Publication | Open Access
Modulation of Auxin-Binding Proteins in Cell Suspensions
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1991
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BiologyBiosynthesisDevelopmental BiologyBiochemistryBotanyNatural Sciences2,4-Dichlorophenoxyacetic AcidMorphogenesisAuxin-binding ProteinsCytoskeletonIndoleacetic AcidMedicineCell BiologyCellular PhysiologyPlant HormonePlant PhysiologyEmbryologyPlant Development
This paper shows that the level of 2,4-dichlorophenoxyacetic acid (2,4-D) in the medium determines the level of auxin-binding proteins in the membranes of carrot, Daucus carota, cells grown in suspension. This induction takes slightly more than 2 hours to complete and can be elicited by natural as well as synthetic auxins. The auxin binding sites thus generated, which are pronase-sensitive, bind 2,4-D, indoleacetic acid, and naphthalene-acetic acid (NAA) equally well. However both alpha- and beta-NAA bind, whereas only alpha-NAA is effective in the inductive process. Cells committed to embryogeny (proembryogenic masses) do not respond to auxin, i.e. their level of auxin-binding proteins remains very low, and they do not seem to synthesize the hormone, as indicated by inhibitor studies. Sensitivity to, and production of, auxin, begins when the embryo becomes polarized, i.e. at postglobular stage.