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Evidence of phytochrome involvement in the entrainment of the circadian rhythm of carbon dioxide metabolism inBryophyllum

โœ Scribed by Philip J. C. Harris; Malcolm B. Wilkins


Publisher
Springer-Verlag
Year
1978
Tongue
English
Weight
741 KB
Volume
138
Category
Article
ISSN
0032-0935

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โœฆ Synopsis


The rhythm of carbon dioxide output in Bryophyllum leaves was entrained on exposure to 0.25 h of white light every 24 h. Entrainment also occurred on similar exposure to monochromatic radiation in spectral bands centred at 660 nm and, to a lesser extent, at 730 nm, but a band centred at 450 nm was without effect. A "skeleton" irradiation programme comprising two 0.25-h exposures to white light per 24 h also entrained the rhythm when the intervening dark periods were either 7.5 h and 16 h, or 10.5 h and 13 h. The rhythm disappeared when the two exposures were separated by 11.5-h and 12-h dark periods. Regular 0.25-h exposures to red light separated by 11.75-h periods of darkness also resulted in loss of the rhythm. Red/far-red reversibility was observed in irradiation schedules having either one or two exposures to red light daily. In the latter case, far-red reversal of the effects of one of the exposures to red light resulted in entrainment of the rhythm by the other, instead of abolition of the rhythm. The occurrence of distinct red/far-red reversibility suggests strongly that phytochrome is the pigment involved in entrainment of this rhythm by cycles of light and darkness.


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## Detached leaves of Bryophyllum fedtschenkoi Hamet et Perrier kept in normal air show a single period of net CO2 fixation on transfer to constant darkness at temperatures in the range 0-25 ~ The duration of this initial fixation period is largely independent of temperature in the range 5-20 ~ bu