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Plant Physiology 47:805-811 (1971)
© 1971 American Society of Plant Biologists

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The Mechanical Behavior of Isolated Avena Coleoptile Walls Subjected to Constant Stress

Properties and Relation to Cell Elongation 1

Robert Cleland2

a Astbury Department of Biophysics, University of Leeds, Leeds, England

In order to assess the role of the mechanical properties of the wall in auxin-induced cell elongation, a study has been made of the ability of isolated Avena coleoptile walls to extend (creep) when subjected to a constant applied stress. Creep occurs as a viscoelastic extension which has the following characteristics: the extension is proportional to log time and is partly reversible, and the extension rate has a Q10 of about 1.05 and is markedly greater in auxin-pretreated walls. In nonconditioned walls the extension rate is proportional to applied stress, but pre-extension causes the appearance of an apparent yield strain. The similarity of creep and instantaneous plastic deformation in response to temperature or to pretreatment with auxin or KCN suggests that the instantaneous deformation is simply the viscoelastic extension which occurs at very short times. A comparison of these viscoelastic properties with the properties of auxin-induced cell elongation indicates that cell elongation requires more than just a physical extension of the wall. It is suggested that elongation occurs as a series of extension steps, each of which involves a viscoelastic extension preceded or accompanied by an auxin-dependent biochemical change in the wall properties.


2 Present address: Department of Botany, University of Washington, Seattle, Wash. 98105.

1 This work was supported by National Science Foundation Grant GB-5385X and was made possible by a John Simon Guggenheim Foundation Fellowship.




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