Gravitropism: interaction of sensitivity modulation and effector redistribution. (57/1066)

Our increasing capabilities for quantitative hormone analysis and automated high resolution growth studies have allowed a reassessment of the classical Cholodny-Went hypothesis of gravitropism. According to this hypothesis, gravity induces redistribution of auxin toward the lower side of the organ and this causes the growth asymmetry that leads to reorientation. Arguments against the Cholodny-Went hypothesis that were based primarily on concerns over the timing and magnitude of the development of hormone asymmetry are countered by recent evidence that such asymmetry develops early and is sufficiently large to account for curvature. Thus, it appears that the Cholodny-Went hypothesis is fundamentally valid. However, recent comparative studies of the kinetics of curvature and the timing of the development of hormone asymmetry indicate that this hypothesis alone cannot account for the intricacies of the gravitropic response. It appears that time-dependent gravity-induced changes in hormone sensitivity as well as changes in sensitivity of the gravity receptor play important roles in the response.  (+info)

The Acid Growth Theory of auxin-induced cell elongation is alive and well. (58/1066)

Plant cells elongate irreversibly only when load-bearing bonds in the walls are cleaved. Auxin causes the elongation of stem and coleoptile cells by promoting wall loosening via cleavage of these bonds. This process may be coupled with the intercalation of new cell wall polymers. Because the primary site of auxin action appears to be the plasma membrane or some intracellular site, and wall loosening is extracellular, there must be communication between the protoplast and the wall. Some "wall-loosening factor" must be exported from auxin-impacted cells, which sets into motion the wall loosening events. About 20 years ago, it was suggested that the wall-loosening factor is hydrogen ions. This idea and subsequent supporting data gave rise to the Acid Growth Theory, which states that when exposed to auxin, susceptible cells excrete protons into the wall (apoplast) at an enhanced rate, resulting in a decrease in apoplastic pH. The lowered wall pH then activates wall-loosening processes, the precise nature of which is unknown. Because exogenous acid causes a transient (1-4 h) increase in growth rate, auxin must also mediate events in addition to wall acidification for growth to continue for an extended period of time. These events may include osmoregulation, cell wall synthesis, and maintenance of the capacity of walls to undergo acid-induced wall loosening. At present, we do not know if these phenomena are tightly coupled to wall acidification or if they are the products of multiple independent signal transduction pathways.  (+info)

Two endogenous proteins that induce cell wall extension in plants. (59/1066)

Plant cell enlargement is regulated by wall relaxation and yielding, which is thought to be catalyzed by elusive "wall-loosening" enzymes. By employing a reconstitution approach, we found that a crude protein extract from the cell walls of growing cucumber seedlings possessed the ability to induce the extension of isolated cell walls. This activity was restricted to the growing region of the stem and could induce the extension of isolated cell walls from various dicot stems and the leaves of amaryllidaceous monocots, but was less effective on grass coleoptile walls. Endogenous and reconstituted wall extension activities showed similar sensitivities to pH, metal ions, thiol reducing agents, proteases, and boiling in methanol or water. Sequential HPLC fractionation of the active wall extract revealed two proteins with molecular masses of 29 and 30 kD associated with the activity. Each protein, by itself, could induce wall extension without detectable hydrolytic breakdown of the wall. These proteins appear to mediate "acid growth" responses of isolated walls and may catalyze plant cell wall extension by a novel biochemical mechanism.  (+info)

The role of gravity in apical dominance: effects of clinostating on shoot inversion-induced ethylene production, shoot elongation and lateral bud growth. (60/1066)

Shoot inversion-induced release of apical dominance in Pharbitis nil is inhibited by rotating the plant at 0.42 revolutions per minute in a vertical plane perpendicular to the axis of rotation of a horizontal clinostat. Clinostating prevented lateral bud outgrowth, apparently by negating the restriction of the shoot elongation via reduction of ethylene production in the inverted shoot. Radial stem expansion was also decreased. Data from experiments with intact tissue and isolated segments indicated that shoot-inversion stimulates ethylene production by increasing the activity of 1-aminocyclopropane-1-carboxylic acid synthase. The results support the hypothesis that shoot inversion-induced release of apical dominance in Pharbitis nil is due to gravity stress and is mediated by ethylene-induced retardation of the elongation of the inverted shoot.  (+info)

Transductions to generate plant form and pattern: an essay on cause and effect. (61/1066)

Many complex processes can be broken into transduction steps where one state is converted to another by a well defined activity. One difficulty for analysis is that transductions occur in chains or networks. Another, of primary concern here, is that a single transduction can be complex. Some such transductions can efficiently explain phenomena often thought to be summations or orchestrations of many simple transductions. Pattern formation is in this category. For a wide range of transductions one can define cause and effect in a differential equation. In its integral one can define the before and after states. The main experimental tactic to characterize unknown transductions is co-variation. The before state (input) is altered, change in the after state (output) is assayed. Thus an unknown transduction, with cause and effect embodied in the differential, is investigated through long-term changes in its integral. This is fully practical when all of the integral is known or readily surmised, as in simple discrete biochemical transductions. As causal differential expressions become complex, their integrals become more versatile in generating output because this changes not only with variation in the expression itself but also with boundary conditions and limits. These very features, however, make such a function increasingly intractable to discovery by co-variation. Only a small part of the integral is embodied in the before and after states; the remainder is not readily surmised. Accordingly, in contrast to reliance on the role of controls to deduce unknown simple transductions, the complex ones are generally established through formalization of the differential nature of the process itself.  (+info)

Plant development: Two sides to organ asymmetry. (62/1066)

Three gene families have been identified which interact to polarize plant lateral organs. The results suggest that organ polarity is initially determined by a signal from the shoot tip which specifies adaxial organ identity and results in repression of abaxial identity, thereby aligning the polarity of organs with the stem.  (+info)

Large electrical currents traverse growing pollen tubes. (63/1066)

Using a newly developed vibrating electrode, we have explored the electric fields around lily pollen germinating in vitro. From these field measurements, we infer that each weeted pollen drives a steady current of a few hundred picoamperes through itself. Considered as a flow of positive ions, this current enters an ungerminated grain's prospective growth site and leaves it opposite end. After a grain germinates and forms a tube, this current enters most of the growing tube and leaves the whole grain. The current densities over both of these extended surface regions are relatively uniform, and the boundary zone, near the tube's base, is relatively narrow. This current continues as long as the tube grows, and even continues when elongation, as well as cytoplasmic streaming, are blocked by 1 mug/ml of cytochalasin B. After a otherwise indistinguishable minority of tubes have grown to lengths of a millimeter or more, their current comes to include an endless train of discrete and characteristic current pulses as well as a steady component. These pulses are about 30s long, never overlap, recur every 60-100s, and seem to enter a region more restricted to be growing tip than the steady current's sink. In most ways, the current through growing lily pollen resembles that known to flow through focoid eggs.  (+info)

Growth and survivorship of dipterocarp seedlings: differences in shade persistence create a special case of dispersal limitation. (64/1066)

A series of growth experiments and observations on natural populations have been carried out on dipterocarp species of contrasting ecology growing in artificial gaps and the forest understorey. These studies have demonstrated that although differences exist between species in photosynthetic and growth responses to the high-light environment, competition for light in canopy gaps is highly asymmetrical and tends to reinforce any pre-existing dominance hierarchy. We propose that differences in seedling persistence in forest canopy shade are highly influenced by species-specific biotic and abiotic interactions. Our experiments suggest that as seedlings, dipterocarp species trade off traits which enhance persistence and growth in shade against those that enhance their ability to exploit gaps. Less competitive species survive for progressively longer periods of time after a gregarious fruiting event. This leads to significant shifts with time in the number of species present in the seedling bank and hence in the importance of interspecific competition in determining which species dominates regrowth in gaps. We propose that this special case of dispersal limitation is more likely to account for coexistence of dipterocarp species than differences in growth responses to gaps of different size, with stochastic and environmental variables interacting to determine species distribution and abundance.  (+info)