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Plant Physiology 59:1165-1168 (1977)
© 1977 American Society of Plant Biologists

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Movement and Endogenous Levels of Abscisic Acid during Water-Stress-induced Abscission in Cotton Seedlings 1

Thomas L. Davenport2, Wayne R. Jordan3 and Page W. Morgan

a Department of Plant Sciences, Texas A&M University, College Station, Texas 77843

In an effort to investigate possible involvement of abscisic acid (ABA) in foliar abscission processes, its movement and endogenous levels were examined in cotyledons taken from cotton seedlings (Gossypium hirsutum L.) subjected to varying degrees of water deficit, a condition which initiates leaf abscission. Using a pulse-labeling technique to avoid complications of uptake and exit from the tissue, ABA-1-14C movement was observed in both basipetal and acropetal directions in cotyledonary petioles taken from well watered, stressed, and rewatered plants. The label distribution patterns obtained after 1 and 3 hours of transport under all situations of water supply were diffusive in nature and did not change when tested under anaerobic conditions. The transport capacity of the petioles ranged from 3.6 to 14.4% ABA-1-14C transported per hour at estimated velocities of 0 to 2 millimeters per hour. Comparison of basipetal and acropetal movement indicated a lack of polarity under all conditions tested. These low transport capacities and slow velocities of movement, when compared to the active transport systems associated with auxin movement, as well as the lack of anaerobic effects and polarity, suggest that ABA movement in cotton cotyledonary petiole sections is facilitated by passive diffusion. Increases in free and bound ABA in the lamina with increased water stress did not correlate with patterns of cotyledonary abscission. Thus, no evidence was found to suggest that ABA is directly involved in stress-induced abscission processes.


2 Present address: University of Florida, IFAS, Agricultural Research and Education Center, 18905 S.W. 280th St., Homestead, Fla. 33031.

3 Present address: Texas Agricultural Experiment Station, Blackland Research Center, Box 748, Temple, Texas 76501.

1 This research was supported in part by a grant from Cotton Incorporated. A contribution of the Texas Agricultural Experiment Station.







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Copyright © 1977 by the American Society of Plant Biologists