4-Chloroindole-3-acetic acid


4-Chloroindole-3-acetic acid is an organic compound that functions as a plant hormone.

Synopsis

It is a member of the class of compounds known as auxins and a chlorinated analogue of the more common indole-3-acetic acid auxin. 4-Cl-IAA is found in the seeds of a variety of plants, particularly legumes such as peas and broad beans. In one study it is written that the substance is "mainly found in reproductive structures" and "is thought to be restricted to members of the leguminous tribe Fabeae, specifically "the genera Vicia, Pisum, Lathyrus, Lens, and Vavilovia". In Pisum sativum, 4-Cl-IAA biosynthesis diverges from IAA biosynthesis when the amino acid tryptophan is chlorinated to form 4-chlorotryptophan ; the biosynthesis of 4-Cl-IAA then precedes parallel to that of IAA.
Engvild hypothesized in 1996 that 4-Cl-IAA may be a "death hormone" that maturing seeds use to trigger death of the parent plant by mobilizing nutrients to be stored in the seed.
Lam et al found the substance in the seeds of Medicago truncatula, Melilotus indicus, and three species of Trifolium.