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Plant Physiology 54:656-658 (1974) © 1974 American Society of Plant Biologists Structure of Some Cyclohexyl Compounds as Related to Their Ability to Stimulate Plant Growth 1a Department of Botany, University of British Columbia, Vancouver, Canada
Aqueous solution, 10 mM, of cyclohexanecarboxylic, cyclohexylacetic, cyclohexylpropionic, cyclohexylbutyric acids (all components of naphthenic acid); cis-1,2-, and trans-1, 4-cyclohexyldicarboxylic acids; 3-cyclohexene-1-carboxylic and cyclohexylsulfamic acids; and cyclohexyl mercaptan were applied to 14-day-old bush bean plants, Phaseolus vulgaris L. cv. Top Crop. Only cyclohexanecarboxylic and cyclohexylacetic acid resulted in a statistically significant (P = 0.05) increase in pod production per plant in all experiments. The stimulation by the first four monocarboxylic acids decreased as the number of methylene groups in the side chain increased from 0 to 3. The effective compounds possessed an H-saturated 6-carbon ring with a single carboxyl group attached directly to the ring or separated from it by no more than one methylene group.
1 This research was supported in part by the National Research Council of Canada.
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