Abstract

AbstractThe active, far‐red light absorbing, form of phytochrome was found to inhibit growth and phytochrome levels in the mesocotyl and coleoptile of 4‐ to 5.5‐day‐old seedlings of Zea mays L. Short, low‐irradiance red or far‐red light treatments were used to produce different proportions of active phytochrome at the end of highdirradiance white‐light periods, which left different levels of total phytochrome in the plants. After light treatments which left relatively high levels of spectrophotometrically assayable phytochrome in the seedlings, apparent phytochrome synthesis in the subsequent dark period was low regardless of the proportions of each form of the pigment present at the beginning of the dark period. In light treatments producing relatively low levels of assayable phytochrome, levels of apparent phytochrome synthesis in both red and far‐red treatments and differences between apparent synthesis in red and far‐red treatments were maximal. No simple correlation was found between growth and apparent phytochrome synthesis. However, growth and total phytochrome levels were positively correlated in both organs. Using a subtractive method of correlation, in which only phytochrome effects were plotted, strong linear relationships between phytochrome levels or longitudinal growth and Pfr levels were found in those light treatments leaving greater than 8% of dark control levels of phytochrome in the tissues. Using this technique non‐linear, inverse relationships between Pfr and apparent phytochrome synthesis was found, indicating that modes of phytochrome control over phytochrome synthesis and growth differ. Our results are consistent with the view that in vivo assays of “bulk’ phytochrome reflect levels and states of the physiologically active phytochrome fraction under our experimental conditions in maize.

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