首页 | 本学科首页   官方微博 | 高级检索  
相似文献
 共查询到20条相似文献,搜索用时 31 毫秒
1.
H. J. Pluymaekers 《Protoplasma》1982,112(1-2):107-116
Summary The cell wall of root hairs ofLimnobium stoloniferum is composed of two fibrillar layers: an outer layer with a dispersed texture and an inner layer with a helicoidal texture. In stained oblique sections the helicoidal layer appears as a series of bow-shaped structures. In sections which were shadow-casted after the embedding medium was removed, the following properties of the helicoidal layer can be directly observed. (1) It is build up of superimposed lamellae. (2) Each lamella consists of parallel oriented microfibrils. (3) Going into the helicoidal layer, there is a counter-clockwise discontinuous rotation of the microfibril orientation in successive lamellae. (4) Between adjacent lamellae the average angular displacement of the microfibril orientation is about 23 degrees. The dispersed outer layer is also polylamellated, but with randomly arranged microfibrils in each lamella. Both layers are present in the lateral wall as well as in the apical wall of the root hairs. Observations indicate that in the cell wall of the tip the parallel oriented microfibrils of the outermost helicoidal lamellae become distorted towards a dispersed arrangement. The suggestion is made that the dispersed outer layer is derived from the helicoidal layer.  相似文献   

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

3.
Summary InGlomus epigaeum Daniels and Trappe, a vesicular-arbuscular mycorrhizal fungus, the mature spore has a complex multi-layered wall containing a regular pattern of wall subunits.The outer wall (2–4 m thick) consists of a simple layer of parallel microfibrils. The inner wall (5–6 m thick) is built from two layers possessing different organization. The innermost layer, near the plasmalemma has a texture of apparently dispersed fibrils, whereas the second layer is regularly organized with an arced texture. Ten to twelve bundles of fibrils connected by apparently bow-shaped fibrils are consistently observed. The appearance of this arced organization depends on the section plane and on the angle of observation in the electron microscope as confirmed by tilting experiments. Wall subunits are evident as straight electron transparent fibrils; particularly well-defined in negatively stained frozen sections: their diameter is about 3.5nm.The regular pattern of wall subunits in this fungal cell wall is compared with the textures shown by cellulose fibrils in algae or higher plants and by chitin fibrils in arthropod cuticle.Research work supported by CNR, Italy. Special grant I.P.R.A.—Sub-project 1. Paper No. 55.  相似文献   

4.
Summary The long-term effects of white light (WL) on epidermal cell elongation and the mechanical properties and ultrastructure of cell walls were investigated in the subapical regions of hypocotyls of sunflower seedlings (Helianthus annuus L.) that were grown in darkness. Upon transition to WL a drastic inhibition of epidermal cell elongation was observed. However, the mechanical properties of the inner tissues (cortex, vascular bundles, and pith) were unaffected by WL. Thus, the light-induced decrease in cell wall plasticity measured on entire stems occurs exclusively in the peripheral tissues (epidermis and 2 to 3 subepidermal cell layers).An electronmicroscopic investigation of the epidermal cell walls showed that they are of the helicoidal type with the direction of microfibrils monotonously changing during deposition. This cell wall type was identified by the appearance of arced patterns of microfibrils in cell walls sectioned oblique to the plane of their synthesis. WL irradiation did not change the periodicity of this pattern nor the thickness of the lamellae. Thus, the inhibition of cell elongation was not caused or accompanied by a shift in the direction of microfibril deposition in the growth-limiting outer tissues. However, cell wall thickness, the number of lamellae and hence the amount of cellulose oriented parallel and transverse to the longitudinal cell axis increased in WL. This may account for the effect of WL on the reduction of cell wall plasticity and growth.Abbreviations D darkness - PATAg periodic acid-thiocarbohydracide-silver protein - WL white light  相似文献   

5.
Previous publications show arced patterns in electron micrographs of either microfibrils or canals in sectioned fish eggshells, but these have been misinterpreted. We show here that such patterns in the inner layer of cod (Gadus morrhua), plaice (Pleuronectes platessa) and trout (Salmo gairdneri) eggs arise from a helicoidal structure. This consists of a laminate of protein microfibrils, with the direction of ply processing like the steps of a spiral staircase and with the same sense as a left-handed corkscrew. Mechanically, this is an ideal way to strengthen a spherical shell, to resist deforming forces equally from any direction. Radial canals which traverse this layer are forced into flattened and twisted ribbons. Both the helicoidal microfibrillar structure and the canal shape in fish eggshells show remarkable convergent evolution with similar structures in insect cuticles. Trout eggs were resistant to deforming forces as high as 380,000 N/m2. Fish eggshells, like those of many other organisms, are mechanically well designed.  相似文献   

6.
Melissa A. Melan 《Protoplasma》1990,153(3):169-177
Summary We have investigated the effects of microtubule stabilizing conditions upon microtubule patterns in protoplasts and developed a new method for producing protoplasts which have non-random cortical microtubule arrays. Segments of elongating pea epicotyl tissue were treated with the microtubule stabilizing drug taxol for 1 h before enzymatic digestion of the cell walls in the presence of the drug. Anti-tubulin immunofluorescence showed that 40 M taxol preserved regions of ordered microtubules. The microtubules in these regions were arranged in parallel arrays, although the arrays did not always show the transverse orientation seen in the intact tissue. Protoplasts prepared without taxol had microtubules which were random in distribution. Addition of taxol to protoplasts with random microtubule arrangements did not result in organized microtubule arrays. Taxol-treated protoplasts were used to determine whether or not organized microtubule arrays would affect the organization of cell wall microfibrils as new walls were regenerated. We found that protoplasts from taxol-treated tissue which were allowed to regenerate cell walls produced organized arrays of microfibrils whose patterns matched those of the underlying microtubules. Protoplasts from untreated tissue synthesized microfibrils which were disordered. The synthesis of organized microfibrils by protoplasts with ordered microtubules arrays shows that microtubule arrangements in protoplasts influence the arrangement of newly synthesized microfibrils.Abbreviations DIC differential interference contrast - DMSO dimethyl sulfoxide - FITC fluorescein isothiocyanate - IgG immunoglobulin G - PIPES piperazine-N,N-bis[2-ethane-sulfonic acid] - PBS phosphate buffered saline  相似文献   

7.
It is shown that root hairs of most aquatic plants have a helicoidal cell-wall texture. Cell walls of root hairs of the aquatic/marshland plant Ranunculus lingua, however, have an axial microfibril alignment. The occurrence of a helicoidal wall texture is not limited to root hairs of aquatic plants: the terrestrial plant Zebrina purpusii has a helicoidal root-hair wall texture, too. With the exception of the grasses, the occurrence of root hairs with helicoidal cell walls pertains to species with predetermined root-hair-forming cells, trichoblasts. The rotation mode of the helicoid is species-specific. The average angle between fibrils of adjacent lamellae varies from 23° to 40°. In Hydrocharis morsus-ranae, cortical microtubules have a net-axial orientation and thus do not parallel nascent microfibrils. The deposition of the helicoidal cell wall is discussed.In honour of Prof. Dr. H.F Linskens (Nijmegen) on the occasion of his 65th birthday  相似文献   

8.
R. D. Preston 《Planta》1982,155(4):356-363
The basis of multinet gwoth, the multinet growth hypothesis, is examined in view of recent criticisms. It is shown that the strain across a growing wall may be calculated by simple means and the expected reorientations are deduced (a) for a wall in which the microfibrils of the innermost wall lamella always lie helically with the same pitch and (b) in which the microfibrils lie at random. Calculations are presented both for cells increasing in length only and for cells also increasing in breadth. Both the strains and the reorientations are smaller than commonly implied and are too small to be reliably detectable in wall sections. Observations on wall sections cannot therefore be accepted as proof that microfibril reorientation has not occured and it is concluded that the multinet growth hypothesis still stands as applying both to parenchyma and to collenchyma cells. In view of the wide dispersity in the structure of the walls of growing cells, it is recommended that the qualifying multinet should be dropped and replaced by passive reorientation.Abbreviation MGH multinet growth hypothesis  相似文献   

9.
Summary This paper reports on preliminary investigations into the structure of cell walls of varying complexity as revealed by the rapidfreeze deep-etch technique. Three cell types from different species were examined in order to compare the three-dimensional arrangement of random, polylamellate and helicoidal walls. Each cell type displayed a distinctive level of organisation with respect to the cellulose microfibrils and the matrix material. In polylamellated walls, the microfibrils within each layer were linked to each other by 16–20 nm long side chains regularly spaced along the length of the microfibril. In helicoidal walls, the shifting of the microfibrils could cleary be seen, yet no recognisable structures were observed which could mediate this movement.  相似文献   

10.
Kazuo Takeda  Hiroh Shibaoka 《Planta》1981,151(4):385-392
Throughout the entire period of cell growth, the microfibrils on the inner surface of the outer tangential walls of the epidermal cells of Vigna angularis epicotyls are running parallel to one another and their orientation differs from cell to cell. Although transverse, oblique and longitudinal microfibrils can be observed irrespective of cell age, the frequency distribution of microfibril orientation changes with age. In young cells, transversely oriented microfibrils predominate. In cells of medium age, which are still undergoing elongation, transverse, oblique and longitudinal microfibrils are present in quite similar frequencies. In old, non-growing cells, longitudinally oriented microfibrils are predominent. A decrease in the relative frequency of transversely oriented microfibrils with cell age was also observed in the radial epidermal walls.  相似文献   

11.
Summary The cell wall of root hairs ofEquisetum hyemale is shown to be composed of three different cell wall textures. The growing cell wall at the tip of the hair is composed of a dispersed texture of microfibrils, which continues along the outside of the whole hair. With increasing distance from the tip an increasing number of helicoidally arranged lamellae is deposited. These findings correspond with the observed isotropism of young hairs in polarized light.Hairs of approximately 4 days old become positive birefringent, indicating that longitudinally oriented layers prevail over layers with a transverse direction. This phenomenon starts at the base of the hair. Full-grown hairs are positive birefringent up to the tip and concordantly show a thick additional inner cell wall layer which forms a helical pattern the length of the hair, with a mean microfibril angle of 25 with the cell axis.Cortical microtubules, subjacent to the dispersed, the helicoidal and the helical wall texture are axially aligned and, thus, not in coalignment with the last deposited microfibrils.Coated and smooth vesicles are present in the cortical cytoplasm of both growing and full-grown hairs. Electron-dense profiles (20 nm in diameter), surrounded by a halo (of 50 nm) were observed on the wall-plasmalemma interface in full-grown hairs only. A relation of these structures with microfibril deposition could not be demonstrated. They might represent channels transporting material to the wall, which, in full-grown hairs, is heavily impregnated with a tawny brown substance.The general hypothesis that cortical microtubule orientation directs microfibril deposition is disputed.  相似文献   

12.
Summary A new model of rotating fibre components (helicoidal model) is proposed to explain the architecture of some plant cell walls. On the basis of tilting observations under the electron microscope, we establish the validity of this model for the cell wall ofChara vulgaris oospores. We suggest that this model explains the architecture seen in a number of published micrographs from a variety of different plant cell walls. Helicoidal architecture is shown to be distinct from the previously established crossed polylamellate architecture. The diagnostic features of helicoidal architecture are given. Morphogenesis of plant cell walls is discussed, with particular reference to self assembly in cholesteric liquid crystals.  相似文献   

13.
The role of calcium in the mechanical strength of isolated cell walls of soybean (Glycine max (L.) Merr. cv. Wayne) hypocotyls has been investigated, using the Instron technique to measure the plastic extensibility (PEx) of methanol-boiled, bisected hypocotyl sections and epidermal strips, and atomic absorption spectroscopy to measure wall calcium. Plastic extensibility was closely correlated with the growth rate of intact soybean hypocotyls. Removal of calcium from isolated cell walls by ethylene glycol-bis(2-aminoethyl ether)-N,N,N,N-tetraacetic acid (EGTA) or low pH increased PEx, while addition of calcium decreased PEx; both effects were reversible. The amount of calcium removed and the increase in PEx at pH 4.5 were strongly dependent upon the chelating ability of the buffer anion. There was a direct correlation between the amount of calcium removed from the wall by EGTA or acid and the increase in PEx. Removal of up to 60% of the calcium increased PEx of half-section up to two fold, but further loss of calcium caused a much greater increase in PEx. With epidermal strips, PEx increased only when calcium was reduced below a threshold. At pH 3.5, there was an additional increase in PEx after a lag of about 2 h; this additional increase may be the result of acid-induced cleavage of a different set of load-bearing bonds. We conclude that calcium bridges are part of the load-bearing bonds in soybean hypocotyl cell walls, and that breakage of these crosslinks by apoplastic acid participates in wall loosening. Acid-induced solubilization of wall calcium may be one mechanism involved in wall loosening of dicotyledonous stems.Abbreviations EGTA ethylene glycol-bis(2-aminoethyl ether)-N,N,N,N-tetraacetic acid - PEx Instron plastic extensibility  相似文献   

14.
The microtubules in highly synchronized aplanospores of twogiant marine algae, Boergesenia forbesii and Valonia ventricosa,were examined by immunofluorescence microscopy throughout theregeneration of the cell wall. Microtubule orientation was alwaysrandom up to 20 h after wounding, although the orientation ofcellulose microfibrils changed from random to parallel withinthat time period. When the rhizoid cells were in the stage ofelongation at 7 to 10 days after wounding, highly ordered microtubuleswere always observed along the longitudinal cell axis exceptat the very tip of the cells where random ones were found. Incontrast, the microfibrils in the innermost lamellae of newlysynthesized cell walls showed three different orientations,that is, transverse, longitudinal and oblique to the longitudinalcell axis. These observations suggest that microtubules maycontrol cell shape, but not the orientation of microfibrils.The mechanism of cell wall construction in these algae is discussedin relation to the self-assembly mechanism thought to operatein the construction of helicoidal cell walls. 3 Present address: Polymer Research Laboratory, Mitsui ToatsuChemicals, Inc., Yokohama, Kanagawa 244, Japan. (Received November 18, 1987; Accepted April 11, 1988)  相似文献   

15.
Organ morphology depends on cell placement and directional cell expansion. Microtubules are involved in both of these processes so genetic approaches to understand the role microtubules play in organ expansion are not straightforward. Our use of the temperature-sensitive mor1-1 mutants led to the surprising discovery that Arabidopsis thaliana (L.) Heynh. root cells can establish and maintain transverse cellulose texture without well organized microtubule arrays. This work also demonstrated that cells can lose the ability to expand anisotropically without losing transversely oriented cellulose microfibrils. We suggest that microtubule disruption affects the cells ability to generate long cellulose microfibrils, which may be essential for achieving growth anisotropy. Thus organ shape may depend not only on the orientation but also on the relative length of cellulose microfibrils during axis establishment and growth. More recent work has shown an important correlation between microtubule organization and the deposition patterns of the glycosylphosphatidylinositol (GPI)-anchored wall protein COBRA. Loss of microtubule organization is associated with the dissipation of transverse banding patterns of COBRA, suggesting that COBRAs function in maintaining anisotropic expansion may be microtubule-dependent.  相似文献   

16.
J. D. Dodge  G. B. Lawes 《Planta》1968,84(2):134-140
Summary The microfibrillar component of the walls of zoosporangia and resistant sporangia of the phycomycete Allomyces arbusculus has been studied in the electron microscope, after chemical removal of the amorphous wall materials. In the zoosporangium wall the microfibrils are randomly arranged, as in the outer layer of the hyphal walls, and the sporangial wall is of even thickness. In the resistant sporangia the microfibrillar layer of the wall is perforated by numerous pores 0.25 in diameter. The microfibrils are randomly arranged over much of the wall but tend to be concentrically arranged in the vicinity of the pores. On the inside of the wall the microfibrils form a thickened rim around the pore.  相似文献   

17.
S. C. Chafe  A. B. Wardrop 《Planta》1972,107(3):269-278
Summary The organization of the wall of epidermal cells in the petiole of species of Apium, Eryngium, Rumex, and Abutilon as well as that of the epidermis of Avena coleoptile has been investigated. The outer and inner tangential walls consist of layers in which the cellulose microfibrils are oriented alternately parallel or transverse to the longitudinal cell axis. This organization resembles that previously described for collenchyma cell walls (Wardrop, 1969; Chafe, 1970). On the radial (anticlinal) walls the orientation of the microfibrils is transverse and these appear continuous with the layers of transverse orientation of the outer and inner tangential walls. Variation in thickness of the outer tangential, and radial, and inner tangential walls appears to result from the variation in thickness of those layers in which the microfibrils have a longitudinal orientation. The extent to which these observations can interpreted in terms of some type of modified multi-net growth is discussed.  相似文献   

18.
Summary Overall cellular arrangement of cortical microtubules (MTs) is studied by reconstruction of MT images on serial thin sections. The mature root cortex ofHyacinthus orientalis L. cv. Delft blue is composed of elongate, highly vacuolate nondividing parenchyma cells. In longitudinal sections in these cells, MTs generally form parallel arrays at oblique angles to longitudinal cell axes. These MTs extend towards the transverse face of the cell where they appear in localized parallel arrays as well as in crisscross patterns. Repeated observations of oblique parallel arrays of MTs along the length of the cell and the continuity of MT bundles in serial sections suggest that MTs form a single helix in the cell. MTs in neighboring cells appear in sections either as parallel or as herringbone patterns, suggesting that the MT helices in these cells may spiral in the same or the opposite directions.Abbreviations MT Microtubule - MF microfibil - EM electron microscopy  相似文献   

19.
Microfibrillar structure, cortical microtubule orientation andthe effect of amiprophos-methyl (APM) on the arrangement ofthe most recently deposited cellulose microfibrils were investigatedin the marine filamentous green alga, Chamaedoris orientalis.The thallus cells of Chamaedoris showed typical tip growth.The orientation of microfibrils in the thick cell wall showedorderly change in longitudinal, transverse and oblique directionsin a polar dependent manner. Microtubules run parallel to thelongitudinally arranged microfibrils in the innermost layerof the wall but they are never parallel to either transverseor obliquely arranged microfibrils. The ordered change in microfibrilorientation is altered by the disruption of the microtubuleswith APM. The walls, deposited in the absence of the microtubules,showed typical helicoidal pattern. However, the original crossedpolylamellate pattern was restored by the removal of APM. Thissuggests that cortical microtubules in this alga do not controlthe direction of microfibril orientation but control the orderedchange of microfibril orientation. Amiprophos-methyl, Chamaedoris orientalis, coenocytic green alga, cortical microtubule, microfibrillar structure, tip growth  相似文献   

20.
The helicoidal plant cell wall can be considered as a composite in which cellulose is the constant reinforcing fiber. In order to strengthen the analogy with cholesteric liquid crystals, and taking into account a range of data, we describe a progressive series showing that cellulosic helicoidal systems are versatile and multifunctional. The following examples were considered: a) the cellulose microfibrils, with their rigid backbone possibly coated with a plastifying matrix; b) actual cholesteric cellulosic derivatives, such as in vitro liquid crystals and in vitro cellulosic mucilages; c) viscoplastic. growing cell walls; d) consolidated “stony” cell walls with their adaptation to intercellular communications. The series shows a dramatic progression from a liquid construction to what is the hardest in the plant cells, i.e. the sclerified walls.  相似文献   

设为首页 | 免责声明 | 关于勤云 | 加入收藏

Copyright©北京勤云科技发展有限公司  京ICP备09084417号