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44 P.W. Barlow<br />

afferentnervousimpulsewithinthesomaticnervoussystem.Theredirected<br />

basipetal flow of auxin from the brain composed of root tip and its capenclosed<br />

sensory tissues is analogous to the efferent nervous impulse. In<br />

addition, the movement of auxin, either acropetally or basipetally, occurs<br />

in much the same way that animal neurotransmitter substances are moved<br />

from neuron to neuron by means of chemical synapses (Lodish et al. 2000).<br />

It seems that one consequence of the polarised flow of auxin towards the<br />

anterior root tip is that it leads to the regulation of auxin level by auxin<br />

catabolism in the quiescent centre. A second consequence is that a polarised<br />

flow can be redirected so that when an appropriate stimulus is perceived<br />

differential growth can be initiated. In the plant embryo, also, the flow<br />

of auxin is polarised towards the root tip (Friml et al. 2003), this being<br />

established after an early phase during which auxin transport is subject<br />

to maternal influence. In the embryo, therefore, the root tip can also be<br />

regarded as the anterior, or front end, of the plant. It is also worth noting<br />

that the root tip is often the first organ to emerge from a germinating seed –<br />

an anterior property akin to head-first emergence from hatching eggs or<br />

during mammalian parturition.<br />

Theseobservationsaboutanteriorityupsettheusualperceptionofthe<br />

plant where, because of its visibility and upward growth, a false preeminence<br />

is implied to the shoot. Some authors even explicitly regard<br />

the shoot as apical (anterior) and the root as basal (posterior) (Friml et al.<br />

2003). But, for the reasons mentioned, the converse may be a more valid<br />

conception of the plant, thereby vindicating Darwin’s remark about the<br />

anterior root.<br />

3.5<br />

Closing a Gap in Living Systems Theory<br />

The presence of a channel in the form of a cellular system which transports<br />

auxin either towards (in the xylem parenchyma) or away from (in the outer<br />

cortex and epidermis) the ‘brain’ of the root tip and its cap, together with<br />

the redefinition of the root tip as an anterior element of the plant, results<br />

in a congruence between plants and animals with respect not only to their<br />

morphology and anatomy but also to the way in which sensory information<br />

is processed. It follows that the theoretical analysis of living systems, as it<br />

applies to plants (Barlow 1999), can now be completed.<br />

Living systems theory was propounded by James Grier Miller, first alone<br />

(Miller 1978), then later in collaboration with his wife, Jessie Louise Miller<br />

(Miller and Miller 1981, 1995). In this theory, the organism and the social<br />

environment within which it lives and which it has helped to create<br />

are analysed into 20 subsystems. These subsystems in turn fall into

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