Title: Control Systems in Plants
1Control Systems in Plants
2Plant Hormones
- What is a Plant Hormone ?
- Compound produced by one part of an organism that
is translocated to other parts where it triggers
a response in target cells and tissues.
3Functions of Plant Hormones
- Control plant growth and development by affecting
division, elongation, and cell differentiation - Effect depends on size of action, stage of plant
growth and hormone concentration - Hormonal signal is amplified by gene expression,
enzyme activity, or membrane properties
4Table 39.1 An Overview of Plant Hormones
5Auxins(IAA) indoleacetic acid natural auxin in
plants
- Promotes elongation secondary growth
- Apical meristem is the major site of auxin
production - Inhibits lateral growth
- Induces female floral parts fruit
6Figure 39.8 Apical dominance with apical bud
(left), apical bud removed (right)
7Figure 39.7 Cell elongation in response to
auxin the acid growth hypothesis
8Cytokinins
- Move from the roots to tissues by moving up xylem
- Stimulates protein synthesis
- Made in roots
- Functions
- 1. Cell division and differentiation
- 2. Apical dominance
- 3. Anti-aging hormones
- slow protein deterioration
9Gibberellins
- Stimulate elongation of cells
- Inhibits root growth
- Stimulate flower part development- bolting
- Signals seeds to break dormancy and germinate
10Figure 39.9 Foolish seedling disease in rice
11Figure 39.11 The effect of gibberellin treatment
on seedless grapes
12Abscisic Acid (ABA)
- Growth inhibitor
- returns seeds to dormancy
- inhibits cell division in vascular cambium
- causes rapid closing of stoma during dry periods
- promotes positive geotropism
13Figure 39.12 Precocious germination of mutant
maize seeds
14Ethylene
- Gaseous hormone
- High auxin induces release of ethylene
- Causes senescence (aging)
- Fruit ripening one bad apple does spoil the
whole bunch - Abscission loss of leaves on
- deciduous trees
15Figure 39.16 Abscission of a maple leaf
16Which hormones cause the following.
- Apical dominance from apical bud
- Abscission
- Stimulates growth of axillary buds
- Root growth
- Stimulates closing of stomata
- Causes fruit ripening
- Stimulates seeds to break dormancy and germinate
- Growth inhibitor
- Cell division and differentiation
- Cell elongation
- Seedless fruit
17- Answers to Previous Slide
- Auxin
- Ethylene
- Cytokinins
- Cytokinins
- Abscisic acid
- Ethylene
- Gibberellins
- Abscisic acid
- Auxins and cytokinins
- Auxins
- Auxins
18Which hormone is made at each location?
- Made in roots and transported upwards
- Found in meristems of apical buds and seed
embryos - Found in tissues of ripening fruit
- Leaves stems, roots and green fruit
19- Answers to Previous Slide
- Cytokinins
- Auxins
- Ethylene
- Abscisic Acid
20Plant Movement
- A. Tropisms
- growth response toward or away from stimuli
- 1. Phototropism
- cells on darker side of shoot elongate faster
than cells on bright side due to auxin
distribution - auxin move laterally across the tip from the
bright to dark side by an unknown mechanism. - Cells on the dark side grow
21- 2. Gravitropism (geotropism)
- gravity
- roots --gt positive geotropism
- stems---gt negative geotropism
- Statoliths
- starch grains in root cap cells, they trigger
calcium redistribution which results in auxin
movement in root - auxin inhibits cell elongation
- upperside of root elongates faster than bottom
22- 3. Thigmotropism
- growth in response to touch
- tendrils contacts solid and coils
- increased production of ethylene
-
- 4. Hydrotropism
- growth toward water
- willow tree