Journal of Experimental Botany, Vol 50, 861-868, Copyright © 1999 by Oxford University Press
J Forsyth, S Pearson, P Hadley and J Barnett
Apical abortion in calabrese (Brassica oleracea var.
italica), a highly destructive disorder which occurs
in overwintered transplants, has been investigated using a model system in
which blindness (abortion of the apical meristem) can be reproducibly and
predictably induced. An initial experiment examined the susceptibility of
12 cultivars to apical abortion when grown throughout a winter period under
commercial conditions. Three of those varieties showed very high levels of
blindness (100%). Subsequently, plants of the susceptible cultivar PETO
7204 were subjected to an inductive period of low light intensity (30
ARTICLES
Apical abortion in calabrese is induced by periods of low temperature and results in premature differentiation of apical meristem cells
School of Plant Sciences, The University of Reading, PO Box 221, Whiteknights, Reading RG6 6AS, UK; Corresponding author; Fax: +44 118 975 3676; E-mail: J.R.Barnett@reading.ac.uk
mol m-2
s-1) and low temperature (4
C). Apical meristematic cells of all plants ceased
mitotic activity within 3 d of being transferred to a regime comprising
higher light intensity (100
mol
m-2 s-1) and temperature (15
C). Using this system the structures of
normal apices were compared with those which became blind. Blindness was
characterized by a cessation of leaf primordium production by the
vegetative apex, the last formed primordium growing on in some cases to
form a mature normal leaf, or in others, a deformed structure known as a
whip-tail. The inactive apical bud became embedded in the tissues of this
last-formed structure. The cells of the inactivated apical bud remained
alive, but lost their meristematic capability, becoming enlarged, highly
vacuolated parenchyma cells with amyloplasts.Keywords:
Apical abortion, apical meristem, blindness, calabrese.
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