Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research
Organization, Plant Industry, G.P.O. Box 1600, Canberra,
Australian Capital Territory 2601, Australia (R.W.K., Y.B.-T.); and
Agricultural Research Organization, The Volcani Centre, P.O.
Box 6, Bet Dagan 50250, Israel (Y.B.-T.)
The use of gas chromatography-mass spectrometry-selected ion
monitoring along with a 13C internal standard has allowed
sensitive measurements of the sucrose (Suc) content of individual shoot
apices of Fuchsia hybrida. With intact plants, as the
photosynthetic irradiance increased, so did shoot apex Suc content,
reaching saturation at about 500 µmol m
2
s
1. These same plants flowered at the higher irradiances,
remaining vegetative in 10-h short days at an irradiance of 230 µmol
m
2 s
1. The strong correlation
(r = 0.93) in these studies between flowering and
shoot apex Suc content indicates a role for Suc as a stimulus to
flowering in this species. However, Suc is not the long-day (LD)
"florigen" of F. hybrida
because 2 to 4 LD given as a 14-h low-irradiance photoperiod
extension (10-15 µmol m
2 s
1) induced
flowering but without increase in shoot apex Suc content. Flowering
induced by either pathway, the LD- or the Suc-mediated one, was
inhibited by applying gibberellin (GA) to the shoot tip. Such
inhibition of flowering by GA, at least for the LD pathway, was
associated with a reduced apex Suc content, enhanced elongation of
subapical stem tissue, and a reduced import into the shoot apex of
leaf-sourced assimilate. Thus, our findings show how GA inhibits
flowering of F. hybrida and confirm the
importance of nutrient diversion in regulating flowering.
 |
INTRODUCTION |
In a series of studies with the
long-day plant (LDP) Sinapis alba using sensitive enzymatic
measurements, early increases in shoot apex Suc content were found
during exposure to either a florally inductive long day (LD) of high
irradiance or to a displaced short day (SD; Bodson, 1977
; Bodson and
Outlaw, 1985
). Lejeune et al. (1993)
subsequently reported an increase
in LD of Suc delivery to the apex of S. alba based on
measurements of phloem exudate in the stem below the apex. Thus, such
increases in assimilate/Suc supply to the shoot apex might be important for floral induction.
Quite separate from effects of a high irradiance, for most LDP
a low irradiance non-photosynthetic LD can be effective for flowering.
Such a non-photosynthetic LD could still alter leaf carbon metabolism
but it is unlikely that this would alter Suc supply to the shoot apex.
For example, the LDP Lolium temulentum can flower with no
increase in Suc at the shoot apex following a low-irradiance LD
extension of 10 to 15 µmol m
2
s
1 (King and Evans, 1991
). In contrast, when
various photosynthetically effective irradiances were imposed during
the LD photoperiod extension there were substantial increases in apex
Suc content and parallel increases in flowering of L. temulentum (King and Evans, 1991
). Thus, there is a clear
distinction for L. temulentum between Suc and the LD
photoperiodic florigen as conceived by Chailakhyan in 1936. Suc is not
a component of the true LD "florigen(s)" of L. temulentum but it acts as an effective florigenic synergist.
The contrasts between the various studies with L. temulentum
and S. alba are informative. More often than not, the LD
exposure with S. alba has involved photosynthetically
effective irradiances of about 150 µmol
m
2 s
1 (Bodson, 1977
;
Bodson and Outlaw, 1985
; Lejeune et al., 1993
). Thus, a
synergistic, irradiance-driven photosynthetic Suc response might be
expected and it would act along with the low-irradiance photoperiodic
LD response known for this species (Bodson et al., 1977
). The more
complex experiments with S. alba involving a displaced SD
also showed an early increase in apex sugars with floral induction (Bodson, 1977
; Lejeune et al., 1993
).
The scenario above, with the implication of increased photosynthesis,
places the increase in shoot apex sugar of S. alba as separate to but synergistic with an LD photoperiodic flowering response. However, there might also be a direct Suc/photosynthetic effect with S. alba, which flowers after 3 SD of high (e.g.
500-600 µmol m
2
s
1) photosynthetic irradiance (Bodson et al.,
1977
). In contrast, L. temulentum does not flower in SD even
with exposure for weeks to very high irradiances (1,200-1,600 µmol
m
2 s
1; King and Evans,
1991
). Thus, Suc can apparently act florigenically in S. alba in SD or LD but, again, not as the day length-dependent florigen of Chailakhyan (1936)
.
To further our understanding of how apex Suc levels relate to
flowering, another LD plant, Fuchsia hybrida, has been
examined here for two reasons. First, like S. alba, its
flowering is enhanced by increased photosynthetic irradiance. Second,
applied gibberellin (GA) inhibits its LD-induced flowering (Sachs and
Bretz, 1961
). The simplest explanation, and one which links these two
findings, is that a rise in apical Suc content is sufficient for
flowering of F. hybrida, as in S. alba. GA would inhibit flowering by diverting assimilate away from
the apex and into elongating stem tissue. This concept, often referred
to as the nutrient diversion hypothesis (see Sachs and Hackett, 1983
),
fits with our recent finding that the greater the stem elongation of
F. hybrida in response to GAs, the greater the
inhibition of its flowering (King et al., 2000
). Furthermore, this
inhibition of flowering was lost following slight structural changes to
create either an elongation-inactive GA (epimerization of the
C3-hydroxyl) or an elongation-inhibiting GA (e.g. 16,17-dihydro GA5).
Such evidence points to an indirect, inhibitory effect of GA on
flowering due to enhanced stem growth, a hypothesis also supported by
Steffen et al. (1988)
from their studies of inhibitory effects of GA on
flower development in Bougainvillea "San Diego Red."
In the present paper the role of Suc in flowering of F. hybrida has been examined in three ways: (a) causality in
the relationship between shoot apex Suc content and flowering has been
examined by imposing various irradiances during otherwise noninductive SD, (b) changes in Suc content of the shoot apex have been measured during its transition to flowering and following inhibition of flowering by GA treatment, and (c) the distribution of
14C-labeled assimilate has been examined to
establish if GA action involves diversion of leaf-sourced assimilate
away from the shoot apex.
 |
RESULTS |
For flowering of F. hybrida two inductive
treatments were utilized: an LD of low irradiance or an SD at a high
irradiance. As shown in Figure 1,
flowering resulted after exposure to 2 or more LD, this LD involving
the 10-h high light (230 µmol m
2
s
1) of the SD followed by 14-h low irradiance
(15 µmol m
2 s
1) LD
daylength extension. On return to SD the first morphological sign of
the onset of flowering of axillary buds was at 8 to 10 d and they
were visible to the naked eye at 21 d. In general, only two pairs
of axillary buds were induced to flower by the brief LD treatment (i.e.
a total of about four flowers per plant). Plants held in SD at
an irradiance of 230 µmol m
2
s
1 remained vegetative for many months.

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Figure 1.
Induction of flowering of F. hybrida either by exposure to LD or by increasing the
irradiance to 500 µmol m 2
s 1 in SD. Control plants maintained at an
irradiance of 230 µmol m 2
s 1 in SD remained vegetative. Values are
means ± SE (n = 12).
|
|
The second inductive treatment involved increase in the irradiance
during the SD. As shown in Figure 1, flowering required 5 to 10 d
of exposure to a high irradiance (500 µmol m
2
s
1). Interaction of these two treatments is
shown in Figure 2, where a 7-d increase
in SD irradiance was combined with exposure to 4 LD. The increased
photosynthetic input was clearly most important when it immediately
preceded or coincided with early events of LD floral initiation of
F. hybrida. This experiment also included control
SD plants exposed to an increase in irradiance for 7 d. Their
flowering response was very weak (an average of 0.5 flowers per plant;
data not shown) and contrasts with the effective SD induction at high
irradiance shown in Figure 1 and also later. We cannot explain why
there was variability between floral induction across experiments and
treatments but we confirmed the response in two further
experiments (see Figs. 4 and 7).

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Figure 2.
Flowering of F. hybrida in
response to a 4-LD exposure combined with a 1-week increase in
irradiance during the daily 10-h main light period. The 1-week increase
in irradiance (from 230 to 500 µmol m 2
s 1) was imposed at various times before,
during, or after exposure of the plants to the 4 LD. The low-irradiance
(230 µmol m 2 s 1) LD
control is shown as a column. Horizontal bars on the data points show
the period of high-light exposure with the plot points being for the
midpoint of the 7 d. Vertical bars are
±SE of the mean (n = 15).
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Photosynthetic input could be expected to regulate flowering via change
in Suc supply to the shoot apex. In preliminary studies of apex Suc a
diurnal cycle was evident (Fig. 3) with
the maximum content occurring during the light period as was expected
based on our earlier findings with L. temulentum (King and
Evans, 1991
). Apices subsequently have been harvested over the period
that Suc levels were at their peak.

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Figure 3.
Effect of time of day on the Suc content of the
shoot apex of F. hybrida plants growing
vegetatively in SD. The black and white boxes, respectively, indicate
the daily cycle of dark and light. Bars are
±SE of the mean (n = 5-9).
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The relationship between flowering and irradiance of the SD is
illustrated in Figure 4 and this data
confirms that flowering of F. hybrida can be
induced directly by increasing the photosynthetically effective
radiation as was also evident in Figure 1. Furthermore, shoot apex
sugar content increased in parallel.

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Figure 4.
Effect of increasing the irradiance in SD on
shoot apex Suc content and on flowering. Apices (n = 10) were harvested for Suc measurements 10 d after commencing the
treatment and flowering (n = 20) was determined after 3 weeks. Values are means ± SE. The
correlation coefficient between Suc content and flowering was
r = 0.93.
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Apex Suc increase approached saturation at an irradiance of >500
µmol m
2 s
1 and at 350 µmol m
2 s
1 in a
second experiment (not shown). Flowering response was also saturated
over this same range in the two experiments. In contrast, saturation of
photosynthesis for the youngest fully expanded leaf occurred above 800 µmol m
2 s
1 (data not
shown). For the apex Suc increase and for flowering, such saturation at
lower irradiances was expected given our similar findings for L. temulentum (King and Evans, 1991
). There apparently is a
restriction at the shoot apex to carbon inflow, a resistance that is
not overcome by large increases in carbon supply from the leaf.
GA treatment both inhibits flowering of F. hybrida and promotes stem elongation (e.g. Sachs and Bretz,
1961
; King et al., 2000
). As shown in Figure
5, with increasing GA dosage shoot apex Suc content decreased progressively and stem elongation increased for
these vegetative, SD-grown plants.

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Figure 5.
Relationship between GA3
dose, stem elongation, and shoot apex Suc content for plants of
F. hybrida growing vegetatively in SD. For Suc
measurements, apex samples (six-eight per treatment) were taken 4 d after the GA3 treatment. Stem lengths
(n = 13) for each treatment are given as an increment
over the starting value. Plants were measured daily but lengths are
only shown after 7 d. Values are means ± SE.
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To define when GA acted during floral initiation, flowering was
induced either by exposure to 4 LD or to an increase in SD irradiance.
Early applications of GA-inhibited flowering (Fig. 6) but this inhibition was lost by
delaying the GA application until 6 d or more after the beginning of an
inductive treatment. Morphological signs of floral development
were first evident 7 to 10 d after the start of a 4-LD
exposure of plants (data not shown). Thus, only early events of floral
evocation and early initiation are inhibited by GA.

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Figure 6.
Effect of GA3 application
before, during, or after induction of flowering of F. hybrida by exposure to 4 LD or to 10 d at high
irradiance in SD. The high irradiance was 500 µmol
m 2 s 1, control plants
receiving 230 µmol m 2
s 1. GA3 was applied at
200 ng/plant in the experiment involving LD-induced flowering and at
100 ng/plant where high irradiance SD were used to induce flowering.
Control plants were induced to flower but not treated with GA. Values
are means ± SE. (n = 12-20).
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To examine changes over time in shoot apex Suc content and stem
elongation, GA was applied either to noninduced plants or at the start
of floral induction for plants exposed to 4 LD. As shown in Figure
7, within 1 d of GA treatment there
was a brief but significant increase in apex Suc content for both
vegetative and florally induced apices. Suc content subsequently
dropped to a value below the untreated control and this drop was
correlated with the onset of detectable GA-induced elongation of the
stem 0.5 to 1 cm below the apex (Fig. 7). Over time, the GA treatment maintained rapid stem elongation and shoot apex Suc levels remained low.

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Figure 7.
Change over time following GA treatment in shoot
apex Suc content (top) and stem elongation (bottom) of vegetative or
florally induced plants of F. hybrida. The
synthetic GA 2,2-dimethyl-GA4 was applied at a
dose of 200 ng/plant to the vegetative plants in SD and at 400 ng/plant
to florally induced plants. The daily light (white box), dark (black
box), and LD treatment (hatched box) is shown on the abscissa. The
inset shows further measurements of stem elongation out to 21 d by
which time the stem length of the GA-treated LD plants was 275 mm.
Errors are shown as ± SE or as the least
significant difference (P = 0.05).
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With non-GA-treated flowering plants, apex Suc content first decreased
and then increased after the LD was terminated (Fig. 7). The changes in
stem growth were the inverse of those for apex Suc content with at
first rapid elongation during the 4 LD and a drop in Suc but afterward
an almost instantaneous return to the slower rate of elongation of SD
plants (see inset Fig. 7) and a rise in Suc content. Such stem growth
responses are most simply interpreted as an LD effect involving a
temporary increase in endogenous GA content as is well-known for other
species (compare with spinach; Zeevaart, 1971
). With GA treatment
coupled with LD, the changes in Suc content and stem elongation were
more extreme. The more prolonged growth stimulation due to applied GA
apparently inhibited flowering by keeping apex Suc levels low for much longer.
Examination of the supply of 14C-labeled
photosynthetic assimilate from the leaf to the apex confirmed that the
effects of GA on apex Suc were linked to assimilate import. Six days
after GA treatment, import from the leaf into the apex of
14C-labeled assimilate was reduced relative to
control plants as shown in Table I for a
10-min feed followed by a 6.75-h export period. This response fits with
the decrease seen in apex Suc content (Fig. 7) and the increase in stem
growth (Fig. 7; Table I). A similar trend was found in a repeat
experiment (not shown) and there was a significant increase in
assimilate import to the apex 1 d after GA application, which fits
with the increase seen in apex Suc at this early time (Fig. 7).
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Table I.
Effect of prior GA treatment (GA3 400 ng/plant) on the import of 14C-labeled assimilate into the
shoot apex of F. hybrida over a period of 6.75 h
The leaf was exposed to 14CO2 for 10 min
beginning 1.5 h after the start of the daily main-light period for
untreated control plants or for plants treated 1 or 6 d earlier
with GA. Apices from control and GA-treated plants were harvested at
the same time. Stem elongation was followed daily and the data shown
were from measurements 5 d after the start of GA treatment. Values
are means ± SE for n = 20.
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 |
DISCUSSION |
By combining the sensitivity and specificity of gas
chromatography (GC)-mass spectrometry (MS)-selected ion monitoring
(SIM) with accuracy due to the addition of a
13C-Suc internal standard, we have developed a
robust technique for measuring the Suc content of single, 2-µg dry
weight, shoot apices of F. hybrida. Apex Suc
increased with increased photosynthetic input; hence, these
measurements are sensitive. They are also physiologically meaningful
because, when photosynthetic input was increased, we found that
flowering increased in parallel with apex Suc increase (Fig. 4). We
consequently have been able to examine the role of apex Suc in
environmental and hormonal regulation of flowering of F. hybrida.
Environmental Regulation of Flowering and of Suc Supply to the
Shoot Apex
Here, by manipulating photoinductive conditions, we have shown
that Suc is florigenic in F. hybrida but it is
not a stimulus specific to LD photoperiodic exposures. Increases in
photosynthetic input in non-photoinductive SD led to increased apex Suc
content and, in parallel, to flowering of F. hybrida (Figs. 1 and 4). In contrast, exposure to
low-irradiance inductive LD photoperiods resulted in flowering but
without any increase in apex Suc content (Fig. 7). Thus, for
F. hybrida, evidence of a relationship between flowering and apex Suc depends on whether a photosynthetic or a
photoperiodic, non-photosynthetic LD irradiance has been used.
The low-irradiance florally effective LD photoperiod extensions
contributed to a 6% increase at the most in photosynthesis and
did not increase apex Suc, as we also reported previously for L. temulentum (King and Evans, 1991
). In contrast, induction of
flowering in the absence of LD required a greater than 200% increase
in irradiance (Figs. 1 and 4). It is clear that photosynthetically produced Suc may cause flowering of F. hybrida
but separately from (Fig. 1 and 4) yet additively with (Fig. 2), a
low-irradiance LD photoperiodic treatment.
Other LD species that show photosynthetically driven flowering in SD
include S. alba (Bodson et al., 1977
) and Arabidopsis (Bagnall, 1992
; Koornneef et al., 1998
). Furthermore, with both the
latter species, supplying Suc promoted flowering to the same extent as
achieved by increasing irradiance (Deltour, 1967
; King and Bagnall,
1996
). In contrast, for flowering of L. temulentum Suc is
necessary but alone an increase in apical Suc is not sufficient. For
example, Suc supplied to excised, cultured apices of L. temulentum was not sufficient to induce flowering, but if apices
were excised when the LD photoperiodic floral stimulus had reached the
apex (after 36 h), then a strong Suc response was obtained
(McDaniel et al., 1991
). Similar response was evident with intact
plants in that substantial increases in the irradiance were not
effective for flowering in SD but were additive to LD induction (King
and Evans, 1991
). As an aside, as for F. hybrida
(Fig. 4), these earlier studies with L. temulentum showed
that apex Suc as measured was a valid estimate of that pool of Suc of
physiological importance for flowering.
One apparent contradiction between F. hybrida and
L. temulentum on the one hand and S. alba on the
other is that flowering of S. alba was associated with
increase in apex Suc with LD or displaced SD treatments (Bodson, 1977
;
Bodson and Outlaw, 1985
). However, these responses with S. alba require further examination. In particular, high irradiances
were generally imposed during the inductive LD or displaced SD
treatments, thus making it impossible to separate photosynthetic change
in shoot apex sugars from any truly photoperiodic response. In their
presentations these authors also claim that floral induction by
exposure to a displaced SD should avoid photosynthetic effects.
However, as applied to S. alba, the near-proximity of the 2 SD introduces a durational photosynthetic effect due to the 16 h
of light given over 22 h. In addition, a potential LD photoperiod
is imposed so that the treatment might be better described as a
displaced LD.
GA Inhibition of Flowering and the Relationship with Suc Supply to
the Shoot Apex
Inhibition of flowering by GA has been reported previously for two
herbaceous LDP, F. hybrida (Sachs and Bretz,
1961
) and Pisum sativum (Barber et al., 1958
; Reid et al.,
1977
). GA may also inhibit flowering of SD species including
Bougainvillea "San Diego Red" (Hackett and Sachs,
1967
) and Pharbitis nil (see King et al., 2000
) and it
inhibits flowering of woody species including citrus (Monselise
and Goldschmidt, 1982
). As a corollary, lowering endogenous GA levels
may promote flowering of woody species as has now been demonstrated
very clearly with one Eucalyptus nitens (Moncur and
Hasan, 1994
).
Mechanistically, our findings of GA inhibition of flowering of
F. hybrida are most simply interpreted in terms
of assimilate diversion, as originally proposed by Sachs and Hackett
(1983)
. Because of the importance of assimilate/Suc input for flowering of F. hybrida (see above), competition for
assimilate between the shoot apex and the rest of the plant should
result from the promotion of stem elongation by GA treatment. This
proposal fits with our observation that when flowering was inhibited by
GA treatment (Fig. 6), Suc content of the apex was reduced (Figs. 5 and
7) and there was apparently reduced import of assimilate into the shoot
apex (Table I). Such inhibition of flowering only occurred if the GA
was growth active; simple growth-inactive GA structural variants were
inactive for inhibition of flowering (King et al., 2000
). Overall, our
findings that GA causes a diversion of assimilate/Suc from the apex and
inhibits flowering are unique for two reasons. First, we have focused
on changes at the shoot apex over the time that enhanced stem growth is
first becoming evident (Fig. 7). Second, these changes have been
documented during the brief (4-5 d), early period of development when
floral initiation is inhibited by GA (Sachs and Bretz, 1961
; Fig.
6).
We have yet to explain the early transient (24-h) increase in apex Suc
content following GA application to the shoot tip (Fig. 7). However,
the increase might result if GA can mobilize assimilate to the
apex, but such action is then rapidly masked due to increased stem
elongation after 2 to 3 d. In other species a GA-regulated increase in Suc import to the apex may not be so transient. For example, in a red clover (Trifolium pratense) mutant
requiring GA for its flowering, GA treatment appears to increase apex
Suc levels (Jones, 1990
).
The contrast between GA action on F. hybrida and
that of L. temulentum is dramatic. For this latter species,
GAs or their derivatives promote flowering but may variously promote or
inhibit stem elongation, or be growth neutral (Evans et al., 1994
).
Therefore, it is clear that unlike F. hybrida,
for flowering of L. temulentum there is no GA-induced
inhibition of flowering due to growth effects. By default, in
species such as L. temulentum where GA predominantly promotes flowering, a quite different mechanism of its action must be
argued. It is possible that for L. temulentum this GA regulation involves activation of the myb transcription factor LtGAMYB
(see Gocal et al., 1999
).
How Suc regulates flowering of F. hybrida is not
clear. Where applied Suc can induce flowering as for S. alba
(Deltour, 1967
) or promote it as in L. temulentum
(McDaniel et al., 1991
); then the Suc itself is active. On the other
hand, because florigen(s) can be cotransported with assimilate in some
species (e.g. P. nil, King et al., 1968
;
Perilla frutescens, King and Zeevaart, 1973
) then changes
in the import of assimilate will change the delivery of known hormones
and florigenic compounds. Similar "cotransport" effects may also
result from changes in the sourcing of assimilate where the total
supply to the apex remains constant, as shown in studies of labeled
assimilate supply to the apex from matched but induced or noninduced
cotyledons of P. nil (Ogawa and King, 1979
). It is clear
that further effort is needed to resolve the extent to which applied GA
inhibits LD-induced flowering of F. hybrida by
diversion of assimilate only or also by diverting any cotransported LD florigen.
 |
MATERIALS AND METHODS |
Clonally propagated plants of Fuchsia hybrida cv
Lord Byron were grown in the Canberra phytotron (Morse and Evans, 1962
)
in 8-cm cylindrical plastic pots in a 1:1 mixture of
perlite:vermiculite and irrigated twice daily with nutrient solution in
the morning and water in the afternoon. They were grown until they were
10 to 12 cm high in shuttered cabinets under natural light in SD of
10 h at 24°C during the day and 19°C at night. Then they were transferred to artificially lit cabinets at the same temperatures and
with 10-h daily illumination at a photosynthetic flux density of 220 to
230 µmol m
2 s
1 from a combination of
metal halide and quartz halide lamps. Plants were kept under these
conditions for 3 to 4 weeks. For LD treatment in the artificially lit
cabinets the main daylight period was extended for 14 h with low
irradiances from incandescent lamps (15 µmol m
2
s
1). Experimental treatments were usually started when
plants were about 25 cm high. After 4 LD the plants were
returned to the regular SD light regime. In one series of experiments
the irradiance during the regular 10 h of the SD light period was
doubled for 1 week beginning at various times before, during, or after
the 4-LD exposure. Three weeks after any florally inductive treatment,
flowering was assessed on 14 to 18 plants. Values are presented as the
average ± SE of the mean. To simplify presentation,
errors are sometimes shown as least significant differences.
GAs (supplied by L.N. Mander, Australian National University,
Canberra) were applied in 10% (v/v) ethanol as a 10-µL drop to the shoot tip. The control received 10 µL of 10% (v/v)
ethanol. All chemical applications were made 2 to 3 h before the
end of a daily light period. The GA treatment preceded the LD exposure unless specified otherwise. At the time of GA treatment and for controls treated with 10% (v/v) ethanol, the pair of leaves
about two-thirds fully expanded was marked. Stem elongation
subsequently was measured for the young expanding internodes above this
leaf pair.
Suc Extraction and Quantitation
Shoot apices, including one or two just-visible primordia, were
excised under a dissecting microscope, transferred onto a piece of
aluminum foil, laid in planchets, and oven dried (62°C) for at least
24 h. The dry weight of each apex (generally between 2-8 µg)
was determined using a Sartorius Supermicro S4 balance (Sartorius GmbH,
Goettingen, Germany). After weighing they were transferred to
clean tapered glass autosampler inserts. To each sample a fixed amount
of 13C-Suc internal standard was added plus 100 µL of
80% (v/v) methanol (HPLC grade + double distilled water). The
inserts were capped in tapered 1.5-mL microcentrifuge tubes and shaken
overnight on an orbital shaker to extract Suc from the apex. The
methanol was then evaporated under vacuum (Speed Vac SC 110, Savant
Instruments Inc., Holbrook, NY).
For GC-MS-SIM analysis the Suc was converted to its
trimethylsilyl derivative in 10 µL of dry pyridine plus 10 µL of Bis(trimethylsilyl)trifluoroacetamide plus 1%
(v/v) trimethyl chlorosilane (Alltech, Sydney). The inserts were sealed tightly with crimp caps, and the mixture left to react at
90°C for 90 min in an oven. For GC-MS-SIM, 1 µL of the extracted, derivatized sugar was injected into a gas chromatograph (5890 Series
II, Hewlett-Packard, Palo Alto, CA) coupled to a mass selective detector (HP5971, Hewlett-Packard). The peak area of the plant 12C-Suc was compared with the area of the
13C-Suc internal standard. Based on a calibration curve
this ratio was converted to the mass of Suc in the apex per unit dry
weight. The 12C-Suc base peak ion of m/z 361 (see Gaskin and MacMillan, 1991
) was selected for Suc analysis.
This m/z 361 ion presumably arises from cleavage of the
glycosidic linkage of Suc and subsequent loss of a
trimethylsilylhydroxy group from the deoxy-Glc fragment. The base peak
of the 13C internal standard was at m/z 367, which is expected because it was synthesized enzymatically from
uniformly labeled 13C- D-Glc (99% + purity)
purchased from Cambridge Isotope Laboratories (Andover, MA). Dr. J. Lunn (Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research Organization)
carried out the enzymic conversions that required the formation of a
13C-Fru moiety from the 13C-Glc prior to
synthesis of 13C-Suc.
The GC column was a 25-m × 0.22-mm i.d. × 0.25-µm film
thickness fused silica column (BPX-5, SGE, Austin, TX).
Conditions were: injector at 250°C; column temperature was held for
1.5 min at 60°C, then programmed to 200°C at 25°C
min
1 and thereafter to 270°C at 5°C
min
1. The MS interface was at 290°C. The helium column
carrier gas flow rate was 0.8 mL min
1. The ionization
potential was 70 eV.
Maximum sensitivity was not required for the GC-MS-SIM assay of Suc and
the separation of 12C and 13C ions by 6 mass
units meant that the assay was not influenced by detector
tuning. The assays routinely detected as little as 0.1 ng of Suc per
injection and the standard curve was linear (r = 0.999) over at least a 40-fold range. One advantage of using an
internal standard was that samples once derivatized gave a constant
measurement of shoot apex Suc over days when assayed again and also
when the same vial was repetitively assayed (up to 10 times).
The content of Suc in an apex that we and others have reported (Bodson,
1977
; King and Evans, 1991
) can range from 10 to 60 mg g
1
dry weight depending on environmental treatments. The minimum amount of
12C-Suc found for the smallest apex was generally 5-fold
greater than the lower limit of detection for a 1-µL injection from
the 20-µL derivatization mixture. An apex alone weighed about 2 µg dry weight but, due to the difficulty of precise dissection,
dry weights of apex plus leaf and stem base tissue ranged at the
extreme from 2 to 25 µg. The amount of Suc per "apex" extract
(50-500 ng Suc) was linearly related to dry weight
(r = 0.81). The concentration of Suc apparently was
similar in all "apical" tissues. Further, as shown later, when
daily irradiance was increased, the content of Suc in such "apical"
tissue was directly related to flowering response and so reflects
change in a physiologically relevant pool of Suc.
F. hybrida flowers on axillary meristems
so for Suc assay it was important to harvest the appropriate tissue.
The relevant tissue in this study was the terminal meristem because all
our harvests were prior to visible formation of the relevant axillary meristem.
Distribution of 14C-Labeled Assimilate
The distal halves of just fully expanded leaves were exposed for
10 min in a perspex assimilation chamber to
14CO2 generated by adding 50% (v/v) lactic
acid to Ba14CO3 (4 mg, 52 Ci
mol
1). The irradiance during
14CO2 exposure was 220 µmol m
2
s
1. There were 20 (Experiment 1) or six
(Experiment 2) replicates per treatment with up to 30 leaves fed at any
one time. To make allowance for potential differences between leaves
fed together, immediately after the 10-min exposure a leaf disc was cut
from each leaf and later, at harvest, the area of the fed leaf was measured. The discs were dried, extracted in 80% (v/v) methanol/water and an aliquot counted in a liquid scintillation spectrometer. After
6.75 (Experiment 1) or 8 (Experiment 2) h the apical bud (apex plus a
pair of primordial leaves no longer than 200 µm) was excised, dried
at 62°C overnight, weighed, sugars extracted in 80% (v/v)
methanol for 6 h with shaking, and extract radioactivity determined.
Cheryl Blundell is thanked for her excellent technical support.
Lloyd Evans gave valued criticism during preparation of this paper.
Received June 2, 2000; modified August 3, 2000; accepted September
14, 2000.