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. 1979 Mar;63(3):444–449. doi: 10.1104/pp.63.3.444

Phytochrome Control of Cell Wall-bound Hydroxyproline Content in Etiolated Pea Epicotyls 1

Carl S Pike a, Hyong Un a,2, John C Lystash a,3, Allan M Showalter a,4
PMCID: PMC542848  PMID: 16660745

Abstract

The red light inhibition of growth of the intact pea (Pisum sativum L. cv. Alaska) third internode was correlated with an increase in the content of cell wall-bound hydroxyproline. These changes were detected 3 hours after irradiation, and possibly at 1 hour. Far red light reversed the effects of red light. The iron chelator α,α′-dipyridyl reversed the red light effects on both growth and hydroxyproline content. Using segments incubated in vitro, no phytochrome-mediated change in hydroxyproline content could be observed, perhaps because of an overwhelming wounding response. If plants were irradiated in situ and grown for 8 hours before excision and incubation of segments, some enhancement of hydroxylation by red light was detectable both colorimetrically and radioisotopically. The red light inhibition of segment growth was reversed by α,α′-dipyridyl. These results are examined in reference to the role of extensin in normal and induced growth cessation.

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Selected References

These references are in PubMed. This may not be the complete list of references from this article.

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