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1.
The giant marine alga Valonia utricularis is capable of regulating its turgor pressure in response to changes in the osmotic pressure of the sea water. The turgor pressure response comprises two phases, a fast, exponential phase arising exclusively from water shifting between the vacuole and the external medium (time constant about 10 min) and a second very slow, almost exponential phase adjusting (but not always) the turgor pressure near to the original value by release or uptake of KCl (time constant about 5 h). The changes in the vacuolar membrane potential as well as in the individual conductances of the tonoplast and plasmalemma accompanying turgor pressure regulation were measured by using the vacuolar perfusion assembly (with integrated microelectrodes, pressure transducers and pressure‐regulating valves) as described by Wang et al. (J. Membrane Biology 157, 311–321, 1997). Measurements on pressure‐clamped cells gave strong evidence that the turgor pressure, but not effects related to water flow (i.e. electro‐osmosis or streaming potential) or changes in the internal osmotic pressure and in the osmotic gradients, triggers the cascade of osmotic and electrical events recorded after disturbance of the osmotic equilibrium. The findings definitely exclude the existence of osmosensors as postulated for other plant cells and bacteria. There was also evidence that turgor pressure signals were primarily sensed by ion transporters in the vacuolar membrane because conductance changes were first recorded in the many‐folded tonoplast and then significantly delayed in the plasmalemma independent of the direction of the osmotic challenge. Consistently, turgor pressure up‐regulation (but not down‐regulation) could be inhibited reversibly by external addition of the K+ transport inhibitor Ba2+ and/or by the Cl transport inhibitor 4,4′‐diisothiocyanatostilbene‐2,2′‐disulfonic acid (DIDS). Extensive studies under iso‐, hyper‐ and hypo‐osmotic conditions revealed that K+ and Cl contribute predominantly to the plasmalemma conductance. Addition of 0.3 mm NaCN showed further that part of the K+ and Cl transporters depended on ATP. These transporters are apparently up‐regulated upon hyper‐osmotic, but not hypo‐osmotic challenge. These findings explain the strong increase of the K+ influx upon lowering turgor pressure and the less pronounced pressure‐dependence of the Cl influx of V. utricularis reported in the literature. The data derived from the blockage experiments under hypo‐osmotic conditions were also equally consistent with the experimental findings that the K+ efflux is solely passive and progressively increases with increasing turgor pressure due to an increase of the volumetric elastic modulus of the cell wall. However, despite unravelling some of the sequences and other components involved in turgor pressure regulation of V. utricularis the co‐ordination between the ion transporters in the tonoplast and plasmalemma remains unresolved because of the failure to block the tonoplast transporters by addition of Ba2+ and DIDS from the vacuolar side.  相似文献   

2.
The growing cells of hydroponic maize roots expand at constant turgor pressure (0.48 MPa) both when grown in low-(0.5 mol m-3 CaCl2) or full-nutrient (Hoagland's) solution and also when seedlings are stressed osmotically (0.96 MPa mannitol). Cell osmotic pressure decreases by 0.1–0.2 MPa during expansion. Despite this, total solute influx largely matches the continuously-varying volume expansion-rate of each cell. K+ in the non-osmotically stressed roots is a significant exception-its concentration dropping by 50% regardless of the presence or absence of K+ in the nutrient medium. This corresponds to the drop in osmotic pressure. Nitrate appears to replace Cl- in the Hoagland-grown cells.Analogous insensitivity of solute gradients to external solutes is observed in the radial distribution of water and solutes in the cortex 12 mm from the tip. Uniform turgor and osmotic pressures are accompanied by opposite gradients of K+ and Cl-, outwards, and hexoses and amino acids, inwards, for plants grown in either 0.5 mol m-3 CaCl2 or Hoagland's solution (with negligible Cl-). K+ and Cl- levels within both gradients were slightly higher when the ions were available in the medium. The gradients themselves are independent of the direction of solute supply. In CaCl2 solution all other nutrients must come from the stele, in Hoagland's solution inorganic solutes are available in the medium.24 h after osmotic stress, turgor pressure is recovered at all points in each gradient by osmotic adjustment using organic solutes. Remarkably, K+ and Cl- levels hardly change, despite their ready availability. Hexoses are responsible for some 50% of the adjustment with mannitol for a further 30%. Some 20% of the final osmotic pressure remains to be accounted for. Proline and sucrose are not significantly involved. Under all conditions a standing water potential step of 0.2 MPa between the rhizodermis and its hydroponic medium was found. We suggest that this is due to solute leakage.Abbreviations EDX energy dispersive X-ray microanalysis - water potential - 11-1 cell osmotic pressure - P turgor pressure  相似文献   

3.
When turgor was increased, by decreasing the concentration of mannitol bathing discs of sugar beet storage root tissue, the rates of sucrose and potassium uptake into the vacuole were decreased. At all external mannitol concentrations the rate of sucrose and potassium uptake across the plasma membrane was an order of magnitude greater than the rate of quasi-steady uptake into the vacuole, implying a very large efflux. Efflux of both sucrose and potassium was increased at high turgor. However, while increasing turgor decreased the rate of K+ uptake, the rate of sucrose uptake at the plasma membrane increased with time. Compartmental analysis of tracer exchange kinetics was used to determine unidirectional K+ fluxes. From these results, it was estimated that the increase in K+ efflux accompanying a 1.5 MPa increase in turgor could lead to a net increase of 140mol?3h?1 in the external potassium concentration. It is suggested that the turgor-imposed increase in solute efflux is a means of regulating intracellular osmotic pressure and/or turgor in sugar beet storage roots, but that sucrose is preferentially retrieved from the apoplast, even under conditions of excessively high turgor. However, much of this sucrose is probably lost from the cell, implying a ‘futile’ sucrose transport cycle at the plasma membrane. The turgor-stimulated leak of potassium could play a major role in the regulation of turgor pressure in sugar beet storage root tissue.  相似文献   

4.
Osmotic regulation of assimilate efflux from excised coats of developing Vicia faba (cv. Coles Prolific) seed was examined by exposing these to bathing solutions (adjusted to –0. 02 to –0. 75 MPa with sorbitol) introduced into the cavity vacated by the embryo. 14C photosynthate efflux was found to be independent of solution osmotic potentials below –0. 63 MPa. At higher osmotic potentials, efflux was stimulated and exhibited a biphasic response to osmotic potential with apparent saturation being reached at –0. 37 MPa. Efflux could be repeatedly stimulated and slowed by exposing seed coats to solutions of high and low osmotic potentials, respectively. Manipulation of components of tissue water potential, with slowly- and rapidly-permeating osmotica, demonstrated that turgor functioned as the signal regulating 14C photosynthate efflux. Com-partmental analysis of 14C photosynthate preloaded seed coats was consistent with exchange from 4 kinetically-distinct compartments. The kinetics of turgor-dependent efflux exhibited characteristics consistent with the transport mechanism residing in the plasma membranes of the unloading cells. These characteristics included the rapidity (<2 min) of the efflux response to turgor increases, similar rate constants for efflux from the putative turgor-sensitive and cytoplasmic compartments and the apparent small pool size from which turgor-dependent efflux could repeatedly occur. In contrast, influx of [14C] sucrose across the plasma and tonoplast membranes was found to be insensitive to turgor. The plasma membrane [14C] sucrose influx was unaffected by p-chloromercuribenzenesulfonic acid and erythrosin B and exhibited a linear dependence on the external sucrose concentration. This behaviour suggested that influx across the plasma membrane occurs by passive diffusion. Preloading excised seed coats with a range of solutes demonstrated that turgor-dependent efflux exhibited partial solute selectivity. Based on these findings, it is proposed that turgor controls assimilate exchange from the seed coat by regulating an efflux mechanism located in the plasma membranes of the unloading cells.  相似文献   

5.
Guard cell solution osmotic potential changes resulting in the opening and closing of stomata apertures follow an initial influx of potassium ions, their substitution with sucrose molecules and the subsequent reduction of the latter. To provide an insight into the osmotic mechanism of the changes, the new equation for calculating osmotic pressure, which equates the difference between the energy of pure water across a semi-permeable membrane interface with that of solution water, was used to compare the osmotic properties of KCl and sucrose. For sucrose solutions, the effect of the sucrose molecules in increasing the spacing of the solution water was mainly responsible for osmotic potential; this contrasted with K+ + Cl? ions where their spacing effect was only a little higher to that of water held to those ions. At solute concentrations giving an osmotic potential level of ?3.0 MPa near that of turgid guard cells, the spacing effect on the potential of the unattached solution water molecules caused by sucrose, but in its theoretical absence, was estimated as ?2.203 MPa compared with ?1.431 MPa for KCl. In contrast, the potential attributed to water molecules firmly held to the K+ + Cl? ions was ?1.212 MPa versus zero for sucrose. The potential to keep the sucrose molecules in solution was ?0.797 MPa compared with ?0.357 MPa for KCl. The findings illustrate that the way KCl effects osmotic pressure is very different to that of sucrose. It is concluded that stomata aperture modulation is closely linked to the osmotic properties of its guard cell solution solutes.  相似文献   

6.
Summary The marine algaValonia macrophysa an inhabitant of shallow subtropical waters, is subjected to sudden dilutions of external seawater during rain showers. This study describes the mechanisms involved in turgor pressure regulation following acute hyposmotic shock. Turgor regulation is 88% effective and complete within 4 hr following hyposmotic shocks of up to –10 bar. Loss of vacuolar K+, Na+ and Cl accounts for the decrease in vacuolar osmotic pressure associated with turgor regulation. A novel mechanism of turgor regulation is exhibited byValonia macrophysa given hyposmotic shocks greater than about –4 bar. Such an osmotic shock causes cell wall tension to increase above a critical value of about 6×105 dyne/cm, whereupon the protoplasm ruptures and the cell wall stretches irreversibly at a localized site. The protoplasm rupture is suggested by (1) a large abrupt increase in K+ efflux (as measured by86Rb+), (2) a rapid decrease in turgor pressure as measured with a pressure probe, and (3) sudden depolarization of the vacuole potential. Evidence for an increase in cell wall permeability includes efflux from the vacuole of dextran (mol wt 70,000), which normally has a very low cell wall permeability, and scanning electron micrographs which show a trabeculated scar area in the cell wall. This mechanism of turgor regulation is physiologically important because 98% of the cells regained normal growth rate and turgor following acute osmotic shock.  相似文献   

7.
The pulvinus of bean (Phaseolus vulgaris L) responds to unilateral photo-excitation by phototropic curvature. Osmotically active solutes and water are transported from its exposed to the opposite sector of its motor tissue, resulting in differential changes in turgor pressure in these sectors and generation of a trans-pulvinar torque. A null-point approach was used to non-invasively study these dynamic changes in the terminal leaflet of bean. A variable torque was applied perpendicular to the midrib, to restrain laminar movement by precisely and continuously counteracting the generated torque. This equilibrium prevented curvature of the pulvinus and the associated opposite axial changes in volume in the opposite sectors of its motor tissue. The laminar torques measured were used to estimate stresses (changes in turgor pressure) generated within the motor tissue. These stress values were used to derive the corresponding changes in osmotic pressures and in solute concentration. Skotonastically downfolded leaflets were excited with white light to study their combined dynamic response to photonastic and phototropic excitation. Photonastically unfolded (horizontal) leaflets were excited with blue and red light, alone and in combination, to determine the spectral dependence of the dynamic pulvinar responses tophototropic excitation by itself.  相似文献   

8.
Summary Embryos of Pelvetia fastigiata De Toni respond to sudden decreases in osmotic pressure by driving characteristic current pulses through themselves. One group of pulses occurs immediately after the pressure decrease and another often follows about 1 h later. While there is a measurable response to decreases as small as 3%, a far larger response occurs above a threshold change of 8–10%. These pulses involve an efflux of Cl and K+ ions which approximately restores the original turgor pressure.  相似文献   

9.
Abstract Methods were developed for measuring water content of the free space of suspension-cultured tobacco cells using 3H- or 14C-sorbitol. Sorbitol was not taken up by cells in significant quantities over the 3 min taken to label free space. Free space accounted for 50–60% of the water content of cell pellets irrespective of whether 3H- or 14-C-sorbitol was used. 14C-inulin labelled 13.5% less of the water in cell pellets than 3H-sorbitol, probably due to inadequate penetration by inulin into the free space in the cell wall matrix and within clumps of cells. Measurement of free space is necessary for measuring growth on a fresh or dry weight basis, solute concentrations and parameters of water relations of cells. Techniques for making these measurements on tobacco cells were also developed in this study. Solutes were measured after extraction from cells by expressing sap or by boiling cells in ethanol. Similar solute concentrations were found using both methods of extraction. By expressing sap from cells grown in culture medium with an osmotic pressure of 0.24 MPa, the cells were found to have an internal osmotic pressure of 0.70 MPa. Glucose, fructose, sucrose, amino acids and K+ accounted for 60% of this osmotic pressure. Elastic moduli were estimated using the Boyle-Van't Hoff relationship after suspending cells in solutions with different osmotic pressures and assessing their water content or internal osmotic pressure. For two different lines of tobacco cells, elastic modulus varied between 1 MPa and 5.4 MPa at turgor pressures of 0.15–0.52 MPa (line 1) and between 0.2 MPa and 4.2 MPa at turgor pressures of 0.04–0.26 MPa (line 2).  相似文献   

10.
Stomata are light‐activated biological valves in the otherwise gas‐impermeable epidermis of aerial organs of higher plants. Stomata often regulate rates of photosynthesis and transpiration in ways that optimize whole‐plant carbon gain against water loss. Each stoma is flanked by a pair of opposing guard cells. Stomatal opening occurs by light‐activated increases in the turgor pressure of guard cells, which causes them to change shape so that the stomatal pore between them widens. These increases in turgor pressure oppose increases in cellular osmotic pressure that result from uptake of K+. K+ uptake occurs by a chemiosmotic mechanism in response to light‐activated extrusion of H+ outward across the plasma membrane of the guard cell. The initial changes in cellular membrane potential lead to the opening of inward‐rectifying K+ channels, after which K+ is taken up along its electrochemical gradient. Changes in membrane potential resulting from K+ uptake may be balanced by accumulation of Cl?ions by guard cells and/or by synthesis of malic acid within each cell. Malic acid also acts to buffer increases in cytosolic pH caused by H+ extrusion. This review describes how the application of patch‐clamp technology to guard cell protoplasts has enabled investigators to elucidate the mechanisms by which H+ is extruded from guard cells, the types of ion channels present in the guard cell plasma membrane, how those ion channels are regulated, and the signal transduction processes that trigger stomatal opening and closing.  相似文献   

11.
We review electrophysiological measures of turgor regulation in some siphonous green algae, primarily the giant-celled marine algae, Valonia and Ventricaria, with particular comparison to the well studied charophyte algae Chara and Lamprothamnium. The siphonous green algae have a less negative plasma membrane potential, and are unlikely to have a proton-based chemiosmotic transport system, dominated by active electrogenic K+ uptake. We also make note of the unusual cellular structure of the siphonous green algae. Hypertonic stress, due to increased external osmotic pressure, is accompanied by positive-going potential difference (PD), increase in conductance, and slow turgor regulation. The relationship between these is not yet resolved, but may involve changes in K+ conductance (G K) or active K+ transport at both membranes. Hypotonic turgor regulation, in response to decreased external osmotic pressure, is ∼3 times faster than hypertonic turgor regulation. It is accompanied by a negative-going PD, although conductance also increases. The conductance increase and the magnitude of the PD change are strongly correlated with the magnitude of hypotonic stress.  相似文献   

12.
Concentrations of ions and sucrose in the vacuolar sap of Chara canescens growing in an oligohaline lake (1.5 ‰) were estimated over the main growth period of the plants. During fructification vacuolar sap contained a mean of 41 mol m?3 (range 10.2–61.8) sucrose. The mean turgor pressure was 239 mosmol kg?1 (range 219–264). In long- and short-term experiments these plants were subjected to increasing salinities up to 22 ‰. When salinity was increased from 1.5 to 4.4 ‰ turgor pressure was restored to only 80 % of the initial value. This reduced level of turgor pressure was maintained up to a salinity of 22 ‰. The increase in vacuolar osmotic potential was due to the monovalent ions Na+, K+ and Cl?. The relative amounts of Na+ and K+ participating in the regulation process were dependent on external salinity. The regulatory mechanisms observed in the brackish water species Ch. canescens are compared with those reported from freshwater and euryhaline species.  相似文献   

13.
Fungi normally maintain a high internal hydrostatic pressure (turgor) of about 500 kPa. In response to hyperosmotic shock, there are immediate electrical changes: a transient depolarization (1 to 2 min) followed by a sustained hyperpolarization (5 to 10 min) prior to turgor recovery (10 to 60 min). Using ion-selective vibrating probes, we established that the transient depolarization is due to Ca2+ influx and the sustained hyperpolarization is due to H+ efflux by activation of the plasma membrane H+-ATPase. Protein synthesis is not required for H+-ATPase activation. Net K+ and Cl uptake occurs at the same time as turgor recovery. The magnitude of the ion uptake is more than sufficient to account for the osmotic gradients required for turgor to return to its original level. Two osmotic mutants, os-1 and os-2, homologs of a two-component histidine kinase sensor and the yeast high osmotic glycerol mitogen-activated protein (MAP) kinase, respectively, have lower turgor than the wild type and do not exhibit the sustained hyperpolarization after hyperosmotic treatment. The os-1 mutant does not exhibit all of the wild-type turgor-adaptive ion fluxes (Cl uptake increases, but net K+ flux barely changes and net H+ efflux declines) (os-2 was not examined). Both os mutants are able to regulate turgor but at a lower level than the wild type. Our results demonstrate that a MAP kinase cascade regulates ion transport, activation of the H+-ATPase, and net K+ and Cl uptake during turgor regulation. Other pathways regulating turgor must also exist.  相似文献   

14.
Roger A. Leigh  A. Deri Tomos 《Planta》1983,159(5):469-475
Vacuoles isolated from red beet (Beta vulgaris L.) storage roots contain Na+ and K+ but their analysis does not give reliable information about the size of vacuolar pools of these ions in vivo. Analyses of isolated vacuoles indicated that between 53% and 90% of the Na+ was located in the vacuole and that the vacuolar concentrations of Na+ ranged between 4 and 45 mol m-3. Calculated concentrations of K+ in the vacuoles varied between 32 and 72 mol m-3 but, in contrast to Na+, only about 50% of the K+ was located in the vacuole. Considerations of the likely cytoplasmic concentrations of Na+ and K+ suggest that if these results indicate conditions in vivo a large proportion of these ions must be located in the extracellular space, where they would exert considerable osmotic pressure. To test this, the effect of washing on cell turgor (measured directly with a pressure probe) and on loss of Na+ and K+ was determined. Washing caused an increase in turgor of 5 bar but losses of Na+ and K+ were less than predicted by the experiments with isolated vacuoles. It is concluded that beet vacuoles leak Na+ and K+ when isolated resulting in an underestimation of the size of vacuolar pools of these cations in vivo. Nonetheless, the turgor measurements provide evidence for the presence of osmotically active solute in the extracellular space. The possible contribution of extracellular Na+ and K+ to the observed turgor reduction is calculated and the physiological importance of the accumulation of extracellular solutes is discussed.  相似文献   

15.
Summary Osmotic responses of slices of dogfish rectal gland to hypotonic (urea-free) and hypertonic media were studied. Transfer of tissue from isotonic (890 mosM) to hypotonic (550 mosM) saline produced an osmotic swelling associated with a slow net uptake of cell K+ (and Cl) and a slow, two-component efflux of urea. Media made hypertonic (1180 mosM) by addition of urea or mannitol produced osmotic shrinkage with a net loss of KCl. The cell osmotic responses in hypotonic media were lower than predicted for an ideal osmometer. No volume regulatory responses were seen subsequent to the initial osmotic effects. The cation influx in hypotonic media lacked specificity: in the presence of 0.5 mM ouabain or in K+-free media a net influx of Na+ was found. At steady state, the cell membrane potential evaluated from the Nernst potentials of K+ and triphenylmethyl phosphonium+, was independent of medium tonicity, suggesting the membrane potential as a determinant in the cellular osmotic response. Zero-time86Rb+ fluxes were measured:86Rb+ influx was not affected by hypotonicity, implying an unchanged operation of the Na+–K+-ATPase. On the other hand,86Rb+ efflux was significantly reduced at hypotonicity; this effect was transient, the efflux returning to the control value once the new steady state of cell volume had been reached. A controlled efflux system is therefore involved in the cell osmotic response. The absence of the volume regulatory phenomenon suggests that the cells are not equipped with a volume-sensing mechanism.Abbreviations and symbols DW dry weight - E extracellular (polyethylene glycol) space - E Nernst potential - H2Oe H2Oi tissue water, extra- and intracellular - TPMP + triphenyl methyl phosphonium salt - WW wet weight  相似文献   

16.
细胞内离子在气孔运动中的作用   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
高巍  尚忠林 《植物学报》2010,45(5):632-639
气孔运动与植物水分代谢密切相关。保卫细胞中的无机离子作为第二信使(Ca2+)或者渗透调节物质(K+、Cl)在响应 外界理化因子的刺激、调节保卫细胞膨压过程中发挥重要作用。保卫细胞质膜和液泡膜上的离子通道作为各种刺激因素作 用的靶位点, 是保卫细胞离子转运的关键组分, 在气孔运动调控过程中扮演关键角色。该文对近年来保卫细胞离子的作用 和离子通道研究的进展进行了综述。  相似文献   

17.
The internal hydrostatic pressure (turgor) of the filamentous fungus Neurospora crassa is regulated at about 400–500 kiloPascals, primarily by an osmotic MAP kinase cascade which activates ion uptake from the extracellular medium and glycerol synthesis. In the absence of hyperosmotic stress, the phenylpyrrole fungicide fludioxonil activates the osmotic MAP kinase cascade, resulting in cell death. Turgor, the electrical potential and net ion fluxes were measured after treatment with fludioxonil. In wildtype, fludioxonil causes a hyperpolarization of the plasma membrane and net H+ efflux from the cell, consistent with activation of the H+-ATPase. At the same time, net K+ uptake occurs, and turgor increases (about 2-fold above normal levels). None of these changes are observed in the os–2 mutant (which lacks a functional MAP kinase, the last of the three kinases in the osmotic MAP kinase cascade). Tip growth ceases as hyperpolarization, net ion flux changes, and turgor increases begin. The inappropriate turgor increase is the probable cause of eventual lysis and death. The results corroborate a multi-pathway response to hyperosmotic stress that includes activation of plasma membrane transport. The relation to cell expansion (tip growth) is not direct. Increases in turgor due to ion transport might be expected to increase growth rate, but this does not occur. Instead, there must be a complex regulatory interplay between the growth and the turgor driving force, possibly mediated by regulation of cell wall extensibility.  相似文献   

18.
Methyl jasmonate (MeJA) elicits stomatal closure in many plant species. Stomatal closure is accompanied by large ion fluxes across the plasma membrane (PM). Here, we recorded the transmembrane ion fluxes of H+, Ca2+ and K+ in guard cells of wild‐type (Col‐0) Arabidopsis, the CORONATINE INSENSITIVE1 (COI1) mutant coi1‐1 and the PM H+‐ATPase mutants aha1‐6 and aha1‐7, using a non‐invasive micro‐test technique. We showed that MeJA induced transmembrane H+ efflux, Ca2+ influx and K+ efflux across the PM of Col‐0 guard cells. However, this ion transport was abolished in coi1‐1 guard cells, suggesting that MeJA‐induced transmembrane ion flux requires COI1. Furthermore, the H+ efflux and Ca2+ influx in Col‐0 guard cells was impaired by vanadate pre‐treatment or PM H+‐ATPase mutation, suggesting that the rapid H+ efflux mediated by PM H+‐ATPases could function upstream of the Ca2+ flux. After the rapid H+ efflux, the Col‐0 guard cells had a longer oscillation period than before MeJA treatment, indicating that the activity of the PM H+‐ATPase was reduced. Finally, the elevation of cytosolic Ca2+ concentration and the depolarized PM drive the efflux of K+ from the cell, resulting in loss of turgor and closure of the stomata.  相似文献   

19.
Abstract: A new combined turgor/membrane potential probe (T-EP probe) monitored cell turgor and membrane potential simultaneously in single giant cells. The new probe consisted of a silicone oil-filled micropipette (oil-microelectrode), which conducted electric current. Measurements of turgor and hydraulic conductivity were performed as with the conventional cell pressure probe besides the membrane potential. In internodal cells of Chara corallina, steady state turgor (0.5-0.7 MPa) and resting potentials (-200 to ?220 mV) in APW, and hydraulic conductivity (0.07 to 0.21 × 10~5 m s?1 MPa?1) were measured with the new probe, and cells exhibited healthy cytoplasmic streaming for at least 24 h during measurements. When internodal cells of Chara corallina were treated with 30, 20, 10, and 5 mM KCI, turgor responded immediately to all concentrations, and the osmotic changes in the medium were measured. Action potentials, which brought the membrane potential to a steady depolarization that measured the concentration difference of K+ in the medium, were induced in a concentration — dependent delay and occurred only 30, 20, and 10 mM of KCl. When the solution was changed back to APW, the repolarization of membrane potential consisted of a quick and a following slow phase. During the quick phase, which took place immediately and lasted 1 to 3 min, the plasma membrane remained activated. The membrane was gradually deactivated in the slow phase, and entirely deactivated when the membrane potential recovered to the resting potential in APW. Although the activated plasma membrane was permeable to K+, no major ion channels were activated on the tonoplast, and therefore, internodal cells of Chara corallina did not regulate turgor when osmotic potential changed in the surrounding medium.  相似文献   

20.
Summary Using a pressure probe, turgor pressure was directly determined in leaf-mesophyll cells and the giant epidermal bladder cells of stems, petioles and leaves of the halophilic plant Mesembryanthemum crystallinum. Experimental plants were grown under non-saline conditions. They displayed the photosynthetic characteristics typical of C3-plants when 10 weeks old and performed weak CAM when 16 weeks old. In 10 week old plants, the turgor pressure (P) of bladder cells of stems was 0.30 MPa; of bladder cells of petioles 0.19 MPa, and of bladder cells of leaves 0.04 MPa. In bladder cells from leaves of 16 week old plants, marked changes in turgor pressure were observed during day/night cycles. Maximum turgor occurred at noon and was paralleled by a decrease in the osmotic pressure of the bladder cell sap. Similar changes in the cell water relations were observed in plants in which traspirational water loss was prevented by high ambient relative humidity. Turgor pressure of mesophyll cells also increased during day-time showing macimum values in the early morning. No such changes in turgor pressure and osmotic pressure were observed in bladder and mesophyll cells of the 10 week old plants not showing the diurnal acid fluctuation typical of CAMAbbreviations CAM crassulacean acid metabolism - V volume of the cells (mm3) - P turgor pressure (MPa) - volumetric elastic modulus (MPa) - i osmotic pressure of the cell sap (MPa) - T 1/2 half-time of water exchange (s) - Lp hydraulic conductivity of the cell membrane (m·s-1·MPa-1) - A surface area of cells (mm2) - P pressure changes (MPa) - V volume changes (mm3) - nocturanal nighttime - diurnal daytime  相似文献   

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