Abstract

AC 94,377 caused elongation of seedlings of Triticum aestivum, Triticum durum, and Hordeum vulgare when applied to the soil, or the soil plus seed at planting. Affected were the leaf sheathes and the coleoptiles, and at high compound rates there was premature elongation of the stem internodes. As exemplified by the response of T. aestivum var. Fidel, the influence on coleoptile elongation was greatest under conditions whereby the coleoptile was naturally stimulated to elongate, i.e., when growth was in the dark and temperatures were cool (15°C). All of the stem internodes were capable of elongation except the one below the coleoptile node. The effect on leaf sheath elongation was prolonged when compared to activity of gibberellic acid. Several varieties of the three cereal species were examined in the greenhouse for sensitivity to AC 94,377 in order to evaluate the extent of the response. All of the barley varieties examined were sensitive to AC 94,377, elongating regardless of the planting conditions. Two such conditions were established, including incubation under warm (28/20°C) conditions following planting the grains 1 cm deep, and incubation under cool (22/16°C) conditions following planting the grains 6 cm deep. Wheat varieties distributed into two general categories, those which were sensitive and those which were not. The insensitivity correlated well to the presence of the reduced height (Rht) and GA-insensitive (Gai) genes in Triticum aestivum and Triticum durum, respectively. Thus, AC 94,377 can be used conveniently to evaluate varietal lines for the presence of this phenotype. This correlation also lends support to the notion that the Rht/Gai mutations in wheat are either at the level of a gibberellin receptor or at a step in the signal transduction pathway.

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