Auxin-induced Ethylene Production and Its Inhibition by Aminoethyoxyvinylglycine and Cobalt Ion

Abstract
Auxin is known to stimulate greatly both C2H4 production and the conversion of methionine to ethylene in vegetative tissues, while amino-ethoxyvinylglycine (AVG) or Co2+ ion effectively block these processes. To identify the step in the ethylene biosynthetic pathway at which indoleacetic acid (IAA) and AVG exert their effects, [3-14C]methionine was administered to IAA or IAA-plus-AVG-treated mung bean hypocotyls, and the conversion of methionine to S-adenosylmethionine (SAM), 1-amino-cyclopropane-1-carboxylic acid (ACC), and C2H4 was studied. The conversion of methionine to SAM was unaffected by treatment with IAA or IAA plus AVG, but active conversion of methionine to ACC was found only in tissues which were treated with IAA and which were actively producing ethylene. AVG treatment abolished both the conversion of methionine to ACC and ethylene production. These results suggest that in the ethylene biosynthetic pathway (methionine → SAM → ACC → C2H4) IAA stimulates C2H4 production by inducing the synthesis or activation of ACC synthase, which catalyzes the conversion of SAM to ACC. Indeed, ACC synthase activity was detected only in IAA-treated tissues and its activity was completely inhibited by AVG. This conclusion was supported by the observation that endogenous ACC accumulated after IAA treatment, and that this accumulation was completely eliminated by AVG treatment. The characteristics of Co2+ inhibition of IAA-dependent and ACC-dependent ethylene production were similar. The data indicate that Co2+ exerts its effect by inhibiting the conversion of ACC to ethylene. This conclusion was further supported by the observation that when Co2+ was administered to IAA-treated tissues, endogenous ACC accumulated while ethylene production declined.