Temporal course of graviperception in intermittently stimulated cress roots
Gravitropic bending of Lepidium roots caused by intermittent stimulation lasting ≈ 1 h was the same for a particular sum of stimulation intervals and was independent of (i) the length of a single stimulation interval (from 1 to 12·2 s) during which the roots were exposed unilaterally and horizontall...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Plant, cell and environment cell and environment, 1998-12, Vol.21 (12), p.1293-1300 |
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Zusammenfassung: | Gravitropic bending of Lepidium roots caused by intermittent stimulation lasting ≈ 1 h was the same for a particular sum of stimulation intervals and was independent of (i) the length of a single stimulation interval (from 1 to 12·2 s) during which the roots were exposed unilaterally and horizontally, and (ii) rest intervals (from 60 to 300 s) during which roots were horizontally rotated at two revolutions per minute on a clinostat. The same effectiveness of equal sums of short stimulations separated by relatively long rest intervals indicates that the signals into which the stimuli are transduced are: (i) additive; (ii) proportional to the duration of a single stimulation; and (iii) stable for at least 5 min. The perception time is shorter than 1 s, the presentation time is ≈ 10 s. The effects of intermittent stimulation fit the hypothesis that the gravity‐induced movement of statoliths changes asymmetrically the stress in cytoskeletal actin filaments, thereby inducing gravitropic bending. |
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ISSN: | 0140-7791 1365-3040 |
DOI: | 10.1046/j.1365-3040.1998.00375.x |