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Plant Physiology 92:551-559 (1990)
© 1990 American Society of Plant Biologists

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Development and Growth Regulation

Violaxanthin Is an Abscisic Acid Precursor in Water-Stressed Dark-Grown Bean Leaves 1

Yi Li2 and Daniel C. Walton

Department of Biology, SUNY College of Environmental Science and Forestry, Syracuse, New York 13210

The leaves of dark-grown bean (Phaseolus vulgaris L.) seedlings accumulate considerably lower quantities of xanthophylls and carotenes than do leaves of light-grown seedlings, but they synthesize at least comparable amounts of abscisic acid (ABA) and its metabolites when water stressed. We observed a 1:1 relationship on a molar basis between the reduction in levels of violaxanthin, 9'-cis-neoxanthin, and 9-cis-violaxanthin and the accumulation of ABA, phaseic acid, and dihydrophaseic acid, when leaves from dark-grown plants were stressed for 7 hours. Early in the stress period, reductions in xanthophylls were greater than the accumulation of ABA and its metabolites, suggesting the accumulation of an intermediate which was subsequently converted to ABA. Leaves which were detached, but not stressed, did not accumulate ABA nor were their xanthophyll levels reduced. Leaves from plants that had been sprayed with cycloheximide did not accumulate ABA when stressed, nor were their xanthophyll levels reduced significantly. Incubation of dark-grown stressed leaves in an 18O2-containing atmosphere resulted in the synthesis of ABA with levels of 18O in the carboxyl group that were virtually identical to those observed in light-grown leaves. The results of these experiments indicate that violaxanthin is an ABA precursor in stressed dark-grown leaves, and they are used to suggest several possible pathways from violaxanthin to ABA.


2 Current address: Biochemistry Department, University of Missouri, Columbia, MO 65211.

1 Supported by U.S. Department of Agriculture Competitive Research Grant 86CRCR 12078.




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