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1.
The turgor pressure and water relation parameters were determined in single photoautotrophically grown suspension cells and in individual cells of intact leaves of Chenopodium rubrum using the miniaturized pressure probe. The stationary turgor pressure in suspension-cultured cells was in the range of betwen 3 and 5 bar. From the turgor pressure relaxation process, induced either hydrostatically (by means of the pressure probe) or osmotically, the halftime of water exchange was estimated to be 20±10 s. No polarity was observed for both ex- and endosmotic water flow. The volumetric elastic modulus, , determined from measurements of turgor pressure changes, and the corresponding changes in the fractional cell volume was determined to be in the range of between 20 and 50 bar. increases with increasing turgor pressure as observed for other higher plant and algal cells. The hydraulic conductivity, Lp, is calculated to be about 0,5–2·10–6 cm s–1 bar–1. Similar results were obtained for individual leaf cells of Ch. rubrum. Suspension cells immobilized in a cross-linked matrix of alginate (6 to 8% w/w) revealed the same values for the half-time of water exchange and for the hydraulic conductivity, Lp, provided that the turgor pressure relaxation process was generated hydrostatically by means of the pressure probe. Thus, it can be concluded that the unstirred layer from the immobilized matrix has no effect on the calculation of Lp from the turgor pressure relaxation process, using the water transport equation derived for a single cell surrounded by a large external volume. By analogy, this also holds true for Lp-values derived from turgor pressure changes generated by the pressure probe in a single cell within the leaf tissue. The fair similarity between the Lp-values measured in mesophyll cells in situ and mesophyll-like suspension cells suggests that the water transport relations of a cell within a leaf are not fundamentally different from those measured in a single cell.  相似文献   

2.
Hyper- and hypotonic stresses elicit apparently symmetrical responses in the alga Ventricaria. With hypertonic stress, membrane potential difference (PD) between the vacuole and the external medium becomes more positive, conductance at positive PDs (Gmpos) increases and KCl is actively taken up to increase turgor. With hypotonic stress, the membrane PD becomes more negative, conductance at negative PDs (Gmneg) increases and KCl is lost to decrease turgor. We used inhibitors that affect active transport to determine whether agents that inhibit the K(+) pump and hypertonic regulation also inhibit hypotonic regulatory responses. Cells whose turgor pressure was held low by the pressure probe (turgor-clamped) exhibited the same response as cells challenged by hyperosmotic medium, although the response was maintained longer than in osmotically challenged cells, which regulate turgor. The role of active K(+) transport was confirmed by the effects of decreased light, dichlorophenyldimethyl urea and diethylstilbestrol, which induced a uniformly low conductance (quiet state). Cells clamped to high turgor exhibited the same response as cells challenged by hypo-osmotic medium, but the response was similarly transient, making effects of inhibitors hard to determine. Unlike clamped cells, cells challenged by hypo-osmotic medium responded to inhibitors with rapid, transient, negative-going PDs, with decreased Gmneg and increased Gmpos (linearized I-V), achieving the quiet state as PD recovered. These changes are different from those exerted on the pump state, indicating that different transport systems are responsible for turgor regulation in the two cases.  相似文献   

3.
Turgor pressure provides a sensitive indicator for irrigation scheduling. Leaf turgor pressure of Musa acuminate was measured by using the so‐called leaf patch clamp pressure probe, i.e. by application of an external, magnetically generated and constantly retained clamp pressure to a leaf patch and determination of the attenuated output pressure Pp that is highly correlated with the turgor pressure. Real‐time recording of Pp values was made using wireless telemetric transmitters, which send the data to a receiver base station where data are logged and transferred to a GPRS modem linked to an Internet server. Probes functioned over several months under field and laboratory conditions without damage to the leaf patch. Measurements showed that the magnetic‐based probe could monitor very sensitively changes in turgor pressure induced by changes in microclimate (temperature, relative humidity, irradiation and wind) and irrigation. Irrigation effects could clearly be distinguished from environmental effects. Interestingly, oscillations in stomatal aperture, which occurred frequently below turgor pressures of 100 kPa towards noon at high transpiration or at high wind speed, were reflected in the Pp values. The period of pressure oscillations was comparable with the period of oscillations in transpiration and photosynthesis. Multiple probe readings on individual leaves and/or on several leaves over the entire height of the plants further emphasised the great impact of this non‐invasive turgor pressure sensor system for elucidating the dynamics of short‐ and long‐distance water transport in higher plants.  相似文献   

4.
The volumetric elastic modulus of the cell wall and the hydraulic conductivity of the cell membranes were measured on ligatured compartments of different sizes of Chara corallina internodes using the pressure probe technique. The ratio between intact cell surface area and the area of puncture in the cell wall and membrane introduced by the microcapillary of the pressure probe was varied over a large range by inserting microcapillaries of widely varying diameters in different sized compartments. The relationship of the elastic modulus and the hydraulic conductivity to turgor pressure was independent of the ratio of intact cell surface area to the area of injury. The increase in the hydraulic conductivity below 2 bar turgor pressure and the volume dependence of the elastic modulus were shown to be the same as those observed in intact nonligatured cells. Theoretical considerations of the possible influence of injury of the cell wall and cell membrane around the inserted microcapillary on the measurement of the water transport and cell wall parameters do not explain the experimental findings. Thus, mechanical artifacts, if at all present, are too small to account for the observed dependence of the hydraulic conductivity and the elastic modulus on turgor pressure. The pressure probe technique thus represents an accurate method for measuring water transport parameters in both giant algal cells and in tissue cells of higher plants.  相似文献   

5.
Water potential, osmotic potential and turgor measurements obtained by using a cell pressure probe together with a nanoliter osmometer were compared with measurements obtained with an isopiestic psychrometer. Both types of measurements were conducted in the mature region of Tradescantia virginiana L. leaves under non-transpiring conditions in the dark, and gave similar values of all potentials. This finding indicates that the pressure probe and the osmometer provide accurate measurements of turgor, osmotic potentials and water potentials. Because the pressure probe does not require long equilibration times and can measure turgor of single cells in intact plants, the pressure probe together with the osmometer was used to determine in-situ cell water potentials, osmotic potentials and turgor of epidermal and mesophyll cells of transpiring leaves as functions of stomatal aperture and xylem water potential. When the xylem water potential was-0.1 MPa, the stomatal aperture was at its maximum, but turgor of both epidermal and mesophyll cells was relatively low. As the xylem water potential decreased, the stomatal aperture became gradually smaller, whereas turgor of both epidermal and mesophyll cells first increased and afterward decreased. Water potentials of the mesophyll cells were always lower than those of the epidermal cells. These findings indicate that evaporation of water is mainly occurring from mesophyll cells and that peristomatal transpiration could be less important than it has been proposed previously, although peristomatal transpiration may be directly related to regulation of turgor in the guard cells.  相似文献   

6.
Cells of Ancylobacter aquaticus were observed under phase microscopy in a chamber to which a measured pressure could be applied. The initial collapse pressure (Ca), i.e., the lowest pressure needed to collapse the most pressure-sensitive gas vesicles, was measured for 69 cells. The cells were taken from cultures in low-density balanced exponential growth, and the experiments were performed quickly so that the bacteria were in a uniform physiological state at the time of measurement. The turgor pressure, Pt, is the difference between the pressure, C, that would cause collapse of vesicles when removed from the cell and Ca. In this paper we focus on the variability of Pt from cell to cell. Part of the observed variability of Ca was due to the variability of the collapse pressure of individual vesicles (standard deviation [SD] = 90 kPa), but because there were about 100 vesicles per cell and because a change in refracted light after the fifth vesicle (approximately) collapsed probably could be detected by the human eye, the pressure would only have an SD of 18.6 kPa due to this type of sampling error. The observed SD of Pt was 42 kPa, indicating that turgor pressure did vary considerably from cell to cell. However, the turgor pressure was independent of cell size. Statistical analysis showed that Pt would decrease 6.9 kPa over a cell cycle, but with too large an SD (19.9 kPa) to be significant. This implies that the observed change in Pt over the cell cycle is not statistically significant.  相似文献   

7.
The intrinsic control of uniform and differential growth of plant cells can be traced to a small number of physical parameters. These are cell wall rheology, membrane and tissue hydraulic conductivity, and membrane and tissue solute transport. Water and solute effects are manifested as alterations in turgor pressure. Environmental and biochemical processes always channel their effects through one or more of these parameters. Technical developments such as the pressure probe and Instron tensiometer, together with a reappraisal of older techniques, are beginning to allow assessment of the relative roles of these factors. Although the importance of cell wall rheology is becoming increasingly apparent, there is still insufficient information to allow generalized conclusions regarding the role of turgor pressure in differential growth. This review considers attempts to correlate these parameters with observed anatomical growth patterns.  相似文献   

8.
K. H. Büchner  U. Zimmermann 《Planta》1982,154(4):318-325
Cells of Halicystis parvula, Acetabularia mediterranea, and Valonia utricularis were immobilized in a cross-linked alginate matrix (4–6% w/w) in order to simulate water-relation experiments in individual cells of higher plant tissues. The immobilization of these cells did not lead to an increase in the mechanical stability of the cell walls. This was demonstrated by measuring the volumetric elastic modulus of the cell wall and its dependence on turgor pressure with the aid of the non-miniaturized pressure probe. In immobilized cells, no changes in the absolute value of the elastic modulus of the cell wall could be detected for any given pressure. At the maximum turgor pressure at which non-immobilized cells normally burst (about 3–7 bar for V. utricularis; depending on cell size, 3 bar for A. mediterranea and 0.9 bar for H. parvula) reversible decreases in the pressure are observed which are succeeded by corresponding pressure increases. This obvervation indicates that coating the cells with the cross-linked matrix protects them from rapid water and turgor pressure loss. Turgor pressure relaxation processes in immobilized cells, which could be induced hydrostatically by means of the pressure probe, yielded accurate values for the half-times of water exchange and for the hydraulic conductivity of the cell membrane. The results demonstrate that the water transport equations derived for single cells in a large surrouding medium are valid for immobilized cells, so that any influence exerted by the unstirred layer which is caused by the presence of the cross-linked matrix can be ignored in the calculations. On the other hand, the evaluation of the half-times of water exchange and the hydraulic conductivity from turgor pressure relaxation processes, which have been induced osmotically, only yields correct values under certain circumstances. The model experiments presented here show, therefore, that the correct Lp-value for an individual cell in a higher plant tissue can probably only be obtained presently by using the pressure probe technique rather than the osmotic method. The results are also discussed in relation to the possible applications of immobilized cells and particularly of immobilized micro-organisms in catalytic reaction runs on an industrial scale.  相似文献   

9.
An advanced non-invasive, field-suitable and inexpensive leaf patch clamp pressure probe for online-monitoring of the water relations of intact leaves is described. The probe measures the attenuated output patch clamp pressure, Pp, of a clamped leaf in response to an externally applied input pressure, Pclamp. Pclamp is generated magnetically. Pp is sensed by a pressure sensor integrated into the magnetic clamp. The magnitude of Pp depends on the transfer function, Tf, of the leaf cells. Tf consists of a turgor pressure-independent (related to the compression of the cuticle, cell walls and other structural elements) and a turgor pressure-dependent term. Tf is dimensionless and assumes values between 0 and 1. Theory shows that Tf is a power function of cell turgor pressure Pc. Concomitant Pp and Pc measurements on grapevines confirmed the relationship between Tf and Pc. Pp peaked if Pc approached zero and assumed low values if Pc reached maximum values. The novel probe was successfully tested on leaves of irrigated and non-irrigated grapevines under field conditions. Data show that slight changes in the microclimate and/or water supply (by irrigation or rain) are reflected very sensitively in Pp.  相似文献   

10.
Abscisic acid (ABA) was shown to influence turgor pressure and growth in wheat (Triticum aestivum L.) roots. At a concentrations of 25 mmol·m-3, ABA increased the turgor pressure of cells located within 1 cm of the tip by up to 450 kPa. At 4 to 5 cm from the root tip this concentration of ABA reduced the turgor pressure of peripheral cells (epidermis and the first few cortical cell layers) to zero or close to zero while that of the inner cells was increased. Increases in sap osmolality were dependent on the concentration of ABA and the effect saturated at 5 mmol·m-3 ABA. The increase in osmolality took about 4 h and was partly the result of reducing-sugar accumulation. Levels of inorganic cations were not affected by ABA. Root growth was inhibited at ABA concentrations that caused a turgor-pressure increase. The results show that while ABA can affect root cell turgor pressures, this effect does not result in increased root growth.Abbreviation ABA abscisic acid  相似文献   

11.
Pressure probe and isopiestic psychrometer measure similar turgor   总被引:10,自引:2,他引:8       下载免费PDF全文
Turgor measured with a miniature pressure probe was compared to that measured with an isopiestic thermocouple psychrometer in mature regions of soybean (Glycine max [L.] Merr.) stems. The probe measured turgor directly in cells of intact stems whereas the psychrometer measured the water potential and osmotic potential of excised stem segments and turgor was calculated by difference. When care was taken to prevent dehydration when working with the pressure probe, and diffusive resistance and dilution errors with the psychrometer, both methods gave similar values of turgor whether the plants were dehydrating or rehydrating. This finding, together with the previously demonstrated similarity in turgor measured with the isopiestic psychrometer and a pressure chamber, indicates that the pressure probe provides accurate measurements of turgor despite the need to penetrate the cell. On the other hand, it suggests that as long as precautions are taken to obtain accurate values for the water potential and osmotic potential, turgor can be determined by isopiestic psychrometry in tissues not accessible to the pressure probe for physical reasons.  相似文献   

12.
Internodes of Chara corallina were used for experiments in which cell turgor pressure was clamped by means of the pressure probe technique. Essentially, the procedure consisted of a combination of volume and turgor pressure relaxations. This technique permits the determination of the cell volume by nonoptical means. The values obtained are in agreement with the ones determined by optical means. Furthermore, the hydraulic conductivity (Lp) was determined from the initial slope of the volume relaxation; the values thus obtained are in agreement with those calculated from the half-times of pressure relaxations. The determination of Lp from volume relaxation measurements has the advantage that the cell volume, the volumetric elastic modulus of the cell wall, and the internal osmotic pressure do not have to be known. Furthermore, the half-time of volume relaxation is longer than that of pressure relaxation, as shown by theory and experiment. This may be used to enhance the resolution of the relaxation measurement and, thus, to improve the accuracy of Lp determinations for higher plant cells which exhibit a very fast pressure relaxation.  相似文献   

13.
Turgor pressure was measured in cortical cells and in xylem elements of excised roots and roots of intact plants of Zea mays L. by means of a cell pressure probe. Turgor of living and hence not fully differentiated late metaxylem (range 0.6–0.8 MPa) was consistently higher than turgor of cortical cells (range 0.4–0.6 MPa) at positions between 40 and 180 mm behind the root tip. Closer to the tip, no turgor difference between the cortex and the stele was measured. The turgor difference indicated that late-metaxylem elements may function as nutrient-storage compartments within the stele. Excised roots were attached to the root pressure probe to precisely manipulate the xylem water potential. Root excision did not affect turgor of cortical cells for at least 8 h. Using the cell pressure probe, the propagation of a hydrostatic pressure change effected by the root pressure probe was recorded in mature and immature xylem elements at various positions along the root. Within seconds, the pressure change propagated along both early and late metaxylems. The half-times of the kinetics, however, were about five times smaller for the early metaxylem, indicating they are likely the major pathway of longitudinal water flow. The hydraulic signal dissipated from the source of the pressure application (cut end of the root) to the tip of the root, presumably because of radial water movement along the root axis. The results demonstrate that the water status of the growth zone and other positions apical to 20 mm is mainly uncoupled from changes of the xylem water potential in the rest of the plant.Abbreviations and Symbols CPP cell pressure probe - EMX early metaxylem - LMX Late metaxylem - Pc cell turgor - Pr root pressure - RPP root pressure probe - t1/2,c half-time of water exchange across a single cell - t1/2 half-time of water exchange across multiple cells We thank Antony Matista for his expert assistance in the construction and modification of instruments. The work was supported by grant DCB8802033 from the National Science Foundation and grant 91-37100-6671 from USDA, and by the award of a Feodor Lynen-Fellowship from the Alexander von Humboldt-Foundation (Germany) to J.F.  相似文献   

14.
To allow successful germination and growth of a pollen tube, mature and dehydrated pollen grains (PGs) take up water and have to adjust their turgor pressure according to the water potential of the surrounding stigma surface. The turgor pressure of PGs of lily (Lilium longiflorum) was measured with a modified pressure probe for simultaneous recordings of turgor pressure and membrane potential to investigate the relation between water and electrogenic ion transport in osmoregulation. Upon hyperosmolar shock, the turgor pressure decreased, and the plasma membrane (PM) hyperpolarizes in parallel, whereas depolarization of the PM was observed with hypoosmolar treatment. An acidification and alkalinization of the external medium was monitored after hyper- and hypoosmotic treatments, respectively, and pH changes were blocked by vanadate, indicating a putative role of the PM H(+) ATPase. Indeed, an increase in PM-associated 14-3-3 proteins and an increase in PM H(+) ATPase activity were detected in PGs challenged by hyperosmolar medium. We therefore suggest that in PGs the PM H(+) ATPase via modulation of its activity by 14-3-3 proteins is involved in the regulation of turgor pressure.  相似文献   

15.
The conventional method of measuring plant cell turgor pressure is the pressure probe but applying this method to single cells in suspension culture is technically difficult and requires puncture of the cell wall. Conversely, compression testing by micromanipulation is particularly suited to studies on single cells, and can be used to characterise cell wall mechanical properties, but has not been used to measure turgor pressure. In order to demonstrate that the micromanipulation method can do this, pressure measurements by both methods were compared on single suspension-cultured tomato (Lycopersicon esculentum vf36) cells and generally were in good agreement. This validates further the micromanipulation method and demonstrates its capability to measure turgor pressure during water loss. It also suggests that it might eventually be used to estimate plant cell hydraulic conductivity.  相似文献   

16.
Changes in cell turgor pressure have been followed in cells of Microcystis sp. transferred to culture medium containing added NaCl at osmolalities of 30–1,500 mosmol kg-1 ( 74–3,680 kPa). Upon upshock turgor decreased, due to osmotically-induced water loss from the cell. However, partial recovery of turgor was then observed in illuminated cells, with maximum turgor regain in media containing 30–500 mosmol kg-1 NaCl. The lightdependent recovery of turgor pressure was completed within 60 min, with no evidence of further changes in cell turgor up to 24 h. This is the first direct evidence that turgor regulation may occur in a prokaryotic organism. Short-term increases in cell K+ content were also observed upon upshock in NaCl, indicating that turgor regain may involve a turgorsensitive K+ uptake system. Estimation of internal K+ concentration in cells transferred to 250 mosmol kg-1 NaCl showed that changes in cell K+ may account for at least half of the observed turgor regain up to 60 min.  相似文献   

17.
Simultaneous measurements of net CO2 exchange, water vapor exchange, and leaf water relations were performed in Mesembryanthemum crystallinum during the development of crassulacean acid metabolism (CAM) in response to high NaCl salinity in the rooting medium. Determinations of chlorophyll a fluorescence were used to estimate relative changes in electron transport rate. Alterations in leaf mass per unit area, which—on a short-term basis—largely reflect changes in water content, were recorded continuously with a beta-gauge. Turgor pressure of mesophyll cells was determined with a pressure probe. As reported previously (K Winter, DJ von Willert [1972] Z Pflanzenphysiol 67: 166-170), recently expanded leaves of plants grown under nonsaline conditions showed gas-exchange characteristics of a C3 plant. Although these plants were not exposed to any particular stress treatment, water content and turgor pressure regularly decreased toward the end of the 12 hour light periods and recovered during the following 12 hours of darkness. When the NaCl concentration of the rooting medium was raised to 400 millimolar, in increments of 100 millimolar given at the onset of the photoperiods for 4 consecutive days, leaf water content and turgor pressure decreased by as much as 30 and 60%, respectively, during the course of the photoperiods. These transient decreases probably triggered the induction of the biochemical machinery which is required for CAM to operate. After several days at 400 millimolar NaCl, when leaves showed features typical of CAM, overall turgor pressure and leaf mass per unit area had increased above the levels before onset of the salt treatment, and diurnal alterations in leaf water content were reduced. Net carbon gain during photoperiods and average intercellular CO2 partial pressures at which net CO2 uptake occurred, progressively decreased upon salinization. Reversible diurnal depressions in leaf conductance and net CO2 uptake, with minima recorded in the middle of the photoperiods, preceded the occurrence of nocturnal net CO2 uptake. During these reductions, intercellular CO2 partial pressure and rates of photosynthetic electron transport decreased. With advancing age, leaves of plants grown under nonsaline conditions exhibited progressively greater diurnal reductions in turgor pressure and developed a low degree of CAM activity.  相似文献   

18.
Spatial distribution of turgor and root growth at low water potentials   总被引:29,自引:12,他引:17       下载免费PDF全文
Spatial distributions of turgor and longitudinal growth were compared in primary roots of maize (Zea mays L. cv FR27 × FRMo 17) growing in vermiculite at high (−0.02 megapascals) or low (−1.6 megapascals) water potential. Turgor was measured directly using a pressure probe in cells of the cortex and stele. At low water potential, turgor was greatly decreased in both tissues throughout the elongation zone. Despite this, longitudinal growth in the apical 2 millimeters was the same in the two treatments, as reported previously. These results indicate that the low water potential treatment caused large changes in cell wall yielding properties that contributed to the maintenance of root elongation. Further from the apex, longitudinal growth was inhibited at low water potential despite only slightly lower turgor than in the apical region. Therefore, the ability to adjust cell wall properties in response to low water potential may decrease with cell development.  相似文献   

19.
Zhu GL  Boyer JS 《Plant physiology》1992,100(4):2071-2080
A new method, the turgor clamp, was developed to test the effects of turgor on cell enlargement. The method used a pressure probe to remove or inject cell solution and change the turgor without altering the external environment of the cell walls. After the injections, the cells were permanently at the new turgor and required no further manipulation. Internode cells of Chara corallina grew rapidly with the pressure probe in place when growth was monitored with a position transducer. Growth-induced water potentials were negligible and turgor effects could be studied simply. As turgor was decreased, there was a threshold below which no growth occurred, and only reversible elastic/viscoelastic changes could be seen. Above the threshold, growth was superimposed on the elastic/viscoelastic effects. The rate of growth did not depend on turgor. Instead, the rate was highly dependent on energy metabolism as shown by inhibitors that rapidly abolished growth without changing the turgor. However, turgors could be driven above the maximum normally attainable by the cell, and these caused growth to respond as though plastic deformation of the walls was beginning, but the deformation caused wounding. Growth was inhibited when turgor was changed with osmotica but not inhibited when similar changes were made with the turgor clamp. It was concluded that osmotica caused side effects that could be mistaken for turgor effects. The presence of a turgor threshold indicates that turgor was required for growth. However, because turgor did not control the rate, it appears incorrect to consider the rate to be determined by a turgor-dependent plastic deformation of wall polymers. Instead, above the turgor threshold, the rapid response to energy inhibitors suggests a control by metabolic reactions causing synthesis and/or extension of wall polymers.  相似文献   

20.
Using the cell-pressure probe the possibility of symplastic water flow between cells of the upper epidermis of barley leaves was investigated. Cells analysed had either an intact or a more or less damaged cellular environment. Cell damage caused large pressure differentials (0·9 MPa) between damaged and adjacent intact cells. Turgor in cells adjacent to damaged cells decreased significantly. Turgor decreases were the larger the more the adjacent, damaged cell was leaking (decreases by 2·5–4·4%). In cells surrounded by a patch of leaking cells, turgor decreased the most, by 18·1–20·4%. In contrast, half-times of water exchange (T1/2) of cells were not affected by a damaged cellular environment. Assuming that in the barley leaf epidermis, plasmodesmata close at pressure-differentials at or exceeding 0·2 MPa as shown for other plant cells (The Plant Journal 2, 741–750; Canadian Journal of Botany 65, 509–511), it is concluded that symplastic water flow contributes insignificantly to water exchange between cells. Mechanical damage to one individual cell is enough to induce significant turgor changes in neighbouring cells.  相似文献   

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