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Gibberellin influence on membrane disruption by thiocarbamate herbicides
Authors:RE Wilkinson
Institution:Department of Agronomy, Georgia Station, Experiment, Georgia 30212 USA
Abstract:Vernolate (0, 8, 16, 31, 62, 125.0, or 250.0 ppbw) incorporated into sand inhibited the growth of wheat (Triticum aestivum L. cv Holley) at 125.0 ppbw. These growth inhibition and morphological responses were virtually identical to wheat response to EPTC at 125 ppbw. 14C from vernolate (carbonyl labeled) (125.0 ppbw) was absorbed into wheat seedlings at approximately 1.8 μM on the presumption that the 14C present was 14C]vernolate. Since the response of wheat to the thiocarbamate herbicides resembles a gibberellic acid (GA) deficiency and cell enlargement requires the presence of functional plasmalemmas and tonoplasts, the question of membrane disruption by excessive concentrations of thiocarbamate herbicides and potential reversal thereof by GA3 was studied by measuring the efflux of K+, Na+, and Mg2+. GA3 (0.003 μM) stimulated lettuce leaf disc growth in diameter and fresh weight. This GA-stimulated increase in size and weight was reversed by 1 mM EPTC. Betacyanin efflux from beet leaf tonoplasts was increased by 1 mM EPTC and this efflux was not reversed by exogenous GA3 (0.3 μM). This influence by supraoptimal EPTC concentrations was shown to be via membrane disruption, which obviated any possible GA influence by eliminating the functionality of the membranes requisite to the development of a GA response. It is concluded that viable mode-of-action studies must measure physiological responses consistent with the symptomology of herbicide responses normally observed with each herbicide at field concentrations.
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