Abstract

The involvement of indole-3-acetic acid (IAA) in the integration of the light signal perceived by phytochrome during the morphogenesis of plants was investigated in Nicotiana plumbaginifolia Viviani. The chromophore mutant pew1, deficient in all the phytochrome types, and the aurea-like mutant pew2, which appears to be specifically deficient in phytochromes expressed in darkness, were analysed for IAA-related morphogenic effects such as rooting, shooting and callus formation. We observed, in the absence of exogenously applied hormones, abundant root formation by the pew2 mutant. The pew1 mutant exhibited callus formation in the presence of gibberellins and cytokinins when the wild type did not. The previously described lethality of the double mutant pew1–pew2 was shown to be hormone-dependent since, in the light, exogenously applied auxin and cytokinin (0.1 mg·1−1 each) led to plant regeneration from calli and subsequent normal development. These observations suggested an increase in the auxin/cytokinin ratio as a consequence of the phytochrome mutations. We correlated these morphogenic characteristics with high IAA levels in the mutants. The difference in IAA accumulation in the two mutants indicates that among the different phytochromes expressed by N. plumbaginifolia, the light-expressed isoforms play a major role in the control of IAA levels.

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