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Plant Responses to the Environment

Plant Responses to the Environment. Chapter 45. Plant Hormones. Hormones – chemicals secreted by cells, transported to other cells where they exert effect Released in response to an environmental stimuli Promote growth, development, aging. Six Plant Hormones. Auxins Gibberellins

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Plant Responses to the Environment

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  1. Plant Responses to the Environment Chapter 45

  2. Plant Hormones • Hormones – chemicals secreted by cells, transported to other cells where they exert effect • Released in response to an environmental stimuli • Promote growth, development, aging

  3. Six Plant Hormones • Auxins • Gibberellins • Cytokinins • Ethylene • Abscisic acid • Florigens

  4. Auxins • Promote or inhibit elongation in target cells • Shoot – high conc. causes elongation • Root – low levels stimulate elongation, high conc. inhibit • Synthetic auxin (2,4 D) is used to kill dicots • Commercially used to promote root formation in plant cuttings, stimulate fruit development, delay fruit fall

  5. Gibberellins • Primarily in plant shoots • Promote stem elongation by increasing cell elongation and division • Stimulate bud sprouting, flowering, fruit production and development, seed germination • Produced in the shoot apical meristem, young leaves, plant embryos

  6. Cytokinins • Promote cell division • Synthesized in root apical meristem • Inhibit formation of root branches, cause nutrients to be transported to leaves, stimulating chlorophyll production and delaying aging • Commercially - sprayed on cut flowers to keep them fresh

  7. Ethylene • Gas • Produced in plant tissues, released in response to a range of environmental stimuli • Stress hormone – produced in response to wounding, flooding, drought, extreme temp. • Stimulates weak celled abscission layers - leaves, petals, fruit drop off at appropriate times • Commercially – used to ripen fruit

  8. Abscisic Acid • Synthesized in tissues throughout the plant • Helps plants to withstand unfavorable environmental conditions • Causes stomata to close when water is scarce • Promotes root growth, inhibits stem growth in dry conditions. • Helps maintain dormancy

  9. Florigens • Synthesized in leaves • Control flowering in response to environment • Discovered in 2007

  10. Hormones regulate plant life cycles • Hormones are produced in response to an environmental stimulus • These hormones may influence the activity of genes (activate, repress)

  11. Maintaining Dormancy of Seeds • In temperate zones, seeds remain dormant until spring • Cold weather reduces abscisic acid, preparing plant for spring germination • In desert plants, some seeds have high levels of abscisic acid in their coats. It may be washed away by rain • Grasslands, chaparral, forest – require fire for germination

  12. Gibberellin Stimulates Germination • -Abscisic acid and +Gibberellin = germination • Gibberellin is produced by the embryo • Enzymes break down starch for energy

  13. Auxin controls Orientation • Light and gravity help the seedling figure which way is up • Auxin controls phototrophism – growth towards light, in shoots • Gravitropism – growth to/away from gravity, in shoots and roots • Gravirtopism and phototrophism work together to cause shoot to grow upward

  14. Auxin mediates Gravitropism • Vertical stem – auxin distributed evenly • Horizontal stem – position detected and auxin distributed to lower side of stem. • Lower cells elongate, bending stem upwards (-gravitropism) • When stem is vertical auxin is evenly distributed

  15. Gravitropism shoot Auxin, produced in the shoot tip, is distributed evenly across the shoot and root as it travels downward seed Auxin from the shoot tip travels down and collects in the root tip root (a) The shoot and root are oriented vertically

  16. Gravitropism Auxin is transported to the lower side of the shoot, where it stimulates cell elongation and causes the stem to bend upward Auxin is transported to the lower side of the root, where it inhibits cell elongation and causes the root to bend downward (b) The shoot and root are oriented horizontally

  17. Negative Gravitropism Positive Gravitropism

  18. Auxin mediates Phototropism • Auxin accumulates in the side of the shoot that is away from the light. • Cells elongate and bend towards the light

  19. Animation: Hormone Characteristics

  20. Animation: Hormone Transport and Activity

  21. Auxin mediates Root Elongation • Toward gravity • If root is horizontal, they sense gravity and cause auxin transport to lower side • Lower side cells elongate, causing root to grow towards gravity • How do they sense gravity? Statoliths – starch filled plastids settle into the lower part of the cell

  22. Statoliths May Be Gravity Detectors root cell in root cap nucleus statoliths

  23. Plant responds to Environment • When shoot or root push against soil, ethylene is given off. • Elongation slows and cells become thicker and stronger • More able to force their way through soil • Dicots – ethylene causes formation of hook in forming shoot

  24. Thimotropism • Directional movement or growth in response to touch • Cell elongation on contact side is inhibited, tendrils grow • Etheylene may be produced by cells touching the object

  25. Shoot and Root Branching • Controlled by Auxin and Cytokinin • Growth of shoot must be balanced by root growth • Water, mineral, anchorage of plant • Stems – auxin inhibits later bud growth to form branches, cytokinin promotes this growth • Root – cytokinin stimulates root branching, auxin promotes this growth

  26. Apical Dominance • Pinching back the tip of a plant causes bushy growth because apical meristems release auxin which suppresses bud development into branches.

  27. Lateral bud sprouting • Auxin is transported from the stem to the root, decreasing in concentration. • Cytokinin is transported from the root to the stem, decreasing in concentration. • Lateral buds closes to shoot receive enough auxin to inhibit growth, very little cytokinin = remain dormant • Lower lateral buds receive less auxin and more cytokinin = stimulate to grow into branches

  28. Root branch formation • Auxin, transported down from the stem stimulates branch roots to form • Cytokinin produced in the root apical meristem inhibits root branching and is transported from the root towards the shoot • Roots closer to the shoot develop branch roots • Gradient of hormones keeps size of root and shoot in balance

  29. Gradient of Auxin and Cytokinin auxin shoot tip high Lateral buds are inhibited by high auxin levels Lateral buds develop into branches (optimal ratio of auxin to cytokinin) Branch roots develop (optimal ratio of cytokinin to auxin) Branch roots are inhibited by high cytokinin levels high cytokinin root tip

  30. Response to Light and Dark • Timing of flowering and seed production is crucial • Environmental clues like water and temperature are unpredictable • Day length is very reliable • Shortening vs. lengthening days

  31. It’s about the amount of darkness • Day-neutral plants – flower independently of day length • Roses, tomatoes, cucumbers, corn • Long-day plants – flower when uninterrupted dark is shorter than species-specific duration • Iris, lettuce, spinach, hollyhocks • Short-day plants – flower when uninterrupted dark is longer than species-specific duration • Cockleburs, chrysanthemums, asters, potato, goldenrod • It is really more about the amount of darkness than light

  32. The Effects of Darkness on Flowering long night short night interrupted night night day long-day plant(iris) short-day plant(chrysanthemum) day-neutral plant(rose)

  33. Phytochrome • Plants measure darkness using a biological clock that isn’t well understood • Each time the phytochrome molecule is exposed to light, the clock resets to 0 • If a plant needs 8 hours of dark to flower but is interrupted with a flash of light at 4 hours, the clock will reset • Light changes the shape of the phytochrome molecule

  34. The Light-Sensitive Phytochrome Pigment absorbs red light absorbs far-red light conversion in light both forms are present in daylight Pr (inactive) Pfr (active) Pfr stimulates or inhibits a response conversion in dark

  35. Author Animation: Phytochrome

  36. Author Animation: Morning Glory

  37. Animation: Seedling Elongation

  38. Florigen Stimulates Flowering • Leaves produce florigen in response to the biological clock • Transported on phloem to the apical meristem where it activates genes that are responsible for flowering

  39. Coordination of Seeds and Fruit • Auxin and gibberellin promote growth of ovary • Apply to fruit and they grow larger and looser

  40. Ethylene • Unripe fruit is green, bitter • Ripened fruit turns color & attracts animals • Ethylene gas stimulates ripening, as they ripen fruits give off ethylene gas to stimulate ripening of adjacent fruit • Bananas & tomatoes are picked & shipped green

  41. Senscence • Genetically programmed series of events that prepare the plant for winter • Ethylene production increases • Auxin and cytokinin production decreases • Starches and chlorophyll are broken down and stored in the stem and roots

  42. The Abscission Layer • A layer located where the fruit or leaf join the stem • Ethylene promotes breakdown of this layer • Leaves/fruit drop at correct time • Can also be triggered by stress

  43. Plant Communication • Plants summon insect bodyguards • When attacked by caterpillars, corn releases chemicals, stimulated by volicitin (in caterpillar saliva) • Parasitic wasps are attracted to chemical, lay eggs in caterpillar • Lima beans, attacked by spider mites release chemical that attracts carnivorous mite that preys on spider mite

  44. A Chemical Cry for Help 2 Volicitin and leaf damage cause the plant to synthesize and release volatile chemicals 3 The released chemicals attract female parasitic wasps 1 A caterpillar chews on a corn leaf, leaving traces of saliva that contains volicitin 4 The wasps lay their eggs on the caterpillar, which will provide food for their larvae

  45. Animation: Chemical Messengers

  46. Plant Defense • Some plants, when damaged by insects, produce a signaling molecule that moves through the plant. • The plant then makes a distasteful chemical • Radishes and caterpillars

  47. Warning the Neighbors • Healthy plants sense chemicals released by neighbors that have been wounded by insects. • Salicylic acid  methyl salicylate (volitile) • Neighbors boost their defenses

  48. Mimosa • Thigmotropism - sensitive to touch • Stimulated by electric signals conducted through motor cells at the base of each leaf

  49. Carnivorous Plants • Sundew - movement of trapped insects triggers thigmotropism in the hairs, secrete sticky goop, smothering the insect • Bladderwort – trapdoor is sprung by insect, opens inward suddenly, sucking insect into the bladder where it is digested.

  50. A Sundew and Its Insect Prey

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