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Indole-3-acetic acid sensitization of phytochrome-controlled growth of coleoptile sections

Abstract
Addition of 6 μM indole-3-acetic acid (IAA) to incubation buffer increases the sensitivity of coleoptile sections cut from dark-grown Avena sativa L. cv. Lodi to red light by a factor of 10,000, relative to the response in the absence of added IAA, without changing the maximum amount of light-induced growth. From 0.03 to 4 μM IAA sections show at least a 100-fold increase in sensitivity to red light relative to the response in the absence of added IAA. In this IAA concentration range, the light-induced increase in elongation shows two phases of response to red-light fluence, which are separated by a plateau. The biphasic fluence-response curve is also characteristic of the red-light-induced stimulation of coleoptile growth in intact dark-grown seedlings. The effect of IAA on the sensitivity of the phytochrome-mediated growth response appears to be on some step in the transduction of the phytochrome signal, rather than on the growth response itself.