Journal Article PreJuSER-11557

http://join2-wiki.gsi.de/foswiki/pub/Main/Artwork/join2_logo100x88.png
Endogenous Abscisic Acid as a Key Switch for Natural Variation in Flooding-Induced Shoot Elongation

 ;  ;  ;  ;  ;  ;  ;

2010
JSTOR Rockville, Md.: Soc.

Plant physiology 154, 969 - 977 () [10.1104/pp.110.162792]

This record in other databases:    

Please use a persistent id in citations: doi:

Abstract: Elongation of leaves and stem is a key trait for survival of terrestrial plants during shallow but prolonged floods that completely submerge the shoot. However, natural floods at different locations vary strongly in duration and depth, and, therefore, populations from these locations are subjected to different selection pressure, leading to intraspecific variation. Here, we identified the signal transduction component that causes response variation in shoot elongation among two accessions of the wetland plant Rumex palustris. These accessions differed 2-fold in petiole elongation rates upon submergence, with fast elongation found in a population from a river floodplain and slow elongation in plants from a lake bank. Fast petiole elongation under water consumes carbohydrates and depends on the (inter)action of the plant hormones ethylene, abscisic acid, and gibberellic acid. We found that carbohydrate levels and dynamics in shoots did not differ between the fast and slow elongating plants, but that the level of ethylene-regulated abscisic acid in petioles, and hence gibberellic acid responsiveness of these petioles explained the difference in shoot elongation upon submergence. Since this is the exact signal transduction level that also explains the variation in flooding-induced shoot elongation among plant species (namely, R. palustris and Rumex acetosa), we suggest that natural selection results in similar modification of regulatory pathways within and between species.

Keyword(s): Abscisic Acid: physiology (MeSH) ; Carbohydrates: analysis (MeSH) ; Ethylenes: metabolism (MeSH) ; Floods (MeSH) ; Gibberellins: physiology (MeSH) ; Molecular Sequence Data (MeSH) ; Plant Growth Regulators: physiology (MeSH) ; Plant Shoots: growth & development (MeSH) ; RNA, Plant: genetics (MeSH) ; Rumex: genetics (MeSH) ; Rumex: growth & development (MeSH) ; Rumex: physiology (MeSH) ; Signal Transduction (MeSH) ; Water: physiology (MeSH) ; Carbohydrates ; Ethylenes ; Gibberellins ; Plant Growth Regulators ; RNA, Plant ; Abscisic Acid ; ethylene ; gibberellic acid ; Water ; J

Classification:

Note: This work was supported by the Netherlands Organization for Scientific Research (NWO-ALW; VENI grant no. 86306001 to R.P.).

Research Program(s):
  1. Terrestrische Umwelt (P24)

Appears in the scientific report 2010
Click to display QR Code for this record

The record appears in these collections:
Dokumenttypen > Aufsätze > Zeitschriftenaufsätze
Institutssammlungen > IBG > IBG-2
Workflowsammlungen > Öffentliche Einträge
Publikationsdatenbank

 Datensatz erzeugt am 2012-11-13, letzte Änderung am 2020-04-23


Restricted:
Volltext herunterladen PDF
Externer link:
Volltext herunterladenFulltext by Pubmed Central
Dieses Dokument bewerten:

Rate this document:
1
2
3
 
(Bisher nicht rezensiert)