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1.
Inada  S.  Sato  S. 《Plant and Soil》2000,226(1):117-128
In actively growing cortical cells in the elongation zone of Lemna minor L. roots, both longitudinal (radial and tangential) and transverse walls expand in both length and width. The longitudinal walls of the three types of cortical cells in the root (i.e. outer, middle and inner) showed the largest expansion in the longitudinal axis. In contrast, the inner cortical cells exhibited the least expansion in width, whereas the middle cortical cells displayed the largest expansion in width. Thus, the profiles of the expansion of longitudinal walls were characteristic for the three types of cortical cells. In this study, both the orientation of cortical microtubule (MT) arrays and their dynamic reorientation, and the density of cortical MTs, were documented and correlated to the patterns of cell wall expansion. Significantly, transverse arrays of cortical MTs were most prominent in the radial walls of the inner cortical cells, and least so in those of the middle cortical cells. Toward the base of roots, beyond the elongation zone, the orientation of cortical MTs shifted continuously from transverse to oblique and then to longitudinal. In this case, the rate of shift in the orientation of cortical MTs along the root axis was appreciably faster in the middle cortical cells than in the other two types of cortical cells. Interestingly, the continuous change in cortical MT orientation was not confirmed in the transverse walls which showed much smaller two-dimensional expansion than the radial walls. Additionally, the presence of fragmented or shortened cortical MTs rapidly increased concomitantly with the decrease of transversely oriented cortical MTs. This relationship was especially prominent in the transverse walls of the inner cortical cells, which displayed the least expansion among the three types of cortical cells investigated. In the root elongation zone, the density of cortical MTs in the inner cortical cells was about three times higher than that in the other two cortical cell types. These results indicate that in the early stage of cell expansion, the orientation of cortical MTs determines a preferential direction of cell expansion and both the shifting orientation and density of cortical MTs affect the magnitude of expansion in width of the cell wall.  相似文献   

2.
Previous work has shown that microtubule (MT) reorientation follows the onset of growth inhibition on the lower side of graviresponding roots, indicating that growth reduction can occur independently of MT reorientation. To test this observation further, we examined whether the reduction in growth in response to osmotic stress is correlated with MT reorientation. The distribution and rate of growth in maize roots exposed to 350 mOsm sorbitol and KCl or 5 mM Mes/Tris buffer were measured with a digitizer. After various times roots were processed for indirect immunofluorescence microscopy. Application of sorbitol or KCl had no effect on the organization of MTs in the apical 2 mm of the root but resulted in striking and different effects in the basal region of the root. Sorbitol treatment caused rapid appearance of oval to circular holes in the microtubular array that persisted for at least 9 h. Between 30 min and 4 h of submersion in KCl, MTs in cortical cells 4 mm and farther from the quiescent center began to reorient oblique to the longitudinal axis. After 9 h, the alignment of MTs had shifted to parallel to the root axis but MTs of the epidermal cells remained transverse. In KCl-treated roots MT reorientation appeared to follow a pattern of development similar to that in controls but without elongation. Our data provide additional evidence that MT reorientation is not the cause but a consequence of growth inhibition.  相似文献   

3.
Summary Cortical microtubules (MTs) were visualized in root cortex cells ofHyacinthus orientalis L. using immunofluorescence techniques. Cellular MT orientation was determined adjacent to radial longitudinal and transverse walls of root tip, uncontracted, contracting, and fully contracted regions. As seen in longitudinal views, MTs formed parallel, apparently helical arrays which were oriented transversely, axially or obliquely depending upon the region. Transverse sectional views showed that MTs adjacent to transverse cell walls formed a variety of patterns which varied with developmental stage and cell location. Microtubules were oriented in crisscross or parallel arrays. The parallel arrays were oriented either parallel, perpendicular or oblique to the radius of the root. There was an apparent temporal progression in MT reorientation from outer cortical to inner cortical cell layers. A resultant progression of reoriented cell growth could account for root contraction. These findings corroborate earlier electron microscopic observations of changing MT orientation accompanying root contraction, and provide cytological evidence to test mathematical and biophysical models of the mechanics of cell expansion.Abbreviations MT microtubule - MF microfibril - MTSB microtubule stabilizing buffer - PBS phosphate buffered saline  相似文献   

4.
We studied the effect of 4,4,4-trifluoro-3-(indole-3-)butyric acid (TFIBA), a recently described root growth stimulator, and 5,6-dichloro-indole-3-acetic acid (DCIAA) on growth and microtubule (MT) organization in roots of Lactuca sativa L. DCIAA and indole-3-butyric acid (IBA) inhibited root elongation and depolymerized MTs in the cortex of the elongation zone, inhibited the elongation of stele cells, and promoted xylem maturation. Both auxins caused the plane of cell division to shift from anticlinal to periclinal. In contrast, TFIBA (100 micromolar) promoted elongation of primary roots by 40% and stimulated the elongation of lateral roots, even in the presence of IBA, the microtubular inhibitors oryzalin and taxol, or the auxin transport inhibitor naphthylphthalamic acid. However, TFIBA inhibited the formation of lateral root primordia. Immunostaining showed that TFIBA stabilized MTs orientation perpendicular to the root axis, doubled the cortical cell length, but delayed xylem maturation. The data indicate that the auxin-induced inhibition of elongation and swelling of roots results from reoriented phragmoplasts, the destabilization of MTs in elongating cells, and promotion of vessel formation. In contrast, TFIBA induced promotion of root elongation by enhancing cell length, prolonging transverse MT orientation, delaying cell and xylem maturation.  相似文献   

5.
To investigate the role of tyrosine phosphorylation/dephosphorylation processes in plant cells the morphology of Arabidopsis thaliana primary roots and the organization of cortical microtubules (MTs) were studied after inhibition of protein tyrosine kinases (PTKs) and tyrosine phosphatases (PTPs). It was found that all tested types of PTKs inhibitors (herbimycin A, genistein and tyrphostin AG 18) altered root hair growth and development, probably as a result of their significant influences on MTs organization in root hairs. The treatment also led to MTs reorientation and disruption in epidermis and cortex cells of both elongation and differentiation zones of primary roots. Enhanced tyrosine phosphorylation after treatment with a PTPs inhibitor (sodium orthovanadate) resulted in intense induction of root hair development and growth and caused a significant shortening of the elongation zone. It also led to changes of MTs orientation from transverse to longitudinal in epidermis and cortex cells of the elongation and differentiation zones of the root. From the data obtained we can suppose that tyrosine phosphorylation can be involved in the dynamics and organization of MTs in different types of plant cells.  相似文献   

6.
Aluminum (Al) induces agricultural problems limiting crop productivity in acid soils. Since Al causes morphological changes in roots, and because microtubules (MTs) play important roles in determination of tissue morphology, we investigated whether Al affects the arrangement of MTs in maize root meristem using immunolocalization techniques. When seedling roots were treated with 50 μM Al, the orientations of MTs were dramatically altered in a population of cells located in the protoderm and the two outer layers of cortex: interphase cortical MT arrays lost their normal transverse organization and became random or longitudinal; the preprophase band of MTs, mitotic spindle, and phragmoplast developed at planes 90° rotated compared to their counterparts in controls. These changes in MT orientation resulted in the change of the division plane from transverse to longitudinal, producing daughter cells positioned side by side instead of above and below. The rotation of the otherwise normal MT arrays and the division plane in Al-treated roots indicates that Al interferes with the normal polarity sensing mechanism, which may contribute to the reduced axial growth of the Al-treated roots.  相似文献   

7.
Gravity-induced changes in intracellular potentials in primary roots of 2-day-old mung bean (Vigna mungo L. cv. black matpe) seedlings were investigated using glass microelectrodes held by 3-dimensional hydraulic micro-drives. The electrodes were inserted into outer cortical cells within the elongation zone. Intracellular potentials, angle of root orientation with respect to gravity, and position within the root of the impaled cortical cell were measured simultaneously. Gravistimulation caused intracellular potential changes in cortical cells of the elongation zone. When the roots were oriented vertically, the intracellular potentials of the outer cortical cells (2 mm behind the root apex) were approximately - 115 mV. When the roots were placed horizontally cortical cells on the upper side hyperpolarized to - 154 mV within 30 s while cortical cells on the lower side depolarized to about - 62 mV. This electrical asymmetry did not occur in cells of the maturation zone. Because attempts to insert the electrode into cells of the root cap were unsuccessful, these cells were not measured. The hyperpolarization of cortical cells on the upper side was greatly reduced upon application of N,N'-dicyclohexylcarbodiimide (DCCD), an inhibitor of respiratory energy coupling. When stimulated roots were returned to the vertical, the degree of hyperpolarization of cortical cells on the previous upper side decreased within 30 s and approached that of cortical cells in non-stimulated roots. This cycle of hyperpolarization/loss of hyperpolarization was repeatable at least ten times by alternately turning the root from the vertical to the horizontal and back again. The very short (<30 s) lag period of these electrical changes indicates that they may result from stimulus-perception and transduction within the elongation zone rather than from transmission of a signal from the root cap.  相似文献   

8.
Marta J. Laskowski 《Planta》1990,181(1):44-52
The orientation of microtubules in cells of redlight-grown pea plants (Pisum sativum L.) was examined by means of immunofluorescence. Microtubules (MTs) in rapidly elongating, subepidermal cells commonly form multiple, parallel strands that run transverse to the cell's axis of elongation. By contrast, MTs in nonelongating subepidermal cells form steeply pitched helical arrays; MTs in non-elongating epidermal cells are oriented parallel to the axis of elongation. This change in orientation occurs during the time interval in which growth rate is declining. The transition is abrupt rather than gradual and occurs in both epidermal and subepidermal cells at the same time. Plants irradiated for 2 h with a growth-inhibiting fluence of blue light did not undergo the same transition, indicating that factors other than changing elongation rates must be responsible for triggering the reorganization of MT arrays.  相似文献   

9.
The inhibitory action of 0.1 microM auxin (IAA) on maize root growth was closely associated with a rapid and complete disintegration of the microtubular (MT) cytoskeleton, as visualized by indirect immunofluorescence of tubulin, throughout the growth region. After 30 min of this treatment, only fluorescent spots were present in root cells, accumulating either around nuclei or along cell walls. Six h later, in addition to some background fluorescence, dense but partially oriented oblique or longitudinal arrays of cortical MTs (CMTs) were found in most growing cells of the root apex. After 24 h of treatment, maize roots had adapted to the auxin, as inferred from the slowly recovering elongation rate and from the reassembly of a dense and well-ordered MT cytoskeleton which showed only slight deviations from that of the control root cells. Taxol pretreatment (100 microM, 24 h) prevented not only the rapid auxin-mediated disintegration of the MT cytoskeleton but also a reorientation of the CMT arrays, from transversal to longitudinal. The only tissue to show MTs in their cells throughout the auxin treatment was the epidermis. Significant resistance of transverse CMT arrays in these cells towards auxin was confirmed using a higher auxin concentration (100 microM, 24 h). The latter auxin dose also revealed inter-tissue-specific responses to auxin: outer cortical cell files reoriented their CMTs from the transversal to longitudinal orientation, whereas inner cortical cell files lost their MTs. This high auxin-mediated response, associated with the swelling of root apices, was abolished with the pretreatment of maize root with taxol.  相似文献   

10.
Summary Cellulose microfibrils (MFs) were visualized on the inner surface of root cortex cell walls ofHyacinthus orientalis L. using a replica technique. Microfibril orientation was determined in radial longitudinal and transverse cell walls of the root tip, uncontracted, contracting, and fully contracted regions of the root. In longitudinal walls, the innermost MFs were ordered and parallel to one another and were oriented transversely, axially or obliquely, depending upon the developmental stage of the region. In transverse walls MFs in a single layer formed crisscross or ordered parallel arrays, depending upon the region. Parallel arrays were oriented either parallel, perpendicular, or oblique to the radius of the root. Inner walls of certain cells in the contracting region had MFs which appeared interrupted over their lengths. In general, these findings parallel earlier immunofluorescence and electron microscopic observations of changing cortical microtubule (MT) orientation accompanying root contraction. The major exception to MT-MF congruence occurred in cells of the actively contracting region. In middle and outer cell layers, MFs appeared short and partially obscured, while MTs in these cells occurred in conspicuous laterally aggregated strands parallel to one another over the length of the cells or were absent. This alteration in MF-MT parallelism may be related to the reorientation in cell growth occurring in the contractile zone or to the collapse of specific cells during the process of root contraction.Abbreviations MF microfibril - MT microtubule  相似文献   

11.
The arrangements of cortical microtubules (MTs) in a tip-growing protonemal cell of Adiantum capillus-veneris L. and of cellulose microfibrils (MFs) in its wall were examined during blue-light (BL)-induced apical swelling. In most protonemal cells which had been growing in the longitudinal direction under red light, apical swelling was induced within 2 h of the onset of BL irradiation, and swelling continued for at least 8 h. During the longitudinal growth under red light, the arrangement of MFs around the base of the apical hemisphere (the subapical region) was perpendicular to the cell axis, while a random arrangement of MFs was found at the very tip, and a roughly axial arrangement was observed in the cylindrical region of most cells. This orientation of MFs corresponds to that of the cortical MTs reported previously (Murata et al. 1987, Protoplasma 141, 135–138). In cells irradiated with BL, a random rather than transverse arrangement of both MTs and MFs was found in the subapical region. Time-course studies showed that this reorientation occurred within 1 h after the onset of the BL irradiation, i.e. it preceded the change in growth pattern. These results indicate that the orientation of cortical MTs and of cellulose MFs is involved in the regulation of cell diameter in a tip-growing Adiantum protonemal cell.Abbreviations BL blue light - MF(s) microfibril(s) - MT(s) microtubule(s)  相似文献   

12.
Abstract: The control of maize root growth by root cap mucilage and extracellular calcium (Ca) was examined. Special attention was paid to the influence of these factors on cellular aspects of root growth, such as cell shape and organization of the microtubular (MT) cytoskeleton. Externally supplied Ca impaired the transition of early post-mitotic cells from a more-or-less apolar mode of expansion to a strictly anisotropic mode of elongation accompanied by their more rapid growth. However, this inhibitory effect of Ca was not associated with any re-arrangement of the cortical MTs, their transverse arrays, with respect to the root axis, being maintained under these conditions. Root mucilage, collected from donor root caps and placed around root tips, exerted a similar effect on cell shapes as did externally supplied Ca. In contrast, roots grown in a medium of low Ca content, or from which the root cap mucilage was continually removed, had more elongated cell shapes in their post-mitotic growth regions when compared to the control roots. These findings are consistent with a notion that Ca is present in the root cap mucilage in physiologically relevant amounts and can mediate growth responses in both the PIG region and the apical part of the elongation zone. Integrating several known effects of Ca ions on growth at the root apex, a hypothesis is proposed that a Ca-mediated and MT-independent control of cell growth in the PIG region might be involved in morphogenetic root movements (e.g. gravitropism), and that root growth responses could be initiated by an asymmetric distribution of extracellular calcium, or root cap slime, around the growing root tip.  相似文献   

13.
Τhe bidirectional relationship between cortical microtubule orientation and cell wall structure has been extensively studied in elongating cells. Nevertheless, the possible interplay between microtubules and cell wall elements in meristematic cells still remains elusive. Herein, the impact of cellulose synthesis inhibition and suppressed cell elongation on cortical microtubule orientation was assessed throughout the developmental zones of Arabidopsis thaliana root apex by whole-mount tubulin immunolabeling and confocal microscopy. Apart from the wild-type, thanatos and pom2-4 mutants of Cellulose SynthaseA3 and Cellulose Synthase Interacting1, respectively, were studied. Pharmacological and mechanical approaches inhibiting cell expansion were also applied. Cortical microtubules of untreated wild-type roots were predominantly transverse in the meristematic, transition and elongation root zones. Cellulose-deficient mutants, chemical inhibition of cell expansion, or growth in soil resulted in microtubule reorientation in the elongation zone, wherein cell length was significantly decreased. Combinatorial genetic and chemical suppression of cell expansion extended microtubule reorientation to the transition zone. According to the results, transverse cortical microtubule orientation is established in the meristematic root zone, persisting upon inhibition of cell expansion. Microtubule reorientation in the elongation zone could be attributed to conditional suppression of cell elongation. The differential responsiveness of microtubule orientation to genetic and environmental cues is most likely associated with distinct biophysical traits of the cells among each developmental root zone.  相似文献   

14.
There is general agreement that during root gravitropism some sort of growth-modifying signal moves from the cap to the elongation zone and that this signal ultimately induces the curvature that leads to reorientation of the root. However, there is disagreement regarding both the nature of the signal and the pathway of its movement from the root cap to the elongation zone. We examined the pathway of movement by testing gravitropism in primary roots of maize (Zea mays L.) from which narrow (0.5 mm) rings of epidermal and cortical tissue were surgically removed from various positions within the elongation zone. When roots were girdled in the apical part of the elongation zone gravitropic curvature occurred apical to the girdle but not basal to the girdle. Filling the girdle with agar allowed curvature basal to the girdle to occur. Shallow girdles, in which only two or three cell layers (epidermis plus one or two cortical cell layers) were removed, prevented or greatly delayed gravitropic curvature basal to the girdle. The results indicate that the gravitropic signal moves basipetally through the outermost cell layers, perhaps through the epidermis itself.  相似文献   

15.
Protoplasts were isolated from cortical cells of the elongating zone of maize (Zea mays L. cv. LG 11) roots and submitted to microelectrophoresis. Significant and transient differences in zeta potential between protoplasts from upper and lower root sides were compared with the gravireaction and the differential elongation of these roots. The maximum difference in the zeta potential was obtained between protoplasts from the upper and lower cortical cells after 90 min, exactly the time of gravipresentation for which the maximum rate of gravireaction was observed. In addition, this almost corresponded to the time for which the difference between the elongation rates of upper and lower sides of the extending zone began to increase. Consequently, the changes in the charges of the plasmalemma of the cortical cells from the growing part of roots could be more or less directly related to the root graviresponse.  相似文献   

16.
In the regeneration of a shoot from a leaf of the succulent, Graptopetalum paraguayense E. Walther the first new organs are leaf primordia. The original arrangement of cellulose microfibrils and of microtubules (MTs) in the epidermis of the leaf-forming site is one of parallel, straight lines. In the new primordium both structures still have a congruent arrangement but it is roughly in the form of concentric circles that surround the new cylindrical organ. The regions which undergo the greatest shift in orientation (90°) were studied in detail. Departures from the original cellulose alignment are detected in changes in the polarized-light image. Departures from the original cortical MT arrangement are detected using electron microscopy. The over-all reorganization of the MT pattern is followed by the tally of MT profiles, the various regions being studied in two perpendicular planes of section. This corrects for the difference in efficiency in counting transverse versus longitudinal profiles of MTs. Reorientation takes place sporadically, cell by cell, for both the cellulose microfibrils and the MTs, indicating a coordinated reorientation of the two structures. That MTs and cellulose microfibrils reorient jointly in individual cells was shown by reconstruction of the arrays of cortical MTs in paradermal sections of individual cells whose recent change in the orientation of cellulose deposition had been detected with polarized light. Closeness of the two alignments was also indicated by images where the MT and microfibril alignments co-varied within a single cell. The change-over in alignment of the MTs appears to involve stages where arrays of contrasting orientation co-exist to give a criss-cross image. During this critical reorganization, the frequency of the MTs is high. It falls during subsequent enlargement of the organ. It was found that the rearrangement of the cortical MTs to approximate a series of concentric circles on the residual meristem occurred before the emergence of leaf primordia. Through their apparent influence on microfibril alignments, the changes in MT disposition, described here, have the potential to generate major biophysical changes that accompany organogenesis.Abbreviation MT(s) microtubule(s)  相似文献   

17.
Summary Microtubule (MT) arrays in stomatal complexes ofLolium have been studied using cryosectioning and immunofluorescence microscopy. This in situ analysis reveals that the arrangement of MTs in pairs of guard cells (GCs) or subsidiary cells (SCs) within a complex is very similar, indicating that MT deployment is closely coordinated during development. In premitotic guard mother cells (GMCs), MTs of the transverse interphase MT band (IMB) are reorganized into a longitudinal array via a transitory array in which the MTs appear to radiate from the cell edges towards the centre of the walls. Following the longitudinal division of GMCs, cortical MTs are reinstated in the GCs at the edge of the periclinal and ventral walls. The MTs become organized into arrays which radiate across the periclinal walls, initially from along the length of the ventral wall and later only from the pore site. As the GCs elongate, the organization of MTs and the patterns of wall expansion differ on the internal and external periclinal walls. A final reorientation of MTs from transverse to longitudinal is associated with the elongation and constriction of GCs to produce mature complexes. During cytokinesis in the subsidiary mother cells (SMCs), MTs appear around the reforming nucleus in the daughter epidermal cells but appear in the cortex of the SC once division is complete. Our results are thus consistent with the idea that interphase MTs are nucleated in the cell cortex in all cells of the stomatal complex but not in adjacent epidermal cells.Abbreviations GMC guard mother cell - GC guard cell - IMB interphase microtubule band - MT microtubule - PPB preprophase band - SMC subsidiary mother cell - SC subsidiary cell  相似文献   

18.
A mycorrhizal fungus changes microtubule orientation in tobacco root cells   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
A. Genre  P. Bonfante 《Protoplasma》1997,199(1-2):30-38
Summary Cortical cells of mycorrhizal roots undergo drastic morphological changes, such as vacuole fragmentation, nucleus migration, and deposition of cell wall components at the plant-fungus interface. We hypothesized that the cytoskeleton is involved in these mechanisms leading to cell reorganization. We subjected longitudinal, meristem to basal zone, sections of uninfectedNicotiana tabacum roots to immunofluorescence methods to identify the microtubular (MT) structures associated with root cells. Similar sections were obtained from tobacco roots grown in the presence ofGigaspora margarita, an arbuscular mycorrhizal fungus which penetrates the root via the epidermal cells, but mostly develops in the inner cortical cells. While the usual MT structures were found in uninfected roots (e.g., MTs involved in mitosis in the meristem and cortical hoops in differentiated parenchyma cells), an increase in complexity of MT structures was observed in infected tissues. At least three new systems were identified: (i) MTs running along large intracellular hyphae, (ii) MTs linking hyphae, (iii) MTs binding the hyphae to the host nucleus. The experiments show that mycorrhizal infection causes reorganization of root MTs, suggesting their involvement in the drastic morphological changes shown by the cortical cells.  相似文献   

19.
The curvature of roots in response to gravity is attributed to the development of a differential concentration gradient of IAA in the top and bottom of the elongation region of roots. The development of the IAA gradient has been attributed to the redistribution of IAA from the stele to cortical tissues in the elongation region. The gravistimulated redistribution of IAA was investigated by applying [3H]IAA to the cut surface of 5 mm apical primary root segments. The movement of label from the stele-associated [3H]IAA into the root, tip, root cap, and cortical tissues on the top and bottom of the elongation region was determined in vertically growing roots and gravistimulated roots. Label from the stele moved into the region of cell differentiation (root tip) prior to accumulating in the elongation region. Little label was observed in the root cap. Gravistimulation did not increase the amount of label moving from the stele; but gravistimulation did increase the amount of label accumulating in cortical tissues on the lower side of the elongation region, and decreased the amount of label accumulating in cortical tissues on the upper side of the elongation region. Removal of the cap prior to or immediately following gravity stimulation rendered the roots partially insensitive to gravity and also prevented gravity-induced asymmetric redistribution of label. However, removal of the root cap following 30 min of gravistimulation did not alter root curvature or the establishment of an IAA asymmetry across the region of root elongation. These results suggest that a signal originating in the root cap directs auxin redistribution in tissues behind the root cap, leading to the development of an asymmetry of IAA concentration in the elongation region that in turn causes the differential growth rate in the elongation region of a graviresponding root.  相似文献   

20.
The curvature of roots in response to gravity is attributed to the development of a differential concentration gradient of IAA in the top and bottom of the elongation region of roots. The development of the IAA gradient has been attributed to the redistribution of IAA from the stele to cortical tissues in the elongation region. The gravistimulated redistribution of IAA was investigated by applying [3H]IAA to the cut surface of 5 mm apical primary root segments. The movement of label from the stele-associated [3H]IAA into the root, tip, root cap, and cortical tissues on the top and bottom of the elongation region was determined in vertically growing roots and gravistimulated roots. Label from the stele moved into the region of cell differentiation (root tip) prior to accumulating in the elongation region. Little label was observed in the root cap. Gravistimulation did not increase the amount of label moving from the stele; but gravistimulation did increase the amount of label accumulating in cortical tissues on the lower side of the elongation region, and decreased the amount of label accumulating in cortical tissues on the upper side of the elongation region. Removal of the cap prior to or immediately following gravity stimulation rendered the roots partially insensitive to gravity and also prevented gravity-induced asymmetric redistribution of label. However, removal of the root cap following 30 min of gravistimulation did not alter root curvature or the establishment of an IAA asymmetry across the region of root elongation. These results suggest that a signal originating in the root cap directs auxin redistribution in tissues behind the root cap, leading to the development of an asymmetry of IAA concentration in the elongation region that in turn causes the differential growth rate in the elongation region of a graviresponding root.  相似文献   

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