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Explore how plants detect internal & external signals to activate responses through cytoplasm, cell wall, and receptors, including hormones & environmental stimuli. Delve into the role of cellular relay molecules in transduction, second messengers, and enzyme activity modulation. Discover plant hormones' effects like auxins in cell elongation, cytokinins in cell division, and gibberellins in stem growth. Learn about control mechanisms like apical dominance and the impact of factors like abscisic acid and ethylene on plant development. Dive into topics such as photomorphogenesis, biological clocks, photoperiodism, and flowering control.
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CYTOPLASM CELL WALL LE 39-3 Reception Transduction Response Activation of cellular responses Relay molecules Receptor Hormone or environmental stimulus Plasma membrane
Reception • Internal and external signals • Detection by receptors • proteins that change in response to specific stimuli • Transduction • Second messengers transfer and amplify signals from receptors to proteins that cause responses • Response • Usually increased activity of enzymes
The Discovery of Plant Hormones • Tropism • Any response resulting in curvature of organs toward or away from a stimulus • caused by hormones
Shaded side of coleoptile Control LE 39-5a Light Illuminated side of coleoptile
Darwin and Darwin (1880) LE 39-5b Light Base covered by opaque shield Tip removed Tip covered by trans- parent cap Tip covered by opaque cap
Boysen-Jensen (1913) LE 39-5c Light In 1913, Peter Boysen-Jensen demonstrated that the signal was a mobile chemical substance Tip separated by mica Tip separated by gelatin block
Excised tip placed on agar block Growth-promoting chemical diffuses into agar block In 1926, Frits Went extracted the chemical messenger for phototropism, auxin, by modifying earlier experiments LE 39-6 Agar block with chemical stimulates growth Control (agar block lacking chemical) has no effect Offset blocks cause curvature Control
A Survey of Plant Hormones • hormones • control plant growth and development • affecting the division, elongation, and differentiation of cells • produced in very low concentration
Auxin • promotes cell elongation in target tissues • stimulates proton pumps in the plasma membrane • lower the pH in the cell wall • activate expansins • enzymes that loosen the wall’s fabric • Cell elongates
Other Effects of Auxin • affects secondary growth • An overdose of auxins can kill eudicots
Cytokinins • stimulate cytokinesis (cell division) • produced in actively growing tissues such as roots, embryos, and fruits • Cytokinins work together with auxin
Control of Apical Dominance • Cytokinins, auxin, and other factors interact in the control of apical dominance • terminal bud’s ability to suppress development of axillary buds • Removal of terminal bud causes bushier plant
LE 39-9 “Stump” after removal of apical bud Axillary buds Lateral branches Intact plant Plant with apical bud removed
Anti-Aging Effects • Cytokinins • retard the aging of some plant organs • Inhibit protein breakdown • stimulate RNA and protein synthesis • mobilize nutrients from surrounding tissues
Gibberellins • stem elongation • fruit growth • seed germination
Stem Elongation • Gibberellins stimulate growth of leaves and stems • In stems, they stimulate cell elongation and cell division
Brassinosteroids • similar to the sex hormones of animals • induce cell elongation and division
Abscisic Acid • Two of the many effects of abscisic acid (ABA): • Seed dormancy • Drought tolerance
Ethylene • Produced in response to stresses • Drought • Flooding • mechanical pressure • Injury • Infection
The Triple Response • Ethylene induces the triple response • allows a growing shoot to avoid obstacles • triple response consists of: • slows of stem elongation • thickens the stem • horizontal growth
LE 39-13 0.80 0.10 0.20 0.40 0.00 Ethylene concentration (parts per million)
ein mutant ctr mutant LE 39-14 ein mutant. An ethylene-insensitive (ein) mutant fails to undergo the triple response in the presence of ethylene. ctr mutant. A constitutive triple-response (ctr) mutant undergoes the triple response even in the absence of ethylene.
Apoptosis • the programmed destruction of cells, organs, or whole plants • A burst of ethylene is associated with apoptosis,
Responses to light • growth and development • Photomorphogenesis • Effects of light on plant morphology
light receptors: • blue-light photoreceptors • hypocotyl elongation • stomatal opening • phototropism • Phytochromes • Seed germination • opposing effects of red and far-red light • provides the plant with information about the quality of light • “shade avoidance” response
Biological Clocks and Circadian Rhythms • Many plant processes oscillate during the day • Ex. legumes lower their leaves in the evening and raise them in the morning • circadian rhythms • Cyclical responses to environmental stimuli • about 24 hours long
LE 39-21 Midnight Noon
Photoperiodism and Responses to Seasons • Photoperiod • relative lengths of night and day • environmental stimulus plants use most often to detect the time of year • Photoperiodism • physiological response to photoperiod
Photoperiodism and Control of Flowering • short-day plants • Plants that flower when a light period is shorter than a critical length • long-day plants • Plants that flower when a light period is longer than a certain number of hours • responses to photoperiod are actually controlled by night length, not day length
Darkness Flash of light LE 39-22 24 hours Critical dark period Light “Short-day” plants “Long-day” plants
Gravity • gravitropism • Response to gravity • Roots show positive gravitropism • Stems show negative gravitropism
Mechanical Stimuli • thigmomorphogenesis • changes in form that result from mechanical perturbation • Ie. Rubbing stems • growth in response to touch • occurs in vines and other climbing plants
LE 39-27 Unstimulated Stimulated Side of pulvinus with flaccid cells Leaflets after stimulation Side of pulvinus with turgid cells Vein Pulvinus (motor organ) Motor organs 0.5 mm
Environmental Stresses • Drought • reducing transpiration • Deeper roots continue to grow • Flooding • Enzymatic destruction of cells creates air tubes that help plants survive oxygen deprivation during flooding
Vascular cylinder LE 39-28 Air tubes Epidermis 100 µm 100 µm Experimental root (nonaerated) Control root (aerated)
Environmental Stresses • Salt Stress • producing solutes tolerated at high concentrations • keeps the water potential of cells more negative than that of the soil solution • Heat Stress • Heat-shock proteins help plants survive heat stress • Cold Stress • Altering lipid composition of membranes
Defenses Against Herbivores • thorns • chemical defenses • distasteful or toxic compounds
Defenses Against Pathogens • A plant’s first line of defense against infection is its “skin,” the epidermis or periderm • the second line of defense is a chemical attack that kills the pathogen and prevents its spread • This second defense system is enhanced by the inherited ability to recognize certain pathogens
Systemic Acquired Resistance • Systemic acquired resistance (SAR) • set of generalized defense responses in organs distant from the original site of infection • Salicylic acid • one of the hormones that activates SAR