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1.
During differentiation of isolated Zinnia mesophyll cells into tracheary elements (TEs), lignification on TEs progresses by supply of monolignols not only from TEs themselves but also from surrounding xylem parenchyma-like cells through the culture medium. However, how lignin polymerizes from the secreted monolignols has not been resolved. In this study, we analyzed phenol compounds in culture medium with reversed-phase HPLC, gas chromatography-mass spectrometry and nuclear magnetic resonance spectrometry, and found 12 phenolic compounds including coniferyl alcohol and four dilignols, i.e. erythro-guaiacylglycerol-beta-coniferyl ether, threo-guaiacylglycerol-beta-coniferyl ether, dehydrodiconiferyl alcohol and pinoresinol, in the medium in which TEs were developing. Coniferyl alcohol applied to TE-inductive cultures during TE formation rapidly disappeared from the medium, and caused a sudden increase in dilignols. Addition of the dilignols promoted lignification of TEs in which monolignol biosynthesis was blocked by an inhibitor of phenylalanine anmmonia-lyase (PAL), L-alpha-aminooxy-beta-phenylpropionic acid (AOPP). These results suggested that dilignols can act as intermediates of lignin polymerization.  相似文献   

2.
Mechanically isolated mesophyll cells of Zinnia elegans differentiate into tracheary elements (TEs) when cultured in a medium containing adequate auxin and cytokinin. Differentiation in this culture system is relatively synchronous, rapid (occuring within 3 days of cell isolation) and efficient (with up to 65% of the mesophyll cells differentiating into TEs), and does not require prior mitosis. The Zinnia system has been used to investigate (a) cytological and ultrastructural changes occurring during TE differentiation, such as the reorganization of microtubules controlling secondary wall deposition, (b) the influences of calcium and of various plant hormones and antihormones on TE differentiation, and (c) biochemical changes during differentiation, including those occurring during secondary wall deposition, lignification and autolysis. This review summarizes experiments in which the Zinnia system has served as a model for the study of TE differentiation.  相似文献   

3.
We investigated the effect of elicitors on xylem differentiation and lignification using a Zinnia elegans xylogenic culture system. Water-soluble chitosan and a fungal elicitor derived from Botrytis cinerea were used as elicitors. Elicitor addition at the start of culturing inhibited tracheary element (TE) differentiation in a concentration-dependent manner, and 30 μg mL?1 of chitosan or 16.7 μg mL?1 of the fungal elicitor strikingly inhibited TE differentiation and lignification. Addition of chitosan (at 50 μg mL?1) or the fungal elicitor (at 16.7 μg mL?1) during the culturing period also inhibited TE differentiation without inhibiting cell division, except for immature TEs undergoing secondary wall thickening. Elicitor addition after immature TE appearance also caused the accumulation of an extracellular lignin-like substance. It appears that elicitor addition at the start of culturing inhibits the process by which dedifferentiated cells differentiate into xylem cell precursors. Elicitor addition during culturing also appears to inhibit the transition from xylem cell precursors to immature TEs, and induces xylem cell precursors or xylem parenchyma cells to produce an extracellular stress lignin-like substance.  相似文献   

4.
The differentiation of water-conducting tracheary elements (TEs) is the result of the orchestrated construction of secondary wall structure, including lignification, and programmed cell death (PCD), including cellular autolysis. To understand the orchestrated regulation of differentiation of TEs, we investigated the regulatory mechanism of gene expression directing TE differentiation. Detailed loss-of-function and gain-of-function analyses of the ZCP4 (Zinniacysteine protease 4) promoter, which confers TE-specific expression, demonstrated that a novel 11-bp cis-element is necessary and sufficient for the immature TE-specific promoter activity. The 11-bp cis-element-like sequences were found in promoters of many Arabidopsis TE differentiation-related genes. A gain-of-function analysis with similar putative cis-elements from secondary wall formation or modification-related genes as well as PCD-related genes indicated that the cis-elements are also sufficient for TE-specific expression of genes. These results demonstrate that a common sequence, designated as the tracheary-element-regulating cis-element, confers TE-specific expression to both genes related to secondary wall formation or modification and PCD.  相似文献   

5.
6.
Uniconazole [S-3307; (E)-l-(4-chlorophenyl)-4,4-dimethyl-2-(l,2,4-triazol-l-yl)-l-penten-3-ol],a synthetic plant-growth retardant, inhibited the differentiationof isolated mesophyll cells of Zinnia elegans L. into trachearyelements (TEs) but had no effect on cell division when it wasadded to the culture medium at a concentration of 3.4 µM.In the presence of uniconazole, none of the cytological eventscharacteristic of the processes of TE differentiation, suchas aggregation of actin filaments, bundling of microtubulesor localized thickening and lignification of secondary walls,was observed. Uniconazole was effective when it was added tothe medium within 36 h after the start of culture. Brassinosteroids(0.2 nM brassinolide or 2 µM homobrassinolide), but notgibberellin A3, counteracted the inhibitory effect of uniconazoleon TE differentiation. Brassinosteroids were most effectivewhen they were added to cultures between 24 and 30 h after thestart of culture. Exogenously applied brassinosteroids promotedTE differentiation. It is suggested that the synthesis of brassinosteroidsis essential for the differentiation of the cells into TEs andthat uniconazole inhibits this differentiation through its inhibitoryeffect on the biosynthesis of brassinosteroids. (Received May 9, 1991; )  相似文献   

7.
Fluorescence-tagged coniferyl alcohols, coniferyl alcohol γ-coupled by ethylenediamine spacers to dimethylaminocoumarin or nitrobenzofuran fluorophores, were tested as photoprobes to study the oxidase-mediated polymerization of monolignols. The fluorescent coniferyl alcohol derivatives readily underwent peroxidase-catalyzed in vitro copolymerization with coniferyl alcohol to yield fluorescent dehydrogenation polymers, the backbone polymers of which were structurally indistinguishable from polymers formed solely from coniferyl alcohol. To illustrate the use of the photoprobes, we successfully monitored in real time the complexation of coniferyl alcohol with horseradish apoperoxidase by Fo?rster resonance energy transfer (FRET) using the protein-tryptophan near the active site and a dimethylaminocoumarin moiety as donor and acceptor fluorophores. Furthermore, mixtures of fluorescence-tagged and normal coniferyl alcohols readily diffused into isolated maize cell walls and reacted with wall-bound peroxidases to form in muro artificial lignins that could be visualized by fluorescence microscopy. Thus we anticipate that fluorescence-tagged monolignols will be useful for in vitro and in vivo studies of cell wall lignification.  相似文献   

8.
When Pinus taeda cell suspension cultures are exposed to 8% sucrose solution, the cells undergo significant intracellular disruption, irregular wall thickening/lignification with concomitant formation of an 'extracellular lignin precipitate. However, addition of potassium iodide (KI), an H202 scavenger, inhibits this lignification response, while the ability to synthesize the monolignols, p-coumaryl and coniferyl alcohols, is retained. Lignin synthesis (i.e. polymerization) is thus temporarily correlated with H202 generation, strongly implying a regulatory role for the latter. Time course analyses of extracellular metabolites leading up to polymer formation reveal that coniferyl alcohol, but not p-coumaryl alcohol, undergoes substantial coupling reactions to give various lignans. Of these, the metabolites, dihydrodehydrodiconiferyl alcohol, shonanin (divanillyl tetrahydrofuran) and its apparent aryl tetralin derivative, cannot be explained simply on the basis of phenolic coupling. It is proposed that these moieties are the precursors of so-called reduced substructures in the lignin macromolecule. This adds a new perspective to the lignin assembly mechanism.  相似文献   

9.
A Norway spruce (Picea abies) tissue culture line that produces extracellular lignin into the culture medium has been used as a model system to study the enzymes involved in lignin polymerization. We report here the purification of two highly basic culture medium peroxidases, PAPX4 and PAPX5, and isolation of the corresponding cDNAs. Both isoforms had high affinity to monolignols with apparent Km values in μM range. PAPX4 favoured coniferyl alcohol with a six-fold higher catalytic efficiency (Vmax/Km) and PAPX5 p-coumaryl alcohol with a two-fold higher catalytic efficiency as compared to the other monolignol. Thus coniferyl and p-coumaryl alcohol could be preferentially oxidized by different peroxidase isoforms in this suspension culture, which may reflect a control mechanism for the incorporation of different monolignols into the cell wall. Dehydrogenation polymers produced by the isoforms were structurally similar. All differed from the released suspension culture lignin and milled wood lignin, in accordance with previous observations on the major effects that e.g. cell wall context, rate of monolignol feeding and other proteins have on polymerisation. Amino acid residues shown to be involved in monolignol binding in the lignification-related Arabidopsis ATPA2 peroxidase were nearly identical in PAPX4 and PAPX5. This similarity extended to other peroxidases involved in lignification, suggesting that a preferential structural organization of the substrate access channel for monolignol oxidation might exist in both angiosperms and gymnosperms.  相似文献   

10.
In a culture system in which single cells isolated from the mesophyll of Zinnia elegans L. differentiate to tracheary elements (TEs), two inhibitors of phenylalanine ammonia-lyase (EC 4.3.1.5), L-α-aminooxy-β-phenylpropionic acid (AOPP) at 10 μM inhibited lignification without reducing the number of TEs formed. These inhibitors caused intracellular changes in peroxidase (EC 1.11.1.7) activities. The inhibitors increased the activity of peroxidases bound to the cell walls and especially the activity of peroxidase bound ionically to the cell walls. In contrast, the activity of extracellular peroxidase decreased. There were five isoenzymes, P1-P5, in the ionically bound peroxidase of cultured Zinnia cells. Among the isoenzymes, P4 and P5 appeared to be specific for TE differentation. Treatment with AOPP and AIP resulted in increases in the activities of P2, P4 and P5 isoenzymes, with the most prominent increase in P5 activity. The addition of lignin precursors, including coniferyl alcohol, to the AOPP-treated cells restored lignification, and suppressed the alteration of peroxidase isoenzyme patterns caused by AOPP. The relationship between the wall-bound peroxidases and lignification during TE differentiation is discussed in the light of these results.  相似文献   

11.
Tracking monolignols during wood development in lodgepole pine   总被引:1,自引:1,他引:0  
Secondary xylem (wood) formation in gymnosperms requires that the tracheid protoplasts first build an elaborate secondary cell wall from an array of polysaccharides and then reinforce it with lignin, an amorphous, three-dimensional product of the random radical coupling of monolignols. The objective of this study was to track the spatial distribution of monolignols during development as they move from symplasm to apoplasm. This was done by feeding [(3)H]phenylalanine ([(3)H]Phe) to dissected cambium/developing wood from lodgepole pine (Pinus contorta var latifolia) seedlings, allowing uptake and metabolism, then rapidly freezing the cells and performing autoradiography to detect the locations of the monolignols responsible for lignification. Parallel experiments showed that radioactivity was incorporated into polymeric lignin and a methanol-soluble pool that was characterized by high-performance liquid chromatography. [(3)H]Phe was incorporated into expected lignin precursors, such as coniferyl alcohol and p-coumaryl alcohol, as well as pinoresinol. Coniferin, the glucoside of coniferyl alcohol, was detected by high-performance liquid chromatography but was not radioactively labeled. With light microscopy, radiolabeled phenylpropanoids were detected in the rays as well as the tracheids, with the two cell types showing differential sensitivity to inhibitors of protein translation and phenylpropanoid metabolism. Secondary cell walls of developing tracheids were heavily labeled when incubated with [(3)H]Phe. Inside the cell, cytoplasm was most strongly labeled followed by Golgi and low-vacuole label. Inhibitor studies suggest that the Golgi signal could be attributed to protein, rather than phenylpropanoid, origins. These data, produced with the best microscopy tools that are available today, support a model in which unknown membrane transporters, rather than Golgi vesicles, export monolignols.  相似文献   

12.
13.
The objectives of this study were to define cell structure during pine secondary xylem development and to integrate this information with current knowledge of the biochemistry and physiology of secondary cell wall biosynthesis in gymnosperms. Lodgepole pine (Pinus contorta var. latifolia Englem.) cambium and secondary xylem were cryofixed using high pressure freezing and freeze-substitution which allowed excellent preservation of the cell structure of developing secondary xylem and enabled high-resolution transmission electron microscopic viewing of these cells for the first time. In contrast to their precursors in the adjacent cambial zone, developing tracheids were active in secondary wall deposition, with abundant cortical microtubules and developing bordered pits. These cells were also characterized by unusual Golgi structures: the trans-Golgi network was highly developed and the associated vesicles were large and darkly stained. These unusual Golgi structures persisted throughout the period of xylem maturation until programmed cell death occurred. Immuno-cytochemistry and enzyme-gold probes were used to investigate the distribution of key secretory products (mannans) and a lignification-associated enzyme (coniferin beta-glucosidase) during xylogenesis. Mannans were localized to the secondary cell wall, the trans-Golgi cisternae and trans-Golgi network vesicles of developing xylem. Coniferin beta-glucosidase was found only in the secondary cell wall. The cell wall localization of coniferin beta-glucosidase, the enzyme responsible for cleaving glucose from coniferin to generate free coniferyl alcohol, provides a mechanism to de-glucosylate monolignols in muro. A two-step model of lignification of conifer tracheids is proposed. First, Golgi-mediated secretion deposits monolignols into the cell wall, where they polymerize in cell corners and middle lamella. Secondly, cell lysis releases stored, vacuolar monolignol glucosides into the wall where they are deglucosylated and their polymerization is influenced by the wall environment including the lignin deposited earlier.  相似文献   

14.
Ohashi-Ito K  Oda Y  Fukuda H 《The Plant cell》2010,22(10):3461-3473
Xylem consists of three types of cells: tracheary elements (TEs), parenchyma cells, and fiber cells. TE differentiation includes two essential processes, programmed cell death (PCD) and secondary cell wall formation. These two processes are tightly coupled. However, little is known about the molecular mechanisms underlying these processes. Here, we show that VASCULAR-RELATED NAC-DOMAIN6 (VND6), a master regulator of TEs, regulates some of the downstream genes involved in these processes in a coordinated manner. We first identified genes that are expressed downstream of VND6 but not downstream of SECONDARY WALL-ASSOCIATED NAC DOMAIN PROTEIN1 (SND1), a master regulator of xylem fiber cells, using transformed suspension culture cells in microarray experiments. We found that VND6 and SND1 governed distinct aspects of xylem formation, whereas they regulated a number of genes in common, specifically those related to secondary cell wall formation. Genes involved in TE-specific PCD were upregulated only by VND6. Moreover, we revealed that VND6 directly regulated genes that harbor a TE-specific cis-element, TERE, in their promoters. Thus, we found that VND6 is a direct regulator of genes related to PCD as well as to secondary wall formation.  相似文献   

15.
The tracheary elements (TEs) of the xylem serve as the water‐conducting vessels of the plant vascular system. To achieve this, TEs undergo secondary cell wall thickening and cell death, during which the cell contents are completely removed. Cell death of TEs is a typical example of developmental programmed cell death that has been suggested to be autophagic. However, little evidence of autophagy in TE differentiation has been provided. The present study demonstrates that the small GTP binding protein RabG3b plays a role in TE differentiation through its function in autophagy. Differentiating wild type TE cells were found to undergo autophagy in an Arabidopsis culture system. Both autophagy and TE formation were significantly stimulated by overexpression of a constitutively active mutant (RabG3bCA), and were inhibited in transgenic plants overexpressing a dominant negative mutant (RabG3bDN) or RabG3b RNAi (RabG3bRNAi), a brassinosteroid insensitive mutant bri1‐301, and an autophagy mutant atg5‐1. Taken together, our results suggest that autophagy occurs during TE differentiation, and that RabG3b, as a component of autophagy, regulates TE differentiation.  相似文献   

16.
《Autophagy》2013,9(8):1187-1189
The vascular system of plants consists of two conducting tissues, xylem and phloem, which differentiate from procambium cells. Xylem serves as a transporting system for water and signaling molecules and is formed by sequential developmental processes, including cell division/expansion, secondary cell wall deposition, vacuole collapse and programmed cell death (PCD). PCD during xylem differentiation is accomplished by degradation of cytoplasmic constituents, and it is required for the formation of hollow vessels, known as tracheary elements (TEs). Our recent study revealed that the small GTPase RabG3b acts as a regulator of TE differentiation through its autophagic activation. By using an Arabidopsis in vitro cell culture system, we showed that autophagy is activated during TE differentiation. Overexpression of a constitutively active RabG3b (RabG3bCA) significantly enhances both autophagy and TE differentiation, which are consistently suppressed in transgenic plants overexpressing a dominant negative form (RabG3bDN) or RabG3b RNAi (RabG3bRNAi), a brassinosteroid-insensitive mutant bri1-301 and an autophagy mutant atg5-1. On the basis of our results, we propose that RabG3b functions as a component of autophagy and regulates TE differentiation by activating the process of PCD.  相似文献   

17.
Programmed cell death of tracheary elements as a paradigm in plants   总被引:26,自引:0,他引:26  
Plant development involves various programmed cell death (PCD) processes. Among them, cell death occurring during differentiation of procambium into tracheary elements (TEs), which are a major component of vessels or tracheids, has been studied extensively. Recent studies of PCD during TE differentiation mainly using an in vitro differentiation system of Zinnia have revealed that PCD of TEs is a plant-specific one in which the vacuole plays a central role. Furthermore, there are recent findings of several factors that may initiate PCD of TEs and that act at autonomous degradation of cell contents. Herein I summarize the present knowledge about cell death program during TE differentiation as an excellent example of PCD in plants.  相似文献   

18.
Motose H  Fukuda H  Sugiyama M 《Planta》2001,213(1):121-131
The transdifferentiation of isolated mesophyll cells of zinnia (Zinnia elegans L.) into tracheary elements (TEs) has been well studied as a model of plant cell differentiation. In order to investigate intercellular communication in this phenomenon, two types of culture method were developed, in which mesophyll cells were embedded in a thin sheet of agarose gel and cultured on solid medium, or embedded in microbeads of agarose gel and cultured in liquid medium. A statistical analysis of the two-dimensional distribution of TEs in the thin-sheet cultures demonstrated their aggregation. In the microbead cultures, the frequency of TE differentiation was shown to depend on the local cell density (the cell density in each microbead): TE differentiation required local cell densities of more than 105 cells ml−1. These results suggest that TE differentiation involves cell-cell communication mediated by a locally acting diffusible factor. This presumptive factor was characterized by applying a modified version of the sheet culture, which used two sheets of different cell densities, a low-density sheet and a high-density sheet. Differentiation of TEs in the former could be induced only by bringing it into contact with the latter. Insertion of a 25-kDa-cutoff membrane between the high-density and low-density sheets severely suppressed such induction of TEs in the low-density sheet while a 300-kDa-cutoff membrane suppressed induction only slightly. Insertion of agarose sheets containing immobilized pronase E or trypsin also interfered with the induction of TEs in the low-density sheets. Thus, a proteinaceous macromolecule of 25–300 kDa in molecular weight was assumed to mediate the local intercellular communication required for TE differentiation. This substance was designated “xylogen” with reference to its xylogenic activity. The time of requirement for xylogen during TE differentiation was assessed by experiments in which cells in the low-density sheet were separated from xylogen produced in the high-density sheet at various times by insertion of a 25-kDa-cutoff membrane between the two sheets, and was estimated to be from the 36th hour to the 60th hour of culture (12–36 h before visible thickening of secondary cell walls of TEs). Received: 13 July 2000 / Accepted: 4 October 2000  相似文献   

19.
The effects of medium pH on cell expansion and tracheary element (TE) differentiation were investigated in differentiating mesophyll suspension cultures of Zinnia elegans L. In unbuffered cultures initially adjusted to pH 5.5, the medium pH fluctuated reproducibly, decreasing about 1 unit prior to the onset of TE differentiation and then increasing when the initiation of new Tes was complete. Elimination of large pH fluctuations by buffering the culture medium with 20 mM 2-(N-morpholino)ethanesulfonic acid altered both cell expansion and TE differentiation, whereas altering the starting pH of unbuffered culture medium had no effect on either process. Cell expansion in buffered cultures was pH dependent with an optimum of 5.5 to 6.0. The direction of cell expansion was also pH dependent in buffered cultures. Cells elongated at pH 5.5 to 6.0, whereas isodiametric cell expansion was predominant at pH 6.5 to 7.0. The onset of TE differentiation was delayed when the pH was buffered higher or lower than 5.0. However, TEs eventually appeared in cultures buffered at pH 6.5 to 7.0, indicating that a decrease in pH to 5.0 is not necessary for differentiation. Very large TEs with secondary cell wall thickenings resembling metaxylem differentiated in cultures buffered at pH 5.5 to 6.0, which also showed the greatest cell expansion. The correlation between cell expansion and delayed differentiation of large, metaxylem-like TEs may indicate a link between the regulatory mechanisms controlling cell expansion and TE differentiation.  相似文献   

20.
Changes in the enzymatic activity of cinnamyl alcohol dehydrogenase (CAD) and in the expression of a gene for CAD during tracheary element (TE) differentiation were investigated in cultures of single cells isolated from the mesophyll of zinnia (Zinnia elegans). In cultures in which TE differentiation was induced (TE-inductive cultures), CAD activity increased from h 36 after the start of culture (12 h before the start of thickening of the secondary cell wall) and peaked at h 72, when lignin was actively being deposited. In control cultures in which TE differentiation was not induced, CAD activity remained at a very low level for 5 d. Some isoforms of CAD were detected only in the TE-inductive cultures by native gel electrophoresis and subsequent staining for CAD activity. A cDNA clone for CAD, ZCAD1, was isolated from Z. elegans using a cDNA clone for CAD from Aralia cordata as the probe. RNA gel-blot analysis revealed that in the TE-inductive cultures the level of ZCAD1 mRNA increased from h 36 and peaked at h 48 to 60. No such increases were observed in control cultures. These results indicated that both the gene expression and the activity of CAD are strictly regulated, in association with lignification, during TE differentiation in Z. elegans.  相似文献   

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