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Lateral diffusion of polarly transported indoleacetic acid and its role in the growth of Lupinus albus L. hypocotyls

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Abstract

The transport and metabolism of indole-3-acetic acid (IAA) was studied in etiolated lupin (Lupinus albus L, cv. Multolupa) hypocotyls, following application of dual-isotope-labelled indole-3-acetic acid, [5-3H]IAA plus [1-14C]IAA, to decapitated plants. To study the radial distribution of the transported and metabolized IAA, experiments were carried out with plants in which the stele was separated from the cortex by a glass capillary. After local application of labelled IAA to the cortex, radioactivity remained immobilized in the cortex, near the application point, showing that polar transport cannot occur in the outer tissues. However, following application of IAA to the stele, radioactivity appeared in the cortex in those hypocotyl sections below the first 1 cm (in which the capillary was inserted), and the basipetal IAA movement was similar to that observed after application of IAA to the complete cut surface. In both assays, longitudinal distribution of 14C and 3H in the stele outside the first 1 cm was positively correlated with that of cortex, indicating that there was a lateral migration of IAA from the transport pathway (in the stele) to the outer tissues and that this migration depended on the amount of IAA in the stele. Both tissues (stele and cortex) exhibited intensive IAA metabolism, decarboxylation being higher in the stele than in the cortex while IAA conjugation was the opposite. Decapitation of the seedlings caused a drastic reduction of hypocotyl growth in the 24 h following decapitation, unless the hypocotyls were treated apically with IAA. Thus, exogenous IAA, polarly transported, was able to substitute the endogenous source of auxin (cotyledons plus meristem) to permit hypocotyl growth. It is proposed that IAA escapes from the transporting cells (in the stele) to the outer tissues in order to reach the growth-responsive cells. The IAA metabolism in the outer tissues could generate the IAA gradient necessary for the maintenance of its lateral flow, and consequently the auxin-induced cell elongation.

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Abbreviations

IAA:

Indole-3-acetic acid

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We are grateful to Dr. P.H. Rubery (Department of Biochemistry, Cambridge University, UK) for his critical comments on the manuscript. We also thank to Dr. G. Sandberg (Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences, Umea, Sweden) for letting us have the results about endogenous IAA measurements in lupin hypocotyls.

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Sánchez-Bravo, J., Ortuno, A., Botia, J.M. et al. Lateral diffusion of polarly transported indoleacetic acid and its role in the growth of Lupinus albus L. hypocotyls. Planta 185, 391–396 (1991). https://doi.org/10.1007/BF00201062

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