| Literature DB >> 11537478 |
A H Brown1, D K Chapman, R F Lewis, A L Venditti.
Abstract
The principal objective of the research reported here was to determine whether a plant's periodic growth oscillations, called circumnutations, would persist in the absence of a significant gravitational or inertial force. The definitive experiment was made possible by access to the condition of protracted near weightlessness in an earth satellite. The experiment, performed during the first flight of Spacelab on the National Aeronautics and Space Administration shuttle, Columbia, in November and December, 1983, tested a biophysical model, proposed in 1967, that might account for circumnutation as a gravity-dependent growth response. However, circumnutations were observed in microgravity. They continued for many hours without stimulation by a significant g-force. Therefore, neither a gravitational nor an inertial g-force was an absolute requirement for initiation [correction of initation] or continuation of circumnutation. On average, circumnutation was significantly more vigorous in satellite orbit than on earth-based clinostats. Therefore, at least for sunflower (Helianthus annuus L.) circumnutation, clinostatting is not the functional equivalent of weightlessness.Entities:
Keywords: NASA Discipline Number 00-00; NASA Discipline Number 29-20; NASA Discipline Plant Biology; NASA Program Flight; NASA Program Space Biology; Non-NASA Center
Mesh:
Year: 1990 PMID: 11537478 PMCID: PMC1077215 DOI: 10.1104/pp.94.1.233
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Plant Physiol ISSN: 0032-0889 Impact factor: 8.340