共查询到20条相似文献,搜索用时 0 毫秒
1.
Roots of Zea mays were maintained in a vertical orhorizontal position and the local elongation rate and H+ fluxes were measured using Sephadex beads containing a pH indicator. When the roots were kept horizontally, the growth of the lower side was strongly inhibited and that of the upper side slightly stimulated as compared with vertical roots. The H+ extrusion, which was greatest in the elongation zone, was strongly inhibited on the lower side and slightly stimulated on the upper side as compared with vertical roots. 相似文献
2.
Rotation of unstimulated maize (Zea mays L.) seedlings on a horizontal clinostat is accompanied by a strong bending response of the coleoptiles towards the caryopsis, yielding curvatures exceding 100°. The corresponding azimuthal distribution shows two peaks, each of which is displayed by 30° from the symmetry axis connecting the shortest coleoptile and caryopsis cross sections. It is argued that this spatial pattern is not the result of two independent bending preferences, but caused by a one-peaked distribution encountering an obstacle in its central part and thus being split into the two subpeaks. The existence of one preferential direction justifies considering this response to be a nastic movement. Its time course consists of an early negative phase (coleoptiles bend away from the caryopsis) followed 2 h later by a longlasting positive bending towards the caryopsis. In light-interaction experiments, fluence-response curves for different angles between blue light and the direction of the nastic response were measured. These experiments indicate that blue light interacts with the nastic response at two levels: (i) phototonic inhibition, and (ii) addition of nastic and phototropic curvatures. It is concluded that phototropic and phototonic transduction bifurcate before the formation of phototropic transverse polarity. The additivity of nastic and phototropic responses was followed at the population level. At the level of the individual seedling, one observes, in the case of phototropic induction opposing nastic movement, three distinct responses: either strong phototropism, or nastic bending, or an avoidance response which involves strong curvature perpendicular to the stimulation plane. With time the nastic bending becomes increasingly stable against opposing phototropic stimulation. This can be seen from a growing proportion of seedlings exhibiting nastic bending when light is applied at variable intervals after the onset of clinostat rotation. At the transition from instability to stability, this type of experiment produces a high percentage of seedlings displaying the avoidance response. However, no cancelling resulting in zero curvature can be observed. It is concluded that the endogenous polarity underlying the nastic response is different in its very nature from the blue-light-elicited stable transverse polarity described earlier (Nick and Schäfer 1988 b).Abbreviation BL
blue light (449 nm) 相似文献
3.
Photo- or gravitropic stimulation of graminean coleoptiles involves the formation of putative tropistic transverse polarities. It had been postulated that these polarities can be extended by stabilization to developmentally active polarities. Such polarities are known from unicellular spores and zygotes of lower plants and regeneration experiments in dicotyledonous plants. In coleoptiles, photo- or gravitropic stimulation results in stability to counterstimulation of equal strength (with only transient bending in the direction of the second stimulus), as a result of a directional memory, if the time interval between both stimuli exceeds 90 min. This directional memory develops from a labile precursor, which is present from at least 20 min after induction. Once it is stable, spatial memory is conserved for many hours. The formation of spatial memory involves at least one step not present in the common tropistic transduction chain. The spatial expression of memory as curvature is restricted to three distinct responses: (i) curving in the direction of the first stimulus (for time intervals exceeding 90 min); (ii) curving in the direction of the second stimulus (for time intervals shorter than 65 min); and (iii) zero-curvature (for time intervals between 65 and 90 min). This can be interpreted in terms of a stable transverse polarity, which is not identical with the putative tropistic transverse polarity, but might be an extension of it. 相似文献
4.
Interaction of gravi- and phototropic stimulation in the response of maize (Zea mays L.) coleoptiles 总被引:3,自引:0,他引:3
The influence of gravitropic stimulation upon blue-light-induced first positive phototropism for stimulations in the same (light source and center of gravity opposite to each other) and in opposing directions was investigated in maize cole-optiles by measuring fluence-response patterns. As a result of gravitropic counterstimulation, phototropic bending was transient with maximum curvature occurring 100 min after stimulation. On a horizontal clinostat, however, the seedlings curved for 20 h. Gravistimulation in the opposite direction acted additively upon blue-light curvature. Gravistimulation in the same direction as phototropic stimulation produced a complex behaviour deviating from simple additivity. This pattern can be explained by a gravitropically mediated sensitization of the phototropic reaction, an optimal dependence of differential growth on the sum of photo-and gravistimulation, and blue-light-induced inhibition of gravitropic curvature at high fluences. These findings indicate that several steps of photo-and gravitransduction are separate. Preirradiation with red light desensitized the system independently of applied gravity-treatment, indicating that the site of red-light interaction is common to both transduction chains.Abbreviations BL
blue light
- G+
stimulation by light and gravity in the same direction (i.e. light source and center of gravity opposite to each other)
- G-
stimulation by light and gravity in opposing directions 相似文献
5.
In illuminated maize (Zea mays L.) leaves, the distribution of triose phosphates, 3-phosphoglycerate, malate and various amino acids between the chloroplastic and the extrachloroplastic compartments of mesophyll and bundle-sheath cells, and the total vacuolar fraction of the leaves, was determined by a combination of previously published methods, for separating mesophyll from bundle-sheath material, and for nonaqueous subcellular fractionation. The results show that the triose phosphate/3-phosphoglycerate ratio in the extrachloroplastic fraction of the mesophyll cells is about 20-fold higher than in the bundle-sheath cells, which is in accordance with a triose phosphate/phosphoglycerate shuttle postulated previously. Whereas the vacuolar compartment was shown to contain most of the cellular malate, amino acids were found to be almost absent from this compartment. The amino-acid pattern in the extrachloroplastic fraction of the bundle-sheath cells largely resembled the pattern in whole leaves. These results show that for future studies the analysis of amino-acid contents in whole maize leaves can be used as a measure for the amino-acid levels in the cytosol of bundle-sheath cells.Abbreviations BS
bundle sheath
- Chl
chlorophyll
- Man
-mannosidase
- ME
malic enzyme
- MDH
malate dehydrogenase
- MS
mesophyll
- PEPCase
phosphoenolpyruvate carboxylase
- PGA
3-phosphoglycerate
- trioseP
triose phosphate
This work was supported by the Bundesminister für Forschung und Technologie. 相似文献
6.
Phytochrome was determined in small sections of maize (Zea mays L.) seedlings by means of a highly specific double sandwich enzyme immunoassay which uses a monoclonal anti-phytochrome antibody for binding phytochrome and anti-phytochrome serum to detect the bound phytochrome. The distribution of phytochrome in maize seedlings was followed from germination to the 7th d after soaking the caryopses. Regions of high phytochrome accumulation were found in the coleoptile tip, the root cap and the shoot apex: the values for 5-d-old seedlings were 120, 80 and 70 g phytochrome per g fresh weight (or 0.91, 0.61 and 0.53 nmol·g-1), respectively. The mesocotyl and the leaves contained relatively low amounts of phytochrome (less than 10 g·g-1FW), which were almost uniformly distributed throughout these organs. As might be expected, regions of these organs adjacent to the shoot apex showed higher levels. The root, other than root tip, was almost devoid of phytochrome (0.2 to 0.5 g·g-1). The general distribution of phytochrome in organs did not change during the development of seedlings. The amount of phytochrome, however, did fluctuate: up to the 5th or 6th d after soaking the caryopses, the levels increased in the regions of high phytochrome accumulation but thereafter decreased. After the 6th d the roots were 15 cm or longer and the coleoptiles became prone to penetration by primary leaves. The tips of adventitious roots, emerging after the 6th d, were also found to contain phytochrome. When the root cap was illuminated (4.3 W·m-1), phytochrome was degraded as in illuminated shoots. Degradation of phytochrome in coleoptile, mesocotyl and shoot apex started with a lag phase but phytochrome degradation in the root cap and the leaves started without a lag. In contrast to shoot phytochrome, which was almost completely degraded under continuous illumination, about 3% of initial phytochrome was measured in root caps after 24 h continuous illumination. Some of the data, obtained by immunological measurements, may indicate differences between phytochrome, or its synthesis or degradation, in the root cap and shoots. The results are discussed with a view to different red-light-mediated responses of grass seedlings.Abbreviations ABTS
2,2-azino-bis(3-ethylbenz-thiazoline)-sulfonic acid
- EIA
enzyme immunoassay
- PBS
phosphatebuffered saline
- SDS-PAGE
sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis 相似文献
7.
Spray Clive Phinney Bernard O. Gaskin Paul Gilmour Sarah J. MacMillan Jake 《Planta》1984,160(5):464-468
[13C, 3H]Gibberellin A20 (GA20) has been fed to seedlings of normal (tall) and dwarf-5 and dwarf-1 mutants of maize (Zea mays L.). The metabolites from these feeds were identified by combined gas chromatography-mass spectrometry. [13C, 3H]Gibberellin A20 was metabolized to [13C, 3H]GA29-catabolite and [13C, 3H]GA1 by the normal, and to [13C, 3H]GA29 and [13C, 3H]GA1 by the dwarf-5 mutant. In the dwarf-1 mutant, [13C, 3H]GA20 was metabolized to [13C, 3H]GA29 and [13C, 3H]GA29-catabolite; no evidence was found for the metabolism of [13C, 3H]GA20 to [13C, 3H]GA1. [13C, 3H]Gibberellin A8 was not found in any of the feeds. In all feeds no dilution of 13C in recovered [13C, 3H]GA20 was observed. Also in the dwarf-5 mutant, the [13C]label in the metabolites was apparently undiluted by endogenous [13C]GAs. However, dilution of the [13C]label in metabolites from [13C, 3H]GA20 was observed in normal and dwarf-1 seedlings. The results from the feeding studies provide evidence that the dwarf-1 mutation of maize blocks the conversion of GA20 to GA1.Abbreviations GAn
gibberellin An
- GC-MS
combined gas chromatography-mass spectrometry
- HPLC
high-performance liquid chromatography
- RP
reverse phase 相似文献
8.
To develop a less genotype-dependent maize-transformation procedure, we used 10-month-old Type I callus as target tissue for microprojectile bombardment. Twelve transgenic callus lines were obtained from two of the three anther-culture-derived callus cultures representing different gentic backgrounds. Multiple fertile transgenic plants (T0) were regenerated from each transgenic callus line. Transgenic leaves treated with the herbicide Basta showed no symptoms, indicating that one of the two introduced genes, bar, was functionally expressing. Data from DNA hybridization analysis confirmed that the introduced genes (bar and uidA) were integrated into the plant genome and that all lines derived from independent transformation events. Transmission of the introduced genes and the functional expression of bar in T1 progeny was also confirmed. Germination of T1 immature embryos in the presence of bialaphos was used as a screen for functional expression of bar; however, leaf painting of T1 plants proved a more accurate predictor of bar expression in plants. This study suggests that maize Type I callus can be transformed efficiently through microprojectile bombardment and that fertile transgenic plants can be recovered. This system should facilitate the direct introduction of agronomically important genes in to commercial genotypes. 相似文献
9.
Graham J. P. Riley 《Planta》1981,151(1):68-74
Poor emergence of maize seedlings, due to high soil temperatures, is a major limitation of crop potential in the lowland tropics. Ability to germinate at high temperature (>c. 37° C) is related to the temperature sensitivity of the embryo, and there is considerable genotypic variation for this character.Respiration and mitochondrial phosphorylation proceed normally in seeds imbibing at 41° C, and ATP levels are adequate for germination. However, the specific activities of several important enzymes are lower, and the rate of protein synthesis is severely reduced compared with seeds imbibing at 28° C. The depression of the rate of protein synthesis in the embryos of several tropical hybrids imbibing at high temperature correlated with their known temperature sensitivity. It is concluded that protein synthesis is an especially temperature sensitive process in germinating maize embryos, and that this is the principal reason for the sensitivity of germinating maize seeds to high temperature.Abbreviations ADP adenosine-5-diphosphate - ATP adenosine-5-triphosphate - BSA bovine serum albumin - EDTA ethylenediaminetetra-acetic acid - HEPES N-2-hydroxyethylpiperazinc-N-2-ethanesulphonic acid - NADH nicotinamide-adenine dinucleotide, reduced form - PPO 2, 5-diphenyloxazole - PVP polyvinylpyrrolidone - SEM standard error of the mean - tris tris (hydroxymethyl)-methylamine 相似文献
10.
11.
The effects of anoxia on water and solute transport across excised roots of young maize plants (Zea mays L. cv. Tanker) grown hydroponically have been studied. With the aid of the root pressure probe, root pressure (Pr), root hydraulic conductivity (Lpr), and root permeability (Psr), and reflection (
sr) coefficients were measured using potassium nitrate (a typical nutrient salt) and sodium nitrate (an atypical nutrient salt) as solutes. During a period of 10–15 h, anaerobic treatment (0.0–0.2 g O2·m-3 in root medium) caused a decrease of root pressure by 0.01–0.28 MPa (by 10–80% of original root pressure) after a short transient increase. For a time period of 5 h, the decrease in the stationary root pressure was not reversible. Under anaerobic conditions, roots still behaved like osmometers and were not leaky. The root hydraulic conductivity measured in osmotic experiments (osmotic solute: NaNO3) was smaller by one to two orders of magnitude than that measured in the presence of hydrostatic gradients. Both the osmotic and hydrostatic hydraulic conductivity decreased during anaerobic treatment by 28 and 44%, respectively, at a constant reflection coefficient of the solutes (
sr=0.3–1.0). As with root pressure, changes in root permeability to water and solutes were not reversible within 5 h. Under aerobic conditions and at low external concentrations (31–59 mOsmol·kg-1), osmotic response curves were monophasic for KNO3, i.e. there was no passive uptake of solutes. Response curves became biphasic at higher concentrations (100–150 mOsmol·kg-1)- For NaNO3, response curves were biphasic at all concentrations. Presumably, this pattern was a consequence of the fact that potassium had already accumulated in the xylem. During anoxia, accumulation of potassium in the xylem was reduced, and biphasic responses were also obtained at lower potassium concentrations applied to the medium. The results are discussed in terms of a pump/leak model of the root in which anoxia affects both the active ion pumping and the permeability of the root to nutrient salts (leakage). The effects of anaerobiosis on the passive transport properties of the root (Lpr, Psr,
sr) are in line with the recently proposed composite transport model of the root.Abbreviations and Symbols Ar
root surface area
- Lpr
root hydraulic conductivity
- Lprh
hydrostatic hydraulic conductivity of root
- Lpro
osmotic hydraulic conductivity of root
- Pr
root pressure
- Psr
permeability coefficient of root
-
sr
reflection coefficient of root
The authors thank Mr. Walter Melchior for the curve-fitting program used to work out Lprh values from root pressure relaxations and Mr. Mohammad Hajirezai (Lehrstuhl für Pflanzenphysiologie, Universität Bayreuth) for making the ATP measurements. The assistance of Mrs. Libuse Badewitz in making the drawings and the technical help of Mr. Burkhard Stumpf are also gratefully acknowledged. 相似文献
12.
A. P. Kausch T. R. Adams M. Mangano S. J. Zachwieja W. Gordon-Kamm Richard Daines N. G. Willetts S. A. Chambers W. Adams Jr. A. Anderson G. Williams G. Haines 《Planta》1995,196(3):501-509
We have investigated the interaction between tungsten and gold microprojectiles with suspension-culture cells of maize used for genetic transformation. Particle size measurements were evaluated before and after DNA precipitation to determine mean particle size and the effect of DNA precipitation on particle aggregation. Following particle bombardment, metal foils were examined by scanning electron microscopy to visualize dispersion of individual particles and aggregates. Particle penetration into suspension-culture cell clusters was examined in paraffin-embedded bombarded cells serially sectioned and viewed with light microscopy and by energy dispersive X-ray microanalysis. Acridine-orange-stained bombarded cells were examined to observe cellular response to particle penetration. Transient expression of reporter genes C1 and B and GUS, (-glucuronidase) were used to assess effects of particle bombardment on embryogenic cell types. Autoradiographic analysis of the transformable suspension cell culture SC82 (see Gordon-Kamm et al. 1990, Plant Cell 2, 603–618) was conducted to evaluate the S-phase and mitotic indices in embryogenic and nonembryogenic cells throughout a subculture passage and in response to DNA/particle delivery. The results of these investigations are discussed relative to cytodifferentiation of suspension cell clusters and recovery of transformed clonal sectors.Abbreviations GUS
-glucuronidase
- FAA
formaldehyde-acetic acid-alcohol
- SEM
scanning electron microscopy 相似文献
13.
Minor antigens characteristic of developing and mature embryos were not found in the shoot and root meristems of the seedlings. Some of these embryonal antigens (EA) were present, however, in callus and cell-suspension cultures, irrespective of their tissue origin, and were maintained throughout repeated subcultures, in some cases for more than 2 years. These EA were distinct both from the meristematic antigens found in the intact seedlings and in callus cultures, and from organ-specific antigens found only in intact plants. The EA of callus tissues derived from several maize genotypes were serologically identical. We therefore assume that these EA are proliferation proteins or early proteins expressed by cells that have not undergone any determination and lack any tissue or organ specificity. 相似文献
14.
The vascular system of the Zea mays L. leaf consists of longitudinal strands interconnected by transverse bundles. In any given transverse section the longitudinal strands may be divided into three types of bundle according to size and structure: small, intermediate, large. Virtually all of the longitudinal strands intergrade structurally however, from one bundle type to another as they descend the leaf. For example, all of the strands having large-bundle anatomy appear distally as small bundles, which intergrade into intermediates and then large bundles as they descend the leaf. Only the large bundles and the intermediates that arise midway between them extend basipetally into the sheath and stem. Most of the remaining longitudinal strands of the blade do not enter the sheath but fuse with other strands above and in the region of the blade joint. Despite the marked decrease in number of longitudinal bundles at the base of the blade, both the total and mean cross-sectional areas of sieve tubes and tracheary elements increase as the bundles continuing into the sheath increase in size. Linear relationships exist between leaf width and total bundle number, and between cross-sectional area of vascular bundles and both total and mean cross-sectional areas of sieve tubes and tracheary elements. 相似文献
15.
The objective of this research was to study the in-vitro morphogenetic pattern of corn (Zea mays L.) shoot tips excised from aseptically-grown seedlings, and of expiants of axillary shoot buds, immature tassels and ears (staminate and pistillate inflorescences) obtained from greenhouse-grown corn plants. The seedling shoot tips and immature ears first regenerated clumps of multiple shoots within four weeks of culture on Murashige and Skoog (MS) basal medium supplemented with 500 mg/L casein hydrolysate (CH) and 9.0 M N6-benzyladenine (BA). Multiple shoot clumps were also differentiated from spikelets of immature tassels cultured on MS medium containing 500 mg/L CH, 4.5 M BA and 0.45 M 2,4-dichlorophenoxy acetic acid (2,4-D). All these multiple shoot clumps in turn differentiated clusters of ears after further four subcultures at four-week intervals under light on MS medium supplemented with 500 mg/L CH and 2.25, 4.5, 9.0 or 18 M BA. Axillary shoot buds readily differentiated clusters of ears within four weeks of the initial culture on these media. Secondary and tertiary ear clusters were initiated following subculture of primary ears on MS medium containing 500 mg/L CH and 4.5 or 9.0 M BA. Most of the ear primordia developed into ears with well-developed ovaries and styles on subculture on MS medium containing 500 mg/L CH and 1.0 M BA. Corn kernels were obtained after pollination of in-vitro-formed ears with pollens collected from greenhouse-grown corn. These kernels germinated in vitro and developed into mature corn plants in the greenhouse. Clusters of tassels were also differentiated in darkness from the multiple shoot clumps after six months successive subcultures but the spikelet primordia of tassels failed to develop fully under the in-vitro conditions tested. Somatic embryos arose directly from spikelet primordia of young tassels or ears on MS medium containing 500 mg/L CH and 4.5 M 2,4-D, or indirectly from calli derived from spikelets of young tassels and ears on MS medium containing 500 mg/L CH and 9.0 M 2.4-D.Abbreviations BA
N6-benzyladenine
- CH
casein hydrolysate
- 2,4-D
2,4-dichlorophenoxyacetic acid
- IBA
indole-3-butyric acid
- MS
Murashige and Skoog (basal medium)
Heng Zhong is a Rockefeller Foundation Fellow on leave from the Institute of Botany, Academia Sinica, Beijing, P.R. China. This work was supported by a grant from the MidWest Plant Biotechnology Consortium and U.S.-A.I.D. grant No. DAN-4197-A-00-1126-00 to M.B. Sticklen. Thanks are due to Illinois Foundation Seeds, Champaign, USA for the supply of Honey N Pearl sweetcorn seeds and the Services of Center for Electron Optics, Michigan State University, for the electromicroscopic work as related to this publication. 相似文献
16.
Two wheat (Triticum aestivum L.) cultivars, one aluminium tolerant (Atlas 66) and one sensitive (Scout 66), were grown in a continuous-flow culture system (≤pH 5.0) containing aluminium (0–100 μM) and silicon (0–2000 μM) in factorial combination. Treatment with silicon resulted in a highly significant amelioration of aluminium toxicity as assessed by root growth in both cultivars. Amelioration was influenced by wheat cultivar and silicon concentration, as 2000 μM silicon significantly ameliorated the toxic effects of 100 μM aluminium in Atlas 66, and only 5 μM silicon alleviated the effect of 1.5 μM aluminium on Scout 66. Nutrient medium pH was critical, as an amelioration by silicon was apparent only at pH > 4.2 for Atlas 66, and at pH > 4.6 for Scout 66. Silicon neither reduced levels of toxic aluminium species in the growth solutions, nor the amount of aluminium taken up by roots. In experiments to assess exudation of malate by Atlas 66 roots treated with 100 μM aluminium, the presence of 2000 μM silicon (pH 4.6) was found to have a negligible effect on exudation. In contrast, citrate, a known aluminium chelator, reduced aluminium-induced exudation of malate at 5–40 μM and completely inhibited it at 100 μM citrate. The results indicate that silicon does not reduce aluminium phytotoxicity as a result of aluminium/silicon interactions in the external media, and that the mechanism of amelioration has an in planta component. Received: 22 April 1997 / Accepted: 16 August 1997 相似文献
17.
Maize plants (Zea mays L. cv. Honeycomb F-1) were grown on quartz sand containing amounts of Cd or Cu which resulted in comparable internal contents in the roots. Fresh and dry weights and the content of Cd or Cu were measured in roots and shoots after eight weeks. In addition, cysteine, γ-glutamylcysteine (γEC), glutathione (GSH) and the thiols in heavy-metal-binding peptides (HMBPs) were determined in the roots. At low internal contents, Cd and Cu inhibited root growth to the same extent. Inhibition by Cu was enhanced, however, at high internal contents, indicating that Cu was more toxic than Cd. Separation of extracts from roots of Cd- and Cutreated plants on a Sephadex G-50 column resulted in HMBP complexes with relative molecular masses (Mrs) of 6200 and 7300, respectively. Separation of these HMBP-complexes using HPLC resulted in a distinct pattern of thiol compounds for each heavy metal. The accumulation of HMBPs was linearly dependent on the content of Cd at all values examined. In Cu-treated roots, HMBP accumulation was linearly dependent on the internal Cu content only up to 7.1 μmol·g?1 dry weight. At internal contents which caused an enhanced inhibition of root growth, no further significant increase in the HMBP content was detected. At these internal Cu contents an increased transport of Cu to the shoot was measured. This result indicates that HMBPs are involved in reducing heavy-metal transport from roots to shoots. 相似文献
18.
Early effects of gibberellic acid (GA3) (1–4 h treatment) on the ion ratios in a dwarf maize mutant (Zea mays L. d
1) showing normal growth after hormone treatment, have been investigated by electron microprobe analysis. GA3 exerts a different effect on the ion ratios in plastids, cytoplasm and vacuoles in short term experiments. The Cl content of chloroplasts and cytoplasm increases without a lag phase after GA3 treatment. The K content of plastids increases after a lag phase of 2 h, whereas in the cytoplasm an increase can be observed immediately after GA3 addition. The hormone has only little influence on the Ca content of the cell compartments investigated. Control experiments with water and the physiologically inactive GA3 methylester confirm the specifity of the short-term actions of GA3 on the ion ratios. The primary action of GA3 at the membrane level is discussed. 相似文献
19.
Shoot and root growth of hydroponic maize (Zea mays L.) as influenced by K deficiency 总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1
Potassium (K) has major biophysical and biochemical functions in plant physiology. However, plant responses to K deficiency
at the whole plant level are not always clearly related to these well-known functions of K at the cellular level. The objective
of this study was to investigate the morphological response of maize to increasing K deficiency and test to what extent this
morphological response can be interpreted in the light of the simple model proposed by Leigh and Wyn Jones, suggesting that
biophysical functions are affected first. Maize was grown in a greenhouse under hydroponic conditions. For half of the plants,
K was removed from the nutrient solution from the 4th visible leaf stage. The K content in the starved plants dropped from
100 to 30 mM, and was not fully compensated by an increase in other cations. Leaf elongation rates were reduced on K-deprived
plants, whereas axile root elongation rates were slightly increased between 45°C days and 75°C days after starvation, and
reduced thereafter. During the first part of the starvation period, i.e. under moderate K deficiency (K concentration above
40 mM), all measured variables suggest that the whole plant response may be interpreted as the consequence of the reduced
leaf growth, probably due to insufficient turgor pressure or cell-wall extensibility. This general pattern of response is
in agreement with the model of Leigh and Wyn Jones. However, during the second part of the starvation period, i.e. under more
severe K deficiency (K concentration below 40 mM), malfunction of additional physiological processes (mostly related to biochemical
functions like photosynthetic processes) must be considered to explain the plant morphological response. 相似文献
20.
Intact bundle-sheath cells with functional plasmodesmata were isolated from leaves of Zea mays L. cv. Mutin, and the capacity of these cells to synthesize glutamine and glutamate was determined by simulating physiological substrate concentrations in the bathing medium. The results show that glutamine synthetase can operate at full rate in the presence of added 8 mM ATP. At lower concentrations of ATP a higher rate of glutamine synthesis was found in the light than in darkness. Glutamate-synthase activity, on the other hand, was strictly light dependent. It appears that in bundle-sheath cells of maize the nitrate-assimilatory capacities of glutamine synthetase (located mainly in the cytosol) and of glutamate synthase (located in the stroma) are high enough to meet the demands of whole maize leaves.Abbreviations Gln
glutamine
- Glu
glutamate
- GOGAT
glutamate synthase
- GS
glutamine synthetase
- 2-OG
2-oxoglutarate
This work was supported by the Bundesminister für Forschung und Technologie (0319296A). We thank Mr. Bernd Raufeisen for the art work of Fig. 1. 相似文献