Plant Hormones

Plant hormones are signal molecules produced within the plant, and occur in extremely low concentrations. Hormones regulate cellular processes in targeted cells locally and, when moved to other locations, in other locations of the plant. Hormones also determine the formation of flowers, stems, leaves, the shedding of leaves, and the development and ripening of fruit. Plants, unlike animals, lack glands that produce and secrete hormones. Instead, each cell is capable of producing hormones. They affect which tissues grow upward and which grow downward, leaf formation and stem growth, fruit development and ripening, plant longevity, and even plant death. Hormones are vital to plant growth, and, lacking them, plants would be mostly a mass of undifferentiated cells.

There are various types of plant hormones.

Auxins

Auxin is a group of plant hormones that produce a number of effects, including plant growth, phototropic response through the stimulation of cell elongation (photopropism), stimulation of secondary growth, api¬cal dominance, and the development of leaf traces and fruit. An important plant auxin is indole-3-acetic acid. (IAA and synthetic auxins such as 2,4-D and 2,4,5-T are used as common weed killers.)

  • They are basically weak organic acids which actively participate in the cell division and the cell elongates consequently thus plants growth occurs.
  • If some auxins hormones be applied on the flower of the plants then without fertilization and without seeds formation ovary wall becomes tuberous and forms the fruit. This is called the artificial parthenocarpy

Agent Orange

2,4-dichlorophenoxyacetic acid (2,4-dichlorophenoxyethanoic acid) is a synthetic auxin frequently used as a weed killer of broad-leaved weeds. When two herbicides 2,4,5-T and 2,4-D and mixed in equal parts, it is called Agent Orange, which was used by US in Vietnam war.

Gibberellins

Gibberellins, or GAs, include a large range of chemicals that are produced naturally within plants and by fungi. They were first discovered when Japanese researchers, including Eiichi Kurosawa, noticed a chemical produced by a fungus called Gibberella fujikuroi that produced abnormal growth in rice plants.

  • Gibberellins are important in seed germination, affecting enzyme production that mobilizes food production used for growth of new cells. This is done by modulating chromosomal transcription. In grain (rice, wheat, corn, etc.) seeds, a layer of cells called the aleurone layer wraps around the endosperm tissue.
  • Absoption of water by the seed causes production of GA. The GA is transported to the aleurone layer, which responds by producing enzymes that break down stored food reserves within the endosperm, which are utilized by the growing seedling. GAs produce bolting of rosette-forming plants, increasing internodal length. They promote flowering, cellular division, and in seeds growth after germination. Gibberellins also reverse the inhibition of shoot growth and dormancy induced by ABA.

Cytokinins

Cytokinins or CKs are a group of chemicals that influence cell division and shoot formation.

  • They were called kinins in the past when the first cytokinins were isolated from yeast cells.
  • They also help delay senescence or the aging of tissues, are responsible for mediating auxin transport throughout the plant, and affect internodal length and leaf growth.
  • They have a highly synergistic effect in concert with auxins, and the ratios of these two groups of plant hormones affect most major growth periods during a plant’s lifetime.
  • Cytokinins counter the apical dominance induced by auxins; they in conjunction with ethylene promote abscission of leaves, flower parts, and fruits.
  • The correlation of auxins and cytokinins in the plants is a constant (A/C = const.).

Ethylene

Ethylene is a gas that forms through the Yang Cycle from the breakdown of methionine, which is in all cells. Ethylene has very limited solubility in water and does not accumulate within the cell but diffuses out of the cell and escapes out of the plant.

  • Its effectiveness as a plant hormone is dependent on its rate of production versus its rate of escaping into the atmosphere. Ethylene is produced at a faster rate in rapidly growing and dividing cells, especially in darkness. New growth and newly germinated seedlings produce more ethylene than can escape the plant, which leads to elevated amounts of ethylene, inhibiting leaf expansion.
  • As the new shoot is exposed to light, reactions by phytochrome in the plant’s cells produce a signal for ethylene production to decrease, allowing leaf expansion. Ethylene affects cell growth and cell shape; when a growing shoot hits an obstacle while underground, ethylene production greatly increases, preventing cell elongation and causing the stem to swell. The resulting thicker stem can exert more pressure against the object impeding its path to the surface. If the shoot does not reach the surface and the ethylene stimulus becomes prolonged, it affects the stem’s natural geotropic response, which is to grow upright, allowing it to grow around an object.

Abscisic Acid

Abscisic acid (ABA) hormone activates the vascular cambium during mitosis cell divison and its presence slows down the stems growth. This hormone can be used in preventing the sprouting activities in seeds and buds. In dry stem it provokes the pores to close and consequently a downfall in the rate of evaporation takes place. The role of Abscisic acid in abscission of leaves is doubtful and not proved, please note it.


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