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Plant Physiology 88:10-12 (1988)
© 1988 American Society of Plant Biologists

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Development and Growth Regulation

Effect of Dark Pretreatment on the Kinetics of Response of Barley Pulvini to Gravistimulation and Hormones 1

Thomas G. Brock and Peter B. Kaufman

Department of Biology, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, Michigan 48109

Starch in pulvinus amyloplasts of barley (Hordeum vulgare cv Larker) disappears when 45-day-old, light-grown plants are given 5 days of continuous darkness. The effect of this loss on the pulvinus graviresponse was evaluated by following changes in the kinetics of response during the 5-day dark period. Over 5 days of dark pretreatment, the lag to initial graviresponse and the subsequent half-time to maximum steady state bending rate increased significantly while the maximum bending rate did not change. The change in response to applied indoleacetic acid (100 micromolar) plus gibberellic acid (10 micromolar) without gravistimulation, under identical dark pretreatments, was used as a model system for the response component of gravitropism. Dark pretreatment did not change the lag to initial response following hormone application to vertical pulvini, but both the maximum bending rate and the half-time to the maximum rate were significantly reduced. Also, after dark pretreatment, significant bending responses following hormone application were observed in vertical segments with or without added sucrose, while gravistimulation produced a response only if segments were given sucrose. These results indicate that starch-filled amyloplasts are required for the graviresponse of barley pulvini and suggest that they function in the stimulus perception and signal transduction components of gravitropism.


1 Supported by a National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA) Research Associate Award to T. G. B. and NASA grant NAGW-34 to P. B. K.







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