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Soga K  Wakabayashi K  Kamisaka S  Hoson T 《Planta》2004,218(6):1054-1061
Hypergravity caused by centrifugation inhibits elongation growth of shoots by decreasing the cell wall extensibility via suppression of xyloglucan breakdown as well as by the thickening of cell walls. The mechanism of graviperception in hypergravity-induced growth inhibition was investigated in Arabidopsis [A. thaliana (L.) Heynh.] hypocotyls and azuki bean (Vigna angularis Ohwi et Ohashi) epicotyls. Hypergravity caused growth suppression in both sgr1-1 and pgm1, which are Arabidopsis mutants deprived of gravitropism, as in wild-type plants, suggesting that the graviperception in hypergravity-induced growth inhibition of shoots is independent of that in gravitropism. Hypergravity had no effects on growth of azuki bean epicotyls or Arabidopsis hypocotyls in the presence of lanthanum or gadolinium, which are blockers of mechanoreceptors. Moreover, lanthanum or gadolinium at the same concentration had no influence on gravitropism of azuki bean epicotyls and Arabidopsis hypocotyls. Hypergravity had no effects on cell wall extensibility and affected neither xyloglucan metabolism nor the thickness of cell walls in the lanthanum- or gadolinium-treated azuki bean epicotyls. Lanthanum or gadolinium inhibited the hypergravity-induced increase in the pH of the apoplastic fluid in the epicotyls, which is involved in the processes of the suppression of xyloglucan breakdown due to hypergravity. These findings suggest that plants perceive the hypergravity stimuli by mechanoreceptors in the plasma membrane, and utilize the perceived signal to regulate the growth rate of their shoots.Abbreviations HC-I Hemicellulose-I - HC-II Hemicellulose-II  相似文献   

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Hypergravity produced by centrifugation caused inhibition of elongation growth and a decrease in the cell wall extensibility in azuki bean epicotyls ( Vigna angularis Ohwi et Ohashi). Also, hypergravity increased the molecular mass of xyloglucans, whereas it decreased xyloglucan-degrading activity in epicotyls. When the expression profiles of three xyloglucan endotransglucosylase/hydrolase ( XTH ) genes, VaXTHS4 , VaXTH1 and VaXTH2 , were analyzed under hypergravity conditions, the expression of VaXTHS4 , which shows only hydrolase activity, was downregulated in proportion to the logarithm of the magnitude of gravity (R = −0.94). However, the gene expression of VaXTH1 or VaXTH2 , which shows only transglucosylase activity, was not affected by gravitational conditions. When the seedlings that had been grown at 1  g were transferred to hypergravity conditions at 300  g , the downregulation of VaXTHS4 expression was detected within 1 h. By removal of hypergravity stimulus, VaXTHS4 expression was increased within 1 h. These results suggest that azuki bean epicotyls promptly regulate the expression level of only VaXTHS4 in response to gravity stimuli. The regulation of xyloglucan-hydrolyzing activity as a result of changes in VaXTHS4 expression may be involved in the regulation by gravity of molecular mass of xyloglucans, leading to modifications of cell wall mechanical properties and cell elongation. Lanthanum and gadolinium, potential blockers of mechanosensitive calcium ion permeable channels (mechanoreceptors), nullified the suppression of VaXTHS4 expression, suggesting that mechanoreceptors are responsible for inhibition by hypergravity of VaXTHS4 expression.  相似文献   

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Mechanical resistance to the gravitational force is a principal gravity response in plants distinct from gravitropism. In the final step of gravity resistance, plants increase the rigidity of their cell walls. Here we discuss the role of cortical microtubules, which sustain the function of the cell wall, in gravity resistance. Hypocotyls of Arabidopsis tubulin mutants were shorter and thicker than the wild-type, and showed either left-handed or right-handed helical growth at 1 g. The degree of twisting phenotype was intensified under hypergravity conditions. Hypergravity also induces reorientation of cortical microtubules from transverse to longitudinal directions in epidermal cells. In tubulin mutants, the percentage of cells with longitudinal microtubules was high even at 1 g, and it was further increased by hypergravity. The left-handed helical growth mutants had right-handed microtubule arrays, whereas the right-handed mutant had left-handed arrays. Moreover, blockers of mechanoreceptors suppressed both the twisting phenotype and reorientation of microtubules in tubulin mutants. These results support the hypothesis that cortical microtubules play an essential role in maintenance of normal growth phenotype against the gravitational force, and suggest that mechanoreceptors are involved in signal perception in gravity resistance. Space experiments will confirm whether this view is applicable to plant resistance to 1 g gravity, as to the resistance to hypergravity.Key words: cortical microtubules, gravity, gravity resistance, hypergravity, mechanoreceptor, microgravity, tubulin mutants  相似文献   

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Summary The outer tangential wall (OTW) of epidermal cells of azuki bean epicotyls has a crossed polylamellate structure, in which lamellae of longitudinal cellulose microfibrils alternate with lamellae of transverse cellulose microfibrils. This implies that the cyclic reorientation of cortical microtubules (MTs) from longitudinal to transverse and from transverse to longitudinal occurs on the OTW. Treatment with a solution that contained no auxin caused the accumulation of cells with longitudinal MTs, suggesting that auxin is required for the reorientation of MTs from longitudinal to transverse during the reorientation cycle. Treatment with 6-dimethylaminopurine (DMAP), an inhibitor of protein kinases that promoted the reorientation of MTs from transverse to longitudinal, resulted in the accumulation of cells with longitudinal MTs. Subsequent treatment with auxin caused a marked increase in the percentage of cells with transverse MTs and then a decrease in the percentage, indicating that the reorientation of MTs from longitudinal to transverse and then from transverse to longitudinal occurred during treatment with auxin. The percentage of cells with transverse MTs decreased more slowly in segments that had been pretreated with gibberellin A3 (GA) than in segments that had been pretreated without GA, suggesting that GA, in cooperation with auxin, caused the suppression of the reorientation of MTs from transverse to longitudinal.Abbreviations BL brassinolide - BSA bovine serum albumin - GA gibberellin A3 - DMAP 6-dimethylaminopurine - DMSO dimethylsulfoxide - FITC fluorescein isothiocyanate - IAA indoleacetic acid - MT microtubule - OTW outer tangential wall - PBS phosphate-buffered saline Dedicated to Professor Eldon H. Newcomb in recognition of his contributions to cell biology  相似文献   

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Kaori Takesue  Hiroh Shibaoka 《Planta》1998,205(4):539-546
The orientation of microtubules (MTs) was examined in epidermal cells of azuki bean (Vigna angularis Ohwi et Ohashi) epicotyls. The orientation of MTs adjacent to the outer tangential wall of the cells, which has a crossed polylamellate structure with lamellae of longitudinal cellulose microfibrils alternating with lamellae of transverse cellulose microfibrils, differed from one cell to another. Treatment with an auxin-free solution caused the accumulation of cells with longitudinal MTs and subsequent treatment with a solution that contained auxin resulted in the accumulation of cells with transverse MTs, showing that sequential treatments with auxin-free and auxin-containing solutions can synchronize the reorientation of MTs. The MTs, once reoriented from longitudinal to transverse, returned to longitudinal and then back to transverse once again, the duration of the cycle being about 6 h. Gibberellic acid, known to increase the percentage of cells with transverse MTs, promoted reorientation of MTs from longitudinal to transverse and inhibited that from transverse to longitudinal. Cytochalasin D, an agent that disrupts actin filaments, speeded up the reorientation from transverse to longitudinal and slowed down that from longitudinal to transverse. It caused an increase in the percentage of cells with MTs in mixed orientation, and the percentage of such cells was highest when the percentage of cells with longitudinal MTs was decreasing and that of cells with transverse MTs was increasing. Received: 27 November 1997 / Accepted: 7 January 1998  相似文献   

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We investigated the roles of cortical microtubules in gravity-induced modifications to the development of stem organs by analyzing morphology and orientation of cortical microtubule arrays in hypocotyls of Arabidopsis (Arabidopsis thaliana) tubulin mutants, tua3(D205N), tua4(S178Δ), and tua6(A281T), cultivated under 1g and hypergravity (300g) conditions. Hypocotyls of tubulin mutants were shorter and thicker than the wild type even at 1g, and hypergravity further suppressed elongation and stimulated expansion. The degree of such changes was clearly smaller in tubulin mutants, in particular in tua6. Hypocotyls of tubulin mutants also showed either left-handed or right-handed helical growth at 1g, and the degree of twisting phenotype was intensified under hypergravity conditions, especially in tua6. Hypergravity induced reorientation of cortical microtubules from transverse to longitudinal directions in epidermal cells of wild-type hypocotyls. In tubulin mutants, especially in tua6, the percentage of cells with longitudinal microtubules was high even at 1g, and it was further increased by hypergravity. The twisting phenotype was most obvious at cells 10 to 12 from the top, where reorientation of cortical microtubules from transverse to longitudinal directions occurred. Moreover, the left-handed helical growth mutants (tua3 and tua4) had right-handed microtubule arrays, whereas the right-handed mutant (tua6) had left-handed arrays. There was a close correlation between the alignment angle of epidermal cell files and the alignment of cortical microtubules. Gadolinium ions, blockers of mechanosensitive ion channels (mechanoreceptors), suppressed the twisting phenotype in tubulin mutants under both 1g and 300g conditions. Microtubule arrays in tubulin mutants were oriented more transversely by gadolinium treatment, irrespective of gravity conditions. These results support the hypothesis that cortical microtubules play an essential role in maintenance of normal growth phenotype against the gravitational force, and suggest that mechanoreceptors are involved in modifications to morphology and orientation of microtubule arrays by 1g gravity and hypergravity in tubulin mutants.The direction of cell expansion is important for determining the shape of whole plant body. Cortical microtubules are assumed to be responsible for anisotropic expansion of plant cells (Wasteneys and Galway, 2003; Lloyd and Chan, 2004; Mathur, 2004; Baskin, 2005; Paredez et al., 2008). The prevailing view is that cortical microtubule arrays direct or constrain the movement of the cellulose synthase complexes and thus align nascent cellulose microfibrils in the same direction in the innermost layer of the cell wall (Baskin, 2001), although some other mechanisms may also be involved (Baskin, 2001; Sugimoto et al., 2003; Wasteneys, 2004).It is evident that orientation of cortical microtubules plays an essential role in creating the distinct shape of higher plant organs, even if there is uncertainty over the mechanism by which microtubules influence morphogenesis. The importance of cortical microtubule arrays for anisotropic growth has been documented by pharmacological studies and experiments with helical growth mutants of Arabidopsis (Arabidopsis thaliana). Mutants on α- and β-tubulins as well as microtubule-associated proteins show either left-handed or right-handed helical growth (Thitamadee et al., 2002; Nakajima et al., 2004; Sedbrook et al., 2004; Shoji et al., 2004). The rapidly elongating cells of these mutants skew consistently either to the right or to the left and exhibit cortical microtubule arrays that form shallow helices with fixed handedness (Thitamadee et al., 2002; Abe and Hashimoto, 2005; Ishida et al., 2007). Cortical microtubule arrays in the left-handed helical growth mutants form right-handed helix, whereas those in right-handed helical growth mutants form left-handed helix (Thitamadee et al., 2002; Abe and Hashimoto, 2005; Ishida et al., 2007). These results indicate that dysfunctional cortical microtubules are arranged in helical arrays and affect the direction of cell expansion.The gravitational force is one of the environmental factors that determine the plant body shape. Under hypergravity conditions produced by centrifugation, plants generally have a shorter and thicker body (Soga et al., 2006). Namely, hypergravity modifies growth anisotropy. In Arabidopsis hypocotyls, the expression of most α- and β-tubulin genes was up-regulated by hypergravity (Yoshioka et al., 2003; Matsumoto et al., 2007). In protoplasts of Brassica hypocotyls, hypergravity stimulated the regeneration of cortical microtubules into parallel arrays (Skagen and Iversen, 1999), and in azuki bean (Vigna angularis) epicotyls it increased the percentage of cells with longitudinal cortical microtubules (Soga et al., 2006). The reorientation of cortical microtubules from transverse to longitudinal directions may be involved in modifications by hypergravity to growth anisotropy.The aim of this study was to clarify the roles of cortical microtubules in gravity-induced modifications to development of stem organs. For this purpose, we examined the changes in growth, morphology, and orientation of cortical microtubule arrays in hypocotyls of Arabidopsis amino acid substitution mutants in α-tubulin structure, tua3, tua4, and tua6, grown under 1g and 300g conditions. We have reported the possible involvement of mechanosensitive ion channels (mechanoreceptors) in hypergravity-induced modifications to growth and cell wall properties (Soga et al., 2004, 2005, 2006). Thus, we also examined the effect of blockers of mechanoreceptors on helical growth and orientation of cortical microtubule arrays in the tubulin mutants.  相似文献   

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We investigated the effect of galactose on IAA-induced elongation and proton excretion in azuki bean (Vigna angularis Ohwi et Ohashi) segments in order to confirm whether or not protons were involved in auxin-induced growth. Galactose inhibited the IAA-induced decrease in the solution pH but had no inhibitory effect on IAA-induced growth in segments of azuki bean epicotyls. On the other hand, galactose inhibited both IAA-induced growth and proton excretion in oat (Avena sativa L.) coleoptile segments. From these results it is unlikely that IAA-induced growth is mediated by proton excretion at least in azuki bean epicotyls.Abbreviations IAA indole-3-acetic acid - FC fusicoccin  相似文献   

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Elongation growth of dark-grown azuki bean (Vigna angularis Ohwi et Ohashi cv. Takara) epicotyls was suppressed by hypergravity at 30 x g and above. Acceleration at 300 x g significantly decreased the mechanical extensibility of cell walls. The amounts of cell wall polysaccharides (pectin, hemicellulose-II and cellulose) per unit length of epicotyls increased under the hypergravity condition. Hypergravity also increased the amounts and the weight-average molecular mass of xyloglucans in the hemicellulose-II fraction, while decreasing the activity of xyloglucan-degrading enzymes extracted from epicotyl cell walls. These results suggest that hypergravity increases the amounts and the molecular mass of xyloglucans by decreasing xyloglucan-degrading activity. Modification of xyloglucan metabolism as well as the thickening of cell walls under hypergravity conditions seems to be involved in making the cell wall mechanically rigid, thereby inhibiting elongation growth of azuki bean epicotyls.  相似文献   

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Summary In epidermal cells of azuki bean (Vigna angularis) epicotyl segments, that were sequentially treated with an auxin-free solution and an auxin solution, cortical microtubules changed their orientation from longitudinal to transverse. Auxin caused the reorientation of microtubules from longitudinal to transverse in segments that were kept under anaerobic conditions and, therefore, showed no elongation, indicating that auxin can regulate the orientation of microtubules by a mechanism that does not involve auxin-induced change in the rate of cell elongation.Abbreviations DMSO dimethylsulfoxide - GA3 gibberellic acid - IAA indoleacetic acid - MT microtubule - PBS phosphate-buffered saline  相似文献   

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Hypergravity inhibited elongation growth of azuki bean (Vigna angularis Ohwi et Ohashi) epicotyls by decreasing the mechanical extensibility of cell walls via the increase in the molecular mass of xyloglucans [Soga et al. (1999) Plant Cell Physiol. 40: 581]. Here, we report that the pH value of the apoplastic fluid in epicotyls increased from 5.8 to 6.6 by hypergravity (300 x g) treatment. When the xyloglucan-degrading enzymes extracted from cell walls of the 1 x g control epicotyls were assayed in buffer at pH 6.6 and 5.8, the activity at pH 6.6 was almost half of that at pH 5.8. In addition, when enzymically active cell wall preparations obtained from 1 x g control epicotyls were autolyzed in buffer at pH 5.8 and 6.6 and then xyloglucans were extracted from the autolyzed cell walls, the molecular mass of xyloglucans incubated at pH 5.8 decreased during the autolysis, while that at pH 6.6 did not change. Thus, the xyloglucans were not depolymerized by autolysis at the pH value (6.6) observed in the hypergravity-treated epicotyls. These findings suggest that in azuki bean epicotyls, hypergravity decreases the activities of xyloglucan-degrading enzymes by increasing the pH in the apoplastic fluid, which may be involved in the processes of the increase in the molecular mass of xyloglucans, leading to the decrease in the cell wall extensibility.  相似文献   

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The orientation of cortical microtubules (cMT) during gravitropism was studied in epidermal cells of azuki epicotyls. The relative proportion of cells with longitudinal cMT increased in the upper epidermis, and those with transverse cMT increased in the lower epidermis. When epicotyls were kept straight during gravistimulation, no change in cMT orientation occurred in either the upper and lower epidermis. When epicotyls were forced to bend downward, cells with transverse cMT increased in the upper epidermis, and those with longitudinal cMT increased in the lower epidermis. When epicotyls were loaded with naphthylphthalamic acid, an inhibitor of auxin transport, both gravitropic bending and change in cMT orientation were inhibited. However, when a change in cMT orientation was induced by forced downward bending, cells with longitudinal cMT increased in the compressed (lower) side and those with transverse cMT increased in the extended (upper) side. It was suggested that cMT orientation was controlled by the bending of the epicotyl and not by a gravity signal per se. Loading with Gd3+, an inhibitor of the stretch-activated channel, did not inhibit gravitropic bending. However, it inhibited cMT reorientation induced by gravitropic bending and by forced bending. Involvement of the stretch-activated channel in mechano-sensitive orientation of cMT was suggested.  相似文献   

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Brassinolide, at 10–8M or higher, enhanced the elongationof epicotyl segments from azuki bean seedlings that was inducedby IAA, but it did not enhance the increase in fresh weightof the segments, an indication that brassinolide suppressedthe lateral expansion of the segments. The additional elongationcaused by brassinolide was completely prevented in the presenceof 10–5 M cremart, which disrupted the cortical microtubules(MTs) in epidermal cells in the segments, and in the presenceof 10–6M 2,6-dichlorobenzonitrile, an inhibitor of thesynthesis of cellulose. Brassinolide at 10–7M, appliedtogether with IAA, increased the percentage of epidermal cellswith transversely oriented cortical MTs. Brassinolide appearsto enhance the longitudinal expansion and suppress the lateralexpansion of epicotyl cells by organizing cortical MTs transverselyto the cell axis and, thereby, causing the deposition of cellulosemicrofibrils in the same orientation. Brassinolide by itself, at 10–8M or higher, induced theelongation of epicotyl segments and the elongation caused bybrassinolide was partially prevented by 10–5M cremart,results that suggest that brassinolide regulates cell expansionvia at least two processes, an MT-dependent process and an MT-independentprocess. Brassinolide by itself increased the percentage ofepidermal cells with transversely oriented cortical MTs. Since,in azuki bean epicotyls, the percentage of cells with transverseMTs is increased only by the combination of auxin and gibberellinbut not by either alone, brassinolide applied alone seems toplay a double role, similar to that of auxin and of gibberellin,in organizing cortical MTs. (Received September 2, 1994; Accepted November 16, 1994)  相似文献   

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The mechanism inducing the difference in growth rate under various temperature (10–50 °C) conditions was analyzed using rice and azuki bean seedlings. The growth rate of rice coleoptiles and azuki bean epicotyls increased as temperature increased up to 40 and 30 °C, respectively, and the elongation was retarded at a higher temperature. The cell wall extensibility of rice coleoptiles and azuki bean epicotyls also showed the highest value at 40 and 30 °C, respectively, and became smaller as the temperature rose or dropped from the optimum. The opposite tendency was observed in the minimum stress-relaxation time of the cell wall. On the other hand, the cellular osmotic concentration of rice coleoptiles and azuki bean epicotyls was lower at the temperature optimum for growth at 40 and 30 °C, respectively. When rice and azuki bean seedlings grown at 10, 20, 40, or 50 °C were transferred to the initial temperature (30 °C), the growth rate of coleoptiles and epicotyls was mostly elevated, concomitant with an increase in the cell wall extensibility. The growth rate was correlated with the cell wall mechanical parameters in both materials. These results suggest that the environmental temperature modulates the growth rate of plant shoots by affecting mainly the mechanical properties of the cell wall. Electronic Publication  相似文献   

17.
Although regulation of the dynamics of plant microtubules (MTs) by microtubule-associated proteins (MAPs) has been suggested, the mechanism has not yet been elucidated. As one candidate, a MAP composed of a 65 kDa polypeptide (65 kDa MAP) has been isolated from tobacco cultured cells [Jiang and Sonobe (1993), J. Cell Sci 105: 8911. To investigate the physiological role of the 65 kDa MAP in situ, we analyzed the changes in content and colocalization of this MAP with cortical MTs in relation to elongation growth, using azuki bean epicotyls (Vigna angularis Ohwi et Ohashi). All apical, intermediate, and basal segments prepared from 6 d seedlings showed high growth activity. In 12 d seedlings, growth activity of intermediate and basal segments was low, although that of apical segments was high. The relationship between the growth activity and the orientation of cortical MTs in the epidermal cells was analyzed. Cells could be classified into four types with respect to orientation of cortical MTs: transverse (T), oblique (O), longitudinal (L) to the vertical axis of cells, and random (R). In rapidly growing segments, three types of cells, T, O, L, were observed at similar ratios. In such segments, significant amounts of the 65 kDa MAP were expressed, and it colocalized well with cortical MTs. In segments showing low growth activity, most of the cells showed oblique and longitudinal orientation of cortical MTs. In such segments, the content of the 65 kDa MAP was low. These results suggested involvement of this 65 kDa MAP in regulation of the elongation growth of this epicotyl.  相似文献   

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We reported that elongation growth of plant shoots and roots is suppressed by hypergravity, with the rate decreasing in proportion to logarithm of the magnitude of gravity. In hypergravity-induced growth inhibition of shoots, graviperception is supposed to be independent of that in gravitropism and to involve mechanoreceptors. However, the graviperception mechanism in the hypergravity-induced growth inhibition of roots is not known. In the present study, we compared the mechanism in the hypergravity-induced growth inhibition of roots with that in gravitropism. The removal of root cap did not influence hypergravity-induced growth inhibition of roots, although the gravitropic curvature was completely inhibited. Hypergravity had no effects on growth of azuki bean roots in the presence of lanthanum or gadolinium, which are blockers of mechanoreceptors. On the contrary, lanthanum or gadolinium at the same concentration did not influence gravitropism of roots. These results suggest that the graviperception mechanism in the hypergravity-induced growth inhibition of roots is independent of that in gravitropism. Hypergravity-induced growth inhibition of azuki bean roots was observed irrespective of the direction of stimuli, which disappeared in the presence of lanthanum or gadolinium. Thus, in the hypergravity-induced growth inhibition, roots may perceive the gravity signal by mechanoreceptors on the plasma membrane independently of the direction of stimuli, and may utilize it to regulate their growth rate.  相似文献   

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We developed a three-dimensional (3-D) clinostat to simulate a microgravity environment and studied the changes in plant growth processes under this condition. The rate of germination of cress (Lepidium sativum), maize (Zea mays), rice (Oryza sativa), pea (Pisum sativum), or azuki bean (Vigna angularis) was not affected on the clinostat. The clinostat rotation did not influence the growth rate of their roots or shoots, except for a slight promotion of growth in azuki roots and epicotyls. On the contrary, the direction of growth of plant organs clearly changed on the 3-D clinostat. On the surface of the earth, roots grow downward while shoots upward in parallel to the gravity vector. On the 3-D clinostat, roots of cress elongated along the direction of the tip of root primordia after having changed the direction continuously. Rice roots also grew parallel to the direction of the tip of root primordia. On the other hand, roots of maize, pea, and azuki bean grew in a random fashion. The direction of growth of shoots was more controlled even on the 3-D clinostat. In a front view of embryos, shoots grew mostly along the direction of the tip of primordia. In a side view, rice coleoptiles showed an adaxial (toward the caryopsis) while coleoptiles of maize and epicotyls of pea and azuki bean an abaxial curvature. The curvature of shoots became larger with their growth. Such an autotropism may have an important role in regulation of life cycle of higher plants under a microgravity environment.  相似文献   

20.
Developing resistance to gravitational force is a critical response for terrestrial plants to survive under 1 × g conditions. We have termed this reaction “gravity resistance” and have analyzed its nature and mechanisms using hypergravity conditions produced by centrifugation and microgravity conditions in space. Our results indicate that plants develop a short and thick body and increase cell wall rigidity to resist gravitational force. The modification of body shape is brought about by the rapid reorientation of cortical microtubules that is caused by the action of microtubule-associated proteins in response to the magnitude of the gravitational force. The modification of cell wall rigidity is regulated by changes in cell wall metabolism that are caused by alterations in the levels of cell wall enzymes and in the pH of apoplastic fluid (cell wall fluid). Mechanoreceptors on the plasma membrane may be involved in the perception of the gravitational force. In this review, we discuss methods for altering gravitational conditions and describe the nature and mechanisms of gravity resistance in plants.  相似文献   

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