Plant Hormones and Signaling Flashcards
What is phototropism?
bending of growing seedlings towards the light
What did Darwin and Darwin find about phototropism and how?
the tip of the emerging plant is what responds to light 4 groups were measured tip removed: no bending opaque tip: no bending transparent tip: bending shield over curvature: bending
What did Boysen and Jenson find about phototropism and how?
the response of bending is induced chemically, something moves through the shoot (a hormone)
2 groups were measured
permeable gelatin roadblock: bending
impermeable mica roadblock: no bending
What did Went find about phototropism?
the distribution of the chemical signal is responsible for bending
also discovered auxin, now known as indoleacetic acid (IAA)
What does IAA cause?
growth of a seedling by inducing cell elongation; bending occurs because IAA concentrations are higher on the ‘dark’ side of the plant
What does absolute concentration of auxin promote and inhibit?
promotes stem growth at moderate concentrations
inhibits stem growth at high concentrations
How does relative concentrations affect plants?
apical dominance and lateral branching controlled by antagonistic effects of auxin and cytokinins
How does gravitropism affect plants?
plants detect gravity roots grow in positive gravity shoots grow in negative gravity detected by statoliths (plastids with dense starch grains) not light dependent
How does thigmotropism affect plants?
Plants respond to mechanical stimuli:
change in growth form (erect to prostrate in high winds)
direction of growth (vine tendrils)
short term movements (leaf collapse)
How do plants respond to attacks?
release of toxins, repellants within attacked plant
release of chemical signals to other plants
What are examples of cyclic environmental changes?
germination
leaf and stem growth phases
flowering and fruit and seed production
photosynthate production and storage in summer and winter dormancy
What mechanism detects night length?
the phytochrome switch
What is a phytochrome?
a dimer of two identical peptide chains that has a chromophore with two isomers
Pr (phytochrome red light)
Pfr (phytochrome far red light)