Abstract

A small blue-light beam (50 μm in diam) was used to examine light-growth response and phototropism inPilobolus crystallinus sporangiophores. Continuous irradiation by microbeam of a region 100–150 μm from the apex promoted the growth of a dark-adapted sporangiophore for about 15 min after a lag period of 1–2 min. After the promotion, the growth rate fell below that before the irradiation. Irradiation of the apex of sporangiophore slightly promoted the growth but strongly inhibited the growth after the promotion. A smaller light beam (10 μm in diam) applied continuously at grazing incidence along one side of the sporangiophore caused bending toward the shaded side, implying that the irradiated side grew more rapidly than the shaded side and that the lens effect is involved in the phototropism of young sporangiophores ofP. crystallinus. The involvement of the lens effect was confirmed by the fact that a carotenoid-less mutant was 1.5–2 times more sensitive to unilateral blue light than the wild type, probably because of a smaller intracellular light attenuation during passage through the mutant cell.

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