Effectiveness of Intermittent Light Treatments on Anthocyanin Synthesis in Dark-Grown and Light-Pretreated Seedlings

  • Mancinelli A
  • Rabino I
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Abstract

Differences in the extent of anthocyanin production between intermittent light treatments with short and long dark intervals between successive irradiations are more pronounced in dark-grown than in light-pretreated cabbage seedlings. This observation is consistent with the hypothesis, based on destruction kinetics data, that there might be two pools of phytochrome, a labile one and a stable one, present in different proportions in dark-grown and light-pretreated seedlings, and suggests that light-dependent changes of the stable to labile phytochrome ratio might be physiologically significant in the photoregulation of photomorphogenic responses.

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Mancinelli, A. L., & Rabino, I. (1985). Effectiveness of Intermittent Light Treatments on Anthocyanin Synthesis in Dark-Grown and Light-Pretreated Seedlings. Plant Physiology, 78(1), 203–206. https://doi.org/10.1104/pp.78.1.203

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