4.6 Article

Variation in endogenous gibberellins, abscisic acid, and carbohydrate content during the growth cycle of colored Zantedeschia spp., a tuberous geophyte

Journal

JOURNAL OF PLANT GROWTH REGULATION
Volume 27, Issue 3, Pages 211-220

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s00344-008-9048-5

Keywords

alpha-amylase; abscisic acid; development; flowering; gibberellin; tuber dormancy; Zantedeschia

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Phenologic changes and variation in the level of endogenous gibberellins (GAs), abscisic acid (ABA), carbohydrate content, and alpha-amylase activity were examined in colored Zantedeschia spp. cv. Cala Gold. These changes were examined in the primary bud tissues and in the attached tuber tissue during the growth cycle. Dormant tubers were dry-stored at 20 degrees C for 3 months, planted in a phytotron, and grown under 22/16 +/- 1 degrees C. Plant development was monitored under continued irrigation until leaf senescence and tuber dormancy. GAs and ABA were extracted from the primary bud tissues, fractionated by HPLC, and analyzed using GC-SIM. Starch, glucose, soluble protein, and alpha-amylase activity were monitored in the tuber tissue attached to the primary bud. Endogenous changes in GAs and ABA in the primary bud were correlated with endogenous changes in carbohydrate content and alpha-amylase activity in the attached tuber tissue. These correlations were observed during the rest and the growth periods and were associated with developmental changes in the plant, that is, bud dormancy relaxation, bud growth, and inflorescence differentiation. ABA content decreased and a transient pulse of GA was measured in the primary bud concomitantly with the onset of shoot elongation in dry tubers during storage, before planting. The sharp increase of GAs in the bud preceded inflorescence differentiation as observed in dissected apices by about 15 days, as well as the increase in alpha-amylase activity in the attached tuber tissue. A steep decrease in starch level was measured in the tuber after planting, concomitantly with massive plant growth. These findings suggest a possible involvement of gibberellin in the initiation of alpha-amylase activity during dormancy relaxation in colored Zantedeschia and in the autonomous induction of flowering.

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