Abstract

In this study we examined the biosynthesis of abscisic acid (ABA) by developing corn (Zea mays L.) embryos. Three comparisons were made: ABA biosynthesis in embryos isolated from kernels grown in vitro with those grown in the field; the developmental profile of ABA content with that of biosynthesis; and ABA biosynthesis in corn embryos lacking carotenoid precursors with ABA biosynthesis in normal embryos. Embryos were harvested at various times during seed development and divided into two groups. Endogenous levels of ABA were measured in one group of embryos and ABA biosynthetic capacity was measured in the other group. The ABA biosynthetic capacity was measured with and without tetcyclacis (an inhibitor of ABA degradation) in embryos from both field-grown and in-vitro-grown corn kernels. Reduced-carotenoid (either fluridone-treated or genetically viviparous) embryos were also included in the study. Corn kernels developing under field and in-vitro conditions differed from each other in their responses to tetcyclacis and in their profiles of ABA biosynthesis during development. Therefore, in-vitro kernel culture may not be an appropriate substitute for field conditions for studies of embryo development. The developmental profiles of endogenous ABA content differed from those of ABA biosynthesis in isolated embryos of both in-vitro-and field-grown kernels. This indicated that ABA levels in the developing embryos were determined by import from the maternal tissues available to the embryos rather than by in-situ biosynthesis. In embryos with reduced levels of carotenoids, either fluridone-treated or genetically viviparous embryos, ABA biosynthesis was low or nonexistent. This result is expected for the presence of an indirect pathway of ABA biosynthesis and in the absence of ABA precursors.

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