21
Plant Responses to Signals IV Photomorphogenesis Circadian Rhythms Gravitropism /sunflower.bio.indiana.edu/~rhangart/plantsinmotion

Plant Responses to Signals IV

  • Upload
    mac

  • View
    36

  • Download
    0

Embed Size (px)

DESCRIPTION

Plant Responses to Signals IV . Photomorphogenesis Circadian Rhythms Gravitropism. http://sunflower.bio.indiana.edu/~rhangart/plantsinmotion.html. Germination. Stem elongation (inhibition). Action Spectra. Action Spectrum , graph of the magnitude of a biological response to light, - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

Citation preview

Page 1: Plant Responses to Signals IV

Plant Responses to Signals IV

PhotomorphogenesisCircadian Rhythms

Gravitropism

http://sunflower.bio.indiana.edu/~rhangart/plantsinmotion.html

Page 2: Plant Responses to Signals IV

• Action Spectrum,

– graph of the magnitude of a biological response to light,

– as a function of wavelength.

Action Spectra

Germination

Stem elongation(inhibition)

Page 3: Plant Responses to Signals IV

Molecular Switch…looking for a photoreceptor,

Germinationhypothesis

…look for a photo-reversible pigment.

Page 4: Plant Responses to Signals IV

Absorption vs. Action Spectra…looking for a photoreceptor,

Germination

Page 5: Plant Responses to Signals IV

Phytochromephotoreceptor molecule

dimer

redlight

FRlight

Page 6: Plant Responses to Signals IV

Phytochromephotoreceptor molecule

Quantity,Time,Quality.

Page 7: Plant Responses to Signals IV

Phytochrome Location

Phtyochrome is a cytosolic protein.

Page 8: Plant Responses to Signals IV

Phytochrome…has multiple functions,

• Seed Germination,

• Flowering time (photoperiodism),

• Entraining (setting) the biological clock,

• End of day,

• Stem elongation,

• Leaf Expansion,

• Pigment synthesis.

Page 9: Plant Responses to Signals IV

Photoperiodism…flowering times,

Long-day plants,

…night breaks induce flowering.

Short-day plants,

…night breaks inhibit flowering.

Page 10: Plant Responses to Signals IV

Phytochrome…photoperiodism,

…use photoreversibility to establish phytochrome function.

Page 11: Plant Responses to Signals IV

Phytochrome

absorbtion spectra,

…the wavelengths absorbed by specific pigments.

Germination

Stem elongation(inhibition)

not phytochrome

Page 12: Plant Responses to Signals IV

Cryptochromesblue light photoreceptors (I),…evolved from a light dependent DNA repair enzyme,

...across phylogeny, these proteins have been used for many functions,

• ranging from blue-light-dependent development in plants,

• blue-light-mediated phase shifting of the circadian clock in insects,

• to a core circadian clock component in mammals.

Stem elongation(inhibition)

Page 13: Plant Responses to Signals IV

Phototropins…mediate phototropism,

…contribute to stem, root and leaf movements in response to directional information,

• to maximize light gathering capacity,

• and to minimize light damage at high irradiances.

Phototropism action spectrum

blue light photoreceptors II

Page 14: Plant Responses to Signals IV

Concept Map

Phytochrome

Action Spectra, Absorption spectra

Photoperiodism

Photomorphogenesis

Cryptochrome

Phototropin

PhotoreversibleFunctions

Signal transduction

Page 15: Plant Responses to Signals IV

Circadian Rhythms• Relating to, or exhibiting

approximately 24-hour periodicity,

– circa around + dies day.

• Internal Biochemical Oscillators,

– found in all eukaryotes,

– eubacteria as well. sleep movements

Page 16: Plant Responses to Signals IV

Circadian Rhythms

<- Period (24h) ->

amplitude

Entrainment

Circadian processes continue even if light (or

dark) is continuous...

…amplitude and period entrainment is continuous,

- allows fine control.

…of response,

Page 17: Plant Responses to Signals IV

~ 480 of 8,000 (tested) genes are under circadian control,

• ~1,500 (estimated) Arabidopsis genes, or ~6% follow circadian cycles of expression.

Page 18: Plant Responses to Signals IV

Photosynthesis genes...

Secondary metabolism (wood, defense).

Page 19: Plant Responses to Signals IV

Gravitropism

… the gravity directed growth processes that direct root and shoot orientation during a plants life-cycle,

roots,

…are positively gravitropic.

shoots,

…are negatively gravitropic.

– about 1.7%, or roughly 500 genes, are transcribed in Arabidopsis when it is re-oriented 90o.

Page 20: Plant Responses to Signals IV

Gravitropic Set Point

0o

90o

180o

Plant organs orient themselves to the gravity vector.

Page 21: Plant Responses to Signals IV

Starch Statolith Hypothesis

Re-orientation of heavy starch grains signals gravity vector.

http://www.biosci.ohio-state.edu/~plantbio/Sacklab/timelapse.htmlMoss