Correlations of Growth Rate and De-etiolation with Rate of Ent-Kaurene Biosynthesis in Pea (Pisum sativum L.) 1

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RESUMO

Biosynthesis of the gibberellin precursor ent-kaurene-14C from mevalonic acid-2-14C was assayed in cell-free extracts of shoot tips of etiolated and light-grown Alaska (normal) and Progress No. 9 (dwarf) peas (Pisum sativum L.). During ontogeny of light-grown Alaska peas, kaurene-synthesizing activity increased from an undectectable level in 3-day-old epicotyls to a maximum in shoot tips of 9-day-old plants and remained relatively constant thereafter until postanthesis. The capacity for kaurene synthesis in extracts from shoot tips of 10-day-old etiolated Alaska seedlings increased approximately exponentially during the first 12 hr of de-etiolation in continuous high intensity white light and remained relatively constant during the succeeding 24 hr of irradiation. Extracts from light-grown Alaska (normal) shoot tips possessed greater capacity for kaurene synthesis than did extracts from light-grown Progress No. 9 (dwarf) shoot tips. Extracts from shoot tips of either light-grown cultivar displayed greater kaurene-synthesizing capacity than was observed in extracts from their dark-grown counterparts. It is concluded that gibberellin biosynthesis in pea shoot tips is subject to partial regulation by factors controlling the rate of biosynthesis of kaurene.

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