Blue light‐regulation of cell division in Adiantum protonemata: an approach with pulse stimulation

1988 
Abstract Cell division of the single-celled Adiantum protonemata produced by red-light (RL) incubation of germinated spores is induced by transfer to darkness and is stimulated by blue light (BL). It is known that the cellular process leading to this cell division includes one cell cycle and the BL response results from shortening of the Gl phase. The authors studied this BL regulation of cell cycle by giving a pulse of BL after RL termination and measuring changes in the proportion of divided cells. To minimize phytochrome responses arising from BL irradiation, the plants were kept in continuous far-red light instead of total darkness after the RL incubation. The response to a pulse (10–100 s) approached saturation with increasing rluences in a manner that reciprocity is valid. The sensitivity to BL, investigated by measuring the response to a saturating pulse, showed an increase in the first several hours after RL termination, followed by a sustained sensitivity for 20 h. Time courses of the pulse-induced responses showed a lag of about 12 h, which was considerably shorter than in the non-stimulated control; the lag was approximately independent of the strength of BL stimulation or the timing of BL application after RL termination, and the major difference occurred in the slope. It is concluded that the sensitivity to BL is retained during the time span in which the dark-dependent Gl phase progresses, and that the BL response is initiated independently of the reactions involved in the dark-dependent Gl phase. A minimal reaction model of Gl phase is suggested to unify the results.
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