS than dormant seeds, and their catalase activity was lower. In situ ROS localization revealed that germination was associated with an accumulation of superoxide and hydrogen peroxide in the radicle. ROS production was temporally and spatially regulated: ROS were first localized within the cytoplasm upon imbibition of non-dormant seeds, then in the nucleus and finally in the cell wall, which suggests that ROS play different roles during germination. Imbibition of dormant and non-dormant seeds in the presence of ROS scavengers or donors, which inhibited or stimulated germination, respectively, confirmed the role of ROS in germination. Freshly harvested seeds of the mutants defective in catalase (cat2-1) and vitamin E (vte1-1) did not display dormancy; however, seeds of the NADPH oxidase mutants (rbohD) were deeply dormant. Expression of a set of genes related to dormancy upon imbibition in the cat2-1 and vet1-1 seeds revealed that their non-dormant phenotype was probably not related to ABA or gibberellin metabolism, but suggested that ROS could trigger germination through gibberellin signaling activation.
SummaryA majority of the cells in the Arabidopsis hypocotyl undergo endoreduplication. The number of endocycles in this organ is partially controlled by light. Up to two cycles occur in light-grown hypocotyls, whereas in the dark about 30% of the cells go through a third cycle. Is the inhibition of the third endocycle in the light an indirect result of the reduced cell size in the light-grown hypocotyl, or is it under independent light control? To address this question, the authors examined the temporal and spacial patterns of endoreduplication in light-or dark-grown plants and report here on the following observations: (i) during germination two endocycles take place prior to any significant cell expansion; (ii) in the dark the third cycle is completed very early during cell growth; and (iii) a mutation that dramatically reduces cell size does not interfere with the third endocycle. The authors then used mutants to study the way light controls the third endocycle and found that the third endocycle is completely suppressed in far red light through the action of phytochrome A and, to a lesser extent, in red light by phytochrome B. Furthermore, no 16C nuclei were observed in dark-grown constitutive photomorphogenic 1 seedlings. And, finally the hypocotyl of the cryptochrome mutant, hy4, grown in blue light was about three times longer than that of the wild-type without a significant difference in ploidy levels. Together, the results support the view that the inhibition of the third endocycle in light-grown hypocotyls is not the consequence of a simple feed-back mechanism coupling the number of cycles to the cell volume, but an integral part of the phytochrome-controlled photomorphogenic program.
At harvest, barley seeds are dormant because their germination is difficult above 20 degrees C. Incubation of primary dormant seeds at 30 degrees C, a temperature at which they do not germinate, results in a loss of their ability to germinate at 20 degrees C. This phenomenon which corresponds to an induction of a secondary dormancy is already observed after a pre-treatment at 30 degrees C as short as 4-6 h, and is optimal after 24-48 h. It is associated with maintenance of a high level of embryo ABA content during seed incubation at 30 degrees C, and after seed transfer at 20 degrees C, while ABA content decreases rapidly in embryos of primary dormant seeds placed directly at 20 degrees C. Induction of secondary dormancy also results in an increase in embryo responsiveness to ABA at 20 degrees C. Application of ABA during seed treatment at 30 degrees C has no significant additive effect on the further germination at 20 degrees C. In contrast, incubation of primary dormant seeds at 20 degrees C for 48 and 72 h in the presence of ABA inhibits further germination on water similarly to 24-48 h incubation at 30 degrees C. However fluridone, an inhibitor of ABA synthesis, applied during incubation of the grains at 30 degrees C has only a slight effect on ABA content and secondary dormancy. Expression of genes involved in ABA metabolism (HvABA8'OH-1, HvNCED1 and HvNCED2) was studied in relation to the expression of primary and secondary dormancies. The results presented suggest a specific role for HvNCED1 and HvNCED2 in regulation of ABA synthesis in secondary seed dormancy.
We have previously shown that endoreduplication levels in hypocotyls of Arabidopsis thaliana (L.) Heynh. are under negative control of phytochromes. In this study, the hormonal regulation of this process was analysed using a collection of A. thaliana mutants. The results show that two hormones in particular, gibberellin (GA) and ethylene, play distinct roles. Hypocotyl cells of the GA-deficient mutant ga1-11 grown in the dark did not elongate and showed a greatly reduced endoreduplication. Normal endoreduplication could be restored by supplying 10(-9) M of the gibberellin GA(4+7), whereas the restoration of normal cell growth required 100-fold higher concentrations. The GA-insensitive mutant gai showed reduced cell elongation but normal ploidy levels. We conclude that (i) GA(4+7) has a global positive effect on endoreduplication and (ii) that endoreduplication is more sensitive to GA(4+7) than cell elongation. Ethylene had a completely different effect. It induced an extra round of endoreduplication both in light- and dark-grown seedlings and acted mainly on discrete steps rather than having a global effect on endoreduplication. The genes EIN2 and CTR1, components of the ethylene signal transduction pathway were both involved in this process.
Primary dormant barley (Hordeum vulgare) grains germinate at 10-15°C but not at 30°C, and there exist a positive correlation between embryo ABA content after 24 h on water and the depth of dormancy. Incubation at 30°C results in a progressive loss of the ability to germinate at 15°C. This induction of a secondary dormancy is optimal after 3 days and requires an embryo water content higher than 0.50 g H₂O g⁻¹ DW, this corresponding with activation of the cell cycle. There exists no correlation between ABA content after 3 days at 30°C and the induction of secondary dormancy. However, at high water content (1.60-1.87 g H₂O g⁻¹ DW), secondary dormancy is associated with an high embryo ABA content after transfer to 15°C, resulting from an increase in HvNCED1 and HvNCED2 expression and a decrease in HvABA8'OH-1. Such changes are not observed at 0.45 g H₂O g⁻¹ DW. Incubation at 30°C also results in an increase in expression of genes involved in GA catabolism (HvGA2ox1, HvGA2ox3 and HvGA2ox5) and synthesis (HvGA3ox2, HvGA20ox1 and HvGA20ox3). The HvGA3ox2/HvGA2ox3 transcript ratio remains low (0.27-0.37) at 30°C and after transfer to 15°C in secondary dormant seeds, but it is higher than two when secondary dormancy is not induced. Changes in HvExpA11 expression indicate that GA signaling decreases when a secondary dormancy is expressed. Our results clearly indicate that expression of genes involved in ABA and GA metabolism differs in primary and secondary dormancies and furthermore, their expression is related to embryo water content.
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