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1.
Cinnamyl alcohol dehydrogenase 2 (CAD 2) localization and the cell-specific activity of the eucalyptus CAD 2 promoter were investigated by CAD 2 immunogold localization and promoter β-glucuronidase (GUS) histochemistry in apical and mature parts of stable transformed poplar (Populus tremula × P. alba) stems. Both CAD 2 protein and GUS activity were found to be confined in the same types of cells in the shoot apices, particularly in the determined meristematic cells in leaf axils and shell zones, procambium and developing tracheids. Within mature stems, CAD 2 and GUS were also identified in cambium and in fully or partially lignified cells derived from it (young xylem, developing phloem fibres, chambered parenchyma cells around phloem). Additionally, GUS activity was found in the scale leaves of apical shoot buds and in the roots (namely in the procambium, cambium, phellogen, young xylem, pericycle) of transformed plants. By employing immunogold cytochemistry, CAD 2 was shown to be localized in the cytoplasm within cambial, ray and young xylem cells in stems, the gold particles being randomly attached to endoplasmic reticulum and Golgi-derived vesicles. These results support a crucial role for CAD 2 in lignification and indicate a new role for this enzyme in branching events within the shoot apex and during lateral root formation. Received: 24 April 1997 / Accepted: 17 July 1997  相似文献   

2.
The use is reported of Mirande's reagent in epifluorescence microscopy which permits a clear distinction between cellulosic and lignified tissues. Homogeneous Prespermatophytae and gymnosperm xylem appeared entirely green with Mirande's reagent under ultraviolet excitation, whereas heteroxyled angiosperm wood showed a mixed pink and blue–green colour. This coloration was due to the fluorescence of cellulose, since certain elements in dicotyledonous wood (parenchyma, fibres, xylem rays) are not entirely lignified. Monocotyledonous (Poaceae) lignin showed an intense blue fluorescence due to hydroxycinnamic acids bound to the cell wall.The method showed that lignification occurs first in the middle lamella, and later in the secondary wall of xylem cells. In addition, this staining technique proved useful in the study of lignin and suberin deposition in response to various stress factors.  相似文献   

3.
Lignin is a critical structural component of plants, providing vascular integrity and mechanical strength. Lignin precursors (monolignols) must be exported to the extracellular matrix where random oxidative coupling produces a complex lignin polymer. The objectives of this study were twofold: to determine the timing of lignification with respect to programmed cell death and to test if nonlignifying xylary parenchyma cells can contribute to the lignification of tracheary elements and fibers. This study demonstrates that lignin deposition is not exclusively a postmortem event, but also occurs prior to programmed cell death. Radiolabeled monolignols were not detected in the cytoplasm or vacuoles of tracheary elements or neighbors. To experimentally define which cells in lignifying tissues contribute to lignification in intact plants, a microRNA against CINNAMOYL CoA-REDUCTASE1 driven by the promoter from CELLULOSE SYNTHASE7 (ProCESA7:miRNA CCR1) was used to silence monolignol biosynthesis specifically in cells developing lignified secondary cell walls. When monolignol biosynthesis in ProCESA7:miRNA CCR1 lines was silenced in the lignifying cells themselves, but not in the neighboring cells, lignin was still deposited in the xylem secondary cell walls. Surprisingly, a dramatic reduction in cell wall lignification of extraxylary fiber cells demonstrates that extraxylary fibers undergo cell autonomous lignification.  相似文献   

4.
We investigated the effect of elicitors on xylem differentiation and lignification using a Zinnia elegans xylogenic culture system. Water-soluble chitosan and a fungal elicitor derived from Botrytis cinerea were used as elicitors. Elicitor addition at the start of culturing inhibited tracheary element (TE) differentiation in a concentration-dependent manner, and 30 μg mL?1 of chitosan or 16.7 μg mL?1 of the fungal elicitor strikingly inhibited TE differentiation and lignification. Addition of chitosan (at 50 μg mL?1) or the fungal elicitor (at 16.7 μg mL?1) during the culturing period also inhibited TE differentiation without inhibiting cell division, except for immature TEs undergoing secondary wall thickening. Elicitor addition after immature TE appearance also caused the accumulation of an extracellular lignin-like substance. It appears that elicitor addition at the start of culturing inhibits the process by which dedifferentiated cells differentiate into xylem cell precursors. Elicitor addition during culturing also appears to inhibit the transition from xylem cell precursors to immature TEs, and induces xylem cell precursors or xylem parenchyma cells to produce an extracellular stress lignin-like substance.  相似文献   

5.
Z H Ye 《Plant physiology》1997,115(4):1341-1350
Caffeoyl coenzyme A 3-O-methyltransferase (CCoAOMT) was previously shown to be associated with lignification in both in vitro tracheary elements (TEs) and organs of zinnia (Zinnia elegans). However, it is not known whether this is a general pattern in dicot plants. To address this question, polyclonal antibodies against zinnia recombinant CCoAOMT fusion protein were raiseed and used for immunolocalization in several dicot plants. The antibodies predominantly recognized a protein band with a molecular mass of 28 kD on western analysis of tissue extracts from zinnia, forsythia (Forsythia suspensa), tobacco (Nicotiana tabacum), alfalfa (Medicago sativa), and soybean (Glycine max). Western analyses showed that the accumulation of CCoAOMT protein was closely correlated with lignification in in vitro TEs of zinnia. Immunolocalization results showed that CCoAOMT was localized in developing TEs of young zinnia stems and in TEs, xylem fibers, and phloem fibers of old stems. CCoAOMT was also found to be specifically associated with all lignifying tissues, including TEs, xylem fibers, and phloem fibers in stems of forsythia, tobacco, alfalfa, soybean, and tomato (Lycopersicon esculentum). The presence of CCoAOMT was evident in xylem ray parenchyma cells of forsythia, tobacco, and tomato. In forsythia and alfalfa, pith parenchyma cells next to the vascular cylinder were lignified. Accordingly, marked accumulation of CCoAOMT in these cells was observed. Taken together, these results showed a close association of CCoAOMT expression with lignification in dicot plants. This supports the hypothesis that the CCoAOMT-mediated methylation branch is a general one in lignin biosynthesis during normal growth and development in dicot plants.  相似文献   

6.
Anatomical and histological features affecting the degradation of stem tissues by ruminal microorganisms were examined in ‘Caucasian’, ‘Ganada,’ and ‘WW-Spar’ Old World bluestem grasses (Bothriochloa spp.). Tissue degradation and/or staining results revealed variation among cultivars in the degree of lignification of parenchyma, sclerenchyma, and epidermal cells. In both immature and mature stems, parenchyma and sclerenchyma cell degradation by microorganisms was rapid and extensive for Ganada as compared with Caucasian and WW-Spar. In general, Caucasian tissues were more resistant to degradation than WW-Spar. There also were differences in tissue composition and degradation as a result of stem maturity. Increased lignification in parenchyma cells was primarily responsible for a decreased rate and extent of degradation in older stem portions. The major difference in tissue composition among cultivars was found in older stems; WW-Spar had more vascular and less parenchyma tissues than Caucasian and Ganada. However, Caucasian had a greater percentage of xylem-metaxylem complex tissues than the other two cultivars. The amount of lignified tissues did not seem to be related strongly with rate and extent of tissue degradation. Instead, the data suggest that our previously reported differences in digestibility among the three Old World bluestem grasses could be attributed to differences in the degradation of their individual tissue types. Fungal attachment was greatest on mature tissues, hence, the rate and extent of degradation of lignified tissues may be associated with the colonization of fungi in mature stems. Also, there was minimal colonization of fungi on immature tissues suggesting that their degradation was primarily affected by enzymatic or direct involvement of bacteria.  相似文献   

7.
The lignification process and lignin heterogeneity of fibre, vessel and parenchyma cell walls for various age classes of bamboo stems of Phyllostachys pubescens Mazel were investigated. It was shown that protoxylem vessels lignified in the early stage of vascular bundle differentiation, metaxylem vessel and fibre walls initiated lignification from the middle lamella and cell corners after the completion of vascular bundle differentiation. Most of the parenchyma cell walls lignified after the stem reached its full height, while a few parenchyma cells remained non-lignified even in the mature culm. The cell walls of fibres and most parenchyma cells thickened further during the stem growth to form polylamellate structure and the lignification process of these cells may last even up to 7 years. The fibre walls were rich in guaiacyl lignin in the early stage of lignification, and lignin rich in syringyl units were deposited in the later stage. Vessel walls mainly contained guaiacyl lignin, while both guaiacyl and syringyl lignin were present in the fibre and parenchyma cell walls.  相似文献   

8.
Alfalfa Stem Tissues: Cell-wall Development and Lignification   总被引:4,自引:0,他引:4  
Alfalfa stems contain a variety of tissues with different patternsof cell-wall development. Development of alfalfa cell wallswas investigated after histochemical staining and with polarizedlight using light microscopy and scanning electron microscopy.Samples of the seventh internode, from the base of stems grownon cut stems, were harvested at five defined stages of developmentfrom early internode elongation through to late maturity. Internodeseven was elongating up to the third sample harvest and internodediameter increased throughout the entire sampling period. Chlorenchyma,cambium, secondary phloem, primary xylem parenchyma and pithparenchyma stem tissues all had thin primary cell walls. Pithparenchyma underwent a small amount of cell-wall thickeningand lignification during maturation. Collenchyma and primaryphloem tissues developed partially thickened primary walls.In contrast to a recent report, the formation of a ring shaped,lignified portion of the primary wall in a number of cells inthe exterior part of the primary phloem was found to precedethe deposition of a thick, non-lignified secondary wall whichwas degradable by rumen microbes. In numerous xylem fibres fromthe fourth harvest date onwards, an additional highly degradablesecondary wall layer was deposited against a previously depositedlignified and undegradable secondary wall. The pattern of lignificationobserved in alfalfa stem tissues suggests that polymerizationof monolignols by peroxidases at the luminal border of the primarycell wall creates an impermeable zone which restricts lignificationof the middle lamella region of tissues with thick primary walls.Copyright1998 Annals of Botany Company Alfalfa,Medicago sativaL., stem tissue, cell wall, development, lignification, degradation.  相似文献   

9.
Carica papaya L. does not contain wood, according to the botanical definition of wood as lignified secondary xylem. Despite its parenchymatous secondary xylem, these plants are able to grow up to 10‐m high. This is surprising, as wooden structural elements are the ubiquitous strategy for supporting height growth in plants. Proposed possible alternative principles to explain the compensation for lack of wood in C. papaya are turgor pressure of the parenchyma, lignified phloem fibres in the bark, or a combination of the two. Interestingly, lignified tissue comprises only 5–8% of the entire stem mass. Furthermore, the phloem fibres do not form a compact tube enclosing the xylem, but instead form a mesh tubular structure. To investigate the mechanism of papaya's unusually high mechanical strength, a set of mechanical measurements were undertaken on whole stems and tissue sections of secondary phloem and xylem. The structural Young's modulus of mature stems reached 2.5 GPa. Since this is low compared to woody plants, the flexural rigidity of papaya stem construction may mainly be based on a higher second moment of inertia. Additionally, stem turgor pressure was determined indirectly by immersing specimens in sucrose solutions of different osmolalities, followed by mechanical tests; turgor pressure was between 0.82 and 1.25 MPa, indicating that turgor is essential for flexural rigidity of the entire stem.  相似文献   

10.
The lignification of the leaf vein bundle sheath (BS) has been observed in many species and would reduce conductance from xylem to mesophyll. We hypothesized that lignification of the BS in lower‐order veins would provide benefits for water delivery through the vein hierarchy but that the lignification of higher‐order veins would limit transport capacity from xylem to mesophyll and leaf hydraulic conductance (Kleaf). We further hypothesized that BS lignification would mediate the relationship of Kleaf to vein length per area. We analysed the dependence of Kleaf, and its light response, on the lignification of the BS across vein orders for 11 angiosperm tree species. Eight of 11 species had lignin deposits in the BS of the midrib, and two species additionally only in their secondary veins, and for six species up to their minor veins. Species with lignification of minor veins had a lower hydraulic conductance of xylem and outside‐xylem pathways and lower Kleaf. Kleaf could be strongly predicted by vein length per area and highest lignified vein order (R2 = .69). The light‐response of Kleaf was statistically independent of BS lignification. The lignification of the BS is an important determinant of species variation in leaf and thus whole plant water transport.  相似文献   

11.
12.
Stem anatomy and development of medullary phloem are studied in the dwarf subshrub Cressa cretica L. (Convolvulaceae). The family Convolvulaceae is dominated by vines or woody climbers, which are characterized by the presence of successive cambia, medullary- and included phloem, internal cambium and presence of fibriform vessels. The main stems of the not winding C. cretica shows presence of medullary (internal) phloem, internal cambium and fibriform vessels, whereas successive cambia and included phloem are lacking. However, presence of fibriform vessels is an unique feature which so far has been reported only in climbing members of the family. Medullary phloem develops from peri-medullary cells after the initiation of secondary growth and completely occupies the pith region in fully grown mature plants. In young stems, the cortex is wide and formed of radial files of tightly packed small and large cells without intercellular air spaces. In thick stems, cortical cells become compressed due to the pressure developed by the radial expansion of secondary xylem, a feature actually common to halophytes. The stem diameter increases by the activity of a single ring of vascular cambium. The secondary xylem is composed of vessels (both wide and fibriform), fibres, axial parenchyma cells and uni-seriate rays. The secondary phloem consists of sieve elements, companion cells, axial and ray parenchyma cells. In consequence, Cressa shares anatomical characteristics of both climbing and non-climbing members. The structure of the secondary xylem is correlated with the habit and comparable with that of other climbing members of Convolvulaceae.  相似文献   

13.
Abstract: Caffeate and caffeoyl-CoA O-methyltransferases (COMTs and CCoAOMTs) catalyze the formation of ferulic acid and feruloyl-CoA, respectively, in many plants, and their physiological significance is under investigation. CCoAOMT was proposed to play a pivotal role in cell wall reinforcement during the induced disease resistance response, as exemplified in elici-tor-treated parsley cells, as well as in the formation of guaiacyl-and syringyl-type lignins. This requires selective substrate and tissue specificities. Parsley CCoAOMT expressed in E. coli methylated caffeoyl- or 5-hydroxyferuloyl-CoA to feruloyl- and sinap-oyl-CoA, whereas neither caffeate nor 5-hydroxyferulate was accepted. Tissue print hybridizations of parsley stem and root sections revealed, furthermore, that CCoAOMT mRNA is consti-tutively associated with the vascular tissues, but is also expressed in the surface cell layers upon wounding. In order to study the promoter activity of the parsley CCoAOMT gene, tobacco plantlets were transformed with parsley CCoAOMT promoter-GUS reporter gene constructs; these transformants, at the very young stage, expressed GUS activity in a narrow subapical root zone only extending later to the vascular tissue at the onset of xylem differentiation. GUS activity of the mature transgenic tobacco plants was observed exclusively in the parenchyma lining the differentiated xylem elements and xylem ray cells of root, stem or leaf tissues. Thus, parsley CCoAOMT is a bifunctional enzyme which appears to serve in both stress compensation and lignification. This was supported by the ontogenetic activity profile of tobacco endogeneous CCoAOMT, which correlated closely with the GUS expression under the control of parsley CCoAOMT promoter, while the proportion of CCoAOMT vs. COMT activities varied substantially during growth of the transgenic tobacco plants.  相似文献   

14.
Cinnamyl alcohol dehydrogenase (CAD) is a key enzyme in lignin biosynthesis and catalyzes the final step in the synthesis of monolignols. Seven CAD homologs (LtuCAD1 to LtuCAD7) have been previously identified from a basal angiosperm species Liriodendron tulipifera L., which is an important timber tree species with significant ecological and economic values. The phylogenetic analysis indicates that LtuCAD1 is the only Liriodendron CAD grouped with the bona fide CADs, the primary CAD genes involved in lignification. In this study, the predicted protein sequence of LtuCAD1 was found to have conserved domains and the same key determinant site with the bona fide CADs in other plant species. Additionally, LtuCAD1 had the highest expression level in xylem as revealed by quantitative RT-PCR analysis. The expression of beta-glucuronidase (GUS) driven by the LtuCAD1 promoter was largely localized in vascular tissues in Arabidopsis. In stem cross sections, GUS staining was found exclusively in xylem and phloem. When expressed in the Arabidopsis cad4 cad5 double mutant, LtuCAD1 was able to restore the total lignin content and decrease the S/G lignin ratio. Our data indicate that LtuCAD1 is a CAD ortholog involved in lignin biosynthesis in Liriodendron.  相似文献   

15.
Background and AimsThe ability to avoid drought-induced embolisms in the xylem is one of the essential traits for plants to survive periods of water shortage. Over the past three decades, hydraulic studies have been focusing on trees, which limits our ability to understand how herbs tolerate drought. Here we investigate the embolism resistance in inflorescence stems of four Arabidopsis thaliana accessions that differ in growth form and drought response. We assess functional traits underlying the variation in embolism resistance amongst the accessions studied using detailed anatomical observations.MethodsVulnerability to xylem embolism was evaluated via vulnerability curves using the centrifuge technique and linked with detailed anatomical observations in stems using light microscopy and transmission electron microscopy.Key ResultsThe data show significant differences in stem P50, varying 2-fold from −1.58 MPa in the Cape Verde Island accession to −3.07 MPa in the woody soc1 ful double mutant. Out of all the anatomical traits measured, intervessel pit membrane thickness (TPM) best explains the differences in P50, as well as P12 and P88. The association between embolism resistance and TPM can be functionally explained by the air-seeding hypothesis. There is no evidence that the correlation between increased woodiness and increased embolism resistance is directly related to functional aspects. However, we found that increased woodiness is strongly linked to other lignification characters, explaining why mechanical stem reinforcement is indirectly related to increased embolism resistance.ConclusionsThe woodier or more lignified accessions are more resistant to embolism than the herbaceous accessions, confirming the link between increased stem lignification and increased embolism resistance, as also observed in other lineages. Intervessel pit membrane thickness and, to a lesser extent, theoretical vessel implosion resistance and vessel wall thickness are the missing functional links between stem lignification and embolism resistance.  相似文献   

16.
17.
The interrelationship among seasonality of cambium, wood formation, cell size variation, lignification, tree phenology and climatic factors has been examined in Moringa oleifera, a tropical evergreen tree. The vascular cambium in Moringa is a storied with a distinct seasonal variation in its structure due to dimensional changes in rays. Though cambium remains active throughout the year it is sensitive to water availability. Peak cambial cell division and rate of xylem differentiation are influenced by average rainfall during the monsoon period. Cambial cell division reaches higher up in the tree trunk when it is supporting a high number of branches and leaves. Statistical analysis of cell size variation and climate factors revealed that xylem cell development is greatly influenced by rainfall and rarely by temperature. Lengths of fusiform initials and vessel elements are positively correlated. The pattern of lignification during xylogenesis shows that the vessels are the first element to develop lignified walls and ray cells are the last elements to become lignified. Fiber cell walls show more syringyl lignin, while the cell walls of other xylem elements are characterized by relatively more guaiacyl lignin units.  相似文献   

18.
Gao M  Showalter AM 《Planta》2000,210(6):865-874
 Arabinogalactan-proteins (AGPs) are highly glycosylated cell surface proteins that are thought to function in plant growth and development. The developmentally regulated expression of LeAGP-1, a novel and major AGP in tomato, was examined in different organs and tissues of tomato (Lycopersicon esculentum Mill. cv. UC82B) plants with an anti-peptide antibody (i.e. the PAP antibody) directed specifically against the lysine-rich subdomain of the LeAGP-1 core protein. During cell differentiation in tomato plants, LeAGP-1 was associated with cell wall thickening and lignification of particular cell types. Specifically, LeAGP-1 was detected in secondary wall thickenings of maturing metaxylem and secondary xylem tracheary elements in roots and stems, and in thickened cell walls of phloem sieve elements. However, LeAGP-1 was also present in thin-walled, cortical parenchyma cells of seedling roots as well as thick-walled collenchyma cells in young stems, both of which are not lignified. Based on these observed patterns, possible roles for LeAGP-1 in plant growth and development are discussed. Received: 17 August 1999 / Accepted: 7 October 1999  相似文献   

19.
Strong constitutive promoters, such as CaMV35S, are widely used for plant transformation, but undesirable phenotypic changes have been reported when used to drive biotic stress tolerance and/or for modifying lignin content. The promoter of the eucalyptus cinnamoyl CoA reductase (CCR), a key enzyme of the lignin biosynthetic pathway, was shown to be preferentially expressed in vascular tissues both in herbaceous and woody transgenic plants but not eucalyptus. In this work, we transformed Eucalyptus globulus with the EgCCR promoter governing both β-glucuronidase (GUS) and GFP activity patterns. No statistical differences were found between the survival rate and percentage of GUS positive shoots between eucalyptus transformed with either the constitutive CaMV35S or with the EgCCR promoter. The EgCCR transformed plantlets exhibited high GUS expression levels associated with the vascular tissues opening the possibility of targeting vascular-associated traits such as lignin content or vascular pathogen resistance in adult elite plants of eucalyptus while avoiding the undesirable pleiotropic effects caused by strong constitutive promoters.  相似文献   

20.
Ros Barceló A 《Planta》2005,220(5):747-756
Lignification in Zinnia elegans L. stems is characterized by a burst in the production of H2O2, the apparent fate of which is to be used by xylem peroxidases for the polymerization of p-hydroxycinnamyl alcohols into lignins. A search for the sites of H2O2 production in the differentiating xylem of Z. elegans stems by the simultaneous use of optical (bright field, polarized light and epi-polarization) and electron-microscope tools revealed that H2O2 is produced on the outer-face of the plasma membrane of both differentiating (living) thin-walled xylem cells and particular (non-lignifying) xylem parenchyma cells. From the production sites it diffuses to the differentiating (secondary cell wall-forming) and differentiated lignifying xylem vessels. H2O2 diffusion occurs mainly through the continuous cell wall space. Both the experimental data and the theoretical calculations suggest that H2O2 diffusion from the sites of production might not limit the rate of xylem cell wall lignification. It can be concluded that H2O2 is produced at the plasma membrane in differentiating (living) thin-walled xylem cells and xylem parenchyma cells associated to xylem vessels, and that it diffuses to adjacent secondary lignifying xylem vessels. The results strongly indicate that non-lignifying xylem parenchyma cells are the source of the H2O2 necessary for the polymerization of cinnamyl alcohols in the secondary cell wall of lignifying xylem vessels.  相似文献   

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