The Content and In Vivo Metabolism of Gibberellin in Apple Vegetative Tissues

被引:6
作者
Yang, Xiaohua [1 ]
Brown, Susan K. [1 ,2 ]
Davies, Peter J. [1 ,3 ]
机构
[1] Cornell Univ, Dept Hort, Ithaca, NY 14850 USA
[2] Cornell Univ, Dept Plant Breeding & Genet, Ithaca, NY 14850 USA
[3] Cornell Univ, Dept Plant Biol, Ithaca, NY 14850 USA
关键词
Malus domestica; plant hormone; dwarf; stem elongation; breeding; ENDOGENOUS GIBBERELLINS; REPRODUCTIVE GROWTH; EXPRESSION ANALYSIS; BIENNIAL BEARING; IDENTIFICATION; BIOSYNTHESIS; SHOOTS; XYLEM; GENE; PEA;
D O I
10.21273/JASHS.138.3.173
中图分类号
S6 [园艺];
学科分类号
0902 ;
摘要
Despite the demonstrated importance of gibberellins (GAs) as regulators of fruit tree stature, information on their in vivo metabolism in apple vegetative tissues is still lacking. To determine whether the GA content and metabolism differs between dwarf and standard phenotypes and the influence of rootstocks, [C-14]GA(12), a common precursor of all GAs in higher plants, was applied to vigorously growing apple (Mains xdomestica) shoots collected from the scion cultivar Redcort on MM.106, a growth-promoting rootstock, and dwarf and standard seedlings on their own roots from progeny 806 (a cross between a breeding selection with reduced stature and an advanced breeding selection with a standard tree form). Twenty-one metabolites were identified by high-performance liquid chromatography (HPLC) and used as tracers for the purification of endogenous GAs. The existence of endogenous and [H-2]-labeled GA(12), GA(15), GA(53), GA(44), GA(19), GA(20), and GA(3) was demonstrated by gas chromatography-mass spectrometry (GC-MS); GA(20) was the major GA present, with slightly less GA(19) and GA(44), and with GA(3) present at approximately one-third the level of GA(20). Despite specific searching, neither GA(4), GA(7), GA(1), nor GA(29) was found, showing that [C-14]GA(12) is metabolized mainly through the 13-hydroxylation pathway and that GA(3) is a bioactive GA in apple vegetative tissues. The invigorating rootstock led to a slow GA metabolic rate in 'Redcort'. For self-rooted plants, the same GAs were identified in dwarf and standard seedlings from progeny 806, although standard plants metabolized at twice the speed of dwarf plants. Young branches of dwarf 806 plants treated with GA(3) were one-third longer with more nodes but similar in internode length. We conclude that the dwarf phenotype in progeny 806 is not caused by a lack of certain GAs in the GA biosynthesis pathway downstream of GA(12).
引用
收藏
页码:173 / 183
页数:11
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [41] ROOTSTOCK AFFECTS VEGETATIVE GROWTH-CHARACTERISTICS AND PRODUCTIVITY OF DELICIOUS APPLE
    SCHECHTER, I
    ELFVING, DC
    PROCTOR, JTA
    HORTSCIENCE, 1991, 26 (09) : 1145 - 1148
  • [42] Comparison of Phenolic Composition of Healthy Apple Tissues and Tissues Affected by Bitter Pit
    Zupan, Anka
    Mikulic-Petkovsek, Maja
    Cunja, Vlasta
    Stampar, Franci
    Veberic, Robert
    JOURNAL OF AGRICULTURAL AND FOOD CHEMISTRY, 2013, 61 (49) : 12066 - 12071
  • [43] Small RNA-Sequencing Links Physiological Changes and RdDM Process to Vegetative-to-Floral Transition in Apple
    Guo, Xinwei
    Ma, Zeyang
    Zhang, Zhonghui
    Cheng, Lailiang
    Zhang, Xiuren
    Li, Tianhong
    FRONTIERS IN PLANT SCIENCE, 2017, 8
  • [44] The brassinosteroid growth response in pea is not mediated by changes in gibberellin content
    Jager, CE
    Symons, GM
    Ross, JJ
    Smith, JJ
    Reid, JB
    PLANTA, 2005, 221 (01) : 141 - 148
  • [45] Fruit setting rewires central metabolism via gibberellin cascades
    Shinozaki, Yoshihito
    Beauvoit, Bertrand P.
    Takahara, Masaru
    Hao, Shuhei
    Ezura, Kentaro
    Andrieu, Marie-Helene
    Nishida, Keiji
    Mori, Kazuki
    Suzuki, Yutaka
    Kuhara, Satoshi
    Enomoto, Hirofumi
    Kusano, Miyako
    Fukushima, Atsushi
    Mori, Tetsuya
    Kojima, Mikiko
    Kobayashi, Makoto
    Sakakibara, Hitoshi
    Saito, Kazuki
    Ohtani, Yuya
    Benard, Camille
    Prodhomme, Duyen
    Gibon, Yves
    Ezura, Hiroshi
    Ariizumi, Tohru
    PROCEEDINGS OF THE NATIONAL ACADEMY OF SCIENCES OF THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA, 2020, 117 (38) : 23970 - 23981
  • [46] Gibberellin biosynthesis and metabolism: A convergent route for plants, fungi and bacteria
    Salazar-Cerezo, Sonia
    Martinez-Montiel, Nancy
    Garcia-Sanchez, Jenny
    Perez-y-Terron, Rocio
    Martinez-Contreras, Rebeca D.
    MICROBIOLOGICAL RESEARCH, 2018, 208 : 85 - 98
  • [47] Practical Applications of Manipulating Plant Architecture by Regulating Gibberellin Metabolism
    Bhattacharya, Anjanabha
    Kourmpetli, Sofia
    Davey, Michael R.
    JOURNAL OF PLANT GROWTH REGULATION, 2010, 29 (02) : 249 - 256
  • [48] The brassinosteroid growth response in pea is not mediated by changes in gibberellin content
    Corinne E. Jager
    Gregory M. Symons
    John J. Ross
    Jennifer J. Smith
    James B. Reid
    Planta, 2005, 221 : 141 - 148
  • [49] Introducing selective agrochemical manipulation of gibberellin metabolism into a cereal crop
    Zhang, Juan
    Zhang, Yushi
    Xing, Jiapeng
    Yu, Haiyue
    Zhang, Rui
    Chen, Yiyao
    Zhang, Delin
    Yin, Ping
    Tian, Xiaoli
    Wang, Qiang
    Duan, Liusheng
    Zhang, Mingcai
    Peters, Reuben J.
    Li, Zhaohu
    NATURE PLANTS, 2020, 6 (02) : 67 - +
  • [50] Increased phenolic content in apple leaves infected with the apple scab pathogen
    Mikulic-Petkovsek, M.
    Stampar, F.
    Veberic, R.
    JOURNAL OF PLANT PATHOLOGY, 2008, 90 (01) : 49 - 55