This document discusses plant growth regulators and retardants. It provides information on the five main classes of plant hormones - auxins, gibberellins, cytokinins, ethylene, and abscisic acid. For each hormone, it describes their site of production in plants, biosynthetic pathways, and roles in growth and development processes like cell elongation, flowering, seed germination, and stress response. The document also examines the effects of some commonly used synthetic plant growth regulators and the roles of hormones like auxins and ethylene in processes like phototropism, fruit ripening, and organ abscission.
1. PLANT GROWTH REGULATORS
AND RETARDANTS
PRESENTED BY: REETIKA SHARMA
DIVISION: FRUIT SCIENCE.
REGISTRATION NUMBER: J-19-M-656
PRESENTED TO: DR. GURUDEV CHAND
2. PLANT GROWTH REGULATORS
A hormone is a naturally produced chemical synthesized in one part of
the plant and then travels to another part where it effects growth and
development. There are five main groups:
Auxin or Indole Acetic Acid (IAA)
Gibberellin or Gibberellic Acid (GA)
Cytokinin (Ck)
Ethylene (C2H4)
Abscisic Acid (ABA)
Hormones discovered more recently include salicylic acid, jasmonates,
brassinolides, etc.
Plant growth regulators are man-made chemicals applied to plants to
produce a desired effect (some are chemically identical to hormones).
3. AUXINS:
Auxin name was given by Kogl
Avena curvature test, oat coloeptile test: bioassay for auxin
Auxins are produced in merismatic tissue such as root tips, shoot tips,
apical buds, young leaves and flowers
Precursor: Tryptophan
Types of Auxins:
1. Only known naturally occuring auxin in plants: Indole-3-acetic
acid(IAA)
2. Synthetic Auxins: IBA, NAA, 2,4-D
Site of auxin production: Shoot and root tips, young expanding
leaves and seeds
Translocation: Shows polarity.
5. ROLE OF AUXIN IN PLANTS
Stimulate the cell elongation
Promotes apical dominance
Xylem differentiation
Rooting harmone to induce rooting(adventitious) in
cuttings
High amounts of auxins induce root formation in callus
Induce flowering in pineapple
Induce parthenocarpy in tomato
6. Synthetic auxin (e.g. 0.1-0.8% IBA) can be used to
stimulate adventitious rooting on cuttings.
8. GIBBERLINS:
Discovery: Kurosawa, a Japanese botanist, discovered gibberellin while
investigating the rice foolish seedling disease in which spindly seedlings
are formed due to GA like compounds produced by the fungus (
Gibberella fujikuroi) infecting the plant
Gibberellins are another kind of promotery PGR
There are more than 100 gibberellins reported from widely different
organisms such as fungi and higher plants. They are denoted as GA1,
GA2, GA3 and so on.
Derivatives of Diterpenes
Precursor: Terpenoids
Site of gibberllin production: Young leaves
10. ROLE OF GIBBERLLINS:
Mobilize enzymes that release nutrient reserves in grass seeds
Stem elongation requires gibberellins.
Mutants that don’t produce gibberellins are dwarfs.When
gibberellins are added they grow normally.
Rosette growth until an environmental cue cause them to bolt
(elongate their shoots)
Developing seeds produce gibberellins stimulate their
growth. Seedless grapes are smaller than seeded ones.
Farmers spray them with gibberellins to get normal large
grapes.
Delay senescence
Improve shape of apple fruit
Early seed production in conifers
Increase length of stock in grapes
Enhance barley germination and malt production (Malting) in
the liquor industry.
11. Gibberellic acid and low light levels cause stretching due to the
elongation of internode cells.
12. Auxin regulates apical dominance: pinching/ shearing plants will
result in more branches.
13. CYTOKININS:
Cytokinin occur in embryonic or merismatic organs
Skoog and Miller coined the auxin-cytokinin hypothesis
of plant morphogenesis
Natural cytokinin: isopentenyl adenine(IPA) and zeatin
Synthetic cytokinin: Kinetin, BA( Benzyl adenine)
Site of cytokinin production: Root tips
Precursor: 5’-AMP (Isopentenyl group)
15. ROLE OF CYTOKININ
Shoot vs Root growth: High ratio of cytokinin to auxin:
buds and shoots are formed. Low ratio of cytokinin to
auxin: roots form.
Delay senescence of leaves.
In stems, the ratio of cytokinin to auxin determines the
bushiness of a plant (apical dominance)
Stimulate cell division and lateral bud development
Enlargement of cells
Induces flowering in short day plants
Differentiation of cells( interact with auxins)
Cytokinins producing large amounts of callus tissue
16. Shoot proliferation in tissue culture: high cytokinin and
auxin level promotes shoot growth.
17. ABSCISIC ACID:
Naturally occuring plant harmone
Stress harmone
Site of production: terminal bud
Precursor: Sesquiterpenoid pathway( Mevalonic acid)
Site of ABA production: All organs.
19. ROLE OF ABSCISIC ACID
Bud dormancy
Stimulates the closure of stomata
Induction and maintenance of dormancy
Disease resistance
Protecting cells from dehydration
Act as growth inhibitor
Reduces the rate of transpiration
Induce abscission of flower and fruits
21. ETHYLENE
Ethylene is a simple, gaseous plant growth regulator,
synthesis by most of the plant organs including ripening fruits
and ageing tissues. It is an unsaturated hydrocarbon having
double covalent bonds between and adjacent to carbon atoms.
Ethylene is used as both plant growth promoters and plant
growth inhibitors. Ethylene is synthesized by the ripening
fruits and ageing tissues.
Only gaseous harmone, ripening harmone
Precursor: Methionine
23. ROLE OF ETHYLENE
1.Ethylene is the most widely used plant growth regulator as it helps in
regulating many physiological processes.
2.Induce flowering in the mango tree.
3.Promotes sprouting of potato tubers.
4.Breaks the dormancy of seeds and buds.
5.Enhances respiration rate during ripening of fruits.
6.Applied to rubber trees to stimulate the flow of latex.
7.Promotes abscission and senescence of both leaves and flowers.
8.Used to stimulate the ripening of fruits. For example, tomatoes and citrus
fruits.
9.Affects horizontal growth of seedlings and swelling of the axis in dicot
seedlings.
10.Increases root growth and root hair formation, therefore helping plants
to increase their absorption surface area
24. Senescence (aging) and dormancy: Ethephon causes plants to
release ethylene and senesce faster.
25. Senescent parts due to Ethephon spray abscise faster due to more
ethylene gas being released.