Abstract
The stability and pool size of the growth-limiting proteins (GLP) of the Avena coleoptile have been studied by measuring the time required for cycloheximide to inhibit the growth of auxin-treated segments. Inhibition of growth follows inhibition of protein synthesis by 20–25 min regardless of the growth rate. This indicates that the growth inhibition is due to inherent instability of the GLP rather than to exhaustion of the pool through growth. A study of the amount and rate of auxin-induced growth which occurs when cycloheximide is added just before or after the auxin indicates that the rate of elongation is determined by the size of the GLP pool, and that the pool of GLP is low in the absence of auxin, but rapidly expands and reaches a maximum 20–25 min after addition of auxin. Three ways in which auxin might expand the pool of GLP are discussed.