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Plant Physiology 71:767-771 (1983)
© 1983 American Society of Plant Biologists

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Articles

Putrescine and Acid Stress 1

Induction of Arginine Decarboxylase Activity and Putrescine Accumulation by Low pH

Nevin D. Young and Arthur W. Galston

Department of Biology, Yale University, New Haven, Connecticut 06511

Incubation of peeled oat Avena sativa L. var Victory leaf segments on media of pH 5.0 or below leads to a rapid and massive increase in the titer of putrescine while incubation at pH values above 5.0 causes little or no change. The low pH effect is independent of the buffer system employed. Putrescine levels rise within 3 hours and reach their peak 8 to 9 hours after acidification. At this time, putrescine titer is eight times greater at pH 3.5 than at 6.0. None of the other polyamines shows a response to changes in external pH. The increase in putrescine is blocked by the addition of cycloheximide or DL-{alpha}-difluoromethylarginine, a specific inhibitor of the putrescine biosynthetic enzyme, arginine decarboxylase. In one experiment, arginine decarboxylase activity was 110% greater at pH 4.0 than at 6.0 after a 4-hour incubation, although the average increase over many experiments was 47%. The activity of the other possible putrescine biosynthetic enzyme, ornithine decarboxylase, falls throughout the incubation period and is virtually equal at pH 4.0 and 6.0.


1 Supported by grants from the United States Public Health Service to N. D. Y. and from the Binational Agricultural Research and Development Fund to A. W. G.




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Copyright © 1983 by the American Society of Plant Biologists