Plant Physiology 80:403-408 (1986)
© 1986 American Society of Plant Biologists
Articles
Lack of Control by Early Pistillate Ethylene of the Accelerated Wilting of Petunia hybrida Flowers
Folkert A. Hoekstra and
Roelf Weges
Department of Plant Physiology, Agricultural University, Arboretumlaan 4, 6703 BD Wageningen, The Netherlands
Well before pollen tube penetration, ethylene has begun to disseminate from pollinated styles of Petunia hybrida flowers. Previous stigmatic application of aminoethoxyvinylglycine (AVG) completely prevented this ethylene synthesis, indicating that the endogenous 1-aminocyclopropane-1-carboxylic acid (ACC) in pollen is not readily converted on the stigma. Compared to other flower parts, the capacity of the ethylene forming enzyme was largest in the stigma. When applied to the stigma, ACC caused ethylene synthesis, but did not accelerate wilting, unless high concentrations (20 nanomols) were used. Upon pollination or stigma wounding, the early ethylene evolved exclusively from the gynoecium, much later followed by the synthesis of corolla ethylene. Employing wideneck Erlenmeyer flasks, the competitive inhibitor of ethylene action, norbornadiene, was applied to entire flowers in situ, with delaying effects on wound-induced wilting. In contrast, norbornadiene treatment of styles alone, using capillaries, could not postpone wilting. Pollination with foreign pollen species did not lead to accelerated corolla wilting, notwithstanding considerable synthesis of ethylene during the first 5 hours. In situ treatment of the stigma with AVG considerably delayed wound- and pollination-induced wilting. Removal of the entire AVG-treated style 6 hours after stigma wounding still allowed for the postponement of the accelerated wilting, even at very low concentrations of AVG. It is concluded that early stylar ethylene does not play a role in the acceleration of wilting but that, much later, corolla ethylene does, induced by a mobile wilting factor from the stigma, which is ACC.
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