𝔖 Bobbio Scriptorium
✦   LIBER   ✦

[Signaling and Communication in Plants] Polar Auxin Transport Volume 17 || Polar Auxin Transport Regulation in Plant–Microbe Interactions

✍ Scribed by Chen, Rujin; Baluška, František


Book ID
120200394
Publisher
Springer Berlin Heidelberg
Year
2013
Tongue
German
Weight
227 KB
Edition
2013
Category
Article
ISBN
3642352995

No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.

✦ Synopsis


The importance of the plant growth regulator auxin for plant growth has long been recognized, even before the discovery of its chemical structures in the early 20th century. Physiological studies in the decades since have demonstrated that auxin is unidirectionally transported in plants, a process dubbed polar auxin transport. It is the polar auxin transport process that generates a local auxin concentration gradient and regulates a broad array of physiological and developmental processes. The discoveries of auxin transport carrier proteins that mediate auxin influx into and efflux out of transport-competent cells and auxin receptor proteins for auxin signaling in the last few decades represent significant milestones in auxin research and open up opportunities to probe the cellular and molecular processes that regulate auxin transport and integrate environmental cues with signaling processes. Remarkably, components of the polar auxin transport machinery are present in both lower plants such as mosses and higher plants including monocots and eudicots, illustrating the key role of polar auxin transport in plant evolution.  This book highlights topics ranging from physiological and genetic studies of polar auxin transport in plant development, to growth responses to the environment and plant-microbe interactions, to hormonal cross-talks with various cellular and molecular regulatory processes essential for polar auxin transport.


📜 SIMILAR VOLUMES


Regulation of auxin transport in pea (Pi
✍ D. A. Morris; Claire F. Johnson 📂 Article 📅 1987 🏛 Springer-Verlag 🌐 English ⚖ 831 KB

The transport of [14C]phenylacetic acid (PAA) in intact plants and stem segments of lightgrown pea (Pisum sativum L. cv. Alderman) plants was investigated and compared with the transport of [14C] indol-3yl-acetic acid (IAA). Although PAA was readily taken up by apical tissues, unlike IAA it did not