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Science 25 October 1985: Vol. 230. no. 4724, pp. 445 - 447 DOI: 10.1126/science.230.4724.445
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Articles
A Pea Mutant for the Study of Hydrotropism in Roots
M. J. JAFFE 1,
H. TAKAHASHI 1, and
R. L. BIRO 2
1 Department of Biology, Wake Forest University, Winston-Salem, North Carolina 27109
2 Biomedical and Environmental Laboratories, The Bionetics Corporation, Kennedy Space Center, Florida 32899
Plant roots grow in the direction of increasing soil moisture, but studies of hydrotropism have always been difficult to interpret because of the effect of gravity. In this study it was found that roots of the mutant pea `Ageotropum' are neither gravitropic nor phototropic, but do respond tropically to a moisture gradient, making them an ideal subject for the study of hydrotropism. When the root caps were removed, elongation was not affected but hydrotropism was blocked, suggesting that the site of sensory perception resides in the root cap.
Submitted on May 20, 1985
Accepted on August 7, 1985
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- The Root Tip and Accelerating Region Suppress Elongation of the Decelerating Region without any Effects on Cell Turgor in Primary Roots of Maize under Water Stress.
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- Roots of Pisum sativum L. Exhibit Hydrotropism in Response to a Water Potential Gradient in Vermiculite.
- S. TSUDA, N. MIYAMOTO, H. TAKAHASHI, K. ISHIHARA, and T. HIRASAWA (2003)
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- A no hydrotropic response Root Mutant that Responds Positively to Gravitropism in Arabidopsis.
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- Hydrotropic Response and Expression Pattern of Auxin-Inducible Gene, CS-IAA1, in the Primary Roots of Clinorotated Cucumber Seedlings.
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