Plant Physiol. Drug Metab Dispos
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Plant Physiology 70:1619-1625 (1982)
© 1982 American Society of Plant Biologists

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Articles

Ontogenetic Variation of Four Cytokinins in Soybean Root Pressure Exudate 1

Josephine C. Heindl, Dale R. Carlson, William A. Brun and Mark L. Brenner

Department of Agronomy and Plant Genetics, University of Minnesota, St. Paul, Minnesota 55108, Department of Horticultural Science and Landscape Architecture, University of Minnesota, St. Paul, Minnesota 55108

Cytokinins exported from the root may be involved in the correlative control of plant development. To test this hypothesis in soybean ((Glycine max [L.] Merr. cv. McCall, cv Chippewa 64, and cv Hodgson 78), cytokinins were intercepted en route from the root to the shoot by collecting root pressure exudate from detopped roots. The quantities of four cytokinins in the exudate were studied throughout the development of plants grown in the field and in controlled environment chambers. Zeatin, zeatin riboside, and their dihydro derivatives, dihydrozeatin and dihydrozeatin riboside, were isolated and quantitated using high-performance liquid chromatography.

Cytokinin fluxes (pmoles per plant per hour) were independent of exudate flux (grams per plant per hour). All fluxes are averages for a 6- or 8-h collection period. The ribosides accounted for the majority of the observed cytokinin transport. The fluxes of zeatin riboside and dihydrozeatin riboside increased from low levels during vegetative growth to maxima during late flowering or early pod formation. Before the seeds began rapid dry matter accumulation, zeatin riboside and dihydrozeatin riboside fluxes decreased and remained at low levels through maturation. The fluxes of zeatin and dihydrozeatin were low throughout development.

No correlation was found between cytokinin fluxes and nodule dry weight or specific nodule activity (acetylene reduction).

The timing of distinct peaks in zeatin riboside and dihydrozeatin riboside fluxes during flowering or pod formation suggests that cytokinins exported from the root may function in the regulation of reproductive growth in soybean.


1 Supported in part by the American Soybean Association Research Foundation Grant 79253, and also in part by the Science and Education Administration of the United States Department of Agriculture under Grant 5901-0410-8-0183-0 from the Competitive Research Grants Office. Contribution from the University of Minnesota Agricultural Experiment Station, St. Paul, MN 55108. Paper No. 12,112, Scientific Journal Series.




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M. Kokubun, S. Shimada, and M. Takahashi
Flower Abortion Caused by Preanthesis Water Deficit Is Not Attributed to Impairment of Pollen in Soybean
Crop Sci., September 1, 2001; 41(5): 1517 - 1521.
[Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF]




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Copyright © 1982 by the American Society of Plant Biologists