Characterization of dormancy behaviour in seeds of the model legume Medicago truncatula

Seeds of Medicago truncatula, a genomic model species for legumes, exhibit physiological and physical dormancy. Here, the factors influencing the germination behaviour of freshly harvested and stored seeds were investigated using several genotypes. Hardseededness is promoted when mature seeds are eq...

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Bibliographic Details
Published inSeed science research Vol. 20; no. 2; pp. 97 - 107
Main Authors Bolingue, William, Ly Vu, Benoit, Leprince, Olivier, Buitink, Julia
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published Cambridge, UK Cambridge University Press 01.06.2010
Cambridge University Press (CUP)
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Summary:Seeds of Medicago truncatula, a genomic model species for legumes, exhibit physiological and physical dormancy. Here, the factors influencing the germination behaviour of freshly harvested and stored seeds were investigated using several genotypes. Hardseededness is promoted when mature seeds are equilibrated at relative humidities (RH) below 75%. The release of physical dormancy during imbibition was dependent on the initial water content/RH that the seeds were dried to: the drier the seeds, the longer the imbibition time needed to break physical dormancy. The kinetics of physical dormancy release was slower than that of physiological dormancy, making it possible to uncouple both phenomena. Freshly harvested embryos without seed coverings germinated at the same speed as afterripened seeds. The depth of dormancy varied between different M. truncatula genotypes, from more to less dormant: DZA315.16>A17 (Jemalong)>R108>DZA45.5. This difference was eliminated by removing the endosperm. Collectively, these observations indicate that the endosperm is likely the main factor in the reduced germination of freshly harvested seeds. White light decreased germination speed of dormant seeds whereas it had no effect on non-dormant seeds. Recently harvested seeds were most dormant at temperatures above 17°C, whereas afterripened seeds germinated over a wider range of temperature. Fluridone could efficiently break dormancy, reinforcing the role of abscisic acid (ABA) synthesis. However, dormancy was not affected by gibberellic acid (100 μM GA3) or nitrate. The particular dormancy features unravelled here for M. truncatula, combined with the available genomic resources, make it a new, useful model for genetic and molecular studies which can complement those developed for Arabidopsis.
Bibliography:http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/S0960258510000061
ark:/67375/6GQ-2DPVWC78-C
PII:S0960258510000061
istex:E14F559F4665A65EC68F48BAE75B66075D670465
ArticleID:00006
ISSN:0960-2585
1475-2735
DOI:10.1017/S0960258510000061