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Hormone Production In Plants: The
Production of Auxin by Autolysing Tissues
Planta, Berlin (1968), 80, 227-236
The
Production of Auxin by Autolysing Tissues
by Rupert Sheldrake, D.H. Northcote
ABSTRACT:
Abstract: Autolysing plant tissues are known to produce
auxin when extracted with ether. It has been shown that autolysing
plant, yeast and rat liver tissues produce auxin in vitro; this
suggests that relatively unspecific mechanisms are involved.
Furthermore, sterile plant and animal tissues which have been killed
by freezing and thawing induce nodules of differentiated cells in a
previously undifferentiated callus of Phaseolus vulgaris. The callus
tissue is known to differentiate in response to applied gradients of
auxin. Plant and animal tissues killed by boiling were considerably
less effective in inducing differentiation in the tissue. The
evidence indicates that auxin is a normal product of autolysing
cells. It is suggested that dying cells are an important source of
auxin in the plant. 1995 - 2001
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