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Home : Papers & Abstracts :
Auxin Transport In Plants :
Carrier-mediated Auxin Transport
Abstract: 1. Auxin (IAA) transport was investigated using
crown gall suspension tissue culture cells. We have shown that auxin
can cross the plasmalemma both by transport of IAA anions on a
saturable carrier and by passive (not carrier-mediated) diffusion of
the lipid-soluble undissociated IAA molecules (pK=4.7). The pH
optimum of the carrier for auxin influx is about pH6 and it is
half-saturated by auxin concentrations in the region of a 1-5u-M. We
found that the synthetic auxin, 2,4D specifically inhibited
carrier-mediated IAA anion influx, and possibly also efflux. Other
lipid-soluble weak acids which are not auxins, such as
3,4-dichlorobenzoic acid, had no effect on auxin transport. By
contrast, we found that TIBA, an inhibitor of polar auxin transport
in intact tissue inhibited only the carrier-mediated efflux of IAA."
"2. When the pH outside the cells is maintained
below that of the cytoplasm (pH7), auxin can be accumulated by the
cells: In the initial phase of uptake, the direction of the auxin
concentration gradient allows both passive carrier-mediated anion
influx (inhibited by 2,4D) and a passive diffusion of undissociated
acid molecules into the cells. Once inside the cytoplasm, the
undissociated molecules ionise, producing IAA anions, to a greater
extent than in the more acidic extra-cellular environment. Uptake by
passive diffusion continues as long as the extra-cellular
concentration of undissociated acid remains higher than its
intra-cellular concentration. Thus, the direction of the auxin anion
concentration gradient is reversed after a short period of uptake
and auxin accumulates within the cells. The carrier is now able to
mediate passive IAA anion efflux (inhibited by TIBA) down this
concentration gradient even though net uptake still proceeds because
the carrier is saturable whereas passive diffusion is not."
"3. Auxin 'secretion' from cells is regarded as
a critical step in polar auxin transport. The evidence which we
present is consistent with the view that auxin 'secretion' depends
on a passive carrier-mediated efflux of auxin anions which
accumulate within the cells when the extra-cellular pH is below that
of the cytoplasm. The implications of this view for theories of
polar auxin transport are discussed.
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