Abstract

Brief irradiation of intact etiolated seedlings of maize (Zea mays L.) with red light (R; 30 μW cm(-2), 10 min) reduces the amounts of diffusible and free (solvent-extractable) indole-3-acetic acid (IAA) obtainable from excised coleoptile tips. The effect is transient, the lowest level (30% of the dark control) occurring at about 3 h after irradiation. The free-IAA content of the whole coleoptile and the diffusible-IAA yield from the base of the same organ are similarly reduced, whereas the conjugated-IAA content of the coleoptile is not affected. These results support the view that R inhibits the production of IAA at the coleoptile tip. It is further shown that R inhibits biosynthesis of [(3)H]IAA from [(3)H]tryptophan supplied to the coleoptile tip. The shapes of the fluence-response curves obtained for the reduction of the diffusible-IAA yield by R and far-red light (FR) indicate the participation of two photoreactive systems. One has thresholds at 10(-3) μW s cm(2) of R, five orders of magnitude less than the minimum required for the appearance of spectrophotometrically measurable far-red-absorbing form of phytochrome (Pfr) in vivo, and 10(-1) μW s cm(-2) of FR; its response is linear to the logarithm of fluence exceeding five orders of magnitude. The other system is seen above 10(2) μW s cm(-2) as an increase in the slope of the fluenceresponse curve; its response is FR reversible and related to the Pfr level of total photoreversible phytochrome. Both systems inhibit biosynthesis of IAA from tryptophan. Elongation of the coleoptile is stimulated by R; the stimulation is most apparent in the apical region, and is saturated with a fluence at which bo detectable pfr is formed. Farred light can also saturate this response. Since the endogenous IAA concentration in the coleoptile appears not to be in the inhibitory range, it is concluded that the stimulation of coleoptile elongation is not the result of changes in free-IAA levels.

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