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Control of Growth and Development Chapter 15 Developmental Processes • Development includes – Growth • Cell division and enlargement • Morphogenesis – Developmental changes that lead to the formation of specific shapes – Differentiation • Any process that makes cells functionally specialized and different from one another • Often occurs through expression of genes Growth Patterns • Growth patterns – Determinate • Usual pattern in animals – Cell division and differentiation result in adult organism in animals • “having defined limits” • In plants, dicot leaves and organs formed from modified leaves (bud scales, bracts, sepals, stamens, carpels) show limited, determinate growth pattern Growth Patterns – Indeterminate • Growth of shoots and roots • Continue to grow until stopped by environmental or internal signal Stages in Differentiation • First cell in developmental pathway – zygote – Totipotent • Has capability of making all the cells in the future organism • After three or four divisions, cells formed no longer totipotent – Cells now described as determined • Potential to differentiate is limited Stages in Differentiation • Plant zygote is totipotent • Plant cells may also become determined – Often reversible – Examples • Adventitious roots form from shoot tissue • Shoots can form from roots Stages in Differentiation • Some differentiated cells can regain totipotency – Removing pieces of tissue from shoots or roots and placing them in culture conditions can lead to formation of whole plants • Some differentiation process occur after cell has received stimulus – Mesophyll cells produce chlorophyll only after being illuminated – Procambial cells produce secondary walls after being stimulated by sucrose Gene Expression • Processes of differentiation depend on expression of genes • Genetic information encoded in sequence of bases in DNA Gene Expression • Steps in producing enzymes needed for life and growth of cell – Transcription of genetic code of DNA onto RNA molecule • Base sequence of DNA serves as template • RNA molecule has base sequence complimentary to DNA strand Gene Expression – Types of RNA synthesized • Ribosomal RNA (rRNA) – Three separate rRNAs, in combination with several proteins, form ribosomes for making proteins • Transfer RNA (tRNA) – Serves as decoding molecule – Translates base sequence into amino acid sequence • Messenger RNA (mRNA) – Specifies amino acid sequences of particular proteins – Carries message from nucleus to cytoplasm where protein is synthesized – Translates by interacting with ribosomes and rRNAs Gene Expression – Ribosomes bind to mRNA and move along mRNA three bases at a time while binding appropriate tRNAs » Sequence of three mRNA bases called a codon » 64 different codons – tRNA finds amino acid with complementary set of bases (anticodon) – Ribosome connects amino acid of tRNA to preceding amino acid with peptide bond Coordination of Development • Coordination of development requires series of signals – Short-range signals • Possibly from adjacent cells – Long-range signals • Inform one part of plant about conditions in another part – Environmental signals • Light, temperature, day length, water, nutrients, mechanical disturbances such as wind and wounding by herbivores Coordination of Development • Signals – May stimulate new patterns of gene expression – May activate existing proteins or other cell compounds • Signal must be perceived by target cells – Cells must have receptor – Reception of original signal usually starts a signal cascade • Series of events in which one signal leads to another and another Coordination of Development • Original signals that coordinate growth and development are generally hormones • Other possible signals – Transient electrical impulses – Hydraulic impulses – Environmental stimuli • Examples: light and temperature • Can serve as initial signals Coordination of Development • Signal receptors are proteins – Proteins may lead to another link in cascade of events – Cascade finally ends either in • activation or inactivation of transcription factor (protein that stimulates reading of a particular gene) • An enzyme that produces required differentiation of the cell Signals Regulating Cell Cycle • Signal allows cells to pass checkpoints in cell cycle • Researchers Lee Hartwell, Paul Nurse, Timothy Hunt – 2001 Nobel Prize – Genes and proteins that control cell cycles of yeast and animal cells Signals Regulating Cell Cycle • Plants have similar genes and proteins – Less known about them • cdc2 gene – Provides genetic information for enzyme protein involved in phosphorylation reactions • Cyclin-dependent protein kinase (C-PK) – Enzyme adds phosphate functional group to another protein • Another enzyme catalyzes dephosphorylation – Removes phosphate from proteins Signals Regulating Cell Cycle • Phosphorylation/dephosphorylation reaction seems to be key to regulating cell cycle • C-PK works with other proteins called cyclins – C-PK must be phosphorylated before it can combine with cyclin – Initial combination inactive – Phosphotase removes one phosphate and activates the C-PK complex – Active form of combined proteins acts as a protein kinase » Enzyme that is actual trigger to start the S or M phases Signals Regulating Cell Cycle – Complex is recycled in a three-step process » Complex is broken down into two parts » C-PK can be reused by having new phosphates added to it » Cyclin protein is degraded into component amino acids » New cyclins must be resynthesized to restart the process The need to regenerate C-PK and cyclin ensures that the cell must be healthy (not starved) to synthesize more DNA and divide again. Hormones • Chemicals produced by plant – promote or inhibit growth or differentiation of plant cells – coordinate development in different parts of plant • Many agricultural uses • Chemicals are diffusible but often influence same cells that produced them • Sometimes referred to as growth regulators Hormones • Examples of plant hormones or growth regulators – Auxins – Gibberellins – Cytokinins – Abscisic acid – Ethylene Discovery of Plant Hormones • Discovered by studying plant developmental processes • Auxin – Discovered during studies of growth of grass coleoptiles – Charles Darwin and son Francis • Experiments demonstrated that coleoptile tip was necessary for elongation of shaft • Coleoptile could also be induced to bend toward light phototropism • Coleoptile, when placed on its side, would bend upward gravitropism Discovery of Plant Hormones – N. Cholodny and Frits Went • 1920s • Cut off coleoptile tip • Placed it on small block of agar so that diffusible substance could move into agar • Agar block placed on decapitated coleoptile – Shaft resumed growth – Showed agar had received chemicals from tip that stimulated growth of coleoptile – Agar placed on side of coleoptile, caused uneven growth – Coleoptile bent away from side that received agar Discovery of Plant Hormones • Growth of decapitated coleoptiles demonstrated presence of growthpromoting substance • Substance named auxin – Substance that acted like an auxin was first purified from urine – Identified as indoleacetic acid – Same substance was later found in plant extracts Auxin Site of synthesis Site of effect Stem apex, young leaves Expanding tissues Promotes cell elongation Developing embryos Effect Roots Initiates lateral roots Axillary buds Inhibits growth (apical dominance) Cambium Promotes xylem differentiation Leaves, fruits Inhibits abscission Ovary Promotes fruit development Discovery of Plant Hormones • Gibberellins – Group of similar plant hormones that stimulate elongation of stem internodes – Discovered in Japan by plant physiologists studying rice disease (bakanae, or foolish seedling disease) caused by fungus Gibberella fujikuroi – Infected seedlings grew faster than uninfected ones but died before could produce grain Discovery of Plant Hormones – Physiologists showed that chemicals produced by fungus stimulated the growth of the rice seedlings – Later found that same chemicals are made in low amounts in young leaves and transported throughout plant in phloem Gibberellins Site of synthesis Site of effect Effect Stem apex, young leaves Stem internode Promotes cell division, cell elongation Embryo Seed Promotes germination Embryo (grass) Endosperm Promotes starch hydrolysis Discovery of Plant Hormones • Cytokinin – Discovered during experiments designed to define conditions needed for culturing plant tissues – Sterilized pieces of stem, leaf, and root tissue placed in flask with nutrient medium – Medium contained carbon source, nutrient minerals, and certain vitamins Discovery of Plant Hormones – Hormones added to induce cells to divide – In medium containing only auxin, cells enlarge without dividing – Studies showed that hormone found in solutions of boiled DNA and in coconut milk (liquid endosperm) were necessary • active ingredients were cytokinins, modified forms of adenine – Plant cells divided and grew rapidly in nutrient medium containing both auxin and cytokinin Cytokinin Site of synthesis Root apex Site of effect Effect Stem apex, axillary buds Promotes cell division (release of apical dominance) Leaves Inhibits senescence Discovery of Plant Hormones • Further experiments with auxin and cytokinin showed they also influence development – 10 times more auxin than cytokinin added to cell culture growth undifferentiated forms amorphous mass called a callus – Auxin concentration increased further or when nutrient concentration in medium reduced callus produces roots Discovery of Plant Hormones – Increase in cytokinin concentration callus becomes green and compact and produces shoots Precise response of plant tissues to different auxin and cytokinin concentrations depends on the plant species and other growth conditions. Discovery of Plant Hormones • Abscisic acid – More associated with suspension of growth rather than stimulation – Discovered almost simultaneously by two different groups • F. Addicott at University of California – Discovered compound that promoted abscission • P.F. Wareing and his coworkers in Wales – Found compound that was associated with dormancy of woody shoots in winter Abscisic Acid Site of synthesis Site of effect Effect Leaves Guard cells Closes stomata Stem apex Promotes dormant bud formation Seed coat Inhibits seed germination Ovule Discovery of Plant Hormones • Ethylene – Associated with inhibition and modification of growth – C2H4 – Gas at normal temperatures and pressures – Discovered when the gas, produced by oil or kerosene heaters in greenhouses, stimulated senescence of flowers and caused lemons and oranges to ripen Discovery of Plant Hormones – Produced by almost any wounded plant tissue – Produced by unwounded tissues whose growth has been restricted – Can move by diffusion to nearby organs Ethylene Site of synthesis Site of effect Effect Wounded tissues, aged tissues Stem Inhibits cell elongation Leaves Promotes senescence Fruits Promotes ripening Signals from Shoot Apex Promote Growth • Auxin and gibberellins normally produced by shoot apical meristems, young leaves, developing fruits and seeds • Actively transported down stem toward roots from shoot apices and young leaves • Stimulate primary growth of stem • Major effect of auxin is increase in plasticity of cell wall Signals from Shoot Apex Promote Growth • Hypotheses for plasticity increase by auxin – Acid-growth hypothesis • Suggests main effect of auxin is to cause cells to secrete acid (H+ ions, protons) • Acid stimulates changes in plasticity – Induced gene expression hypothesis • Suggests auxin works by inducing the expression of genes that make growth-promoting proteins Signals from Shoot Apex Promote Growth • May be special proteins that affect cell wall’s plasticity – Activities may promote acidic conditions – One protein induced by auxin stimulates activity of plasma membrane proton pump which acidifies cell wall – Protein called expansin increases plasticity at pH values less than 6.0 Signals from Shoot Apex Promote Growth – Another protein with enzymatic activity (transglycosylation) promotes plasticity and growth • Breaks carbohydrate chains • Reforms carbohydrate chains in configuration that can result in more extended cell wall Signals from Shoot Apex Promote Growth • Gibberellins also needed for elongation of stem internodes • Auxin and gibberellins – Stimulates cell division in vascular cambium • Auxin stimulates growth of secondary xylem • Gibberellins stimulate growth of secondary phloem Signals from Shoot Apex Promote Growth • Auxin – Tends to inhibit activity of axillary meristems near apical meristem • Restricts formation of shoot branches • Phenomenon called apical dominance – Helps coordinate root growth with shoot growth Cytokinin Coordinates Shoot with Root Growth • Found in embryos and endosperm – Stimulates cell cycle • Possibly promotes cyclin synthesis • Plays similar role in mature plants • Produced in roots and transported to shoots in xylem sap – Presence of cytokinin signals to shoots the presence of healthy roots • Delays senescence Shoot Growth in Response to Environmental Signals • Gibberellin – Bolting (internode growth) of plants with rosette morphology • Induced by environment by longer days or cold temperatures • Can be stimulated by spraying plant with gibberellin • Observations suggest that rosette plants are deficient in gibberellin and they bolt when environmental signal stimulates them to produce gibberellin Shoot Growth in Response to Environmental Signals • Abscisic acid – Accumulates in shoots of perennial plants – Environmental stimulus • Shorter days or temperature decrease – Stimulates the formation of dormant bud at each shoot apical meristem Shoot Growth in Response to Environmental Signals • Ethylene – Slows growth of stems and roots when produced by wounded cells or by organs meeting physical obstacle – Stem or root growing under influence of ethylene • Short and stumpy because formed from short, round cells Seed Development and Germination • Abscisic acid – Plays role in formation of viable seeds • Induces formation of large amounts of certain proteins thought to store materials needed for use by embryo when it germinates – Associated with dormancy of some seeds • Accumulates in seed coat during development • In presence of abscisic acid, embryo does not germinate • Seed requires long period under cool, wet conditions before it can germinate – Conditions stimulate breakdown of abscisic acid Seed Development and Germination • Gibberellin – Promotes germination in many types of seeds • Possibly causes increased concentration of one of cell wall-loosening enzymes • Possibly causes reorientation of microtubules and microfibrils so fewer microfibrils oppose cell elongation – Promotes metabolic breakdown of storage materials • Made by germinating embryo • Represent signal from embryo to endosperm announcing need for nutrients Stimulation of Senescence • Ethylene – Triggers expression of genes leading to synthesis of enzymes that begin process of senescence • Chlorophyllases and proteases – Mechanism by which ethylene induces synthesis of enzymes is not well understood – A specific protein receptor that recognizes and binds to ethylene has been found Stimulation of Senescence – Ripening of fruit stimulated by ethylene – May involve • Conversion of starch or organic acids to sugars • Softening of cell walls to form a fleshy fruit • Rupturing of cell membrane with resulting loss of cell fluid to form dry fruit – Overripe fruit is potent source of ethylene • Promote ripening of adjacent fruits • CO2 inhibits effect of ethylene Stress Signals • Abscisic acid – Plays role in control of photosynthetic system under stress • Under drought conditions, wilted mesophyll cells synthesize and excrete abscisic acid • Abscisic acid diffuses into guard cells • Receptor recognizes hormone and releases K+, Cland H2O which closes stomata Stress Signals • Upon detection of attack of plant by fungus or fungus-like protists – Plant may produce H2O2 (hydrogen peroxide) • Thought to act as antibiotic – Plant may produce enzymes that break down fungal cell walls • Plant cells around infection site may die • Release tannins • Fungus has trouble spreading through dead cells to new, live cells Stress Signals • Systemic acquired resistance – If plant survives infection by virus, bacterium, or fungus, this infection may make plant less susceptible to later invasion into other parts of its body by same pathogen – Mechanism not fully understood • Involves transmission of signal from infected organ to new leaves, probably through phloem • Induction of several types of antibiotic proteins in new leaves • Does not involve antibodies of type that appear in animals Stress Signals – Compounds possibly involved in systemic acquired resistance • Salicylic acid – Compound related to aspirin • Jasmonic acid • Hydrogen peroxide • Systemin – Produced in response to infections – Required for establishing systemic resistance – May be first polypeptide hormone discovered in plants Light and Plant Development • Light – most important environmental factor influencing plant development • Response to light – Major way plants adapt to surroundings Light and Plant Development • Plants “sense” three colors of light that correspond to at least three distinct light receptors Light color Receptor Red light Phytochromes Blue and nearultraviolet (black) Cryptochromes Intermediatewavelength ultraviolet light (UVB radiation from sun) Currently unnamed receptor Red/Far-Red Response • Wavelengths seem to act as on/off switch • Responses governed by switch – Growth of seedlings • Seedling grown in dark is etiolated (long and light yellow) • Exposure of seedling to red light starts deetiolation process • Process is retarded if red signal is followed immediately by far-red light Red/Far-Red Response – Structure and function of phytochromes • Type of protein containing a pigment molecule related to heme (O2 carrying molecule in animal blood cells) • Pr - inactive • Pfr – active • Irradiating phytochrome with red and then far/red light is equivalent of turning a switch on and then off • Function of phytochromes not certain – May attach phosphate to other proteins Photoperiodic Responses • Plants have system that measures lengths of days and nights • System called photoperiodism • Protoperiodism used to time flowering in many plants • Two major groups of plants – Long-day plants – Short-day plants Photoperiodic Responses • Day-neutral plants – Flowering is not referenced to length of day • Long-day plants – Begin flowering sometime between January and June – Flower when days get longer than characteristic day length Photoperiodic Responses • Short-day plants – Begin flowering between July and December – Flower when days become shorter than characteristic day length • Experiments have shown – length of uninterrupted night is most important part of signal – phytochrome is receptor by which short-day plants perceive light Photoperiodic Responses • Biological clocks – Known in all eukaryotic organisms – Generally reset every day in response to light exposure – Endogenous • Can continue to operate in continuous darkness • “coming from within” Photoperiodic Responses – Can be observed as daily rhythms or patterns • Mimosa leaflets open during day and close at night • Nyctinastic movement – Caused by transport of ions and resulting change in turgor pressures of cells on opposite side of petiole – Other responses controlled by photoperiodism probably through interaction between light and endogenous clock • Dormancy • Senescence in the fall • Resumption of growth in the spring Plant Responses to Light • Responses are complex • Some responses involve exposure to blue part of spectrum – Phototropism – Induction of enzymes that synthesize red pigments (anthocyanins) in skins of fruits such as apples and plums Plant Responses to Light • Other responses require exposure to more than one color of light – Some plants require exposure to both red and blue light in order to form red pigments – Either color forms some pigment but both colors are required for full response – Synthesis of chlorophyll • Brief exposure to red light will not turn etiolated leaves green • Chlorophyll synthesis requires longer exposure to red or blue light