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Plant Physiology 92:792-796 (1990)
© 1990 American Society of Plant Biologists

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Development and Growth Regulation

Correlations between Gravitropic Curvature and Auxin Movement across Gravistimulated Roots of Zea mays1

Linda M. Young, Michael L. Evans and Rainer Hertel

Department of Biological Sciences, Ohio Northern University, Ada, Ohio 45810, Department of Botany, Ohio State University, Columbus, Ohio 43210, Institut für Biologie III, Albert-Ludwigs-Universität, D-7800, Frieburg, Federal Republic of Germany

We compared the kinetics of auxin redistribution across the caps of primary roots of 2-day-old maize (Zea mays, cv Merit) seedlings with the time course of gravitropic curvature. [3H] indoleacetic acid was applied to one side of the cap in an agar donor and radioactivity moving across the cap was collected in an agar receiver applied to the opposite side. Upon gravistimulation the roots first curved upward slightly, then returned to the horizontal and began curving downward, reaching a final angle of about 67°. Movement of label across the caps of gravistimulated roots was asymmetric with preferential downward movement (ratio downward/upward = ca. 1.6, radioactivity collected during the 90 min following beginning of gravistimulation). There was a close correlation between the development of asymmetric auxin movement across the root cap and the rate of curvature, with both values increasing to a maximum and then declining as the roots approached the final angle of curvature. In roots preadapted to gravity (alternate brief stimulation on opposite flanks over a period of 1 hour) the initial phase of upward curvature was eliminated and downward bending began earlier than for controls. The correlation between asymmetric auxin movement and the kinetics of curvature also held in comparisons between control and preadapted roots. Both downward auxin transport asymmetry and downward curvature occurred earlier in preadapted roots than in controls. These findings are consistent with suggestions that the root cap is not only the site of perception but also the location of the initial redistribution of effectors that ultimately leads to curvature.


1 Supported by National Aeronautics and Space Administration grant NAGW297, by National Science Foundation grant DMB8608673, and by an Ohio State University Visiting Distinguished Professorship award to Rainer Hertel. This study constitutes a portion of the Ph.D. thesis research of L. M. Y. (19).




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