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AN ANALYSIS OF THE GROWTH RESPONSE OF YOUNG TOMATO PLANTS TO INFECTION BY VERTICILLIUM ALBO-ATRUM: II. THE PRODUCTION OF GROWTH SUBSTANCES
Authors:G. F. PEGG  I. W. SELMAN
Affiliation:Department of Biological Sciences, Wye College, University of London
Abstract:Bioassays on ether-soluble acid extracts from healthy and Verticillium -infected tomato plants, showed the presence of substances inhibiting growth of wheat coleoptiles in both healthy and infected leaves and stems, but the amounts were greater in the infected.
Assays of infected stems and leaves showed increases in growth-promoting activity expressed as indole-3-acetic acid equivalents (IAAe), up to 200% of those for healthy controls.
Similar assays of cultures of V. albo-atrum showed growth-promoting activity. No acid substance capable of inhibiting the growth of wheat tissue was detected in the culture filtrate. IAA was identified by colour test with Ehrlich's reagent on chromatograms from extracts of both infected stems and fungal culture filtrates.
The vertical distribution of IAAe was determined in healthy and infected plants at the eight-leaf stage by assaying individual leaves and four stem segments separately. In healthy plants the IAAe content was greatest in the young leaves (6–8) but no gradient was observed as between leaves 1–5. In infected leaves increases over the controls were found in leaves, 1, 3 and 6 and a decrease in leaf 8.
In healthy stems IAAe was highest in the distal segment and infected stems showed higher values at all four levels, with the relative increase greatest in the distal region.
It is suggested that the major part of the Verticillium syndrome including petiolar epinasty, tylosis, pith hyperplasia and the formation of adventitious roots is the result of an accumulation of growth substances in infected tissue.
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