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1.
The composition of the aliphatic components of suberin in the stele and cortex of young corn (Zea mays L.) roots was determined by combined gas-liquid chromatography/mass spectrometry of the LiAlD4 depolymerization products. ω-Hydroxy acids were shown to be the major class of the aliphatic components of both the hypodermal (35%) and endodermal (28%) polymeric materials with the dominant chain length being C24 in the former and C16 in the latter. Nitrobenzene oxidation of the roots generated p-hydroxybenzaldehyde and vanillin with much less syringaldehyde. Electron microscopic examination of the hypodermal and endodermal cell walls from roots of corn plants grown in a Mg2+ -deficient (0.03 millimolar) nutrient solution showed that these walls were more heavily suberized than the analogous walls of roots from plants grown in normal (2 millimolar) Mg2+ levels. Analysis of the LiAlD4 depolymerization products of the suberin polymers from these roots showed that the roots grown in low Mg2+ had 3.5 times as much aliphatic suberin monomers on a weight basis as the roots from plants grown in nutrient with normal Mg2+ levels. Roots from plants grown in Mg2+ -deficient nutrient solution released 3.8 times the amount of aromatic aldehydes upon nitrobenzene oxidation as that released from normal roots. As the degree of Mg2+ deficiency of the nutrient solution was increased, there was an increase in the aliphatic and aromatic components characteristic of suberin. Thus, both ultrastructural and chemical evidence strongly suggested that Mg2+ deficiency resulted in increased suberization of the cell walls of both hypodermis and endodermis of Zea mays roots. The roots from Mg2+ -deficient plants also had a higher amount of peroxidase activity when compared to control roots.  相似文献   

2.
Suberin from the roots of carrots (Daucus carota), parsnip (Pastinaca sativa), rutabaga (Brassica napobrassica), turnip (Brassica rapa), red beet (Beta vulgaris), and sweet potato (Ipomoea batatas) was isolated by a combination of chemical and enzymatic techniques. Finely powdered suberin was depolymerized with 14% BF3 in methanol, and soluble monomers (20-50% of suberin) were fractionated into phenolic (<10%) and aliphatic (13-35%) fractions. The aliphatic fractions consisted mainly of ω-hydroxyacids (29-43%), dicarboxylic acids (16-27%), fatty acids (4-18%), and fatty alcohols (3-6%). Each fraction was subjected to combined gas-liquid chromatography and mass spectrometry. Among the fatty acids very long chain acids (>C20) were the dominant components in all six plants. In the alcohol fraction C18, C20, C22, and C24 saturated primary alcohols were the major components. C16 and C18 dicarboxylic acids were the major dicarboxylic acids of the suberin of all six plants and in all cases octadec-9-ene-1, 18-dioic acid was the major component except in rutabaga where hexadecane-1, 16-dioic acid was the major dicarboxylic acid. The composition of the ω-hydroxyacid fraction was quite similar to that of the dicarboxylic acids; 18-hydroxy-octadec-9-enoic acid was the major component in all plants except rutabaga, where equal quantities of 16-hydroxyhexadecanoic acid and 18-hydroxyoctadec-9-enoic acid (42% each) were found. Compounds which would be derived from 18-hydroxyoctadec-9-enoic acid and octadec-9-ene-1, 18-dioic acid by epoxidation, and epoxidation followed by hydration of the epoxide, were also detected in most of the suberin samples. The monomer composition of the six plants showed general similarities but quite clear taxonomic differences.  相似文献   

3.
Effect of abscisic acid (ABA) on suberization of potato (Solanum tuberosum var. Russet-Burbank) tuber tissue culture was studied by measuring deposition of suberin components and the level of certain key enzymes postulated to be involved in suberization. ABA treatment resulted in a 3-fold increase in the polymeric aliphatic components of suberin and a 4-fold increase in the polymeric aromatic components. Hydrocarbons and fatty alcohols, two components characteristic of waxes associated with potato suberin, increased 9- and 5-fold, respectively, as a result of ABA treatment. Thus, the deposition of the polymeric aliphatics and aromatics as well as waxes, all of which have been postulated to be components of suberized cell walls, was markedly stimulated by ABA. ω-Hydroxy-fatty acid dehydrogenase which showed a rather high initial level of activity increased only 60% due to ABA treatment. Phenylalanine ammonia-lyase activity reached a maximum at a 5-fold level after 4 days in the ABA medium, whereas the control showed only a 3-fold increase. ABA treatment also resulted in a dramatic (7-fold) increase in an isozyme of peroxidase which has been specifically associated with suberization. Thus, ABA appears to induce certain key enzymes which are most probably involved in suberization.  相似文献   

4.
The structure and composition of the aliphatic monomers of the polymeric material deposited during wound-healing of tomato fruit, bean pods, and Jade leaves were examined. After removing the cuticle-containing layer of tissue, the wounds were healed for 14 days and the resulting surface layer was excised, lyophilized, solvent-extracted, and depolymerized by hydrogenolysis with LiAlH4 or transesterified with BF3 in methanol. The products obtained by the chemical depolymerization were subjected to thin layer chromatography and combined gas chromatography and mass spectrometry. The major aliphatic components isolated from the hydrogenolysate of the wound polymer produced by tomato fruit were hexadecane-1,16-diol and octadec-9-ene-1,18-diol, which were shown to be derived from a 1:1 mixture of ω-hydroxy and dicarboxylic acids of the appropriate chain length by LiAlH4 reduction. Also identified in the wound polymer were long chain (>C20) fatty acids and alcohols. This monomer composition is typical of suberin polymers and is in sharp contrast with that of the cutin of tomato fruit which contains dihydroxy C16 acid as the major aliphatic component. The hydrogenolysis of the wound material from bean pods gave octadecene-1,18-diol as the major aliphatic component, and smaller amounts of hexadecane-1,16-diol and long chain alcohols. Similar treatment of the normal cuticular tissue of these pods gave hexadecane triol, as well as C16 and C18 alcohols. Hydrogenolysis of wound material from the Jade leaves gave octadecene-1,18-diol, C16 and C22 diols, as well as alcohols from C16 to C26, whereas similar treatment of the cutin-containing tissue from these leaves gave C16 triol as the major aliphatic component. Thus, the major aliphatic monomers of the polymeric material deposited during the wound-healing of bean pods and Jade leaves are very similar to those of suberin, although the natural protective polymer of these tissues is cutin. From these results, it is concluded that suberization is a fundamental process involved in wound-healing in plants, irrespective of the chemical nature of the natural protective polymer of the tissue.  相似文献   

5.
Castor bean (Ricinus communis L.) plants were hydroponically cultivated to achieve NO3 deficiency (N starvation), salt stress (addition of 100 mM NaCl), or normal conditions. Endodermal (ECW) and rhizodermal and hypodermal cell walls (RHCW) were isolated enzymatically from roots, and suberin monomers were released by transesterification after solvent extraction. Aromatic and aliphatic suberin monomers were identified and quantified by gas chromatography and mass spectrometry. Between 90 and 95% of the released suberin monomers were linear, long-chain, aliphatic compounds (alcohols, acids, diacids, ω-hydroxy acids and 2-hydroxy acids) with an average chain length of 19 C-atoms. The remainder was an aromatic suberin fraction mainly composed of coumaric and ferulic acid. Suberin amounts were significantly increased in ECW and RHCW in the presence of NaCl. In contrast, N starvation led to significantly reduced levels of suberization in ECW and RHCW. It is concluded that R. communis plants reinforce their apoplastic transport barriers in roots in adaptation to NaCl stress in order to minimize NaCl uptake. Under conditions of N starvation the opposite occurs and plants reduce the suberization of their apoplastic transport barriers to facilitate nutrient uptake form the soil.  相似文献   

6.
Biosynthesis of the aliphatic components of suberin was studied in suberizing potato (Solanum tuberosum) slices with [1-14C]oleic acid and [1-14C]acetate as precursors. In 4-day aged tissue, [1-14C]oleic acid was incorporated into an insoluble residue, which, upon hydrogenolysis (LiA1H4), released the label into chloroform-soluble products. Radio thin layer and gas chromatographic analyses of these products showed that 14C was contained exclusively in octadecenol and octadecene-1, 18-diol. OsO4 treatment and periodate cleavage of the resulting tetraol showed that the labeled diol was octadec-9-ene-1, 18-diol, the product expected from the two major components of suberin, namely 18-hydroxyoleic acid and the corresponding dicarboxylic acid. Aged potato slices also incorporated [1-14C]acetate into an insoluble material. Hydrogenolysis followed by radio chromatographic analyses of the products showed that 14C was contained in alkanols and alkane-α,ω-diols. In the former fraction, a substantial proportion of the label was contained in aliphatic chains longer than C20, which are known to be common constituents of suberin. In the labeled diol fraction, the major component was octadec-9-ene-1,18-diol, with smaller quantities of saturated C16, C18, C20, C22, and C24-α,ω-diols. Soluble lipids derived from [1-14C]acetate in the aged tissue also contained labeled very long acids from C20 to C28, as well as C22 and C24 alcohols, but no labeled ω-hydroxy acids or dicarboxylic acids were detected. Label was also found in n-alkanes isolated from the soluble lipids, and the distribution of label among them was consistent with the composition of n-alkanes found in the wound periderm of this tissue; C21 and C23 were the major components with lesser amounts of C19 and C25. The amount of 14C incorporated into these bifunctional monomers in 0-, 2-, 4-, 6-, and 8-day aged tissue were 0, 1.5, 2.5, 0.8, and 0.3% of the applied [1-14C]oleic acid, respectively. Incorporation of [1-14C]acetate into the insoluble residue was low up to the 3rd day of aging, rapid during the next 4 days of aging, and subsequently the rate decreased. These changes in the rates of incorporation of exogenous oleic acid and acetate reflected the development of diffusion resistance of the tissue surface to water vapor. As the tissue aged, increasing amounts of the [1-14C]acetate were incorporated into longer aliphatic chains of the residue and the soluble lipids, but no changes in the distribution of radioactivity among the α-ω-diols were obvious. The above results demonstrated that aging potato slices constitute a convenient system with which to study the biochemistry of suberization.  相似文献   

7.
Green cotton (Gossypium hirsutum L.) fibers were shown by electron microscopy to have numerous thin concentric rings around the lumen of the cell. These rings possessed a lamellar fine structure characteristic of suberin. LiA1D4 depolymerization and gas chromatography-mass spectrometry analysis showed the presence of a suberin polymer in the green cotton with the major aliphatic monomers being ω-hydroxydocosanoic acid (70%) and docosanedoic acid (25%). Ordinary white cotton was shown by chemical and ultrastructural examination to be encircled by a thin cuticular polymer containing less than 0.5% of the aliphatic components found in green cotton.  相似文献   

8.
Suberin, a cell specific, wall-associated biopolymer, is formed during normal plant growth and development as well as in response to stress conditions such as wounding. It is characterized by the deposition of both a poly(phenolic) domain (SPPD) in the cell wall and a poly(aliphatic) domain (SPAD) thought to be deposited between the cell wall and plasma membrane. Although the monomeric components that comprise the SPPD and SPAD are well known, the biosynthesis and deposition of suberin is poorly understood. Using wound healing potato tubers as a model system, we have tracked the flux of carbon into the aliphatic monomers of the SPAD in a time course fashion. From these analyses, we demonstrate that newly formed fatty acids undergo one of two main metabolic fates during wound-induced suberization: (1) desaturation followed by oxidation to form the 18:1 ω-hydroxy and dioic acids characteristic of potato suberin, and (2) elongation to very long chain fatty acids (C20 to C28), associated with reduction to 1-alkanols, decarboxylation to n-alkanes and minor amounts of hydroxylation. The partitioning of carbon between these two metabolic fates illustrates metabolic regulation during wound healing, and provides insight into the organization of fatty acid metabolism.Key Words: suberin, potato, Solanum tuberosum, carbon flux analysis, abiotic stress  相似文献   

9.
Suberin composition of various plants including Arabidopsis (Arabidopsis thaliana) has shown the presence of very long chain fatty acid derivatives C20 in addition to the C16 and C18 series. Phylogenetic studies and plant genome mining have led to the identification of putative aliphatic hydroxylases belonging to the CYP86B subfamily of cytochrome P450 monooxygenases. In Arabidopsis, this subfamily is represented by CYP86B1 and CYP86B2, which share about 45% identity with CYP86A1, a fatty acid ω-hydroxylase implicated in root suberin monomer synthesis. Here, we show that CYP86B1 is located to the endoplasmic reticulum and is highly expressed in roots. Indeed, CYP86B1 promoter-driven β-glucuronidase expression indicated strong reporter activities at known sites of suberin production such as the endodermis. These observations, together with the fact that proteins of the CYP86B type are widespread among plant species, suggested a role of CYP86B1 in suberin biogenesis. To investigate the involvement of CYP86B1 in suberin biogenesis, we characterized an allelic series of cyp86B1 mutants of which two strong alleles were knockouts and two weak ones were RNA interference-silenced lines. These root aliphatic plant hydroxylase lines had a root and a seed coat aliphatic polyester composition in which C22- and C24-hydroxyacids and α,ω-dicarboxylic acids were strongly reduced. However, these changes did not affect seed coat permeability and ion content in leaves. The presumed precursors, C22 and C24 fatty acids, accumulated in the suberin polyester. These results demonstrate that CYP86B1 is a very long chain fatty acid hydroxylase specifically involved in polyester monomer biosynthesis during the course of plant development.  相似文献   

10.
The multilamellar wall secreted by protoplasts isolated from locule tissue of tomato (Lycopersicon esculentum L.) fruit was purified, and an extract was obtained after depolymerization with BF3-methanol. Analysis of this extract using thin layer chromatography demonstrated the presence of fatty acid methyl esters, fatty alcohols, dicarboxylic acid dimethyl esters, and ω-hydroxy acid methyl esters. These components were quantified using an Iatroscan thin layer chromatography-flame ionization detection system. The different chain lengths in each group were identified and quantified using gas chromatography. The results clearly indicated the presence of suberin.  相似文献   

11.
The recent proposal of Tipton and Thowsen (Plant Physiol 79: 432-435) that iron-deficient plants reduce ferric chelates in cell walls by a system dependent on the leakage of malate from root cells was tested. Results are presented showing that this mechanism could not be responsible for the high rates of ferric reduction shown by roots of iron-deficient bean (Phaseolus vulgaris L. var Prélude) plants. The role of O2 in the reduction of ferric chelates by roots of iron-deficient bean plants was also tested. The rate of Fe(III) reduction was the same in the presence and in the absence of O2. However, in the presence of O2 the reaction was partially inhibited by superoxide dismutase (SOD), which indicates a role for the superoxide radical, O2[unk], as a facultative intermediate electron carrier. The inhibition by SOD increased with substrate pH and with decrease in concentration of the ferrous scavenger bathophenanthroline-disulfonate. The results are consistent with a mechanism for transmembrane electron transport in which a flavin or quinone is the final electron carrier in the plasma membrane. The results are discussed in relation to the ecological importance that O2[unk] may have in the acquisition of ferric iron by dicotyledonous plants.  相似文献   

12.
Suberin is a cell wall lipid polyester found in the cork cells of the periderm offering protection against dehydration and pathogens. Its biosynthesis and assembly, as well as its contribution to the sealing properties of the periderm, are still poorly understood. Here, we report on the isolation of the coding sequence CYP86A33 and the molecular and physiological function of this gene in potato (Solanum tuberosum) tuber periderm. CYP86A33 was down-regulated in potato plants by RNA interference-mediated silencing. Periderm from CYP86A33-silenced plants revealed a 60% decrease in its aliphatic suberin load and greatly reduced levels of C18:1 ω-hydroxyacid (approximately 70%) and α,ω-diacid (approximately 90%) monomers in comparison with wild type. Moreover, the glycerol esterified to suberin was reduced by 60% in the silenced plants. The typical regular ultrastructure of suberin, consisting of dark and light lamellae, disappeared and the thickness of the suberin layer was clearly reduced. In addition, the water permeability of the periderm isolated from CYP86A33-silenced lines was 3.5 times higher than that of the wild type. Thus, our data provide convincing evidence for the involvement of ω-functional fatty acids in establishing suberin structure and function.Periderm, the boundary tissue that replaces the epidermis in the secondary organs of plants, provides efficient protection against dehydration, UV radiation, and pathogens (Esau, 1965). Periderm is regularly found in the bark of woody plants, but herbaceous plants may also form a well-developed periderm in roots, tubers, and the oldest portions of stem. The periderm has been widely studied in potato (Solanum tuberosum) tubers because of the latter''s great agronomic significance (Schmidt and Schönherr, 1982; Vogt et al., 1983; Lulai and Freeman, 2001; Sabba and Lulai, 2002). Shrinkage and flaccidity occur in tubers if the protection afforded by the periderm against water loss is compromised (Lulai et al., 2006). Suberin and waxes embedded into the suberin matrix are considered essential for periderm imperviousness (Franke and Schreiber, 2007). Chemically, suberin is a complex lipid polymer consisting of a fatty acid-derived domain (aliphatic suberin) cross-linked by ester bonds to a polyaromatic lignin-like domain (aromatic suberin; Kolattukudy, 2001; Bernards, 2002; Franke and Schreiber, 2007). Aliphatic suberin has been widely analyzed in potato periderm (Kolattukudy and Agrawal, 1974; Graça and Pereira, 2000; Schreiber et al., 2005). The main monomers released from potato aliphatic suberin are a mixture of ω-hydroxyacids and α,ω-diacids with chain lengths ranging from C16 to C28 (mainly C18), together with glycerol. Small amounts of monofunctional fatty acids, alcohols, and ferulic acid are also released. Waxes are complex mixtures of lipids extractable with chloroform that in potato periderm consist mostly of linear very-long-chain aliphatics up to C32 (Schreiber et al., 2005). Suberin is deposited in the cell wall as a continuous deposit or secondary cell wall that overlays the polysaccharide primary cell wall from the inside (Esau, 1965). These suberin deposits appear under the transmission electron microscope (TEM) as regularly alternating opaque and translucent lamellae (Schmidt and Schönherr, 1982). Although several molecular models for suberin have been proposed (Kolattukudy, 1980; Bernards, 2002; Graça and Santos, 2007), how the suberin and wax components are organized in the lamellated suberin secondary cell wall is a matter of debate (Graça and Santos, 2007). Moreover, to what extent suberin and wax deposition and composition determine sealing properties of periderm still remains unclear (Schreiber et al., 2005). Several studies confirm the importance of waxes for the diffusion barrier (Soliday et al., 1979; Vogt et al., 1983; Schreiber et al., 2005), but the significance of aliphatic suberin has hardly been investigated at all. Interestingly, an Arabidopsis (Arabidopsis thaliana) knockout mutant for the GLYCEROL-3-PHOSPHATE ACYLTRANSFERASE5 gene (GPAT5) with altered suberin showed higher tetrazolium salt permeability in the seed coat (Beisson et al., 2007).ω-Hydroxylation of fatty acids, a reaction carried out in plants by cytochrome P450 monooxygenases, is a crucial step in the biosynthesis of plant biopolymers (Kolattukudy, 1980; Nawrath, 2002). The Arabidopsis mutant lacerata, which shows phenotype defects compatible with a cutin deficiency, is defective in CYP86A8 encoding a fatty acid ω-hydroxylase (Wellesen et al., 2001). The aberrant induction of type three genes1 (att1) mutant, showing an altered cuticle ultrastructure and a higher transpiration rate than wild type, is defective in CYP86A2 and contains reduced amounts of ω-functionalized cutin monomers (Xiao et al., 2004). Moreover, a genome-wide study of cork oak (Quercus suber) bark highlighted a member of the cytochrome P450 of the CYP86A subfamily as a strong candidate gene for aliphatic suberin biosynthesis (Soler et al., 2007); and a role for CYP86A1 in the biosynthesis of suberin has recently been confirmed in the primary root of Arabidopsis knockout mutants (Li et al., 2007; Hofer et al., 2008). However, how the lack of fatty acid ω-hydroxylase activity may affect the structural features and sealing properties of suberin in periderm cell walls has not been documented.To provide experimental evidence of the role of CYP86A genes in periderm fine structure and water transpiration properties, especially quantitative permeability studies so far unexplored in Arabidopsis, we followed a strategy based on the potato (cv Desirée). The potato is a model of choice for such studies because transgenic plants can be produced in reasonable time and sufficient amounts of periderm can easily be obtained from tubers for chemical and physiological studies (Vogt et al., 1983; Schreiber et al., 2005). Based on the CYP86A gene that was highlighted in cork oak periderm as a strong suberin candidate for aliphatic suberin biosynthesis, we isolated the putative ortholog in potato and used a reverse genetic approach to analyze the effects of down-regulation on the chemical and ultrastructural features of suberin and on the physiological properties of the tuber periderm. Our findings indicate that down-regulation of CYP86A33, as this gene was designated, results in a strong decrease of the ω-functionalized monomers in aliphatic suberin, which are necessary for the suberin typical lamellar organization and for the periderm resistance to water loss.  相似文献   

13.
The monomer composition of the esterified part of suberin can be determined using gas chromatography-mass spectroscopy technology and is accordingly believed to be well known. However, evidence was presented recently indicating that the suberin of green cotton (Gossypium hirsutum cv Green Lint) fibers contains substantial amounts of esterified glycerol. This observation is confirmed in the present report by a sodium dodecyl sulfate extraction of membrane lipids and by a developmental study, demonstrating the correlated accumulation of glycerol and established suberin monomers. Corresponding amounts of glycerol also occur in the suberin of the periderm of cotton stems and potato (Solanum tuberosum) tubers. A periderm preparation of wound-healing potato tuber storage parenchyma was further purified by different treatments. As the purification proceeded, the concentration of glycerol increased at about the same rate as that of α,ω-alkanedioic acids, the most diagnostic suberin monomers. Therefore, it is proposed that glycerol is a monomer of suberins in general and can cross-link aliphatic and aromatic suberin domains, corresponding to the electron-translucent and electron-opaque suberin lamellae, respectively. This proposal is consistent with the reported dimensions of the electron-translucent suberin lamellae.  相似文献   

14.
Indirect evidence suggests that vascular coatings formed by plants in response to stress consist of suberin-like substances containing lipid and phenolic compounds. To provide more direct chemical evidence that coatings are suberin, we used a natural pathogen, Verticillium albo-atrum, or a stress-responsive hormone, abscisic acid, to induce coating in two isolines of tomato (Lycopersicon esculentum L. cultivar Craigella) that are resistant or susceptible to the pathogen. Using treated petioles that had been monitored cytologically, chemical depolymerization followed by combined gas-liquid chromatography-mass spectrometry analysis of alkane-α,ω-diol levels confirmed the presence of suberin after induction of coating and showed quantitative differences between the isolines that correlated with cytological measurements of the coating response. Northern analysis of suberization-associated anionic peroxidase mRNA showed corresponding increases, and tissue blot analysis further indicated that induction of the mRNA was localized in the responding vascular bundles, as determined by suberin histochemistry. Taken together, these results provide chemical evidence that the coatings are mainly suberin.  相似文献   

15.
16.
Dean BB 《Plant physiology》1989,89(4):1021-1023
The effect of temperature on suberization of potato tuber tissue was measured by diffusive resistance and quantitative chemical procedures. The optimum temperature for formation of aliphatic suberin monomers and development of resistance to water vapor conduction was 26.4°C whereas alkane synthesis was optimal at 18.6°C. Low temperatures (<16.6°C) reduced suberin monomer production more than alkane synthesis.  相似文献   

17.
The composition of the aliphatics of the protective cuticular polymers from different anatomical regions from several plant species was determined by combined gas-liquid chromatography and mass spectrometry of the depolymerization products derived from the polymers. The polymer from the aerial parts of Vicia faba showed similar composition; dihydroxypalmitic acid was the major (>85%) component of the cutin covering leaves, petioles, flower petals and stem with smaller amounts of palmitic acid and ω-hydroxy palmitic acid. On the other hand, the chief components of the polymer from the tap root were ω-hydroxy C16:0 and C18:1 acids and/or the corresponding dicarboxylic acids. The positional isomer composition of the dihydroxy C16 acids was shown to be dependent upon anatomical location, developmental stage, and light. Apple cutin from rapidly expanding organs (flower petal and stigma) was shown to contain predominately C16 family acids whereas the C18 family dominated in cutin of slower growing organs (leaf and fruit). The composition of the aliphatic components of cutin found in the seed coats of pea, corn, barley, and lettuce was found to be similar to that of the cuticular polymer of the leaves in each species.  相似文献   

18.
Wounding of potato (Solanum tuberosum L.) tubers results in suberization, apparently triggered by the release of some chemical factor(s) at the cut surface. Suberization, as measured by diffusion resistance of the tissue surface to water vapor, was inhibited by mm concentrations of indoleacetic acid, unaffected by mm concentrations of traumatic acid, severely inhibited at μm concentrations of cytokinin, but stimulated by abscisic acid (ABA) at 10−4 m. Thorough washing of potato disks up to 3 to 4 days after cutting resulted in severe inhibition of suberization as measured both by diffusion resistance and by the amount of the octadecene diol generated by hydrogenolysis (LiAlH4) of the tissue. Disks washed after 4 days did not show any inhibition of suberization. High performance liquid chromatographic analysis of the wash from fresh potato disks showed that about 14 ng of ABA was released into the wash per g of tissue. The amount of ABA released increased with time up to 4 to 6 hours of washing. The maximal amount of ABA was washed out after aging for 24 hours and after 2 days of aging ABA could no longer be found in the surface wash of the disks. Addition of ABA to the media of potato tissue cultures resulted in suberin formation whereas control cultures contained little suberin. The effect of ABA on suberization in the tissue cultures was shown to be linearly concentration-dependent up to 10−4 m and a linear increase in suberin formation was seen up to about 8 days of culture growth on the media containing 10−4 m ABA. From these results it is proposed that during the early phase of wound-healing ABA plays a role in triggering a chain of biochemical processes which eventually (in about 3 to 4 days) result in the formation of a suberization-inducing factor, responsible for the induction of the enzymes involved in suberin biosynthesis.  相似文献   

19.
Free space iron pools in roots: generation and mobilization   总被引:21,自引:9,他引:12  
A rapid and simple method for the determination of a ferric iron pool in the free space of roots is described. Formation of this pool depended on the source of iron in the nutrient solution. During growth in water culture at pH 5 to 6 with Fe-ethylenediaminetetraacetate, a free space pool of 500 to 1000 nanomoles Fe per gram fresh weight was formed in the roots of bean (Phaseolus vulgaris L. var. Prélude), maize (Zea mays L. var. Capella), and chlorophytum (Chlorophytum comosum [Thunb.] Jacques). No significant pool (less than 100 nanomoles per gram fresh weight) was formed with ferrioxamine. Upon impending Fe deficiency, bean and chlorophytum were able to mobilize this pool. Fe-deficient bean plants mobilized iron from the free space iron pool of another plant in the same vessel.  相似文献   

20.
Suberin is a complex polymer composed of aliphatic and phenolic compounds. It is a constituent of apoplastic plant interfaces. In many plant species, including rice (Oryza sativa), the hypodermis in the outer part of roots forms a suberized cell wall (the Casparian strip and/or suberin lamellae), which inhibits the flow of water and ions and protects against pathogens. To date, there is no genetic evidence that suberin forms an apoplastic transport barrier in the hypodermis. We discovered that a rice reduced culm number1 (rcn1) mutant could not develop roots longer than 100 mm in waterlogged soil. The mutated gene encoded an ATP‐binding cassette (ABC) transporter named RCN1/OsABCG5. RCN1/OsABCG5 gene expression in the wild type was increased in most hypodermal and some endodermal roots cells under stagnant deoxygenated conditions. A GFP‐RCN1/OsABCG5 fusion protein localized at the plasma membrane of the wild type. Under stagnant deoxygenated conditions, well suberized hypodermis developed in wild types but not in rcn1 mutants. Under stagnant deoxygenated conditions, apoplastic tracers (periodic acid and berberine) were blocked at the hypodermis in the wild type but not in rcn1, indicating that the apoplastic barrier in the mutant was impaired. The amount of the major aliphatic suberin monomers originating from C28 and C30 fatty acids or ω‐OH fatty acids was much lower in rcn1 than in the wild type. These findings suggest that RCN1/OsABCG5 has a role in the suberization of the hypodermis of rice roots, which contributes to formation of the apoplastic barrier.  相似文献   

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