Characteristics of systemic growth activation by 9,10-ketol-12(Z),15(Z)-octadecadienoic acid (KODA) in Populus alba cultured in vitro
Mineyuki Yokoyama, Rumi Kaida, Kensuke Miyamoto, Yuichi Tada, Yoshiharu Fujii

TL;DR
This paper shows that KODA, a plant compound, promotes growth in white poplar plants grown in a lab by activating immature tissues.
Contribution
The novel finding is that KODA systemically activates growth in Populus alba by enhancing immature tissue development.
Findings
KODA treatment significantly increased primary root and aerial part growth in Populus alba.
KODA extended the length of specific stem internodes but did not affect total node number.
KODA's growth promotion is likely due to activation of immature tissues across all plant organs.
Abstract
α-Ketol octadecadienoic acid (KODA), an oxylipin, is generated from linolenic acid by 9-specific lipoxygenase, while jasmonic acid is ultimately synthesized from the same linolenic acid by 13-specific lipoxygenase. KODA has a unique action different from jasmonic acid, such as promotion of flower formation, activation of rooting, increase of shoot germinating in spring, and breaking endodormancy. We report here that KODA promotes the systemic growth in juvenile Populus alba cultured in vitro probably through the activation of immature tissue. Two newly growing shoots emerging from axillary buds of Populus alba shoots cultured in vitro, were cut off. One was immersed in 10 µM KODA for 3 min while the other in water as a control. The growth of the plants developing from the shoots was observed one month later. KODA strongly promoted the growth of the primary roots and the aerial parts, in…
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Taxonomy
TopicsPlant Molecular Biology Research · Plant tissue culture and regeneration · Plant Reproductive Biology
