The 36 mutants which did not nodulate and 24 mutants which formed inefficient nodules with no or very low acetylene reduction activity were isolated among 86,000 M2-seedlings of 'Finale' pea, Pisum sativum L., after treatment with chemical mutagens. One mutant was found for approximately every 50 chlorophyll mutants. Most mutations were induced by ethyl methanesulfonate; some by diethyl sulfate, ethyl nitrosourea and acidified sodium azide. Putative mutants were selected as nitrogen deficient plants, yellowing from the bottom and up, when M2 seedlings were grown in sand with a Rhizobium mixture and PK fertilizer. The mutants were verified in the M3 generation by acetylene reduction assay on intact plants.
Several indoleacetic acids, substituted in the benzene ring, were compared in the Avena straight growth bioassay. 4-Chloroindoleacetic acid, a naturally occurring plant hormone, is one of the strongest hormones in this bioassay. With an optimum at 10(-6) mol l(-1), it is more active than indoleacetic acid, 2,4-dichlorphenoxyacetic acid and naphthaleneacetic acid. 5-Chloro- and 6-chloroindoleacetic acids are very strong auxins as well. Other derivatives tested have a lower activity. 5,7-Dichloro- and 5-hydroxyindoleacetic acids have very low auxin activity at 10(-4) mol l(-1) and may be anti-auxins. Some of the derivatives were compared for their effect on pH decline in stem protoplast suspensions of Helianthus annuus L. and Pisum sativum L. The change of pH occurs without a lag period or with only a very short one. Derivatives which are very active in the Avena straight growth assay cause a larger pH decline than indoleacetic acid, while inactive derivatives cause effectively no pH decline.
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