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1.
The concentration dependences of the binding of fusicoccins (FCs) A, B, C, D, J and H to plasma membranes isolated from maize (Zea mays L.) roots have been studied in parallel with the effects of these compounds on elongation and 86Rb transport in detached maize roots. The dissociation constants obtained showed a good correlation between the affinity of the FCs for the plasmalemma and their biological activity. However, the range of physiologically active FC concentrations proved to be about two orders of magnitude higher than that calculated from the dissociation constants. It was also shown that Vicia faba L. mesophyll protoplasts, unlike isolated plasma membranes, have two FC-binding sites, one with a K D similar to that of the isolated plasmalemma while the other has a substantially higher K D , apparently corresponding to the physiologically active state of the FC-binding proteins.Abbreviation FC fusicoccin  相似文献   

2.
Plasma membranes have been purified from roots of maize (Zea mays L.) using a two-phase aqueous polymer system, dextran-polyethylene glycol. The plant material was homogenized in the presence of a mixture of natural protease inhibitors from potato (Solanum tuberosum L.); these inhibitors have been shown to be more effective than phenylmethylsulfonyl fluoride in suppressing the endogenous proteases in maize roots. Inhibition of proteolysis in the homogenization medium markedly increased (about tenfold) the number of lowaffinity binding sites for fusicoccin (FC). In addition, storage of plasma membranes at −20° C decreased both the number of the low-affinity sites and their dissociation constant (KD); this effect was in all probability caused by lipid peroxidation. The presence of EDTA throughout isolation and storage of the plasma membranes stabilized the parameters of FC binding to the membranes. The kinetics of binding of [3H]dihydroFC and the competition between [3H]dihydroFC and FCs A, C, J, and H were determined for the low-affinity sites. It was found that (i) the rate constant of association between FC and the low-affinity binding sites is about two orders of magnitude lower than that for the high-affinity sites; (ii) different FCs can be arranged in the order of decreasing avidity for the low-affinity FCbinding site: FC A>FC C>FC J>FC H. The authors are indebted to Dr. L.M. Krasnopolskaya (Institute of Agricultural Biotechnology, Moscow, Russia) for fusicoccins A, C, J, and H, and to Dr. A.V. Galkin (Institute of Agricultural Biotechnology, Moscow, Russia) for valuable comments and ren dering the paper into English.  相似文献   

3.
C. -H. Ullrich 《Planta》1978,140(3):201-211
To analyze early effects of auxin application, an apparatus was developed which continuously and simultaneously registered the curvature of 10 individual maize (Zea mays L.) coleoptiles. Resolution was less than 5 m over a range of ±0.5 mm. The data were evaluated and plotted via paper tape and Hewlett-Packard-computer. Unilateral application of 3×10-5 M indoleacetic acid (IAA) resulted in a transient inhibition of growth on the side of application for ca. 10 min (Phase I), followed by a strong stimulation (Phase II). The phytotoxin fusicoccin (FC) caused an immediate stimulation of elongation. The initial negative reaction of Phase I is auxin-specific. Only active auxins such as IAA and 1-naphtaleneacetic acid produced this initial inhibition; chemical analogs-inhibitory or neutral in long-term growth tests, e.g. phenylacetic acid-did not show any significant effects on Phase I. When the coleoptiles were symmetrically preloaded with different levels of auxin, only a large step-up of subsequent unilateral auxin application resulted in a negative phase I; a small step-up led to an immediate positive reaction. The results are discussed in context with the parallel kinetics for various other auxin-induced reactions of coleoptile cells which have already been published.Abbreviations FC fusicoccin - IAA indole-3-acetic acid - NAA -naphthaleneacetic acid - PAA phenylacetic acid  相似文献   

4.
In-vitro binding of labeled auxins to sedimentable particles was tested in subcellular fractions from homogenates of maize (Zea mays L.) coleoptiles. The material was fractionated by differential centrifugation or on sucrose density gradients. It was confirmed that the major saturable binding activity (site I) for 1-naphthyl[1-14C]acetic acid is associated with vesicles derived from the endoplasmatic reticulum. A second type of specific auxin binding (site II) could be distinguished by several criteria, e.g. by the low affinity towards phenylacetic acid. The particles carrying site II could be clearly separated from markers of the endoplasmatic reticulum, the plasmalemma, the mitochondria and the nuclei, while their density as well as sedimentation velocity correlated with particle-bound acid phosphatase, indicating a localization at the tonoplast. In contrast to site I, binding at site II was hardly affected by a supernatant factor and by sulfhydryl groups. However, the specificity pattern of site II towards auxins and auxin analogs was very similar to that of site I tested in the presence of supernatant factor. The existence of a third auxin receptor localized in plasma membrane-rich gradient fractions was indicated by a preferential in-vitro binding of 2,4-dichlorophenoxyacetic acid.Abbreviations 1-NAA 1-naphthyl acetic acid - 2-NAA 2-naphthyl acetic acid - IAA 3-indolyl acetic acid - PAA phenyl acetic acid - 2,4-D 2,4-D-dichlorophenoxy acetic acid - D-2,4-DP dichlorophenoxy isopropionic acid - NPA 1-N-naphthyl phthalamic acid - ER endoplasmatic reticulum - SF supernatant factor  相似文献   

5.
In vivo treatment of maize (Zea mays L.) coleoptile segments with auxin (indole-3-acetic acid; IAA) and fusicoccin (FC) followed by plasma-membrane isolation was used to characterize the effects of these treatments on the plasma-membrane H+-ATPase. Both IAA and FC increased H+ extrusion and elongation rate of the coleoptile segments, FC more strongly than IAA. Plasma membranes isolated after in-vivo treatment with FC showed a twofold stimulation of ATP hydrolysis and a several-fold stimulation of H+ pumping, whereas no effect was observed after IAA treatment, irrespective of whether the plasma membranes were prepared by two-phase partitioning or sucrose-gradient centrifugation. A more detailed investigation of the kinetic properties and pH dependence of the enzyme showed that FC treatment led to a twofold increase in V max, a decrease in K m for ATP from 1.5 mM to 0.24 mM, and a change in pH dependence resulting in increased activity at physiological pH levels. Again, IAA treatment showed no effects. Quantitation of the H+-ATPase by immunostaining using four different antibodies revealed no difference between IAA-and FC-treated material, and controls. From these data we conclude that (i) neither IAA nor FC gives rise to an increase in the amount of H+ -ATPase molecules in the plasma membrane that can be detected after membrane isolation, and (ii) if the H+-ATPase is activated by IAA, this activation is, in contrast to FC activation, not detectable after membrane isolation.Abbreviations BTP 1,3-bis(tris[hydroxymethyl]methylamino)-propane - FC fusicoccin - lyso-PC lysophosphatidylcholine - Mes 2-(N-morpholino)ethanesulfonic acid This paper is dedicated to Prof. Dieter Klämbt on the occasion of his 65th birthdayWe thank Ann-Christine Holmström and Adine Karlsson for excellent technical assistance, Professor Ramón Serrano (Instituto de Biologia Molecular y Celular de Plantas, UPV-CSIC, Universidad Politecnica, Valencia, Spain) for a generous gift of antisera to the H+-ATPase and Professor Wolfgang Michalke (Institut für Biologie III, Albert-Ludwigs-Universität, Freiburg, Germany) for kindly providing the monoclonal antibody to the H+-ATPase. This work was supported by the Swedish Natural Science Research Council, the Deutsche Agentur für Raumfahrtangelegenheiten (DARA, Bonn) via AGRAVIS (Bonn) and by the Ministerium für Wissenschaft und Forschung (MWF, Düsseldorf). Thomas Jahn received scholarships from the Deutsche Graduiertenförderung des Landes Nordrhein-Westfalen and the Deutscher Akademischer Austauschdienst (DAAD, Bonn).  相似文献   

6.
Several properties of a 43-kilodalton (kDa) auxin-binding protein (ABP) having 22-kDa subunits are shared by a class of auxin binding designated Site I. The spatial distribution of the ABP in the maize (Zea mays L.) mesocotyl corresponds with the distribution of growth induced by naphthalene-1-acetic acid and with the distribution of Site I binding as previously shown by J.D. Walton and P.M. Ray (1981, Plant Physiol. 68, 1334–1338). The greatest abundance of both ABP and Site I activity is at the apical region of the mesocotyl. The ABP and Site I activity co-migrate in isopycnic centrifugation with the endoplasmic-reticulum marker, cytochrome-c reductase. Red light, at low and high fluence, far-red and white light were used to alter the elongation rate of apical 1-cm sections of etiolated maize mesocotyls, the amount of auxin binding, and the abundance of the ABP. Relative changes in auxin binding and the ABP were correlated, but the growth rate was not always correlated with the abundance of the ABP.Abbreviations ABP auxin-binding protein - ER endoplasmic reticulum - FR far-red light - kDa kilodalton - NAA naphthalene-1-acetic acid - PM plasma membrane - R red light - SDS-PAGE sodium dodecylsulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis  相似文献   

7.
M. M. Moloney  P. E. Pilet 《Planta》1981,153(5):447-452
Auxin binding onto membrane fractions of primary roots of maize seedlings has been demonstrated using naphth-1yl-acetic acid (NAA) and indol-3yl-acetic acid (IAA) as ligands. This binding is compared with the already well characterized interaction between auxins and coleoptile membranes. The results indicate that while kinetic parameters are of the same order for root and coleoptile binding, a number of differences occur with respect to location in cells and relative affinity. The possible significance of the existence of such binding sites in root cells is discussed in relation to auxin action.Abbreviations 4-Cl-PA 4-chlorophenoxyacetic acid - EDTA ethylene diamine tetracetic acid - IAA indol-3yl-acetic acid - MCPA 2-methyl-4-chlorophenoxyacetic acid - NAA naphth-1yl-acetic acid - 2-NAA naphth-2yl-acetic acid - Tris 2-amino-2-(hydroxymethyl) propane-1,3 diol - TIBA 2,3,5 triiodobenzoic acid - NPA naphthylphthalamic acid - PCIB 4-chlorophenoxyisobutyric acid - PCPP 4-chlorophenoxyisopropionic acid - 2,4-D 2,4-dichlorophenoxyacetic acid  相似文献   

8.
When membrane vesicles from maize (Zea mays L.) coleoptiles are extracted at high buffer strength, a pH-driven, saturable association of [14C] indole-3-acetic acid is found, similar to the in-vitro auxin-transport system previously described for Cucurbita hypocotyls. The phytotropins naphthylphthalamic acid and pyrenoylbenzoic acid increase net uptake, pressumably by inhibiting the auxin-efflux carrier.Abbreviations IAA indole-3-acetic acid - ION3 ionophore mixture of carbonylcyanide-3-chlorophenylhydrazone, nigericin and valinomycin - 1-NAA, 2-NAA 1-, 2-naphthaleneacetic acid - NPA 1-N-naphthylphthalamic acid - PBA 2-(1-pyrenoyl)benzoic acid  相似文献   

9.
Two types of auxin-binding sites (sites I and II) in membranes from maize (Zea mays L.) coleoptiles were characterized. Site I was a protein with a relative molecular mass of 21 000, and the distribution of site I protein on sucrose density gradient fractionation coincided with that of NADH-cytochrome-c reductase (EC 1.6.99.3), a marker enzyme of the endoplasmic reticulum. Immunoprecipitation and immunoblotting studies showed that the content of site I protein in maize coleoptiles was approx. 2 g·(g FW)-1. Site II occurred in higher-density fractions and also differed immunologically from site I. Site I was present at the early developmental stage of the coleoptile and increased only twice during coleoptile growth between day 2 and 4. Site II activity was low at the early stage and increased more substantially between day 3 and 4, a period of rapid growth of the coleoptile. Both sites decreased concurrently after day 4, followed by a reduction in the growth rate of the coleoptile. Coleoptiles with the outer epidermis removed showed a lower site I activity than intact coleoptiles, indicating that site I was concentrated in the outer epidermis. Site II, in contrast, remained constant after removal of the outer epidermis. The results indicate that site I is not a precursor of site II and that the two sites are involved in different cellular functions.Abbreviations FW fresh weight - M r relative molecular mass - 1-NAA 1-naphthaleneacetic acid - 2-NAA 2-naphthaleneacetic acid - SDS-PAGE sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis  相似文献   

10.
The demonstration of an auxin-stimulated NADH-oxidase in the plasma membrane (Brightman et al. 1988. Plant Physiol. 86: 1264–1269) has led to the suggestion that the plasma membrane redox system is involved in the mechanism of auxin action. To evaluate the relevance of this concept in vivo, the influence of micromolar concentrations of hexachloroiridate (IV), an impermeable electron acceptor for the plant plasma membrane redox system, on elongation growth of excised, abraded maize coleoptile ( Zea mays L. cv. Golden Bantam) segments was studied. It was found that the substance induced a rapid growth response if the experiment was carried out in an unbuffered solution. This effect was entirely prevented by a 2 m M phosphate buffer. Nevertheless, the acid-growth-theory does not seem sufficient to explain this effect, since proton extrusion is induced without a lag, whereas increased growth rates commence after a lag phase of 40 min.
If growth is stimulated by a pretreatment with fusicoccin or auxin, hexachloroiridate IV transiently inhibits growth. The kinetics of the response are then determined by the concentrations of hexachloroiridate and auxin or fusicoccin. These results are compatible with the view that the plasma membrane redox system is somehow involved in the control of elongation growth.  相似文献   

11.
Following asymmetric application of indoleacetic acid to maize (Zea mays L.) coleoptiles the early time course of changes in lateral electrical potential was externally monitored with static-drop electrodes. First, an early negative potential change of ca.-1 mV was measured at the surface on the side of a strong auxin application. This negative auxin effect ended after ca. 15 min and was followed by a strong and lasting auxin stimulation of a positive lateral potential up to +12 mV at the auxin-treated side. The initial auxin effect appeared to depend on the size of the step-up in auxin concentration.  相似文献   

12.
U. Kutschera  P. Schopfer 《Planta》1985,163(4):494-499
Three predictions of the acid-growth theory of fusicoccin (FC) action in inducing cell elongation were reinvestigated using abraded segments of maize (Zea mays L.) coleoptiles. i) Quantitative comparison of segment elongation and medium-acidification kinetics measured in the same sample of tissue shows that these FC-induced processes are strictly correlated in time and respond coordinately to cations present in the medium. ii) Fusicoccin (1 mol l-1) induces a rapid acidification of the cell-wall solution, reaching a final level of pH 3.8–4.0. Exogenous protons are able to substitute quantitatively for FC in causing segment elongation at pH 3.8–4.0. At pH 4, FC has no additional effect on cell elongation. iii) Neutral buffers (pH 7) completely abolish the FC-mediated growth response. iv) Cycloheximide (10 mg l-1) inhibits both FC-induced and acid-buffer(pH 4)-induced elongation after a lag of 40–45 min, and FC-induced H+ excretion after a lag of 2 h. Under the same conditions, indole-3-acetic acid-induced elongation and H+ excretion are inhibited without detectable lag. It is concluded that these results are fully compatible with the acid-growth theory of FC action.Abbreviations IAA indole-3-acetic acid - CHI cycloheximide - FC fusicoccin  相似文献   

13.
U. Kutschera  P. Schopfer 《Planta》1985,163(4):483-493
Four experimental predictions of the acid-growth theory of auxin (indole-3-acetic acid, IAA) action in inducing cell elongation were reinvestigated using abraded segments of maize (Zea mays L.) coleoptiles. i) Quantitative comparison of segment elongation and medium-acidification kinetics measured in the same sample of tissue reveals that these IAA-induced processes are neither correlated in time nor responding coordinately to cations present in the medium. ii) Exogenous protons are not able to substitute for IAA in causing segment elongation at the predicted pH of 4.5–5.0. Instead, external buffers induce significant segment elongation only below pH 4.5, reaching a maximal response at pH 1.75–2.5. Acid and IAA coact additively, and therefore independently, in the whole range of feasible pH values. iii) Neutral or alkaline buffers (pH 6–10) are unable to abolish the IAA-mediated growth response and have no effect on its lag-phase. iv) Fusicoccin, at a concentration producing the same H+ excretion as high concentrations of IAA, is ineffective in inducing segment elongation. Moreover, sucrose and other sugars can quantiatively substritute for IAA in inducing H+ excretion but are likewise ineffective in inducing elongation. It is concluded that these results are incompatible with the acid-growth theory of auxin action.Abbreviations IAA indole-3-acetic acid - FC fusicoccin  相似文献   

14.
Mary Jo Vesper  Carol L. Kuss 《Planta》1990,182(4):486-491
To locate functionally the primary site of auxin action in growing cells, the pool of auxin relevant to induction of growth in maize (Zea mays L.) coleoptile sections was determined. A positive correlation was consistently noted between growth and intracellular levels of indole-3-acetic acid (IAA), i.e. growth appears to be relatively independent of the external level of IAA. N-1-Naphthylphthalamic acid (NPA), a potent inhibitor of auxin transport, was used to enhance accumulation of IAA in coleoptile cells. From the use of NPA, it is shown that: 1) increasing the accumulation of IAA in cells, while the external concentration is held constant, resulted in a concomitant increase in growth, and 2) blocking the exit of IAA from cells with NPA sustained an IAA-induced growth response in the absence of externally applied IAA. Furthermore, the absence of any alterations in auxin binding to microsomal fractions by NPA indicates that the action of NPA in causing enhancement of auxin-induced growth is based upon its inhibition of efflux of IAA from the cells. This research was supported by National Science Foundation grant No. DMB 8515925. The careful assistance of Laurie Brulport is gratefully acknowledged.  相似文献   

15.
The validity of a chemiosmotic hypothesis for uptake of weak acids as an explanation for the accumulation of auxin by cells has been explored further by comparing the uptake of indole-3-acetic acid (IAA) by 1-mm segments of corn (Zea mays L.) coleoptiles with that of benzoic acid and two neutral indoles, indoleethanol and indoleacetonitrile, which do not ionize. These substances, while structurally related to IAA lack both auxin activity and polar transport. Uptake of IAA and benzoic acid increase with decreasing external pH, whereas the uptake of the two neutral indoles is independent of external pH.Although metabolism of IAA, during 90 min or less, is minimal and without significant effect on its uptake, metabolism of benzoic acid appears responsible for the apparent saturation of benzoic acid uptake at high concentrations. An inhibitor of auxin transport, N-1-naphthylphathalamic acid (NPA), stimulates uptake of IAA but has no effect on uptake of either benzoic acid or the two neutral indoles. Thus, NPA does not affect the driving forces for accumulation of weak acids but probably specifically decreases the flux of the auxin anions relative to undissociated auxin. Since the electrochemical potential of auxin anions is usually higher in than outside cells, blocking the anion flux with NPA would enhance auxin uptake. Azide, which abolishes accumulation of both IAA and benzoic acid, may simply collapse the pH gradient across the plasma membrane.In the absence of NPA, increasing concentrations of auxins or the analogoue -naphthaleneacetic acid (-NAA) exert two opposing effects on the uptake of IAA-depression and stimulation. Stimulation results from saturating the anion flux. With uptake fully stimulated by NPA, however, increasing concentrations of auxins or analogues only depress uptake of [3H]IAA. These results are consistent with more than one path for auxin transport each with a different dependence on concentration. In depressing NPA-stimulated IAA uptake, the effectiveness of -NAAIAA-NAA benzoic acid, a specificity similar to that of an auxin binding site in vitro that has been implicated by others in auxin transport. The results support the general hypothesis that cellular auxin uptake and polar transport through tissues are chemiosmotically coupled to the electrochemical potential of auxin and protons.Abbreviations IAA indole-3-acetic acid - -NAA -naphthaleneacetic acid - -NAA -naphthaleneacetic acid - NPA N-1-naphthylphthalamic acid  相似文献   

16.
Using both 1-mm segments of corn (Zea mays L.) coleoptiles and a preparation of membranes isolated from the same source, we have compared the effectiveness of several inhibitors of geotropism and polar transport in stimulating uptake of auxin (indole-3-acetic acid, IAA) into the tissue and in competing with N-1-naphthylphthalamic acid (NPA) for a membrane-bound site. Low concentrations of 2,3,5-triiodobenzoic acid (TIBA), NPA, 2-chloro-9-hydroxyfluorene-9-carboxylic acid (morphactin), and fluorescein, eosin, and mercurochrome all stimulated net uptake of [3H]IAA by corn coleoptile tissues while higher concentrations reduced the uptake of both [3H]IAA and another lipophilic weak acid, [14C]benzoic acid. Since low concentrations of fluorescein and its derivatives competed for the same membrane-bound site in vitro as did morphactin and NPA, the basis for both the specific stimulation of auxin accumulation and the inhibition of polar auxin transport by all these compounds may be their ability to interfere with the carrier-mediated efflux of auxin anions from cells. At higher concentrations, the decrease in accumulation of weak acids was nonspecific and thus may be the result of acidification of the cytoplasm and a general decrease in the driving force for uptake of the weak acids. Triiodobenzoic acid was an exception. Low concentration of TIBA (0.1–1 M) were much less effective than NPA in competing for the NPA receptor in vitro, but little different from NPA in ability to stimulate auxin uptake. One possibility is that TIBA, a substance which is polarly transported, may compete with auxin for the polar transport site while NPA, morphactin, and the fluorescein derivatives may render this site inactive.Abbreviations C1-NPA 2,3,4,5-tetrachloro-N-1-naphthylphthalamic acid - IAA indole-3-acetic acid - -NAA -naphthaleneacetic acid - -NAA -naphthalenacetic acid - NPA N-1-naphthylphthalamic acid - TIBA 2,3,5-triiodobenzoic acid  相似文献   

17.
The function of the epidermis in auxinmediated elongation growth of maize (Zea mays L.) coleoptile segments was investigated. The following results were obtained: i) In the intact organ, there is a strong tissue tension produced by the expanding force of the inner tissues which is balanced by the contracting force of the outer epidermal wall. The compression imposed by the stretched outer epidermal wall upon the inner tissues gives rise to a wall-pressure difference which can be transformed into a water-potential difference between inner tissues and external medium (water) by removal of the outer epidermal wall. ii) Peeled segments fail to respond to auxin with normal growth. The plastic extensibility of the inner-tissue cell walls (measured with a constant-load extensiometer using living segments) is not influenced by auxin (or abscisic acid) in peeled or nonpeeled segments. It is concluded that auxin induces (and abscisic acid inhibits) elongation of the intact segment by increasing (decreasing) the extensibility specifically in the outer epidermal wall. In addition, tissue tension (and therewith the pressure acting on the outer epidermal wall) is maintained at a constant level over several hours of auxin-mediated growth, indicating that the inner cells also contribute actively to organ elongation. However, this contribution does not involve an increase of cell-wall extensibility, but a continuous shifting of the potential extension threshold (i.e., the length to which the inner tissues would extend by water uptake after peeling) ahead of the actual segment length. Thus, steady growth involves the coordinated action of wall loosening in the epidermis and regeneration of tissue tension by the inner tissues. iii) Electron micrographs show the accumulation of striking osmiophilic material (particles of approx. 0.3 m diameter) specifically at the plasma membrane/cell-wall interface of the outer epidermal wall of auxin-treated segments. iv) Peeled segments fail to respond to auxin with proton excretion. This is in contrast to fusicoccin-induced proton excretion and growth which can also be readily demonstrated in the absence of the epidermis. However, peeled and nonpeeled segments show the same sensitivity to protons with regard to the induction of acid-mediated in-vivo elongation and cell-wall extensibility. The observed threshold at pH 4.5–5.0 is too low to be compatible with a second messenger function of protons also in the growth response of the inner tissues. Organ growth is described in terms of a physical model which takes into account tissue tension and extensibility of the outer epidermal wall as the decisive growth parameters. This model states that the wall pressure increment, produced by tissue tension in the outer epidermal wall, rather than the pressure acting on the inner-tissue walls, is the driving force of growth.Abbreviations and symbols E el, E pl elastic and plastic in-vitro cell-wall extensibility, respectively - E tot E el+E pl - FC fusicoccin - IAA indole-3-acetic acid - IT inner tissue - ITW inner-tissue walls - OEW outer epidermal wall - osmotic pressure - P wall pressure - water potential  相似文献   

18.
The effect of indole-3-acetic acid (IAA) on the elongation rates of 2 mm corn (Zea mays L.) root segments induced by citrate-phosphate buffer (or unbuffered) solutions of pH 4.0 and 7.0 was studied. At pH 7.0, auxin initially reduced the elongation rate in both buffered and unbuffered solutions. Only in buffer at pH 7.0 was auxin at a concentration of 0.1 M found to promote the elongation rate though briefly. THis promoted rate represented only ca. 20% of the rate achieved with only buffer at pH 4.0. Auxin in pH 4.0 buffered and unbuffered solutions only served to reduce the elongation rates of root segments. Some comparative experiments were done using 2 mm corn coleoptile segments. Auxin (pH 6.8) promoted the elongation rate of coleoptile segments to a level equal or greater than the maximal H ion-induced rate. The two responses of root segments to auxin are compared to auxin action in coleoptile growth.  相似文献   

19.
Cell-wall acidification and electrical reactions (depolarization and hyperpolarization) are typical auxin responses in maize (Zea mays L.) coleoptiles. In an attempt to test the role of the outer epidermis in these responses, they have been measured and compared in intact and peeled coleoptile fragments. To exclude interactions between parenchymal and epidermal cells, the coleoptile pieces were completely stripped of their outer epidermis. This preparation was monitored by means of a scanning electron microscope. When externally applied indole-3-acetic acid was tested, we found that neither cell-wall acidification nor the electrical membrane responses depended on the presence of intact epidermal cells.Abbreviations IAA Indole-3-acetic acid - MES 2-[N morpholino-ethane-sulfonic acid - TRIS 2-Amino-2-hydroxymethyl-1,3-propanediol We thank Kuki Kaethner for her excellent technical assistance. This work was supported by the Hessische Graduiertenförderung and the Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft.  相似文献   

20.
U. Kutschera  P. Schopfer 《Planta》1986,167(4):527-535
Plastic and elastic in-vitro extensibilities (E pland E el ) of cell walls from growing maize (Zea mays L.) coleoptile segments were measured by stretching frozen-thawed tissue, pre-extended to its in-vivo length, at constant force (creep test) in a custom-buildt extensiometer, equipped with a linear-displacement transducer. The indole-3-acetic acid (IAA)-induced change of E pl (E pl ) is strictly correlated with the growth rate for a period of 3–4 h. Subsequently, E plremains constant while the growth rate is slowing down. Since this discrepancy can be accounted for by a growth-dependent reduction of osmotic pressure, it is concluded that E plrepresents quantitatively the relative increase of in-vivo extensibility (cell wall loosening) involved in IAA-mediated cell growth over a much longer time. On the other side it is argued that the growth rate may not be strictly correlated with wall extensibility during long-term growth. Abscisic acid (ABA) inhibits segment growth induced by auxin, fusicoccin, or exogenous acid, and this effect can be quantitatively attributed to an ABA-mediated reduction of cell wall extensibility as determined by the E plmeasurement. Both, IAA and ABA have no effect on total protein synthesis, RNA synthesis, and amount of osmotic solutes. Fusicoccin-induced proton excretion is only slightly inhibited by ABA. In contrast to ABA, growth inhibition by cycloheximide (CHI) is always much larger than the concomitant reduction of E pl , indicating that a further growth parameter is also involved in the inhibition of cell growth by CHI. E el is not affected by either IAA, ABA, or CHI. It is concluded that E pl as determined by the applied method, represents a relative measure of the actual in-vivo extensibility of the growing cell wall at the very moment when the tissue is killed, rather than an average extensibility accumulated over some immediate-past period of time as suggested by Cleland (1984, Planta 160, 514–520). Hence, we further draw the conclusion that IAA and ABA control of cell growth can entirely be attributed to a modulation of cell wall extensibility by these hormones in maize coleoptiles.Abbreviations ABA ±abscisic acid - CHI cycloheximide - E el , Epl elastic and plastic in vitro extensibilities, respectively (E el+Epl=Etot>) - FC fusicoccin - IAA indole-3-acetic acid  相似文献   

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