Plant Physiol. Journal of Pharmacology and Experimental Therapeutics
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Plant Physiology 77:676-686 (1985)
© 1985 American Society of Plant Biologists

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Articles

Control of Seed Germination by Abscisic Acid 1

III. Effect on Embryo Growth Potential (Minimum Turgor Pressure) and Growth Coefficient (Cell Wall Extensibility) in Brassica napus L.

Peter Schopfer and Claudia Plachy

Biologisches Institut II der Universität, Schänzlestrasse 1, D 7800 Freiburg, West Germany

The physical mechanism of seed germination and its inhibition by abscisic acid (ABA) in Brassica napus L. was investigated, using volumetric growth (= water uptake) rate (dV/dt), water conductance (L), cell wall extensibility coefficient (m), osmotic pressure (i), water potential ({Psi}i), turgor pressure (P), and minimum turgor for cell expansion (Y) of the intact embryo as experimental parameters. dV/dt, i, and {Psi}i were measured directly, while m, P, and Y were derived by calculation. Based on the general equation of hydraulic cell growth [dV/dt = Lm/(L + m) ({Delta} - Y), where {Delta} = i - of the external medium], the terms (Lm/(L + m) and i - Y were defined as growth coefficient (kG) and growth potential (GP), respectively. Both kG and GP were estimated from curves relating dV/dt (steady state) to of osmotic test solutions (polyethylene glycol 6000).

During the imbibition phase (0-12 hours after sowing), kG remains very small while GP approaches a stable level of about 10 bar. During the subsequent growth phase of the embryo, kG increases about 10-fold. ABA, added before the onset of the growth phase, prevents the rise of kG and lowers GP. These effects are rapidly abolished when germination is induced by removal of ABA. Neither L (as judged from the kinetics of osmotic water efflux) nor the amount of extractable solutes are affected by these changes. i and {Psi}i remain at a high level in the ABA-treated seed but drop upon induction of germination, and this adds up to a large decrease of P, indicating that water uptake of the germinating embryo is controlled by cell wall loosening rather than by changes of i or L. ABA inhibits water uptake by preventing cell wall loosening. By calculating Y and m from the growth equation, it is further shown that cell wall loosening during germination comprises both a decrease of Y from about 10 to 0 bar and an at least 10-fold increase of m. ABA-mediated embryo dormancy is caused by a reversible inhibition of both of these changes in cell wall stability.


1 Supported by the Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft (SFB 206).




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