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1.
R. S. Pearce  A. Beckett 《Planta》1985,166(3):335-340
Low-temperature scanning electron microscopy was used to examine fracture faces in leaf blades taken from well-watered or drought-stressed barley (Hordeum vulgare L. cv. Mazurka) seedlings. The leaf blades were freeze-fixed while hydrated and were examined with or without gold-coating. There were droplets (with a smooth surface at the resolution achieved) on the surface of cell walls in leaf blades (0.91 g-1 water content) from well-watered seedlings grown in an environment of 67% relative humidity. These were mainly on the vascular bundle sheath, the guard and subsidiary cells, and on some mesophyll cells around the substomatal cavity and between the stoma and vascular bundle. The droplets occurred, more abundantly, in the same places in seedlings from 100% relative humidity. They occurred on a few guard cells from wilting leaf blades (0.81 g·g-1 water content) and were absent from severely drought-stressed leaf blades (0.15 g·g-1 water content). The droplets sublimed at the same moment as both water which was in leaf cells and water which was allowed to condense (after freeze-fixation) on the wall surface. It is suggested that the droplets are aqueous. Their possible origin and importance is discussed.  相似文献   

2.
Summary The effects of saline conditions on the water relations of cells in intact leaf tissue of the facultative CAM plantMesembryanthemum crystallinum were studied using the pressure probe technique. During a 12-hr light/dark regime a maximum in turgor pressure was recorded for the mesophyll cells of salttreated (CAM) plants at the beginning of the light period followed 6 hr later by a pressure maximum in the bladder cells of the upper epidermis. In contrast, the turgor pressure in the bladder cells of the lower epidermis remained constant during light/dark regime. Turgor pressure maxima were not observed in untreated (C3) plants.This finding strongly supports the assumption that water movement during malate accumulation and degradation in salttreated plants occurs predominantly between the mesophyll cells and the bladder cells of the upper epidermis. The necessary calculations take differences in the compartment volumes and in the elastic moduli of the cell walls () of the bladder cells of the lower and upper epidermis into account.Measurements of the kinetics of water transport showed that the half-time of water exchange for the two sorts of bladder cells were nearly identical in CAM plants and in C3 plants. The absolute values of the half-times increased by about 45% in salttreated plants (about 113 sec) compared to the control plants (78 sec). Simultaneously, the half-time of water exchange of the mesophyll cells increased by about 60% from 14 sec (untreated plants) to 22 sec (salt-exposed plants). The leaves of this plant are apparently able to closely maintain the time of propagation of short-term osmotic pressure changes over a large salinity range.A cumulative plot of the data measured on both C3 and CAM plants showed that the differences between the values of the elastic moduli of bladder cells from the lower and from the upper epidermis are due to differences in volume and suggested that the intrinsic elastic properties of the differently located bladder cells of C3 and CAM plants were identical.A cumulative plot of the hydraulic conductivity of the membrane obtained both on mesophyll and on bladder cells of salttreated and of untreated plantsvs. the individual turgor pressure yielded a relationship well-known from giant algal cells and some higher plant cells: The hydraulic conductivity increased at very low pressure, indicating that the water permeability properties of the membrane of the various cell types of C3 and CAM plants are pressure dependent, but otherwise identical.The results suggest that a few fundamental physical relationships control the adaptation of the tissue cells to salinity.  相似文献   

3.
Turgor (p) and osmotic potential (s) in epidermal and mesophyll cells, in-situ xylem water potential (-xyl) and gas exchange were measured during changes of air humidity and light in leaves ofTradescantia virginiana L., Turgor of single cells was determined using the pressure probe. Sap of individual cells was collected with the probe for measuring the freezing-point depression in a nanoliter osmometer. Turgor pressure was by 0.2 to 0.4 MPa larger in mesophyll cells than in epidermal cells. A water-potential gradient, which was dependent on the rate of transpiration, was found between epidermis and mesophyll and between tip and base of the test leaf. Step changes of humidity or light resulted in changes of epidermal and mesophyll turgor (p-epi, p-mes) and could be correlated with the transpiration rate. Osmotic potential was not affected by a step change of humidity or light. For the humidity-step experiments, stomatal conductance (g) increased with increasing epidermal turgor.g/p-epi appeared to be constant over a wide range of epidermal turgor pressures. In light-step experiments this type of response was not found and stomatal conductance could increase while epidermal turgor decreased.Symbols E transpiration - g leaf conductance - w leaf/air vapour concentration difference - -epi water potential of epidermal cells - -mes water potential of mesophyll cells - -xyl water potential of xylem - p-epi turgor pressure of epidermal cells - p-mes turgor pressure of mesophyll cells - s-epi osmotic potential of epidermal cells - s-mes osmotic potential of mesophyll cells  相似文献   

4.
Turgor, and osmotic and water potentials of subsidiary cells, epidermal cells and mesophyll cells were measured with a pressure probe and a nanoliter osmometer in intact transpiring leaves of Tradescantia virginiana L. Xylem water potential was manipulated by changing air humidity, light, and water supply. In a transpiring leaf the water potential of mesophyll cells was lower, but turgor was higher, than in cells surrounding the stomatal cavity owing to the presence of a cuticle layer which covers the internal surface of subsidiary and guard cells. Cuticular transpiration from the outer leaf surface was negligibly small. When stomata closed in dry air, transpiration decreased despite an increasing vapor-pressure difference between leaf and air, and the water potential of subsidiary cells dropped to the level of the water potential in mesophyll cells. We suggest that the observed decrease of transpiration at increasing vapor-pressure difference can be attributed to a shortage of water supply to the guard cells from subsidiary cells, causing turgor to decrease in the former more than in the latter. The leafs internal cuticle appears to play a special role in channelling the internal water flow during a water shortage.Abbreviations and Symbols VPD Vapor-pressure difference between leaf and air - PFD photon flux density - water potential  相似文献   

5.
K. Schmitz  U. Holthaus 《Planta》1986,169(4):529-535
Biosynthesis of sucrosyl-oligosaccharides (raffinose, stachyose) was traced in source leaves of Cucumis melo after 14C-photoassimilation. The main carbon compound exported was 14C-labeled stachyose. No oligosaccharide synthesis was detected in young, importing leaves. Mesophyll protoplasts, isolated from mature leaves which had previously photosynthesized 14CO2, did not contain 14C-oligosaccharides but contained [14C]-sucrose and 14C-hexoses. Isolated minor-vein-enriched fractions from the same leaves, however, showed nearly 30% of the 14C of the neutral fraction to be in oligosaccharides. Isolated, viable mesophyll protoplasts incubated with NaH14CO3 also failed to incorporate radioactivity into oligosaccharides, although sucrose and galactinol synthesis was unimpaired. Galactinolsynthase activity in leaf extracts and in mesophyll protoplasts was 16.8 mol·h-1·mg-1 protein and 13.8 mol·h-1·mg-1 protein, respectively. Galactosyltransferase (EC 2.4.1.67), which synthesizes stachyose from raffinose and galactinol, had an activity of 50 nmol·h-1·mg-1 protein in leaf extracts and was also present in the minor-vein-enriched fraction, but could not be detected in mesophyll protoplast lysates. The results indicate that mesophyll cells may not be the site of stachyose synthesis although precursor compounds like sucrose and galactinol are synthesized there.Abbreviation HPLC high-performance liquid chromatography  相似文献   

6.
Mercedes Wrischer 《Planta》1989,177(1):18-23
The localization of photosynthetic activity in developing maize (Zea mays L.) chloroplasts was studied in situ by two electron-microscopic-cytochemical methods. The activity of photosystem I was detected by photooxidation of 3,3-diaminobenzidine (DAB) and the activity of the photosystem II by photoreduction of thiocarbamyl nitrotetrazolium blue (TCNBT). During the transformation of proplastids into chloroplasts, at the base of the leaf blade the DAB reaction appeared before the TCNBT reaction. A positive DAB reaction was observed in the single thylakoids of plastids in cells located only about 0.5 mm above the base. Dark, osmiophilic DAB polymers accumulated in the lumina of the thylakoids. Plastid envelopes and tubules of the prolamellar bodies in immature chloroplasts were DAB-negative. In fully differentiated leaf tissue the DAB reaction was intense in the thylakoids of bundle-sheath chloroplasts, as well as in the stroma thylakoids and the peripheral grana thylakoids of mesophyll chloroplats. The photoreduction of TCNBT started in leaf tissue about 1 mm above the base. Dark granular material of reduced TCNBT appeared mostly in the partitions of grana, i.e. interthylakoidally, but some granules were also attached to the stroma thylakoids. The membranes of plastid envelopes and the tubules of prolamellar bodies showed a negative TCNBT reaction. Young bundle-sheath chloroplasts contained some reduced TCNBT in their grana; these deposits largely disappeared in the course of further differentiation. In mature leaf tissue the photoreduction of TCNBT was conspicuous in the grana of mesophyll chloroplasts, but very weak in the single thylakoids and in the granal rudiments of bundle-sheath chloroplasts.Abbreviations DAB 3,3-diaminobenzidine·4 HCl - DCMU 3-(3,4-dichlorophenyl)-1,1-dimethylurea - PS(I,II) photosystem (I,II) - TCNBT thiocarbamyl nitrotetrazolium blue chloride  相似文献   

7.
Monica A. Madore 《Planta》1992,187(4):537-541
Leaf discs obtained from mature leaves of Xerosicyos danguyi were found to contain appreciable levels of stachyose throughout an 8-h nocturnal period during which this plant performs Crassulacean acid metabolism (CAM). In contrast, in mesophyll tissues obtained from paradermal sections of these same leaf discs and which were devoid of vascular tissues, stachyose pools were rapidly depleted during the nocturnal phase. The pattern of this depletion followed closely the depletion pattern observed for starch, indicating that mesophyll stachyose was possibly involved in nocturnal CAM processes and was not necessarily being used for export. Pulse-labelling of intact X. danguyi leaves prior to excision of leaf discs and mesophyll samples also indicated that, while labelled stachyose had turned-over completely in the mesophyll tissues by the end of the nocturnal period, substantial levels of labelled stachyose were always recovered from the leaf discs from which these mesophyll samples were derived. The data indicate the existence of two separate pools of stachyose in the X. danguyi leaf, one a mesophyll pool which turns over rapidly at night and which may be involved to a small extent in nocturnal CAM processes, and the other a pool associated with and possibly synthesized by the vascular tissues and which presumably represents the phloem-transport pool.Abbreviation CAM Crassulacean acid metabolism This work was supported by National Science Foundation Grant DCB 8901785.  相似文献   

8.
In the succulent leaves of Aloe arborescens Mill diurnal oscillations of the malic acid content, being indicative of Crassulacean Acid Metabolism (CAM), were exhibited only by the green mesophyll. In contrast, the malic acid level of the central chloroplast-free water-storing tissue remained constant throughout the day-night cycle. Apart from malate, the green tissue contained high amounts of isocitrat which was lacking in the water tissue. There was no significant transfer from the green mesophyll to the water tissue of 14C fixed originally via dark 14CO2 fixation in the mesophyll. Both isolated mesophyll and water tissue were capable of dark CO2 fixation yielding mainly malate as the first stable product. Both tissues have phosphoenolpyruvate carboxylase. However, the enzymes derived from the both sources could be distinguished by their molecular weights and by their kinetic properties, suggesting different phosphoenolpyruvate carboxylase proteins. The conclusion drawn from the experiments is that in a. arborescens the CAM cycle proceeds exclusively in the green mesophyll and that the water tissue, though capable of malate synthesis via -carboxylation of phosphoenolpyruvate, behaves as an independent metabolic system where CAM is lacking. This view is supported by the finding that the cell walls bordering the green mesophyll from the water tissue lack plasmodesmata, hence conveniant pathways of metabolite transport.Abbreviations CAM Crassulacean acid metabolism - PEP phosphoenolpyruvate - PEP-C phosphoenolpyruvate carboxylase  相似文献   

9.
Kudzu (Pueraria lobata (Willd) Ohwi.) is a vine which forms large, monospecific stands in disturbed areas of the southeastern United States. Kudzu also emits isoprene, a hydrocarbon which can significantly affect atmospheric chemistry including reactions leading to tropospheric ozone. We have studied physiological aspects of isoprene emission from kudzu so the ecological consequences of isoprene emission can be better understood. We examined: (a) the development of isoprene emission as leaves developed, (b) the interaction between photon flux density and temperature effects on isoprene emission, (c) isoprene emission during and after water stress, and (d) the induction of isoprene emission from leaves grown at low temperature by water stress or elevated temperature. Isoprene emission under standard conditions of 1000 mol photons·m-2·s-1 and 30°C developed only after the leaf had reached full expansion, and was not complete until up to two weeks past the point of full expansion of the leaf. The effect of temperature on isoprene emission was much greater than found for other species, with a 10°C increase in temperature causing a eight-fold increase in the rate of isoprene emission. Isoprene emission from kudzu was stimulated by increases in photon flux density up to 3000 mol photons·m-2·s-1. In contrast, photosynthesis of kudzu was saturated at less than 1000 mol·m-2·s-1 photon flux density and was reduced at high temperature, so that up to 20% of the carbon fixed in photosynthesis was reemitted as isoprene gas at 1000 mol photons·m-2·s-1 and 35°C. Withholding water caused photosynthesis to decline nearly to zero after several days but had a much smaller effect on isoprene emission. Following the relief of water stress, photosynthesis recovered to the prestress level but isoprene emission increased to about five times the prestress rate. At 1000 mol photons·m-2·s-1 and 35°C as much as 67% of the carbon fixed in photosynthesis was reemitted as isoprene eight days after water stress. Leaves grown at less than 20°C did not make isoprene until an inductive treatment was given. Inductive treatments included growth at 24°C, leaf temperature of 30°C for 5 h, or witholding water from plants. With the new information on temperature and water stress effects on isoprene emission, we speculate that isoprene emission may help plants cope with stressful conditions.  相似文献   

10.
A technique has been developed for the enzymatic isolation of leaf cells from the Crassulacean acid-metabolism plant Sedum telephium. The cells exhibited high activity in both 14CO2 incorporation (30–70 mol CO2 mg-1 chlorophyll h-1) and O2 evolution in the presence of bicarbonate (60–110 mol O2 mg-1 chlorophyll h-1). Half-maximum saturation of 14CO2 incorporation occurred at a bicarbonate concentration of ca. 2 mM (20 M CO2) at pH 8.4 and 30°C. Two types of light-dependent O2 evolution are reported: O2 evolution in the absence of exogenously supplied bicarbonate (endogenous O2 evolution), and bicarbonate-stimulated O2 evolution. Oxygen evolution in the presence of approximately ambient concentrations of CO2 appeared to be a combination of the endogenous O2 evolution and O2 evolution from fixation of the exogenously supplied CO2.Abbreviations CAM Crassulacean acid metabolism - cirlo chlorophyll - DCMU 3-(3,4-dichlorophenyl)-1,1-dimethylurea - PEP phosphoenolpyruvate - RuDP ribulose-1,5-diphosphate  相似文献   

11.
Light-microscopic analysis of leaf clearings of the obligate Crassulacean-acid-metabolism (CAM) species Kalanchoe daigremontiana Hamet et Perr. has shown the existence of unusual and highly irregular venation patterns. Fifth-order veins exhibit a three-dimensional random orientation with respect to the mesophyll. Minor veins were often observed crossing over or under each other and over and under major veins in the mesophyll. Paraffin sections of mature leaves show tannin cells scattered throughout the mesophyll rather evenly spaced, and a distinct layer of tannin cells below the abaxial epidermis. Scanning electron microscopy showed that bundle-sheath cells are distinct from the surrounding mesophyll in veins of all orders. Transmission electron microscopy demonstrated developing sieve-tube elements in expanded leaves. Cytosolic vesicles produced by dictyosomes undergo a diurnal variation in number and were often observed in association with the chloroplasts. These vesicles are an interesting feature of cell ultrastructure of CAM cells and may serve a regulatory role in the diurnal malic-acid fluctuations in this species.Abbreviations CAM Crassulacean acid metabolism - SEM scanning-electron microscopy - TEM transmission-electron microscopy  相似文献   

12.
J. A. C. Smith  U. Lüttge 《Planta》1985,163(2):272-282
A study was made of the day-night changes under controlled environmental conditions in the bulk-leaf water relations of Kalanchoë daigremontiana, a plant showing Crassulacean acid metabolism. In addition to nocturnal stomatal opening and net CO2 uptake, the leaves of well-watered plants showed high rates of gas exchange during the whole of the second part of the light period. Measurements with the pressure chamber showed that xylem tension increased during the night and then decreased towards a minimum at about midday; a significant increase in xylem tension was also seen in the late afternoon. Cell-sap osmotic pressure paralleled leaf malate content and was maximum at dawn and minimum at dusk. The relationship between these two variables indicated that the nocturnally synthesized malate was apparently behaving as an ideal osmoticum. To estimate bulk-leaf turgor pressure, values for water potential were derived by correcting the pressurechamber readings for the osmotic pressure of the xylem sap. This itself was found to depend on the malate content of the leaves. Bulk-leaf turgor pressure changed rhythmically during the day-night cycle; turgor was low during the late afternoon and for most of the night, but increased quickly to a maximum of 0.20 MPa around midday. In water-stressed plants, where net CO2 uptake was restricted to the dark period, there was also an increase in bulk-leaf turgor pressure at the start of the light period, but of reduced magnitude. Such changes in turgor pressure are likely to be of considerable ecological importance for the water economy of crassulacean-acid-metabolism plants growing in their natural habitats.Abbreviation and symbols CAM Crassulacean acid metabolism - P turgor pressure - osmotic pressure - water potential Dedicated to Professor Dr. H. Ziegler on the occasion of his 60th birthday  相似文献   

13.
A flow-sensitive nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) microimaging technique was applied to measure directly the in-vivo water flow in 6-d-old castor bean seedlings. The achieved in-plane resolution of the technique allowed discrimination between xylem and phloem water flow. Both the xylem- and the phloem-average flow velocities in the intact seedling could be quantified. Furthermore, the total conductive cross-sectional area of the xylem vessels and the phloem sieve elements could be determined using the non-invasive and non-destructive NMR microimaging technique. Hence, it was possible to calculate the in-vivo volume flow rates for both xylem and phloem water flow. Our non-destructive technique showed that previously used methods to measure phloem water flow affected the flow rate itself. In the intact seedlings we found values of 16.6 l·h–1, two fold lower than those previously estimated from phloem exudation rates. Finally, our results demonstrate for the first time that water is internally circulated between phloem and xylem, and that water flow within the xylem is maintained by this internally circulated water, even in the absence of any significant transpiration or evaporation.Abbreviation NMR nuclear magnetic resonance  相似文献   

14.
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   

15.
Upon transfer from well-watered conditions to total drought, long-day-grown cladodes of Opuntia ficus-indica Mill. shift from full Crassulacean acid metabolism (CAM) to CAM-idling. Experiments using 14C-tracers were conducted in order to characterize the carbon-flow pattern in cladodes under both physiological situations. Tracer was applied by 14CO2 fumigations and NaH14CO3 injections during the day-night cycle. The results showed that behind the closed stomata, mesophyll cells of CAM-idling plants retained their full capacity to metabolize CO2 in light and in darkness. Upon the induction of CAM-idling the level of the capacity of phosphoenolpyruvate carboxylase (EC 4.1.1.31) was maintained. By contrast, malate pools decreased, displaying finally only a small or no day-night oscillation. The capacity of NADP-malic enzyme (EC 1.1.1.40) decreased in parallel with the reduction in malate pools. Differences in the labelling patterns, as influenced by the mode of tracer application, are discussed.Abbreviations CAM Crassulacean acid metabolism - PEP-Case phosphoenolpyruvate carboxylase  相似文献   

16.
A method is described for isolating epidermal protoplasts from the primary leaves of barley (Hordeum vulgare L.). Epidermal protoplasts are lighter than mesophyll protoplasts because of their smaller ratio of cytoplasm to vacuole, and can be separated from the latter by density-gradient centrifugation after complete digestion of the leaves. We have started a basic characterization of the epidermal protoplast fraction in comparison with mesophyll protoplasts. Epidermal protoplasts had a mean diameter of 63.5 m, whereas that of mesophyll protoplasts was 35.7 m. Their respiratory oxygen consumption was not influenced by light. They contained acid hydrolases and cytoplasmic enzymes in relative activities different from those of mesophyll protoplasts. Their polypeptide pattern as judged from two-dimensional separations was, in principle, similar to that of mesophyll cells after elimination of the plastids from the latter by the preparation of vacuoplasts. However, in addition, a considerable number of epidermis-specific polypeptides were observed. Isolated epidermal protoplasts were viable and efficiently incorporated [35S]methionine into newly synthesized proteins. The results show that epidermal protoplasts are suitable for the investigation of the physiological and molecular properties of epidermal cells in leaves.Abbreviation SDS-PAGE sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis We are grateful to Professor U. Heber (Lehrstuhl Botanik 1, Würzburg) for his continuous support. This work was supported by the DFG and the University of Würzburg within the Sonderforschungsbereich 176.  相似文献   

17.
Leaves of Kalanchoë daigremontiana Hamet et Perr. at a photon flux density (PFD) above 220 mol·m–2s–1 (400–700 nm) or at leaf temperatures above 27.0 °C showed a rapid loss of rhythmicity, and a more or less pronounced damping-out of the endogenous circadian rhythm of CO2 exchange under continuous illumination. This rhythm was reinitiated after reduction of the PFD by 90–120 mol·m–2·s–1 or reduction of leaf temperature by 3.5–11.0 °C under otherwise unchanged external conditions. The reduction in the magnitude of the external control parameter of the Crassulacean acid metabolism (CAM) rhythm (i.e. PFD or leaf temperature) set the phase of the new rhythm. The maxima of CO2 uptake occurred about 5, 28, 51, 75 h after the reduction. Simulations with a CAM model under comparable conditions showed a similar behaviour. The influence of temperature on the endogenous CAM rhythm observed in K. daigremontiana in vivo could be simulated by incorporating into the model temperature-dependent switch modes for passive efflux of malate from the vacuole to the cytoplasm. Thus, the model indicates that tonoplast function plays an important role in regulation of the endogenous CAM rhythm in K. daigremontiana.Abbreviations CAM Crassulacean acid metabolism - PAR photosynthetically active radiation - PFD photon flux density This work was supported by a grant to F.B. and U.L. from Teilprojekt B5 in the Sonderforschungsbereich 199 of the Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft (Bonn, Germany) and by a grant to T. E. E. G. from the Sudienstiftung des deutschen Volkes (Bonn, Germany). Erika Ball is thanked for processing of time-course data for the analysis of Fourier spectra.  相似文献   

18.
Barley (Hordeum vulgare L.) plants were grown hydroponically with or without inorganic phosphate (Pi) in the medium. Leaves were analyzed for the intercellular and the intracellular distribution of Pi. Most of the leaf Pi was contained in mesophyll cells; Pi concentrations were low in the xylem sap, the apoplast and in the cells of the epidermis. The vacuolar concentration of Pi in mesophyll cells depended on Pi availability in the nutrient medium. After infiltrating the intercellular space of leaves with solutions containing Pi, Pi was taken up by the mesophyll at rates higher than 2.5 mol· (g fresh weight)–1 · h–1. Isolated mesophyll protoplasts did not possess a comparable capacity to take up Pi from the medium. Phosphate uptake by mesophyll protoplasts showed a biphasic dependence on Pi concentration. Uptake of Pi by Pi-deficient cells was faster than uptake by cells which had Pi stored in their vacuoles, although cytoplasmic Pi concentrations were comparable. Phosphate transport into isolated mesophyll vacuoles was dependent on their Pi content; it was stimulated by ATP. In contrast to the vacuolar Pi concentration, and despite different kinetic characteristics of the uptake systems for pi of the plasmalemma and the tonoplast, the cytoplasmic pi concentration was regulated in mesophyll cells within narrow limits under very different conditions of Pi availability in the nutrient medium, whereas vacuolar Pi concentrations varied within wide limits.Dedicated to Professor Wilhelm Simonis on the occasion of his 80th birthdayThis investigation was part of the research efforts of the Sonderforschungsbereich 176 of the Bayerische Julius-Maximilians-Universität Würzburg. We are grateful to Dr. Olaf Wolf for introducing us to the method for preparation of xylem sap of barley plants and to Mr. Yin Zuhua for fluorimetric experiments with the dye pyranine. T. Mimura is indebted to the Alexander-von-Humboldt-Stiftung for a postdoctoral research fellowship.  相似文献   

19.
The hydraulic conductivities of excised whole root systems of wheat (Triticum aestivum L. cv. Atou) and of single excised roots of wheat and maize (Zea mays L. cv. Passat) were measured using an osmotically induced back-flow technique. Ninety minutes after excision the values for single excised roots ranged from 1.6·10-8 to 5.5·10-8 m·s-1·MPa-1 in wheat and from 0.9·10-8 to 4.8·10-8 m·s-1·MPa-1 in maize. The main source of variation was a decrease in the value as root length increased. The hydraulic conductivities of whole root systems, but not of single excised roots, were smaller 15 h after excision. This was not caused by occlusion of the xylem at the cut end of the coleoptile. The hydraulic conductivities of epidermal, cortical and endodermal cells were measured using a pressure probe. Epidermal and cortical cells of both wheat and maize roots gave mean values of 1.2·10-7 m·s-1·MPa-1 but in endodermal cells (measured only in wheat) the mean value was 0.5·10-7 m·s-1·MPa-1. The cellular hydraulic conductivities were used to calculate the root hydraulic conductivities expected if water flow across the root was via transcellular (vacuole-to-vacuole), apoplasmic or symplasmic pathways. The results indicate that, in freshly excised roots, the bulk of water flow is unlikely to be via the transcellular pathway. This is in contrast to our previous conclusion (H. Jones, A.D. Tomos, R.A. Leigh and R.G. Wyn Jones 1983, Planta 158, 230–236) which was based on results obtained with whole root systems of wheat measured 14–15 h after excision and which probably gave artefactually low values for root hydraulic conductivity. It is now concluded that, near the root tip, water flow could be through a symplasmic pathway in which the only substantial resistances to water flow are provided by the outer epidermal and the inner endodermal plasma membranes. Further from the tip, the measured hydraulic conductivities of the roots are consistent with flow either through the symplasmic or apoplasmic pathways.Symbols L p, cell cell hydraulic conductivity - L p, root root hydraulic conductivity - L p, root calculated root hydraulic conductivity - root reflection coefficient  相似文献   

20.
U. Homeyer  G. Schultz 《Planta》1988,176(3):378-382
The energy-dependent transport of phenylalanine into isolated vacuoles of barley (Hordeum vulgare L.) mesophyll protoplasts has been studied by silicone-layer floatation filtering. The uptake of this aromatic amino acid into the vacuolar compartment is markedly increased by MgATP, showing saturation kinetics; the K m values were 0.5 mM for MgATP and 1.2 mM for phenylalanine. V max for phenylalanine transport was estimated to 140 nmol phenylalanine·(mg·Chl)-1·h-1. The transport shows a distinct pH optimum at 7.3 and is markedly inhibited by 40 mM nitrate. Azide (1 mM) and vanadate (400 M) had no or little effect on rates of transport while p-fluorophenylalanine seemed to be an effective inhibitor, indicating a possible competition at an amino-acid carrier. Ionophores such as valinomycin, nigericin or gramicidin were strong inhibitors of phenylalanine transport, indicating that this process is coupled to both the transmembrane pH gradient (pH) and the transmembrane potential ().Abbreviations and symbols BSA bovine serum albumin - Chl chlorophyll - Hepes 4-(2-hydroxyethyl)-1-piperazineethanesulfonic acid - pH transmembrane pH gradient - transmembrane potential  相似文献   

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