Abstract
The modifications induced by abscisic acid (ABA) on the senescence of oat leaves in darkness have been studied and are compared with its well-known effects in light. Contrary to the action in light, ABA preserves chlorophyll (Chl) in the dark almost as well as kinetin. Chlorophylla is decolorized more extensively thanb, and the content ofb is maintained by ABA almost at its initial level for 4 days. ABA also prevents proteolysis in darkness just as completely as chlorophyll loss, the relationship of both breakdown processes to ABA concentration being strictly log-linear over the range from 1 to 100 μM. In line with this action, ABA inhibits formation of the neutral protease in the dark but not in the light. The data suggest that ABA and kinetin operate to preserve chlorophyll and protein by different mechanisms, since their actions are neither independent nor synergistic but actually interfere with one another. In this connection, protein values given by the Lowry and Bradford methods have been compared. In parallel with the effect on senescence, ABA slowly opens the stomata in the dark. This effect increases with time, and by day 3 the stomata in ABA are as open as in leaves on water in light. Thus all these effects of ABA in darkness are strikingly opposite to those commonly observed on leaves in natural lighting. In addition, ABA powerfully inhibits the formation of ethylene in the dark by the detached oat leaves, and this inhibition also tends to increase with time. Finally, a slight antagonism to ABA's action on senescence is exerted byp-coumaric acid in the light but not in the dark.
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Zhi-Yi, T., Veierskov, B., Park, J. et al. Multiple actions of abscisic acid in senescence of oat leaves. J Plant Growth Regul 7, 213–226 (1988). https://doi.org/10.1007/BF02025264
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/BF02025264