Volume 13, Issue 2 p. 231-239
Free Access

Arginine decarboxylase (polyamine synthesis) mutants of Arabidopsis thaliana exhibit altered root growth

Mark B. Watson

Mark B. Watson

Department of Botany, 2502 Plant Sciences Building, University of Georgia, Athens, Georgia 30602–7271, USA

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Kimberly K. Emory

Kimberly K. Emory

Department of Botany, 2502 Plant Sciences Building, University of Georgia, Athens, Georgia 30602–7271, USA

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Ruth Marie Piatak

Ruth Marie Piatak

Department of Botany, 2502 Plant Sciences Building, University of Georgia, Athens, Georgia 30602–7271, USA

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Russell L. Malmberg

Russell L. Malmberg

Department of Botany, 2502 Plant Sciences Building, University of Georgia, Athens, Georgia 30602–7271, USA

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First published: 05 January 2002
Citations: 89

Summary

Putrescine and polyamines are produced by two alternative pathways in plants. One pathway starts with the enzyme arginine decarboxylase; the other with ornithine decarboxylase. The authors developed an in vivo screening strategy to identify mutants with low levels of arginine decarboxylase activity. The screen requires both a primary screen of the M2 generation and a secondary screen of the M3 generation. The method used was to screen 15 000 EMS-mutagenized M2 seedlings for low levels of arginine decarboxylase (ADC) activity and identified seven mutants that fall into two complementation groups. These mutants have from 20% to 50% of wild-type enzyme activity. Morphological alterations common among the mutants include increased levels of lateral root branching. The authors obtained a double mutant combining the alleles with the lowest activities from the two complementation groups; this has lower ADC enzyme activity and putrescine levels than either of the single mutants. The double mutant has highly kinked roots that form a tight cluster; it also has narrower leaves, sepals, and petals than either single mutant or wild-type, and delayed flowering. These results suggest there may be more than one ADC gene in Arabidopsis, and that ADC and polyamine levels play roles in root meristem function and in lateral growth of leaf-homolog organs.

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