KCN Blocks the Inhibiting Effect of Red Light Night-Break onthe Flowering of Pharbitis nil

1995 ◽  
Vol 145 (1-2) ◽  
pp. 189-190 ◽  
Author(s):  
Mariusz Cymerski ◽  
Jan Kopcewicz
2014 ◽  
Vol 63 (3-4) ◽  
pp. 275-278 ◽  
Author(s):  
Mariusz Cymerski ◽  
Jan Kopcewicz

Seedlings of <i>Pharbitis nil</i> cultivated under non-inductive conditions of white light were subjected to generative induction applying one 16-hour-long period of inductive night. During the eighth hour the night was interrupted with 1 min of red light pulse which completely inhibited the flowering. Treating the plants with KCN blocked the inhibiting effect of red light. Because KCN lowers considerably the rate of destruction of labile Pfd in some plant systems, it seems probable that red light night-break irradiation (without KCN), which blocked the flowering, leads also to the accumulation of unknown Pfd destruction products (irreversible phytochrome). It also suggests that it is not the labile PfrI itself but the products of its irreversible transformation that could be active in the photoperiodic control of flowering.


2011 ◽  
Vol 80 (1) ◽  
pp. 21-26 ◽  
Author(s):  
Emilia Wilmowicz ◽  
Kamil Frankowski ◽  
Paulina Glazińska ◽  
Jacek Kęsy ◽  
Jan Kopcewicz

<p>Flowering of plants is controlled by hormones among which both stimulators and inhibitors are present. The role of abscisic acid (ABA) in flower induction of the short day plant <em>Pharbitis nil</em> was shown in our experiments through exogenous applications and endogenous level determination of the hormone in cotyledons of seedlings grown under special light conditions.</p><p>The application of ABA to cotyledons or shoot apices during the first half of a 24-h long inductive night inhibits flowering. The same compound applied towards the end of or after a 14-h long subinductive night increases the number of flower buds produced by these plants.</p><p>Exposing <em>P. nil</em> seedlings at the beginning of a 24-h long inductive night to far red light (FR) decreases the level of endogenous abscisic acid in cotyledons and leads to flower inhibition. However, a pulse of red light (R) reversing the inhibitory effect of far red light on the flowering of <em>P. nil</em> increases the ABA content.</p><p>The results obtained confirm previous observations that ABA may play a dual and an important role in the regulation of floral bud formation in <em>P. nil</em>. The flowering occurs when the level of endogenous abscisic acid is low at the beginning and is high toward the end of the inductive night.</p>


1976 ◽  
Vol 3 (2) ◽  
pp. 207 ◽  
Author(s):  
LT Evans

Plants of L. temulentum grown in short days were exposed at various times during one night to mixtures of red (R) and far red (FR) light or to prolonged irradiation on a spectrograph. Irradiation with red light through the latter half of the 16-h night was inductive of flowering, its effect being enhanced by exposure to FR during the first 6 h after the period in daylight. Brief exposure to FR during this initial period was as effective as continuous irradiation with FR, and its effect was reversible by brief subsequent exposure to R, implicating the pigment phytochrome. Brief exposures to mixtures of R + FR at various times during the first 6 h in darkness were used to chart apparent changes in the two forms of phytochrome. To judge from the R + FR mixtures giving null responses, phytochrome reverted from the Pfr to the Pr form progressively over the first 5 h of darkness. There was no evidence of inverse reversion after an initial exposure to FR. Optimum flowering response required most of the phytochrome to be present in the Pfr form in the initial hours after daylight, followed by a rise in the proportion of the Pfr form to that set by R. Reflecting this shift during the night in the optimum proportion of Pfr, the spectrograph experiments indicated peak effectiveness in the far red region of the spectrum for irradiation at the end of the period in daylight, and in the red region (~670 nm) for irradiation during the latter part of the night. Flower induction in this long day plant is optimal when phytochrome is mostly in the Pr form early in the night, and in the Pfr form later, a sequence opposite to that required by short day plants such as Pharbitis nil and Chenopodium rubrum.


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