Rates of production and internal levels of ethylene in the vegetative cotton plant
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概要
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The internal levels of ethylene in and the production rates of ethylene by various parts of the cotton plant (Gossypium hirsutum L. cultivar Acala 4-42) were determined by separate techniques. Wounding of tissue, which resulted from both techniques, increased ethylene production. A peak in wound-induced ethylene occurred around the second to third hour after wounding and gradually declined until the sixth or seventh hour when ethylene production began to level off. Using two techniques, with numerous observations from each technique, ethylene levels were found to be relatively uniform throughout the vegetative cotton plant. There was a small trend for levels of ethylene to increase from the bottom (oldest tissue) to the top of the plant (youngest tissue). Of major inferest was the observation that the production rates and internal concentrations of ethylene in the petiole were two to six times higher than those in the leaf blade. This relative concentration of ethylene in the petiole supports the hypothesis that ethylene is a natural regulator of abscission which acts, in part, through modification of auxin transport.
- 日本植物生理学会の論文
著者
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Mcafee James
Department Of Plant Sciences Texas A & M University College Station
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Morgan Page
Department Of Plant Sciences Texas A & M University College Station
関連論文
- Time sequence of the effect of ethylene on transport, uptake and decarboxylation of auxin
- Rates of production and internal levels of ethylene in the vegetative cotton plant
- Ethylene : Modification of peroxidase activity and isozyme complement in cotton (Gossypium hirsutum L.)