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1.
Arrays of cortical microtubules (MTs) on radial walls in differentiatingtracheids of Taxus cuspidata were randomly oriented when primarywalls formed. The orientation of MTs changed progressively fromlongitudinal to transverse as cells expanded. During formationof primary walls, MTs in differentiating tracheids disappearedlocally at sites of future intertracheal bordered pits. In furtherdifferentiated tracheids, circular bands of MTs were observedaround the edges of developing bordered pits. (Received July 17, 1996; Accepted November 11, 1996)  相似文献   

2.
Rearrangements of cortical microtubules (CMTs) during the differentiation of axial secondary xylem elements within taproots and shoots of Aesculus hippocastanum L. (horse-chestnut) are described. A correlative approach was employed using indirect immunofluorescence microscopy of α-tubulin in 6- to 10-μm sections and transmission electron microscopy of ultrathin sections. All cell types – fibres, vessel elements and axial parenchyma – derive from fusiform cambial cells which contain randomly oriented CMTs. At the early stages of development, fibres and axial parenchyma cells possess helically arranged CMTs, which increase in number as secondary wall thickening proceeds and simple pits develop. In contrast, incipient vessel elements are distinguished by the marking out of sites of bordered pits; these sites first appear as microtubule-free regions within the reticulum of randomly oriented CMTs that characterises their precursor fusiform cambial cells. Subsequently, the ring of CMTs which develops at the periphery of the microtubule-free region decreases in diameter as the over-arching pit border is formed. Like bordered pits, large-diameter, non-bordered pits (contact pits) which develop between vessel elements and adjacent contact ray cells originate as microtubule-free regions and are also associated with development of a ring of CMTs at the periphery. In the case of contact pits, however, there is no reduction in the diameter of the CMT ring during pit development. Tertiary cell wall thickenings are also a feature of vessel elements and appear to form at sites where bands of laterally associated, transversely oriented CMTs, separated from each other by microtubule-free zones, are found. Later, these bands of CMTs become narrower, and separate into pairs of microtubule bundles located on each side of the developing wall thickening. Development of perforations between vessel elements is also associated with the presence of a ring of CMTs at their periphery. Received: 13 July 1998 / Accepted: 30 November 1998  相似文献   

3.
Taizo Hogetsu 《Planta》1991,185(2):190-200
Arrangements of microfibrils (MFs) and microtubules (MTs) were examined in tracheary elements (TEs) of Pisum sativum L. and Commelina communis L. by production of replicas of cryo-sections, and by immunofluorescence microscopy, respectively. The secondary wall thickenings of TEs of Pisum and Commelina roots have pitted and latticed patterns, respectively. Most MFs in the pitted thickening of Pisum TEs retain a parallel alignment as they pass around the periphery of pits. However, some groups of MFs grow into the pits but then terminate at the edge of the thickening, indicating that cellulose-synthase complexes are inactivated in the plasma membrane under the pit. Microtubules of TEs of both Pisum and Commelina are localized under the secondary thickening and few MTs are detected in the areas between wall thickenings. In the presence of the MT-disrupting agent, amiprophosmethyl, cellulose and hemicellulose, which is specific to secondary thickening, are deposited in deformed patterns in TEs of Pisum roots, Pisum epicotyls and Commelina roots. This indicates that the localized deposition of hemicellulose as well as cellulose involves MTs. The deformed, but heterogeneous pattern of secondary thickening is still visible, indicating that MTs are involved in determining and maintaining the regular patterns of the secondary thickening but not the spatial heterogeneous pattern of the wall deposition. A working hypothesis for the formation of the secondary thickening is proposed.Abbreviations APM amiprophosmethyl - DMSO dimethyl sulfoxide - F-WGA fluorescein-conjugated wheat-germ agglutinin - M F microfibril - MT microtubule - PEG polyethyleneglycol - TE tracheary element I thank Ms. Aiko Hirata (Institute of Applied Microbiology, University of Tokyo, Japan) for help in taking stereomicrographs. This work was supported in part by a Grant-in-Aid from the Ministry of Education, Science and Culture of Japan.  相似文献   

4.
Summary Cortical microtubules (MTs) were visualized in root cortex cells ofHyacinthus orientalis L. using immunofluorescence techniques. Cellular MT orientation was determined adjacent to radial longitudinal and transverse walls of root tip, uncontracted, contracting, and fully contracted regions. As seen in longitudinal views, MTs formed parallel, apparently helical arrays which were oriented transversely, axially or obliquely depending upon the region. Transverse sectional views showed that MTs adjacent to transverse cell walls formed a variety of patterns which varied with developmental stage and cell location. Microtubules were oriented in crisscross or parallel arrays. The parallel arrays were oriented either parallel, perpendicular or oblique to the radius of the root. There was an apparent temporal progression in MT reorientation from outer cortical to inner cortical cell layers. A resultant progression of reoriented cell growth could account for root contraction. These findings corroborate earlier electron microscopic observations of changing MT orientation accompanying root contraction, and provide cytological evidence to test mathematical and biophysical models of the mechanics of cell expansion.Abbreviations MT microtubule - MF microfibril - MTSB microtubule stabilizing buffer - PBS phosphate buffered saline  相似文献   

5.
Lotus fibers are the isolated helical secondary cell wall thickenings from tracheary elements of lotus (Nelumbo nucifera Gaertn) petioles. In this study the anatomical characteristics of lotus petioles and microstructures of tracheary elements were studied using light microscopy (LM) and scanning electron microscopy (SEM). The results show that vascular bundles of lotus petioles are scattered throughout ground tissue. Their tracheary elements are of various sizes and there are several patterns of secondary wall thickening present. However, only secondary thickening in a ribbon-like helical pattern can be drawn out from the petiole to form lotus fibers for subsequent utilization. Study of the microstructure of the tracheary elements reveals that there are two pit structures present in the end walls in addition to pits with intact pit membranes: those with porose or web-like remnants pit membrane and those that lack pit membranes. This is an indication of the transitional stage between tracheids and vessel elements. This study provides supportive evidence that lotus fibers are found in both helically thickened tracheids and helically thickened primitive vessels.  相似文献   

6.
Chaffey N  Barlow P 《Planta》2002,214(4):526-536
The immunolocalisation of unconventional myosin VIII ('myosin') in the cells of the secondary vascular tissues of angiosperm (Populus tremula L. x P. tremuloides Michx. and Aesculus hippocastanum L.) and gymnosperm (Pinus pinea L.) trees is described for the first time and related to other cytoskeletal elements, as well as to callose. Both myosin and callose are located at the cell plate in dividing cambial cells, whereas actin microfilaments are found alongside the cell plate; actin and tubulin are both associated with the phragmoplast. Myosin and callose also localise to the plasmodesmata-rich pit fields in the walls of living cells, which are particularly abundant within the common walls between ray cells and between ray cells and axial parenchyma cells in the phloem and xylem. In those xylem ray cells that contact developing vessel elements and tracheids, myosin, tubulin, actin and callose are localised at the periphery of developing contact and cross-field pits; the respective antibodies also highlight the bordered pits between vessels and between tracheids. The aperture of the bordered pits, whose diameter diminishes as the over-arching border of these pits develops, also houses myosin, actin and tubulin. Myosin, actin and callose are also found together around the sieve pores of sieve elements and sieve cells. We suggest that an acto-myosin contractile system (a 'plant muscle') is present at the cell plate, the sieve pores, the plasmodesmata within the walls of long-lived parenchyma cells, and at the apertures of bordered pits during their development.  相似文献   

7.
The arrangement of cortical microtubules (MTs) during spore formation in Equisetum arvense was examined by immunofluorescence microscopy. The arrangement of MTs was observed to change during sporoderm formation. During exospore formation, the cortical MTs of the tapetum appeared along the tapetal plasma membrane that enclosed each developing spore cell. After exospore formation, the arrangement of the cortical MTs changed into one of separate bands of MTs arranged spirally (spiral bands of MTs). The spiral bands of MTs were superimposed on the developing elaters. This new pattern corresponded to the pattern of cellulose microfibrils deposited in the inner layer of the elater, suggesting that these spiral bands are involved in the deposition of the cellulose microfibrils in the elater. We conclude that the spiral bands of MTs are functionally equivalent to cortical MTs in secondary wall formation.  相似文献   

8.
The arrangement of cortical microtubules (MTs) in differentiating tracheids of Abies sachalinensis Masters was examined by confocal laser scanning microscopy after immunofluorescent staining. The arrays of MTs in the tracheids during formation of the primary wall were not well ordered and the predominant orientation changed from longitudinal to transverse. During formation of the secondary wall, the arrays of MTs were well ordered and their orientation changed progressively from a flat S-helix to a steep Z-helix and then to a flat S-helix as the differentiation of tracheids proceeded. The orientation of cellulose microfibrils (MFs) on the innermost surface of cell walls changed in a similar manner to that of the MTs. These results provide strong evidence for the co-alignment of MTs and MFs during the formation of the semi-helicoidal texture of the cell wall in conifer tracheids.Abbreviations MT cortical microtubule - MF cellulose microfibril - S1, S2 and S3 the outer, middle and inner layers of the secondary wall The authors thank Mr. T. Itoh of the Electron Microscope Laboratory, Faculty of Agriculture, Hokkaido University, for his technical assistance. This work was supported in part by a Grant-in-Aid from the Ministry of Education, Science and Culture, Japan (no. 06404013).  相似文献   

9.
Wood is composed of various types of cells and each type of cell has different structural and functional properties. However, the temporal and spatial diversities of cell wall components in the cell wall between different cell types are rarely understood. To extend our understanding of distributional diversities of cell wall components among cells, we investigated the immunolabeling of mannans (O-acetyl-galactoglucomannans, GGMs) and xylans (arabino-4-O-methylglucuronoxylans, AGXs) in ray cells and pits. The labeling of GGMs and AGXs was temporally different in ray cells. GGM labeling began to be detected in ray cells at early stages of S1 formation in tracheids, whereas AGX labeling began to be detected in ray cells at the S2 formation stage in tracheids. The occurrence of GGM and AGX labeling in ray cells was also temporally different from that of tracheids. AGX labeling began to be detected much later in ray cells than in tracheids. GGM labeling also began to be detected in ray cells either slightly earlier or later than in tracheids. In pits, GGM labeling was detected in bordered and cross-field pit membranes at early stages of pit formation, but not observed in mature pits, indicating that enzymes capable of GGM degradation may be involved in pit membrane formation. In contrast to GGMs, AGXs were not detected in pit membranes during the entire developmental process of bordered and cross-field pits. AGXs showed structural and depositional variations in pit borders depending on the developmental stage of bordered and cross-field pits.  相似文献   

10.
Aspects of the structure and ultrastructure of the fusiform cambial cells of the taproot of Aesculus hippocastanum L. (horse chestnut) are described in relation to the seasonal cycle of cambial activity and dormancy. Particular attention is directed at cell walls and the microtubule and microfilament components of the cytoskeleton, using a range of cytochemical and immunolocalization techniques at the optical and electron-microscopical levels. During the dormant phase, cambial cell walls are thick and multi-layered, the cells possess a helical array of cortical microtubules, and microfilament bundles are oriented axially. In the early stages of reactivation, vesicle-like profiles are associated with the cell walls, whereas arrangement of the cytoskeletal elements remains unchanged. In the succeeding active phase, the cell walls are thin, and cortical microtubules form a random array, although microfilament bundles maintain a near-axial orientation. The observations are discussed in relation to the seasonal cycle of wall structure and cortical microtubule rearrangement within the vascular cambium of hardwood trees. It is suggested that the cell-wall thickening at the onset of cambial dormancy, which is associated with the presence of a helical cortical microtubule array, should be considered to be secondary wall thickening, and that selective lysis of this secondary wall layer during cambial reactivation restores the thinner, primary wall found around active cambial cells.  相似文献   

11.
The structure of tracheids in Lycopodium lucidulum, L. clavatum, and L. tristachyum was studied with the light microscope. Protoxylem development is at least sometimes and possibly always mesarch in indeterminate axes of all three species. Centrifugally formed protoxylem elements are reticulate and discontinuities in the secondary walls of these elements are sometimes conspicuously bordered. Wall thickenings of first formed protoxylem elements consist mainly of indirectly connected rings. Late centripetally formed protoxylem elements and transitional elements have a reticulate secondary wall pattern. The narrowest metaxylem elements have circular bordered pits while in wider metaxylem elements pits are bordered and may vary from circular to scalariform. Pitting is uniseriate to triseriate in tracheids of all three species, and intermittent tetraseriate pitting was occasionally observed in L. lucidulum. Crassulae occur in tracheids of the three species, and in L. clavatum an additional framework, probably representing thickened compound middle lamella, is also present. Pits often appear helically arranged, and in all three species pits are connected by thin areas in the secondary wall. Macrofibrils approximately 0.5 μ wide were observed in tracheids of the three species. In L. clavatum the arrangement of macro-fibrils was predominantly bidirectional.  相似文献   

12.
Permineralized gigantopterid stems of Vasovinea tianii Li et Taylor gen. et sp. nov. were collected from the Upper Permian of Guizhou Province, China. They are slender and bear prickles, trichomes, and compound hooks. Internally, the stems have a sparganum cortex, eustele, and secondary xylem. The mesarch protoxylem tracheids have annular to helical thickenings, and metaxylem tracheary elements have scalariform and/or transversely elongated, bordered pits, while those of the secondary xylem have scalariform to circular bordered pits. Importantly, the inner part of the secondary xylem has large vessel elements with foraminate-like perforation plates. The hooks and other morphological and anatomical characteristics are similar to those found in gigantopterids, suggesting that Vasovinea is a member of the Gigantopteridales. The vegetative plant is reconstructed from permineralized stems and Gigantopteris-type leaves based on the anatomical similarities and intimate association. The eustele, secondary xylem, and other features support the placement of the order among the seed plants. Ecologically, Vasovinea is suggested to have been a vine or liana that used compound hooks to climb among the trees in a Permian tropical rain forest. The occurrence of vessels could have been an efficient adaptation to allow the slender stems to conduct sufficient water to the large Gigantopteris-type leaves.  相似文献   

13.
The air-seeding hypothesis predicts that xylem embolism resistance is linked directly to bordered pit functioning. We tested this prediction in trunks, roots, and branches at different vertical and radial locations in young and old trees of Pseudotsuga menziesii. Dimensions of bordered pits were measured from light and scanning electron micrographs, and physiological data were from published values. Consistent with observations, calculations showed that earlywood tracheids were more resistant to embolism than latewood tracheids, mainly from earlywood having stretchier pit membranes that can distend and cover the pit aperture. Air seeding that occurs in earlywood appears to happen through gaps between the torus edge and pit border, as shown by the similar calculated pressures required to stretch the membrane over the pit aperture and to cause embolism. Although bordered pit functioning was correlated with tracheid hydraulic diameter, pit pore size and above all pit aperture constrained conductivity the most. From roots to branches and from the trunk base to higher on the trunk, hydraulic resistance of the earlywood pit membrane increased significantly because of a decrease in the size of the pit aperture and size and number of margo pores. Moreover, overall wood conductivity decreased, in part due to lower pit conductivity and a decrease in size and frequency of pits. Structural and functional constraints leading to the trade-off of efficiency against safety of water transport were also demonstrated at the individual pit level, with a positive correlation between pit membrane resistance on an area basis and the pressure differential required to cause membrane stretching, a characteristic that is essential for pit aspiration.  相似文献   

14.
Modelling the hydrodynamic resistance of bordered pits   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
Previous studies of the hydrodynamics of plant stems have shown that resistance to flow through bordered pits on the side walls of tracheids makes up a significant proportion of their total resistance, and that this proportion increases with tracheid diameter. This suggests a possible reason why tracheids with a diameter above around 100 microm have failed to evolve. This possibility has been investigated by obtaining an estimate for the resistance of a single pit, and incorporating it into analytical models of tracheid resistance and wood resistivity. The hydrodynamic resistance of the bordered pits of Tsuga canadensis was investigated using large-scale physical models. The importance of individual components of the pit were investigated by comparing the resistance of models with different pore sizes in their pit membrane, and with or without the torus and border. The estimate for the resistance of a real bordered pit was 1.70x10(15) Pa s m(-3). Resistance of pits varied with morphology as might be predicted; the resistance was inversely proportional to the pore size to the power of 0.715; removing the torus reduced resistance by 28%, while removal of the torus and border together reduced it by 72%. It was estimated that in a 'typical tracheid' pit resistance should account for 29% of the total. Incorporating the results into the model for the resistivity of wood showed that resistivity should fall as tracheid diameter increases. However, to minimize resistance wider tracheids would also need to be proportionally much longer. It is suggested that the diameter of tracheids in conifers is limited by upper limits to cell length or cell volume. This limitation is avoided by angiosperms because they can digest away the ends of their cells to produce long, wide vessels composed of many short cells.  相似文献   

15.
A vesselless fossil wood was discovered in the Miocene Yanagida Formation in the Noto Peninsula, central Japan. This fossil has distinct growth rings with gradual transition from the early- to the latewood ; tracheids, which are called 'usual traeheids' here, constitute the ground mass of the wood and have typical scalariform bordered pits on radial walls in the earlywood and circular sparse pits on those in the latewood ; rays are 1\2-4 cells wide and heterogeneous with low to high uniseriate wings; axial parenchyma strands are scattered in the latewood. This wood has a peculiar feature; sporadic radial files of broad tracheids whose tangential walls have crowded alternate bordered pits. The radial walls have crowded half-bordered pits to ray cells, but no pits to the usual tracheids. Among all of the extant and extinct angiosperms and gymnosperms, these unusual tracheids occur only in Tetracentron. From these features, we refer the fossil to the extant genus Tetracentron, and name it T. japonoxylum. A revision of homoxylic woods is made for comparision with the present fossil. Tetracentron japonoxylum is the only fossil wood of Tetracentron.  相似文献   

16.
J. Marc  Y. Mineyuki  B. A. Palevitz 《Planta》1989,179(4):516-529
The initiation and development of a radial array of microtubules (MTs) in guard cells of A. cepa was studied using immunofluorescence microscopy of tubulin in isolated epidermal layers. Soon after the completion of cytokinesis, MTs originate in the cortex adjacent to a central strip of the new, anticlinically oriented ventral wall separating the two guard cells. Cortical MTs extend from the mid-region of the central strip toward the cell edge where the ventral wall joins the inner periclinal wall. They then spread in a fan-like formation along the periclinal wall and gradually extend along the lateral and end walls as well. Many MTs criss-cross at various angles as they arc past the edge formed by the junction of the ventral and periclinal walls, but they do not terminate there, indicating that, contrary to previous report, the edge is not involved in MT initiation. Instead, the mid-region of the central strip appears to function as a planar MT-organizing zone. Initially, MTs radiate from this zone through the inner cytoplasm as well as the cortex. During cell expansion, however, the cortical MTs increasingly predominate and consolidate into relatively thick, long bundles, while the frequency of non-cortical MTs diminishes. The apparent density of MTs per unit surface area is maintained as the cells expand and gradually flex into an elliptical shape. The guard cells eventually separate completely at the pore site. The entire process is accomplished within about 12 h.Abbreviations DIC differential interference contrast - GC guard cell - MT microtubule To whom correspondence should be addressed.  相似文献   

17.
Silicified stems with typical cycadalean anatomy are described from specimens collected from the Fremouw Formation (Triassic) in the Transantarctic Mountains of Antarctica. Axes are slender with a large parenchymatous pith and cortex separated by a narrow ring of vascular tissue. Mucilage canals are present in both pith and cortex. Vascular tissue consists of endarch primary xylem, a narrow band of secondary xylem tracheids, cambial zone, and region of secondary phloem. Vascular bundles contain uni- to triseriate rays with larger rays up to 2 mm wide separating the individual bundles. Pitting on primary xylem elements ranges from helical to scalariform; secondary xylem tracheids exhibit alternate circular bordered pits. Traces, often accompanied by a mucilage canal, extend out through the large rays into the cortex where some assume a girdling configuration. A zone of periderm is present at the periphery of the stem. Large and small roots are attached to the stem and are conspicuous in the surrounding matrix. The anatomy of the Antarctic cycad is compared with that of other fossil and extant cycadalean stems.  相似文献   

18.
Summary Tritiated leucine, tyrosine, phenylalanine, methyllabelled methionine, and cinnamic acid were used to study xylem wall deposition and lignin formation with radioautography. Leucine did not specifically label xylem thickenings; tyrosine, phenylalanine and methionine were quite good precursors in this regard. Cinnamic acid was also readily taken up by the tissues and was very markedly concentrated in the xylem thickenings; the labelling of thickenings also occurred in empty tracheids. In developing xylem cells, labelling of the cytoplasm indicated that both the endoplasmic reticulum and Golgi bodies were associated with the wall incorporation. Vesicles probably derived from the Golgi bodies, were generally observed to aggregate in the cytoplasm near the bands of wall microtubules (even if secondary wall thickening had not commenced). Simple biochemical analyses showed that incorporation of cinnamic acid into amino acids and proteins was negligible, but some lignin oxidation products were heavily labelled. The results are related to the biochemistry of lignin synthesis, and confirm that cinnamic acid is a highly specific marker for some forms of wall synthesis.  相似文献   

19.
The micromorphology of pits in tracheary elements was examined in 35 species representing 29 genera of Rosaceae and related families to evaluate the assumption that angiosperm pits are largely invariant. In most Rosaceae, pit membranes between fibers and tracheids frequently appear to have amorphous thickenings with an irregular distribution. Although these structures are torus-like under the light microscope, observations by electron microscopy illustrate that they represent "pseudotori" or plasmodesmata-associated thickenings. These thickenings frequently extend from the periphery of the pit membrane and form a cap-like, hollow structure. Pseudotori are occasionally found in few Elaeagnaceae and Rhamnaceae and appear to be related to species with fiber-tracheids and/or tracheids. True tori are strongly associated with round to oval pit apertures and are consistently present in narrow tracheary elements of Cercocarpus (Rosaceae), Planera (Ulmaceae), and ring-porous species of Ulmus and Zelkova (Ulmaceae). Vestured pits with homogenous pit membranes are reported for Hemiptelea (Ulmaceae). The homoplastic nature of pit membrane characteristics may be related to functional adaptations in terms of safety and efficiency of water transport or may reflect different developmental processes of xylem elements. These observations illustrate that there is more variation in angiosperm pits than previously thought.  相似文献   

20.
Summary A correlative study, using indirect immunofluorescence microscopy (IIF) of anti--tubulin stained sections and transmission electron microscopy (TEM), gave details of the involvement of cortical microtubules (CMTs) in the development of bordered pits in secondary xylem vessel elements ofAesculus hippocastanum L. In addition, aspects of wall cytochemistry were studied during this process using the Thiéry (PATAg) test, immunolocalization with the monoclonal antibodies JIM5 and JIM7, and a range of other cytochemical procedures. IIF showed that the alternately-arranged pits are pre-figured as perforations within a reticulum of randomly-oriented CMTs before any secondary wall thickening is obvious. Each incipient pit border is subsequently delimited by a circle of CMTs whose diameter decreases as deposition of secondary wall takes place around the perforation. These IIF observations are corroborated by a parallel TEM study. During the period of bordered pit formation, the secondary walls of the cell are lignifying. At maturity, however, the pit membrane is unlignified and continues to stain strongly with the monoclonal antibody JIM5, a marker of primary, juvenile wall. The results are discussed in terms of the relationship of the CMT cytoskeleton with development of bordered pits.Abbrevations BSA bovine serum albumin - CMT(s) cortical micro-tubule(s) - EGTA ethylene glycol-bis-(ß-aminoethyl ether)-N,N,N,N-tetraacetic acid - FITC fluorescein isothiocyanate - IIP indirect immunofluorescence - MAP microtubule-associated protein - mf(s) wall microfibril(s) - MTSB microtubule-stabilising buffer - PATAg periodic acid-thiocarbohydrazide-silver proteinate - PBS Phosphate-buffered saline - PIPES piperazine-N,N-bis-[2-ethylsulphonic acid] - SVS secondary vascular system - TEM transmission electron microscopy  相似文献   

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