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Plant Physiology 95:1-5 (1991)
© 1991 American Society of Plant Biologists

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Development and Growth Regulation

Gravitropism: Interaction of Sensitivity Modulation and Effector Redistribution 1

Michael L. Evans

Department of Plant Biology, The Ohio State University, Columbus, Ohio 43210

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.


1 Research in the author's laboratory is funded by the National Aeronautics and Space Administration.




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