The effects of the plant-growth regulator, prohexadione-calcium, on the levels of the endogenous gibberellins in rice shoots were measured by GC-SIM using 2H-labeled gibberellins as internal standards. The compound was applied at the 4-leaf stage and shoots were harvested 5 and 12 days after treatment. Plant length was reduced to 78% and 66%, respectively, relative to control by application of the compound at 1 and 30 mg m-2, when plant length was measured 12 days after treatment. The level of GA, was reduced to 36% and 18%, respectively, relative to control in the treated plants. The levels of GA19and GA20 increased but that of GA44 was reduced in the treated plants. The level of GA53 was unchanged. These results suggest that primary mode of action of the compound in vivo is the inhibition of the 3β-hydroxylation of GA20 to GA1 and further support the hypothesis that GA1 not GA19 nor GA20 is active in promoting shoot elongation in rice. © 1992. The Japanese Society of Plant Physiologists (JSPP).
CITATION STYLE
Nakayama, I., Kobayashi, M., Kamiya, Y., Abe, H., & Sakurai, A. (1992). Effects of a plant-growth regulat or, prohexadione-calcium (BX-112), on the endogenous levels of gibberellins in rice. Plant and Cell Physiology, 33(1), 59–62. https://doi.org/10.1093/oxfordjournals.pcp.a078220
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