Abstract
The effects of ethylene and of indole-3-acetic acid (IAA) on growth of excised pea root sections have been compared under a variety of conditions. After 16 hours treatment the inhibitory action of IAA is fully reversible on transfer of the root sections to IAA-free solutions. In contrast, inhibition by ethylene is almost totally irreversible. IAA inhibits growth from zero time; ethylene is generally without effect during the first 3 to 6 hours. The inhibitory action of ethylene is dependent on factors such as tissue age and solution composition which have no major effect on IAA inhibition. Ethylene production is enhanced by 100 mum IAA, but conditions which reduce the rate of ethylene evolution 2 to 3-fold at the same IAA concentration fail to affect the inhibitory action of IAA on elongation. It seems unlikely that ethylene can play more than a minor role in mediating inhibition of pea root growth by IAA.
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