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Plant Physiology 92:310-315 (1990)
© 1990 American Society of Plant Biologists

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Cellular and Structural Biology

Inducing Gravitropic Curvature of Primary Roots of Zea mays cv Ageotropic 1

Randy Moore, Michael L. Evans and W. Mark Fondren

Department of Biological Sciences, Wright State University, Dayton, Ohio 45435, Department of Botany, The Ohio State University, Columbus, Ohio 43210

Primary roots of the mutant `Ageotropic' cultivar of Zea mays are nonresponsive to gravity. Their root caps secrete little or no mucilage and touch the root only at the extreme apex. A gap separates the cap and root at the periphery of the cap. Applying mucilage from normal roots or substances with a consistency similar to that of mucilage to tips of mutant roots causes these roots to become strongly graviresponsive. Gravicurvature stops when these substances are removed. Caps of some mutants secrete small amounts of mucilage and are graviresponsive. These results indicate that (a) the lack of graviresponsiveness in the mutant results from disrupting the transport pathway between the cap and root, (b) movement of the growth-modifying signal from the cap to the root occurs via an apoplastic pathway, and (c) mucilage is necessary for normal communication between the root cap and root in Zea mays cv Ageotropic.


1 This research was supported by grants NAGW-297 and NAGW-1738 from the Life Sciences Program of the National Aeronautics and Space Administration and by National Science Foundation grant DMB8608673 to M. L. E.







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Copyright © 1990 by the American Society of Plant Biologists