Opentopia Directory Encyclopedia Tools

Abscisic acid

Encyclopedia : A : AB : ABS : Abscisic acid


''''''
Abscisic acid
Chemical name [Abscisic Acid Chemical Name]
Chemical formula
Molecular mass
CAS number
Density 3
Melting point
Boiling point
SMILES
[Chemical infoboxDisclaimer and references]
Abscisic acid (ABA), also known as abscisin II, is a plant hormone. It was given its name because it was once thought to be pivotal in leaf abscission.

Location, Characteristics and Occasions for Synthesis Induction

Abscisic acid is defined as a plant growth regulator that acts mainly to inhibit growth, promote dormancy, and help the plant tolerate stressful conditions.

Abscisic acid is named so because it was believed that this plant growth regulator caused the abscission of leaves from deciduous trees in the fall. The plant's growth slows down, and then assumes a dormant state. This is the complete opposite of what auxin, gibberellins, and cytokinins, the other plant hormones, do to the plant. Inside the terminal bud, the hormone abscisic acid is produced. The slow growth and direction of leaf primordial develops scales to protect the dormant buds during the cold season.

This plant growth regulator inhibits the division of the cell in the vascular cambium, also preparing for the winter by suspending primary and secondary growth. The most impressive effect of abscisic acid is the inhibition of growth and the maintenance done on the dormancy of buds. Yet this is not enough to keep the dormancy of buds up for the long term.

Abscisic acid is produced in the roots in response to decreased soil water potential. It travels to the leaves where it is rapidly metabolised and alters the osmotic potential of the guard cells of the leaf, causing them to collapse and the stomata to close. This prevents transpiration from occurring and prevents further water loss from the leaves in times of low water availability.

Effects

A climactic rise or sustained level of ABA may be a prerequisite for the synthesis of any GA and/or Ethylene in that its presence indicates unusable or unsurvivable levels of Water, Sugar, Minerals and/or essential gases ([speculative])


Plant hormones [edit]
Abscisic acid - Auxins - Cytokinins - Ethylene (Ethene) - Gibberellins

Brassinosteroids - Jasmonates - Salicylic acid

References

 


From Wikipedia, the Free Encyclopedia. Original article here. Support Wikipedia by contributing or donating.
All text is available under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License See Wikipedia Copyrights for details.

Search Titles
0123456789
ABCDEFGHIJ
KLMNOPQRST
UVWXYZ?

E-mail this article to:

Personal Message: