Plant Physiol. Journal of Pharmacology and Experimental Therapeutics
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Plant Physiology 92:434-439 (1990)
© 1990 American Society of Plant Biologists

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Molecular Biology and Gene Regulation

Intact Plastids Are Required for Nitrate- and Light-Induced Accumulation of Nitrate Reductase Activity and mRNA in Squash Cotyledons 1

Rolf Oelmüller2 and Winslow R. Briggs

Department of Plant Biology, Carnegie Institution of Washington, Stanford, California 94305-1297

Induction of nitrate reductase activity and mRNA by nitrate and light is prevented if chloroplasts are destroyed by photooxidation in norflurazon-treated squash (Cucurbita maxima L.) cotyledons. The enzyme activity and mRNA can be induced if norflurazon-treated squash seedlings are kept in low-intensity red light, which minimizes photodamage to the plastids. It is concluded that induction of nitrate reductase activity and nitrate reductase mRNA requires intact plastids. If squash seedlings grown in low-intensity red light are transferred to photooxidative white light, nitrate reductase activity accumulates during the first 12 hours after the shift and declines thereafter. Thus photodamage to the plastids and the disappearance of nitrate reductase activity and mRNA are events separable in time, and disappearance of the enzyme activity is a consequence of the damage to the plastids.


2 Present address: Botanisches Institut der Ludwig-Maximilians-Universität, Menzingerstr. 67, D-8000 München 19, FRG.

1 CIW-DPB publication No. 1039. R. O. was supported by the Alexander von Humboldt-Stiftung (Feodor Lynen-research fellowship).




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