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Science 26 August 1988:
Vol. 241. no. 4869, pp. 1086 - 1089
DOI: 10.1126/science.241.4869.1086

Articles

Insensitivity to Ethylene Conferred by a Dominant Mutation in Arabidopsis thaliana

ANTHONY B. BLEECKER 1, MARK A. ESTELLE 1, CHRIS SOMERVILLE 1, and HANS KENDE 1

1 MSU-DOE Plant Research Laboratory, Michigan State University, East Lansing, MI 48824.

Ethylene influences a number of developmental processes and responses to stress in higher plants. The molecular basis for the action of ethylene was investigated in mutants of Arabidopsis thaliana that have altered responses to ethylene. One mutant line, which has a dominant mutation at a locus designated etr, lacks a number of responses to ethylene that are present in the wild-type plant. These include inhibition of cell elongation, promotion of seed germination, enhancement of peroxidase activity, acceleration of leaf senescence, and feedback suppression of ethylene synthesis by ethylene. These diverse responses, which occur in different tissues of Arabidopsis, appear to share some common element in their transduction pathways—for example, a single receptor for ethylene. Results of ethylene binding experiments in vivo indicate that this receptor may be affected by the etr mutation.

Submitted on February 12, 1988
Accepted on June 6, 1988


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