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Plant Physiol. (1998) 116: 17-25
Phytochrome B and the Regulation of Circadian Ethylene Production
in Sorghum1
Scott A. Finlayson,
In-Jung Lee, and
Page W. Morgan*
Department of Soil and Crop Sciences, Texas A&M University, College
Station, Texas 77843-2474
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ABSTRACT |
The sorghum (Sorghum
bicolor L. Moench) cultivar 58M, which contains the
null mutant phytochrome B gene, shows reduced photoperiodic sensitivity
and exhibits a shade-avoidance phenotype. Ethylene production by
seedlings of wild-type and phytochrome B mutant cultivars was monitored
every 3 h, and both cultivars were found to produce ethylene in a
circadian rhythm, with peak production occurring during the day. The
phytochrome B mutant produces rhythmic peaks of ethylene with
approximately 10 times the amplitude of the wild-type counterpart with
the same period and diurnal timing. The source of the mutant's
additional ethylene is the shoot. The diurnal rhythm can be produced
with either light or temperature cycles; however, both light and
temperature cycles are required for circadian entrainment. The
temperature signal overrides the light signal in the production of
diurnal rhythms, because seedlings grown under thermoperiods reversed
with the photoperiod produced ethylene peaks during the warm nights. To
examine the effect of extreme shading on ethylene production, seedlings
were grown under dim, far-red-enriched light. This treatment duplicated
the phytochrome B mutant's shade-avoidance phenotype in the wild type
and caused the wild type to produce ethylene peaks similar to those
observed in the mutant. The results confirm that phytochrome B is not
required for proper function of circadian timing, but it may be
involved in modulating physiological rhythms driven by the biological
clock oscillator.
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INTRODUCTION |
Phytochrome is a light-sensing protein-chromophore complex present
in higher plants. At least five species of phytochrome, from PhyA to
PhyE, have been characterized in Arabidopsis thaliana (Sharrrock and Quail, 1989; Clack et al., 1994 ), and it has been proposed that at least some of these phytochromes have both overlapping and distinct functions (Reed et al., 1994 ; Smith, 1995 ). One of these
functions is thought to be an involvement in setting the timing of the
circadian clock (Lumsden, 1991 ). The circadian clock is believed to
occur in all eukaryotic organisms, with a model consisting of
environmental cues (generally light) entraining an oscillator, which in
turn times rhythmic responses within a period of approximately 24 h (Bünning, 1967 ). Phytochrome is currently perceived to
transduce the environmental light stimulus to time the oscillator; the
majority of the work on the circadian clock in plants has focused on
the role of light in entrainment.
The short-day, photoperiodic grass Sorghum bicolor is
represented by a number of maturity cultivars that vary in their
photoperiodic sensitivity (Quinby, 1967 ). One of these cultivars,
58M, has recently been shown to possess a frameshift
mutation in the coding sequence of the PHYB gene, which
results in a premature stop codon (Childs et al., 1997 ). The mutation
in this gene results in a plant with immunologically undetectable
levels of the light-stable phytochrome PhyB (Childs et al., 1992 ). The
phyB mutant 58M exhibits classic symptoms of a
PhyB-deficient plant; compared with its wild-type counterpart
100M, 58M appears to be etiolated even under
high red-light irradiance, has less chlorophyll and anthocyanin, and shows reduced sensitivity to photoperiodic control of flowering by
flowering early, even under long days (Childs et al., 1991 ).
As part of an ongoing investigation of the control of short-day
photoperiodism, we have been examining rhythmic fluctuations in the
levels of endogenous GAs. Levels of four of these GAs have been shown
to cycle in a diurnal fashion in cv 90M (recessive phyB-2),
cv 100M (dominant PHYB), and cv 58M (null mutant
phyB-1). Furthermore, the timing of the peaks of bioactive
GA1 and its precursor GA20
are shifted in the PhyB mutant, from afternoon in the wild type to
early morning in the mutant (Foster and Morgan, 1995 ). The significance
of these findings is enhanced by the observation that, when the mutant
is grown under long, noninductive days, flowering is delayed and the
GA1 and GA20 peaks shift to
late in the day, similar to the timing observed for the wild type. Furthermore, under very short, inductive photoperiods, the wild type
produces GA1 peaks early in the day and also
flowers early (I.-J. Lee, K.R. Foster, and P.M. Morgan, unpublished
data).
The plant hormone ethylene is involved in many plant growth and
development responses and, with a few exceptions, is generally viewed
as playing an inhibitory role in vegetative growth by reducing elongation of both roots and shoots (Abeles et al., 1992 ). Light is one
of many environmental stimuli shown to be involved in modifying ethylene production both positively and negatively, with phytochrome implicated in the control of this response in several cases (Goeschl et
al., 1967 ; Imaseki et al., 1971 ; Vangronsveld et al., 1988 ; Michalczuk
and Rudnicki, 1993 ). Previous work has shown that ethylene production
by cotton and bean follows a diurnal rhythm, with peaks occurring
during the light cycle (Lipe and Morgan, 1973 ; Rikin et al., 1984 ;
Morgan et al., 1990 ). Ethylene production rates of
Stellaria were observed to fluctuate in a diurnal rhythm
(Emery et al., 1994 ), and subsequently it was found that the level of ACC oxidase activity and ACC oxidase mRNA expression occur in a
matching circadian rhythm, possibly influenced by phytochrome (Kathiresan et al., 1996 ). Recently, diurnal ethylene evolution was
reported in Chenopodium rubrum; however, unlike the case for Stellaria, the rhythm was suggested to be a result of cyclic
ACC synthase activity and was not shown to be circadian
(Machácková et al., 1997 ). An endogenous ethylene rhythm in
young cereal seedlings has also been demonstrated, but this rhythm
occurred within an unusual period (12-16 h) and degraded upon leaf
emergence (Ievenish and Kreic-bergs, 1992).
Because of the gross phenotypic differences observed between the PhyB
mutant and its wild-type counterpart, and because of the history of
rhythmic hormone production observed in this and other species,
rhythmic ethylene production by the two sorghum cultivars 100M and 58M
was examined. We sought to test the relative levels of ethylene
produced by each cultivar during the day/night cycle and to examine how
the entrainment of a possible ethylene rhythm was controlled.
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MATERIALS AND METHODS |
Two of the near-isogenic sorghum (Sorghum
bicolor L. Moench) maturity cultivars, 100M
(Ma1Ma1,
Ma2Ma2,
Ma3Ma3, and
Ma4Ma4 for the
maturity genes) and 58M
(Ma1Ma1,
Ma2Ma2,
ma3Rma3R,
and Ma4Ma4; Quinby,
1967 ) were used. Ma3 and
ma3R were recently
redesignated as PHYB and phyB-1, respectively, based on the determination that they encode the gene for phytochrome B
and a null mutant version of the gene (Childs et al., 1997 ). Seeds were
germinated vertically in the dark at 27°C on moistened germination
paper. After 40 h three healthy, uniform seedlings were carefully
transferred in upright orientation into 65-mL test tubes containing 20 mL of fritted clay previously saturated with one-quarter-strength
Hoagland solution and drained. The bottoms of the tubes were covered
with aluminum foil, and the tubes were placed in the dark for 24 h
until the start of the first photoperiod. The plants received various
photoperiods and temperature regimens as described in Results, with
small fans ensuring constant air circulation. Lighting was provided by
a combination of F48T12/CW/HO fluorescent lamps (Phillips, Mahwah, NJ)
and 60-W incandescent lamps giving 225 µmol
m 2 s 1 PAR with a
red:far-red ratio of 1.42. For dim, far-red-enriched light treatments,
light was provided by four 60-W incandescent lamps producing 29 µmol
m 2 s 1 PAR with a
red:far-red ratio of 0.75. Light measurements were made with a
spectroradiometer (model no. 1800, Li-Cor, Lincoln, NE). Plant height
was measured from substrate level at various times.
Ethylene Evolution
For analysis of ethylene evolution, the tubes were capped
with rubber septa for 30 min and a 1-mL headspace sample was collected and analyzed using a 10S10 or 10SPlus gas chromatograph (Photovac, Markham, Ontario, Canada) equipped with a photoionization detector. Three identical tubes without plants were measured at each time to
account for background ethylene. Ethylene production in this system was
linear for at least 30 min.
To determine the relative contribution of the root and shoot to
ethylene production, seedlings were removed from the tubes 6 d
after sowing and the root and shoot were cut from the caryopsis. The
organs were placed in 3-mL syringes equipped with a three-way valve
attached to a 1-mL syringe. After 20 min of incubation a 1-mL headspace
sample from the 3-mL syringe was transferred to the 1-mL syringe, and
this was analyzed for ethylene as described above. Three syringes
without plants were measured to account for background ethylene. Organ
weight was determined immediately after sampling. Ethylene production
from organs prepared in this way was linear for at least 20 min.
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RESULTS |
Ethylene Production by Wild Type and Null Phytochrome B
Sorghum Mutant
Figure 1A illustrates
ethylene production by cv 58M (phyB-1) and cv 100M
(PHYB) under a 12-h photo-/thermoperiod. Both cultivars showed rhythmic ethylene production with peaks near the middle of the
light period and low ethylene, production at night. cv 58M grossly
overproduced ethylene, with peak values about 10 times higher than cv
100M. The amplitude of peak ethylene production showed a tendency to
decrease on the last day of sampling (d 7); however, plants maintained
in unenclosed test tubes for longer periods also showed strong rhythmic
ethylene production with the same daily pattern when assayed 14 and
15 d after sowing (data not shown).

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| Figure 1.
Diurnal ethylene production rates by sorghum under
various photo-/thermoperiods. A and B, n = 7; C,
n = 5; results are means ± se.
White and black bars near the bottom indicate light and dark periods,
respectively.
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When roots and shoots of both cultivars grown under 12-h
photo-/thermoperiods were cut and incubated separately, roots were found to produce ethylene at approximately the same rate. The shoots of
cv 58M produced much more ethylene than shoots of cv 100M and much more
ethylene than the roots (Table I).
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Table I.
Ethylene production from dissected organs of sorghum
cvs 58 M (phyB-1) and 100 M (PHYB)
Values are means ± se, n = 3.
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Plants grown under both shorter (10 h; data not shown) and longer (16 h; Fig. 1B) photo-/thermoperiods showed patterns of ethylene production
similar to the 12-h case, with correspondingly narrower and broader
peaks, respectively. Under the 16-h photo-/thermoperiod it was apparent
that the peak in ethylene production by cv 58M actually occurred before
the midday point in the photo-/thermoperiod (Fig. 1B). Plants grown
under extremely short photo-/thermoperiods (4 h light:20 h dark) also
showed a rhythmic production of ethylene, which anticipated the
appearance of the light/warm period (Fig. 1C).
To test whether the rhythmic production of ethylene was circadian,
plants were entrained for 2 d under 12-h photo-/thermoperiods and
then switched to constant light and temperature. Figure
2A shows that the ethylene rhythm is
free-running in both cultivars, with strong peaks produced by cv 58M
occurring within an approximate 24-h period. Similarly entrained plants
switched into constant dark and temperature also produced a
free-running rhythm within a period of approximately 24 h (Fig.
2B). cv 100M did not exhibit a clear rhythm under these conditions.
Both cultivars showed a gradual, general increase in ethylene
production under the constant dark condition.

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| Figure 2.
Circadian ethylene production by sorghum under
constant light (cL; A) or dark (cD; B) conditions.
n = 5; results are means ± se.
White and black bars near the bottom indicate light and dark periods,
respectively.
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cv 58M seedlings grown with 12-h photoperiods under a regimen of
constant temperature demonstrated erratic ethylene rhythms that decayed
over three measured cycles, whereas cv 100M seedlings did not exhibit
rhythmic ethylene production under these growth conditions (Fig.
3A). Mutant seedlings entrained with both
12-h photo- and thermoperiods for 2 d and then switched to
constant temperature and 12-h photoperiods continued to cycle with a
decaying rhythm. A second peak of lower amplitude was also observed,
with a maximum late in the dark period. Again, cyclic ethylene
production was not apparent in cv 100M (Fig. 3B).

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| Figure 3.
Rhythmic ethylene production by sorghum with
cycling photoperiods and constant temperature from sowing (A) and
cycling photo-/thermoperiods and then transferring to cycling
photoperiods and constant temperature (B). n = 5; results are means ± se. White and black
bars near the bottom indicate light and dark periods,
respectively.
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The remarkable effect of temperature on the rhythmic production of
ethylene was studied in several ways. Seedlings were grown under
constant light and given cycling thermoperiods beginning 3 d after
sowing. Both cultivars showed rhythmic ethylene production with peaks
during the warm period, and cv 58M overproduced ethylene (Fig.
4A). The pattern of ethylene production
was strikingly similar to that observed under 12-h synchronous
photo-/thermoperiods. Cycling temperature was also sufficient to cause
plants grown in constant darkness to produce ethylene rhythms (Fig.
4B). Under a constant dark/cycling thermoperiod regimen the cv 100M
seedlings actually produced more ethylene than did cv 58M. Growth of
seedlings in the dark again resulted in a general increase in ethylene
production by both cultivars.

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| Figure 4.
Rhythmic ethylene production by sorghum with
cycling thermoperiods and constant light (cD, A) or dark (cD, B).
n = 5; results are means ± se.
Solid white and black bars near the bottom indicate light and dark
periods, respectively; hatched bars indicate the warm period.
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To examine the relative contributions of temperature and light,
seedlings were grown under photoperiods with the temperature kept warm
during the dark period and cool during the light. This regimen resulted
in weak rhythmicity in cv 100M and a strong ethylene rhythm in the
mutant, with the timing of peak ethylene production being reversed so
that it occurred during the warm, dark period (Fig.
5).

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| Figure 5.
Rhythmic ethylene production by sorghum under a
regimen of reversed photo- and thermoperiods (warm nights, cool days).
n = 5; results are means ± se.
Solid white and black bars near the bottom indicate light and dark
periods, respectively; hatched bars indicate the warm period.
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Seedlings entrained with either three 12-h photoperiods at 26°C
constant temperature or with three 12-h 31/22°C thermoperiods under
constant light did not continue to cycle when the timing stimulus
(light or temperature) was made constant (data not shown).
The shoot elongation rate of the seedlings was a function of both
temperature and light. cv 58M elongated more rapidly than the wild type
under illuminated conditions, and the differential in growth rate was
enhanced under longer photoperiods (Fig.
6). In constant dark the elongation rates
of the two cultivars were comparable. As noted earlier, ethylene
production under prolonged dark conditions tended to increase after
several days (Fig. 2B), and ethylene production by cv 100M in constant
dark, cycling temperature was actually greater than that by the mutant
(Fig. 4B). To examine the effect of shading on elongation and ethylene
production, seedlings were grown under a regimen of dim,
far-red-enriched light provided by incandescent lights only. Seedlings
of the two cultivars grown in this way exhibited nearly identical
elongation rates (Fig. 6, bottom) and appeared nearly identical to the
eye. The cv 58M phenotype was changed little under these conditions,
whereas the phenotype of cv 100M was a near phenocopy of cv 58M.
Ethylene production by both cultivars was remarkably similar, echoing
the pattern produced by cv 58M under bright, red-light-enriched
conditions and yet with greater amplitude (Fig.
7).

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| Figure 6.
Elongation of sorghum seedlings grown under
various light regimens. n = 15; results are
means ± se. White and black bars near the bottom
indicate light and dark periods, respectively.
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| Figure 7.
Rhythmic ethylene production by sorghum grown
under dim, far-red-enriched photo-/thermoperiods. n = 5; results are means ± se. White and black bars
near the bottom indicate light and dark periods, respectively.
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Elongation rates of the two cultivars determined for the light and dark
periods of d 6 are shown in Table II.
Under a 12-h synchronized photo-/thermoperiod with far-red balanced
light, cv 58M elongated about 1.2 times as fast as cv 100M during the light period, and the elongation rates of both cultivars were reduced
during the dark period. When the plants were grown with 12-h
synchronized photo-/thermoperiods with dim, far-red-enriched light, the
light period elongation rate of cv 58M increased slightly over far-red
balanced values (1.1 times), whereas the elongation rate for cv
100M increased by almost 1.3 times. The dark period elongation rate
for cv 58M was unaffected by this light treatment, whereas the dark
period elongation rate of cv 100M was increased by 1.31 times. A
regimen of 12-h photo-/thermoperiods with cool days and warm nights
resulted in both cultivars achieving maximal elongation rates during
the warm night. The cool, light period elongation rates for both
cultivars were similar to the dark period rates observed with 12-h
synchronized far-red balanced conditions, whereas the warm, dark period
rates were less than those observed for the 12-h synchronized far-red
balanced light period (0.82 times for cv 58M and 0.51 times for cv
100M).
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Table II.
Elongation rates of sorghum cvs 58 M (phyB-1) and
100 M (PHYB) grown under different photo/thermoperiod regimens
Rates were calculated over 12-h periods, beginning 6 d after
sowing, from growth curve data presented in Figure 6. Values are
means ± se.
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DISCUSSION |
The circadian ethylene biosynthesis rhythms we have
described are significant in at least three interrelated ways. First, they are a convenient means of measuring an output of the circadian clock in sorghum. The assay of ethylene is relatively easy and yields
readily quantifiable results. It will be possible to perform detailed
studies of entrainment and perturbation of the clock under various
environmental conditions using this system. The fact that the output
signal is actually a plant hormone with multiple regulatory effects
adds to the utility of the assay. Second, the discovery of these
rhythms raises the question of how they are controlled by PhyB
and other phytochromes. How PhyB effects overproduction of
ethylene in sorghum is beginning to be discovered in our laboratory. The results of Kathiresan et al. (1996) suggest that a phytochrome may
also be involved in timing the rhythm, although we cannot corroborate
this in sorghum. Third, the possible role of ethylene in the control of
the shade-avoidance syndrome, including vegetative growth and/or floral
initiation, can be studied using these cultivars, which vary widely in
their ethylene production, growth rates, and time to flowering under
different light/temperature regimens.
We initially observed diurnal ethylene production by the two sorghum
cultivars under cycling photo-/thermoperiods of different durations.
Both cultivars produced ethylene in a cyclic rhythm, with peaks before
or near the midpoint of the light period. The timing of the ethylene
peaks was not discernibly different between the PhyB mutant (cv 58M)
and the wild type (cv 100M); however, the amplitude of the ethylene
biosynthesis peak was greatly enhanced in the case of the mutant. These
results show that the plants are able to time the rhythm to daylengths
of different durations. Even under a regimen of extremely short 4-h
days, the ethylene rhythm was propagated in both cultivars,
demonstrating the ability of the plant to track even abnormally short
light signals, although the plants are not able to compress the
ethylene peak to fit entirely into the light period. Under such
short-day conditions, it is obvious from the predawn leadin to the
ethylene peak that the plants anticipate the light period, and this
effect can also be noted to a lesser degree in the 10-, 12-, and 16-h
photo-/thermoperiods. The ethylene rhythm in wild-type plants was only
weakly expressed in 12-h photo- and thermoperiods (Fig. 1), but in
constant dark or dim, far-red-enriched light, existence of a rhythmic
pattern of ethylene biosynthesis was clearly demonstrated (Figs. 4 and 7).
The ethylene biosynthesis rhythm was proven to be circadian by
entraining the plants with two photo-/thermoperiods and then letting
the system free-run in the light at a constant temperature. We observed
that the rhythms persisted for at least three cycles without further
timing stimuli. A subsequent experiment in which the plants were
entrained and then allowed to free-run in constant dark with constant
temperature produced similar results, indicating that light is not
required for persistence of the rhythm once it has been entrained. The
circadian ethylene rhythm appears to have the same period under either
constant light or constant dark, and there is no difference in the
period of the wild type compared with the mutant in constant light,
although the exact timing of the wild-type peak was uncertain because
of its low amplitude. In constant dark a rhythm could not be detected
in the wild type. In contrast, the CAB gene expression rhythm in
Arabidopsis has been shown to cycle with a longer period under constant
dark as compared with constant light (Millar et al., 1995 ). A
lengthening of the period of the same CAB expression cycle was also
observed in seedlings possessing the hy1 mutation, which
lack detectable phytochromes (Millar et al., 1995 ).
We next began examining the contributions of light and temperature
signals to the rhythm. Mutant seedlings maintained with only a
light/dark signal showed a weakened ethylene biosynthesis rhythm that
decayed by the 3rd d of measurement, whereas no rhythm at all was
detectable in the wild type (Fig. 3A). This entrainment did not prove
to be circadian, since neither cultivar would cycle after being placed
in constant light. Unexpectedly, plants entrained with both photo- and
thermoperiods produced a weak, decaying rhythm after being switched to
constant temperature, with the cycling photoperiod maintained (Fig.
3B). This treatment also resulted in the appearance of a second peak of
ethylene release in the mutant. The second peak appeared late in the
dark period, was of lower amplitude than the primary peak, and was not
observed under any other treatments. The significance of the second
peak and the decay of the rhythm after loss of the temperature signal has not been determined, but these results may indicate that the light-
and temperature-entrained rhythms are independent manifestations of the clock, which produce clear, single-peak oscillations only when synchronized.
Under constant light a cycling thermoperiod regimen produced a strong
ethylene biosynthesis rhythm in both cultivars; however, this rhythm
did not prove to be circadian in nature. Similarly, constant dark
coupled with cycling thermoperiods resulted in rhythmic ethylene
production by both cultivars, with the wild type producing even more
ethylene than the mutant (Fig. 4B). Under constant dark conditions, a
general increase in ethylene production was often observed in both
cultivars; however, this was the only treatment that increased ethylene
production by the wild type over the mutant. The overriding importance
of the temperature signal in eliciting the diurnal rhythm was confirmed
when the plants were grown with cool days and warm nights. Seedlings of
both cultivars grown in this way produced ethylene peaks during the
warm night, once again with the mutant producing peaks with much
greater amplitude than the wild type. Possibly, PhyB is not
fundamentally involved with setting the oscillator but is involved in
coupling the response between the oscillator and the rhythm. Other
evidence supporting this hypothesis has been presented: although CAB
expression levels were dissimilar between the wild type and the PHYB
mutant, a circadian rhythm with similar timing persisted in both
(Childs et al., 1995 ).
Earlier work showed that ethylene production is modified through the
action of phytochrome. Pisum and Phaseolus
seedlings have been shown to reduce ethylene biosynthesis in response
to red-light treatments, an effect demonstrated to be a result of phytochrome action due to its far-red reversibility (Goeschl et al.,
1967 ; Vangronsveld et al., 1988 ). The circadian rhythm of ACC oxidase
activity and mRNA accumulation may also be controlled by phytochrome,
since the rhythm was initiated by red- but not blue-light pulses
(Kathiresan et al., 1996 ). On the other hand, the rhythms observed in
sorghum are less sensitive to light. Single light pulses of different
durations were not able to set the rhythm (S.A. Finlayson, I.-J. Lee,
and P.W. Morgan, unpublished data), nor could a circadian rhythm be
entrained by cycling photoperiods alone. It is possible that the weak
diurnal rhythm observed under constant temperature and light/dark is
actually due to cyclic radiant heating of the seedling rather than
light per se.
Few rhythms are known to be entrained by temperature. Rhythmic
accumulation of the Sinapis alba transcripts
Sagrp and Saglp was observed under either cycling
light or temperature, although only light was demonstrated to entrain
accumulation under free-running conditions (Heintzen et al., 1994a ,
1994b ). It is interesting that, although the transcript levels
fluctuated dramatically, the levels of protein encoded by these genes
did not vary with appreciable amplitude. In tomato, polyamine levels
fluctuate in a diurnal rhythm, with peaks occurring during cool nights
(N Doye et al., 1994 ). Diurnal polyamine levels cycled strongly with
temperature under constant dark, and they also peaked during cool days
in a regimen of cool days and warm nights, indicating the dominance of
the temperature signal in the effect. However, temperature was not
shown to entrain a circadian rhythm. Circadian entrainment of
accumulation of CAB and Rubisco small subunit mRNAs can be induced by
temperature alone, either as a short, cyclic heat shock or as
alternating warm and cool thermoperiods under constant dark (Kloppstech
et al., 1991 ). We report that temperature alone is not able to entrain
free-running ethylene rhythms, but the ethylene rhythms in sorghum
represent a novel system in higher plants in which entrainment of a
circadian rhythm requires both light and temperature signals.
The shoot elongation rates of the two cultivars begin to converge under
shorter photo-/thermoperiods; under constant dark the elongation
rates are indistinguishable, and we also observed that the wild type
can produce more ethylene than the mutant. Postulating that the effect
observed under constant dark might reflect a response to the most
extreme type of shading possible, we designed an experiment to simulate
a high shade environment with dim far-red light. This treatment
resulted in the wild-type seedlings assuming the elongation rate
and phenotype of the mutant, which was unchanged. Additionally,
total ethylene production by the two cultivars was very similar. These
results can be interpreted as meaning that the production of ethylene
with a high amplitude is a response to shading, which is constitutively
expressed in the mutant as a result of the loss of PhyB function.
Possibly, the large ethylene peaks are involved in generating the
shade-avoidance phenotype; however, a causal relationship has not yet
been established. It was noted that, when the wild type exhibited a
strong rhythmic production of ethylene at rates similar to the mutant
(Figs. 4 and 7), it also expressed aspects of the mutant phenotype, and elongation rates were very similar (Table II). Furthermore, we observed
that maximal elongation rates occur concurrently with the expression of
peak ethylene production, i.e. during the light period when plants are
grown with 12-h synchronized photo-/thermoperiods and during the dark
period when plants are grown with 12-h cool days and warm nights (Table
II). Although peak ethylene production does correlate with maximum
shoot elongation in the timing of the phenomena, it was also observed
that the amplitude of the ethylene rhythm is much greater than the
corresponding differences in growth rates presented in Table II.
In most instances ethylene is implicated as a inhibitor of vegetative
growth, especially elongation (Abeles et al., 1992 ). The general
exception to this paradigm is the case of plants adapted to partial
submergence, such as deep water rice (Métraux and Kende, 1983 )
and Rumex spp. (Voesenek and Blom, 1989 ), in which ethylene
actually stimulates elongation. Recently, two reports demonstrated that
in both maize and sorghum ethylene can have a promotive effect on
mesocotyl elongation under red light, whereas ethylene applied to
seedlings in darkness inhibits elongation (Nishizawa and Suge, 1995 ;
Suge and Nishizawa, 1995 ). It is difficult to reconcile these reports
with our system in which both maximum elongation and ethylene
production can occur in the dark when the warm temperature occurs
concurrently. We are presently testing whether ethylene is involved in
the growth responses of the sorghum cultivars, but we are also
considering the possibility that the large ethylene peaks are a
result of, rather than a cause of, rapid elongation. Few studies have
addressed the role of endogenous ethylene in nonstressed vegetative
growth, although it has been our experience that rapidly growing
tissues produce more ethylene than less active tissues. Whether this
ethylene is involved in eliciting the rapid growth or is produced as a
consequence of this growth has yet to be answered. It is also possible
that ethylene overproduction in cv 58M may reflect an inability of the
seedlings to perceive ethylene and control its biosynthesis through a
feedback inhibition loop.
A striking feature of the ethylene rhythms we have measured is the
large amplitude overproduction by the mutant. How does the lesion
result in ethylene overproduction? Previous evidence has suggested that
ACC oxidase fluctuations are responsible for generating the ethylene
rhythm observed in Stellaria longipes (Kathiresan et al.,
1996 ), whereas a contrasting report of Chenopodium rubrum
presents evidence that, although ACC oxidase activity does vary
diurnally, the control of rhythmic ethylene production is actually a
result of ACC synthase activity (Machácková et al., 1997 ).
It is possible that both enzymes contribute to the rhythm. We are
presently investigating the biosynthesis of ethylene in these cultivars
by analyzing substrate levels, enzyme activity, and abundance of mRNAs
encoding ACC synthase and ACC oxidase. At a more fundamental level we
are concerned with the link between ethylene production and PhyB. When
we have identified the enzyme(s) responsible for the generation of the
ethylene rhythm in sorghum, we will have a starting point from which to
trace the molecular events leading from PhyB to the resulting ethylene
production.
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FOOTNOTES |
1
This work was supported by U.S. Department of
Agriculture National Research Initiative Competitive Grants Program
grant no. 91-37304-6582 and Texas Higher Education Board ATP grant no.
999902-87 to P.W.M., a predoctoral overseas Korean government
scholarship to I.-J. L., and the Texas Agriculture Experiment
Station.
*
Corresponding author; e-mail p-morgan{at}tamu.edu; fax 1-
409-845-0456.
Received July 25, 1997;
accepted October 3, 1997.
 |
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS |
We acknowledge with thanks the seed supplied for this
study by Dr. Bill Rooney (Department of Soil and Crop Sciences, Texas A&M, College Station) and the loan of a Photovac 10S10 gas
chromatograph from David M. Reid and the University of Calgary
(Alberta, Canada).
 |
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