How auxin works in plants
In a previous article, I described important new research by Mark Estelle and his
colleagues showing how auxin works. Here is a useful diagram by
Nicolle Rager Fuller, courtesy of the National Science Foundation,
showing the new understanding of auxin's action.
![]() | |
| Auxin
works in a cell by binding specifically to a protein called TIR1. The
combination of TIR1 and auxin, along with a couple of other proteins,
destroys a repressor protein that stops growth genes from being
expressed. Once these growth genes are activated, they are expressed
and produce proteins that control plant growth. Growth genes could include
those that promote cell elongation and division, or differentiation.
This new understanding of how auxin works does not tell us everything
about how auxin promotes root formation, branch suppression and all its
other roles. It gives scientists new ways to do experiments to reveal
these details. |
