Affiliation:
1. Department of Soil and Crop Sciences, Texas A&M University, College Station, Texas 77843–2474
Abstract
Abstract
Regulation of rhythmic peaks in levels of endogenous gibberellins (GAs) by photoperiod was studied in the short-day monocot sorghum (Sorghum bicolor [L.] Moench). Comparisons were made between three maturity (Ma) genotypes: 58M (Ma1Ma1,Ma2Ma2,phyB-1phyB-1, andMa4Ma4 [a phytochrome B null mutant]); 90M (Ma1Ma1,Ma2Ma2,phyB-2phyB-2, andMa4Ma4); and 100M (Ma1Ma1,Ma2Ma2,PHYBPHYB, andMa4Ma4). Plants were grown for 14 d under 10-, 14-, 16-, 18-, and 20-h photoperiods, and GA levels were assayed by gas chromatography-mass spectrometry every 3 h for 24 h. Under inductive 10-h photoperiods, the peak of GA20 and GA1 levels in 90M and 100M was shifted from midday, observed earlier with 12-h photoperiods, to an early morning peak, and flowering was hastened. In addition, the early morning peaks in levels of GA20 and GA1 in 58M under conditions allowing early flowering (10-, 12-, and 14-h photoperiods) were shifted to midday by noninductive (18- and 20-h) photoperiods, and flowering was delayed. These results are consistent with the possibility that the diurnal rhythm of GA levels plays a role in floral initiation and may be one way by which the absence of phytochrome B causes early flowering in 58M under most photoperiods.
Publisher
Oxford University Press (OUP)
Subject
Plant Science,Genetics,Physiology