Abstract

Red light causes a reduction in the extension growth of dark-grown seedlings. The involvement of gibberellin in this process was tested by screening a number of gibberellin synthesis and gibberellin response mutants of Pisum sativum L. for the kinetic response of stem growth inhibition by red light. Gibberellin deficient dwarfs, produced by mutant alleles at the Le, Na, and Ls loci, and gibberellin response mutants produced by mutant alleles at the La and Cry(2), Lka, and Lkb loci were tested. Extension growth of expanding third internodes of dark-grown seedlings was recorded with high resolution using angular position transducers. Seedlings were treated with red light at a fluence rate of 4 micromoles per square meter per second either continuously or for 75 seconds, and the response was measured over 9 hours. With certain small exceptions, the response to the red light treatments was similar in all the mutants and wild types examined. The lag time for the response was approximately 1 hour and a minimum in growth rate was reached by 3 to 4 hours after the onset of the light treatment. Growth rate depression at this point was about 80%. Seedlings treated with 75 seconds red light recovered growth to a certain extent. Red/far-red treatments indicated that the response was mediated largely by phytochrome. The similar responses to red light among these wild-type and mutant genotypes suggest that the short-term (i.e. 9 hour) response to red light is not mediated by either a reduction in the level of gibberellin or a reduction in the level or affinity of a gibberellin receptor.

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