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Chapter 39: Control Systems in Plants. Question  Do plants sense and respond to their environment ?  Yes - By adjusting their pattern of growth and.

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Presentation on theme: "Chapter 39: Control Systems in Plants. Question  Do plants sense and respond to their environment ?  Yes - By adjusting their pattern of growth and."— Presentation transcript:

1 Chapter 39: Control Systems in Plants

2 Question  Do plants sense and respond to their environment ?  Yes - By adjusting their pattern of growth and development. In DarkIn Light

3 Comment  Plants can’t “move” away from a stimulus, but can change their growth response.  Result – plant bodies are more “flexible” in morphology than animals.

4 Classical Example  Phototropism - plant growth response to unilateral light.  Observation – plants bend or grow towards the light.

5 Phototropism Experimenters  Darwins: late 1800's.  Boysen & Jenson: early 1900's.  F.W. Went: 1926

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7 Went Experiments

8 Mechanism of Phototropism  Cells on the dark side elongate faster than the cells on the light side.  The uneven growth rate causes the bending of the stem toward the light.

9 Question  What is the adaptive value of phototropism?  It tilts the leaves toward the light source for more efficient photosynthesis.

10 Cause of Phototropism  Chemical messenger from the tip caused the growth response in the stem.  The distribution of the chemical changes in the unequal light, resulting in unequal cell elongation.

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12 Hormone  Chemical signal produced in one location, transported, has effect in another location.  Phototropism is caused by a plant hormone.

13 Plant Hormones  Are produced in small quantities.  Effects may reflect balance between several hormones.

14 Mechanism

15 Plant Hormones 1. Auxins 2. Cytokinins 3. Gibberellins 4. Abscisic Acid 5. Ethylene

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17 Auxins  Named by Went in 1926.  First plant hormone described.  Ex: IAA (natural) 2,4-D (synthetic)

18 Major Functions  Stimulates cell elongation.  Fruit development.  Apical Dominance.  Tropism responses.

19 Apical Dominance

20 Where Produced  Apical Meristems.  Young leaves.  Embryos.

21 Cytokinins  Isolated from coconut "milk" (endosperm) in the 1940’s.  Named because they stimulate cell division.  Ex: Zeatin

22 Major Effects  Stimulates cell division.  Delays senescence.  Root growth and differentiation.  Where Produced - roots

23 Auxin/Cytokinin Ratios  Control shoot or root differentiation in tissue cultures.

24 Gibberellins  Found from the "Foolish Seedling" disease in rice.  Ex: GA 3 70 types known

25 Foolish Seedlings

26 Major Effects  Internode elongation.  Seed/Bud germination.  Flowering (some species).  Fruit development. Extra GA3 No GA3

27 Lack GA3 Have GA3

28 Where Produced  Apical Meristems.  Young leaves.  Embryos.

29 Abscisic Acid  Slows or inhibits plant growth.  "Stress" hormone produced under unfavorable conditions.

30 Major Effects  Inhibits growth  Seed/Bud dormancy.  Stomata closure.  Leaf drop – produces abscission layer.

31  Abscission Layer

32 Where Produced  Leaves  Stems  Green fruit

33 Ethylene  Gaseous hormone (fast diffusion rates).  Often interacts with Auxin.

34 Major Effects  Fruit ripening.  Accelerates Senescence.  Stem/Root Elongation (+ or -).

35 Where Produced  Ripening fruits.  Senescent tissue.  Nodes.

36 New Hormones  Oligosaccharins – short chains of sugars released from the cell wall.  Function: Pathogen responses Cell differentiation Flowering

37 New Hormones  Brassinosteroids – steroid hormones similar to animal sex hormones.  Function: Needed for normal growth and development.

38 Commercial Applications of Plant Hormones  Weed killers  Seedless fruit  Rooting of cuttings  Tissue culture

39 Plant Movements 1. Tropisms 2. Circadian Rhythms

40 Tropisms  Growth responses in response to external stimuli.  + toward a stimulus  - away from stimulus

41 Examples 1. Phototropism 2. Gravitropism

42 Phototropism  Response to light (blue).

43 Movie

44 Gravitropism  Response to gravity.  Stems are – gravitropic and roots are + gravitropic.

45 Gravitropism - mechanism  Statolith movement may be the receptor for the stimulus.

46 Thigmotropism  Response to touch.  A series of 5 genes are involved.  Ex: Tendrils Climbing stems Wind direction response of stems.

47 Turgor Movements  Movement caused by turgor pressure differences in certain cells.

48 Types 1. Rapid Leaf Movement Ex: Mimosa 2. Sleep Movements Ex: Bean Leaves Prayer Plant Day Night Sleep Movements

49 Mimosa Rapid Leaf Movement

50 Circadian Rhythms  A physiological cycle about 24 hours long.  Ex: Stomata opening Sleep movements

51 Causes  Synthesis of a transcription factor protein that regulates is own manufacturing through feedback control.  Gene is believed to be common in most eukaryotic organisms.

52 Photoperiodism  A physiological response to changing day lengths.  Used to detect and direct growth responses to seasonal changes.

53 Advantages  Match growth responses to proper season.  Ex: Leaf drop in fall Flowering

54 Flowering Types 1. Short - Day Plants 2. Long - Day Plants 3. Day - Neutral Plants

55 Short-Day Plants  Flower when days are shorter than a critical period (long nights).  Ex: Mums Poinsettias

56 Long-Day Plants  Flower when days are longer than a critical period (short nights).  Ex: Spinach Iris Lettuce

57 Day-Neutral Plants  Flower whenever they have enough energy.  Ex: Roses African Violets

58 Night Length  Actually controls flowering response, not day length.  Proof – experiments show that if you interrupt the dark period, you reset the “clock”.

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60 Comment  Length of night not absolute, but relative for the response to be triggered.

61 Question  What detects day/night length changes?  Phytochrome - plant pigment involved with photoperiodism.

62 Phytochrome Forms  P r - responds to 660nm (red light).  P fr - responds to 730nm (far red).

63 Phytochrome  Changes between the two forms.  Ratio or accumulation of enough P fr triggers the responses

64  In Red light: P r  P fr  Far-red light or darkness: P fr  P r

65 Photoperiodism  Very sensitive (1 minute difference).  Sets clocks for plant responses.

66 Other Effects  Seed Germination  Stomatal Opening  Leaf Drop

67 Lettuce Germination

68 Responses to Stress  Stress – an environmental condition that can have an adverse effect on a plant’s growth, reproduction and survival.

69 Plant Response 1. Developmental changes 2. Physiological changes

70 Water Deficit  During high Ts, guard cells may close.  Young leaves may slow expansion.  Leaves may roll to reduce surface area.

71 Oxygen Deprivation  Common in roots in water-logged soils.  Air tubes in roots may bring oxygen to the cells.

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73 Salt Stress  Damages the plant through unfavorable soil water potentials and toxic ions.  Some plants can concentrate and excrete salt through salt glands (ex. halophytes).

74 Heat and Cold Stress  Heat - use heat-shock proteins to protect other proteins from denaturing.  Cold – lipid shifts to keep lipid bilayers “liquid”.  Cold – solute changes to lower freezing point.

75 Herbivores  Plants have many physical and chemical defenses against herbivores.  Physical – thorns  Chemical – crystals, tannins and other toxic compounds.

76 Herbivores  Often trigger a plant to release chemicals to attract predators or to warn other plants to increase their production of toxins.

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78 Pathogens  First Defense – epidermis  Second Defense – chemical events to restrict or kill the invader.

79 SAR  Systemic Acquired Resistance: chemicals that spread the “alarm” of an infection to other parts of the plant.  Possible Candidate: salicylic acid

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81 Summary  Know the general plant hormones and their effects.  Know tropisms.  Know photoperiodism.  Know general ideas about how plants respond to stress.


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