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1.
This review speculates on correlations between mass flow in sieve tubes and the distribution of photoassimilates and macromolecular signals. Since micro- (low-molecular compounds) and macromolecules are withdrawn from, and released into, the sieve-tube sap at various rates, distribution patterns of these compounds do not strictly obey mass-flow predictions. Due to serial release and retrieval transport steps executed by sieve tube plasma membranes, micromolecules are proposed to “hop” between sieve element/companion cell complexes and phloem parenchyma cells under source-limiting conditions (apoplasmic hopping). Under sink-limiting conditions, micromolecules escape from sieve tubes via pore-plasmodesma units and are temporarily stored. It is speculated that macromolecules “hop” between sieve elements and companion cells using plasmodesmal trafficking mechanisms (symplasmic hopping). We explore how differential tagging may influence distribution patterns of macromolecules and how their bidirectional movement could arise. Effects of exudation techniques on the macromolecular composition of sieve-tube sap are discussed.  相似文献   

2.
The phloem, a miracle of ingenuity   总被引:26,自引:2,他引:24  
This review deals with aspects of the cellular and molecular biology of the sieve element/companion cell complex, the functional unit of sieve tubes in angiosperms. It includes the following issues: (a) evolution of the sieve elements; (b) the specific structural outfit of sieve elements and its functional significance; (c) modes of cellular and molecular interaction between sieve element and companion cell; (d) plasmodesmal trafficking between sieve element and companion cell as the basis for macromolecular long‐distance signalling in the phloem; (e) diversity of sieve element/companion cell complexes in the respective phloem zones (collection phloem, transport phloem, release phloem); (f) deployment of carriers, pumps and channels on the plasma membrane of sieve element/companion cell complexes in various phloem zones; and (g) implications of the molecular‐cellular equipment of sieve element/companion cells complexes for mass flow of water and solutes in a whole‐plant frame.  相似文献   

3.
When special precautions were taken to permit killing and fixation of sieve elements before they were cut, sieve pores were found to be open. Companion cells were shown to be highly resistant to freezing injury and less plasmolyzable than phloem parenchyma. Plasmodesmata connected parenchyma to parenchyma, parenchyma to companion cells, and companion cells to sieve elements. Their general absence between parenchyma cells and sieve elements points to a specific role of companion cells in sieve tube functioning. EM studies of these cells revealed an ER system which connects the central core of the plasmodesma to the sieve tube. This system may be responsible for active sucrose transport. Callose was always present on sieve plates of mature functioning sieve elements even with the most rapid killing and fixing possible. Extra callose promoted by heating (45 C) an intact stem segment was found to constrict the sieve pores almost completely. Constriction of plasmodesmata in lateral sieve areas also was evident. Fine structure analysis of the blocking mechanism is in accord with evidence obtained by tracer studies.  相似文献   

4.
K. J. Oparka  P. Gates 《Planta》1981,151(6):561-573
Assimilates entering the developing rice caryopsis traverse a short-distance pathway between the terminal sieve elements of the pericarp vascular bundle and the aleurone layer. The ultrastructure of this pathway has been studied. Sieve elements in the pericarp vascular bundle are smaller than their companion cells.The sieve elements show few connections with surrounding vascular parenchyma elements but are connected to companion cells by compound plasmodesmata. Companion cells, in turn, are connected to vascular parenchyma elements by numerous compound plasmodesmata present in wall thickenings. Assimilates leaving the sieve element — companion cell complex must laterally traverse cells of the pigment strand before they come into contact with the aleurone layer. The pigment strand cells have modified inner walls made up of a suberin-like material. This material may act as a permeability barrier isolating the apoplast from the symplast of the pigment strand. The walls of the pigment strand cells are traversed by numerous plasmodesmata. Water may be conducted to the endosperm through the isolated cell-wall system of the pigment strand while assimilates possibly move via plasmodesmata. High frequencies of plasmodesmata occur at the junction between the pigment strand and the nucellus and also between adjacent cells of the nucellus. By contrast, plasmodesmata are absent between the nucellus and the aleurone layer and also between the nucellus and the seed coat. A predominantly circumferential and symplastic transport pathway is likely between the pigment strand and nucellus. In view of the total absence of plasmodesmata between the nucellus and the aleurone layer assimilates entering the endosperm may have to cross the plasmalemma of the nucellus. It is possible that constraints to the flow of assimilates may occur in the short-distance pathway between the terminal sieve element — companion cell complexes and the endosperm, and this is discussed.  相似文献   

5.
Seminal root tissue of Hordeum vulgare L. var. Barsoy was fixed in glutaraldehyde and osmium tetroxide and studied with the light and electron microscopes. The roots consist of an epidermis, 6–7 layers of cortical cells, a uniseriate endodermis and a central vascular cylinder. Cytologically, the cortical and endodermal cells are similar except for the presence of tubular-like invaginations of the plasmalemma, especially near the plasmodesmata, in the former. The vascular cylinder consists of a uniseriate pericycle surrounding 6–9 phloem strands occurring on alternating radii with an equal number of xylem bundles. The center of the root contains a single, late maturing metaxylem vessel element. Each phloem strand consists of one protophloem sieve element, two companion cells and 1–3 metaphloem sieve elements. The protophloem element and companion cells are contiguous with the pericycle. Metaphloem sieve elements are contiguous with companion cells and are separated from tracheary elements by xylem parenchyma cells. The protoplasts of contiguous cells of the root are joined by various numbers of cytoplasmic connections. With the exception of the pore-plasmodesmata connections between sieve-tube members and parenchymatic elements, the plasmodesmata between various cell types are similar in structure. The distribution of plasmodesmata supports a symplastic pathway for organic solute unloading and transport from the phloem to the cortex. Based on the arrangement of cell types and plasmodesmatal frequencies between various cell types of the root, the major symplastic pathway from sieve elements to cortex appears to be via the companion and xylem parenchyma cells.  相似文献   

6.
The conducting elements of phloem in angiosperms are a complex of two cell types, sieve elements and companion cells, that form a single developmental and functional unit. During ontogeny of the sieve element/companion cell complex, specific proteins accumulate forming unique structures within sieve elements. Synthesis of these proteins coincides with vascular development and was studied in Cucurbita seedlings by following accumulation of the phloem lectin (PP2) and its mRNA by RNA blot analysis, enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay, immunocytochemistry and in␣situ hybridization. Genes encoding PP2 were developmentally regulated during vascular differentiation in hypocotyls of Cucurbita maxima Duch. Accumulation of PP2 mRNA and protein paralleled one another during hypocotyl elongation, after which mRNA levels decreased, while the protein appeared to be stable. Both PP2 and its mRNA were initially detected during metaphloem differentiation. However, PP2 mRNA was detected in companion cells of both bundle and extrafascicular phloem, but never in differentiating sieve elements. At later stages of development, PP2 mRNA was most often observed in extrafascicular phloem. In developing stems of Cucurbita moschata L., PP2 was immunolocalized in companion cells but not to filamentous phloem protein (P-protein) bodies that characterize immature sieve elements of bundle phloem. In contrast, PP2 was immunolocalized to persistent ␣ P-protein bodies in sieve elements of the extrafascicular phloem. Immunolocalization of PP2 in mature wound sieve elements was similar to that in bundle phloem. It appears that PP2 is synthesized in companion cells, then transported into differentiated sieve elements where it is a component of P-protein filaments in bundle phloem and persistent P-protein bodies in extrafascicular phloem. This differential accumulation in bundle and extrafascicular elements may result from different functional roles of the two types of phloem. Received: 31 July 1996 / Accepted: 27 August 1996  相似文献   

7.
Sieve tubes are comprised of sieve elements, enucleated cells that are incapable of RNA and protein synthesis. The proteins in sieve elements are supplied from the neighboring companion cells through plasmodesmata. In rice plants, it was unclear whether or not all proteins produced in companion cells had the same distribution pattern in the sieve element-companion cell complex. In this study, the distribution pattern of four proteins, beta-glucuronidase (GUS), green fluorescent protein (GFP), thioredoxin h (TRXh) and glutathione S-transferase (GST) were analyzed. The foreign proteins GUS and GFP were expressed in transgenic rice plants under the control of the TRXh gene promoter (PTRXh), a companion cell-specific promoter. Analysis of leaf cross-sections of PTRXh-GUS and PTRXh-GFP plants indicated high accumulation of GUS and GFP, respectively, in companion cells rather than in sieve elements. GUS and GFP were also detected in phloem sap collected from leaf sheaths of the transgenic rice plants, suggesting these proteins could enter sieve elements. Relative amounts of GFP and endogenous phloem proteins, TRXh and GST, in phloem sap and total leaf extracts were compared. Compared to TRXh and GST, GFP content was higher in total leaf extracts, but lower in phloem sap, suggesting that GFP accumulated mainly in companion cells rather than in sieve elements. On the other hand, TRXh and GST appeared to accumulate in sieve elements rather than in companion cells. These results indicate the evidence for differential distribution of proteins between sieve elements and companion cells in rice plants.  相似文献   

8.
Summary The cell-specific expression of two arabinogalactan protein (AGP) epitopes recognized by monoclonal antibodies JIM8 and JIM13 is reported in maize roots. Employing immunofluorescence and immunogold electron microscopy, the JIM8 antibody was shown to label exclusively protophloem sieve elements, while the JIM13 antibody labelled sieve elements very strongly and adjacent pericycle and companion cells, as well as sloughing root cap cells less strongly. Since the labelling of sieve elements with JIM8 antibody was specific and did not spread to other cell types during root development, it is concluded that this AGP epitope can serve as a specific marker of these specialized cells within the maize root. In the case of the AGP epitope recognized by JIM13 antibody, part of the immunofluorescence label was also found to be associated with cytoplasmic strands in the pericycle and sloughing root cap cells. Immunogold-labelling of sieve elements revealed the association of both AGP epitopes (JIM8 and JIM13) with cortical sieve element reticulum and plasma membranes. Labelling of sieve element reticulum was prominent at its domains of adhesion to the plasma membrane, P-type plastids, and mitochondria. Based on our subcellular studies, we propose a new function of AGP epitopes in endomembrane recognition and adhesion within the sieve elements of maize roots.Abbreviations AGP arabinogalactan protein - SER sieve element reticulum  相似文献   

9.
What Is Phloem Unloading?   总被引:19,自引:2,他引:17       下载免费PDF全文
Oparka KJ 《Plant physiology》1990,94(2):393-396
Several studies of phloem unloading have failed to distinguish between transport events occurring at the sieve element/companion cell boundary and subsequent short-distance transport through parenchyma cells. Indirect evidence has been obtained for symplastic unloading in storage and utilization sinks. In other sinks transfer to the apoplast may occur, but not necessarily at the sieve element/companion cell complex, and the evidence for apoplastic phloem unloading is equivocal, as is the role of apoplastic acid invertase in this process. The ability of several types of sink cells to accumulate sugars from the apoplast is discussed in the conflicting light of functional symplastic continuity between sink cells. Attention is drawn to the complexity of the postunloading pathway in many sinks and the difficulty of determining the exact sites of symplast/apoplast solute exchange. Potential future areas for study in the field are highlighted.  相似文献   

10.
11.
Abstract. Glutaraldehyde fixation was used to determine the solute concentrations in the various cell types present in tissue cultures of squash ( Cucurbita pepo ). Small pieces of callus were plasmolyzed in a graded series of mannitol solutions and fixed in 20 kg m−3 glutaraldehyde adjusted to be isosmotic with the particular plasmolysing solution. The callus samples were further processed using standard electron microscopy techniques. Using this procedure, mature sieve elements that form in squash callus have an osmotic potentional of -2.4MPa. The osmotic potential of the callus sieve elements was comparable to values reported for the sieve tube members of the phloem in intact plants. This ability of callus sieve elements to develop high internal hydrostatic pressures demonstrates that they are capable of phloem loading. However, the osmotic potentials of the surrounding parenchymatous cells and companion cells were only –1.15 and –1.5 MPa, respectively. In contrast to the companion cells of the phloem in intact plant tissues, the osmotic potential of the callus companion cells indicated that they were not directly involved in phloem loading. Several immature sieve elements containing distinct nuclei and vacuoles were observed in the callus granules. These immature sieve elements were plasmolyzed in weaker mannitol solutions (below 0.6kmol m−3) than the enucleate sieve elements (1.01 kmol m−3 mannitol). The low solute concentrations in immature sieve elements indicated that the ability to load sugars occurs concomitantly with the maturation of the sieve element protoplast.  相似文献   

12.
Haritatos E  Medville R  Turgeon R 《Planta》2000,211(1):105-111
Leaf and minor vein structure were studied in Arabidopsis thaliana (L.) Heynh. to gain insight into the mechanism(s) of phloem loading. Vein density (length of veins per unit leaf area) is extremely low. Almost all veins are intimately associated with the mesophyll and are probably involved in loading. In transverse sections of veins there are, on average, two companion cells for each sieve element. Phloem parenchyma cells appear to be specialized for delivery of photoassimilate from the bundle sheath to sieve element-companion cell complexes: they make numerous contacts with the bundle sheath and with companion cells and they have transfer cell wall ingrowths where they are in contact with sieve elements. Plasmodesmatal frequencies are high at interfaces involving phloem parenchyma cells. The plasmodesmata between phloem parenchyma cells and companion cells are structurally distinct in that there are several branches on the phloem parenchyma cell side of the wall and only one branch on the companion cell side. Most of the translocated sugar in A. thaliana is sucrose, but raffinose is also transported. Based on structural evidence, the most likely route of sucrose transport is from bundle sheath to phloem parenchyma cells through plasmodesmata, followed by efflux into the apoplasm across wall ingrowths and carrier-mediated uptake into the sieve element-companion cell complex. Received: 5 October 1999 / Accepted: 20 November 1999  相似文献   

13.
Evert , Ray F. (U. Wisconsin, Madison.) Ontogeny and structure of the secondary phloem in Pyrus malus. Amer. Jour. Bot. 50(1): 8–37. Illus. 1963.—The secondary phloem of apple consists of sieve-tube elements, companion cells, phloem parenchyma cells, fiber-sclereids, and ray parenchyma cells. The sieve-tube elements are generally long, slender cells with very oblique end walls and much-compounded sieve plates. All sieve-tube elements initially possess nacreous thickenings. Similar wall thickenings were observed in the differentiating fiber-sclereids and xylem elements. Of the 245 sieve-tube elements critically examined, 242 were associated with companion cells. All of the companion cells were shorter than their associated sieve-tube elements. Young companion cells possess slime bodies which later become dispersed. Callose is often found on the sieve-tube element side of the common wall between sieve-tube element and companion cell. In several collections, callose was found on both sides of that wall. The parenchyma cells are of 3 types: crystal-containing cells; tannin-and/or starch-containing cells; and those with little or no tannins or starch. Any type parenchyma cell may be on to genetically related to a sieve-tube element, that is, may be derived from the same phloem initial as the sieve-tube element. Morphologically, the phloem parenchyma cells intergrade with the companion cells, the tannin- and starch-free parenchyma cells often being difficult to distinguish from companion cells. Most of the tannin- and starch-free parenchyma cells collapse when the contiguous sieve-tube elements become nonfunctional. The fiber-sclereids arise from parenchyma cells which overwinter on the margin of the cambial zone and differentiate in nonfunctional phloem.  相似文献   

14.
R. F. Evert  W. Eschrich  W. Heyser 《Planta》1978,138(3):279-294
Small and intermediate (longitudinal) vascular bundles of the Zea mays leaf are surrounded by chlorenchymatous bundle sheaths and consist of one or two vessels, variable numbers of vascular parenchyma cells, and two or more sieve tubes some of which are associated with companion cells. Sieve tubes not associated with companion cells have relatively thick walls and commonly are in direct contact with the vessels. The thick-walled sieve tubes have abundant cytoplasmic connections with contiguous vascular parenchyma cells; in contrast, connections between vascular parenchyma cells and thin-walled sieve tubes are rare. Connections are abundant, however, between the thin-walled sieve tubes and their companion cells; the latter have few connections with the vascular parenchyma cells. Plasmolytic studies on leaves of plants taken directly from lighted growth chambers gave osmotic potential values of about-18 bars for the companion cells and thin-walled sieve tubes (the companion cell-sieve tube complexes) and about-11 bars for the vascular parenchyma cells. Judging from the distribution of connections between various cell types of the vascular bundles and from the osmotic potential values of those cell types, it appears that sugar is actively accumulated from the apoplast by the companion cell-sieve tube complex, probably across the plasmalemma of the companion cell. The thick-walled sieve tubes, with their close spatial association with the vessels and possession of plasmalemma tubules, may play a role in retrieval of solutes entering the leaf apoplast in the transpiration stream. The transverse veins have chlorenchymatous bundle sheaths and commonly contain a single vessel and sieve tube. Parenchymatic elements may or may not be present. Like the thick-walled sieve tubes of the longitudinal bundles, the sieve tubes of the transverse veins have plasmalemma tubules, indicating that they too may play a role in retrieval of solutes entering the leaf apoplast in the transpiration stream.  相似文献   

15.
ESAU  KATHERINE 《Annals of botany》1973,37(3):625-632
The phloem of Mimosa pudica L. furnishes an example of definablediversification of the parenchymatic members of the tissue intocompanion cells and parenchyma cells. The companion cells havedense protoplasts which contain the typical organelles of plantcells, including chloroplasts and many ribosomes. The sieveelements and companion cells are interconnected by numerousbranched plasmodesmata. The companion cells degenerate whenthe associated sieve elements cease to function. The parenchymacells have less dense protoplasts than the companion cells.In many parenchyma cells the rough endoplasmic reticulum assumesa tubular form, and bundles of microfilaments are present. Thecytoplasmic ribosomes occur in groups apparently held togetherby fibrils. Chloroplasts, mitochondria (some are exceptionallylong), dictyosomes, microbodies, and microtubules are the othercell components. Whether the parenchyma cells are ontogeneticallyrelated to the sieve elements or not, they do not degeneratewhen the sieve element ceases to function.  相似文献   

16.
High-molecular-weight fluorochromes were intracellularly injected into a sieve element of the fascicular stem phloem ofVicia faba L., using a modified membrane-potential-recording pressure probe. After stabilization of the membrane potential following microelectrode impalement, either LYCH (Lucifer Yellow CH), 4.4-kDa FITC-dextran (fluoresceinisothiocyanate-dextran) conjugate, or 3-kDa, 10-kDa or 40-kDa LYCH-dextran conjugate was microinjected into the sieve element. Longitudinal fluorochrome movement across the sieve plates and lateral displacement to the companion cells was detected with all the probes except the 40-kDa conjugate. This indicates that the molecular exclusion limit of the pore/plasmodesma units between a sieve element and a companion cell in the fascicular stem phloem ofVicia faba lies between 10 kDa and 40 kDa.Abbreviations FITC fluoresceinisothiocyanate - LYCH Lucifer Yellow CH - MEL molecular exclusion limit - PPU pore/plasmodesma unit - SE/CC-complex sieve element/companion cell complex  相似文献   

17.
K. J. Oparka 《Protoplasma》1986,131(3):201-210
Summary Potential pathways for sucrose unloading in the potato tuber were examined by light and electron microscopy. Abundant plasmodesmata connected sieve elements with surrounding parenchyma elements and also sieve elements with companion cells. Plasmodesmata were rarer, however, between companion cells and parenchyma elements. These observations suggest that sucrose may leave the sieve elements and enter the storage parenchyma cells directly via the symplast and that transport through the companion cell may not be a prerequisite for unloading. Plasmodesmata, grouped together in primary pit fields, were also abundant between storage cells, and isolated storage cells, separated enzymically, showed considerable variation in plasmodesmatal distribution between cells and also on different faces of a single cell. Deposition of starch was found to occur in the tuber cortex while an endodermis with Casparian strip was present external to the phloem, suggesting that assimilates initially enter the cortical storage cells by an entirely symplastic pathway. The possible involvement of ATPase in the unloading process was examined cytochemically, using a lead-salt precipitation method. By contrast with previous findings for phloem no evidence was found for ATPase activity that was unique to the sieve element-companion cell complex. The present observations favour the view that phloem unloading in the potato tuber is a symplastic and passive process.  相似文献   

18.
Detection of Several mRNA Species in Rice Phloem Sap   总被引:4,自引:0,他引:4  
Evidence is reported for the presence of the mRNAs of thioredoxinh, oryzacystatin-I, and actin in the rice phloem sap collectedby the insect laser method. As the sieve element, the core componentof the phloem, is enucleated, these macromolecules are probablytransported from the companion cells. 1Current address: Ajinomoto Co., Inc., Fermentation & BiotechnologyLaboratories, 1-1 Suzuki-cho, Kawasaki-ku, Kawasaki, 210-8581Japan.  相似文献   

19.
Abstract. The sieve-tube elements of long-lived arborescent monocotyledons which lack secondary thickening remain functional for many decades despite lacking a nucleus. A minimal requirement for transport by mass flow powered by the Munch mechanism is maintenance of semi-permeability of the plasmalemma of the sieve tube elements; loading and re-loading could be deputed to nucleate cells symplastically linked to the sieve elements. An additional requirement in the long-term relates to replacement of components damaged by mechanical, chemical or radiation intrusions. Minimizing the damage from radiation and chemical agents can be related to a number of commonly observed features of sieve tubes. Damage from O2 and radicals derived there from is minimized in these essentially aerobic cells by (1) the absence of intercellular gas spaces in the phloem combined with the lower O2 solubility and diffusivity in concentrated disaccharide (or sugar alcohol) solutions, (2) the absence of photosynthetic machinery which could generate singlet oxygen, and (3) the presence of at least some components of scavenging mechanisms (glutathione, peroxidase, abscorbate). Non-enzymic glycosylation (exacerbated by O2) of proteins is minimized by the low concentrations of reducing sugars in sieve-tubes. Ultraviolet damage is minimized by UV-absorbing materials between the plant surface and the sieve tubes, including the selerenchymatous cap of fibres on the vascular bundles. The extent to which repair involves symplastic import of polypeptides from nucleate companion cells, thus breaching the −800-Da limit on symplastic transport, is unclear, but it could occur in fully differentiated companion cell-sieve element associations without necessarily upsetting development.  相似文献   

20.
Summary The minor veins ofCucurbita pepo leaves were examined as part of a continuing study of leaf development and phloem transport in this species. The minor veins are bicollateral along their entire length. Mature sieve elements are enucleate and lack ribosomes. There is no tonoplast. The sieve elements, which are joined to each other by sieve plates, contain mitochondria, plastids and endoplasmic reticulum as well as fibrillar and tubular (190–195 diameter) P-protein. Fibrillar P-protein is dispersed in mature abaxial sieve elements but remains aggregated as discrete bodies in mature adaxial sieve elements. In both abaxial and adaxial mature sieve elements tubular P-protein remains undispersed. Sieve pores in abaxial sieve elements are narrow, lined with callose and are filled with P-protein. In adaxial sieve elements they are wide, contain little callose and are unobstructed. The intermediary cells (companion cells) of the abaxial phloem are large and dwarf the diminutive sieve elements. Intermediary cells are densely filled with ribosomes and contain numerous small vacuoles and many mitochondria which lie close to the plasmalemma. An unusually large number of plasmodesmata traverse the common wall between intermediary cells and bundle sheath cells suggesting that the pathway for the transport of photosynthate from the mesophyll to the sieve elements is at least partially symplastic. Adaxial companion cells are of approximately the same diameter as the adaxial sieve elements. They are densely packed with ribosomes and have a large central vacuole. They are not conspicuously connected by plasmodesmata to the bundle sheath.  相似文献   

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