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1.
S. Levy 《Protoplasma》1991,163(2-3):145-155
Summary The dynamic changes in microfibril architecture in the internode cell walls of the giant unicellular algaNitella translucens were studied during cell expansion. Thin section electron microscopy in conjunction with mild matrix polysaccharide extraction techniques revealed three distinct architectural zones in the walls of fully grown cells. These zones were related to distinct phases of growth by monitoring changes in cell wall architecture of internodes during active cell expansion. The initial microfibril deposition before the onset of active cell growth is helicoidal. A helicoid is a structurally complex but ordered arrangement of microfibrils that has been detected increasingly often in higher plant cell walls. During active cell elongation microfibrils are deposited transversely to the direction of cell elongation as shown in earlier studies by birefringence measurements in the polarizing microscope. The gradual decline in cell elongation corresponds with a final helicoidal deposition which continues after cell expansion ceases entirely.The continual presence of the initial helicoidal zone in the outer wall region during the whole growth process suggests that these microfibrils do not experience strain reorientation and are continually reorganized, or maintained, in a well ordered helicoidal arrangement.  相似文献   

2.
The helicoidal plant cell wall can be considered as a composite in which cellulose is the constant reinforcing fiber. In order to strengthen the analogy with cholesteric liquid crystals, and taking into account a range of data, we describe a progressive series showing that cellulosic helicoidal systems are versatile and multifunctional. The following examples were considered: a) the cellulose microfibrils, with their rigid backbone possibly coated with a plastifying matrix; b) actual cholesteric cellulosic derivatives, such as in vitro liquid crystals and in vitro cellulosic mucilages; c) viscoplastic. growing cell walls; d) consolidated “stony” cell walls with their adaptation to intercellular communications. The series shows a dramatic progression from a liquid construction to what is the hardest in the plant cells, i.e. the sclerified walls.  相似文献   

3.
H. J. Pluymaekers 《Protoplasma》1982,112(1-2):107-116
Summary The cell wall of root hairs ofLimnobium stoloniferum is composed of two fibrillar layers: an outer layer with a dispersed texture and an inner layer with a helicoidal texture. In stained oblique sections the helicoidal layer appears as a series of bow-shaped structures. In sections which were shadow-casted after the embedding medium was removed, the following properties of the helicoidal layer can be directly observed. (1) It is build up of superimposed lamellae. (2) Each lamella consists of parallel oriented microfibrils. (3) Going into the helicoidal layer, there is a counter-clockwise discontinuous rotation of the microfibril orientation in successive lamellae. (4) Between adjacent lamellae the average angular displacement of the microfibril orientation is about 23 degrees. The dispersed outer layer is also polylamellated, but with randomly arranged microfibrils in each lamella. Both layers are present in the lateral wall as well as in the apical wall of the root hairs. Observations indicate that in the cell wall of the tip the parallel oriented microfibrils of the outermost helicoidal lamellae become distorted towards a dispersed arrangement. The suggestion is made that the dispersed outer layer is derived from the helicoidal layer.  相似文献   

4.
A. C. Neville  S. Levy 《Planta》1984,162(4):370-384
The ultrastructure of the mature internode cell wall of Nitella opaca is described. It is interpreted in terms of a helicoidal array of cellulose microfibrils set in a matrix. A helicoid is a multiple plywood made up of layers of parallel microfibrils. There is a progressive change in direction from ply to ply, giving rise to characteristic arced patterns in oblique sections. A critical tilting test, using an electron microscope fitted with a goniometric stage, showed the expected reversal of direction of the arced pattern. Nitella cell wall is thus more regularly structured than previous studies have shown. From a survey of the cell-wall literature, we show that such arced patterns are common. This indicates that the helicoidal structure may be more widespread than is generally realised, although numerous other cell walls show no signs of it. Nevertheless, there are examples in most major plant taxa, and in several types of cells, including wood tracheids. Most of the examples, however, need confirmation by tilting evidence. There are possible implications for wall morphogenesis. Helicoidal cell walls might arise by selfassembly via a liquid crystalline phase, since it is known that the cholesteric state is itself helicoidal. A computer graphics programme has been developed to plot the expected effects of growth strain on the patterns in oblique sections of helicoids with various original angles between consecutive layers. Herringbone patterns typical of crossed polylamellate texture can be generated in this way, indicating a possible mode of their formation.  相似文献   

5.
Thimm JC  Burritt DJ  Ducker WA  Melton LD 《Planta》2000,212(1):25-32
Atomic force microscopy (AFM) was used to image celery (Apium graveolens L.) parenchyma cell walls in situ. Cellulose microfibrils could clearly be distinguished in topographic images of the cell wall. The microfibrils of the hydrated walls appeared smaller, more uniformly distributed, and less enmeshed than those of dried peels. In material that was kept hydrated at all times and imaged under water, the microfibril diameter was mainly in the range 6–25 nm. The cellulose microfibril diameters were highly dependent on the water content of the specimen. As the water content was decreased, by mixing ethanol with the bathing solution, the microfibril diameters increased. Upon complete dehydration of the specimen we observed a significant increase in microfibril diameter. The procedure used to dehydrate the parenchyma cells also influenced the size of cellulose microfibrils with freeze-dried material having larger diameters than air-dried material. Received: 16 November 1999 / Accepted: 7 March 2000  相似文献   

6.
Summary The secondary cell wall layer of the young root hair ofEquisetum hyemale (L) has a helicoidal texture. The cortical microtubules in these hairs maintain an axial alignment while microfibrils are being deposited with a different orientation in each subsequent layer. The role of cortical microtubules in microfibril orientation is disputed.I gratefully acknowledge the support of Professor Dr. M. M. A.Sassen and the technical assistance of M.Wolters-Arts.  相似文献   

7.
Kazuo Takeda  Hiroh Shibaoka 《Planta》1981,151(4):385-392
Throughout the entire period of cell growth, the microfibrils on the inner surface of the outer tangential walls of the epidermal cells of Vigna angularis epicotyls are running parallel to one another and their orientation differs from cell to cell. Although transverse, oblique and longitudinal microfibrils can be observed irrespective of cell age, the frequency distribution of microfibril orientation changes with age. In young cells, transversely oriented microfibrils predominate. In cells of medium age, which are still undergoing elongation, transverse, oblique and longitudinal microfibrils are present in quite similar frequencies. In old, non-growing cells, longitudinally oriented microfibrils are predominent. A decrease in the relative frequency of transversely oriented microfibrils with cell age was also observed in the radial epidermal walls.  相似文献   

8.
An improved 13C-density-labeling method was used to study cell wall synthesis in rapidly expanding, slowly expanding and recently mature internodes of Nitella translucens var axillaris (A.Br.) R.D.W. As cells matured, the rate of wall synthesis slowed and the deposition of cellulose microfibrils changed from a predominantly transverse direction in the primary wall of rapidly expanding internodes to a helicoidal array in the secondary wall of mature internodes. The secondary wall was characterized by relatively higher rates of cellulose synthesis and lower rates of pectin synthesis than the primary wall. The synthesis of xyloglucan also decreased markedly at the transition to secondary wall synthesis, while the synthesis of mannose-rich hemicellulose increased. Even though structural differences were striking between the primary and secondary walls of Nitella, compositional differences between the two types of wall were quantitative rather than qualitative. The authors appreciate the assistance of Martin Yousef with the electron microscopy.  相似文献   

9.
We used atomic force microscopy (AFM), complemented with electron microscopy, to characterize the nanoscale and mesoscale structure of the outer (periclinal) cell wall of onion scale epidermis – a model system for relating wall structure to cell wall mechanics. The epidermal wall contains ~100 lamellae, each ~40 nm thick, containing 3.5‐nm wide cellulose microfibrils oriented in a common direction within a lamella but varying by ~30 to 90° between adjacent lamellae. The wall thus has a crossed polylamellate, not helicoidal, wall structure. Montages of high‐resolution AFM images of the newly deposited wall surface showed that single microfibrils merge into and out of short regions of microfibril bundles, thereby forming a reticulated network. Microfibril direction within a lamella did not change gradually or abruptly across the whole face of the cell, indicating continuity of the lamella across the outer wall. A layer of pectin at the wall surface obscured the underlying cellulose microfibrils when imaged by FESEM, but not by AFM. The AFM thus preferentially detects cellulose microfibrils by probing through the soft matrix in these hydrated walls. AFM‐based nanomechanical maps revealed significant heterogeneity in cell wall stiffness and adhesiveness at the nm scale. By color coding and merging these maps, the spatial distribution of soft and rigid matrix polymers could be visualized in the context of the stiffer microfibrils. Without chemical extraction and dehydration, our results provide multiscale structural details of the primary cell wall in its near‐native state, with implications for microfibrils motions in different lamellae during uniaxial and biaxial extensions.  相似文献   

10.
Summary Chitin microfibrils exposed by chemical extraction of hyphal walls ofCandida albicans, Histoplasma capsulatum, Blastomyces dermatitidis, Paracoccidiodes brasiliensis, Coprinus cinereus andMucor mucedo were of variable morphology but gave identical infrared spectra and behaved as pure chitin in chromatographic analyses. The microfibrils of the four dimorphic fungi studied were shorter than those in the mouldsC. cinereus andM. mucedo but were similar to those reported for the yeastSaccharomyces cerevisiae. InC. albicans the microfibrils in the septal plates of hyphae were predominantly tangentially orientated and were longer than those in the lateral walls. Microfibrils produced by chitin synthasein vitro were very much longer than any observed from hyphal preparations.  相似文献   

11.
Gibberellin-induced formation of tension wood in angiosperm trees   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
Funada R  Miura T  Shimizu Y  Kinase T  Nakaba S  Kubo T  Sano Y 《Planta》2008,227(6):1409-1414
After gibberellin had been applied to the vertical stems of four species of angiosperm trees for approximately 2 months, we observed eccentric radial growth that was due to the enhanced growth rings on the sides of stems to which gibberellin had been applied. Moreover, the application of gibberellin resulted in the formation of wood fibers in which the thickness of inner layers of cell walls was enhanced. These thickened inner layers of cell walls were unlignified or only slightly lignified. In addition, cellulose microfibrils on the innermost surface of these thickened inner layers of cell walls were oriented parallel or nearly parallel to the longitudinal axis of the fibers. Such thickened inner layers of cell walls had features similar to those of gelatinous layers in the wood fibers of tension wood, which are referred to as gelatinous fibers. Our anatomical and histochemical investigations indicate that the application of gibberellin can induce the formation of tension wood on vertical stems of angiosperm trees in the absence of gravitational stimulus.  相似文献   

12.
It is shown that root hairs of most aquatic plants have a helicoidal cell-wall texture. Cell walls of root hairs of the aquatic/marshland plant Ranunculus lingua, however, have an axial microfibril alignment. The occurrence of a helicoidal wall texture is not limited to root hairs of aquatic plants: the terrestrial plant Zebrina purpusii has a helicoidal root-hair wall texture, too. With the exception of the grasses, the occurrence of root hairs with helicoidal cell walls pertains to species with predetermined root-hair-forming cells, trichoblasts. The rotation mode of the helicoid is species-specific. The average angle between fibrils of adjacent lamellae varies from 23° to 40°. In Hydrocharis morsus-ranae, cortical microtubules have a net-axial orientation and thus do not parallel nascent microfibrils. The deposition of the helicoidal cell wall is discussed.In honour of Prof. Dr. H.F Linskens (Nijmegen) on the occasion of his 65th birthday  相似文献   

13.

Background and Aims

Plant cell enlargement is unambiguously coupled to changes in cell wall architecture, and as such various studies have examined the modification of the proportions and structures of glucuronoarabinoxylan and mixed-linkage glucan in the course of cell elongation in grasses. However, there is still no clear understanding of the mutual arrangement of these matrix polymers with cellulose microfibrils and of the modification of this architecture during cell growth. This study aimed to determine the correspondence between the fine structure of grass cell walls and the course of the elongation process in roots of maize (Zea mays).

Methods

Enzymatic hydrolysis followed by biochemical analysis of derivatives was coupled with immunohistochemical detection of cell wall epitopes at different stages of cell development in a series of maize root zones.

Key Results

Two xylan-directed antibodies (LM11 and ABX) have distinct patterns of primary cell wall labelling in cross-sections of growing maize roots. The LM11 epitopes were masked by mixed-linkage glucan and were revealed only after lichenase treatment. They could be removed from the section by xylanase treatment. Accessibility of ABX epitopes was not affected by the lichenase treatment. Xylanase treatment released only part of the cell wall glucuronoarabinoxylan and produced two types of products: high-substituted (released in polymeric form) and low-substituted (released as low-molecular-mass fragments). The amount of the latter was highly correlated with the amount of mixed-linkage glucan.

Conclusions

Three domains of glucuronoarabinoxylan were determined: one separating cellulose microfibrils, one interacting with them and a middle domain between the two, which links them. The middle domain is masked by the mixed-linkage glucan. A model is proposed in which the mixed-linkage glucan serves as a gel-like filler of the space between the separating domain of the glucuronoarabinoxylan and the cellulose microfibrils. Space for glucan is provided along the middle domain, the proportion of which increases during cell elongation.  相似文献   

14.
Kazuo Takeda  Hiroh Shibaoka 《Planta》1981,151(4):393-398
Gibberellic-acid (GA3) treatment of azukibean epicotyls resulted in alterations of the direction of newly deposited microfibrils, on the cell walls. Cells having transverse microfibrils on the inner surface of the wall were observed more frequently in GA3-treated epicotyls than in untreated or water-treated ones. This effect of GA3 was negated by simultaneously supplied colchicine. A crossed polylamellate structure was observed in the inner portion of the walls of GA3-treated cells, but not in the inner portion of the walls of colchicine-treated cells. The wall formed under the influence of colchicine consisted of microfibrils running in the same direction.Abbreviations GA gibberellin - GA3 gibberellic acid (gibberellin A3)  相似文献   

15.
T. Itoh  R. M. Brown Jr. 《Protoplasma》1988,144(2-3):160-169
Summary The development of linear cellulose synthesizing complexes (=TCs) of two selected siphonocladalean algae,Boergesenia forbesii andValonia ventricosa was investigated by following the time course of the regeneration of cell walls with the freeze fracture technique after aplanospore induction. The following structural changes of TC development were examined: (1) TCs initiatede novo; (2) the first nucleation of TC subunits occurs within 2 hr inBoergesenia and 5 hr inValonia after aplanospore induction, immediately followed by the assembly of cellulose microfibrils; (3) TCs increase their length during the assembly of randomly oriented microfibrils; and, (4) TCs stop increasing in length after the assembly of ordered microfibrils begins, with some time lag. The data demonstrate that linear TCs are not artificial products but dynamic entities which are involved in the assembly of cellulose microfibrils.  相似文献   

16.
In the Arabidopsis mutant irx3, truncation of the AtCesA7 gene encoding a xylem-specific cellulose synthase results in reduced cellulose synthesis in the affected xylem cells and collapse of mature xylem vessels. Here we describe spectroscopic experiments to determine whether any cellulose, normal or abnormal, remained in the walls of these cells and whether there were consequent effects on other cell-wall polysaccharides. Xylem cell walls from irx3 and its wild-type were prepared by anatomically specific isolation and were examined by solid-state NMR spectroscopy and FTIR microscopy. The affected cell walls of irx3 contained low levels of crystalline cellulose, probably associated with primary cell walls. There was no evidence that crystalline cellulose was replaced by less ordered glucans. From the molecular mobility of xylans and lignin it was deduced that these non-cellulosic polymers were cross-linked together in both irx3 and the wild-type. The disorder previously observed in the spatial pattern of non-cellulosic polymer deposition in the secondary walls of irx3 xylem could not be explained by any alteration in the structure or cross-linking of these polymers and may be attributed directly to the absence of cellulose microfibrils which, in the wild-type, scaffold the organisation of the other polymers into a coherent secondary cell wall.  相似文献   

17.
Arrangements of cortical microtubules (MTs) and of cellulose microfibrils at the surface of the vegetative shoot apex ofVinca major L. were examined by immunofluorescence microscopy and polarizing microscopy, respectively. Cortical MTs adjacent to the outermost walls of the apex were arranged more or less randomly in individual cells: especially in cells in the central region of the apex the arrangement was almost completely random. However, in the peripheral region MTs tended to show parallel alignment in individual cells, and an overall pattern that was roughly concentric around the apical dome was discerned. Observations of birefringence of cell walls indicated that cellulose microfibrils in the peripheral region of the apex were also arranged in a pattern which was roughly concentric around the apical dome. These patterns of arrangements of MTs and microfibrils are understood to be perpendicular to the radial cell files observed in the peripheral region of the apex, and can be related to the radial expansion of the surface of the apex.  相似文献   

18.
Melissa A. Melan 《Protoplasma》1990,153(3):169-177
Summary We have investigated the effects of microtubule stabilizing conditions upon microtubule patterns in protoplasts and developed a new method for producing protoplasts which have non-random cortical microtubule arrays. Segments of elongating pea epicotyl tissue were treated with the microtubule stabilizing drug taxol for 1 h before enzymatic digestion of the cell walls in the presence of the drug. Anti-tubulin immunofluorescence showed that 40 M taxol preserved regions of ordered microtubules. The microtubules in these regions were arranged in parallel arrays, although the arrays did not always show the transverse orientation seen in the intact tissue. Protoplasts prepared without taxol had microtubules which were random in distribution. Addition of taxol to protoplasts with random microtubule arrangements did not result in organized microtubule arrays. Taxol-treated protoplasts were used to determine whether or not organized microtubule arrays would affect the organization of cell wall microfibrils as new walls were regenerated. We found that protoplasts from taxol-treated tissue which were allowed to regenerate cell walls produced organized arrays of microfibrils whose patterns matched those of the underlying microtubules. Protoplasts from untreated tissue synthesized microfibrils which were disordered. The synthesis of organized microfibrils by protoplasts with ordered microtubules arrays shows that microtubule arrangements in protoplasts influence the arrangement of newly synthesized microfibrils.Abbreviations DIC differential interference contrast - DMSO dimethyl sulfoxide - FITC fluorescein isothiocyanate - IgG immunoglobulin G - PIPES piperazine-N,N-bis[2-ethane-sulfonic acid] - PBS phosphate buffered saline  相似文献   

19.
The peripheral cell wall(s) of stems and coleoptiles are 6 to 20 times thicker than the walls of the inner tissues. In coleoptiles, the outer wall of the outer epidermis shows a multilayered, helicoidal cellulose architecture, whereas the walls of the parenchyma and the outer wall of the inner epidermis are unilayered. In hypocotyls and epicotyls both the epidermal and some subepidermal walls are multilayered, helicoidal structures. The walls of the internal tissues (inner cortex, pith) are unilayered, with cellulose microfibrils oriented primarily transversely. Peeled inner tissues rapidly extend in water, whereas the outer cell layer(s) contract on isolation. This indicates that the peripheral walls limit elongation of the intact organ. Experiments with the pressure microprobe indicate that the entire organ can be viewed as a giant, turgid cell: the extensible inner tissues exert a pressure (turgor) on the peripheral wall(s), which bear the longitudinal wall stress of the epidermal and internal cells. Numerous studies have shown that auxin induces elongation of isolated, intact sections by loosening of the growth-limiting peripheral cell wall(s). Likewise, the effect of light on reduction of stem elongation and cell wall extensibility in etiolated seedlings is restricted to the peripheral cell layers of the organ. The extensible inner tissues provide the driving force (turgor pressure), whereas the rigid peripheral wall(s) limit, and hence control, the rate of organ elongation.  相似文献   

20.
Summary The long-term effects of white light (WL) on epidermal cell elongation and the mechanical properties and ultrastructure of cell walls were investigated in the subapical regions of hypocotyls of sunflower seedlings (Helianthus annuus L.) that were grown in darkness. Upon transition to WL a drastic inhibition of epidermal cell elongation was observed. However, the mechanical properties of the inner tissues (cortex, vascular bundles, and pith) were unaffected by WL. Thus, the light-induced decrease in cell wall plasticity measured on entire stems occurs exclusively in the peripheral tissues (epidermis and 2 to 3 subepidermal cell layers).An electronmicroscopic investigation of the epidermal cell walls showed that they are of the helicoidal type with the direction of microfibrils monotonously changing during deposition. This cell wall type was identified by the appearance of arced patterns of microfibrils in cell walls sectioned oblique to the plane of their synthesis. WL irradiation did not change the periodicity of this pattern nor the thickness of the lamellae. Thus, the inhibition of cell elongation was not caused or accompanied by a shift in the direction of microfibril deposition in the growth-limiting outer tissues. However, cell wall thickness, the number of lamellae and hence the amount of cellulose oriented parallel and transverse to the longitudinal cell axis increased in WL. This may account for the effect of WL on the reduction of cell wall plasticity and growth.Abbreviations D darkness - PATAg periodic acid-thiocarbohydracide-silver protein - WL white light  相似文献   

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