Naphthylphthalamic acid-binding sites in cultured cells from Nicotiana tabacum

1985 
Naphthylphthalamic acid (NPA), an inhibitor of polar auxin transport, binds with high affinity to membrane preparations from callus and cell suspension cultures derived from Nicotiana tabacum (K d approx. 2·10−9 M). The concentration of membrane-bound binding sites is higher in cell suspension than in callus cultures. The binding of NPA to these sites seems to be a simple process, in contrast to the binding of the synthetic auxin naphthylacetic acid (1-NAA) to membrane preparations from callus cultures, which is more complex (A.C. Maan et al., 1983, Planta 158, 10–15). Naphthylacetic acid, a number of structurally related compounds and the auxin-transport inhibitor triiodobenzoic acid were all able to compete with NPA for the same binding site with K d values ranging from 10−6 to 10−4 M. On the other hand, NPA was not able to displace detectable amounts of NAA from the NAA-binding site. A possible explantation is the existence of two different membrane-bound binding sites, one exclusively for auxins and one for NPA as well as auxins, that differ in concentration. The NPA-binding site is probably an auxin carrier.
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