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Integration and Control •Animals? •Plants?

Integration and Control Animals? Plants?. Integration and Control Animals? –nervous impulses & hormones Plants? –phytohormones

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Page 1: Integration and Control Animals? Plants?. Integration and Control Animals? –nervous impulses & hormones Plants? –phytohormones

Integration and Control

• Animals?

• Plants?

Page 2: Integration and Control Animals? Plants?. Integration and Control Animals? –nervous impulses & hormones Plants? –phytohormones

Integration and Control

• Animals?–nervous impulses & hormones

• Plants?

–phytohormones

Page 3: Integration and Control Animals? Plants?. Integration and Control Animals? –nervous impulses & hormones Plants? –phytohormones

Important Plant Functions

• Growth -– increase in size

• increase organs - roots, stems, leaves

– orient favorably in the environment• seedling growth

• growth of adult organs (?)

Page 4: Integration and Control Animals? Plants?. Integration and Control Animals? –nervous impulses & hormones Plants? –phytohormones

Phototropism

• First investigated by Charles and Frances Darwin (1881) – canary grass Phalaris canariensis L.– The Power of Movement in Plants (1881)– Seedlings

• coleoptile

• plumules

Page 5: Integration and Control Animals? Plants?. Integration and Control Animals? –nervous impulses & hormones Plants? –phytohormones

Phototropism

Page 6: Integration and Control Animals? Plants?. Integration and Control Animals? –nervous impulses & hormones Plants? –phytohormones

Phototropism - Darwins’ Experiment

• Conclusion:

– Some chemical is produced in the tip and transmitted down the stem to somehow produce bending.

– There is a growth-promoting messenger.

Page 7: Integration and Control Animals? Plants?. Integration and Control Animals? –nervous impulses & hormones Plants? –phytohormones

Phototropism - Fritz Went’s Experiment

• Dutch Plant Physiologist 1929

• Oat seedlings

• Diffusion of phytohormone from growing tip in agar blocks

• Agar blocks placed on oat seedlings

Page 8: Integration and Control Animals? Plants?. Integration and Control Animals? –nervous impulses & hormones Plants? –phytohormones

Phototropism - Fritz Went’s Experiment

Page 9: Integration and Control Animals? Plants?. Integration and Control Animals? –nervous impulses & hormones Plants? –phytohormones

Phototropism - Fritz Went’s Experiment

• Conclusion:– A growth substance (phytohormone) must be

(1) produced in the tip; (2) transmitted down the stem; and somehow (3) accumulate on the side away from the light.

– “Auxin” (to increase, by Went)– Either

• H.1: is destroyed on the lighted side

• or

• H.2: migrates to the dark side

Page 10: Integration and Control Animals? Plants?. Integration and Control Animals? –nervous impulses & hormones Plants? –phytohormones

Phototropism

Page 11: Integration and Control Animals? Plants?. Integration and Control Animals? –nervous impulses & hormones Plants? –phytohormones

Distribution of Auxin in an Oat Seedling(Avena savita)

• Auxins are produced in growing tips (meristems); transmitted in the phloem. Basipetal, Acropetal

Page 12: Integration and Control Animals? Plants?. Integration and Control Animals? –nervous impulses & hormones Plants? –phytohormones

Distribution of Auxin in an Oat Seedling(Avena savita)

• Polar Transport*Auxins are produced in growing tips (meristems); transmitted in the phloem. Basipetal, Acropetal

Influx carriers

basal efflux carriers

Becomes protonate in CW space

Page 13: Integration and Control Animals? Plants?. Integration and Control Animals? –nervous impulses & hormones Plants? –phytohormones

Distribution of Auxin in an Oat Seedling(Avena savita)

• Polar Transport*Auxins are produced in growing tips (meristems); transmitted in the phloem. Basipetal, Acropetal

Influx carriers

protonate IAA

basal efflux carriers

nonprotonate IAA-

Becomes protonate in CW space

Page 14: Integration and Control Animals? Plants?. Integration and Control Animals? –nervous impulses & hormones Plants? –phytohormones

Naturally Occurring Auxins have been chemically isolated and analyzed(acid side chain on a aromatic ring)

• Fig15-2a

Page 15: Integration and Control Animals? Plants?. Integration and Control Animals? –nervous impulses & hormones Plants? –phytohormones

Synthetic Auxins (precursors)

• Fig15-2b

Page 16: Integration and Control Animals? Plants?. Integration and Control Animals? –nervous impulses & hormones Plants? –phytohormones

Synthetic Auxins (precursors)

• 2, 4-D and 2,4,5-T are herbicides for broad-leaved plants at very low concentrations.

• Widely used commercially for 30 years - defoliant in Viet Nam.– Contaminant of 2,4,5-T

• tetrachlorobenzo-para-dioxin “dioxin”

Page 17: Integration and Control Animals? Plants?. Integration and Control Animals? –nervous impulses & hormones Plants? –phytohormones

Other Normal Effects of Auxins in Plants

• 1. Phototropism

• ------

• 2. Cell Elongation– causes polysaccharide cross-bridges to break and

reform

Page 18: Integration and Control Animals? Plants?. Integration and Control Animals? –nervous impulses & hormones Plants? –phytohormones

Other Normal Effects of Auxins in Plants

• 1. Phototropism• ------• 2. Cell Elongation

extensins

Page 19: Integration and Control Animals? Plants?. Integration and Control Animals? –nervous impulses & hormones Plants? –phytohormones

Other Normal Effects of Auxins in Plants

2. Cell Elongation

extensinsPhytohormones serve as signals

- signal receptionion

- transduction

- response

Page 20: Integration and Control Animals? Plants?. Integration and Control Animals? –nervous impulses & hormones Plants? –phytohormones

Other Normal Effects of Auxins in Plants

• 1. Phototropism

• ------

• 2. Cell Elongation

• 3. Geotropism

Page 21: Integration and Control Animals? Plants?. Integration and Control Animals? –nervous impulses & hormones Plants? –phytohormones

Other Normal Effects of Auxins in Plants

• 1. Phototropism

• ------

• 2. Cell Elongation

• 3. Geotropism (Gravitropism)

• 4. Initiation of adventitious root growth in cuttings

• 5. Promotes stem elongation and inhibits root elongation

Page 22: Integration and Control Animals? Plants?. Integration and Control Animals? –nervous impulses & hormones Plants? –phytohormones

Other Normal Effects of Auxins in Plants

– 6. Apical Dominance

Page 23: Integration and Control Animals? Plants?. Integration and Control Animals? –nervous impulses & hormones Plants? –phytohormones

Other Normal Effects of Auxins in Plants

– 6. Apical Dominance– 7. Leaf Abscission - Abscission Layer - pectin &– cellulose

– ethylene ->– pectinase &– cellulase

Page 24: Integration and Control Animals? Plants?. Integration and Control Animals? –nervous impulses & hormones Plants? –phytohormones

Other Normal Effects of Auxins in Plants

– 7. Leaf Abscission

Page 25: Integration and Control Animals? Plants?. Integration and Control Animals? –nervous impulses & hormones Plants? –phytohormones

Other Normal Effects of Auxins in Plants• 1. Phototropism• 2. Cell Elongation• 3. Geotropism (Gravitropism)• 4. Initiation of adventitious root growth in cuttings• 5. Promotes stem elongation and inhibits root elongation• 6. Apical Dominance• 7. Leaf Abscission• 8. Maintains chlorophyll in the leaf• 9. Seedling Growth• 10. Fruit Growth (after fertilization)• 11. Parthenocarpic development

Page 26: Integration and Control Animals? Plants?. Integration and Control Animals? –nervous impulses & hormones Plants? –phytohormones

Other Normal Effects of Auxins in Plants

• 11. Parthenocarpic development• (Pollination -> fertilization -> ovary development)

– Massart 1902

• dead pollen grains -> fruit development in orchids

– Fitting 1910

• pollen extract -> fruit development in orchids

– Yasuda 1934

• pollen extract -> fruit development in cucumbers

• pollen extract -> auxins (IAA)

– Gustafson 1936

• IAA paste -> fruit development in several plants

Page 27: Integration and Control Animals? Plants?. Integration and Control Animals? –nervous impulses & hormones Plants? –phytohormones

Auxins• Work at very small concentrations

(500 ppm)

• Action Spectrum: primarily blue

• Tryptophan is the primary precursor

• Auxins must be inactivated at some point by forming conjugates or by enzymatic break down by enzymes such as IAA oxidase

Page 28: Integration and Control Animals? Plants?. Integration and Control Animals? –nervous impulses & hormones Plants? –phytohormones

Trypophan-dependent Biosynthesis of IAA

Page 29: Integration and Control Animals? Plants?. Integration and Control Animals? –nervous impulses & hormones Plants? –phytohormones

Bound Auxins(To inactivate - IAA-conjugates)

Page 30: Integration and Control Animals? Plants?. Integration and Control Animals? –nervous impulses & hormones Plants? –phytohormones

Bound Auxins(To inactivate - IAA-conjugates)

Page 31: Integration and Control Animals? Plants?. Integration and Control Animals? –nervous impulses & hormones Plants? –phytohormones

Bound Auxins(To inactivate - Decarboxylation)

Page 32: Integration and Control Animals? Plants?. Integration and Control Animals? –nervous impulses & hormones Plants? –phytohormones

Gibberellins

• Isolated from a fungal disease of rice -

• “Foolish Seedling Disease”

• Gibberella fugikuroa

• Isolated in the 1930’s Japan

• Gibberellic Acid (GA)

Page 33: Integration and Control Animals? Plants?. Integration and Control Animals? –nervous impulses & hormones Plants? –phytohormones

Gibberellins

• Gibberellic Acid

• 125 forms of Gibberellins

Page 34: Integration and Control Animals? Plants?. Integration and Control Animals? –nervous impulses & hormones Plants? –phytohormones

Gibberellins

• Produced mainly in apical meristems (leaves and embryos). Are considered terpenes (from isoprene).

Page 35: Integration and Control Animals? Plants?. Integration and Control Animals? –nervous impulses & hormones Plants? –phytohormones

Gibberellins

Page 36: Integration and Control Animals? Plants?. Integration and Control Animals? –nervous impulses & hormones Plants? –phytohormones

Gibberellins• Produced mainly in apical meristems

(leaves and embryos).

Page 37: Integration and Control Animals? Plants?. Integration and Control Animals? –nervous impulses & hormones Plants? –phytohormones

Gibberellins

• At least 125 different forms.

• Produced mainly in apical meristems.

• Low concentration required for normal stem elongation.

Page 38: Integration and Control Animals? Plants?. Integration and Control Animals? –nervous impulses & hormones Plants? –phytohormones

Gibberellins

• Low concentration required for normal stem elongation.

Page 39: Integration and Control Animals? Plants?. Integration and Control Animals? –nervous impulses & hormones Plants? –phytohormones

Gibberellins

• Low concentration required for normal stem elongation.

• Can produce parthenocarpic fruits (apples, pears …)

Page 40: Integration and Control Animals? Plants?. Integration and Control Animals? –nervous impulses & hormones Plants? –phytohormones

Gibberellins

• Low concentration required for normal stem elongation.

• Can produce parthenocarpic fruits (apples, pears …)

• Important in seedling development.– breaking dormancy– early germination

Page 41: Integration and Control Animals? Plants?. Integration and Control Animals? –nervous impulses & hormones Plants? –phytohormones

Gibberellins

• Low concentration required for normal stem elongation.

• Can produce parthenocarpic fruits (apples, pears …)

• Important in seedling development.

Page 42: Integration and Control Animals? Plants?. Integration and Control Animals? –nervous impulses & hormones Plants? –phytohormones

Gibberellins

Page 43: Integration and Control Animals? Plants?. Integration and Control Animals? –nervous impulses & hormones Plants? –phytohormones

Gibberellins

• Important in seedling development.

• Controls the mobilization of food reserves in grasses.

Page 44: Integration and Control Animals? Plants?. Integration and Control Animals? –nervous impulses & hormones Plants? –phytohormones

Gibberellins• Important in seedling development.

• Controls the mobilization of food reserves in grasses.

• - cereal grains

Page 45: Integration and Control Animals? Plants?. Integration and Control Animals? –nervous impulses & hormones Plants? –phytohormones

Gibberellins• Important in seedling development.

• Controls the mobilization of food reserves in grasses.

Page 46: Integration and Control Animals? Plants?. Integration and Control Animals? –nervous impulses & hormones Plants? –phytohormones

Gibberellins• Important in seedling development.

• Controls the mobilization of food reserves in grasses.

Page 47: Integration and Control Animals? Plants?. Integration and Control Animals? –nervous impulses & hormones Plants? –phytohormones

Gibberellins• Controls bolting in rosette-type plants.

– Lettuce, cabbage (photoperiod)

– Queen Ann’s lace, Mullein (cold treatment)

– premature bolting

Page 48: Integration and Control Animals? Plants?. Integration and Control Animals? –nervous impulses & hormones Plants? –phytohormones

Gibberellins• Controls bolting in rosette-type plants.

• Important factor in bud break.

Page 49: Integration and Control Animals? Plants?. Integration and Control Animals? –nervous impulses & hormones Plants? –phytohormones

Gibberellins• Controls bolting in rosette-type plants.

• Important factor in bud break.

• Promotes cell elongation and cell division.

Page 50: Integration and Control Animals? Plants?. Integration and Control Animals? –nervous impulses & hormones Plants? –phytohormones

Gibberellins• Controls bolting in rosette-type plants.

• Important factor in bud break.

• Promotes cell elongation and cell division.

• Antisenescent.

Page 51: Integration and Control Animals? Plants?. Integration and Control Animals? –nervous impulses & hormones Plants? –phytohormones

Gibberellins• Controls bolting in rosette-type plants.

• Important factor in bud break.

• Promotes cell elongation and cell division.

• Antisenescent.

• Transported in both the phloem and xylem.

Page 52: Integration and Control Animals? Plants?. Integration and Control Animals? –nervous impulses & hormones Plants? –phytohormones

Gibberellins• Controls bolting in rosette-type plants.

• Important factor in bud break.

• Promotes cell elongation and cell division.

• Antisenescent.

• Transported in both the phloem and xylem.

• Application of GA to imperfect flowers causes male flower production. (monoecious, dioecious)

Page 53: Integration and Control Animals? Plants?. Integration and Control Animals? –nervous impulses & hormones Plants? –phytohormones

Gibberellins• Controls bolting in rosette-type plants.

• Important factor in bud break.

• Promotes cell elongation and cell division.

• Antisenescent.

• Transported in both the phloem and xylem.

• Application of GA to imperfect flowers causes male flower production. (monoecious, dioecious)

• Probably function by gene regulation and gene expression.

Page 54: Integration and Control Animals? Plants?. Integration and Control Animals? –nervous impulses & hormones Plants? –phytohormones

Gibberellins• Application of GA to imperfect flowers causes

male flower production. (monoecious, dioecious)

• Probably function by gene regulation and gene expression.

• Promotes flower and fruit development.– “juvenile stage” --> “ripe to flower”– The juvenile stage for most conifers lasts 10 - 20

years. Exogenous application of GA can cause precocious cones.

Page 55: Integration and Control Animals? Plants?. Integration and Control Animals? –nervous impulses & hormones Plants? –phytohormones

Gibberellins• Promotes flower and fruit development.

– “juvenile stage” --> “ripe to flower”

Page 56: Integration and Control Animals? Plants?. Integration and Control Animals? –nervous impulses & hormones Plants? –phytohormones

Antigibberellins - Growth Retardants• Block steps in Gibberellin biosynthesis.

Prevents “lodging”.

Page 57: Integration and Control Animals? Plants?. Integration and Control Animals? –nervous impulses & hormones Plants? –phytohormones

Cytokinins

• Discovered during the early days of tissue culture.– Stewart 1930’s– carrot phloem cells + coconut milk -->

whole plant

– Skoog 1940’s– tobacco pith cells + auxin & coconut medium -->

whole plant– “CYTOKININ”

Page 58: Integration and Control Animals? Plants?. Integration and Control Animals? –nervous impulses & hormones Plants? –phytohormones

Cytokinins• ZEATIN - most abundant cytokinin in plants.

– Adenine is the basic building block.

Page 59: Integration and Control Animals? Plants?. Integration and Control Animals? –nervous impulses & hormones Plants? –phytohormones

Terpene Biosynthesis - cytokinin(Can be made from isoprene via the melvonic acid pathway.)

• Produced mainly in apical root meristems.

Page 60: Integration and Control Animals? Plants?. Integration and Control Animals? –nervous impulses & hormones Plants? –phytohormones

Cytokinins

• Transported “up” the plant in the xylem tissue.

Page 61: Integration and Control Animals? Plants?. Integration and Control Animals? –nervous impulses & hormones Plants? –phytohormones

Cytokinins

• Transported “up” the plant in the xylem tissue.

• Mainly affects cell division.– “Witches’ Broom”

• mistletoe; bacterial, viral or fungal infection

Page 62: Integration and Control Animals? Plants?. Integration and Control Animals? –nervous impulses & hormones Plants? –phytohormones

Cytokinins

– “Witches’ Broom”• mistletoe; bacterial, viral or fungal infection

Page 63: Integration and Control Animals? Plants?. Integration and Control Animals? –nervous impulses & hormones Plants? –phytohormones

Cytokinins

• “Crown Gall”

– a neoplasic growth due to infection by Agrobacterium tumifaciens.

– A. tumifaciens carries the genes for production of cytokinin and auxins on a plasmid. Plasmid genes become a part of host cell genome.

Page 64: Integration and Control Animals? Plants?. Integration and Control Animals? –nervous impulses & hormones Plants? –phytohormones

Cytokinins– Play an antagonistic role with auxins in apical

dominance.

Page 65: Integration and Control Animals? Plants?. Integration and Control Animals? –nervous impulses & hormones Plants? –phytohormones

Cytokinins• Promotes leaf expansion.

• Prevents senescence.

• Promotes seed germination in some plants.

Page 66: Integration and Control Animals? Plants?. Integration and Control Animals? –nervous impulses & hormones Plants? –phytohormones

Cytokinins• Promotes leaf expansion.

• Prevents senescence.

• Promotes seed germination in some plants.

• Both cytokinins and auxins are needed for plant tissue cultures.

Page 67: Integration and Control Animals? Plants?. Integration and Control Animals? –nervous impulses & hormones Plants? –phytohormones

Cytokinins

• Both cytokinins and auxins are needed for plant tissue cultures. (Skoog and others…)– Cell Initiation Medium (CIM)

• Approximately equal amounts of cytokinin and auxins will proliferate the production of undifferentiated callus.

– EXPLANT ----> CIM

Page 68: Integration and Control Animals? Plants?. Integration and Control Animals? –nervous impulses & hormones Plants? –phytohormones

Cytokinins

• Both cytokinins and auxins are needed for plant tissue cultures. (Skoog and others…)– Cell Initiation Medium (CIM)– Root Growth Medium (RIM)

• High auxin:cytokinin ratio

Page 69: Integration and Control Animals? Plants?. Integration and Control Animals? –nervous impulses & hormones Plants? –phytohormones

Cytokinins

• Both cytokinins and auxins are needed for plant tissue cultures. (Skoog and others…)– Cell Initiation Medium (CIM)– Root Growth Medium (RIM)– Shoot Growth medium (SIM)

• High cytokinin:auxin ratio

Page 70: Integration and Control Animals? Plants?. Integration and Control Animals? –nervous impulses & hormones Plants? –phytohormones

Ethylene

• A gas produced in various parts of the plant.

• (CH2=CH2)

• Production promoted by various types of stress - water stress, temperature, wounding & auxins.

• Can be made from the amino acid methionine (S)

Page 71: Integration and Control Animals? Plants?. Integration and Control Animals? –nervous impulses & hormones Plants? –phytohormones

Ethylene

• Can be made from the amino acid methionine (S)

• Promotes leaf curling (epinasty).

Page 72: Integration and Control Animals? Plants?. Integration and Control Animals? –nervous impulses & hormones Plants? –phytohormones

Ethylene

• Can be made from the amino acid methionine (S)

• Promotes leaf curling (epinasty).

• Promotes senescence.– declining metabolic rates– decrease in protein synthesis

– (Daylight and temperature affects production.)

Page 73: Integration and Control Animals? Plants?. Integration and Control Animals? –nervous impulses & hormones Plants? –phytohormones

Ethylene

• Can be made from the amino acid methionine (S)

• Promotes leaf curling (epinasty).

• Promotes senescence.

• Promotes fruit ripening.

Page 74: Integration and Control Animals? Plants?. Integration and Control Animals? –nervous impulses & hormones Plants? –phytohormones

Ethylene

• Can be made from the amino acid methionine (S)

• Promotes leaf curling (epinasty).

• Promotes senescence.

• Promotes fruit ripening.

• Promotes etioloation and the maintenance of the hypocotyl hook and plumular arch.

• Is autocatalitic.

Page 75: Integration and Control Animals? Plants?. Integration and Control Animals? –nervous impulses & hormones Plants? –phytohormones

Ethylene• Can be made from the amino acid

methionine (S)

• Promotes leaf curling (epinasty).

• Promotes senescence.

• Promotes fruit ripening.

• Promotes etioloation & hypocotyl hook.

• Is autocatalitic.

• Promotes bud dormancy.

• Inhibits cell elongation.

Page 76: Integration and Control Animals? Plants?. Integration and Control Animals? –nervous impulses & hormones Plants? –phytohormones

Ethylene– Causes hypocotyl hook & plumular arch.

Page 77: Integration and Control Animals? Plants?. Integration and Control Animals? –nervous impulses & hormones Plants? –phytohormones

Ethylene Signal Transduction Pathway• Arabidopsis mutants

• Silver Thiosulfate

Page 78: Integration and Control Animals? Plants?. Integration and Control Animals? –nervous impulses & hormones Plants? –phytohormones

Abscisic Acid

• Produced mainly in leaves (chloroplasts) and transported through the phloem.

Page 79: Integration and Control Animals? Plants?. Integration and Control Animals? –nervous impulses & hormones Plants? –phytohormones

Terpene Biosynthesis - Abscisic Acid(Can be made from isoprene via the melvonic acid pathway.)

Page 80: Integration and Control Animals? Plants?. Integration and Control Animals? –nervous impulses & hormones Plants? –phytohormones

Abscisic Acid

• Isolated from dormant buds in the 1930’s.– Promotes “winter’ and “summer dormancy”.

Page 81: Integration and Control Animals? Plants?. Integration and Control Animals? –nervous impulses & hormones Plants? –phytohormones

Abscisic Acid

• Isolated from dormant buds in the 1930’s.

• Growth inhibitor in seeds.– ABA -----------------------> ABA-glucoside

cold water stress

– (may wash out)

Page 82: Integration and Control Animals? Plants?. Integration and Control Animals? –nervous impulses & hormones Plants? –phytohormones

Abscisic Acid

• Isolated from dormant buds in the 1930’s.

• Growth inhibitor in seeds.

• Causes stomatal closure.– (Response to chloroplast membrane changes during

water stress.)

Page 83: Integration and Control Animals? Plants?. Integration and Control Animals? –nervous impulses & hormones Plants? –phytohormones

Brassinosteroids• Found in Brassica rapus.

• Isolated from most tissues.

• Polyhydrated Sterol

Page 84: Integration and Control Animals? Plants?. Integration and Control Animals? –nervous impulses & hormones Plants? –phytohormones

Brassinosteroids• Found in Brassica napus.

• Isolated from most tissues.

• Stimulates shoot elongation, ethylene production; inhibits root growth and development.

Page 85: Integration and Control Animals? Plants?. Integration and Control Animals? –nervous impulses & hormones Plants? –phytohormones

Polyamines• First observed as crystals in human semen

by Van Leeuwenhooke in the 1600’s.

• Ubiquitous in living tissue. Common biochemical pathway in all organisms.

Page 86: Integration and Control Animals? Plants?. Integration and Control Animals? –nervous impulses & hormones Plants? –phytohormones

Polyamines• First observed as crystals in human semen

by Van Leeuwenhooke in the 1600’s.

• Ubiquitous in living tissue.

• Investigated by plant physiologists beginning in the 1970’s. Effect on macromolecules and membranes discovered.

• Role in normal cell functioning in both prokaryotic and eukaryotic cells.

• Growth factor.

Page 87: Integration and Control Animals? Plants?. Integration and Control Animals? –nervous impulses & hormones Plants? –phytohormones

Phytohormones, Senescence and Fall Color Change in

Deciduous Trees