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 15 毫秒
1.
Smith S  Stewart GR 《Plant physiology》1990,94(3):1472-1476
The hemi-parasite Striga hermonthica, exhibits an anomalous pattern of stomatal response, stomata remaining open in darkness and when subjected to water stress. This suggests irregularity in stomatal response due to malfunction of the stomatal mechanism. To test this suggestion guard cells were isolated from the effects of surrounding cells, by incubating epidermal strips at low pH. These stomata responded rapidly to low CO2 concentrations, darkness, and ABA. Thus, a paradox exists between stomatal behavior observed in whole leaves and that in isolated guard cells. However, when incubated in the presence of high potassium concentrations (>200 millimolar KCl) stomatal responses in epidermal strips resembled those found in whole leaves, with enhanced opening and reduced closing responses. It is suggested that the anomalous behavior of stomata in Striga and other leafy hemiparasites can be explained by the modulatory effects of high potassium concentrations which accumulate in the leaves as a consequence of high transpiration rates and the lack of a retranslocation system.  相似文献   

2.
C. K. Pallaghy 《Planta》1971,101(4):287-295
Summary The correlation between stomatal action and potassium movement in the epidermis of Zea mays was examined in isolated epidermal strips floated on distilled water. Stomatal opening in the isolated epidermis is reversible in response to alternate periods of light or darkness, and is always correlated with a shift in the potassium content of the guard cells. K accumulates in guard cells during stomatal opening, and moves from the guard cells into the subsidiary cells during rapid stomatal closure. When epidermal strips are illuminated in normal air, as against CO2-free air, the stomata do not open and there is a virtually complete depletion of K from the stomatal apparatus. In darkness CO2-containing air inhibits stomatal opening and K accumulation in guard cells, but does not lead to a depletion of K from the stomata as observed in the light.  相似文献   

3.
K+ and Cl contents of guard cells and of ordinary epidermal cells were determined in epidermal samples of Allium cepa L. by electron probe microanalysis; malate contents of the same samples were determined by enzymic oxidation. KCl was, in general, the major osmoticum in guard cells, irrespective of whether stomata had opened on leaves or in epidermal strips floating on solutions. The solute requirement varied between 50 and 110 femtomoles KCl per micrometer increase in aperture per pair of guard cells. Stomata did not open on solutions of K iminodiacetate, presumably because its anion could not be taken up. Stomata opened if KCl or KBr was provided. Taken together, the results indicate that the absence of starch from guard cells deprived them of the ability to produce malate in amounts of osmotic consequence and that the presence of absorbable Cl (or Br) was necessary for stomatal opening.  相似文献   

4.
The concentration of potassium chloride required in the incubation medium to open stomata in isolated epidermal tissues of Commelina communis L. and Vicia faba L. could be lowered from 100 mM to 10 mM if the proton concentration of the ambient solution was increased from pH 5.6 to pH 3.5. This acidification effect was formerly attributed to the destruction of epidermal and subsidiary cells resulting in a relief of back pressure upon guard cells. While guard cells remain viable at pH 3.5, as demonstrated by their susceptibility to inhibition by uptake of glucose or to uncoupling by DNP, incipient destruction of the cells surrounding them could first be observed 30 min after the onset of the incubation experiment. By this time, however, the stomata had already opened; the time course of stomatal opening at pH 3.5 did not show any lag phase corresponding to the time required for damaging epidermal cells and showed no difference to that at pH 5.6 Thus, the acid-stimulated opening of stomata appears to be a biphasic phenomenon consisting of a physiologic effect onto which the physical effect of the relief of back pressure is superimposed over longer periods of incubation. To interpret the physiologic role of an increased proton concentration in the ambient solution of isolated epidermal strips, it is suggested that guard cells take up protons and chloride ions in an electroneutral symport. While protons are extruded again to generate the negative membrane potential required for potassium influx, chloride ions are retained to maintain electroneutrality.  相似文献   

5.
Accumulation of malate in guard cells of Vicia faba during stomatal opening   总被引:4,自引:3,他引:1  
W. G. Allaway 《Planta》1973,110(1):63-70
Summary The level of malate in the epidermis from illuminated leaves of Vicia faba was greater than in that from dark-treated leaves. A difference in the malate level was still detected after the epidermis had been treated by rolling so that only the guard cells remained alive. The results suggest that malate may accumulate in guard cells on illumination. In subsequent experiments, stomatal apertures were measured, and potassium as well as malate was analysed in extracts of epidermis. In illuminated leaves, the potassium content of rolled epidermis increased from about 90 to about 335 picoequivalents mm-2 of epidermis whele malate increased from about zero to about 71 pmoles mm-2 and the stomata opened; in dark-treated leaves, the potassium content of rolled epidermis decreased slightly, the malate level remained about zero, and the stomata showed very slight further closure. The measured increase in potassium is likely to represent an increase in potassium concentration in the guard cells of about 0.4 Eq l-1 with stomatal opening; the increase in malate could correspond to 0.23 Eq l-1 (with respect to potassium) in the guard cells. Thus, malate accumulating in guard cells could balance about half of the potassium taken up by guard cells when stomata open in the light.  相似文献   

6.
Fischer RA 《Plant physiology》1968,43(12):1947-1952
This paper reports a consistent and large opening response to light + CO2-free air in living stomata of isolated epidermal strips of Vicia faba. The response was compared to that of non-isolated stomata in leaf discs floating on water; stomatal apertures, guard cell solute potentials and starch contents were similar in the 2 situations. To obtain such stomatal behavior, it was necessary to float epidermal strips on dilute KCl solutions. This suggests that solute uptake is necessary for stomatal opening.

The demonstration of normal stomatal behavior in isolated epidermal strips provides a very useful system in which to investigate the mechanism of stomatal opening. It was possible to show independent responses in stomatal aperture to light and to CO2-free air.

  相似文献   

7.
The study of the structure-activity relationship of phenoliccompounds in reversing the ABA-effect on stomata led us to investigatethe changes in K+ concentrations in guard cells and in the epidermaldiffusive resistance of leaves, after treatment with ABA andphenolics. The amount of potassium localized in guard cells usually correspondsto stomatal aperture in different treatments. Umbelliferone,however, permits stomatal opening without retention of potassiumin the guard cells, which is an exception. The effect of phenolicsin retaining K+ in epidermal peels is matched by recorded epidermaldiffusive resistance changes in the leaves.Although flavonoidsand some other phenolics behave differently showing recoveryin epidermal peels with K+ in guard cells, epidermal diffusiveresistance is not recovered. Key words: Epidermal diffusive resistance, K+, ABA, phenolics, stomata  相似文献   

8.
Abstract Previous work with clones of Populus trichocarpa demonstrated that the water vapour conductance of leaves from well-watered cuttings of this species does not decline with loss of turgor from the bulk leaf. In the present study, stomatal responses to water potential in Populus were examined with detached epidermal strips. Stomata in epidermal strips from well-watered plants of P. trichocarpa did not close at low water potentials which led to plasmolysis of the guard cells. In contrast, stomata of P. deltoides and a P. trichocarpa×deltoides hybrid closed when the guard cells lost turgor. A period of water stress preconditioning resulted in modified stomatal responses in P. trichocarpa such that stomata of stressed and re-watered plants nearly closed when guard cell turgor was lost.  相似文献   

9.
《Plant Science Letters》1976,6(2):111-115
Abscisic acid (ABA) inhibited the light-induced opening of stomata in isolated epidermal strips of Commelina benghalensis. It did not alter stomatal closure in the dark. The ABA-induced inhibition in light was released under conditions conducive for cyclic photophosphorylation and remarkably reversed by ATP in the presence of pyruvate. Cyclic photophosphorylation rates of isolated guard cell chloroplasts were significantly reduced by ABA. It is proposed that the direct effect of ABA on stomatal opening was mediated in two ways: (1) by inhibition of cyclic photophosphorylation activities of guard cell chloroplasts and (2) by blocking organic acid formation in guard cells.  相似文献   

10.
Despite the observation first made by von Mohl in 1856, thatepidermal cells greatly influence stomatal aperture, subsequentstudies have failed to pay adequate attention to epidermal cellviability or to quantify the degree of its influence on aperturein epidermal strips and leaf sections. Using Vicia faba stripsand leaf sections we found the following: (i) a non-linear relationshipbetween aperture and guard cell contact with live epidermalcells; (ii) epidermal cell viability on isolated strips hada threshold at about 25 °C; (iii) epidermal strips withdead epidermal cells had wider apertures and lower variabilitythan strips with live cells or intact leaf sections; (iv) afterepidermal cell viability was accounted for, stomatal aperturesshowed no significant differences between isolated strips orstrips removed from leaf sections treated in the same manner;(v) highly variable apertures appeared to be the normal conditionof the intact leaf. Caution should therefore be used in interpretingstomatal behaviour from epidermal strips without first takinginto account mechanical interactions between the guard and surroundingepidermal cells. Vicia faba L, broad bean, epidermal strips, leaf impressions, stomata, guard cells, temperature effects  相似文献   

11.
Fluorescence microscopy indicated that chlorophyll was absentfrom epidermal and guard cells overlying all white areas andgreen areas (of certain leaves) in variegated leaves of Pelargoniumzonale, cv. Chelsea Gem. Stomata with chlorophyll-free guardcells, in general, responded normally to light and CO2 as gaugedby direct measurements of stomatal aperture and by transpirationalwater loss studies, although stomata from white regions of variegatedleaves were more reluctant to open than stomata from green regionsof the leaves. Thus, functional stomata without guard cell chloroplastshave been discovered in another genus, namely Pelargonium, besidesthat originally discovered in Paphiopedilum. When stomata withchlorophyll-free guard cells opened, K+ accumulated in the guardcells. This indicates that chloroplasts are not essential forthe normal functioning of stomata and that the energy sourcefor driving stomatal movements can come from sources other thanphotophosphorylation. Key words: Guard cell chloroplasts, Leaf chimera, Pelargonium, Stomata  相似文献   

12.
Circadian Stomatal Rhythms in Epidermal Peels from Vicia faba   总被引:6,自引:4,他引:2       下载免费PDF全文
Circadian rhythms in stomatal aperture and in stomatal conductance have been observed previously. Here we investigate circadian rhythms in apertures that persist in functionally isolated guard cells in epidermal peels of Vicia faba, and we compare these rhythms with rhythms in stomatal conductance in attached leaves. Functionally isolated guard cells kept in constant light display a rhythmic change in aperture superimposed on a continuous opening trend. The rhythm free-runs with a period of about 22 hours and is temperature compensated between 20 and 30°C. Functionally isolated guard cell pairs are therefore capable of sustaining a true circadian rhythm without interaction with mesophyll cells. Stomatal conductance in whole leaves displays a more robust rhythm, also temperature-compensated, and with a period similar to that observed for the rhythm in stomatal aperture in epidermal peels. When analyzed individually, some stomata in epidermal peels showed a robust rhythm for several days while others showed little rhythmicity or damped out rapidly. Rhythmic periods may vary between individual stomata, and this may lead to desynchronization within the population.  相似文献   

13.
Humidity Responses of Stomata and the Potassium Content of Guard Cells   总被引:5,自引:0,他引:5  
Humidity responses of stomata and changes in the potassium contentof their guard cells were investigated in intact plants anddetached epidermal strips of Valerianella locusta (L.) Betcke.Potassium content was determined by Macallum‘s stain.It was found that changes in stomatal aperture caused by decreasingor increasing humidity were followed only after a delay by changesin the potassium content of the guard cells. By comparison,if stomatal movements occurred in response to changes in illuminationthe relative potassium content of the guard cells correlatedcontinuously with the changes in stomatal aperture. Since thepotassium content of the guard cells changed only after mostof the stomatal movements in response to changes in humiditywere completed changes in potassium content and humidity responsesof stomata can be described as following a hysteresis curve.  相似文献   

14.
Commelina communis stomata closed within 1 h of transferring intact plants from 27 degrees C to 7 degrees C, whereas tobacco (Nicotiana rustica) stomata did not until the leaves wilted. Abscisic acid (ABA) did not mediate cold-induced C. communis stomatal closure: At low temperatures, bulk leaf ABA did not increase; ABA did not preferentially accumulate in the epidermis; its flux into detached leaves was lower; its release from isolated epidermis was not greater; and stomata in epidermal strips were less sensitive to exogenous ABA. Stomata of both species in epidermal strips on large volumes of cold KCl failed to close unless calcium was supplied. Therefore, the following cannot be triggers for cold-induced stomatal closure in C. communis: direct effects of temperature on guard or epidermal cells, long-distance signals, and effects of temperature on photosynthesis. Low temperature increased stomatal sensitivity to external CaCl(2) by 50% in C. communis but only by 20% in tobacco. C. communis stomata were 300- to 1,000-fold more sensitive to calcium at low temperature than tobacco stomata, but tobacco epidermis only released 13.6-fold more calcium into bathing solutions than C. communis. Stomata in C. communis epidermis incubated on ever-decreasing volumes of cold calcium-free KCl closed on the lowest volume (0.2 cm(3)) because the epidermal apoplast contained enough calcium to mediate closure if this was not over diluted. We propose that the basis of cold-induced stomatal closure exhibited by intact C. communis leaves is increased apoplastic calcium uptake by guard cells. Such responses do not occur in chill-sensitive tobacco leaves.  相似文献   

15.
In an attempt to determine whether low epidermal conductances to water vapor diffusion of senescing leaves were caused by internal changes in guard cells or by factors external to guard cells, stomatal behavior was examined in intact senescing and nonsenescing leaves of Nicotiana glauca (Graham), tree tobacco, grown in the field or in an environmental chamber. Conductances of senescing leaves were 5 to 10% of the maximum conductances of nonsenescing leaves of the same plant, yet guard cell duplexes isolated from epidermal peels of senescing leaves developed full turgor in the light in solutions containing KCl, and sodium cobaltinitrite staining showed that K+ accumulated as turgor developed. Ninety-five per cent of the guard cells isolated from senescing leaves concentrated neutral red and excluded trypan blue. Intercellular leaf CO2 concentrations of senescing and nonsenescing leaves of chamber-grown plants were not significantly different (about 240 microliters per liter), but the potassium contents of adaxial and abaxial epidermes of senescing leaves taken from plants grown in the field were less than half those of nonsenescing leaves. We conclude that guard cells do not undergo the orderly senescence process that characteristically takes place in mesophyll tissue during whole-leaf senescence and that the reduced conductances of senescing leaves are produced by factors external to guard cells.  相似文献   

16.
The effect of mannitol, glucose and sucrose on the stomatal behaviour of two desert species,Merremia aegyptia andM. dissecta has been studied. Stomatal opening did not uniformly depend on the decrease in turgor of the epidermal and subsidiary cells caused by the different osmotic potential of the sugars. Sucrose caused plasmolysis of the subsidiary cells only but this was not accompanied by the opening of the stomatal pore. InM. aegyptia, no plasmolysis was seen either in epidermal or subsidiary cells, even the stomata opened; inM. dissecta, on the other hand, plasmolysis occurred in these cells without any stomatal opening, after incubation in glucose or mannitol. Mannitol is least absorbed, glucose slightly more and sucrose is absorbed to a very large extent in the guard cells when the materials were inoubated in the respective sugar solutions. However, the absorption of these three sugars was almost always larger in isolated epidermal strips than in discs; in detached intact leaves it was still more reduced.  相似文献   

17.
Osmoregulation in opening stomata of epidermal peels from Vicia faba L. leaves was investigated under a variety of experimental conditions. The K+ content of stomatal guard cells and the starch content of guard cell chloroplasts were examined with cobaltinitrite and iodine-potassium iodide stains, respectively; stomatal apertures were measured microscopically. Red light (50 micromoles per square meter per second) irradiation caused a net increase of 3.1 micrometers in aperture and a decrease of −0.4 megapascals in guard cell osmotic potential over a 5 hour incubation, but histochemical observations showed no increase in guard cell K+ content or starch degradation in guard cell chloroplasts. At 10 micromoles per square meter per second, blue light caused a net 6.8 micrometer increase in aperture over 5 hours and there was a substantial decrease in starch content of chloroplasts but no increase in guard cell K+ content. At 25 micromoles per square meter per second of blue light, apertures increased faster (net gain of 5.7 micrometers after 1 hour) and starch content decreased. About 80% of guard cells had a higher K+ content after 1 hour of incubation but that fraction decreased to 10% after 5 hours. In the absence of KCl in the incubation medium, stomata opened slowly in response to 25 micomoles per square meter per second of blue light, without any K+ gain or starch loss. In dual beam experiments, stomata irradiated with 50 micomoles per square meter per second of red light for 3 hours opened without detectable starch loss or K+ gain; addition of 25 micomoles per square meter per second of blue light caused a further net gain of 4.4 micometers in aperture accompanied by substantial K+ uptake and starch loss. Comparison of K+ content in guard cells of opened stomata in epidermal peels with those induced to open in leaf discs showed a substantially higher K+ content in the intact tissue than in isolated peels. These results are not consistent with K+ (and its counterions) as the universal osmoticum in guard cells of open stomata under all conditions; rather, the data point to sugars arising from photosynthesis and from starch degradation as additional osmotica. Biochemical confirmation of these findings would indicate that osmoregulation during stomatal opening is the result of three key metabolic processes: ion transport, photosynthesis, and sugar metabolism.  相似文献   

18.
The effects of preillumination were investigated on ion-stimulated stomatal opening of epidermal strips isolated from Commelina communis L. leaves, which are dark-starved 24 hours or more. The rate and the extent of ion-stimulated stomatal openings were increased by preexposure of epidermal strips to light. The evidences are interpreted as indicating that the energy induced by preillumination can be conserved in guard cells for considerable time periods and then used for a delayed stomatal opening in the presence of higher concentration of potassium or sodium ions. Action spectrum showed two peaks, one in blue and one in the red light region. The ratio of the blue peak to the red peak is 1.2; which is the smallest reported value in action spectra of stomatal movements. 3-(4-chlorophenyl)-1,-1-Dimethylurea suppressed the ion-stimulated stomatal opening induced by the preillumination. We conclude that the photosynthetic electron transport system, containing photosystem II, in guard cell chloroplasts is a basic system of energy acquirement for stomatal opening.  相似文献   

19.
The effect of sulfite and arsenite on stomatal opening and light modulation of enzymes was examined in isolated epidermal strips of Pisum sativum L. var Little Marvel leaves. Sulfite or arsenite at 10 micromolar rapidly inhibited the stomatal opening process in light. Light activation of phosphoenolpyruvate carboxylase and NADP-malate dehydrogenase was completely diminished when the epidermal strips were incubated for 2 hours in light with either sulfite or arsenite at 10 micromolar. The data obtained suggest that the inhibition of stomatal opening by sulfite or arsenite in light might result from the inhibition of light modulation of key enzymes in guard cells.  相似文献   

20.
The wilty tomato mutant flacca and the normal variety RheinlandsRuhm were compared in terms of: (1) potassium transport intoand out of the guard cells, (2) cell wall properties which includeprotein, hydroxyproline and peroxidase activity, and (3) activityof indol-3yl-acetic acid oxidase. Also studied were the effectsof auxin on stomatal behaviour and peroxidase activity whenapplied to normal plants during development, and the short-termeffect of abscisic acid on the resistance of flacca stomatato closure under plasmolysis. Potassium transport, wall protein and hydroxyproline all seemedto be equal in mutant and normal plants. Peroxidase activitywas higher in the soluble and wall fractions of the mutant,and decreased toward normal in the mutant treated with abscisicacid. More stomata were open and peroxidase activity was higherin normal plants treated with auxin during development. Thepercentage of open stomata under plasmolysis was lower and theiraperture size was smaller in the epidermal strips taken fromabscisic-acid-treated mutant plants than from control mutantplants.  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