DETERMINATION OF AUXIN-DEPENDENT PH CHANGES IN COLEOPTILE CELL-WALLS BY A NULL-POINT METHOD

Authors
Citation
P. Schopfer, DETERMINATION OF AUXIN-DEPENDENT PH CHANGES IN COLEOPTILE CELL-WALLS BY A NULL-POINT METHOD, Plant physiology, 103(2), 1993, pp. 351-357
Citations number
28
Categorie Soggetti
Plant Sciences
Journal title
ISSN journal
00320889
Volume
103
Issue
2
Year of publication
1993
Pages
351 - 357
Database
ISI
SICI code
0032-0889(1993)103:2<351:DOAPCI>2.0.ZU;2-R
Abstract
The present debate on the validity of the ''acid-growth theory'' of au xin (indole-3-acetic acid, IAA) action concentrates on the question of whether IAA-induced proton excretion into the cell wall is quantitati vely sufficient to provide the shift in pH that is required to explain IAA-induced growth (see D.L. Rayle, R.E. Cleland [1992] Plant Physiol 99:1271-1274 for a recent apologetic review of the acid-growth theory ). In the present paper a null-point method has been employed for dete rmining the growth-effective cell-wall pH in the presence and absence of IAA after 60 min of treatment. Elongation of abraded maize (Zea may s L.) and oat (Avena sativa L.) coleoptile segments was measured with the high resolution of a displacement transducer. The abrasion method employed for rendering the outer epidermal cell wall permeable for buf fer ions was checked with a dye-uptake method. Evidence is provided de monstrating that externally applied solutes rapidly and homogeneously penetrate into the epidermal wall, whereas penetration into the inner tissue walls is strongly retarded. ''Titration'' curves of IAA-induced and basal elongation were determined by measuring the promoting/inhib iting effect of medium pH under iso-osmotic conditions in the range of pH 4.5 to 6.0. In maize, the null point (no pH-dependent change in el ongation rate after 5-10 min of treatment with 10 mmol L-1 citrate buf fer) was pH 5.00 after 60 min of IAA-induced growth, and the null-poin t pH determined similarly in IAA-depleted tissue (10 times smaller elo ngation rate) was 5.25. Corresponding titration curves with Avena segm ents led to slightly lower null-point pH values both in the presence a nd absence of IAA-induced growth. After induction of acid-mediated ext ension by 1 mumol L-1 fusicoccin (FC) in maize, the null-point pH shif ted to 3.9. At 0.5 mumol L-1, FC induced the same elongation rate as I AA but a 9-fold larger rate of proton excretion. At 0.033 mumol L-1, F C induced the same rate of proton excretion as IAA but had no apprecia ble effect on elongation. The implications of these results against th e background of recent attempts to revitalize the acid-growth theory o f IAA action are discussed.