% IMPORTANT: The following is UTF-8 encoded. This means that in the presence % of non-ASCII characters, it will not work with BibTeX 0.99 or older. % Instead, you should use an up-to-date BibTeX implementation like “bibtex8” or % “biber”. @ARTICLE{Henkes:61831, author = {Henkes, G.J. and Thorpe, M. R. and Minchin, P. E. H. and Schurr, U. and Röse, U. S. R.}, title = {{J}asamonic acid treatment to part of the root system is consistent with simulated leaf herbivory, diverting recently assimilated carbon towards untreated roots within an hour}, journal = {Plant, cell $\&$ environment}, volume = {31}, issn = {0140-7791}, address = {Oxford [u.a.]}, publisher = {Wiley-Blackwell}, reportid = {PreJuSER-61831}, pages = {1229 - 1236}, year = {2008}, note = {We thank Marco Dautzenberg for his help in the preparation of <SUP>11</SUP>C tracer and plant labelling; and Gregoire Hummel and Arnaud Lanoue for their assistance and helpful discussions. This work emerged out of the Virtual Institute for Biotic Interactions (ViBi), which is financially funded by the Helmholtz Association of German Research Centres.}, abstract = {It is known that shoot application of jasmonic acid (JA) leads to an increased carbon export from leaves to stem and roots, and that root treatment with JA inhibits root growth. Using the radioisotope (11)C, we measured JA effects on carbon partitioning in sterile, split-root, barley plants. JA applied to one root half reduced carbon partitioning to the JA-treated tissue within minutes, whereas the untreated side showed a corresponding--but slower--increase. This response was not observed when instead of applying JA, the sink strength of one root half was reduced by cooling it: there was no enhanced partitioning to the untreated roots. The slower response in the JA-untreated roots, and the difference between the effect of JA and temperature, suggest that root JA treatment caused transduction of a signal from the treated roots to the shoot, leading to an increase in carbon allocation from the leaves to the untreated root tissue, as was indeed observed 10 min after the shoot application of JA. This supports the hypothesis that the response of some plant species to both leaf and root herbivores may be the diversion of resources to safer locations.}, keywords = {Analysis of Variance / Biological Transport: drug effects / Carbon: metabolism / Carbon Radioisotopes: metabolism / Cyclopentanes: pharmacology / Hordeum: drug effects / Hordeum: growth $\&$ development / Hordeum: metabolism / Oxylipins: pharmacology / Plant Growth Regulators: pharmacology / Plant Leaves: drug effects / Plant Leaves: growth $\&$ development / Plant Leaves: metabolism / Plant Roots: drug effects / Plant Roots: growth $\&$ development / Plant Roots: metabolism / Plant Shoots: drug effects / Plant Shoots: growth $\&$ development / Plant Shoots: metabolism / Signal Transduction: drug effects / Temperature / Carbon Radioisotopes (NLM Chemicals) / Cyclopentanes (NLM Chemicals) / Oxylipins (NLM Chemicals) / Plant Growth Regulators (NLM Chemicals) / jasmonic acid (NLM Chemicals) / Carbon (NLM Chemicals) / J (WoSType)}, cin = {ICG-3}, ddc = {570}, cid = {I:(DE-Juel1)ICG-3-20090406}, pnm = {Terrestrische Umwelt}, pid = {G:(DE-Juel1)FUEK407}, shelfmark = {Plant Sciences}, typ = {PUB:(DE-HGF)16}, pubmed = {pmid:18507808}, UT = {WOS:000258410600003}, doi = {10.1111/j.1365-3040.2008.01828.x}, url = {https://juser.fz-juelich.de/record/61831}, }