Morphogenesis of the stamenless-2 mutant in tomato. II. Modifications of sex organs in the mutant and normal flowers by plant hormones
- 1 December 1973
- journal article
- Published by Canadian Science Publishing in Canadian Journal of Botany
- Vol. 51 (12) , 2473-2479
- https://doi.org/10.1139/b73-317
Abstract
Application of gibberellic acid (GA3) to young plants of a single gene recessive stamenless-2 (sl2/sl2) mutant of tomato produced 'phenocopies' of the normal plants. Unlike the untreated sl2/sl2 mutant, flowers of GA3-treated plants bore no external ovules, possessed more yellow-pubescent stamens and fewer carpelloid stamens per flower, and produced laterally fused stamens. Stamen length at maturity was similar to normal flowers. In addition, viable pollen resembling the normal was produced in GA3-treated sl2/sl2 flowers. It was also found that GA3 was more effective than GA4+7 in inducing stamen development. Normal plants treated with GA3 produced multicarpellary and multilocular ovaries. Indoleacetic acid (IAA) induced the carpellization of stamens in sl2/sl2 flowers but had no apparent effect on the flowers of normal plants. It is proposed that added gibberellins promote maleness in systems where there is an inhibition or abnormality of stamen development, whereas they stimulate femaleness (possibly through an increase in auxin content) in systems with normal stamen development.Keywords
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