Abstract

The short-term growth response of oat (Avena sativa L.) coleoptiles to exogenously applied uridine was studied both in excised apical segments and in the intact seedlings. In both cases growth of coleoptile tissue was inhibited by uridine. The inhibition of coleoptile growth consistently occurred 20–30 min after uridine treatment, which is within the lag period of their phototropic response. Asymmetric application of uridine to coleoptiles in the intact seedlings resulted in their bending toward the direction to which uridine was applied in the absence of light stimulus. These findings suggest that uridine or its metabolites, plays an important role in the phototropism of oat coleoptiles and provide support to the Bruinsma–Hasegawa theory as an alternative to the Cholodny–Went theory for explaining phototropism.

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