Multiple lines of evidence suggest that the genes involved in gibberellin (GA) biosynthesis are regulated by bioactive GA levels. With the recent cloning of GA 2-oxidase genes from pea, we investigated whether this homeostatic regulation extends to the genes controlling GA deactivation in this species, utilizing two well-characterized GA-deficient mutants, ls and na and a GA-accumulating mutant, sln. The pea GA 2-oxidases showed feed-forward effects at the mRNA level, while the endogenous levels of GA20, GA29, GA1, and GA8 showed no evidence of feed-forward regulation. Analyses of genomic Southern blots and expressed sequenced tag (EST) databases suggest that other GA 2-oxidases could possibly account for this lack of feed-for...