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Plant Physiol, October 2001, Vol. 127, pp. 624-632
Long-Day Induction of Flowering in Lolium temulentum
Involves Sequential Increases in Specific Gibberellins at the Shoot
Apex1
Rod W.
King,*
Thomas
Moritz,
Lloyd T.
Evans,
Olavi
Junttila, and
Anthony J.
Herlt
Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research Organization
Plant Industry, G.P.O. Box 1600, Canberra, Australian Capitol Territory
2601, Australia (R.W.K., L.T.E.); Umea Plant Science Centre, Swedish
University of Agricultural Sciences, S-901 Umea, Sweden (T.M.);
Department of Plant Physiology and Microbiology, University of
Tromso, Tromso, Norway (O.J.); and Research School of Chemistry,
Australian National University, Canberra, Australian Capitol Territory
0020, Australia (A.J.H.)
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ABSTRACT |
One challenge for plant biology has been to identify floral stimuli
at the shoot apex. Using sensitive and specific gas chromatography-mass spectrometry techniques, we have followed changes in gibberellins (GAs)
at the shoot apex during long day (LD)-regulated induction of flowering
in the grass Lolium temulentum. Two separate roles of
GAs in flowering are indicated. First, within 8 h of an inductive LD, i.e. at the time of floral evocation, the GA5 content
of the shoot apex doubled to about 120 ng g 1 dry weight.
The concentration of applied GA5 required for floral induction of excised apices (R.W. King, C. Blundell, L.T. Evans [1993] Aust J Plant Physiol 20: 337-348) was similar to that in the shoot apex. Leaf-applied [2H4]
GA5 was transported intact from the leaf to the shoot apex, flowering being proportional to the amount of GA5 imported.
Thus, GA5 could be part of the LD stimulus for floral
evocation of L. temulentum or, alternatively, its
increase at the shoot apex could follow import of a primary floral
stimulus. Later, during inflorescence differentiation and especially
after exposure to additional LD, a second GA action was apparent. The
content of GA1 and GA4 in the apex increased
greatly, whereas GA5 decreased by up to 75%. GA4 applied during inflorescence differentiation strongly
promoted flowering and stem elongation, whereas it was ineffective for earlier floral evocation although it caused stem growth at all times of
application. Thus, we conclude that GA1 and GA4
are secondary, late-acting LD stimuli for inflorescence differentiation
in L. temulentum.
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INTRODUCTION |
Plants of Lolium
temulentum remain vegetative when grown in short days
(SD), but flower after exposure of their leaves
to a single long day (LD). The leaf gibberellin (GA) content increases in LD (Gocal et al., 1999 ) and applied GAs can cause flowering in
noninductive SD (Evans, 1964 ; Pharis et al., 1987 ; Evans et al., 1990 ).
Thus, GAs mimic LD responses and they could be a transmissible endogenous floral stimulus in this LD plant. A number of other LD
plants but not all (for summary, see Metzger, 1995 ) flower in response
to GA, and recent genetic and molecular studies with Arabidopsis
support such a role for endogenous GAs in flowering in LD (Wilson et
al., 1992 ; Weigel and Nilsson, 1995 ; Blásquez et al., 1997 ).
Furthermore, where there are effects of LD exposure on stem elongation
there are clear increases in the GA content of leaves, petioles, and
shoot tips (Talon and Zeevaart, 1990 ; Talon et al., 1991 ; Zeevaart et
al., 1993 ).
Inflorescence initiation in L. temulentum after one LD
precedes any acceleration of stem elongation. Therefore, if GAs were to
play a role endogenously in floral evocation, they should have little
effect on stem elongation. From application studies, we previously
identified a number of GAs, including GA5, that
meet this criterion of inducing flowering but with little or no effect on stem elongation (Evans et al., 1990 , 1994a , 1994b ). However, in a
broad context, three lines of evidence should be obtained to confirm a
role for GAs in floral evocation. First, exposure to LD should increase
the levels of florally active endogenous GAs in the shoot apex. Second,
there should be evidence that inhibitors of GA biosynthesis block
flowering. Third, there should be molecular/biochemical linkages
between GA and floral initiation at the apex. Elsewhere, we and others
have addressed the latter two issues (Evans, 1969 ; Evans et al., 1994a ;
Weigel and Nilsson, 1995 ; Blásquez et al., 1997 ; Gocal et al.,
1999 ).
Considering the requirement for change in GA content, not only did the
endogenous content of several GAs increase in leaves of L. temulentum soon after exposure to two or more florally inductive LD (Gocal et al., 1999 ), but bioassayable GA-like activity at the shoot
apex increased within 8 h of the end of the LD (Pharis et al.,
1987 ), i.e. at the time when floral evocation occurs (McDaniel et al.,
1991 ). Furthermore, GAs do act at the shoot apex because plants of
L. temulentum flower in SD when GA3 is
applied either to the leaf, near to the shoot apex of intact plants
(Evans, 1964 ), or to cultured apices excised from plants in SD (King et
al., 1993 ). The latter study was particularly persuasive because,
without added GA, the excised shoot apex continued to grow vegetatively and only formed leaves.
Here, we examine changes in the spectrum of GAs and in their content in
the shoot apex of L. temulentum following exposure of the
leaf to florally inductive LD. High-resolution (HR)-mass spectrometry
(MS) and selected reaction monitoring (SRM)-MS provided the specificity
and high sensitivity required for measurements of GAs (Moritz and
Olsen, 1995 ). These MS methods allowed various precursors, active GAs,
and their catabolites to be measured simultaneously. The high
sensitivity of MS meant that femtogram amounts of individual GAs could
be detected in batches of 40 shoot apices (about 200 µg total dry
weight). The selectivity of HR-MS and SRM-MS coupled with the use of
deuterated GAs as internal standards allowed analyses with minimal
purification and, thereby, minimal losses.
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RESULTS |
Shoot Apex GAs
Due to the low shoot apex tissue amounts, the identification of
GAs was based on HR-selected ion monitoring (SIM). Identity was certain
when both the ratio of the ions (at a resolution of 10,000) and the
retention time matched the standard. The GAs identified included GAs
1, 3, 4, 5, 6, 8, 9, 19, 20, 24, and
34, many of these having also been identified by
full-scan MS in leaves of L. temulentum (Gocal et al.,
1999 ). In general, on a dry weight basis, the shoot apex contained up
to 50-fold more GA than the leaf.
It was not possible, routinely, to analyze all the GAs we had
identified both because of restrictions on data collection (e.g. GA3 and GA6) and,
sometimes, because of the presence of contaminating ions (e.g.
GA20). As a consequence, we quantified only the
C-13 hydroxylated GAs 1, 5, and
19 and the non-C-13 hydroxylated GAs 4,
9, 24, and 34. Aside from
GA5, these GAs are metabolites of two parallel
biosynthetic pathways, with several possible cross-links between them,
GA5 being a potential intermediate in the
conversion of GA20 to GA3
(Hedden and Kamiya, 1997 ). In leaves of L. temulentum, we
previously identified GA3 and
GA20 (Gocal et al., 1999 ), but GA5 was not detected with certainty because we
only obtained a small peak and a match to three fragment ions (A. Poole, unpublished data). GA1 and
GA4 were detected in leaves of L. temulentum and especially after exposure to repeated LD (Gocal et
al., 1999 ), but they were hardly detectable in vegetative or
pre-inflorescence-stage apices, their content increasing later.
Of the seven GAs analyzed in these vegetative apices,
GA19 was the most abundant and
GA1 and GA4 were the least
abundant. As an indication of reproducibility between experiments, for
SD shoot apices collected over four matched experiments, the average content of GA19 was 96.3 ± 2.0 ng
g 1 dry weight (n = 15), and by
visual inspection (Fig. 1) there appears
to be no diurnal trend.

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Figure 1.
Diurnal changes in three separate experiments in
the GA5 and GA19 content
(ng g 1 dry weight [dwt]) of the shoot apex of
L. temulentum of vegetative plants in SD (white symbols) and
for plants exposed to 1 or 2 florally inductive LD (black symbols). The
LD low-irradiance day length extension is shown as a stippled bar,
darkness as a black bar, and daylight as a white bar.
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Early LD-Induced Changes in GAs at the Shoot Apex
There was an early increase in the GA5
content of the shoot apex following exposure to florally inductive LDs
(Fig. 1). By the end of the 8-h high-light period after the 1st LD,
there was up to a 2-fold increase in apex GA5
content (91 vs 38 ng g 1 dry weight,
experiment Lt447; 126 vs 74 ng g 1 dry weight,
experiment Lt454), but with a smaller increase in a further experiment
(Fig. 1, Lt446).
Apex dry weight was essentially unchanged over this 1st d (see later,
Fig. 2) and, based on estimates of water
content of the L. temulentum apex (Rijven and Evans, 1967 ),
the endogenous GA5 concentration in the shoot
apex after one LD reached a maximum of about 6 × 10 8 M. This concentration
approaches the threshold of 10 7
M required in the medium for
GA5 to induce inflorescence initiation in shoot
apices of L. temulentum excised from plants in noninductive SD (King et al., 1993 ).

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Figure 2.
Changes during inflorescence development in the
content of various GAs in the shoot apex of L. temulentum
exposed to 2 LD (Expt. Lt 447). Harvests were at the start (8:30
AM) of each daily 8-h sunlight exposure. a, GA
content is shown as ng g 1 dry weight; b, GA
content is shown as ng per apex, together with apex dry weights
(×).
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For vegetative SD apices, there was some diurnal increase in
GA5 content in one experiment (Lt454) but not in
the other two (Fig. 1). In contrast to GA5, the
content of GA19 in the same apices showed
relatively little variation, with no obvious distinction between SD and
LD treatments (Fig. 1). GA24 content was
relatively unchanged or increased by between 30% and 90%, little or
no GA1 or GA4 could be
detected, and GA9 content dropped 3-fold (data not shown).
Longer term trends in GA content are shown in Figure 2 for daily
samples taken at the start of each day (8:30 AM) up to the stage of floret formation at 18 d. As the inflorescence
differentiated, GA content per gram dry weight declined (Fig. 2a), but
for any one GA the total content per apex remained high or increased up to 10 d (Fig. 2b). Due to increased apex weight associated with inflorescence differentiation (40-fold dry weight increase by the last
harvest in Fig. 2b), the late decline in GA content per gram dry weight
shown in Figure 2a therefore represents, in part, a late "dilution"
of the GAs. It is noteworthy that apex dry weight was constant over the
first 3 d after LD exposure (Fig. 2b) and did not change diurnally
(data not shown). Thus, the early changes in Figure 1 in
GA5 content ("concentration" in Fig. 2a or
"amount" in Fig. 2b) relate solely to its metabolism.
To confirm the evidence in Figure 2a of a fall in
GA5 content by 4 or 5 d after the start of
the LD, three experiments were carried out with daily harvests at the
diurnal maxima at 4:30 PM. All confirmed the findings in
Figure 2 in that there was a clear doubling in the content of
GA5 by 56 h from the start of the LD
followed by a fall (data not shown).
Changes at Later Times in GAs at the Shoot Apex
Three days after the start of two LD, the content of
GA1 and GA4 increased,
whereas that of GA5 and
GA19 began to decrease 1 d later (Fig. 2).
These findings were confirmed in a further experiment (not shown).
Although inflorescence initiation and flowering of L. temulentum results from exposure to only 1 LD, repeated cycles
accelerate floral development, as shown in Figure
3. This enhancement was evident soon
after the LD exposure and was matched by the earlier appearance of
floral organs (Fig. 3) and by a faster increase in apex dry weight
(right-side column in Fig. 3). Plants kept in SD remained vegetative
with a final apex length of less than 1.0 mm. Such results confirm the
increased flowering response with extra LD (Evans, 1960 ) and the close
relation between shoot apex length and mass previously reported
(Rijven and Evans, 1967 ), which we have used to establish the
weight of our batches of apices harvested for GA analysis (see
"Materials and Methods").

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Figure 3.
Effect of increasing numbers of LD on shoot apex
length (mm) for L. temulentum (Lt449). Measurements
continued until 21 d after the first exposure to up to 5 LD. The
error bars were smaller than the symbols. For each daylength treatment,
apex dry weight (µg) was determined at 21 d on batches of 20 apices. Plants held in SDs remained vegetative and apex dry weight and
length increased relatively little over 3 weeks. These dry weights
along with values at earlier harvests were used in deriving a
relationship between apex length and weight (see "Materials and
Methods").
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In parallel with enhanced flowering response from extra LD (Fig. 3),
increasing the number of LD cycles resulted in large changes in the GA
content of the shoot apex as shown in Figure 4. Although a single LD exposure led to a
small increase in GA1 from an initially
non-detectable level in the vegetative shoot apex, this occurred only
after 10 d. Increasing the number of LD cycles greatly increased
the content of GA1, GA4,
and GA9 in the apex and these changes occurred
much earlier (Figs. 2 and 4). Such increases in GA content with
multiple LD cycles match those we previously detected in the leaf for
GA1, GA4, and
GA9 (Gocal et al., 1999 ). In contrast, multiple
LD cycles led to dramatic decreases in the GA19,
GA24, and GA5 content of
the apex (Fig. 4). The changes in GAs potentially reflect
precursor/product conversion of GA19 to
GA1, and of GA24 to
GA9 and then to GA4. Where
complete data were available from three replicate experiments, the
content of GA24 had changed little after 2 LD
(1.6-fold to 39.0 ± 4.3 ng g 1 dry
weight), but GA9 had increased 7-fold to
24.3 ± 7.0 ng g 1 dry weight, and
GA4 increased 23-fold to 9.3 ± 5.0 ng
g 1 dry weight, whereas
GA34 showed little change (2.3-fold increase to
25.9 ± 8.1 ng g 1 dry weight).

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Figure 4.
Effect on L. temulentum shoot apex GA
content of exposure to a single LD or to up to 5 LD (Expt Lt 443).
Apices were harvested at 8:30 AM each day for up
to 10 d after the single LD or at 8:30 AM on
the day of ending the exposure to 1, 2, 3, or 5 LD. Where multiple LD
cycles were imposed prior to harvest (filled symbol), their number is
shown next to the symbol.
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Changes in GA content due to LD exposure may indicate regulation by day
length at two steps in GA biosynthesis. The increases in
GA9 (7-fold) following 2 LD could result from
increased activity of a GA 20-oxidase enzyme. The even greater increase
in GA4 (23-fold) may indicate an added activation
of biosynthesis involving a 3 -hydroxylase enzyme capable of
converting GA9 to GA4. The
activity of the 2 -hydroxylase that converts
GA4 to GA34 may not have changed.
Response to Applied GAs
The physiological relevance for flowering of the early increase in
endogenous GA5 at the apex and of the later
increase in GA4 was examined by applying these
GAs to L. temulentum plants induced to flower by one LD.
Flowering was promoted by a GA5 application at
the time of the LD (Fig. 5), which
supports a physiological role for the early rise at the apex in the
content of GA5 (Fig. 1). In sharp contrast,
applications of GA4 at the time of the LD were
ineffective for flowering. Four days later, however, at the time when
endogenous GA4 levels had increased at the apex (Figs. 2 and 4), GA4 became florally promotive.
There was apparently no restriction on GA uptake and transport to the
apex because at all times of application both GA4
and GA5 caused growth of the stem immediately
below the apex (data not shown).

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Figure 5.
Effect on flowering of a single application to the
leaf of 25 µg of GA4 or
GA5. The earliest treatment was 6 h after
the start of the main light period prior to the single LD extension.
Flowering was determined at 21 d and the values are the mean and
SE.
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To establish the timing of GA5 export from the
leaf blade and of import of the intact (unmetabolized) molecule into
the shoot apex, we applied either GA5 or
[2H4]
GA5 to the leaf. Varying the time of removal of
the GA5-treated leaf blade showed that for
flowering, export from the treated blade had begun by 30 h from
the start of the LD and approached completion by 48 h (Fig. 6). A
matching export profile was obtained when stem length was measured on
the same plants (not shown). In parallel treatments but involving
[2H4]
GA5 applied to the leaf blade, its arrival at the
shoot apex reached a peak at 48 h (Fig.
6). We refer to this peak time because assay sensitivity becomes a problem in defining the threshold for
[2H4]
GA5 arrival at the apex. Nevertheless, the match
in time between apex arrival of
[2H4]
GA5 and leaf export of GA5
indicates probable physiological relevance. We detected no
[2H4]
GA6 at the apex although it is a logical
metabolite of [2H4]
GA5. Thus, when applied,
GA5 can be transported from the leaf to the apex
within 1 to 2 d and without chemical alteration.

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Figure 6.
Timing of GA5 export from a
treated leaf to the shoot apex as shown either by increase in the
floral response of the shoot apex with increasing time until removal of
the GA-treated leaf blade, or by arrival at the shoot apex of
[2H4]
GA5 following its application to the leaf. In
both treatments, a dose of 25 µg of GA was applied to the leaf blade
6 h after the start of the main light period prior to the single
LD extension. Values for floral apex length are the means and
SE. Plants not treated with GA5
flowered to the same extent as those with the treated leaf removed at
the start. There was only a trace of
[2H4]
GA5 detected at the apex after 24 h, but it
is shown in brackets because there was uncertainty about quantitation
of the gas chromatography (GC)-MS peak for the
[2H2]
GA5 internal standard.
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The kinetics of [2H4]
GA5 import by the apex cannot be used to
determine the relationship between applied GA5
and flowering response. However, we could ascertain if there was such a
relationship by varying the amount of
[2H4]
GA5 applied to the leaf. As shown in Table
I, based on the one study we performed,
there was a reasonable correlation between the amount of
[2H4]
GA5 at the shoot apex after 48 h and the
flowering response after 21 d (r = 0.92;
n = 4). Given the lesser amount of endogenous GA5 than
[2H4]
GA5 in the apex, there was apparently a
distinction between the physiologically active and total pools of
GA5 and
[2H4]
GA5.
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Table I.
Effect on apex GA content and on flowering of
various doses of [2H4] GA5
applied once to the leaf blade 6 h after the start of a LD
exposure
The apex was harvested 48 h later.
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A separate issue is that only 9.5 pg of the 25 µg of
[2H4]
GA5 applied to the leaf had reached the shoot
apex 48 h later (Table I, Fig. 6),
i.e. less than one part in 1 million applied. Such limited import
agrees with our earlier studies in which comparable low proportions of
leaf-applied radiolabeled sulfate or phosphate reached the shoot apex
(Evans and Rijven, 1967 ). Such limited import no doubt reflects the
minute size of the shoot apex as well as potential for
compartmentalization and metabolism of a compound during its uptake and transport.
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DISCUSSION |
GAs as LD Floral Stimuli
We have detected a number of GAs in the minute shoot apex (about 5 µg dry weight) of the grass L. temulentum and established that a florally inductive LD leads to an early doubling in
GA5 levels and, several days later, to large
increases in GA1 and GA4.
Using highly sensitive and specific MS, we detected GAs at sub-picogram
levels. Furthermore, our repeated checks of reliability of the analyses
by spiking samples with the GA of interest, and our inclusion of
deuterated internal standards for each GA, made these assays specific
and reproducible across independent experiments. Previous GC-MS-based
studies have not focused on the shoot apex alone, nor has it been
considered that different GAs may participate at different stages of
floral development. The most relevant report, that of Talon et al.
(1991) , was focused on the response of subapical tissue that comprised
the major portion of their shoot tip samples. Our samples excluded
nonapical tissue and were "apically enriched" in that the floral
apex of this grass includes up to 24 spikelet sites.
GAs Associated with Floral Evocation
Our previous studies have provided considerable detail on the
timing of floral evocation at the shoot apex of L. temulentum. After reaching the critical day length of
approximately 16 h, the LD floral stimulus in L. temulentum is translocated down the leaf blade and sheath at 1 to
2 cm h 1 (Evans and Wardlaw, 1966 ) to reach the
shoot apex early on the day after the LD. Experiments with shoot apices
excised from such floral plants at various times (McDaniel et al.,
1991 ; King et al., 1993 ) indicate that floral evocation is virtually
complete by the end of that day.
Thus, the close matching in the timing of increase in
GA5 that we see at the shoot apex makes it a
strong candidate for the LD (photoperiodic) stimulus, a claim we base
on the following grounds: (a) During the light period following the LD,
the endogenous GA5 doubled at the apex; (b) the
GA5 concentration was close to that required for
flowering in vitro; (c) the timing of the doubling in endogenous
GA5 coincides with the timing of floral
evocation; (d) applied GA5 was transported intact
from the leaf to the shoot apex (Fig. 6), where it then regulated
flowering. This GA5 was imported in
physiologically meaningful amounts as increasing leaf application led
to parallel increases in both the amount of GA5 transported to the apex and in flowering (Table I); and (e) applied GA5 acts without causing extensive stem
elongation, a characteristic of the response to a single LD but not of
the response to multiple LD cycles or to other candidate GAs such as
GA1, GA3, or
GA4 (Evans et al., 1990 , 1994a , 1994b ).
Considering (a) and (b) above, a doubling in GA5
content of the shoot apex would be biologically important because
floral response increased 3-fold with a 3-fold increase in the
GA5 dose supplied to excised shoot apices
cultured in vitro (King et al., 1993 ). We have not measured the GA
content of cultured apices, but the shoot apex concentration of
endogenous GA5 reached 6 × 10 8 M, a value close to the
10 7 M GA5
threshold required for flowering of cultured apices (King et al.,
1993 ). In addition, other endogenous GAs are likely contributors to
bioactivity and our preliminary studies indicate a role for GA6. The latter GA is florally effective, causes
flowering with little or no stem elongation, and the shoot apex content
of GA6 also doubles at the time of floral
evocation (R.W. King, L.N. Mander, T. Moritz, R.P. Pharis, and L.T.
Evans, unpublished data). As an aside, roles for
GA1, GA3, or
GA4 in floral evocation can be excluded based on
their inherent growth activity and the poor floral activity of
GA1 and GA4 (Evans et al.,
1990 , 1994a , 1994b ). Furthermore, for these latter two GAs, inhibitor
studies also excluded any early role at the time of the LD. An
inhibitor capable of blocking the 3 -hydroxylase enzyme did not
inhibit flowering although stem elongation was inhibited (Evans et al.,
1994a ).
Although exogenously supplied GA5 is transported
from the leaf to the shoot apex of L. temulentum, it remains
to be shown that the leaf is the source of GA5
for the shoot apex because detection of GA5 in
leaf extracts of L. temulentum has proven technically
difficult. The shoot apex itself could be the site of
GA5 formation via a single step conversion of
GA20 to GA5 (Hedden and
Kamiya, 1997 ), GA20 being an endogenous
transported form of GA as suggested for pea (Pisium
sativum; Proebsting et al., 1992 ). In support of this scenario,
the content of GA20 in leaves of L. temulentum does increase with exposure to 2 LD (Gocal et al., 1999 ). However, when GA20 was applied to the leaf
of vegetative plants, it had little or no floral activity
compared with GA5 (Evans et al., 1990 ).
Furthermore, the recent report of Sakamoto et al. (2001) of high levels
of expression of a GA 2-oxidase gene in procambium at the base of the
vegetative shoot apex of rice (Oryza sativa), but not
in florally evoked apices, suggests that prior to floral evocation
there will be rapid catabolism of any GA20
arriving at the shoot apex. Given such uncertainties,
GA5 is either a primary LD floral stimulus in
L. temulentum or its content increases directly at the shoot
apex in response to a transported stimulus. Either way, it is
GA5 at the shoot apex that our findings suggest
is important for LD-induced floral evocation.
GAs Associated with Inflorescence Development
For the first time, our study shows that GAs are
important at the beginning of inflorescence differentiation. This claim
is based on our evidence of a dramatic increase at inflorescence differentiation in the shoot apex content of the 3 -hydroxylated GA1 and GA4. Furthermore,
at this time applied GA4 first becomes florally
active (Fig. 5), being inactive for earlier floral evocation (Pharis et
al., 1987 ; Evans et al., 1990 ). In addition, the involvement of
GA1 and GA4 in
inflorescence initiation is supported by our earlier studies with
inhibitors of GA20 3 -hydroxylation. We found (Evans et al., 1994a ) that several days after the inductive LD, flowering and stem elongation were both inhibited by application of
Trinexapac-ethyl
(ethyl-[3-oxido-4-cyclopropionyl-5-oxo]oxo-3-cyclohexenecarboxylate). With L. temulentum, such acylcyclohexanediones block the
3 -hydroxylation of GA20 to
GA1 and cause GA20 to
accumulate (Junttila et al., 1997 ).
For both the L. temulentum shoot apex (this study) and the leaf (Gocal
et al., 1999 ), exposure to multiple LD causes increases in
GA1 and GA4 levels. By contrast, despite the
increase in the shoot apex content of GA5 after a
single LD, its content in the apex declining with exposure to multiple
LD. Why the spectrum of GAs at the apex shifts over time is a matter
for speculation but, for GA1 and
GA4 which are readily
2 -hydroxylated, a reduced expression of GA 2-oxidase
activity at inflorescence differentiation, as reported in rice
(Sakamoto et al., 2001 ), would allow an increase in apical
GA1 and GA4 at this time.
In a converse manner, in the vegetative shoot apex and at floral
evocation these GAs would be degraded but there could be a buildup of
GA5 because of its lesser susceptibility to
2-oxidase activity due to its ring A C2-3 double bond.
Of the two actions of GAs proposed to control flowering of L. temulentum, it is the late changes in GA1
and GA4 at floral differentiation that are most
similar to GA changes that occur just before the onset of rapid stem
elongation (bolting) of dicots where GA1 levels
can increase dramatically in shoots and petioles (Talon and Zeevaart,
1990 ; Talon et al., 1991 ; Zeevaart et al., 1993 ; Zanewich and Rood,
1995 ; for review, see Metzger, 1995 ). However, unlike dicots where GA
biosynthesis inhibitors may block bolting but not flowering (Cleland
and Zeevaart, 1970 ), with L. temulentum GA
biosynthesis inhibitors inhibit stem elongation but may either promote
or inhibit flowering (Evans et al., 1994a ). Given our evidence of
complexity not only in the spectrum of active GAs, but in their timing
of action and in the response of flowering to inhibitors of GA
biosynthesis, it would be interesting to examine for dicots early shoot
apex changes during flowering and for GAs other than
GA1 or GA4.
Overall, despite recent speculative claims to the contrary (Colasanti
and Sunderasan, 2000 ; Samach and Coupland, 2000 ), our studies
show that, for L. temulentum at least, GAs may serve as LD
flowering signals. Also, our findings provide a novel and more dynamic
view than has been considered previously to explain the role of GAs in
floral evocation and inflorescence differentiation.
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MATERIALS AND METHODS |
Plant Materials and Growing Conditions
Plants of Lolium temulentum strain Ceres were
grown vegetatively in 8-h SDs in sunlit controlled-environment cabinets
as described previously (Evans et al., 1990 ). Floral induction by LD
involved one or more exposures to 16-h extensions of the 8-h day using light from incandescent lamps at a low photon flux density (10 µmol
m 2 s 1). Three weeks later, the flowering
response was scored for both stage of morphogenesis and apex length,
these two measures being closely related (Evans et al., 1990 ). At this
time stem length was also measured. Timing from the LD is taken from
the start of the 8-h main photoperiod of the first LD.
All GA applications were made to the uppermost expanded leaf blade in a
10-µL drop of 95% (v/v) ethanol:water, the controls being treated
with 95% (v/v) ethanol:water. The GAs were pure samples supplied by
Prof. Lewis Mander (Research School of Chemistry, Australian
National University, Canberra). In one study, to assess export, the
GA5-treated leaf blade was cut off at various times after
application. Some metabolism/transport studies with GA5 utilized a sample of [15,15,17,17-2H4]
GA5 and, on GC-MS, this form was readily distinguished from a deutero [17,17-2H2] GA5
internal standard as well as from GA5 but all were matched for relevant ions and their abundance.
GA Analysis
The first four experiments were carried out at 1-month intervals
as duplicate pairs, and 2 years later a fifth set of harvests was made.
Shoot apices were harvested as batches of 40 for each sampling
time/treatment and, over all experiments, 4,320 apices were used. At
dissection, they were immediately frozen in a microcentrifuge tube and
each batch of 40 apices was freeze dried. To account for differences in
apex weight especially over time, we derived apex dry weights from
measured apex lengths based on a linear relationship that exists after
log transformation of length and dry weight
(r2 = 0.988: n = 14). The flowering response to LD exposure was similar for all
experiments, and particularly for each of the paired duplicates in the
four initial experiments (data not shown). Plants held in SD remained vegetative.
For GA assay, homogenized tissue was extracted with 500 µL of 80%
(v/v) aqueous MeOH at 4°C, with 30 pg of
[17,17-2H2] GAs added as internal standards
to give a deutero:protio ratio close to 1.0. The GAs were partitioned
3× at pH 2.8 into an equal volume of ethyl acetate (etOAc). The
extract was applied in EtOAc to a pre-equilibrated 100-mg aminopropyl
Isolute cartridge (Sorbent AB, Västra Frölunda, Sweden).
The cartridge was washed with 3 mL of EtOAc, then eluted with 5 mL of
0.2 M formic acid that was run directly onto a
pre-equilibrated 100-mg C18 Isolute cartridge (Sorbent AB)
and the GAs were then eluted with 2 mL of 80% (v/v) MeOH.
The samples were methylated with ethereal diazomethane and, after
evaporation, dissolved in MeOH and loaded onto a 100-mg Isolute
aminopropyl cartridge. The methylated GAs were eluted with 3 mL MeOH,
which was reduced to dryness and trimethylsilylated in 10 µL pyridine
and 10 µL N-methyl-N-trimethylsilyltrifluoroacetamide at 70° for 30 min. Samples were injected in dichloromethane in the splitless mode
into a 5890 GC (Hewlett-Packard, Sydney) equipped with a
30-m × 0.25-mm i.d. fused silica capillary column with a
chemically bonded 0.25 mm DB-5 MS stationary phase (J&W Scientific, Folsom, CA). The injector temperature was 270°C. The column
temperature was held at 50° for 2 min, then increased by 20°C
min 1 to 220°C, and by 4°C min 1 to
270°C. The column effluent was introduced into the ion source of a
JEOL JMS-SX/SX102A four-sector tandem mass spectrometer of B1E1-B2E2 geometry
(JEOL, Tokyo). The interface and the ion source temperatures were
270°C and 250°C, respectively. Ions were generated with 70 eV at an ionization current of 600 µA. Measurements involving HR-SIM
were performed with an accelerating voltage switching from 10 KV and a
resolution of 7,000 to 10,000.
Perfluorokerosene was used as a reference compound after choosing a
suitable lock mass. The dwell time was 50 ms. For each GA, the ions
recorded for HR-MS and SRM-MS are shown in Table II along with their
deuterated analogs. In the SRM mode, the acceleration voltage was 10 kV
and the precursor ions were selected by magnetic switching. The
daughter ions formed in the first field-free region were detected by
switching the magnetic field and the electrostatic field
simultaneously. The dwell time was 100 ms, and specific reactions for
the different GAs were recorded according to Moritz and Olsen
(1995) .
View this table:
[in this window]
[in a new window]
|
Table II.
Ions detected for quantification of specific GAs
and the deuterated analogues used as internal standards
Ions used for HR-SIM measurements and detected transitions for SRM
measurements are shown. The specific ions were detected in the time
range when the specific GA eluted on the GC.
|
|
Reliability of analysis was checked on several occasions by adding
GAs-MeTMS or [17,17-2H2]GAs-MeTMS to
previously analyzed samples, and then re-analyzing the samples.
Increased intensity of the GA peak at the right retention time, and
lack of chromatography changes at the GA peak, indicated reliability of
the analysis.
 |
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS |
Cheryl Blundell is thanked for her excellent technical support,
Lewis Mander for supplying deuterated GA internal standards, and
Andrew Poole for support with GA analysis.
 |
FOOTNOTES |
Received April 20, 2001; returned for revision June 10, 2001; accepted June 25, 2001.
1
This work was supported by the Department of
Tourism and Industry, Australia (to R.W.K.) and by the Human Frontiers
Science Program (grant no. RG0303/1997-M to T.M.).
*
Corresponding author; e-mail r.king{at}pi.csiro.au; fax 61262465000.
Article, publication date, and citation information can be found at
www.plantphysiol.org/cgi/doi/10.1104/pp.010378.
 |
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