Why pruning encourages plants to thrive
September 23rd, 2009 - 2:26 pm ICT by ANI ( Leave a comment )London, September 23 (ANI): In a new research, a team of scientists have made a significant discovery that helps explain why pruning encourages plants to thrive.
The research was carried out by collaborating teams from the University of York in the UK and the University of Calgary in Canada.
“It is well known that the main growing shoot of a plant can inhibit the growth of the shoots below. That’s why we prune to encourage growth of branches. What we are interested in is exactly how the main shoot can exert this effect,” said Professor Ottoline Leyser of the University of York’s Department of Biology.
“It has been known since the 1930s that the plant hormone auxin is released by the plant’s actively growing tip and is transported down the main stem where it has an indirect effect on buds to inhibit branching. There are a number of ways in which the hormone exerts this effect and we have discovered a new path by which it works,” he added.
The research suggests that for a shoot tip to be active, it must be able to export auxin into the main stem.
But if substantial amounts of auxin already exist in the main stem, export from an additional shoot tip cannot be established.
According to Professor Leyser, “Using this mechanism, all the shoot tips on a plant compete with each other, so that tips both above and below can influence each other’s growth. This allows the strongest branches to grow the most vigorously, wherever they may be on the plant. The main shoot dominates mostly because it was there first, rather than because of its position at the apex of the plant.”
The teams went on to show that the recently discovered plant hormone, strigolactone, works at least in part by making it harder to establish new auxin transport pathways from shoot tips, strengthening the competition between auxin sources and reducing branching. (ANI)
- How plants counteract against larger neighbours' shade - Dec 18, 2010
- Plant hormone could boost crop output - Jul 11, 2011
- Poplars, just like humans, also feel stressed - May 07, 2010
- Plant hormone that controls shoot branching discovered - Aug 12, 2008
- Increasing length of root hairs on plants can improve crop yields - Dec 15, 2008
- 'Anti-growth' hormone could reverse signs of aging - Dec 24, 2010
- New vitamin E treatment for prostate cancer - Oct 20, 2010
- Mechanism that turns healthy cells into prostate cancer cells discovered - Dec 03, 2010
- Gene discovery to pave way for new soybean plants - Apr 28, 2010
- How progesterone and estrogen increase breast cancer risk - Jan 19, 2011
- Mystery behind how plants make eggs solved - Jun 05, 2009
- Overabundance of protein promotes growth of breast cancer stem cells - Feb 16, 2011
- Adult stem cells that do not age created - Oct 02, 2010
- Plant hormones found to increase cotton yields during drought conditions - Mar 11, 2010
- Micro-RNA that regulates insulin in obesity identified - Apr 01, 2011
Tags: 1930s, apex, buds, canada, department of biology, discovery, indirect effect, london, main stem, pathways, plant hormone auxin, plants, scientists, substantial amounts, university of calgary