首页 | 本学科首页   官方微博 | 高级检索  
相似文献
 共查询到20条相似文献,搜索用时 31 毫秒
1.
Summary The effects of saline conditions on the water relations of cells in intact leaf tissue of the facultative CAM plantMesembryanthemum crystallinum were studied using the pressure probe technique. During a 12-hr light/dark regime a maximum in turgor pressure was recorded for the mesophyll cells of salttreated (CAM) plants at the beginning of the light period followed 6 hr later by a pressure maximum in the bladder cells of the upper epidermis. In contrast, the turgor pressure in the bladder cells of the lower epidermis remained constant during light/dark regime. Turgor pressure maxima were not observed in untreated (C3) plants.This finding strongly supports the assumption that water movement during malate accumulation and degradation in salttreated plants occurs predominantly between the mesophyll cells and the bladder cells of the upper epidermis. The necessary calculations take differences in the compartment volumes and in the elastic moduli of the cell walls () of the bladder cells of the lower and upper epidermis into account.Measurements of the kinetics of water transport showed that the half-time of water exchange for the two sorts of bladder cells were nearly identical in CAM plants and in C3 plants. The absolute values of the half-times increased by about 45% in salttreated plants (about 113 sec) compared to the control plants (78 sec). Simultaneously, the half-time of water exchange of the mesophyll cells increased by about 60% from 14 sec (untreated plants) to 22 sec (salt-exposed plants). The leaves of this plant are apparently able to closely maintain the time of propagation of short-term osmotic pressure changes over a large salinity range.A cumulative plot of the data measured on both C3 and CAM plants showed that the differences between the values of the elastic moduli of bladder cells from the lower and from the upper epidermis are due to differences in volume and suggested that the intrinsic elastic properties of the differently located bladder cells of C3 and CAM plants were identical.A cumulative plot of the hydraulic conductivity of the membrane obtained both on mesophyll and on bladder cells of salttreated and of untreated plantsvs. the individual turgor pressure yielded a relationship well-known from giant algal cells and some higher plant cells: The hydraulic conductivity increased at very low pressure, indicating that the water permeability properties of the membrane of the various cell types of C3 and CAM plants are pressure dependent, but otherwise identical.The results suggest that a few fundamental physical relationships control the adaptation of the tissue cells to salinity.  相似文献   

2.
Controversies regarding the function of guard cell chloroplasts and the contribution of mesophyll in stomatal movements have persisted for several decades. Here, by comparing the stomatal opening of guard cells with (crl‐ch) or without chloroplasts (crl‐no ch) in one epidermis of crl (crumpled leaf) mutant in Arabidopsis, we showed that stomatal apertures of crl‐no ch were approximately 65–70% those of crl‐ch and approximately 50–60% those of wild type. The weakened stomatal opening in crl‐no ch could be partially restored by imposing lower extracellular pH. Correspondingly, the external pH changes and K+ accumulations following fusicoccin (FC) treatment were greatly reduced in the guard cells of crl‐no ch compared with crl‐ch and wild type. Determination of the relative ATP levels in individual cells showed that crl‐no ch guard cells contained considerably lower levels of ATP than did crl‐ch and wild type after 2 h of white light illumination. In addition, guard cell ATP levels were lower in the epidermis than in leaves, which is consistent with the observed weaker stomatal opening response to white light in the epidermis than in leaves. These results provide evidence that both guard cell chloroplasts and mesophyll contribute to the ATP source for H+ extrusion by guard cells.  相似文献   

3.
4.
5.
Malcolm B. Wilkins 《Planta》1991,185(3):425-431
The role of the epidermis in the generation of the endogenous circadian rhythm of CO2 exchange in leaves of Bryophyllum fedtschenkoi has been examined. At 25° C the rhythm of CO2 output exhibited by whole leaves kept in continuous darkness and an initially CO2-free air stream also occurs in isolated pieces of mesophyll. The sensitivity to light of the rhythms in whole leaves and in isolated mesophyll appears to be identical. At 15° C, however, no rhythm is observed in isolated mesophyll tissue, despite there being a conspicuous rhythm in intact leaves. The rhythm of net CO2 assimilation in whole leaves kept in continuous light and a stream of normal air at either 25° C or at 15° C is abolished by removal of the epidermis, although at 15° C and under the higher of the two light levels used, there is an indication that rhythmicity may begin to reappear after the third day of the experiment. Thus, only under certain environmental conditions is the rhythm of CO2 exchange in Bryophyllum leaves independent of the epidermis. The results indicate that the rhythm of carbon dioxide fixation in continuous darkness and CO2-free air is generated primarily in the mesophyll cells, whereas the rhythm in continuous light and normal air is generated in the stomatal guard cells or in an interaction of these cells with the mesophyll cells.Abbreviation PEPCase phosphoenolpyruvate carboxylase  相似文献   

6.
P. Dittrich  K. Raschke 《Planta》1977,134(1):83-90
Isolated epidermis of Commelina communis L. and Tulipa gesneriana L. assimilated 14CO2 into malic acid and its metabolites but not into sugars or their phosphates; epidermis could not reduce CO2 by photosynthesis and therefore must be heterotrophic (Raschke and Dittrich, 1977). If, however, isolated epidermis of Commelina communis was placed on prelabelled mesophyll (obtained by an exposure to 14CO2 for 10 min), radioactive sugars appeared in the epidermis, most likely by transfer from the mesophyll. Of the radioactivity in the epidermis, 60% was in sucrose, glucose, fructose, 3-phosphoglyceric acid and sugar phosphates. During a 10-min exposure to 14CO2, epidermis in situ incorporated 16 times more radioactivity than isolated epidermal strips. Isolated epidermis of Commelina communis and Tulipa gesneriana took up 14C-labelled glucose-1-phosphate (without dephosphorylation), glucose, sucrose and maltose. These substances were transformed into other sugars and, simultaneously, into malic acid. Carbons-1 through-3 of malic acid in guard cells can thus be derived from sugars. Radioactivity appeared also in the hydrolysate of the ethanol-insoluble residue and in compounds of the tricarboxylic-acid cycle, including their transamination products. The hydrolysate contained glucose as the only radioactive compound. Radioactivity in the hydrolysate was therefore considered an indication of starch. Starch formation in the epidermis began within 5 min of exposure to glucose-1-phosphate. Autoradiograms of epidermal sections were blackened above the guard cells. Formation of starch from radioactive sugars therefore occurred predominantly in these cells. Epidermis of tulip consistently incorporated more 14C into malic and aspartic acids than that of Commelina communis (e.g. after a 4-h exposure to [14C]glucose in the dark, epidermis, with open stomata, of tulip contained 31% of its radioactivity in malate and aspartate, that of Commelina communis only 2%). The results of our experiments allow a merger of the old observations on the involvement of starch metabolism in stomatal movement with the more recent recognition of ion transfer and acid metabolism as causes of stomatal opening and closing.Abbreviation G-1-P glucose-1-phosphate  相似文献   

7.
The best predictor of leaf level photosynthetic rate is the porosity of the leaf surface, as determined by the number and aperture of stomata on the leaf. This remarkable correlation between stomatal porosity (or diffusive conductance to water vapour gs) and CO2 assimilation rate (A) applies to all major lineages of vascular plants (Figure 1) and is sufficiently predictable that it provides the basis for the model most widely used to predict water and CO2 fluxes from leaves and canopies. Yet the Ball–Berry formulation is only a phenomenological approximation that captures the emergent character of stomatal behaviour. Progressing to a more mechanistic prediction of plant gas exchange is challenging because of the diversity of biological components regulating stomatal action. These processes are the product of more than 400 million years of co‐evolution between stomatal, vascular and photosynthetic tissues. Both molecular and structural components link the abiotic world of the whole plant with the turgor pressure of the epidermis and guard cells, which ultimately determine stomatal pore size and porosity to water and CO2 exchange (New Phytol., 168, 2005, 275). In this review we seek to simplify stomatal behaviour by using an evolutionary perspective to understand the principal selective pressures involved in stomatal evolution, thus identifying the primary regulators of stomatal aperture. We start by considering the adaptive process that has locked together the regulation of water and carbon fluxes in vascular plants, finally examining specific evidence for evolution in the proteins responsible for regulating guard cell turgor.  相似文献   

8.
Alopecurus gerardi, Poa alpina, and Carex curvula are spontaneous, perennial forage plants distributed in the high elevation (2300–3200 m) pasture lands of Piedmont and Valle d'Aosta (Italy). Sedum atratum is an annual succulent which grows at elevations up to 3200 m. The three monocotyledons have, in comparison with corresponding plants from the low-land, peculiar organographic and anatomic structures such as curling leaf lamina, vascular bundle sheath layer with chloroplasts arranged in a centrifugal fashion, low stomatal density (stomata number/cm2: upper epidermis x?= 0–11.9; lower epidermis x?= 7.66–11.55), thick cuticles, as well as higher values of S (H2O; g/dm2; x?= 0.6–0.32), Sm (H2O g/mg Chi.; x?= 0.11–0.16), SLW (g f. wt/dm2; x?= 0.86–1.36), but lower SLA values (cm2/g f. wt; x?= 75.07–116.77). All these data are correlated to water stress. Even though the leaf lamina anatomy possesses some features typical of C4 plants, the presence of starch grains in the mesophyll chloroplasts indicates that these plants are probably C3 ones. In spite of high values of thylacoid grana/thylacoid intergrana ratios, typical of shade plants (mesophyll chloroplasts: x? up to 3.81; bundle sheath chloroplasts: x? up to 5.3), and Chi a/Chl b ratios (x? up to 4.23 in C. curvula), the apparent absence of peroxisomes seem to indicate a very efficient dark phase of photosynthesis. S. atratum, in comparison with the typical CAM succulents, which live in dryer and warmer habitats, has a higher values of stomatal density (upper epidermis, x?= 2.59; lower epidermis, x?= 3.15) and of SLA (x?= 24.98), but lower S (x?= 3.83), Sm (x?= 1.19) and SLW (x?= 4.15).  相似文献   

9.
R. A. Stevens  E. S. Martin 《Planta》1978,142(3):307-316
Differential cell wall thickening in developing guard cells of Polypodium vulgare L. has been studied with particular reference to guard cell protoplast deformation and the eventual formation of the stomatal pore. Concomitant studies on the development of guard cell chloroplasts and their starch inclusions during ontogeny of the stomatal complex have provided data which have been incorporated into a model to account for the formation of the pore. Guard cell starch inclusions reach a maximum density per unit volume at the same time as the guard cell walls achieve maximum differential thickening. These events coincide with the development of the pore. It is suggested that, whilst pore formation is initiated enzymatically, the mechanical forces required to bring about the separation of the two guard cells are of an osmotic nature derived from starch hydrolysis. The development of the mesophyll in relation to the epidermis is examined in respect of the formation of substomatal chambers.  相似文献   

10.
A hydromechanical and biochemical model of stomatal conductance   总被引:17,自引:1,他引:16  
A mathematical model of stomatal conductance is presented. It is based on whole‐plant and epidermal hydromechanics, and on two hypotheses: (1) the osmotic gradient across guard cell membranes is proportional to the concentration of ATP in the guard cells; and (2) the osmotic gradient that can be sustained per unit of ATP is proportional to the turgor pressure of adjacent epidermal cells. In the present study, guard cell [ATP] is calculated using a previously published model that is based on a widely used biochemical model of C3 mesophyll photosynthesis. The conductance model for Vicia faba L. is parameterized and tested As with most other stomatal models, the present model correctly predicts the stomatal responses to variations in transpiration rate, irradiance and intercellular CO2. Unlike most other models, however, this model can predict the transient stomatal opening often observed before conductance declines in response to decreases in humidity, soil water potential, or xylem conductance. The model also explicitly accommodates the mechanical advantage of the epidermis and correctly predicts that stomata are relatively insensitive to the ambient partial pressure of oxygen, as a result of the assumed dependence on ATP concentration.  相似文献   

11.
Uptake of CO2 by the leaf is associated with loss of water. Control of stomatal aperture by volume changes of guard cell pairs optimizes the efficiency of water use. Under water stress, the protein kinase OPEN STOMATA 1 (OST1) activates the guard‐cell anion release channel SLOW ANION CHANNEL‐ASSOCIATED 1 (SLAC1), and thereby triggers stomatal closure. Plants with mutated OST1 and SLAC1 are defective in guard‐cell turgor regulation. To study the effect of stomatal movement on leaf turgor using intact leaves of Arabidopsis, we used a new pressure probe to monitor transpiration and turgor pressure simultaneously and non‐invasively. This probe permits routine easy access to parameters related to water status and stomatal conductance under physiological conditions using the model plant Arabidopsis thaliana. Long‐term leaf turgor pressure recordings over several weeks showed a drop in turgor during the day and recovery at night. Thus pressure changes directly correlated with the degree of plant transpiration. Leaf turgor of wild‐type plants responded to CO2, light, humidity, ozone and abscisic acid (ABA) in a guard cell‐specific manner. Pressure probe measurements of mutants lacking OST1 and SLAC1 function indicated impairment in stomatal responses to light and humidity. In contrast to wild‐type plants, leaves from well‐watered ost1 plants exposed to a dry atmosphere wilted after light‐induced stomatal opening. Experiments with open stomata mutants indicated that the hydraulic conductance of leaf stomata is higher than that of the root–shoot continuum. Thus leaf turgor appears to rely to a large extent on the anion channel activity of autonomously regulated stomatal guard cells.  相似文献   

12.
Environmental stimuli‐triggered stomatal movement is a key physiological process that regulates CO2 uptake and water loss in plants. Stomata are defined by pairs of guard cells that perceive and transduce external signals, leading to cellular volume changes and consequent stomatal aperture change. Within the visible light spectrum, red light induces stomatal opening in intact leaves. However, there has been debate regarding the extent to which red‐light‐induced stomatal opening arises from direct guard cell sensing of red light versus indirect responses as a result of red light influences on mesophyll photosynthesis. Here we identify conditions that result in red‐light‐stimulated stomatal opening in isolated epidermal peels and enlargement of protoplasts, firmly establishing a direct guard cell response to red light. We then employ metabolomics workflows utilizing gas chromatography mass spectrometry and liquid chromatography mass spectrometry for metabolite profiling and identification of Arabidopsis guard cell metabolic signatures in response to red light in the absence of the mesophyll. We quantified 223 metabolites in Arabidopsis guard cells, with 104 found to be red light responsive. These red‐light‐modulated metabolites participate in the tricarboxylic acid cycle, carbon balance, phytohormone biosynthesis and redox homeostasis. We next analyzed selected Arabidopsis mutants, and discovered that stomatal opening response to red light is correlated with a decrease in guard cell abscisic acid content and an increase in jasmonic acid content. The red‐light‐modulated guard cell metabolome reported here provides fundamental information concerning autonomous red light signaling pathways in guard cells.  相似文献   

13.
Stomata mediate gas exchange between the inter‐cellular spaces of leaves and the atmosphere. CO2 levels in leaves (Ci) are determined by respiration, photosynthesis, stomatal conductance and atmospheric [CO2]. [CO2] in leaves mediates stomatal movements. The role of guard cell photosynthesis in stomatal conductance responses is a matter of debate, and genetic approaches are needed. We have generated transgenic Arabidopsis plants that are chlorophyll‐deficient in guard cells only, expressing a constitutively active chlorophyllase in a guard cell specific enhancer trap line. Our data show that more than 90% of guard cells were chlorophyll‐deficient. Interestingly, approximately 45% of stomata had an unusual, previously not‐described, morphology of thin‐shaped chlorophyll‐less stomata. Nevertheless, stomatal size, stomatal index, plant morphology, and whole‐leaf photosynthetic parameters (PSII, qP, qN, FV′/FM′) were comparable with wild‐type plants. Time‐resolved intact leaf gas‐exchange analyses showed a reduction in stomatal conductance and CO2‐assimilation rates of the transgenic plants. Normalization of CO2 responses showed that stomata of transgenic plants respond to [CO2] shifts. Detailed stomatal aperture measurements of normal kidney‐shaped stomata, which lack chlorophyll, showed stomatal closing responses to [CO2] elevation and abscisic acid (ABA), while thin‐shaped stomata were continuously closed. Our present findings show that stomatal movement responses to [CO2] and ABA are functional in guard cells that lack chlorophyll. These data suggest that guard cell CO2 and ABA signal transduction are not directly modulated by guard cell photosynthesis/electron transport. Moreover, the finding that chlorophyll‐less stomata cause a ‘deflated’ thin‐shaped phenotype, suggests that photosynthesis in guard cells is critical for energization and guard cell turgor production.  相似文献   

14.
Abstract Measurements were made of the rate and pattern of 14CO2 fixation by the attached and detached epidermis and accompanying leaf tissue of Commelina cyanea (C3), Zea mays (C4), Kalanchoë daigremontiana (CAM), Allium cepa (C3) and Paphiopedilum venustum (C3). Guard cell plastids of the last two species contain no starch and chlorophyll, respectively. The fine structure of guard cells of these species was also examined. The epidermis of all species when detached from the leaf fixed CO2 by PEP carboxylation but at rates related to those of the underlying mesophyll. When attached to the leaf during 14CO2 feeding a much higher rate of accumulation of radioactivity in substances other than malate and aspartate was found. The results indicated that although concentrations of various metabolites in the two tissues varied greatly, there was fairly ready transport from mesophyll to epidermis. Of recently formed compounds, amino acids appeared to be most readily transported in Commelina and sugars in Zea and Kalanchoë. Epidermal cells appeared to be highly permeable, there being rapid and extensive loss of most labelled products from epidermis placed on CaSO4 solution.  相似文献   

15.
Facultative CAM plants such as Mesembryanthemum crystallinum(ice plant) possess C3 metabolism when unstressed but developCAM under water or salt stress. When ice plants shift from C3metabolism to CAM, their stomata remain closed during the dayand open at night. Recent studies have shown that the stomatalresponse of ice plants in the C3 mode depends solely on theguard cell response to blue light. Recent evidence for a possiblerole of the xanthophyll, zeaxanthin in blue light photoreceptionof guard cells led to the question of whether changes in theregulation of the xanthophyll cycle in guard cells parallelthe shift from diurnal to nocturnal stomatal opening associatedwith CAM induction. In the present study, light-dependent stomatalopening and the operation of the xanthophyll cycle were characterizedin guard cells isolated from ice plants shifting from C3 metabolismto CAM. Stomata in epidermis detached from leaves with C3 metabolismopened in response to white light and blue light, but they didnot open in response to red light. Guard cells from these leavesshowed light-dependent conversion of violaxan-thin to zeaxanthin.Induction of CAM by NaCI abolished both white light- and bluelight-stimulated stomatal opening and light-dependent zeaxanthinformation. When guard cells isolated from leaves with CAM weretreated with 100 mM ascorbate, pH 5.0 for 1 h in darkness, guardcell zeaxanthin content increased at rates equal to or higherthan those stimulated by light in guard cells from leaves inthe C3 mode. The ascorbate effect indicates that chloroplastsin guard cells from leaves with CAM retain their competenceto operate the xanthophyll cycle, but that zeaxanthin formationdoes not take place in the light. The data suggest that inhibitionof light-dependent zeaxanthin formation in guard cells mightbe one of the regulatory steps mediating the shift from diurnalto nocturnal stomatal opening typical of plants with CAM. (Received July 5, 1996; Accepted December 12, 1996)  相似文献   

16.
Cytosolic Ca2+ ([Ca2+]cyt) mediates diverse cellular responses in both animal and plant cells in response to various stimuli. Calcium oscillation amplitude and frequency control gene expression. In stomatal guard cells, [Ca2+]cyt has been shown to regulate stomatal movements, and a defined window of Ca2+ oscillation kinetic parameters encodes necessary information for long‐term stomatal movements. However, it remains unknown how the encrypted information in the cytosolic Ca2+ signature is decoded to maintain stomatal closure. Here we report that the Arabidopsis glutamate receptor homolog AtGLR3.1 is preferentially expressed in guard cells compared to mesophyll cells. Furthermore, over‐expression of AtGLR3.1 using a viral promoter resulted in impaired external Ca2+‐induced stomatal closure. Cytosolic Ca2+ activation of S‐type anion channels, which play a central role in Ca2+‐reactive stomatal closure, was normal in the AtGLR3.1 over‐expressing plants. Interestingly, AtGLR3.1 over‐expression did not affect Ca2+‐induced Ca2+ oscillation kinetics, but resulted in a failure to maintain long‐term ‘Ca2+‐programmed’ stomatal closure when Ca2+ oscillations containing information for maintaining stomatal closure were imposed. By contrast, prompt short‐term Ca2+‐reactive closure was not affected in AtGLR3.1 over‐expressing plants. In wild‐type plants, the translational inhibitor cyclohexamide partially inhibited Ca2+‐programmed stomatal closure induced by experimentally imposed Ca2+ oscillations without affecting short‐term Ca2+‐reactive closure, mimicking the guard cell behavior of the AtGLR3.1 over‐expressing plants. Our results suggest that over‐expression of AtGLR3.1 impairs Ca2+ oscillation‐regulated stomatal movements, and that de novo protein synthesis contributes to the maintenance of long‐term Ca2+‐programmed stomatal closure.  相似文献   

17.
Blue light (BL) induces stomatal opening through the activation of H+-ATPases with subsequent ion accumulation in guard cells. In most plant species, red light (RL) enhances BL-dependent stomatal opening. This RL effect is attributable to the chloroplasts of guard cell, the only cells in the epidermis possessing this organelle. To clarify the role of chloroplasts in stomatal regulation, we investigated the effects of RL on BL-dependent stomatal opening in isolated epidermis, guard cell protoplasts, and intact leaves of Arabidopsis thaliana. In isolated epidermal tissues and intact leaves, weak BL superimposed on RL enhanced stomatal opening while BL alone was less effective. In guard cell protoplasts, RL enhanced BL-dependent H+-pumping and DCMU, a photosynthetic electron transport inhibitor, eliminated this effect. RL enhanced phosphorylation levels of the H+-ATPase in response to BL, but this RL effect was not suppressed by DCMU. Furthermore, DCMU inhibited both RL-induced and BL-dependent stomatal opening in intact leaves. The photosynthetic rate in leaves correlated positively with BL-dependent stomatal opening in the presence of DCMU. We conclude that guard cell chloroplasts provide ATP and/or reducing equivalents that fuel BL-dependent stomatal opening, and that they indirectly monitor photosynthetic CO2 fixation in mesophyll chloroplasts by absorbing PAR in the epidermis.  相似文献   

18.
C. K. Pallaghy 《Planta》1971,101(4):287-295
Summary The correlation between stomatal action and potassium movement in the epidermis of Zea mays was examined in isolated epidermal strips floated on distilled water. Stomatal opening in the isolated epidermis is reversible in response to alternate periods of light or darkness, and is always correlated with a shift in the potassium content of the guard cells. K accumulates in guard cells during stomatal opening, and moves from the guard cells into the subsidiary cells during rapid stomatal closure. When epidermal strips are illuminated in normal air, as against CO2-free air, the stomata do not open and there is a virtually complete depletion of K from the stomatal apparatus. In darkness CO2-containing air inhibits stomatal opening and K accumulation in guard cells, but does not lead to a depletion of K from the stomata as observed in the light.  相似文献   

19.
Flooding the intercellular air spaces of leaves with water was shown to cause rapid closure of stomata in Tradescantia pallida, Lactuca serriola, Helianthus annuus, and Oenothera caespitosa. The response occurred when water was injected into the intercellular spaces, vacuum infiltrated into the intercellular spaces, or forced into the intercellular spaces by pressurizing the xylem. Injecting 50 mm KCl or silicone oil into the intercellular spaces also caused stomata to close, but the response was slower than with distilled water. Epidermis-mesophyll grafts for T. pallida were created by placing the epidermis of one leaf onto the exposed mesophyll of another leaf. Stomata in these grafts opened under light but closed rapidly when water was allowed to wick between epidermis and the mesophyll. When epidermis-mesophyll grafts were constructed with a thin hydrophobic filter between the mesophyll and epidermis stomata responded normally to light and CO2. These data, when taken together, suggest that the effect of water on stomata is caused partly by dilution of K+ in the guard cell and partly by the existence of a vapor-phase signal that originates in the mesophyll and causes stomata to open in the light.Stomatal responses to the environment have been studied in leaves for well over 100 years. More recently, the mechanisms for these responses have been investigated using isolated epidermes or isolated guard cell protoplasts. Despite the combination of these two approaches, the mechanisms by which stomata respond to environmental signals are not well understood. Since stomata control CO2 uptake and water loss from leaves, the responses of stomata to environmental factors are important determinants of terrestrial productivity and water use. It is therefore critical that we understand the mechanisms by which stomata respond to the environment if we are to accurately predict the effects of future climates on productivity and water cycles (Randall et al., 1996).There are two assumptions about stomata that are implicit in much of the recent literature: (1) that stomatal responses result from sensory mechanisms that reside within the guard cells, and (2) that stomata in isolated epidermes respond similarly to those in a leaf. The exception to this generalization is the stomatal response to humidity, which has been suggested to be the result of changes in guard cell water potential (Dewar, 1995, 2002) or of signaling from other cells in the leaf to the guard cells (Buckley et al., 2003). The assumption that guard cells directly sense CO2 and light is largely based on data from isolated epidermes that show effects of light and CO2 on stomatal apertures. As pointed out by Mott (2009), however, stomatal responses to light and CO2 in isolated epidermes are generally much different from those observed in leaves; e.g. responses in isolated epidermes are generally smaller than those in leaves, opening in response to light is slower, and closing in darkness is rarely observed. These observations were used to suggest that the mesophyll is somehow involved in stomatal responses to red light and CO2. This idea is supported by several recent studies that suggest that guard cells do not respond directly to red light. In the first of these studies it was shown that guard cells in an intact leaf do not show hyperpolarization of the plasma membrane in response to red light if the red light is applied to only the guard cell (Roelfsema et al., 2002). In contrast, blue light applied only to the guard cell does cause hyperpolarization, and red light does cause hyperpolarization if applied to the guard cell and the underlying mesophyll. The second study showed that stomata in albino areas of a leaf do not respond to red light, although they contain chloroplasts and do respond to blue light (Roelfsema et al., 2006). Finally, a third study has shown that isolated epidermes are much more sensitive to light and CO2 when placed in close contact with an exposed mesophyll from a leaf from the same or a different species (Mott et al., 2008). These epidermis-mesophyll grafts showed stomatal responses to light and CO2 that were indistinguishable from those in an intact leaf—a sharp contrast to the behavior of stomata in isolated epidermes that are floating on buffer solutions. In that study, illumination of a single stoma in a leaf using a small-diameter fiber optic did not produce stomatal opening, but opening did occur if several stomata and the underlying mesophyll were illuminated. Furthermore, this treatment actually caused opening of adjacent, but unilluminated, stomata (Mott et al., 2008).In constructing the epidermis-mesophyll grafts in the study described above (Mott et al., 2008), it was noticed that functional grafts could be produced only if both the mesophyll and the epidermis were blotted completely dry of any free water before placing them together. Although the tissues were apparently still fully hydrated, there was very little free water present (i.e. water not contained within the walls of the leaf cells), and both the mesophyll and epidermis felt and looked dry prior to assembly. In addition, even when free water was blotted away initially, stomata did not open in grafts that ended up with visible water on the epidermis or mesophyll that was caused by condensation during the experiment. These observations suggest that the presence of free water somehow prevented the stomata in the grafts from opening. Assuming that the mechanisms operating in the grafts were similar to those in an intact leaf, this result also suggests that free water may have an effect on stomata in leaves as well. In addition, it seems possible that the effect of free water on stomata could be related to the disruption of the signal from the mesophyll that was proposed in an earlier study (Mott et al., 2008). We hypothesize that disruption of this signal could be caused by (1) dilution of some solute that is necessary for opening (such as K+) in the guard cell walls, (2) dilution of an apoplastic, liquid-phase opening signal from the mesophyll to the guard cells, and (3) blockage of a vapor-phase opening signal from the mesophyll to the guard cells. This study was initiated to test these three hypotheses by examining the effect of free water and other liquids on stomatal functioning.  相似文献   

20.
The vesicle‐trafficking protein SYP121 (SYR1/PEN1) was originally identified in association with ion channel control at the plasma membrane of stomatal guard cells, although stomata of the Arabidopsis syp121 loss‐of‐function mutant close normally in ABA and high Ca2+. We have now uncovered a set of stomatal phenotypes in the syp121 mutant that reduce CO2 assimilation, slow vegetative growth and increase water use efficiency in the whole plant, conditional upon high light intensities and low relative humidity. Stomatal opening and the rise in stomatal transpiration of the mutant was delayed in the light and following Ca2+‐evoked closure, consistent with a constitutive form of so‐called programmed stomatal closure. Delayed reopening was observed in the syp121, but not in the syp122 mutant lacking the homologous gene product; the delay was rescued by complementation with wild‐type SYP121 and was phenocopied in wild‐type plants in the presence of the vesicle‐trafficking inhibitor Brefeldin A. K+ channel current that normally mediates K+ uptake for stomatal opening was suppressed in the syp121 mutant and, following closure, its recovery was slowed compared to guard cells of wild‐type plants. Evoked stomatal closure was accompanied by internalisation of GFP‐tagged KAT1 K+ channels in both wild‐type and syp121 mutant guard cells, but their subsequently recycling was slowed in the mutant. Our findings indicate that SYP121 facilitates stomatal reopening and they suggest that K+ channel traffic and recycling to the plasma membrane underpins the stress memory phenomenon of programmed closure in stomata. Additionally, they underline the significance of vesicle traffic for whole‐plant water use and biomass production, tying SYP121 function to guard cell membrane transport and stomatal control.  相似文献   

设为首页 | 免责声明 | 关于勤云 | 加入收藏

Copyright©北京勤云科技发展有限公司  京ICP备09084417号