Recommend Plant Signaling & Behavior (PS&B) to your librarian for 2008. Download form here.

Sign up for Table of Contents Alerts!

home subscribe search archive forthcoming

PS&B is the official journal of the Society for Plant Neurobiology. Full membership ($60 annually) and student membership ($30 annually) include online access to the journal. Click here to join.

Email this page Print this page

Article Addendum

How amyloplasts, water deficit and root tropisms interact?

Georgina Ponce, Fátima Rasgado and Gladys I. Cassab

volume 3 | issue 7

july 2008
Pages: 460 - 462

Purchase article for $19

Subscribe to this journal for $79/year

Hydrotropism, the differential growth of plant roots directed by a moisture gradient, is a long recognized, but not well-understood plant behavior. Hydrotropism has been characterized in the model plant Arabidopsis. Previously, it was postulated that roots subjected to water stress are capable of undergo water-directed tropic growth independent of the gravity vector because of the loss of the starch granules in root cap columella cells and hence the loss of the early steps in gravitropic signaling. We have recently proposed that starch degradation in these cells during hydrostimulation sustain osmotic stress and root growth for carrying out hydrotropism instead of reducing gravity responsiveness. In addition, we also proposed that abscisic acid (ABA) and water deficit are critical regulators of root gravitropism and hydrotropism, and thus mediate the interacting mechanism between these two tropisms. Our conclusions are based upon experiments performed with the no hydrotropic response (nhr1) mutant of Arabidopsis, which lacks a hydrotropic response and shows a stronger gravitropic response than that of wild type (WT) in a medium with an osmotic gradient.

Authors

Georgina Ponce

Departamento de Biología Molecular de Plantas; Instituto de Biotecnología; Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México; Cuernavaca, México

Fátima Rasgado

Departamento de Biología Molecular de Plantas; Instituto de Biotecnología; Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México; Cuernavaca, México

Gladys I. Cassab

National Autonomous University of Mexico; Cuernavaca, Morelos, México


Purchase article for $19

Subscribe to this journal for $79/year