Figure 1.
The cellular and metabolic events triggered by water uptake during seed germination.
Germination is affected by both environmental factors (the availability of water,
oxygen and light as well as the temperature) and intrinsic factors (dormancy, permeability
of the testa to water and oxygen, and obstruction of radicle emergence by the endosperm).
A rapid imbibition phase (phase 1) launches the resumption of basic metabolism. During
this phase, known as 'physical' imbibition, a step-by-step activation of metabolic
pathways results from the gradual increase in hydration (arrows). When the level of
hydration exceeds 60%, the rate of hydration slows (phase 2) and new physiological
mechanisms prepare cell expansion in the embryonic axes, culminating in the start
of cell elongation. Osmotically active substances (solutes, such as sugars, amino
acids, and potassium ions) are accumulated and acidification of the cell wall leads
to a loosening of the bonds between cell-wall polymers. These events coincide with
the activation of the H+ ATPase in the plasmalemma, which results in a further increase in water uptake that
may coincide with weakening of the surrounding tissues (the endosperm) as the embryonic
axes elongate and germination is completed. Completion of seed germination can be
temporarily blocked by dormancy, which is in turn released by antagonistic interactions
between the endogenous plant growth factors abscisic acid (ABA) and gibberellins (GAs)
[7]. Storage nutrients (lipids, proteins or starch) accumulated in the embryo's cotyledon
and/or endosperm start to be mobilized before completion of germination and are used
in the post-germination steps to sustain the young plant in its early growth stages,
before it becomes autotrophic. If the cell cycle resumes during germination, the first
cell division (mitosis) occurs in the postgerminative phase. The arrows indicate the
particular hydration levels that are known to correlate with individual metabolic
events. The sequence of events shown in this model results from studies in various
species. Modified from [6].
Bove et al. Genome Biology 2001 3:reviews1002.1 doi:10.1186/gb-2001-3-1-reviews1002 |