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1.
The effects of unstirred layers (USLs) at the endodermis of roots of young maize plants (Zea mays L.) were quantified, when measuring the water permeability of roots using a root pressure probe (RPP) in the pressure relaxation (PR) and pressure clamp (PC) modes. Different from PRs, PCs were performed by applying a constant pressure for certain periods of time. Experimental data were compared with results from simulations based on a convection versus diffusion (C/D) model, with the endodermis being the main barrier for solutes and water. Solute profiles in the stele were calculated as they occurred during rapid water flows across the root. The model quantitatively predicted the experimental finding of two distinct phases during PRs, in terms of a build-up of concentration profiles in the stele between endodermis and xylem vessels. It also predicted that, following a PC, half-times (T1/2) of PRs increased as the time used for clamping (and the build-up of USLs) increased. Following PCs of durations of 15, 30 and 60 s, T1/2 increased by factors of between 2.5 and 7.0, and water permeability of roots (root hydraulic conductivity, Lpr) was reduced by the same factors. When root pressure was immediately taken back to the original equilibrium root pressure following a PC, there was a transient uptake of water into the root stele (transient increase of root pressure), and the size of transients rose with time of clamping, as predicted by the model. The results indicated that the 'real' hydraulic conductivity of roots should be measured during initial water flows, such as during the rapid phase of PRs, when the effect of USLs was minimized. It was discussed that 'pressure-propagation effects' could not explain the finding of two phases during PRs. The results of USL effects threw some doubt on the use of PC and high-pressure flowmeter (HPFM) techniques with roots, where rigorous estimates of USLs were still missing despite the fact that large quantities of water were forced across the root.  相似文献   

2.
The impact of unstirred layers (USLs) during cell pressure probe experiments with Chara corallina internodes has been quantified. The results show that the hydraulic conductivity (Lp) measured in hydrostatic relaxations was not significantly affected by USLs even in the presence of high water flow intensities ('sweep-away effect'). During pressure clamp, there was a reversible reduction in Lp by 20%, which was explained by the constriction of water to aquaporins (AQPs) in the C. corallina membrane and a rapid diffusional equilibration of solutes in arrays where water protruded across AQPs. In osmotic experiments, Lp, and permeability (Ps) and reflection (sigma s) coefficients increased as external flow rate of medium increased, indicating some effects of external USLs. However, the effect was levelling off at 'usual' flow rates of 0.20-0.30 m s(-1) and in the presence of vigorous stirring by air bubbles, suggesting a maximum thickness of external USLs of around 30 microm including the cell wall. Because the diameters of internodes were around 1 mm, internal USLs could have played a significant or even a dominating role, at least in the presence of the rapidly permeating solutes used [acetone, 2-propanol and dimethylformamide (DMF)]. A comparison of calculated (diffusion kinetics) and of measured permeabilities indicated an upper limit of the contribution of USLs for the rapidly moving solute acetone of 29%, and of 15% for the less rapidly permeating DME The results throw some doubt on recent claims that in C. corallina, USLs rather than the cell membrane dominate solute uptake, at least for the most rapidly moving solute acetone.  相似文献   

3.
The main barriers to the movement of water and ions in young roots of Zea mays were located by observing the effects of wounding various cell layers of the cortex on the roots' hydraulic conductivities and root pressures. These parameters were measured with a root pressure probe. Injury to the epidermis and cortex caused no significant change in hydraulic conductivity and either no change or a slight decline in root pressure. Injury to a small area of the endodermis did not change the hydraulic conductivity but caused an immediate and substantial drop in root pressure. When large areas of epidermis and cortex were removed (15–38% of total root mass), the endodermis was always injured and root pressure fell. The hydraulic conductance of the root increased but only by a factor of 1.2–2.7. The results indicate that the endodermis is the main barrier to the radial movement of ions but not water. The major barrier to water is the membranes and apoplast of all the living tissue. These conclusions were drawn from experiments in which hydrostatic-pressure differences were used to induce water flows across young maize roots which had an immature exodermis and an endodermis with Casparian bands but no suberin lamellae or secondary walls. The different reactions of water and ions to the endodermis can be explained by the huge difference in the permeability of membranes to these substances. A hydrophobic wall barrier such as the Casparian band should have little effect on the movement of water, which permeates membranes and, perhaps, also the Casparian bands easily. However, hydrophobic wall depositions largely prevent the movement of ions. Several hours after wounding the endodermis, root pressure recovered to some extent in most of the experiments, indicating that the wound in the endodermis had been partially healed.Abbreviations Lpr hydraulic conductivity of root; T1/2 = half-time of water exchange between root xylem and external medium This research was supported by a grant from EUROSILVA (project no. 39473C) to E.S., and by a Bilateral Exchange Grant jointly funded by the Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft and the Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada to C.A.P. We thank Mr. Burkhard Stumpf for his excellent technicial assistance.  相似文献   

4.
A New Theory for the Ascent of Sap--Cohesion Supported by Tissue Pressure   总被引:9,自引:0,他引:9  
Canny  Martin J. 《Annals of botany》1995,75(4):343-357
Recent work contradicting both the assumptions of the CohesionTheory, and the tensions measured in the xylem sap by the pressure-chamber,is reviewed. Measurements with the xylem-pressure probe revealpressures in vessels around 0 bar absolute, and no detectablegradients of pressure with tree height. Under high water stress,pressures down to -6 bar were found, but then cavitations occurredvery readily. Also, measurements of the cavitation thresholdsof water show an average threshold of about -2 bar. The uncertainfoundations of the Cohesion Theory are recalled from the yearsbefore 1965. Soon after that date, Scholander's measurementswith the pressure chamber were agreed to have confirmed thetheory and the existence of high tensions in the xylem. Before1965, many experiments over many years pointed to the conclusionsnow rediscovered, viz., no high tensions, and no gradients oftension. A resolution of these paradoxes is offered in the formof a new theory. This proposes that the driving force and thetransmission of the force are the same as in the Cohesion Theory,but the operating pressure of the xylem is raised into a stablerange by compensating tissue pressures pressing upon the trachearyelements. The tissue pressure does not propel the transpirationstream, which is still driven by evaporation, but protects thestream from cavitation. Evidence is presented for the existenceof positive pressures in roots, wood, and leaves. It is shownthat the anatomy of roots, wood, and monocotyledon and cryptogamvascular bundles is organized so that pressure is confined bymechanical barriers, and exerted upon the tracheary elementsby the living cells of the phloem and the xylem parenchyma.The Compensating-Pressure Theory also explains, among otherthings, root pressure, the function of the endodermis, the structureof wood, the constant association of xylem and phloem, the absenceof gas spaces in vascular tissue, the absence of a gravitationalgradient in the xylem, bleeding from cut palm inflorescences,how insects are able to withdraw sap from the xylem, and thevariable that is measured by the pressure chamber. This instrumentmeasures the water potential, but this is the potential notof xylem in tension, but of the compensating pressure appliedto the xylem. The requirements of the Theory are explained,and a number of predictions are made which are open to experimentaltesting.Copyright 1995, 1999 Academic Press Ascent of sap, cavitation, cohesion theory, endodermis, pressure chamber, root pressure, stem pressure, tissue pressure, transpiration, water potential, wood anatomy, xylem pressure  相似文献   

5.
A new approach to study dynamic interactions between transpiration and xylem pressure in intact plants is presented. Pressure probe measurements were preformed in living (immature) late metaxylem of maize roots rather than in adjacent mature xylem. This eliminated technical limitations related to the measurement of negative pressures. Water relations of single cells showed that turgor and volumetric elastic modulus were significantly larger in living metaxylem than in cortical cells; hydraulic conductivity was similar in both types of root cells. Increasing transpiration induced an immediate decrease of xylem pressure, and vice versa. Turgor in the living metaxylem could be continuously recorded for more than 1 h. The relationship between xylem pressure and transpiration yielded a root hydraulic resistance of 1.3 x 109 MPa s m-3. Control experiments indicated that the response of living xylem in the positive pressure range essentially paralleled that of mature root xylem in the negative range. In mature xylem, pressures as low as -0.55 MPa were recorded for short periods (several minutes). Several tests verified that the pressure probe was in contact with mature xylem during the measurements of tensions. The results demonstrate convincingly that transpiration generates an effective driving force for water uptake in roots, a central feature of the cohesion theory.Key words: Hydraulic conductivity, negative pressure, root development, turgor, water transport, Zea mays.   相似文献   

6.
In higher plants the xylem is the main pathway for anti-gravitational, long-distance transport of nutrients and water from the root through the shoot to the upper leaves. In the xylem conduit water is in a metastable state if tension larger than 0.1 MPa (i.e. negative pressure) is developed. While diurnal changes in negative pressure of individual xylem vessels can quite accurately be recorded by the minimal-invasive xylem pressure probe technique and water flow by non-invasive NMR techniques, the problem of continuous monitoring of solute flow remains a hitherto unresolved challenge. As shown here, integration of a K+ selective and a potential measuring microelectrode into the xylem pressure probe allowed on-line measurements of the K+ activity in individual xylem vessels of maize roots together with pressure and trans-root potential, the potential difference between the xylem and the external medium (i.e. the overall driving force of ions through the root tissue). When light irradiation was increased from 10 micro mol m(-2) s(-1) to 300 micro mol m(-2) s(-1) and negative pressure developed in the vessel, xylem K+ activity dropped from 3.6 +/- 2.6 mm to 0.9 +/- 0.7 mm (n = 16), whereas the trans-root potential depolarized from -2 +/- 11 mV to + 12 +/- 11 mV (n = 11), i.e. by + 14 +/- 7 mV. The effect of light on all three parameters was reversible. Exposure of the root to various K+ activities in the bath ranging from 0.1 to 43 mm revealed that the K+ activity of the xylem sap was shielded against short-term fluctuations in K+ supply to a large extent. In contrast, control experiments in which the root was cut 1 cm below the probe insertion point, allowing direct entry of external K+ into the xylem vessels, demonstrated that the xylem equilibrated rapidly with external K+. This was taken simultaneously as a proof for the correct reading of the probe.  相似文献   

7.
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   

8.
Determination of the pressure in the water-conducting vessels of intactNicotiana rustica L. plants showed that the pressure probe technique gave less-negative values than the Scholander-bomb method. Even though absolute values of the order of −0.1 MPa could be directly recorded in the xylem by means of the pressure probe, pressures between zero and atmospheric were also frequently found. The data obtained by the pressure probe for excised leaves showed that the Scholander bomb apparently did not read the actual tension in the xylem vessles ofNicotiana plants. The possibility that the pressure probe gave false readings was excluded by several experimental controls. In addition, cavitation and leaks either during the insertion of the microcapillary of the pressure probe, or else during the measurements were easily recognized when they occurred because of the sudden increase of the absolute xylem tension to that of water vapour or to atmospheric, respectively. Tension values of the same order could also be measured by means of the pressure probe in the xylem vessels of pieces of stem cut from leaves and roots under water and clamped at both ends. The magnitude of the absolute tension depended on the osmolarity of the bathing solution which was adjusted by addition of appropriate concentrations of polyethylene glycol. Partial and uniform pressurisation of plant tissues or organs, or of entire plants (by means of the Scholander bomb or of a hyperbaric chamber, respectively) and simultaneous recording of the xylem tension using the pressure probe showed that a 1∶1 response in xylem pressure only occurred under a few circumstances. A 1∶1 response required that the xylem vessels were in direct contact with an external water reservoir and/or that the tissue was (pre-)infiltrated with water. Corresponding pressure-probe measurements in isolated vascular bundles ofPlantago major L. orP. lanceolata L. plants attached to a Hepp-type osmometer indicated that the magnitude of the tension in the xylem vessels was determined by the external osmotic pressure of the reservoir. These and other experiments, as well as analysis of the data using classical thermodynamics, indicated that the turgor and the internal osmotic pressure of the accessory cells along the xylem vessels play an important role in the maintenance of a constant xylem tension. This conclusion is consistent with the cohesion theory. In agreement with the literature (P.E. Weatherley, 1976, Philos. Trans. R. Soc. London Ser. B23, 435–444; 1982, Encyclopedia of plant physiology, vol. 12B, 79-109), it was found that the tension in the xylem of intact plants under normal and elevated ambient pressure (as measured with the pressure probe) under quasi-stationary conditions was independent of the transpiration rate over a large range, indicating that the conductance of the flow path must be flow-dependent.  相似文献   

9.
盐胁迫下大麦根系木质部压力的自调节现象   总被引:9,自引:0,他引:9  
用植物木质部压力探针测定的结果表明,水培大麦幼苗根的木质部压力在环境条件恒定不变时始终保持波动,并且在受到轻度的盐胁迫和当盐胁迫解除时表现出高度的自调节现象.这种波动和自调节现象将对植物水势的测定和根的径向反射系数的测定产生很大的影响,并可能与植物的抗盐性有关.小麦根在同样条件下未表现出上述现象.  相似文献   

10.
The effects of puncturing the endodermis of young maize roots (Zea mays L.) on their transport properties were measured using the root pressure probe. Small holes with a diameter of 18 to 60 [mu]m were created 70 to 90 mm from the tips of the roots by pushing fine glass tubes radially into them. Such wounds injured about 10-2 to 10-3% of the total surface area of the endodermis, which, in these hydroponically grown roots, had developed a Casparian band but no suberin lamellae. The small injury to the endodermis caused the original root pressure, which varied from 0.08 to 0.19 MPa, to decrease rapidly (half-time = 10-100 s) and substantially to a new steady-state value between 0.02 and 0.07 MPa. The radial hydraulic conductivity (Lpr) of control (uninjured) roots determined using hydrostatic pressure gradients as driving forces was larger by a factor of 10 than that determined using osmotic gradients (averages: Lpr [hydrostatic] = 2.7 x 10-7 m s-1 MPa-1; Lpr [osmotic] = 2.2 x 10-8 m s-1 MPa-1; osmotic solute: NaCl). Puncturing the endodermis did not result in measurable increases in hydraulic conductivities measured by either method. Thus, the endodermis was not rate-limiting root Lpr: apparently the hydraulic resistance of roots was more evenly distributed over the entire root tissue. However, puncturing the endodermis did substantially change the reflection ([sigma]sr) and permeability (Psr) coefficients of roots for NaCl, indicating that the endodermis represented a considerable barrier to the flow of nutrient ions. Values of [sigma]sr decreased from 0.64 to 0.41 (average) and Psr increased by a factor of 2.6, i.e. from 3.8 x 10-9 to 10.1 x 10.-9 m s-1(average). The roots recovered from puncturing after a time and regained root pressure. Measurable increases in root pressure became apparent as soon as 0.5 to 1 h after puncturing, and original or higher root pressures were attained 1.5 to 20 h after injury. However, after recovery roots often did not maintain a stable root pressure, and no further osmotic experiments could be performed with them. The Casparian band of the endodermis is discontinuous at the root tip, where the endodermis has not yet matured, and at sites of developing lateral roots. Measurements of the cross-sectional area of the apoplasmic bypass at the root tip yielded an area of 0.031% of the total surface area of the endodermis. An additional 0.049% was associated with lateral root primordia. These areas are larger than the artificial bypasses created by wounding in this study and may provide pathways for a "natural bypass flow" of water and solutes across the intact root. If there were such a pathway, either in these areas or across the Casparian band itself, roots would have to be treated as a system composed of two parallel pathways (a cell-to-cell and an apoplasmic path). It is demonstrated that this "composite transport model of the root" allows integration of several transport properties of roots that are otherwise difficult to understand, namely (a) the differences between osmotic and hydrostatic water flow, (b) the dependence of root hydraulic resistance on the driving force or water flow across the root, and (c) low reflection coefficients of roots.  相似文献   

11.
Water uptake by roots: effects of water deficit   总被引:35,自引:0,他引:35  
The variable hydraulic conductivity of roots (Lp(r)) is explained in terms of a composite transport model. It is shown how the complex, composite anatomical structure of roots results in a composite transport of both water and solutes. In the model, the parallel apoplastic and cell-to-cell (symplastic and transcellular) pathways play an important role as well as the different tissues and structures arranged in series within the root cylinder (epidermis, exodermis, cortex, endodermis, stelar parenchyma). The roles of Casparian bands and suberin lamellae in the root's endo- and exodermis are discussed. Depending on the developmental state of these apoplastic barriers, the overall hydraulic resistance of roots is either more evenly distributed across the root cylinder (young unstressed roots) or is concentrated in certain layers (exo- and endodermis in older stressed roots). The reason for the variability of root Lp(r), is that hydraulic forces cause a dominating apoplastic flow of water around protoplasts, even in the endodermis and exodermis. In the absence of transpiration, water flow is osmotic in nature which causes a high resistance as water passes across many membranes on its passage across the root cylinder. The model allows for a high capability of roots to take up water in the presence of high rates of transpiration (high demands for water from the shoot). By contrast, the hydraulic conductance is low, when transpiration is switched off. Overall, this results in a non-linear relationship between water flow and forces (gradients of hydrostatic and osmotic pressure) which is otherwise hard to explain. The model allows for special root characteristics such as a high hydraulic conductivity (water permeability) in the presence of a low permeability of nutrient ions once taken up into the stele by active processes. Low root reflection coefficients are in line with the idea of some apoplastic bypasses for water within the root cylinder. According to the composite transport model, the switch from the hydraulic to the osmotic mode is purely physical. In the presence of heavily suberized roots, the apoplastic component of water flow may be too small. Under these conditions, a regulation of radial water flow by water channels dominates. Since water channels are under metabolic control, this component represents an 'active' element of regulation. Composite transport allows for an optimization of the water balance of the shoot in addition to the well-known phenomena involved in the regulation of water flow (gas exchange) across stomata. The model is employed to explain the responses of plants to water deficit and other stresses. During water deficit, the cohesion-tension mechanism of the ascent of sap in the xylem plays an important role. Results are summarized which prove the validity of the coehesion/tension theory. Effects of the stress hormone abscisic acid (ABA) are presented. They show that there is an apoplastic component of the flow of ABA in the root which contributes to the ABA signal in the xylem. On the other hand, (+)-cis-trans-ABA specifically affects both the cell level (water channel activity) and water flow driven by gradients in osmotic pressure at the root level which is in agreement with the composite transport model. Hydraulic water flow in the presence of gradients in hydrostatic pressure remains unchanged. The results agree with the composite transport model and resemble earlier findings of high salinity obtained for the cell (Lp) and root (Lp(r)) level. They are in line with known effects of nutrient deprivation on root Lp(r )and the diurnal rhythm of root Lp(r )recently found in roots of LOTUS.  相似文献   

12.
Wei C  Tyree MT  Steudle E 《Plant physiology》1999,121(4):1191-1205
The water relations of maize (Zea mays L. cv Helix) were documented in terms of hydraulic architecture and xylem pressure. A high-pressure flowmeter was used to characterize the hydraulic resistances of the root, stalk, and leaves. Xylem pressure measurements were made with a Scholander-Hammel pressure bomb and with a cell pressure probe. Evaporation rates were measured by gas exchange and by gravimetric measurements. Xylem pressure was altered by changing the light intensity, by controlling irrigation, or by gas pressure applied to the soil mass (using a root pressure bomb). Xylem pressure measured by the cell pressure probe and by the pressure bomb agreed over the entire measured range of 0 to −0.7 MPa. Experiments were consistent with the cohesion-tension theory. Xylem pressure changed rapidly and reversibly with changes in light intensity and root-bomb pressure. Increasing the root-bomb pressure increased the evaporation rate slightly when xylem pressure was negative and increased water flow rate through the shoots dramatically when xylem pressure was positive and guttation was observed. The hydraulic architecture model could predict all observed changes in water flow rate and xylem. We measured the cavitation threshold for oil- and water-filled pressure probes and provide some suggestions for improvement.  相似文献   

13.
Radial water (J(V)) and abscisic acid (ABA) flows (J(ABA)) through maize root seedlings have been investigated under different conditions of nutrient deficiency. Whereas J(V) was reduced under nitrogen deficiency, potassium deficiency stimulated J(V). A substantial increase of J(ABA) was observed in roots kept under potassium deficiency. The observed changes of J(V) might have resulted from changed barrier properties of the endodermis. Nitrogen and potassium deficiency also caused an accumulation of endogenous ABA in root tissues. Under all conditions studied, except under K(+)-deficiency, external ABA (100 nM) caused an increase of J(V). The data of this study were used to analyse the relations between internal and endogenous root ABA, J(V), and J(ABA). The internal ABA of root tissues was positively correlated with J(V) and was highly significant (P <0.001 for internal and P=0.03 for endogenous root ABA) within the range 2-300 pmol g(-1) FW. It was also highly positively correlated to the radial ABA flows. There was also a highly positive correlation between J(V) and J(ABA). The data of this study indicate, for the first time, the relations between internal ABA, water, and ABA flows. Independent of treatment with external ABA, an ABA transport by solvent drag across the endodermis is confirmed.  相似文献   

14.
Summary Suberin lamellae and a tertiary cellulose wall in endodermal cells are deposited much closer to the tip of apple roots than of annual roots. Casparian strips and lignified thickenings differentiate in the anticlinal walls of all endodermal andphi layer cells respectively, 4–5 mm from the root tip. 16 mm from the root tip and only in the endodermis opposite the phloem poles, suberin lamellae are laid down on the inner surface of the cell walls, followed 35 mm from the root tip by an additional cellulosic layer. Coincidentally with this last development, the suberin and cellulose layers detach from the outer tangential walls and the cytoplasm fragments. 85 mm from the root tip the xylem pole endodermis (50% of the endodermis) develops similarly, but does not collapse. 100–150 mm from the root tip, the surface colour of the root changes from white to brown, a phellogen develops from the pericycle and sloughing of the cortex begins. A few secondary xylem elements are visible at this stage.Plasmodesmata traverse the suberin and cellulose layers of the endodermis, but their greater frequency in the outer tangential and radial walls of thephi layer when compared with the endodermis suggests that this layer may regulate the inflow of water and nutrients to the stele.  相似文献   

15.
Poplar is one of the suitable candidates for phytoremediation due to extensive root system, fast growth rate, easy propagation and high biomass production. Zinc (Zn) is an essential element, but at high concentration becomes toxic to plants, similarly like cadmium (Cd). In order to evaluate the effect of Zn on root tissue development we conducted experiments with poplar (Populus × euramericana clone I-214) grown in hydroponics. Plants were treated with low (control) and excess level of Zn (1 mM). Changes in the development of apoplasmic barriers — Casparian bands and suberin lamellae in endodermis, as well as lignification of xylem vessels have been investigated. We found that both apoplasmic barriers developed closer to the root apex in higher Zn-treated root when compared with control root. Similar changes were observed in lignification of xylem vessels. For localization of Zn within root tissues, cryo-SEM/EDXMA analyses were used. Most of Zn was localized in the cortical tissues and four-time less Zn was determined in the inner part of the root below the endodermis. This indicates that endodermis serves as efficient barrier of apoplasmic Zn transport across the poplar root.  相似文献   

16.
Some predictions of the recently proposed theory of long-distance water transport in plants (the Compensating Pressure Theory) have been verified experimentally in sunflower leaves. The xylem sap cavitates early in the day under quite small water stress, and the compensating pressure P (applied as the tissue pressure of turgid cells) pushes water into embolized vessels, refilling them during active transpiration. The water potential, as measured by the pressure chamber or psychrometer, is not a measure of the pressure in the xylem, but (as predicted by the theory) a measure of the compensating pressure P. As transpiration increases, P is increased to provide more rapid embolism repair. In many leaf petioles this increase in P is achieved by the hydrolysis of starch in the starch sheath to soluble sugars. At night P falls as starch is reformed. A hypothesis is proposed to explain these observations by pressure-driven reverse osmosis of water from the ground parenchyma of the petiole. Similar processes occur in roots and are manifested as root pressure. The theory requires a pump to transfer water from the soil into the root xylem. A mechanism is proposed by which this pump may function, in which the endodermis acts as a one-way valve and a pressure-confining barrier. Rays and xylem parenchyma of wood act like the xylem parenchyma of petioles and roots to repair embolisms in trees. The postulated root pump permits a re-appraisal of the work done by evaporation during transpiration, leading to the proposal that in tall trees there is no hydrostatic gradient to be overcome in lifting water. Some published observations are re-interpreted in terms of the theory: doubt is cast on the validity of measurements of hydraulic conductance of wood; vulnerability curves are found not to measure the cavitation threshold of water in the xylem, but the osmotic pressure of the xylem parenchyma; if measures of xylem pressure and of hydraulic conductance are both suspect, the accepted view of the hydraulic architecture of trees needs drastic revision; observations that xylem feeding insects feed faster as the water potential becomes more negative are in accord with the theory; tyloses, which have been shown to form in vessels especially vulnerable to cavitation, are seen as necessary for the maintenance of P, and to conserve the supplementary refilling water. Far from being a metastable system on the edge of disaster, the water transport system of the xylem is ultrastable: robust and self-sustaining in response to many kinds of stress.  相似文献   

17.
In higher plants the pH of the xylem sap plays an important role in drought signaling, growth regulation, and plant nutrition. However, the interpretation of the data is very controversial. The main reason for this is that the xylem pH in intact plants was not directly accessible hitherto. We present here a novel, minimally-invasive probe based on the xylem pressure-potential probe (used for measuring directly xylem pressure and the electrical potential between root xylem sap and medium). Single-tipped, double-barreled capillaries were used, one barrel served as H(+)-selective electrode, whereas pressure and electrical potential were recorded by the other one. Upon insertion of the probe into the root xylem of maize (Zea mays) seedlings, pH values ranging between about 4.2 and 4.9 were monitored when the roots were immersed in standard nutrient solution. The pH did not respond to changes in light irradiation (up to 300 micromol m(-2) s(-1)), but increased upon exposure of the root to 5 or 20 mm bicarbonate in the bath solution. Changes in pH could also be recorded in transpiring plants when the root was cut below the insertion point of the probe and placed in media with different pH. The data support the hypothesis of Mengel ([1994] Plant Soil 165: 275-283) that upon external supply with bicarbonate Fe is immobilized in the leaf apoplast via changes in xylem pH.  相似文献   

18.
Plants experience drought by a limitation of water supply andby enhanced transpiration. Both processes tend to decrease theplant's water potential, but affect growth responses in theroot and leaf differently. The evaluation of the underlyingmechanisms leads to a discussion of recent studies on biophysicalaspects of cell expansion at a cellular, tissue and organ level.Two processes enable roots to compensate rapidly effects ofwater deficits originating in the medium: (i) adjustment ofthe minimum pressure in cells required for expansion (yieldthreshold), and (ii) solute transport within the elongationzone. Limitations of root growth are discussed with respectto hydraulic, mechanical, and solute relations in the root elongationzone. It is argued that the variable nature of both the yieldthreshold and solute transport challenges the applicabilityof the Lockhart concept to determine growth-related parametersfrom steady conditions of turgor and growth. On a whole organlevel, the attenuation of xylem pressure along the root is importantfor the differential response of root and leaf growth. Experimentalevidence is presented for the hydraulic separation of the elongationzones, which is closely related to root development and functioning.The data obtained over the past few years have been used toextend mathematical models of growth and water transport inroots. Key words: Extension growth, hydraulic conductivity, root development (xylem, endodermis), transport (water and solute), turgor pressure, water stress, xylem pressure, Zea mays  相似文献   

19.
盐胁迫对大豆根系木质部压力和Na+吸收的影响   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
取栽培大豆的水培幼苗为材料,用木质部压力探针和原子吸收分光光度计测定了盐胁迫条件下其根木质部压力和伤流液中Na~+含量的变化,以分析大豆抗盐吸水的机制.结果表明:在25~150 mmol/L NaCl的浓度范围内,随着盐胁迫强度的增加,大豆根木质部负压力的绝对值逐渐增大,但相对负压力和根的径向反射系数则逐渐减小;木质部伤流液中Na~+含量逐渐增加,但Na~+的相对含量则逐渐降低.同时,虽然根系吸水所需的木质部负压力(压力势)及根木质部伤流液的渗透势随着盐胁迫强度的增加都有所下降,但两者共同作用使木质部水势下降的幅度远远小于根外溶液水势(渗透势)下降的幅度,即随着根外溶液盐浓度的升高,根木质部溶液的总水势逐渐高出根外溶液的水势.上述结果说明,在盐胁迫下大豆可以利用相对小的木质部负压力逆水势梯度吸水,且通过避免对Na~+的过量吸收来适应盐胁迫环境.  相似文献   

20.
A new stop-flow technique was employed to quantify the impact of internal unstirred layers on the measurement of the solute permeability coefficient (P(s)) across the plasma membrane of internodes of the giant-celled alga Chara corallina using a cell pressure probe. During permeation experiments with rapidly permeating solutes (acetone, 2-propanol, and dimethylformamide), the solute concentration inside the cell was estimated and the external medium was adjusted to stop solute transport across the membrane, after which responses in turgor were measured. This allowed estimation of the solute concentration right at the membrane. Stop-flow experiments were also simulated with a computer. Both the stop-flow experiments and simulations provided quantitative data about internal concentration gradients and the contribution of unstirred layers to overall measured values of P(meas)(s) for the three solutes. The stop-flow experimental results agreed with stop-flow simulations assuming that solutes diffused into a completely stagnant cell interior. The effects of internal unstirred layers on the underestimation of membrane P(s) declined with decreasing P(s). They were no bigger than 37% in the presence of the most rapidly permeating solute, acetone (P(meas)(s) =4.2 x 10(-6) m s(-1)), and 14% for the less rapidly permeating dimethylformamide (P(meas)(s) =1.6x10(-6) m s(-1)). It is concluded that, even in the case of rapidly permeating solutes such as isotopic water and, even when making pessimistic assumptions about the internal mixing of solutes, an upper limit for the underestimation of P(s) due to internal unstirred layers was 37%. The data are discussed in terms of recent theoretical estimates of the effect of internal unstirred layers and in terms of some recent criticism of cell pressure probe measurements of water and solute transport coefficients. The current stop-flow data are in line with earlier estimations of the role of unstirred layers in the literature on cell water relations.  相似文献   

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