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Plant Physiology 95:544-550 (1991)
© 1991 American Society of Plant Biologists

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Development and Growth Regulation

Regulation of Phytochrome Message Abundance in Root Caps of Maize 1

Spatial, Environmental, and Genetic Specificity

Ellen M. Johnson, Lily I. Pao and Lewis J. Feldman

Department of Plant Biology, University of California, Berkeley, California 94720

In many cultivars of maize (Zea mays L.) red light affects root development via the photomorphogenetic pigment phytochrome. The site of perception for the light is the root cap. In the maize cultivar Merit, we investigated phytochrome-mediated events in the cap. We established that the message encoded by the phyA1 gene was most abundant in dark-grown tissue and was asymmetrically distributed in the root cap, with greatest expression in the cells which make up the central columella core of the cap. Phytochrome message was negatively autoregulated in a specific region within the root cap. This autoregulation was sensitive to very-low-fluence red light, and thus was characterized as a phytochrome-mediated, very-low-fluence event. The kinetics of message reaccumulation in the dark were also examined and compared to the kinetics of the light requirement for root gravitropism in this cultivar. Similarly, the degree of autoregulation present in two other maize cultivars with different light requirements for gravitropic sensitivity was investigated. It appears that the Merit cultivar expresses a condition of hypersensitivity to phytochromemediated light regulation in root tissues. We conclude that phytochrome regulates many activities within the cap, but the degree to which these activities share common phytochrome-mediated steps in not known.


1 This research was supported in part by grants from the National Science Foundation, the National Aeronautics and Space Administration, and a National Science Foundation Centers grant.




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A. Hisada, H. Hanzawa, J. L. Weller, A. Nagatani, J. B. Reid, and M. Furuya
Light-Induced Nuclear Translocation of Endogenous Pea Phytochrome A Visualized by Immunocytochemical Procedures
PLANT CELL, July 1, 2000; 12(7): 1063 - 1078.
[Abstract] [Full Text]




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Copyright © 1991 by the American Society of Plant Biologists