1 / 20

Abscisic Acid and Its Role in Seed Dormancy

Abscisic Acid and Its Role in Seed Dormancy. By: Laura Kenney. Introduction. ABA is a plant hormone in vascular plants and is also found in mosses and fungi

iliana
Download Presentation

Abscisic Acid and Its Role in Seed Dormancy

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Abscisic Acid and Its Role in Seed Dormancy By: Laura Kenney

  2. Introduction • ABA is a plant hormone in vascular plants and is also found in mosses and fungi • In plants ABA has been detected in every major organ or living tissue from the root cap to the apical bud and is synthesized in cells containing chloroplasts or amyloplasts

  3. Discovery • In 1963 a substance that promotes the abscission of cotton fruits was identified and named abscisin II • At the same time a substance that promotes bud dormancy was purified from sycamore leaves and called dormin • Dormin and abscisin II are chemically identical and were renamed abscisic acid

  4. Structure • ABA is a 15 carbon terpenoid compound derived from carotenoids • Naturally occurring ABA is in the cis form • The S enantiomer is involved in fast responses and both enantiomers are involved in long term responses

  5. Functions • Regulates growth and stomate opening • Stress hormone • Regulates seed dormancy • Regulates bud dormancy • Acts as an antagonist with auxin, cytokinin, and gibberellins

  6. Seed Dormancy • Enters a temporal delay in the germination process to give time for greater seed dispersal • Maximizes seedling survival by preventing germination under unfavorable conditions

  7. Coat-imposed Seed Dormancy • Dormancy imposed on the embryo by the seed coat and other enclosing structures • Germination occurs readily in the presence of water and oxygen once the seed coat and other enclosing tissues have been damaged or removed

  8. Mechanisms for Coat-imposed Dormancy • Prevention of water uptake • Seed coat is too tough for the radicle to break through • Limit oxygen supply to the embryo • Prevents the release of germination inhibitors from the seed • Contains growth inhibitors such as ABA

  9. Embryo Dormancy • Dormancy that is inherent to the embryo and is not caused by the seed coat or surrounding tissues • Caused by the presence of growth inhibitors (ABA) and the absence of growth promoters (GA) • Seed dormancy is controlled by the ratio of ABA to GA

  10. Primary and Induced Dormancy • Primary dormancy refers to seeds that are released from the plant in a dormant state • Induced dormancy refers to seeds that are initially released from a plant in a non-dormant state but are induced to go dormant if the conditions are unfavorable for germination

  11. Loss of Dormancy • External factors such as dehydration, light, and cold can break seed dormancy

  12. ABA and Seed Dormancy • ABA added to culture medium prevents germination • ABA inhibits the synthesis of hydrolytic enzymes that are required for the breakdown of storage reserves in seeds • ABA deficient mutants are non-dormant at maturity

  13. Measuring ABA • ABA is measured using gas chromatography, HPLC, and immunoassays

  14. Recent Advances • Lopez-Molina et al found that the basic leucine zipper transcription factor ABI5 causes an enhanced response to exogenous ABA during germination, seedling growth and vegetative growth. • ABA regulates ABI5 accumulation and activity. • ABA delays germination and prevents vegetative growth by arresting development of mature germinated embryos.

  15. Procedure • RNA extraction, Western blots, Northern blots and mutants were used to analyze the seeds and seedlings of Arabidopsis

  16. Results • ABI5 transcript was undetectable in the absence of ABA but was induced after one day in the presence of ABA • ABA also induced accumulation of ABI5 • In the absence of ABA, ABI5 was absent • Therefore, ABI5 is induced by ABA

  17. Results • ABA treatment prevented the decrease in ABI5 level suggesting that ABA prevents ABI5 degradation • On removal of ABA, ABI5 is rapidly degraded • ABA applied to seeds within 60h poststratification maintained the germinated embryos in a arrested state • ABA applied outside the time frame failed to arrest growth

  18. Results • ABA applied to seedlings allowed germination after 8 days but blocked further growth for at least a month • Once the ABA was removed the embryos resumed normal growth

  19. Experimental Conclusions • Arabidopsis plants that have already germinated are still able to arrest growth if external environmental conditions are unfavorable. ABA and ABI5 are key players in this process. • ABA is more efficient as a early growth inhibitor than a germination inhibitor. • It is unclear whether ABI5 has a direct or indirect effect on cell cycle machinery when arresting growth upon ABA treatment.

  20. Conclusion • ABA is the main hormone involved in seed dormancy • Seed dormancy is necessary to ensure the survival of seedlings and to maximize seed dispersal

More Related