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1.
U. Lüttge 《Planta》1986,168(2):287-289
Measurements of water uptake and transpiration, during the dark period of plants having Crassulacean acid metabolism (CAM) allow calculation of leaf-volume changes (V). Nocturnal leaf-volume changes of CAM plants have also been reported in the literature on the basis of waterdisplacement measurements. A third way of estimation is from measurements of turgor changes and cellular water-storage capacity using the pressure probe, cytomorphometry and the Scholander pressure chamber. An extension of the interpretation of results reported in the literature shows that for leaf succulent CAM plants the three different approaches give similar values of V ranging between 2.3 and 10.7% (v/v). It is evident that nocturnal malic-acid accumulation osmotically drives significant water storage in CAM leaf tissue.Abbreviations and symbols Cc water-storage capacity - E transporation (evaporational water loss) - P turgor pressure - U water uptake - V cell volume - cell-wall elastic modulus - osmotic pressure - CAM Crassulacean acid metabolism  相似文献   

2.
Summary Lupins (Lupinus angustifolius and L. cosentinii) growing in 321 containers in a glasshouse were exposed to drought by withholding water. Leaf water potential (1), and leaf osmotic potential (s) were measured daily as soil water became depleted. Leaf water relations were further assessed by a pressure-volume technique and by measuring s and relative water content of leaves after rehydration. Analysis by pressure-volume or cryoscopic techniques showed that leaf osmotic potential at saturation (s100) decreased from -0.6 MPa in well watered to -0.9 MPa in severely droughted leaves, and leaf water potential at zero turgor (zt) decreased from about -0.7 to -1.1 MPa in well watered and droughted plants, respectively. Relative water content at zero turgor (RWCzt) was high (88%) and tended to be decreased by drought. The ratio of turgid leaf weight to dry weight was not influenced by drought and was high at about 8.0. The bulk elastic modulus () was approximately halved by drought when related to leaf turgor potential (p) and probably mediated turgor maintenance during drought. The latter was found to be negatively influenced by rate of drought. Supplying the plants with high levels of K salts did not promote adjustment or turgor maintenance.  相似文献   

3.
Summary Solute osmotic potentials (x) in the vessels of hydroponically grown maize roots were measured to assess the osmotic-xylem-sap mechanism for generating root pressure (indicated by guttation). Solutes in vessels were measured in situ by X-ray microanalysis of plants frozen intact while guttating. Osmotic potentials outside the roots (o) were changed by adding polyethylene glycol to the nutrient solution. Guttation rate fell when o was decreased, but recovered towards the control value during 3–5 days when o was greater than or equal to –0.3 MPa, but not when o was equal to –0.4 MPa. In roots stressed to o = –0.3 MPa, x, was always more positive than o, and x changed only slightly (ca. 0.05 MPa). Thus the adjustment in the roots which increased root pressure cannot be ascribed to x, contradicting the osmotic-xylem-sap mechanism. An alternative driving force was sought in the osmotic potentials of the vacuoles of the living cells (v), which were analysed by microanalysis and estimated by plasmolysis. v showed larger responses to osmotic stress (0.1 MPa). Some plants were pretreated with abundant KNO3 in the nutrient solution. These plants showed very large adjustments in v (0.4 MPa) but little change in x (0.08 MPa). They guttated by 4 h after o was lowered to –0.4 MPa. It is argued that turgor pressure of the living cells is a likely alternative source of root pressure. Published evidence for high solute concentrations in the xylem sap is critically assessed.Abbreviations o external water potential - x osmotic potential of xylem sap - v osmotic potential of vacuolar sap - EDX energy dispersive X-ray microanalysis - CSEM cryo-scanning electron microscope - LN2 liquid nitrogen - PEG polyethylene glycol  相似文献   

4.
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   

5.
Summary Tradescantia virginiana L. plants were cultivated under contrasting conditions of temperature, humidity, light quality and intensity, and nutrient status in order to investigate the effect of growth conditions on the water relations parameters of the leaf epidermal cells. Turgor pressure (P), volumetric elastic modulus (), half-time of water potential equilibration (T 1/2), hydraulic conductivity (L p ) were measured with the miniaturized pressure probe in single cells of the upper and lower epidermis of leaves. Turgor differed (range: 0.1 bar to 7.2 bar) between treatments with lowest values under warm and humid conditions and additional supply of fertilizer, and highest values under conditions of low air humidity and low nutrient supply. The volumetric elastic modulus changed by 2 orders of magnitude (range: 3.0 bar to 350 bar, 158 cells), but was only affected by the treatments, in as much as it was dependent on turgor. The turgor dependence of , measured on intact leaves of T. virginiana, was similar to that for cells of the isolated (peeled) lower epidermis, where as a function of turgor was linear over the whole range of turgors. This result has implications for the discussion of pressure/volume curves as measured by the pressure bomb where changes in bulk leaf are frequently discussed as adaptations to certain treatments. The measurements of the hydraulic conductivity indicate that this parameter varies between treatments (range of means: 2.4×10-6 cm s-1 bar-1 to 13.4×10-6 cm s-1 bar-1). There was a negative correlation for L p in cells of intact leaves as a function of turgor which was altered by the growing conditions. However, a correlation with turgor could not be found for cells from isolated epidermis or cells from a uniform population of plants. The large variation in L p from cell to cell observed in the present and in previous studies was accounted for in a study of 100 cells from a uniform population of plants by the propagation of measurement errors in calculating L p . The results suggest that in T. virginiana cellular water relations are changed mainly by the turgor dependence of .  相似文献   

6.
Summary The dependence of leaf water potential (), osmotic potential () and turgor pressure (P) on relative water content (RWC) was determined for leaves of tall and short growth forms of Spartina alterniflora Loisel. from a site on Canary Creek marsh in Lewes, Delaware. Tall plants (ca. 1.5 m) occured along a drainage ditch where interstitial water salinity was approximately 20, and short plants (ca. 0.2 m) were 13 m away near a pan and exposed to 80 salinity during the most stressful period. Leaves were collected at dawn and pressure-volume measurements were made as they desiccated in the laboratory. Pressure equilibrium was used to measure , RWC was determined from weight loss and dry weight, was determined from the pressure volume curve, and P was calculated as the difference between and . Physical properties of the bulk leaf tissue that have a role in regulating water balance of the two growth forms were estimated: relative water content of apoplastic water (RWCa) relative water content at zero turgor (RWC0), the bulk modulus of elasticity (E), and water capacity (C w). There were no detectable temporal trends in any of the parameters measured from Nune through September and no significant differences between the two growth forms when compared on the basis of RWCa, RWC0, E, and C w. There was a clear difference between the two growth forms with respect to ; at RWC0, was-4.5±0.40 MPa for short form plants and-3.3±0.40 MPa for tall form.Turgor pressure of plants in the field (P) was lower in leaves from short form than for the tall form plants with average difference of about 0.4 MPa. In July, P in short form leaves dropped to zero by mid-morning as expected for leaves experiencing water stress.These results show that S. alterniflora is capable of reducing osmotic potential in response to increased salinity and that turgor pressure was lower in short growth form than in tall forms.  相似文献   

7.
Summary Leaf water potentials, osmotic properties and structural characteristics were examined in the Australian tropical rainforest tree species, Castanospermum australe. These features were compared for individuals growing in the understorey and canopy of the undisturbed forest and in an open pasture from which the forest had been cleared. Leaf water potentials during the day declined to significantly lower values in the open-grown and canopy trees than in the understorey trees. During most of the day the opengrown tree experienced the lowest water potentials. These differences were paralleled by significant differences in tissue osmotic properties. The tissue osmotic potential at full hydration was lowest in the open-grown tree (-1.80 MPa), intermediate in the canopy trees (-1.38 MPa), and highest in the understorey trees (-0.80 MPa). As a result, the degree to which high and positive turgor pressures were maintained as water potentials declined was highest in the open-grown tree, intermediate in the canopy trees, and lowest in the understorey trees. The differences in tissue osmotic properties between individuals in the three crown positions were paralleled, in turn, by differences in leaf structual characteristics. Relative to leaves of the canopy and open-grown trees, leaves of the understorey trees had significantly larger epidermal cells with thinner cell walls, larger specific leaf areas and turgid weight: dry weight ratios, and a higher proportion of intercellular air space.Abbreviations 1 Leaf tissue water potential - min Lowest value of 1 during the day ( noon) - P=0 1 zero turgor - R Relative water content - P Tissue turgor pressure - Tissue osmotic potential - 0 at full hydration  相似文献   

8.
Mature leaves of Phaseolus vulgaris L. (red kidney bean), Xanthium strumarium L. (cocklebur), and Gossypium hirsutum L. (cotton) were used to study accumulation of abscisic acid (ABA) during water stress. The water status of individual, detached leaves was monitored while the leaves slowly wilted, and samples were cut from the leaves as they lost water. The leaf sections were incubated at their respecitive water contents to allow ABA to build up or not. At least 8 h were required for a new steady-state level of ABA to be established. The samples from any one leaf covered a range of known water potentials (), osmotic pressures (), and turgor pressures (p). The and p values were calculated from pressure-volume curves, using a pressure bomb to measure the water potentials. Decreasing water potential had little effect on ABA levels in leaves at high turgor. Sensitivity of the production of ABA to changes in progressively increased as turgor approached zero. At p=1 bar, ABA content averaged 4 times the level found in fully turgid samples. Below p=1 bar, ABA content increased sharply to as much as 40 times the level found in unstressed samples. ABA levels rose steeply at different water potentials for different leaves, according to the at which turgor became zero. These differences were caused by the different osmotic pressures of the leaves that were used; must cqual - for turgor to be zero. Leaves vary in , not only among species, but also between plants of one and the same species depending on the growing conditions. A difference of 6 bars (calculated at =0) was found between the osmotic pressures of leaves from two groups of G. hirsutum plants; one group had previously experienced periodic water stress, and the other group had never been stressed. When individual leaves were subsequently wilted, the leaves from stress-conditioned plants required a lower water potential in order to accumulate ABA than did leaves from previously unstressed plants. On the basis of these results we suggest that turgor is the critical parameter of plant water relations which controls ABA production in water-stressed leaves.Abbreviations ABA abscisic acid - me-ABA abscisic-acid methyl ester - leaf water potential - osmotic pressure - p volumeaveraged turgor - volumetric modulus of elasticity  相似文献   

9.
Jensen  C. R.  Andersen  M. N.  Lösch  R. 《Plant and Soil》1993,155(1):423-426
Leaf water relations characteristics were studied in spring barley fertilized at low (50 kg ha-1) or high (200 kg ha-1) levels of potassium applied as KCl. The leaf water relations characteristics were determined by the pressure volume (PV) technique.Seasonal analysis in fully irrigated plants showed that within 2 weeks from leaf emergence the leaf osmotic potential at full turgor ( 100) decreased from about –0.9 to –1.6 MPa in leaf No 7 (counting the first leaf to emerge as number one) and from about –1.1 to –1.9 MPa in leaf No 8 (the flag leaf) due to solute accumulation. 100 was 0.05 to 0.10 MPa lower in high K than in low K plants. Thus, an ontogenetically determined accumulation of solutes occurred in the leaves independent of K application. The ratio of leaf weight at full turgor to dry weight (TW/DW) decreased from about 5.5 in leaf No 6 to 4.5 in leaf No 7 and 3.8 in leaf No. 8. The TW/DW ratio was 4 to 10% higher in high K than in low K plants indicating larger leaf cell size in the former. The tissue modulus of elasticity () was increased in high K plants. The main effect of high K application on water relations was an increase in leaf water content and a slight decrease in leaf During drought limited osmotic adjustment and increase in elasticity of the leaf tissue mediated turgor maintenance. These effects were only slightly modified by high potassium application.  相似文献   

10.
Water relation parameters of leaf cells of the aquatic plant Elodea densa have been measured using the pressure probe. For cells in both the upper and lower epidermis it was found that the elastic modulus () and the hydraulic conductivity (Lp) were dependent on cell turgor (P). Lp was (7.8±5.5)·10-7 cm s-1 bar-1 (mean±SD; n=22 cells) for P>4 bar in cells of the upper epidermis and was increasing by a factor of up to three for P0 bar. No polarity of water movement or concentration dependence of Lp was observed. For cells of the lower epidermis the Lp-values were similar and the hydraulic conductivity also showed a similar dependence on turgor. No wall ingrowth or wall labyrinths (as in transfer cells) could be found in the cells of the lower epidermis. The elastic modulus () of cells of the upper epidermis could be measured over the whole pressure range (P=0–7 bar) by changing the osmotic pressure of the medium. increased linearly with increasing turgor and ranged between 10 and 150 bar. For cells of the lower epidermis the dependence of on P was similar, although the pressure dependence could not be measured on single cells. The Lp-values are compared with literature data obtained for Elodea by a nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR)-technique. The dependence of Lp on P is discussed in terms of pressure dependent structural changes of the cell membranes and interactions between solute and water transport.Abbreviations P cell turgor pressure - Lp hydraulic conductivity - volumetric elastic modulus - T 1/2 half-time of water exchange of individual cell  相似文献   

11.
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   

12.
S. B. Kikuta  H. Richter 《Planta》1986,168(1):36-42
The relationship between relative water content (R) and turgor potential (p) may be derived from pressure-volume (PV) curves and analyzed in various ways. Fifty PV curves were measured with the pressure chamber on leaves of durum wheat (Triticum durum L.). The plots of p versus R were highly variable and could not be adequately described by a single mathematical function. The area below the curve was therefore determined by means of an area meter. This procedure gave the integral of turgor from full saturation to the turgor-loss point. Responses to drought treatment could thus be quantified and partitioned into effects of osmotic adjustment and elastic adjustment. These two adjustment responses, which are probably of different metabolic origin, together improve turgor maintenance in durum wheat considerably.Abbreviations and symbols PV pressure-volume - R relative water content - Ti turgor integral between full saturation and turgor-loss point - p turgor (pressure) potential  相似文献   

13.
The turgor-homeostat model of assimilate efflux from coats of developing seed of Phaseolus vulgaris L. was further characterised. The turgor pressure (P), the volumetric elastic modulus () and hydraulic conductivity (Lp) of the seed coat cells responsible for assimilate efflux and cotyledon storage parenchyma cells were determined with a pressure probe. In addition, turgor of the seed coat and cotyledons was estimated by measuring the osmolalities of symplastic and apoplastic fluids extracted by centrifugation. Osmolality of symplastic and apoplastic saps collected from the seed coat declined significantly over the period of seed development from a cotyledon water content of 80% to 50%. However, the difference in osmolalities of the apoplastic and symplastic saps remained relatively constant. For cotyledons, osmolality of the apoplastic sap exhibited a significant decline during seed development, while the osmolality of symplastic sap did not change significantly. Hence cotyledon P increased as the water content dropped from 80% to 50%. For both detached and attached empty seed coats, a small decrease (ca. 40mOsmol·kg–1) in the osmolality of the bathing solution, led to a rapid increase in P of cells involved in assimilate efflux (efflux cells) by about 0.07 MPa. Thereafter, cell P exhibited a rapid decline to the original value within some 20–30 min. When P of the efflux cells was reduced by increasing the osmolality of the bathing solution, P exhibited a comparable rate of recovery for attached empty seed coats but there was no P recovery to its original value in the case of detached seed coats. In contrast, the cotyledon storage parenchyma cells did not exhibit P regulation when the osmolality of the bathing solution was changed. The observations that the efflux cells of P. vulgaris seed coats can rapidly adjust their P homeostatically in response to small changes in apoplastic osmolality are consistent with the operation of a turgor-homeostat mechanism. The volumetric elastic modulus () of the seed coat efflux cells exhibited a mean value of 7.3±0.8 MPa at P=0.15 MPa and was found to be linearly dependent on cell P. The e of the cotyledon storage parenchyma cells was estimated to be 6.1±1.0 MPa at P=0.41 MPa. Hydraulic conductivity (Lp) of the seed coat cells and the cotyledon cells was (8.2±1.5) × 10–8m·s–1·MPa–1and (12.8±1.0) × 10–8 m·s–1·MPa–1, respectively. The relatively high , i.e., low elasticity, for the seed coat cell walls would ensure that small changes in water potential of the seed apoplast will be reflected in large changes in cell P. The high Lp values for both the seed coat and the cotyledon cells is consistent with the rapid changes in P in response to changes in water potential of the seed apoplast.Abbreviations LYCH Lucifer Yellow CH - volumetric elastic modulus - Lp hydraulic conductivity - P turgor pressure - osmotic pressure - t1/2 half-time for water exchange The investigation was supported by funds from the Australian Research Council. We are grateful to Louise Hetherington for competent technical assistance and to Kevin Stokes for raising the plant material.  相似文献   

14.
Summary The spatial and temporal variation of lead conductance (g) in Eucalyptus pauciflora was analysed with respect to photon flux area density (I), temperature (T), water vapour concentration deficit (w), and leaf water potential () at four different sites between 940 m and 2,040 m altitude in the Snowy Mountains of south-eastern Australia. Along this altitudinal gradient the precipitation/evaporation ratio increases from 1 to 4. The results show that gas diffusion in this tree species is primarily controlled by I and w at all sites, independently of the specific soil moisture regime. Even under dry midsummer conditions with predawn leaf water potentials of-1 MPa at the lowest altitude, had no striking effect on g.The humidity threshold for the onset of stomatal closure does not vary greatly between the study sites (12.2±1.3 Pa kPa-1). The highest and lowest values observed for , the osmotic potential at water saturation (from pressure/volume curves), the mean and maximum g and stomatal dentity, all increase with elevation. The highest (least negative) osmotic potentials were obtained at all sites in midsummer. It therefore appears that there is no osmotic adjustment to drought in the seasonal course. The maximum difference between osmotic potentials obtained at the lowest and highest sites is 0.46 MPa. In general osmotic potential varies less than has been reported for other plant species exposed to varying water regimes. This may be the consequence of the pronounced feed-forward response of the stomata to evaporative demand, which led to only moderate tissue desiccation, never exceeding the turgor loss point. E. pauciflora is a tree species with a very conservative utilisation of soil water, which adjusts to drought via stomatal control of water loss, rather than via osmotic properties.These results explain previous reports of the comparatively high susceptibility of E. pauciflora to severe drought and its positive influence on the hydrological balance of mountain ecosystems in the Australian Alps.  相似文献   

15.
G. O. Kirst  M. A. Bisson 《Planta》1982,155(4):287-295
Ionic responses to alteration in external and internal pH were examined in an organism from a marine-like environment. Vacuolar pH (pHv) is about 4.9–5.1, constant at external pH (pHo) 5–8, while cytoplasmic pH (pHc) increases from 7.3 to 7.7. pHc regulation fails above pHo 9, and this is accompanied by failure of turgor regulation. Na+ increases above pHo 9, while K+ and Cl decrease. These changes alone cannot however explain the alterations in turgor. Agents known to affect internal pH are also tested for their effect on ion relations.Abbreviations Ci ion concentration - CCCP carbonyl cyanide m-chlorophenyl hydrazone - DCCD dicyclohexylcarbodiimide - DES diethylstilbestrol - DMO 5,5-dimethyloxazolidine-2,4-dione - DNP 2,4-dinitrophenol - pHo external pH - pHc cytoplasmic pH - pHv vacuolar pH - i osmotic pressure - turgor pressure  相似文献   

16.
Abscisic acid and water transport in sunflowers   总被引:5,自引:0,他引:5  
The role of abscisic acid (ABA) in the transport of water and ions from the root to the shoot of sunflower plants (Helianthus annuus) was investigated by application of ABA either to the root medium or to the apical bud. The exudation at the hypocotyl stump of decapitated seedlings was measured with and without hydrostatic pressure (0–0.3 MPa) applied to the root. All ABA concentrations tested (10-10–10-4 mol·l-1) promoted exudation. Maximal amounts of exudate (200% of control) were obtained with ABA at 10-6·mol·l-1 and an externally applied pressure of 0.1 MPa. The effect was rapid and long-lasting, and involved promotion of ion release to the xylem (during the first hours) as well as an increase in hydraulic conductivity. Abscisic acid applied to the apical bud had effects similar to those of the rootapplied hormone. Increased rates of exudation were also obtained after osmotic stress was applied to the root; this treatment increased the endogenous level of ABA in the root as well as in the shoot. Water potentials of the hypocotyls of intact plants increased when the roots were treated with ABA at 5°C, whereas stomatal resistances were lowered. The results are consistent with the view that ABA controls the water status of the plant not only by regulating stomatal transpiration, but also by regulating the hydraulic conductivity of the root.Abbreviations and symbols ABA abscisic acid - Tv volume flow - Lp hydraulic conductivity - PEG polyethyleneglycol - water potential - osmotic potential - osmotic value - P hydrostatic pressure  相似文献   

17.
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   

18.
Summary In internodal cells ofLamprothamnium succinctum, turgor regulation in response to hypotonie treatment is inhibited by lowering external Ca2+ concentration ([Ca2+]e) from 3.9 (normal) to 0.01 (low) mM. In order to clarify whether a change in the cytoplasmic free Ca2+ concentration ([Ca2+]c) is involved in turgor regulation, the Ca2+ sensitive protein aequorin was injected into the cytoplasm of internodal cells. A large transient light emission was observed upon hypotonic treatment under normal [Ca2+]e but not under low [Ca2+]e. Thus hypotonic treatment induces a transient increase in [Ca2+]c under normal [Ca2+]e but not under low [Ca2+]e.Abbreviations ASW artificial sea water - i cellular osmotic pressure - [Ca2+]c cytoplasmic free Ca2+ concentration - EDTA ethylenediamine-tetraacetic acid - EGTA ethylenglycol-bis(-aminoethyl ether(N,N-tetraacetic acid - [Ca2+]e external Ca2+ concentration - e external osmotic pressure - GM glass micropipette - GP glass plate - HEPES N-2-hydroxyethylpiperazine-N-2-ethansulfonic acid - MS microscope stage - OL objective lens - PIPES piperazine-N-N-bis(2-ethanesulfonic acid) - W Weight  相似文献   

19.
A mechanism of respiration-dependent water uptake enhanced by auxin   总被引:2,自引:0,他引:2  
Summary There are many contradictory observations on the mechanohydraulic relation of growing higher plant cells and tissues. Graphical analysis of the simultaneous equations which govern irreversible wall yielding and water absorption has made more comprehensive the understanding of this relation when relative growth rate is plotted against turgor pressure. It suggests that some respiration-dependent and auxin sensitive process might regulate the difference of osmotic potential between cells and water source. Based on anatomical and electrophysiological knowledge of the pea stem xylem, we propose the wall canal system as the mechanism of respiration-dependent water uptake which is sensitive to auxin. This system consists of the xylem apoplastic walls, the xylem proton pumps, active solute uptake system and cell membranes. In the simplest case, third-order simultaneous differential equations are involved. Numerical analysis showed that net uptake of solutes enables water to be taken up against an opposing gradient of water potential. The behaviour of this wall canal system describes well the mechano-hydraulic relation of enlarging plant cells and tissues. Recent typical, but incompatible, interpretations of this relation are critically discussed based on our model.Abbreviations V the volume of enlarging symplast - the average extensibility of the wall - Pi turgor pressure - Y the yield threshold of the wall - L the relative hydraulic conductance - the solute reflection coefficient of the plasmamembrane - Ci the osmotic concentration of the symplast cells - Cx the osmotic concentration of the xylem vessels - Px hydrostatic pressure in the xylem vessels - R the gas constant - T absolute temperature - o water potential of xylem fluid - i water potential of symplast cells  相似文献   

20.
Day/night changes in turgor pressure (P) and titratable acidity content were investigated in the (Crassulacean-acid-metabolism (CAM) plant Kalanchoe daigremontiana. Measurements of P were made on individual mesophyll cells of intact attached leaves using the pressure-probe technique. Under conditions of high relative humidity, when transpiration rates were minimal, changes in P correlated well with changes in the level of titratable acidity. During the standard 12 h light/12 h dark cycle, maximum turgor pressure (0.15 MPa) occurred at the end of the dark period when the level of titratable acidity was highest (about 300 eq H+·g-1 fresh weight). A close relationship between P and titratable acidity was also seen in leaves exposed to perturbations of the standard light/dark cycle. (The dark period was either prolonged, or else only CO2-free air was supplied in this period). In plants deprived of irrigation for five weeks, diurnal changes in titratable acidity of the leaves were reduced (H=160 eq H+·g-1 fresh weight) and P increased from essentially zero at the end of the light period to 0.02 MPa at the end of the dark period. Following more severe water stress (experiments were made on leaves which had been detached for five weeks), P was zero throughout day and night, yet small diurnal changes in titratable acidity were still measured. These findings are discussed in relation to a hypothesis by Lüttge et al. 1975 (Plant Physiol. 56,613-616) for the role of P in the regulation of acidification/de-acidification cycles of plants exhibiting CAM.Abbreviations CAM crassulacean acid metabolism - FW fresh weight - P turgor pressure  相似文献   

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