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Plant Physiol, May 2000, Vol. 123, pp. 189-200
The Determination Time of the Carpel Whorl Is Differentially
Sensitive to Carbohydrate Supply in Pharbitis
nil1
Simon Francis
Durdan,
Robert James
Herbert,
Hilary Joan
Rogers, and
Dennis
Francis*
School of Environmental Sciences and Land Management, University
College, Worcester, Henwick Grove, Worcester WR2 6AJ, United Kingdom
(S.F.D., R.J.H.); and School of Biosciences, Main College Building,
Cardiff University, P.O. Box 915, Cardiff CF11 3TL, United Kingdom
(S.F.D., H.J.R., D.F.)
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ABSTRACT |
A shoot apical meristem is florally determined if, following its
removal from an induced plant, it flowers when cultured in non-inductive conditions. Determination times were measured in the
short-day plant Pharbitis nil to examine whether floral
whorls are determined simultaneously or sequentially. Shoot apices were excised at daily intervals following a 48-h dark-inductive treatment, cultured in non-inductive conditions for 4 weeks in continuous light,
and the number of floral organs scored. The culture medium was White's
supplemented with sucrose, glucose (Glc), fructose (Fru), or 1:1
Glc:Fru at 2% (w/v), 4% (w/v), or 6% (w/v) or sugar-mannitol combinations of osmotic potentials equivalent to 4% (w/v) or
6% (w/v). The minimum whorl determination time was 1 d for
sepals, petals, and stamens regardless of carbon supply. However, for carpels it varied remarkably from 5 d on sucrose, to 2 to 3 d on Fru or Glc:Fru, to 1 d for 2% (w/v) and 6% (w/v) Glc.
Therefore, depending on the carbon supply, the carpel whorl was
determined at the same time or after the outer whorls. Generally, these
effects could not be reproduced on the sugar-mannitol treatments.
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INTRODUCTION |
Shoot apical meristems are florally
determined when they form flowers in an environment in which vegetative
growth would be predicted (McDaniel, 1978 ; Singer and McDaniel, 1986 ).
Determination is an operational term used in a number of developmental
studies. Cells are determined when they have the same developmental
fate whether left in situ or isolated from the rest of the organism (McDaniel, 1984 ). An established way to test for floral determination is to provide a potentially inductive treatment, culture the shoot apex
under non-inductive conditions, and record whether it forms a flower in
vitro (McDaniel et al., 1991 ).
An unresolved question is whether floral whorls are determined
simultaneously, in an all-or-nothing response, or independently of each
other both in space and time. In the long-day (LD) plant Lolium
temulentum, cultured apices formed flowers when they were removed
from the plant 22 h after the start of the inductive LD but not
before (McDaniel et al., 1991 ). The authors concluded that all whorls
were determined simultaneously (McDaniel et al., 1991 ). Floral
determination was also examined in another LD plant, Silene
coeli-rosa, which requires 7 LD for 100% flowering. However, 4 LD
is a threshold inductive treatment resulting in 20% to 40% of
flowering (Donnison and Francis, 1993 ). Excising apices from plants
that received 4 LD resulted in 15% of the apices forming sepals in
vitro, but 6 LD were necessary for 50% of them to form sepals, so an
estimate for determination of the sepal whorl was 2 d (6 4 LD).
Seven LD were necessary before 50% of apices exhibited stamens and
petals, while 7 LD + 1 short d (SD) were required for the carpels. Therefore, the stronger the inductive treatment, the
more floral whorls in vitro (Donnison and Francis, 1993 , 1994 ). Overall, these data are consistent with a sequential determination of
each whorl, as opposed to an all-or-nothing determination of the entire
apex. The determination and initiation of the carpel whorl began after
the other whorls were determined and initiated, so that the operational
definition of determination was refined to account for the
determination of each whorl (Donnison and Francis, 1993 ).
To our knowledge, floral determination times have been tested for only
one SD plant, Pharbitis nil. The reported
determination times for P. nil vary from 5 h
(Matsushima et al., 1974 ), to 9 h (Larkin et al., 1990 ), to
36 h (Bhar, 1970 ). The variable times reflect the different
methods chosen: Bhar (1970) and Matsushima et al. (1974) used tissue
culture, while Larkin et al. (1990) used grafting. We also wondered
about the effectiveness of the single 16-h inductive dark period used
in these studies, particularly since in our study 24 h of darkness
was insufficient for 100% flowering of the terminal and axillary
meristems (Herbert et al., 1992 ) 48 h of darkness was necessary before
all terminal shoot apical meristems were induced to flower (Herbert et
al., 1992 ; Durdan et al., 1998 ).
Given the variable results obtained previously, we decided to
re-investigate floral determination times for P. nil using
our strong inductive treatment. The aim of the work reported here was
to examine whether floral determination is an all-or-nothing phenomenon
in the SD plant P. nil, as reported for the LD
plant L. temulentum (McDaniel et al., 1991 ), or whether it
was sequential, whorl by whorl, as in the LD plant S. coeli-rosa (Donnison and Francis, 1993 ). Determination times of
the three outer whorls were coincident and largely unaffected by carbon
supply, but carpel determination time was remarkably variable 3 to
5 d on Suc but 1 d on Glc leading us to propose a role for
this monosaccharide in flowering.
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RESULTS |
Floral Scoring Scheme
P. nil apical meristems were observed by scanning
electron microscopy throughout floral initiation. To our knowledge,
this is the first pictorial record of floral development in P. nil following a strong 48-h inductive treatment. On d 1, the shoot apical meristem appeared vegetative (Fig.
1A), and the first stage of floral
morphogenesis, bract development, was not observed until d 2 (Fig. 1B).
By d 3, sepal primordia were present and the apex appeared as a broad
smooth dome (Fig. 1C). On d 4, all five sepals were apparent (Fig. 1D).
One day later, alternating petal and stamen primordia were observed
(Fig. 1E), which by d 6 became more distinctive from each other (Fig.
1F). At that time, the sepals were fully developed, and, a raised ring
was observed comprising the carpel primordia at the center of the
widening apex (Fig. 1, F-G). On d 7, the carpel primordia were clearly
visible as three distinctive peaks at the center of the apex (Fig. 1G),
which by d 8 resembled a cone-like structure (Fig. 1H).

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Figure 1.
Composite of low-vacuum scanning electron
photomicrographs of shoot apical meristems of P. nil
undergoing the floral transition at various times following induction
of 5-d-old seedlings with 48 h of darkness (bar scale = 100 µm). A, 1-d apex with vegetative leaf primordia (lp); B, 2-d
apex which with two bract primordia (b) directly opposite each other;
C, 3-d apex with sepal primordia forming (s1-4); D, 4-d apex showing
all five sepal primordia (s1-5) surrounding the apex. A partially
dissected leaf primordium remains on this specimen, but the bracts were
removed prior to embedding; E, 5-d apex with partially dissected mature
sepals surrounding a whorl of five petal primordia (p) alternating with
five stamen primordia (st); F, 6-d apex showing two sepals and four
stamens (st) to one side of the carpels (c). The latter are visible for
the first time as a small raised ring in the center of the apex. The
other organs of the earlier whorls were dissected prior to embedding;
G, 7-d apex showing further development of the carpel primordia (c),
which are now visible as three distinctive peaks at the center of the
apex. Surrounding the carpel primordia are stamens, petals, and sepals,
but some of the organs of earlier whorls are dissected; H, 8-d apex
with three large, distinctive carpel (c) primordia fused together to
form a cone-shaped gynoecium. The stamen, petal, and sepal whorls
surrounding the carpel primordia are prominent, but some organs are
dissected in this preparation.
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Observations were grouped into three classes: (a) appearance of the
first primordia, (b) appearance of all primordia in the whorl, and (c)
enlargement (maturation) of all organs in the whorl. This led to a
scoring system based on three successively higher scores per whorl,
with the petal and stamen whorls grouped together because they were
initiated and developed together (Fig. 1E). This scheme, similar to
that of Maeska and Ogawa (1994) using a 16-h inductive dark treatment,
was used to score floral morphogenesis of P. nil in vitro
(Table I).
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Table I.
Numerical scoring scheme of floral development in
the terminal apex of P. nil
The system is a progressive one so that each number represents an
additional stage of floral morphogenesis. The day of appearance
following induction of each whorl in vivo is also indicated.
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Cotyledon Removal
When the cotyledons were removed <16 h after the start of the
48-h inductive dark period flowers began to form at the terminal apex,
but 48 h of darkness was necessary for 100% terminal flowers (Table II). The data are consistent in
showing that under the conditions employed in our experiments, the
floral stimulus began to move from the cotyledons between 12 and
16 h, but 48 h of darkness were necessary for all terminal
apices to become floral.
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Table II.
Percentage flowering at the shoot apical meristem
when the cotyledons were removed at various times (h) following the
start of a 48-h inductive dark treatment and the plants were returned
to continuous light and scored 4 weeks later (n = 12)
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Floral Determination
Floral determination was examined by culturing apices at various
times following induction on media supplemented with qualitatively different carbohydrate sources and scoring them 4 weeks later, as
explained above. Because all observations were of primordia in whorls,
we measured whorl determination times in two ways. In the first method,
times were estimated as the interval between the end of induction and
the day of explantation, which resulted in the first appearance of that
whorl when the cultured apices were examined 4 weeks later the minimum
whorl determination time. In other words, this method was a measure of
the minimum time that the apex had to be left on the plant for it to
form that whorl in vitro. In the second method, determination times
were recorded as the interval between the end of the inductive
treatment and the day of explantation, which resulted in 50% of
apices exhibiting that whorl after 4 weeks in culture, the converse of an LD50 (average whorl determination time).
However, neither in this nor any comparable study was the operational
definition of whorl determination time extended to include the
subsequent development of the whorl through to sexual maturity.
The data are presented as a series of three-dimensional plots
portraying the frequency of each whorl following explantation on each
day of each treatment. For the 2% treatments, they represent pooled
data from either two or three replicate experiments. Mann-Whitney tests
did not allow rejection of the null hypothesis that there were no
significant differences between floral scores within day within
treatments (P 0.6; n = 8-10),
indicating the repeatable nature of the observations and justifying our
decision to pool data from different experiments. These plots
represented a qualitative portrayal of the data, enabling us to
identify the first appearance of each whorl. In other words, the
three-dimensional figures indicate minimum whorl determination times.
In Table III, data are presented as
percentages of apices that formed each whorl. However, they are not a
reproduction of the three-dimensional plots, because they are derived
from accumulated scores within each day. For example, on d 6, 81%
(22/27) of apices exhibited carpel whorls, while 11.5% (3/27)
exhibited petal/stamen whorls, and 7.5% (2/27) formed the sepal whorl
only (Figure 2A). However, to achieve
these floral scores, they all formed the sepal whorl (i.e. 100%), 93% (25/27) formed the petals/stamen whorls, but only 81% formed the carpel whorls (Table III). Therefore, the tabulated data are a quantitative presentation enabling average determination times ( 50%
of apices forming a whorl) to be recorded.
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Table III.
The percentage of apices that formed sepals (s);
sepals, petals, and stamens (s/ps); or sepals, petals, stamens, and
carpels (s/ps/c) upon examination 4 weeks following their removal
and culture on basal medium supplemented with Suc, Glc, Fru, or 1:1
Glc:Fru: 2% (w/v) (A), 4% (w/v) (B), 6% (w/v) (C) or sugar-mannitol
combinations that generated osmotic potentials equivalent to 4% (D) or
6% (E) Suc, Glc or Fru
The percentage data are derived from accumulated scores within days.
For example, 6 d following induction on 2% (w/v) Suc (Fig. 2A),
81% of apices achieved a floral score of carpels (22/27), while 11%
(3/27) were petals and stamens, and 8% (2/27) were sepals only.
However, to achieve these scores, 100% (27/27) exhibited sepals
(100%) and 93% (25/27) exhibited stamens and petals. n
values for Suc 19 30 (2%), 14 19 (4%), 10 17 (6%); Suc:mannitol 6 12 (4%), 6 15 (6%); Glc 21 32 (2%), 10 12 (4%), 10 14 (6%); Glc-mannitol, 7 12 (4%), 5 13 (6%); Fru 18 26 (2%), 12 16 (4%), 14 18 (6%); Fru-mannitol 9 23 (4%), 10 11 (6%); Glc:Fru 10 16 (2%), 10 24 (4%), 11 20 (6%).
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Figure 2.
Frequency with which apices exhibited each floral
whorl when the apices were removed from the plant at various times
following induction and cultured in continuous light for 28 d on
White's medium supplemented with Suc: A, 2% (w/v) Suc; B, 4% (w/v)
Suc; C, 6% (w/v) Suc; D, Suc-mannitol 4% (w/v) Suc; E,
Suc-mannitol 6% (w/v) Suc. The z axis portrays
stages of floral morphogenesis: 1, sepal whorl (scores of 2-4); 2, petal/stamen whorls (scores of 5-7); and 3, carpel whorl (scores of
8-10).
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Suc Treatment
When apices were excised 1 d following induction and cultured
on 2% (w/v) Suc, 100% (30/30) exhibited sepals, 20% (6/30)
formed petals and stamens, but none formed carpels (Fig. 2A; Table
III). These apices did not exhibit floral reversion (Fig.
3). Moreover, apices excised 1 d
following induction and cultured on 2% (w/v) Suc for 10 weeks
did not form carpels (Durdan, 1998 ). Only when the apex was left on the
plant for 5 to 6 d and then cultured did we observe the carpel
whorl in vitro (Fig. 2A; Table III). The data are consistent in
revealing a minimum whorl determination time of 1 d for sepals,
petals, and stamens, but 5 d for carpels (Fig.
4). Note that the lack of carpels in this
treatment was not because the explants had stopped growing in vitro
(Fig. 5).

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Figure 3.
Light microscopic photograph of a shoot apical
meristem of P. nil, which was removed as part of an
apical explant (see "Materials and Methods") from a plant 1 d
following a 48-h dark period, and cultured on 2% (w/v) Suc for
5 weeks. This apex exhibited sepals (dissected in this prep), petals
(p), stamens (st), and, in the center, a flattened dome but no carpels
(bar = 100 µm). There was no evidence of floral reversion.
(Consistently, cultured meristems shriveled under low-vacuum scanning
electron microscopy.)
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Figure 4.
Minimum determination times (dotted rectangles)
superimposed on average determination times (arrows) in days for the
carpels on 2% (w/v), 4% (w/v), or 6% (w/v) Suc, Glc, Fru, or
equimolar Glc:Fru, together with corresponding determination times on
sugar-mannitol ( M) combinations that generated osmotic potentials
equivalent to the 4% or the 6% carbohydrate.
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Figure 5.
A, An apical explant at the time of culture (1 d
following the inductive treatment) alongside B, an explant cultured on
2% (w/v) Suc for 4 weeks showing substantial leaf expansion and
obvious root growth.
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On 2% (w/v) Suc, while 20% of apices formed the petals/stamen
whorls when the apex was removed 1 d following induction, 45% (9/20) did so at 3 d and 100% at 4 d, resulting in an
average determination time of 3 to 4 d for these whorls (Fig. 2A).
Increasing the concentration of Suc to 6% (w/v) resulted in the
carpel whorl forming in 59% (10/17) of apices that were removed on d 3 (Fig. 2C; Table III). This reduction in average carpel whorl
determination time to 3 d was not due to an osmotic effect,
because the equivalent combination of Suc and mannitol lengthened the
carpel determination time back to 5 to 6 d (Figs. 2E and 4). Both
the minimum and average whorl determination times for the
petals/stamens were remarkably constant (1 and 2-3 [4] d,
respectively) regardless of the amount of Suc added to the medium
(non-significant 2 [4 df] when the
percentage of apices exhibiting petals and stamens were compared
between the 2% [w/v], 4% [w/v], and 6% [w/v] Suc treatments).
However, the 6% (w/v) Suc-mannitol combination delayed the
appearance of the petal/stamen whorls until d 6, perhaps because of a
reduction in available carbohydrate (Fig. 2E; Table III).
Glc Treatment
We were surprised to discover that the determination time of the
carpel whorl was remarkably sensitive to the type of carbohydrate supplied to the medium. Notably, the 2% (w/v) Glc treatment
resulted in the carpel whorl forming in 20% (6/30) of apices that were excised 1 d following induction (Fig.
6A; Table III), an effect reproduced on
6% (w/v) Glc (Fig. 6C) but not on 4% (w/v) Glc (Fig. 6B) or on either
of the Glc-mannitol combinations (Fig. 6, D-E; Table III). Therefore,
changing the carbon supply from Suc to Glc resulted in a shortening of
the minimum carpel whorl determination time from 5 to 1 d (highly
significant 2 when the percentage of apices
forming carpels was compared between the 2% [w/v] Glc and Suc
treatments; P < 0.001). Note that for the 2% (w/v)
and 4% (w/v) Glc treatments, it was not until d 6 that 50% of the
apices formed the carpel whorl in vitro (Table III), resulting in an
average determination time of 6 d (Fig. 4). However, Glc was the
only carbon source that resulted in the carpel whorl forming in apices
removed 1 d following induction (Fig. 6, A and C).

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Figure 6.
The frequency with which apices exhibited each
floral whorl when the apices were removed from the plant at various
times following induction and cultured in continuous light for 28 d on White's medium supplemented with Glc: A, 2% (w/v); B, 4% (w/v);
C, 6% (w/v); D, Glc-mannitol = 4% (w/v) Glc; E,
Glc-mannitol = 6% (w/v) Glc. The z axis portrays
stages of floral morphogenesis: 1, sepal whorl (scores of 2-4); 2, petal/stamen whorls (scores of 5-7); and 3, carpel whorl (scores of
8-10).
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Another surprising observation was that 10% (1/10) of apices formed
carpels on d 2 (minimum determination time of 2 d) on the
Glc-mannitol equivalent to 6% (w/v) Glc (Fig. 6E; Table III). This was
the only sugar-mannitol treatment to have this effect on carpel whorl
determination time. Also, on the 2% (w/v) Glc treatment, over
one-third (24/30 = 37%) of the apices formed the petal and stamen
whorls 1 d following induction (Table III) resulting in a minimum
determination time of 1 d for this whorl. However, the average
determination time for these whorls was 2 to 3 d which was
generally the case on 2% (w/v), 4% (w/v), and 6% (w/v) Glc (Fig. 6;
Table III) illustrating how remarkably stable these whorls were
regardless of quantitative changes in the supply of Glc.
Fru and Glc:Fru Treatments
Compared with Suc, the minimum determination time for the carpel
whorl was shortened to 2 to 3 d on all three concentrations of Fru
(Figs. 4 and 7, A-C). This effect
could not be reproduced by the Fru-mannitol combinations, making
interpretations based upon osmotic effects unlikely (Fig. 7, D and E).
In the Glc: Fru treatments, the minimum carpel whorl
determination time was 2 to 3 d (Figs. 4 and
8, A-C), which was the average (Table
III) except for 6% (w/v) Glc:Fru, where it was 6 d (Figs. 4 and
8C; Table III).

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Figure 7.
Frequency with which apices exhibited each floral
whorl when they were were removed from the plant at various times
following induction and cultured in continuous light for 28 d on
White's medium supplemented with Fru: A, 2% (w/v); B, 4% (w/v); C,
6% (w/v); D, Fru-mannitol = 4% (w/v) Fru; E, Fru-mannitol = 6% (w/v) Fru. The z axis portrays stages of floral
morphogenesis: 1, sepal whorl (scores of 2-4); 2, petal/stamen whorls
(scores of 5-7), and 3, carpel whorl (scores of 8-10).
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Figure 8.
Frequency with which apices exhibited each floral
whorl when they were removed from the plant at various times following
induction and cultured in continuous light for 28 d on White's
medium supplemented with 1:1 Glc:Fru: A, 2% (w/v); B, 4% (w/v); or C,
6% (w/v). The z axis portrays stages of floral
morphogenesis: 1, sepal whorl (scores of 2-4); 2, petal/stamen whorls
(scores of 5-7); and 3, carpel whorl (scores of 8-10).
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On both Fru and Glc:Fru, the minimum petal/stamen whorl determination
time was 1 d, except on 6% (w/v) Fru, where it was 3 d (Fig.
7C). The average whorl determination time for the petals/stamens in
these treatments was 3 d, except for 4% (w/v) Fru, where it was
2 d. These data illustrate the stability of whorl determination times for these whorls regardless of either quantitative or qualitative changes to the carbon supply (Table III). Since shoot apical meristems increase in size to accommodate the floral whorls, we take this as
evidence that the growth of the meristems was not substantially different between treatments.
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DISCUSSION |
In our view, the highlight of the response of shoot apical
meristems of induced plants to the different culture media was the
remarkable shortening of minimum carpel whorl determination time from
5 d on 2% (w/v) Suc to 3 d both on 6% (w/v) Suc and 2%
(w/v) and 6% (w/v) Fru, to 2 d on 4% (w/v) Fru, and down to 1 d on 2% and 6% (w/v) Glc. In order of effectiveness in
shortening the minimum whorl determination times, we rank the
carbohydrates in the following order: Glc > Fru > Glc:Fru > Suc.
As an example of the way we envisage carbohydrate-mediated
regulation of determination times, Figure
9 portrays the floral timetable in vivo
(described in Fig. 1 and Table I), together with the minimum
determination times for each whorl in the 2% (w/v) Suc and 2% (w/v)
Glc treatments. Figure 2A depicts a coincident determination time of
1 d for the sepal, petal, and stamen whorls, but a protracted
whorl determination time of 5 d for the carpels in the 2% (w/v)
Suc treatment. In our experiments, the floral stimulus began its export
from the cotyledons between 12 and 16 h after the start of the
inductive treatment (Table II), which is also consistent with the
critical dark period of >11 h for this variety of P. nil
(Vince-Prue and Gressel, 1985 ). Therefore, an absolute determination
time for the outer three whorls could be 56 h (i.e. 16-48 h of
the dark period plus the 24 h after induction), which is closer to
Bhar's (1970) 36 h than the 5 to 9 h found by Matsushima et
al. (1974) and Larkin et al. (1990) . In the present study, culturing
apices at times within the inductive treatment reduced the overall
floral scores, because dark periods <48 h were not sufficient to cause
100% terminal flowering (Table II). Nevertheless, it is of interest
that when apices were removed at times within the dark period and
cultured on Suc, some remained vegetative and some formed the outer
three whorls but not the carpel whorl (S. Tudge and R.J. Herbert,
unpublished data).

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Figure 9.
The interval between the first appearance and
completion of each whorl in vivo following the 48-h inductive period
based upon the scanning electron microphotographs (Fig. 1) and the
observations listed in Table I. Minimum determination times (see Figs.
3 and 6) for A, the 2% (w/v) Suc, and B, the 2% (w/v) Glc treatments
are displayed as hatched squares/rectangles.
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The protracted determination time for the carpel whorl in the 2% (w/v)
Suc treatment was not reported previously (Bhar, 1970 ; Matsushima et
al., 1974 ; Larkin et al., 1990 ). Bhar (1970) cultured the apices on
Murashige and Skoog (1962) medium but did not state the amount of Suc
added. If it was 3%, this would fit with the shorter average
determination times we observed at higher Suc concentrations. Larkin et
al. (1990) recorded 9 h using grafting. This rapid determination
time, using an in vivo approach, is interesting in relation to our Glc
results (see below).
Figure 6A also depicts the 2% (w/v) Glc treatment shortening carpel
whorl determination time to 1 d, coincident with sepal, petal, and
stamen determination. We conclude that this treatment, together with
the 6% (w/v) Glc treatment, resulted in a coincident determination
time of 1 d for all whorls (Fig. 9B). However, we do not dispute
the subjective nature of this interpretation, because, as pointed out
above, the average determination time for the carpel whorl varied
between 3 and 6 d depending on carbon supply (Fig. 4). Fru and
equimolar Glc:Fru also resulted in marked shortening of the minimum
carpel whorl determination time to 2 to 3 d, suggesting that genes
that regulate determination may be more rapidly expressed in the
presence of the monosaccharides than with their parent disaccharide. We
also recognize that the 4% (w/v) Glc result is somewhat anomalous in
that the minimum determination time lengthened to 3 d for this
treatment. Therefore, it is difficult to argue for a
concentration-dependent Glc effect. A clearer explanation of this
particular result would benefit from greater replication of this treatment.
Suc is the main transport form of assimilated carbon, and is only
utilized when cleaved either by invertase or Suc synthase (Copeland,
1990 ; Avigad and Dey, 1997 ). Since only Glc treatment caused the
dramatic appearance of carpels in meristems cultured 1 d following
induction, invertase activity may be more important in the shoot apical
meristem in P. nil because this enzyme releases Glc, whereas
Suc synthase cleaves Suc only in the presence of UDP to form Fru and
UDP-Glc (Copeland, 1990 ). This could have been the case in grafting
experiments whereby a rapid release of Glc in the terminal meristem
could have resulted in the rapid determination time recorded (Larkin et
al., 1990 ). Invertase activity increased substantially when shoot
apical meristems of Sinapis alba became committed to
flowering (Pryke and Bernier, 1978 ).
At the molecular level, we suggest that Glc and Fru treatment can
shorten carpel determination time by activating the rapid and early
expression of homeotic genes involved in carpel development. Lyndon
(1998) described a model for determination that involved the binding of
homeotic gene products that act as feedback activators of the
transcription of downstream homeotic genes (Davies and Schwarz-Sommer,
1994 ). In this model, determination is the time taken to lock in
homeotic gene transcription (Lyndon, 1998 ).
Carbohydrate-regulated gene expression has already been identified in
higher plants with excesses or depletions of sugars, either enhancing
or repressing gene expression in a whole range of different processes
(e.g. Koch, 1996 ). Simoko (1994) observed carbohydrate-responsive
changes in gene expression of unidentified developmental genes involved
with potato tuber induction, which would indicate that sugar-related
gene expression may have a major role in changes in plant development.
(e.g. Borisjuk et al., 1998 ). Although Glc-regulated gene expression
has been studied in both prokaryotes and eukaryotes, the Glc-sensing
and Glc-signaling pathways are still largely unknown (Jang and Sheen,
1994 ).
Clearly, the apex was competent to respond to the floral stimulus,
forming the sepal, stamen, and petal whorls soon after the completion
of induction regardless of carbon supply. However, 1 d following
induction, the P. nil apex may not have been competent to
form carpels when cultured on 2% (w/v) Suc. In this instance we use an
operational definition whereby competent cells or organs can respond in
the expected manner in response to the appropriate developmental signal
(Taiz and Zeiger, 1998 ). In other words, 1 d following induction,
the apex may have been unable to become switched to carpel
whorl morphogenesis. Alternatively, since the same apex would
have formed carpels on Glc, perhaps this monosaccharide is required for
carpel development. This would mean that on 2% (w/v) Suc, the apex may
have carpel identity but be developmentally arrested. Either way, the
data indicate remarkably different effects of Glc and Suc on development.
The longer interval of 5 to 6 d for carpel determination may be a
period during which the meristem acquires competence to respond to the
floral stimulus. This competence may be explicable entirely on
morphological grounds. Note that the carpel whorl only starts to appear
on d 6 following induction in vivo as the center of a considerably
enlarged meristem begins to be consumed by the incipient gynoecium
(Herbert et al., 1992 ) (Fig. 1). Therefore, 5 d are necessary for
the apex to grow sufficiently for the appearance of carpel primordia,
although increasing the level of Suc to 6% (w/v) shortened the carpel
determination time to 3 d. As noted by McDaniel (1996) , this
suggests a requirement in the shoot apical meristem for a metabolic
competence to facilitate floral morphogenesis, an argument that is
germane to the carpels but not so obviously to the outer whorls of the
P. nil flower.
In conclusion, Glc and Fru had some surprising effects on carpel whorl
determination time, an effect that could not be reproduced by any of
the carbohydrate-mannitol combinations except for Glc and mannitol
(6% [w/v] Glc). The remarkable sensitivity of the shoot apical
meristem of P. nil to Glc and Fru could help to explain the
differences in patterns of determination reported for other species.
For example, perhaps in L. temulentum, which exhibits coincident determination of all whorls (McDaniel et al., 1991 ), more
monosaccharides are generated in the shoot apical meristem following
induction compared with S. coeli-rosa, which exhibits sequential determination (Donnison and Francis, 1993 ). In P. nil, Glc and Fru treatments may result in rapid expression of
homeotic genes that regulate gynoecium morphogenesis, thereby
shortening the time required for determination of this whorl and
allowing this mechanism to be studied at the molecular level.
In more general terms, our data are a reminder of the surprising
effects carbohydrates can have on development. For example, callus from
induced tobacco plants formed floral buds on a medium supplemented with
Glc, but formed vegetative buds in the absence of Glc. However, callus
from uninduced plants was unresponsive to Glc (Chailakhyan et al.,
1975 ). In other words, Glc induced floral gene expression in florally
competent cells. Still in question is the extent to which carbohydrates
influence morphogenesis, either directly, through the induction of
changes in gene expression, or indirectly, through alterations in
metabolic state, which then permit particular modes of development.
 |
MATERIALS AND METHODS |
Growth Conditions
Seeds of Pharbitis nil Chois cv Violet (Muritane Seed
Company, Kyoto) were selected for uniform size color and shape and
scarified in 32 N
H2SO4 at 27°C ± 1°C for 30 min (Herbert, 1991 ). The seeds were then washed twice in
distilled water and immersed in running tap water at 25°C to 30°C
for 2 h. Subsequently, they were abraded against a plastic mesh to
further remove the surrounding testa, and then given an overnight
imbibition of aerated distilled water (27°C ± 1°C employed
throughout unless otherwise stated). Seeds that failed to germinate or
produced radicles <15 mm in length were discarded, and the remainder
sown in thoroughly moistened John Innes No.1 compost, with five plants
per 75-mm plastic pot. These pots were then placed in gravel trays and
watered from the base (approximately twice a week). The seedlings were
induced to flower by growing them for 5 d under continuous light
of 400 µmol m 2 s 1
provided by cool-white fluorescent tubes (Sylvania,
London) at 27°C, followed by 48 h darkness, and then a
return to continuous light (Durdan, 1998 ). At daily intervals following
the inductive treatment, shoot tips were excised and shortened to
approximately 10 mm of tissue and dissected to expose the shoot apical
meristem and surrounding primordia. Each apex was then attached to a
sample holder with a drop of Cryoembed (Bright Instrument Co.,
Cambridge, UK) and examined immediately with a low-vacuum
scanning electron microscope (JSM-5200 LV, JEOL, London).
Through examination of floral apices at various times following
induction in vivo, and using the method of Maeska and Ogawa (1994) , we
devised a simple numerical scheme to score the progressive stages of
floral morphogenesis.
To ascertain when the floral stimulus started to move out of the
cotyledons, these organs and any detectable leaf primordia were excised
from each of 12 replicate plants at 0, 4, 8, 12, 16, 20, 24, and
48 h after the start of the inductive treatment. The plants were
then returned to continuous light, and 4 weeks later scored for
evidence of terminal flowers.
Tissue Culture
At various times (between 1 and 6 d) following the
inductive treatment, shoot apices (the shoot apical meristem plus
4-5 leaf primordia plus 10 mm of basal tissue) were explanted on
White's (1943) salt mixture solidified with 0.8% (w/v) agar (in vitro grade 1, Sigma, St. Louis) and supplemented with Suc (58, 116.8, or
175.3 mM), Glc, Fru (111, 222, or 333 mM for
each), or equimolar 1:1 Glc:Fru (analar grade, British Drug House,
Dorset, UK). From here on, we refer to these concentrations as 2%
(w/v), 4% (w/v), or 6% (w/v). Basal medium was also supplemented with
sugar mannitol combinations that would generate osmotic potentials
equivalent to that of the 4% (w/v) and 6% (w/v) sugars (e.g. 20 g L 1 Suc + 10.38 g L 1
mannitol = 0.29 MPa s of 4% [w/v] Suc). In each
case, the medium was balanced to a pH of 5.8.
In all experiments, cultures were maintained for 4 weeks at 23°C ± 1°C in non-inductive continuous light from cool-white fluorescent tubes giving a photon fluence rate of 10 to 25 µmol
m 2 s 1; higher fluence
rates resulted in bleaching (Durdan, 1998 ). Four weeks after the start
of culture, the shoot apices were assessed by dissecting them and
noting the number of each type of floral organ using a microscope (SMZ,
Nikon, Tokyo). At no time during this work did we ever observe
primordia singly, nor did we observe floral reversion (for example,
carpels were always observed as a fused ring).
In the 2% treatments, the experiment was repeated two to three times,
and each time 10 apices were cultured per day per treatment. In the
>2% treatments, more apices were cultured per day in single experiments: approximately 15 to 20 apices were cultured per day per
treatment. In vitro data for d 4 and 5 are presented only for the 2%
(w/v) Suc treatment, because at the time of these experiments we were
unsure when the inner whorls would appear in vivo. Furthermore, sampling apices on d 4 and 5 became redundant because, in vivo, the
stamens and petals appeared on d 5 and the carpels on d 6 (see Table
I). In other words, determination times
>4 d for the stamens and petals and >5 d for the carpels were not
possible because by then these organs were already initiated in vivo.
Statistical Analyses
The data were analyzed using 2
(P = 0.05) or the non-parametric Mann-Whitney test
(P = 0.05).
 |
FOOTNOTES |
Received December 29, 1999; accepted January 3, 2000.
1
S.F.D. received a research studentship from
University College, Worcester, UK.
*
Corresponding author; e-mail francisd{at}cardiff.ac.uk; fax 29-
20-874305.
 |
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