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1.
The mechanisms by which plants regulate levels of the phytohormone indole-3-acetic acid (IAA) are complex and not fully understood. One level of regulation appears to be the synthesis and hydrolysis of IAA conjugates, which function in both the permanent inactivation and temporary storage of auxin. Similar to free IAA, certain IAA-amino acid conjugates inhibit root elongation. We have tested the ability of 19 IAA-l-amino acid conjugates to inhibit Arabidopsis seedling root growth. We have also determined the ability of purified glutathione S-transferase (GST) fusions of four Arabidopsis IAA-amino acid hydrolases (ILR1, IAR3, ILL1, and ILL2) to release free IAA by cleaving these conjugates. Each hydrolase cleaves a subset of IAA-amino acid conjugates in vitro, and GST-ILR1, GST-IAR3, and GST-ILL2 have K(m) values that suggest physiological relevance. In vivo inhibition of root elongation correlates with in vitro hydrolysis rates for each conjugate, suggesting that the identified hydrolases generate the bioactivity of the conjugates.  相似文献   

2.
Bialek K  Cohen JD 《Plant physiology》1992,100(4):2002-2007
We have shown that amide-linked IAA (indole-3-acetic acid) conjugates accumulated to high levels during maturation of bean seeds (K. Bialek and J.D. Cohen [1989] Plant Physiol 91: 775-779). In the present study, we were interested in the fate of these and other IAA conjugates during seed germination. The content of amide-linked conjugates of IAA in cotyledons declined dramatically during the first hours of imbibition. The rate of decline slowed markedly during the period of the resumption of axis growth. The level of amide-linked IAA conjugates in cotyledons remained relatively high after almost 1 week of germination. The decline of IAA conjugates in cotyledons was followed by a steady increase in the content of both free and amide-linked IAA in the embryonic axes. Amide-linked IAA conjugates were also present in the axes cultured on agar after the cotyledons were removed, which suggests that de novo production of these IAA conjugates occurs in the axis of germinating bean seedlings. A comparison of relative amounts of free and conjugated IAA in the axes of intact seedlings and axes cultured on agar showed lower levels of free IAA and higher levels of conjugated IAA in much slower growing isolated axes. These results suggest a more general role for IAA conjugates in the control of seedling growth than simply to serve as a seed storage form of auxin.  相似文献   

3.
The plant hormone auxin (indole-3-acetic acid, IAA) is involved in the control of many phenomena during plant development. By characterizing steady-state free and conjugated IAA levels using a stable isotope dilution method coupled with gas chromatography- selected ion monitoring- mass spectrometry, this paper provides a detailed characterization of IAA metabolism in five liverworts, four mosses, and two tracheophytes. Long-term IAA conjugation patterns were monitored by incubating actively growing tissue with (14)C-IAA and then analyzing the de novo synthesis of IAA conjugates with radioimaging techniques. The liverworts, mosses, and tracheophytes can be differentiated by the total amount of IAA metabolites, the proportion of free and conjugated IAA, the chemical nature of their IAA conjugates, and the rates of IAA conjugation. Our tentative conclusion is that the liverworts appear to employ a biosynthesis-degradation strategy for the regulation of free IAA levels, in contrast to the conjugation-hydrolysis strategy apparently used by the mosses and tracheophytes. Such alternative metabolic strategies may have profound implications for macroevolutionary processes in these plant groups.  相似文献   

4.
The regulation of cellular auxin levels is a critical factor in determining plant growth and architecture, as indole-3-acetic acid (IAA) gradients along the plant axis and local IAA maxima are known to initiate numerous plant growth responses. The regulation of auxin homeostasis is mediated in part by transport, conjugation and deconjugation, as well as by de novo biosynthesis. However, the pathways of IAA biosynthesis are yet not entirely characterized at the molecular and biochemical level. It is suggested that several biosynthetic routes for the formation of IAA have evolved. One such pathway proceeds via the intermediate indole-3-acetamide (IAM), which is converted into IAA by the activity of specific IAM hydrolases, such as Arabidopsis AMIDASE1 (AMI1). In this article we present evidence to support the argument that AMI1-dependent IAA synthesis is likely not to be used during the first two days of seedling development.Key words: Arabidopsis thaliana, auxin biosynthesis, AMIDASE1, indole-3-acetic acid, indole-3-acetamide, LEAFY COTYLEDON1, seed developmentAuxins are versatile plant hormones that play diverse roles in regulating many aspects of plant growth and development.1 To enable auxins to develop their activity, a tight spatiotemporal control of cellular indole-3-acetic acid (IAA) contents is absolutely necessary since it is well-documented that auxin action is dose dependent, and that high IAA levels can have inhibitory effects on plant growth.2 To achieve this goal, plants have evolved a set of different mechanisms to control cellular hormone levels. On the one hand, plants possess several pathways that contribute to the de novo synthesis of IAA. This multiplicity of biosynthetic routes presumably facilitates fine-tuning of the IAA production. On the other hand, plants are equipped with a variety of enzymes that are used to conjugate free auxin to either sugars, amino acids or peptides and small proteins, respectively, or on the contrary, that act as IAA-conjugate hydrolases, releasing free IAA from corresponding conjugates. IAA-conjugates serve as a physiologically inactive storage form of IAA from which the active hormone can be quickly released on demand. Alternatively, conjugation of IAA can mark the first step of IAA catabolism. In general, conjugation and deconjugation of free IAA are ways to positively or negatively affect active hormone levels, which adds another level of complexity to the system. Additionally, IAA can be transported from cell to cell in a polar manner, which is dependent on the action of several transport proteins. All together, these means are used to form auxin gradients and local maxima that are essential to initiate plant growth processes, such as root or leaf primordia formation.3  相似文献   

5.
Metabolism of indole-3-acetic acid (IAA) in apical shoots of Populus tremula (L.) x Populus tremuloides (Michx.) was investigated by feeding a mixture of [12C]IAA, [13C6]IAA, and [1[prime]-14C]IAA through the base of the excised stem. HPLC of methanolic plant extracts revealed eight major radiolabeled metabolites after a 24-h incubation period. Comparison between feeds with [5-3H]IAA and [1[prime]-14C]IAA showed that all detectable metabolites were nondecarboxylative products. The purified radiolabeled HPLC fractions were screened by frit-fast atom bombardment liquid chromatography-mass spectrometry for compounds with characteristic fragment pairs originating from the application with 12C and 13C isotopes. Samples of interest were further characterized by gas chromatography-mass spectrometry. Using this procedure, oxindole-3-acetic acid (OxIAA), indole-3-acetyl-N-aspartic acid (IAAsp), oxindole-3-acetyl-N-aspartic acid (OxIAAsp), and ring-hydroxylated oxindole-3-acetic acid were all identified as IAA metabolites. Furthermore, a novel metabolic pathway from IAA via IAAsp and OxIAAsp to OxIAA was established on the basis of refeeding experiments with the different IAA metabolites.  相似文献   

6.
The chemically induced barley (Hordeum vulgare L.) mutation, agr, was found to be a simple recessive trait resulting in agravitropic roots and normal gravitropic shoots. The total seedling root growth was similar for mutant and wild-type roots, although the mutant had fewer roots per seed and greater elongation per root. Although the concentration of exogenous indole-3-acetic acid (IAA) required to reduce root growth by 50% (GR50) was 12 times greater for the agravitropic mutant, agravitropic and gravitropic roots were equally sensitive to exogenous applications of 2,4-dichlorophenoxyacetic acid (2,4-D) and naphthalene acetic acid (NAA). Root IAA contents, determined by high-pressure liquid chromatography (HPLC), were not different for gravitropes and agravitropes. The greater root elongation rates, lack of sensitivity to exogenous IAA, and normal endogenous IAA levels indicate that auxin-controlled growth regulation may be altered in the mutant.  相似文献   

7.
[5-3H, 1'-14C, 13C6, 12C] Indole-3-acetic acid (IAA), was applied to the flavedo (epicarp) of intact orange fruits at different stages of development. After incubation in the dark, at 25 degrees C, the tissue was extracted with MeOH and the partially purified extracts were analyzed by reversed phase HPLC-RC. Six major metabolite peaks were detected and subsequently analyzed by combined HPLC-frit-FAB MS. The metabolite peak 6 contained oxindole-3-acetic acid (OxIAA), indole-3-acetyl-N-aspartic acid (IAAsp) and also indole-3-acetyl-N-glutamic acid (IAGlu). The nature of metabolite 5 remains unknown. Metabolites 3 and 4 were diastereomers of oxindole-3-acetyl-N-aspartic acid (OxIAAsp). Metabolite 2 was identified as dioxindole-3-acetic acid and metabolite 1 as a DiOx-IAA linked in position three to a hexose, which is suggested to be 3-(-O-beta-glucosyl) dioxindole-3-acetic acid (DiOxIAGlc). Identification work as well as feeding experiments with the [5-3H]IAA labeled metabolites suggest that IAA is metabolized in flavedo tissue mainly through two pathways, namely IAA-OxIAA-DiOxIAA-DiOxIAGlc and IAA-IAAsp-OxIAAsp. The flavedo of citrus fruit has a high capacity for IAA catabolism until the beginning of fruit senescence, with the major route having DiOxIAGlc as end product. This capacity is operative even at high IAA concentrations and is accelerated by pretreatment with the synthetic auxins 2,4-D, NAA and the gibberellin GA3.  相似文献   

8.
Auxin conjugates play a role in the regulation of free indole-3-acetic acid (IAA) content in plants. Not much is known about the enzymes involved in either conjugate synthesis or hydrolysis. In this study we have isolated and characterized an auxin conjugate hydrolase from Chinese cabbage seedlings and investigated it during the development of both the Chinese cabbage plants and the clubroot disease. The hydrolase isolated from light- and dark-grown seedlings accepted the amide conjugates indole-3-acetic acid-alanine (IAAla), IAA-phenylalanine (IAPhe), but not IAA-aspartate (IAAsp) as substrates. We also found a substantial amount of hydrolysis of an ester conjugate (IAA-glucose, IAGlu) in our enzyme preparation. The tentative reaction product IAA was identified by HPLC and subsequent GC-MS analysis. The pH optima for the different substrates were not identical, suggesting several hydrolase isoforms. After gel filtration chromatography we found at least two peaks containing different hydrolase isoforms. The isoform, which converted IAGlu to IAA, exhibited a molecular mass of ca 63 kDa, and an isoform of ca 21 kDa converted IAAla and IAPhe. The increased free IAA content in clubroot-diseased roots of Brassicaceae can be due to either de novo synthesis or release of IAA from conjugates. To answer this question free, ester- and amide-bound IAA was measured in 24- and 30-day-old leaves and roots of healthy and Plasmodiophora brassicae-infected Chinese cabbage, and the hydrolase activity with different substrates measured in the same tissues. The amide conjugates were dramatically enhanced in infected roots, whereas free IAA was only slightly enhanced compared to the control tissue. Hydrolase activity was also enhanced in clubbed roots, but the substrate specificity differed from that found in the seedlings. Especially, IAAsp hydrolysis was induced after inoculation with P. brassicae. We conclude that different auxin conjugates can be hydrolyzed at different developmental stages or under stress.  相似文献   

9.
Auxin Biosynthesis during Seed Germination in Phaseolus vulgaris   总被引:1,自引:1,他引:0  
The relative roles of de novo biosynthesis of indoleacetic acid (IAA) and IAA conjugates stored in mature seeds (Phaseolus vulgaris L.) in supplying auxin to germinating bean seedlings were studied. Using 2H oxide and 2,4,5,6,7-[2H]l-tryptophan as tracers of IAA synthesis, we have shown that de novo biosynthesis of IAA, primarily from tryptophan, is an important source of auxin for young bean seedlings. New synthesis of IAA was detected as early as the second day of germination, at which time the seedlings began to accumulate fresh weight intensively and the total content of free IAA began to increase steadily. IAA conjugates that accumulate in large amounts in cotyledons of mature seeds may thus be considered to be only one of the possible sources of IAA required for the growth of bean seedlings.  相似文献   

10.
Free and conjugated indole-3-acetic Acid in developing bean seeds   总被引:8,自引:6,他引:2       下载免费PDF全文
The changes in conjugated indole-3-acetic acid (IAA) levels compared to the levels of free IAA have been analyzed during the development of bean (Phaseolus vulgaris L.) seed using quantitative mass spectrometry. Free and ester-linked IAA levels are both relatively high in the early stages of seed development but drop during seed maturation. Concomitantly, the amide-linked IAA becomes the major form of IAA present as the seed matures. In fully mature seed, amide IAA accounts for 80% of the total IAA. The total IAA pool in the seed is maintained at approximately the same level (150-170 nanograms/seed) once the level of free IAA has attained its maximum. Thus, the amount of amide IAA conjugates that accumulate in mature seed is closely related to the amounts of free and ester-linked IAA that disappeared from the rapidly growing seed. Analysis of developing bean pods, from which the seeds were taken for analysis, showed very low levels of both ester and amide-linked IAA conjugates. The pattern of changes seen in the levels of free and conjugated IAA in developing bean seed supports our prior hypothesis suggesting a role of IAA conjugates in the storage of the phytohormone in the seed.  相似文献   

11.
The distribution and biosynthesis of indole-3-acetic acid (IAA) was investigated during early plant development in Arabidopsis. The youngest leaves analysed, less than 0.5 mm in length, contained 250 pg mg(-1) of IAA and also exhibited the highest relative capacity to synthesize this hormone. A decrease of nearly one hundred-fold in IAA content occurred as the young leaves expanded to their full size, and this was accompanied by a clear shift in both pool size and IAA synthesis capacity. The correlation between high IAA content and intense cell division was further verified in tobacco leaves, where a detailed analysis revealed that dividing mesophyll tissue contained ten-fold higher IAA levels than tissue growing solely by elongation. We demonstrated that all parts of the young Arabidopsis plant can potentially contribute to the auxin needed for growth and development, as not only young leaves, but also all other parts of the plant such as cotyledons, expanding leaves and root tissues have the capacity to synthesize IAA de novo. We also observed that naphthylphthalamic acid (NPA) treatment induced tissue-dependent feedback inhibition of IAA biosynthesis in expanding leaves and cotyledons, but intriguingly not in young leaves or in the root system. This observation supports the hypothesis that there is a sophisticated tissue-specific regulatory mechanism for auxin biosynthesis. Finally, a strict requirement for maintaining the pool sizes of IAA was revealed as reductions in leaf expansion followed both decreases and increases in the IAA levels in developing leaves. This indicates that leaves are not only important sources for IAA synthesis, but that normal leaf expansion depends on rigorous control of IAA homeostasis.  相似文献   

12.
The plant hormone auxin (indole-3-acetic acid, IAA) appears to control many plant developmental processes, and studies performed in seed plants suggest that IAA conjugation is the critical mechanism to regulate free IAA concentration. The purpose of this investigation is to characterize the biochemical ability of one charophyte and 23 land plants ranging from liverworts to angiosperms to produce IAA conjugates, and to study the complexity of their conjugation patterns. Actively growing tissue was incubated with 14C-IAA, after which labeled IAA conjugates were separated using thin-layer chromatography. The conjugates were analyzed using radioimaging techniques and their tentative identity assigned by co-chromatography and/or by differential hydrolysis. The charophyte and the liverworts appear unable to conjugate IAA. The mosses and the hornwort are able to conjugate IAA into a few amide and ester conjugates. The tracheophytes examined synthesize several conjugates unique to the vascular plants, indole-3-acetyl-aspartic acid (-glutamic acid) and/or indole-3-acetyl-β-1-O-glucose, as well as a variety of other amide and ester conjugates. These three conjugation patterns are correlated to the type of conducting tissue characteristic of the plants analyzed. These biochemical differences may be indicative of significative differences in the hormonal regulation in these plant groups, thus suggesting that changes in IAA regulation accompanied the major evolutionary events in land plants.  相似文献   

13.
Levels of auxin, which regulates both cell division and cell elongation in plant development, are controlled by synthesis, inactivation, transport, and the use of storage forms. However, the specific contributions of various inputs to the active auxin pool are not well understood. One auxin precursor is indole-3-butyric acid (IBA), which undergoes peroxisomal β-oxidation to release free indole-3-acetic acid (IAA). We identified ENOYL-COA HYDRATASE2 (ECH2) as an enzyme required for IBA response. Combining the ech2 mutant with previously identified iba response mutants resulted in enhanced IBA resistance, diverse auxin-related developmental defects, decreased auxin-responsive reporter activity in both untreated and auxin-treated seedlings, and decreased free IAA levels. The decreased auxin levels and responsiveness, along with the associated developmental defects, uncover previously unappreciated roles for IBA-derived IAA during seedling development, establish IBA as an important auxin precursor, and suggest that IBA-to-IAA conversion contributes to the positive feedback that maintains root auxin levels.  相似文献   

14.
The biological activity of 20 l-alpha-amino acid conjugates of indole-3-acetic acid (IAA) to stimulate cell elongation of Avena sativa coleoptile sections and to stimulate growth of soybean cotyledon tissue cultures has been examined at concentrations of 10(-4) to 10(-7)m. In the Avena coleoptile test, most of the amino acid conjugates stimulated elongation. Several of the conjugates stimulated as much elongation as IAA but their half-maximum concentrations tended to be higher. Some of the more active conjugates were alanine, glycine, lysine, serine, aspartic acid, cystine, cysteine, methionine, and glutamic acid.In the soybean cotyledon tissue culture test, all of the l-alpha-amino acid conjugates of IAA stimulated growth except for the phenylalanine, histidine, and arginine conjugates. Most of the conjugates produced responses at least as great as that caused by IAA. Conjugates with half-maximum concentrations lower than IAA included cysteine, cystine, methionine, and alanine. These conjugates exceed the IAA-induced callus growth at all tested concentrations. Other conjugates significantly better than IAA at 10(-6)m were serine, glycine, leucine, proline, and threonine.  相似文献   

15.
Indole-3-acetic acid (IAA) labeled in its carboxyl group was metabolized by tobacco leaf discs (Nicotiana tabacum L. cv. Xanthi) into three metabolites, two of which were preliminarily characterized as a peptide and an ester-conjugated IAA. Reapplication of each of the three metabolites (at 10 μM) resulted in a marked stimulation of ethylene production and decarboxylation by the leaf discs. Similarly, these three IAA metab olites could induce elongation of wheat coleoptile segments, which was accompanied by decarboxylation. Both the exogenously supplied esteric and peptidic IAA conjugates were converted by the leaf discs into the same metabolites as free IAA. (1-14C)IAA, applied to an isolated epidermis tissue, was completely metabolized to the esteric and peptidic IAA conjugates. This epidermis tissue showed much higher ethylene production rates and lower decarboxylation rates than did the whole leaf disc. The results suggest that the participation of IAA conjugates in the regulation of various physiological processes depends on the release of free IAA, which is obtained by enzymatic hydrolysis of the conjugates in the tissue. The present study demonstrates biological activity of endogenous IAA conjugates that were synthesized by tobacco leaf discs in response to exogenously supplied IAA.  相似文献   

16.
Auxin conjugates are thought to play important roles as storage forms for the active plant hormone indole-3-acetic acid (IAA). In its free form, IAA comprises only up to 25% of the total amount of IAA, depending on the tissue and the plant species studied. The major forms of IAA conjugate are low molecular weight ester or amide forms, but there is increasing evidence of the occurrence of peptides and proteins modified by IAA. Since the discovery of genes and enzymes involved in synthesis and hydrolysis of auxin conjugates, much knowledge has been gained on the biochemistry and function of these compounds, but there is still much to discover. For example, recent work has shown that some auxin conjugate hydrolases prefer conjugates with longer-chain auxins such as indole-3-propionic acid and indole-3-butyric acid as substrate. Also, the compartmentation of these reactions in the cell or in tissues has not been resolved in great detail. The function of auxin conjugates has been mainly elucidated by mutant analysis in genes for synthesis or hydrolysis and a possible function for conjugates inferred from these results. In the evolution of land plants auxin conjugates seem to be connected with the development of certain traits such as embryo, shoot, and vasculature. Most likely, the synthesis of auxin conjugates was developed first, since it has been already detected in moss, whereas sequences typical of auxin conjugate hydrolases were found according to database entries first in moss ferns. The implications for the regulation of auxin levels in different species will be discussed.  相似文献   

17.
For the biosynthesis of the phytohormone indole-3-acetic acid (IAA), a number of tryptophan-dependent and -independent pathways have been discussed. Maize is an appropriate model system to analyze IAA biosynthesis particularly because high quantities of IAA conjugates are stored in the endosperm. This allowed precursor feeding experiments in a kernel culture system followed by retrobiosynthetic NMR analysis, which strongly suggested that tryptophan-dependent IAA synthesis is the predominant route for auxin biosynthesis in the maize kernel. Two nitrilases ZmNIT1 and ZmNIT2 are expressed in seeds. ZmNIT2 efficiently hydrolyzes indole-3-acetonitrile (IAN) to IAA and thus could be involved in auxin biosynthesis. Redundant pathways, e.g., via indole-3-acetaldehyde could imply that multiple mutants will be necessary to obtain IAA-deficient plants and to conclusively identify relevant genes for IAA biosynthesis.  相似文献   

18.
Plant hormone conjugation: A signal decision   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
Tight regulation of the auxin hormone indole-3-acetic acid (IAA) is crucial for plant development. Newly discovered IAA antagonists are the amide-linked tryptophan conjugates of IAA and jasmonic acid (JA). JA-Trp and IAA-Trp interfered with root gravitropism in Arabidopsis, and inhibited several responses to exogenously supplied IAA. Relatively low concentrations of the inhibitors occurred in Arabidopsis, but Pisum sativum flowers contained over 300 pmole g−1 FW of JA-Trp. DihydroJA was an even more effective inhibitor than JA-Trp, suggesting that Trp conjugates with other JA derivatives may also be functional. JA-Trp and IAA-Trp add to the list of documented bioactive amide hormone conjugates. The only other example is JA-Ile, the recently discovered jasmonate signal. These examples establish that conjugation not only inactivates hormones, but in some cases creates novel compounds that function in hormone signaling.Key words: jasmonic acid, indole-3-acetic acid, auxin, tryptophan, conjugate, plant hormone, signaling, amino acid, antagonistPlants hold an amazing capacity to auto-regulate their growth and respond to a host of environmental challenges. Since the early discovery of the first plant hormone, indole-3-acetic acid (IAA),1 science has progressively unveiled ever more complex, and sometimes surprising, ways that plants manipulate hormones to optimize their growth and thwart their opponents. Until recently, the covalent coupling of hormones to sugars, amino acids and peptides was thought to be merely a way to dispose of excess hormone.2 The amide linkage of IAA to Asp and Glu does indeed result in IAA catabolism, while IAA-Ala and IAA-Leu are inactive stored forms of IAA.3 But the perception that all hormone conjugates are inactive changed abruptly with the discovery that the isoleucine conjugate of jasmonic acid (JA-Ile) is an active hormonal signal.  相似文献   

19.
While indole-3-butyric acid (IBA) has been confirmed to be an endogenous form of auxin in peas, and may occur in the shoot tip in a level higher than that of indole-3-acetic acid (IAA), the physiological significance of IBA in plants remains unclear. Recent evidence suggests that endogenous IAA may play an important role in controlling stem elongation in peas. To analyze the potential contribution of IBA to stem growth we determined the effectiveness of exogenous IBA in stimulating stem elongation in intact light-grown pea seedlings. Aqueous IBA, directly applied to the growing internodes via a cotton wick, was found to be nearly as effective as IAA in inducing stem elongation, even though the action of IBA appeared to be slower than that of IAA. Apically applied IBA was able to stimulate elongation of the subtending internodes, indicating that IBA is transported downwards in the stem tissue. The profiles of growth kinetics and distribution suggest that the basipetal transport of IBA in the intact plant stem is slower than that of IAA. Following withdrawal of an application, the residual effect of IBA in growth stimulation was markedly stronger than that of IAA, which may support the notion that IBA conjugates can be a better source of free auxin through hydrolysis than IAA conjugates. It is suggested that IBA may serve as a physiologically active form of auxin in contributing to stem elongation in intact plants.  相似文献   

20.
Indole-3-acetic acid (IAA) labeled in its carboxyl group was metabolized by tobacco leaf discs (Nicotiana tabacum L. cv. Xanthi) into three metabolites, two of which were preliminarily characterized as a peptide and an ester-conjugated IAA. Reapplication of each of the three metabolites (at 10 M) resulted in a marked stimulation of ethylene production and decarboxylation by the leaf discs. Similarly, these three IAA metab olites could induce elongation of wheat coleoptile segments, which was accompanied by decarboxylation. Both the exogenously supplied esteric and peptidic IAA conjugates were converted by the leaf discs into the same metabolites as free IAA. (1-14C)IAA, applied to an isolated epidermis tissue, was completely metabolized to the esteric and peptidic IAA conjugates. This epidermis tissue showed much higher ethylene production rates and lower decarboxylation rates than did the whole leaf disc.The results suggest that the participation of IAA conjugates in the regulation of various physiological processes depends on the release of free IAA, which is obtained by enzymatic hydrolysis of the conjugates in the tissue. The present study demonstrates biological activity of endogenous IAA conjugates that were synthesized by tobacco leaf discs in response to exogenously supplied IAA.Contribution No. 952-E, 1983 series, from the Agricultural Research Organization, The Volcani Center, Bet Dagan, Israel.  相似文献   

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