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1.
Hendrik Weiner  Hans W. Heldt 《Planta》1992,187(2):242-246
In illuminated maize (Zea mays L.) leaves, the distribution of triose phosphates, 3-phosphoglycerate, malate and various amino acids between the chloroplastic and the extrachloroplastic compartments of mesophyll and bundle-sheath cells, and the total vacuolar fraction of the leaves, was determined by a combination of previously published methods, for separating mesophyll from bundle-sheath material, and for nonaqueous subcellular fractionation. The results show that the triose phosphate/3-phosphoglycerate ratio in the extrachloroplastic fraction of the mesophyll cells is about 20-fold higher than in the bundle-sheath cells, which is in accordance with a triose phosphate/phosphoglycerate shuttle postulated previously. Whereas the vacuolar compartment was shown to contain most of the cellular malate, amino acids were found to be almost absent from this compartment. The amino-acid pattern in the extrachloroplastic fraction of the bundle-sheath cells largely resembled the pattern in whole leaves. These results show that for future studies the analysis of amino-acid contents in whole maize leaves can be used as a measure for the amino-acid levels in the cytosol of bundle-sheath cells.Abbreviations BS bundle sheath - Chl chlorophyll - Man -mannosidase - ME malic enzyme - MDH malate dehydrogenase - MS mesophyll - PEPCase phosphoenolpyruvate carboxylase - PGA 3-phosphoglycerate - trioseP triose phosphate This work was supported by the Bundesminister für Forschung und Technologie.  相似文献   

2.
Pfundel E  Nagel E  Meister A 《Plant physiology》1996,112(3):1055-1070
The chlorophyll fluorescence characteristics of mesophyll and bundle-sheath thylakoids from plant species with the C4 dicarboxylic acid pathway of photosynthesis were investigated using flow cytometry. Ten species with the NADP-malic enzyme (NADP-ME) biochemical type of C4 photosynthesis were tested: Digitaria sanguinalis (L.) Scop., Euphorbia maculata L., Portulaca grandiflora Hooker, Saccharum officinarum L., Setaria viridis (L.) Beauv., Zea mays L., and four species of the genus Flaveria. This study also included three species with NAD-ME biochemistry (Atriplex rosea L., Atriplex spongiosa F. Muell., and Portulaca oleracea L.). Two C4 species of unknown biochemical type were investigated: Cyperus papyrus L. and Atriplex tatarica L. Pure mesophyll and bundle-sheath thylakoids were prepared by flow cytometry and characterized by low-temperature fluorescence spectroscopy. In pure bundle-sheath thylakoids from many species with C4 photosynthesis of the NADP-ME type, significant amounts of photosystem II (PSII) emission can be detected by fluorescence spectroscopy. Simulation of fluorescence excitation spectra of these thylakoids showed that PSII light absorption contributes significantly to the apparent excitation spectrum of photosystem I. Model calculations indicated that the excitation energy of PSII is efficiently transferred to photosystem I in bundle-sheath thylakoids of many NADP-ME species.  相似文献   

3.
Richard C. Leegood 《Planta》1985,164(2):163-171
Sap extracted from attached leaves of two-to three-week-old maize plants witt the aid of a roller device was almost devoid of bundle-sheath contamination as judged by the distribution of mesophyll and bundle-sheath markers. The extraction could be done very rapidly (less than 1 s) and the extract immediately quenched in HClO4 or reserved for enzyme assay. Comparison of the contents of metabolites in intact leaves and in the leaf extract allowed estimation of the distribution of metabolites between the bundle-sheath and the mesophyll compartments. Substantial amounts of metabolites such as malate and amino acids were present in the non-photosynthetic cells of the midrib. In the illuminated leaf, triose phosphate was predominantly located outside the bundle-sheath while the major part of the 3-phosphoglycerate was in the bundle sheath. The results indicate the existence of concentration gradients of triose phosphate and 3-phosphoglycerate in the leaf which are capable of maintaining carbon flow between the mesophyll and bundle-sheath cells during photosynthesis. There was no evidence for the existence of a gradient of pyruvate between the bundle-sheath and the mesophyll cells.  相似文献   

4.
The intercellular distribution of the enzymes and metabolites of assimilatory sulfate reduction and glutathione synthesis was analyzed in maize (Zea mays L. cv LG 9) leaves. Mesophyll cells and strands of bundle-sheath cells from second leaves of 11-d-old maize seedlings were obtained by two different mechanical-isolation methods. Cross-contamination of cell preparations was determined using ribulose bisphosphate carboxylase (EC 4.1.1.39) and nitrate reductase (EC 1.6.6.1) as marker enzymes for bundle-sheath and mesophyll cells, respectively. ATP sulfurylase (EC 2.7.7.4) and adenosine 5′-phosphosulfate sulfotransferase activities were detected almost exclusively in the bundle-sheath cells, whereas GSH synthetase (EC 6.3.2.3) and cyst(e)ine, γ-glutamylcysteine, and glutathione were located predominantly in the mesophyll cells. Feeding experiments using [35S]sulfate with intact leaves indicated that cyst(e)ine was the transport metabolite of reduced sulfur from bundle-sheath to mesophyll cells. This result was corroborated by tracer experiments, which showed that isolated bundle-sheath strands fed with [35S]sulfate secreted radioactive cyst(e)ine as the sole thiol into the resuspending medium. The results presented in this paper show that assimilatory sulfate reduction is restricted to the bundle-sheath cells, whereas the formation of glutathione takes place predominantly in the mesophyll cells, with cyst(e)ine functioning as a transport metabolite between the two cell types.  相似文献   

5.
The cellular localization of the enzymes involved in primary nitrogen assimilation was investigated following separation of mesophyll protoplasts and bundle-sheath cells of maize (Zea mays L.) leaves. Determination of the enzymatic activities in the two types of cell revealed that nitrate and nitrite reductase are principally located in the mesophyll cells whereas glutamine synthetase (GS) and ferredoxin-dependent glutamate synthase (Fd-GOGAT) are present in both tissues with a preferential location in the bundle-sheath strands. In order to confirm the results obtained by this conventional biochemical method we have used an in-situ immunofluorescence technique to unambiguously localize GS and Fd-GOGAT at the cellular level. Thin-sectioned maize leaves treated with specific GS and Fd-GOGAT antisera followed by conjugation with fluorescein-isothiocyanate-labelled sheep anti-rabbit immunoglobulins clearly show that GS is equally distributed within the leaf whereas Fd-GOGAT is mostly present in the chloroplasts of the bundle-sheath cells. The cellular localization of nitrate reductase, nitrite reductase, GS-2 and Fd-GOGAT in maize leaf cell types strongly indicates that primary nitrogen assimilation functions in the mesophyll cells while photorespiratory nitrogen recycling is restricted to the bundle-sheath cells.  相似文献   

6.
7.
The phloem-loading-related effects of temperature on leaf ultrastructure were studied in seven species having numerous plasmodesmatal connections between the mesophyll and phloem (symplasmic minor-vein configuration). The response to temperature (between 5 and 30 °C) was characterized by drastic changes in the endoplasmic-reticulum labyrinth (ER labyrinth) of intermediary cells, in the position of the vacuole in bundle-sheath cells, and in the starch content in the chloroplasts of bundle-sheath cells and mesophyll cells. At temperatures above 20 °C, the ER system in the intermediary cells reached its maximal volume, while the vacuole in bundlesheath cells was positioned centripetally (proximal to the intermediary cell). With decreasing temperature, the ER labyrinth in intermediary cells gradually contracted till the ER was fully collapsed at 10 °C and the vacuole in bundle-sheath cells moved to a more centrifugal position. The apparent elimination of photosynthate transport via the ER and plasmodesmata at temperatures lower than 10 °C led to starch accumulation in the chloroplasts of bundle-sheath cells and mesophyll cells. All of these changes were fully temperature-reversible and probably reflect changes in the balance between photosynthate transport and storage. The ultrastructural shifts appear to be correlated with the passage of photosynthate through the intermediary cells and, as a consequence, with the rate of phloem loading at various temperatures. A contraction of the ER/plasmodesmata system imposed by cytoskeletal reorganisation is discussed as the reason for the blockage of phloem loading at low temperatures in association with the general chilling sensitivity of these species.Abbreviations BSC bundle-sheath cell - IC intermediary cell - MC mesophyll cell - PD plasmodesmata - PFD photon flux density - SE/CC-complex sieve element/companion cell complex The authors gratefully acknowledge the financial support by NWO (Dutch Organization for Scientific Research).  相似文献   

8.
Extraction of maize (Zea mays) leaves by progressive grinding under suitably protective conditions yields total carbonic anhydrase activities (4800 units per milligram chlorophyll) comparable to the activity in spinach (Spinacia oleracea) leaves. The total ribulose diphosphate carboxylase activity was also equal to or greater than the best literature values for maize. Of the total leaf carbonic anhydrase, 72.5% on a chlorophyll basis was present in the mesophyll cells and 14.2% in the bundle-sheath cells. The distribution of the total leaf ribulose diphosphate carboxylase between the mesophyll and bundle-sheath cells was 42.0 and 48.7% respectively. There was three times as much total chlorophyll in extracts of the mesophyll cells compared with the bundle-sheath cells of maize. Similar results for the above distribution of the two enzymes were found using a differential grinding technique. The possible function of carbonic anhydrase in photosynthesis is discussed. The equal distribution of ribulose diphosphate carboxylase activity between the mesophyll and bundle-sheath cells casts doubt upon the hypothesis that a rigid biochemical compartmentation exists between these cell types in maize.  相似文献   

9.
The distribution of solutes between epidermal, mesophyll and bundle-sheath cells in barley (Hordeum vulgare L. cv. Klaxon) leaves was studied by analysing extracts obtained from single cells with a modified pressure probe. Activity of the cytoplasmic marker enzyme, malate dehydrogenase, revealed that epidermal cell extracts were completely vacuolar in origin, but extracts from mesophyll cells also contained cytoplasmic constituents. The extracts were analysed for osmolality and the concentrations of K, Na, Ca, Cl, P, S, NO 3 , sugars and total amino acids. Epidermal and mesophyll cell extracts had similar osmolalities but these varied between 420 and 565 mosmol, kg 1 depending on the leaf developmental stage; the osmolality of bundle-sheath extracts was approximately 100 mosmol, kg–1 lower. Under the growth conditions used, K and NO 3 were found in all three cell types and their concentrations generally ranged between 180 and 230 mM. In contrast, Ca was almost restricted to epidermal cells, where it increased to 70 mM during leaf ageing. Phosphorus was only detectable ( 5 mM) in extracts from mesophyll and bundle-sheath cells, while Cl concentrations were highest in epidermal and lowest in mesophyll cell extracts. The concentrations of sugars and amino acids were close to the detection limit (approx. 2 mM) in epidermal cells but mesophyll cells contained total sugar (glucose, fructose and sucrose) of up to 78 mM and total amino-acid concentrations of up to 13.5 mM. Concentrations in bundle-sheath cells were intermediate between those in the epidermis and mesophyll.Abbreviations EDX analysis energy dispersive X-ray analysis - MDH malate dehydrogenase We wish to thank Paul Richardson, Jeremy Pritchard, Peter Hinde and Andrew Davies (Banger) for their helpfull discussion and technical advice. This work was financed by a grant (LR5/521) from the Agricultural and Food Research Council.  相似文献   

10.
In order to study the location of enzymes of photorespiration in leaves of the C3–C4 intermediate species Moricandia arvensis (L.). DC, protoplast fractions enriched in mesophyll or bundlesheath cells have been prepared by a combination of mechanical and enzymic techniques. The activities of the mitochondrial enzymes fumarase (EC 4.2.1.2) and glycine decarboxylase (EC 2.1.2.10) were enriched by 3.0- and 7.5-fold, respectively, in the bundle-sheath relative to the mesophyll fraction. Enrichment of fumarase is consistent with the larger number of mitochondria in bundle-sheath cells relative to mesophyll cells. The greater enrichment of glycine decarboxylase indicates that the activity is considerably higher on a mitochondrial basis in bundle-sheath than in mesophyll cells. Serine hydroxymethyltransferase (EC 2.1.2.1) activity was enriched by 5.3-fold and glutamate-dependent glyoxylate-aminotransferase (EC 2.6.1.4) activity by 2.6-fold in the bundle-sheath relative to the mesophyll fraction. Activities of serine- and alanine-dependent glyoxylate aminotransferase (EC 2.6.1.45 and EC 2.6.1.4), glycollate oxidase (EC 1.1.3.1), hydroxypyruvate reductase (EC 1.1.1.81), glutamine synthetase (EC 6.3.1.2) and phosphoribulokinase (EC 2.7.1.19) were not significantly different in the two fractions. These data provide further independent evidence to complement earlier immunocytochemical studies of the distribution of photorespiratory enzymes in the leaves of this species, and indicate that while mesophyll cells of M. arvensis have the capacity to synthesize glycine during photorespiration, they have only a low capacity to metabolize it. We suggest that glycine produced by photorespiratory metabolism in the mesophyll is decarboxylated predominantly by the mitochondria in the bundle sheath.Abbreviation RuBP ribulose 1,5-bisphosphate  相似文献   

11.
A modified fluorescence microscope system was used to measure chlorophyll fluorescence and delayed light emission from mesophyll and bundle sheath cells in situ in fresh-cut sections from leaves of Panicum miliaceum L. The fluorescence rise in 3-(3,4-dichlorophenyl)-1, 1-dimethylurea (DCMU)-treated leaves and the slow fluorescence kinetics in untreated leaves show that mesophyll chloroplasts have larger photosystem II unit sizes than do bundle sheath chloroplasts. The larger photosystem II units imply more efficient noncyclic electron transport in mesophyll chloroplasts. Quenching of slow fluorescence also differs between the cell types with mesophyll chloroplasts showing complex kinetics and bundle sheath chloroplasts showing a relatively simple decline. Properties of the photosynthetic system were also investigated in leaves from plants grown in soil containing elevated NaCl levels. As judged by changes in both fluorescence kinetics in DCMU-treated leaves and delayed light emission in leaves not exposed to DCMU, salinity altered photosystem II in bundle sheath cells but not in mesophyll cells. This result may indicate different ionic distributions in the two cell types or, alternatively, different responses of the two chloroplast types to environmental change.  相似文献   

12.
Light-microscopic analysis of leaf clearings of the obligate Crassulacean-acid-metabolism (CAM) species Kalanchoe daigremontiana Hamet et Perr. has shown the existence of unusual and highly irregular venation patterns. Fifth-order veins exhibit a three-dimensional random orientation with respect to the mesophyll. Minor veins were often observed crossing over or under each other and over and under major veins in the mesophyll. Paraffin sections of mature leaves show tannin cells scattered throughout the mesophyll rather evenly spaced, and a distinct layer of tannin cells below the abaxial epidermis. Scanning electron microscopy showed that bundle-sheath cells are distinct from the surrounding mesophyll in veins of all orders. Transmission electron microscopy demonstrated developing sieve-tube elements in expanded leaves. Cytosolic vesicles produced by dictyosomes undergo a diurnal variation in number and were often observed in association with the chloroplasts. These vesicles are an interesting feature of cell ultrastructure of CAM cells and may serve a regulatory role in the diurnal malic-acid fluctuations in this species.Abbreviations CAM Crassulacean acid metabolism - SEM scanning-electron microscopy - TEM transmission-electron microscopy  相似文献   

13.
C4 photosynthesis is functionally dependent on metabolic interactions between mesophyll and bundle-sheath cells. Although the C4 cycle is biochemically well understood many aspects of the regulation of enzyme activities, gene expression and cell differentiation are elusive.Protein kinases are likely involved in these regulatory processes providing links to hormonal, metabolic and developmental signal transduction pathways. We have identified several protein kinases that are differentially expressed in mesophyll and bundle-sheath cells of the C4 plant Sorghum bicolor. Here we describe the characterization of two putative protein kinases that show high similarity to the SNF1/AMPK family of protein serine/threonine kinases. The mRNA of both kinases accumulates to much higher levels in mesophyll cells than in the bundle-sheath and can also be detected in root tissue. Complementation experiments with a snf1 mutant of Saccharomyces cerevisiae indicate that the S. bicolor protein kinase SNFL1 does not represent a functional homologue of the yeast SNF1 protein kinase.  相似文献   

14.
Summary Two free-space marker procedures (Prussian blue and lanthanum nitrate) were employed to determine the pathway(s) followed by water and solutes in the transpiration stream after their introduction into the xylem of small and intermediate bundles, and the effectiveness of the suberin lamellae of the bundle-sheath cells as a barrier to the movement of tracer ions (Fe3+ and La3+). Judged from the distribution of Prussian-blue crystals (insoluble, crystalline deposits resulting from the precipitation of ferric ions by ferrocyanide anions) and lanthanum deposits, water and the tracer ions moved readily from the lumina of the vessels into the apoplast (cell wall continuum) of the phloem and bundle-sheath cells via portions of vessel primary walls not bearing lignified secondary wall thickenings. Prussian blue and lanthanum deposits were abundant on the bundlesheath cell side of the bundle sheath/mesophyll interface but few occurred on that of the mesophyll, indicating that the suberin lamella is an effective barrier to apoplastic movement of both ferric and lanthanum ions. The presence of Prussian-blue crystals and lanthanum deposits in the compound middle lamella of the radial wall of the bundle-sheath cells indicates that the compound middle lamella provides an apoplastic pathway for transpirational water from the xylem to the evaporating surfaces of the mesophyll and epidermal cells.  相似文献   

15.
Extracellular freezing in leaves of freezing-sensitive species   总被引:4,自引:0,他引:4  
Ashworth EN  Pearce RS 《Planta》2002,214(5):798-805
Low-temperature scanning-electron microscopy was used to study the freezing of leaves of five species that have no resistance to freezing: bean (Phaseolus vulgaris L.), tobacco (Nicotiana tabacum L.), tomato (Lycopersicon esculentum L.), cucumber (Cucumis sativus L.), and corn (Zea mays L.). In the leaves of the four dicotyledonous species, ice was extracellular and the cells of all tissues were collapsed. In contrast, in maize leaves ice was extracellular in the mesophyll, and these cells were collapsed, but the epidermal and bundle-sheath cells apparently retained their original shapes and volume. It is concluded that the leaves of the freezing-sensitive dicotyledonous species tested were killed by cellular dehydration induced by extracellular freezing, and not by intracellular freezing. Freezing injury in maize leaves apparently resulted from a combination of freezing-induced cellular dehydration of some cells and intracellular ice formation in epidermal and bundle-sheath cells.  相似文献   

16.
17.
The effect of the plastoquinone antagonist, dibromothymoquinone, on the photoreduction of ferricyanide and plastocyanin by maize mesophyll, maize bundle-sheath and Euglena gracilis chloroplasts has been investigated. Maximum inhibition of FeCN and plastocyanin reduction by mesophyll chloroplasts was obtained at dibromothymoquinone concentrations of 5 × 10?7m. At higher concentrations dibromothymoquinone acted as an electron shuttle, increasing the rate of reduction of both substrates. In contrast, little inhibition of FeCN and plastocyanin reduction by bundle-sheath chloroplasts occurred at 5 × 10?7 m dibromothymoquinone, and above this concentration of inhibitor, the extent of inhibition increased, with no shuttle effect being observed. Euglena chloroplasts showed a response intermediate between that of mesophyll and bundle-sheath chloroplasts.The presence of a shuttle effect caused by dibromothymoquinone appears to be directly related to the presence of a proton pump in the chloroplast preparations. Plastocyanin is reduced by photosystem 2 alone and shows some of the properties of a class III electron acceptor, although the rates of reduction observed were much lower than those observed with lipophilic class III acceptors.  相似文献   

18.
David G. Fisher  Ray F. Evert 《Planta》1982,155(5):377-387
Both the mesophyll and bundle-sheath cells associated with the minor veins in the leaf of Amaranthus retroflexus L. contain abundant tubular endoplasmic reticulum, which is continuous between the two cell types via numerous plasmodesmata in their common walls. In bundle-sheath cells, the tubular endoplasmic reticulum forms an extensive network that permeates the cytoplasm, and is closely associated, if not continuous, with the delimiting membranes of the chloroplasts, mitochondria, and microbodies. Both the number and frequency of plasmodesmata between various cell types decrease markedly from the bundle-sheath — vascular-parenchyma cell interface to the sicve-tube member — companion-cell interface. For plants taken directly from lighted growth chambers, a stronger mannitol solution (1.4 M) was required to plasmolyze the companion cells and sieve-tube members than that (0.6 M) necessary to plasmolyze the mesophyll, bundle-sheath, and vascular-parenchyma cells. Placing plants in the dark for 48 h reduced the solute concentration in all cell types. Judging from the frequency of plasmodesmata between the various cell types of the vascular bundles, and from the solute concentrations of the various cell types, it appears that assimilates are actively accumulated by the sieve-tube — companion-cell complex from the apoplast.  相似文献   

19.
To study the metabolic interactions between mesophyll and bundle-sheath cells of C4 plants, protein kinases possibly involved in the regulatory processes and signal transduction pathways have been cloned and characterized. A receptor-like protein kinase (RLK) cDNA clone from the C4 plant Sorghum bicolor (L.) Moench has been identified. The deduced protein was designated SbRLK1 for receptor-like protein kinase from S. bicolor. The putative cytoplasmic domain of SbRLK1 contains all amino acids that are characteristic of protein kinases. The extracellular domain contains five leucine-rich repeats. The mRNA of the SbRLK1 gene accumulated to much higher levels in mesophyll cells than in the bundle-sheath and was almost undetectable in roots. This expression pattern indicates that SbRLK1 might be involved in the regulation of specific processes in mesophyll cells. Received: 13 August 1998 / Accepted: 22 December 1998  相似文献   

20.
The minor veins and contiguous tissues of mature leaves of Populus deltoides Bartr. ex Marsh. were examined with the electron microscope to determine the ultrastructural characteristics of the component cells and to determine the structure, distribution, and frequency of plasmodesmata between the various cell types. In addition, plasmolytic studies were carried out to determine the solute concentrations of the various cell types of the minor veins and contiguous tissues. The cells comprising the mesophyll and bundle sheath contain all the components typical of photosynthetic cells. Paraveinal mesophyll cells and bundle-sheath cells have fewer microbodies and smaller chloroplasts than do palisade parenchyma cells. Vascular parenchyma and companion cells tend to intergrade with one another structurally but can be distinguished from one another by their characteristic plastids. The mature, enucleate sieve-tube member is lined by a parietal layer of cytoplasm consisting of plasmalemma, endoplasmic reticulum, mitochondria, plastids, and P-protein. Plasmodesmata occur along all possible routes from the palisade parenchyma cells to the sieve tubes of the minor veins, and their frequency increases with increasing proximity to the sieve-tube members. Plasmolytic studies revealed that the paraveinal mesophyll cells had a higher C50 (estimated mannitol concentration plasmolyzing, on the average, 50% of a given cell type) than any other cell type of the leaf. Concentration gradients existed along the palisade cell/bundle-sheath cell/companion cell (or vascular parenchyma cell) route as well as along the paraveinal mesophyll cell/bundle-sheath cell/companion cell (or vascular parenchyma cell) route. Considering the frequency of plasmodesmata along these routes, it is conceivable that photosynthate diffuses from palisade cells to the companion cells along concentration gradients. Within the minor veins, the C50 was higher for sieve-tube members than for either companion cells or vascular parenchyma cells, indicating that loading of the sieve tubes is an active, energy-dependent process.  相似文献   

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