A Place in the Sun

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Plants can tell the difference between the shade of an inanimate object and the shade of another plant. When a plant detects competition from neighboring plants it initiates a set of responses called collectively the shade avoidance syndrome that alt ...
Plants can tell the difference between the shade of an inanimate object and the shade of another plant. When a plant detects competition from neighboring plants, it initiates a set of responses, called collectively the shade avoidance syndrome, that alter its growth and physiology. A rapid and transient increase of newly synthesized auxin via a newly discovered auxin synthesis pathway allows plants to elongate and grow toward the sun. Courtesy of Dr. Jean-Luc Ferrer, Salk Institute for Biological Studies

Those spindly plants that desperately try to reach for a break in the canopy formed by larger plants all suffer from the same affliction: Shade avoidance syndrome or SAS. Now, the molecular details of SAS have been brought to light by researchers at the Salk Institute for Biological Studies.


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