Abscisic acid
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ABAII.png
ABAII.png
Abscisic Acid is a plant hormone.
Location, Characteristics and Occasions for Synthesis Induction
- Released during desiccation
- Has been found to peak at night
- Synthesized in green fruit and seeds at the beginning of the wintering period
- As well as moving within the leaf it can be transferred to the leaf from the roots by the transpiration stream
- Rapidly translocated
- Produced in response to stress
- Synthesized in leaves and stems (particularly when water stressed)
- Released by cells in danger of not having enough nutrients locally or good enough environmental conditions to survive
- All cells capable of synthesizing
Effects
- Stimulates stomatal closure
- Fruit ripening inhibition
- Encourages seed dormancy by inhibiting cell growth – inhibits seed germination
- ABA inhibits the uptake of Kinetin
- Pathogen resistance response defense -
- Induces senescence in already damaged cells and their proximate neighbors
- Quickly puts a plant, organ, tissue or individual cell in a defensive posture (whatever this entails) in response to rapidly developing nutrient or environmental stress that threaten their survival
- Decreases metabolism in response to a newly developing deficiency of nutrient or adverse environmental condition, such that condition becomes survivable at the new lower level of metabolism (Not true in Theory II)
- Possibly induces cell dormancy or senescence by a climactic increase or sustained level stimulating the synthesis of GA and/or Ethylene (Not true in Theory II of plant hormones)
- A climactic rise or sustained level of ABA may be a prerequisite for the synthesis of any GA and/or Ethylene in that it presence indicates unusable or unsurvivable levels of Water, Sugar, Minerals and/or essential gases (Not true in Theory II)
Plant hormones | edit (http://en.wikipedia.org/w/wiki.phtml?title=Template:Plant_hormones&action=edit) |
Auxins - Cytokinins - Ethylene - Gibberellins - Abscisic acid - Brassinosteroids - Jasmonates - Salicylic acid |