Abstract

When auxin stimulates rapid cell elongation growth of cereal coleoptiles, it causes a degradation of 1,3:1,4-beta-glucan in hemicellulosic polysaccharides. We examined gene expressions of endo-1,3:1,4-beta-glucanase (EI) and exo-beta-glucanase (ExoII), of which optimum pH are about 5, and molecular distribution of hemicellulosic polysaccharides in barley (Hordeum vulgare L.) coleoptile segments treated with or without IAA. IAA (10(-5) M) stimulated the gene expression of EI, while it did not affect that of ExoII. IAA induced gene expression of EI after 4 h and increased wall-bound glucanase activity after 8 h. The molecular weight distribution of hemicellulosic polysaccharides from coleoptile cell walls was shifted to lower molecular weight region by 2 h of IAA treatment. Fusicoccin (10(-6) M) mimicked IAA-induced elongation growth and the decrease in molecular weight of hemicellulosic 1,3:1,4-beta-glucan of coleoptiles in the first 4 h, but it did not promote elongation growth thereafter. These facts suggest that acidification of barley cell walls by IAA action enhances pre-existing cell wall-bound glucanase activity in the early first phase of IAA-induced growth and the late second phase involves the gene expression of EI by IAA.

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