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Specific tropism caused by ultraviolet C radiation inPhycomyces

✍ Scribed by Virginia Martín-Rojas; Heribert Greiner; Theodor Wagner; Leonid Fukshansky; Enrique Cerdá-Olmedo


Book ID
104678237
Publisher
Springer-Verlag
Year
1995
Tongue
English
Weight
779 KB
Volume
197
Category
Article
ISSN
0032-0935

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✦ Synopsis


The giant sporangiophores of Phycomyces blakesleeanus turn towards blue and away from ultraviolet C sources (wavelength under 310 nm). We have isolated fifteen mutants with normal blue tropism but defective ultraviolet tropism. Wild-type sporangiophores described a double turn when exposed successively to blue and ultraviolet beams coming from the same side; under certain conditions, the mutants turned only to the blue. The new uvi mutations modified the behaviour in heterokaryosis and were lethal in homokaryosis, i.e., they affected essential cellular components. The responses of the wild type and one of the mutants were registered and evaluated with a computer-aided device. The mutant behaved normally under blue light, but took longer than the wild type to turn away from the ultraviolet source. With very weak ultraviolet stimuli (10(-8) and l0(-9) W m-2), the wild type turned towards the source, but the mutant did not respond. Calculations of absorbed-energy distributions in the sporangiophore showed that Phycomyces responds differently to similar spatial distributions of blue and ultraviolet radiations. Wild-type and mutant sporangiophores had the same high ultraviolet absorption due to gallic acid. We conclude that ultraviolet tropism is not just a modification of blue phototropism due to the high ultraviolet absorption of the sporangiophores. Phycomyces has a separate sensory system responsive to ultraviolet radiation, but not to blue light.


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