Photoperiodic Time Measurement and Effects of Temperature on Flowering in Chenopodium rubrum L

1979 ◽  
Vol 6 (3) ◽  
pp. 417 ◽  
Author(s):  
RW King

The critical dark period length (c. 8 h darkness) required for induction of flowering of C. rubrum is insensitive to temperature (Q10 c. 1.0) over the temperature range 10-25°C. However, the period of a rhythm controlling floral induction is shown to be temperature sensitive (Q10 c. 1.4) over the temperature range 9-22°C. The discrepancy in temperature dependence of these two parameters of photoperiodic time-measurement could reflect differences in their rates of adjustment after a temperature shift. By contrast, at least two other species (Pharbitis nil and Hyoscyamus niger) show marked temperature sensitivity of their critical daylength. Thus, there may be more than one time- keeper in the photoperiodic control of flowering.

1990 ◽  
Vol 152 (1) ◽  
pp. 167-187 ◽  
Author(s):  
N. K. SANDERS ◽  
J. J. CHILDRESS

Present address and address for correspondence: Bamfield Marine Station, Bamfield, B.C. V0R 1B0, Canada. The effects of temperature and pH on haemocyanin oxygen-binding were compared for three species of diurnally vertically migrating and two species of non-migrating, pelagic oplophorid shrimps from the deep sea off the Hawaiian island of Oahu. The effects of L-lactate were also measured for three of these species. Haemocyanin concentrations were higher in the haemolymphs of oplophorids that migrate vertically (39.4, 46.8 and 57.6 mg ml−1) than in those of non-migrators (26.0 and 36.4 mg ml−1). Moderately high Bohr effects were found for vertically migrating and non-migrating oplophorids at all temperatures examined (5–25°C,φ=−0.46 to −0.80, and −0.55 to −0.88, respectively). The vertically migrating species had temperature-sensitive haemocyanins (ΔH=−23.1 to −41.2 kJ mol−1) across the normal temperature range (5–25°C) encountered during diurnal vertical migration. This results in haemocyanins that have relatively high affinities (P50=0.80-1.06 kPa at pH 7.8,5°C) at the low temperatures and low O2 partial pressures (approximately 2.66 kPa O2 at 5°C) found at depth, and low affinities (P50=4.00-4.66 kPa at pH 7.5, 25°C) at the higher temperatures and higher O2 partial pressures (approximately 13.33-17.50 kPa at 25°C) found in the near-surface waters. In contrast, the non-migrating species, which live within a narrower temperature range (3–6°C) and at a constant, low partial pressure of O2 (2.66-4.00 kPa), have haemocyanins with a high affinity for oxygen (P50=0.67-0.93 kPa at pH 7.8, 5°C) and lower sensitivity to temperature (ΔH=−4.2 to −21.6 kJ mol−11). The effects of temperature on the haemocyanin oxygen-affinities of the vertical migrators appear to be highly adaptive, enabling these haemocyanins to be functional across the entire depth (and thus, temperature and oxygen partial pressure) range encountered.


Genetics ◽  
1975 ◽  
Vol 81 (1) ◽  
pp. 143-162 ◽  
Author(s):  
David L Shellenbarger ◽  
J Dawson Mohler

ABSTRACT Temperature-conditional mutations of the Notch locus were characterized in an attempt to understand the organization of a "complex locus" and the control of its function in development. Among 21 newly induced Notch alleles, about one-half are temperature-conditional for some effects, and three are temperature-sensitive for viability. One temperature-sensitive lethal, l(1)Nts1, is functionally non-complementing for all known effects of Notch locus mutations and maps at a single site within the locus. Among the existing alleles involved in complex patterns of interallelic complementation, Ax59d5 is found to be temperature-sensitive, while fag, spl, and l(1)N are temperature-independent. Whereas temperature-sensitive alleles map predominantly to the right-most fifth of the locus, fag, spl, and l(1)N are known to map to the left of this region. Temperature-shift experiments demonstrate that fag, spl, and l(1)N cause defects at specific, non-overlapping times in development.—We conclude (1) that the Notch locus is a single cistron (responsible for a single functional molecule, presumably a polypeptide); (2) that the right-most fifth of the locus is, at least in part, the region involved in coding for the Notch product; (3) that the complexity of interallelic complementation is a developmental effect of mutations that cause defects at selected times and spaces, and that complementation occurs because the mutant defects are temporally and spatially non-overlapping; and (4) that mutants express selected defects due to critical temporal and spatial differences in the chemical conditions controlling the synthesis or function of the Notch product. The complexity of the locus appears to reside in controlling the expression (synthesis or function) of the Notch product in development.


Genetics ◽  
1997 ◽  
Vol 147 (4) ◽  
pp. 1675-1695 ◽  
Author(s):  
Frans E Tax ◽  
James H Thomas ◽  
Edwin L Ferguson ◽  
H Robert Horvitzt

Abstract We identified and characterized 14 extragenic mutations that suppressed the dominant egg-laying defect of certain lin-12 gain-of-function mutations. These suppressors defined seven genes: sup-l7, lag-2, sel-4, sel-5, sel-6, sel-7 and sel-8. Mutations in six of the genes are recessive suppressors, whereas the two mutations that define the seventh gene, lag-2, are semi-dominant suppressors. These suppressor mutations were able to suppress other lin-12 gain-of-function mutations. The suppressor mutations arose at a very low frequency per gene, 10-50 times below the typical loss-of-function mutation frequency. The suppressor mutations in sup1 7 and lag-2 were shown to be rare non-null alleles, and we present evidence that null mutations in these two genes cause lethality. Temperature-shift studies for two suppressor genes, sup1 7and lag-2, suggest that both genes act at approximately the same time as lin-12in specifying a cell fate. Suppressor alleles of six of these genes enhanced a temperature-sensitive loss-of-function allele of glp-1, a gene related to lin-12 in structure and function. Our analysis of these suppressors suggests that the majority of these genes are part of a shared lin-12/glp-1 signal transduction pathway, or act to regulate the expression or stability of lin-12 and glp-1.


Development ◽  
1975 ◽  
Vol 34 (1) ◽  
pp. 221-252
Author(s):  
Par Maria Fernandez ◽  
Jean-Claude Beetschen

1. At the feeding stage (st. 38), a high percentage (79 %) of Pleurodeles homozygous ac/ac larvae show bent tails after a persistent ascitic blister in the dorsal part of the fin, when embryonic development occurred at 12°C; about only 25 % of them are affected by abdominal and pericardic ascites; about 40 % can feed and survive. The larval phenotype is very different when embryonic development occurred at 23 °C, in which case tail growth appears to be normal, but 95 % larvae die, due to ascitic fluid collection in the abdominal and heart regions, marked anaemia and microcephaly. 2. The exchange of posterior neural plates and dorso-lateral epidermis between normal and mutant neurulae has shown that the localization of the blister in the dorsal fin is not dependent on autonomous properties of the mutant dorsal tissues, but should be considered as resulting from general disturbances in the mutant organism. 3. Experiments were performed, involving a temperature shift from 12 to 23°C or 23 to 12°C, occurring at various developmental stages from the end of gastrulation (stage 13) to the stage of spontaneous embryonic muscle contractions (stage 26). When the temperature shift was applied after the end of neurulation (stage 21), the caudal phenotype was statistically similar to that of larvae which had been bred continuously at the first temperature. Thus temperature-sensitive phases can be characterized between neurula stages 15 and 18 (for a 12–23° shift) or 15 and 21 (for a 23–12° shift). Similarly, abdominal ascites can be induced when embryos are kept at 23 °C till stage 23 (early tail-bud) only, and occurs much less frequently when embryos are kept at 12°C till stage 23 and then transferred to 23°C. 4. It could be concluded from these experiments that the caudal mutant phenotype is already temperature-determined during neurulation, before stage 21. Nevertheless, double temperature-shift experiments showed that the second shift could modify the results which would be obtained if the first shift only occurred. Paradoxical results were obtained, more than 90 % of the tail phenotypes being of the ‘warm type’ when the embryos were first kept at 12°C, then shifted up to 23 °C between stages 22 and 26, and shifted down again to 12°C. Such a treatment markedly lowers the percentage of bent tails (‘cold type’) from the percentage which would occur if ac/ac embryos were constantly kept at 23 °C after stage 21, but this longer warm treatment is of no effect of itself as compared to the case when the whole development occurs at 12°C (bent tails are predominant in this latter case). Thus, whereas the early determination of the position of the caudal blister can be considered as a stable phenomenon under given temperature conditions, it is not irreversible. 5. As compared to cold-bred larvae, thrice as many completely anaemic larvae (66 %) were obtained from ac/ac embryos kept at 23 °C between stages 21 and 26; this offers an opportunity for the experimental study of this anaemia. 6. Implications of these results for further analysis of temperature-sensitive mutations in cold-blooded vertebrates are suggested.


1990 ◽  
Vol 10 (11) ◽  
pp. 5688-5699
Author(s):  
B E Wojcik ◽  
J J Dermody ◽  
H L Ozer ◽  
B Mun ◽  
C K Mathews

JB3-B is a Chinese hamster ovary cell mutant previously shown to be temperature sensitive for DNA replication (J. J. Dermody, B. E. Wojcik, H. Du, and H. L. Ozer, Mol. Cell. Biol. 6:4594-4601, 1986). It was chosen for detailed study because of its novel property of inhibiting both polyomavirus and adenovirus DNA synthesis in a temperature-dependent manner. Pulse-labeling studies demonstrated a defect in the rate of adenovirus DNA synthesis. Measurement of deoxyribonucleoside triphosphate (dNTP) pools as a function of time after shift of uninfected cultures from 33 to 39 degrees C revealed that all four dNTP pools declined at similar rates in extracts prepared either from whole cells or from rapidly isolated nuclei. Ribonucleoside triphosphate pools were unaffected by a temperature shift, ruling out the possibility that the mutation affects nucleoside diphosphokinase. However, ribonucleotide reductase activity, as measured in extracts, declined after cell cultures underwent a temperature shift, in parallel with the decline in dNTP pool sizes. Moreover, the activity of cell extracts was thermolabile in vitro, consistent with the model that the JB3-B mutation affects the structural gene for one of the ribonucleotide reductase subunits. The kinetics of dNTP pool size changes after temperature shift are quite distinct from those reported after inhibition of ribonucleotide reductase with hydroxyurea. An indirect effect on ribonucleotide reductase activity in JB3-B has not been excluded since human sequences other than those encoding the enzyme subunits can correct the temperature-sensitive growth defect in the mutant.


1988 ◽  
Vol 8 (6) ◽  
pp. 2335-2341
Author(s):  
R J Akhurst ◽  
N B Flavin ◽  
J Worden

A new variant rat myogenic cell line, ts485, was isolated by subcloning the cell line ts3b2 (H. T. Nguyen, R. M. Medford, and B. Nadal-Ginard, Cell 34:281-293, 1983). Unlike the progenitor cell line, ts485 was thermosensitive for differentiation. Experiments with conditioned medium suggested that diffusible extracellular factors were not involved in dictating the differential phenotypes of ts485 cells cultured at the permissive and nonpermissive temperatures. Temperature shift experiments performed on cultures of ts485 cells indicated that the temperature-sensitive lesion was in a factor active during the growth phase and required to trigger a cascade of events leading to terminal differentiation.


1990 ◽  
Vol 22 (9) ◽  
pp. 249-254 ◽  
Author(s):  
F. Dilek Çetin ◽  
Gülerman Sürücü

In efficient and economical treatment of wastewaters,the settleability of activated sludge is of prime importance. Efficient settlement in the secondary sedimentation tank is required, both to keep the desired effluent quality and to sustain the necessary amount of microorganisms in the aeration tank. On the other hand, the settleability of microorganisms in the secondary clarifier is very dependent on the physiological and biochemical nature of activated sludge flocs, which are determined by the conditions of the aeration tank. In this research, effects of temperature and pH of aeration basin on settleability of activated sludge were studied. Settleability was measured by zone settling velocity and sludge volume index (SVI). Five different temperatures and four different pH values were operated in the aeration basin. It was found that the settleability of activated sludge is greatly affected by these two parameters.


Author(s):  
Chad L. Widmer

The effects of ten different water temperatures on the growth of newly released ephyrae of Aurelia labiata were explored. Ephyrae grown at 21°C showed the greatest growth, increasing in bell diameter from about 4.0 mm to 14.5 mm in 14 days and remained in good condition for the duration of the experiment. Ephyrae subjected to other temperatures grew at different rates. Ephyrae maintained at 8°C gradually decreased in size during the experiment, shrinking in bell diameter from about 4.0 mm to 3.8 mm by day 14, but remained in apparent good condition. Ephyrae reared at 22.5°C and above everted their bells, were in poor condition, and were unable to feed or swim effectively by about day ten. In this study the optimal temperature range for rearing A. labiata ephyrae was 12°C—21°C, which corresponds with the reported range for this species.


1992 ◽  
Vol 12 (6) ◽  
pp. 977-986 ◽  
Author(s):  
Peter K. Stys ◽  
Stephen G. Waxman ◽  
Bruce R. Ransom

Temperature is known to influence the extent of anoxic/ischemic injury in gray matter of the brain. We tested the hypothesis that small changes in temperature during anoxic exposure could affect the degree of functional injury seen in white matter, using the isolated rat optic nerve, a typical CNS white matter tract (Foster et al., 1982). Functional recovery after anoxia was monitored by quantitative assessment of the compound action potential (CAP) area. Small changes in ambient temperature, within a range of 32 to 42°C, mildly affected the CAP of the optic nerve under normoxic conditions. Reducing the temperature to <37°C caused a reversible increase in the CAP area and in the latencies of all three CAP peaks; increasing the temperature to >37°C had opposite effects. Functional recovery of white matter following 60 min of anoxia was strongly influenced by temperature during the period of anoxia. The average recovery of the CAP, relative to control, after 60 min of anoxia administered at 37°C was 35.4 ± 7%; when the temperature was lowered by 2.5°C (i.e., to 34.5°C) for the period of anoxic exposure, the extent of functional recovery improved to 64.6 ± 15% ( p < 0.00001). Lowering the temperature to 32°C during anoxic exposure for 60 min resulted in even greater functional recovery (100.5 ± 14% of the control CAP area). Conversely, if temperature was increased to >37°C during anoxia, the functional outcome worsened, e.g., CAP recovery at 42°C was 8.5 ± 7% ( p < 0.00001). Hypothermia (i.e., 32°C) for 30 min immediately following anoxia at 37°C did not improve the functional outcome. Many processes within the brain are temperature sensitive, including O2 consumption, and it is not clear which of these is most relevant to the observed effects of temperature on recovery of white matter from anoxic injury. Unlike the situation in gray matter, the temperature dependency of anoxic injury cannot be related to reduced release of excitotoxins like glutamate, because neurotransmitters play no role in the pathophysiology of anoxic damage in white matter (Ransom et al., 1990 a). It is more likely that temperature affects the rate of ion transport by the Na+–Ca2+ exchanger, the transporter responsible for intracellular Ca2+ loading during anoxia in white matter, and/or the rate of some destructive intracellular enzymatic mechanism(s) activated by pathological increases in intracellular Ca2+.


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