Abstract: | Elongation of coleoptile segments, having or not having a tip,excised from rice (Oryza sativa L. cv. Sasanishiki) seedlingswas promoted by exogenous ethylene above 0.3 µl l1as well as by IAA above 0.1 µM. Ethylene production ofdecapitated segments was stimulated by IAA above 1.0µM,and this was strongly inhibited by 1.0 µM AVG. AVG inhibitedthe IAA-stimulated elongation of the decapitated segment witha 4 h lag period, and this was completely recovered by ethyleneapplied at the concentration of 0.03 µl l1, whichhad no effect on elongation without exogenous IAA. The effectsof IAA and ethylene on elongation were additive. These factsshow that ethylene produced in response to IAA promotes ricecoleoptile elongation in concert with IAA, probably by prolongingthe possible duration of the IAA-stimulated elongation, butthat they act independently of each other. Moreover, AVG stronglyinhibited the endogenous growth of coleoptile segments withtips and this effect was nullified by the exogenous applicationof 0.03 µl l1 ethylene. These data imply that theelongation of intact rice coleoptiles may be regulated cooperativelyby endogenous ethylene and auxin in the same manner as foundin the IAA-stimulated elongation of the decapitated coleoptilesegments. Key words: oryza sativa, Ethylene, Auxin, Coleoptile growth |