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1.
Abstract

The ultrastructure of sieve tubes in leaf petioles of HEDERA HELIX. — The structural organization of the sieve elements in Hedera leaf petiole at the beginning of the second year of life has been studied. At this stage of life the sieve tubes are completely developed, but still in full activity.

Their plasmatic structures, though altered, show that they are still alive. The cytoplasm forms a parietal layer; mitochondria, endoplasmic reticulum and plastids are present although very peculiar in aspect. The cytoplasm is bounded externally by a plasmalemma; on the contrary no tonoplast is detectable.

The data reported in this paper are favourable to the idea of an active partecipation of the sieve tubes in the translocation of organic solutes, in agreement with the findings concerning the oat coleoptile.  相似文献   

2.
A close sheathing of the plastids by endoplasmic reticulum has been observed. This is restricted to the companion cells and developing sieve tubes of the phloem of Acer pseudoplatanus and the resin canal cells and leaf callus cells from Pinus pinea. The sheathing is transitory in callus and sieve tubes but is a permanent feature of the companion and the resin canal cells. Possible functional relationships between the two organelles are discussed.  相似文献   

3.
A study has been made by electron microscopy of the fine structureof the peti-olar sieve tubes of the water plant Nymphoides peltatum.These are found to have very well-developed nacreous walls.The pores of the sieve plates appear to be filled in functioningsieve tubes with densely staining cytoplasm. The peripheralcytoplasm of the sieve tubes seems to contain an extensive developmentof the endoplasmic reticulum, whose elements become finer nearthe plates and crowd together through the pores. These findingsappear to be compatible with more than one theory of translocation,including the electro-osmotic theory of mass flow.  相似文献   

4.
Summary Haustoria ofCuscuta odorata R. & P. andC. grandiflora H.B.K. show continuous traces of sieve elements, connecting the phloem of the host with that of theCuscuta shoot. The continuity of this haustorial phloem is discernible by callose fluorescence after staining with aniline blue. The fine structural criteria for sieve tubes are analyzed electronmicroscopically, with special respect to sieve pores, P-protein, and a distinct wall-standing smooth surfaced ER. Within the central part of the haustorium sieve tubes are elongated, while the elements abutting the phloem of theCuscuta shoot are nearly isodiametric in shape. Both elements are associated with rather large companion cells, derived from an unequal division.
  相似文献   

5.
The physiological phloem equivalents, leptoids, of the polytrichaceous moss Atrichum undulatum appear to be similar to the nacreous sieve elements that occur in many higher plants. These leptoids are elongated cells with nacreous thickenings on their radial and tangential walls. Their oblique end walls, which lack such thickenings, are traversed by numerous pores through which the plasmalemma, endoplasmic reticulum, and cytoplasm are continuous between adjacent leptoids of a longitudinal file. These end walls closely resemble the simple sieve areas of the sieve elements found in Polypodium vulgare. The leptoid sieve pores have a median expanded area and frequently are occluded by small amorphous protein plugs at each end. Also, callose was observed as electron-luscent areas both on the faces of the end walls and as a thin cylinder surrounding the lateral area of each pore. Amorphous and granular cytoplasmic contents of the leptoids appear to be morphologically similar to the slime (P-protein) found in the sieve-tube elements of many angiosperms. Differentiating leptoids are characterized by the formation of numerous membrane-bound protein bodies in close association with polysomes and endoplasmic reticulum. As the leptoid matures, the contents of the protein bodies become dispersed in the cytoplasm. Ultrastructurally and ontogenetically the leptoids in the gametophores of A. undulatum appear almost identical to the sieve elements of P. vulgare and therefore should be considered sieve elements rather than phloem-like equivalents.  相似文献   

6.
Summary The distribution of adenosine triphosphatase (ATPase) activity in the phloem of petioles and minor veins of Cucurbita maxima has been studied using a lead phosphate precipitation procedure. ATPase activity was localized in sieve elements, companion cells and parenchyma cells. Activity was found at the cell surfaces, associated with the dispersed P-protein of mature sieve elements, in mitochondria, sieve-element reticulum, and at specific regions of the cell walls. It is suggested that the ATPase at the phloem cell surfaces may function in intercellular transport of assimilates or ions, and that the ATPase activity associated with the P-protein may function in the translocation process or in callose deposition.  相似文献   

7.
Abstract

Electron microscopical observations of the phloem of Brassica chinensis L. leaves, healthy or infected by turnip yellow mosaic virus, have shown that the «slime», characteristic proteic component of the sieve cell protoplast, is present as tubules or fibrils, free in the cellular cytoplasm or localized in the cisternae of the endoplasmic reticulum. In this paper it was thought to follow the ontogensis and evolution of the «slime» in parallel with the differentiation of the sieve tube and at the same time to contribute to the solution of the problem concerning the origin and probable function of this proteic material.  相似文献   

8.
Summer and winter (July and January) samples of secondary phloem of Tilia americana were studied with the electron microscope. Parenchyma cells contain: nuclei, endoplasmic reticulum, ribosomes, plastids, mitochondria and occasional dictyosomes. Well-defined tonoplasts separate vacuoles from cytoplasmic ground substance. Vacuoles often contain tannins. Lipid droplets are common in cytoplasm. Endoplasmic reticulum–connected plasmodesmata are aggregated in primary pit fields. Companion cells differ from parenchyma cells in having numerous sieve-element connections, possibly slime, and in lacking plastids. Mature, enucleate sieve elements possess 1–4 extruded nucleoli. Numerous vesicles occupy a mostly parietal position in association with plasmalemma. The mature sieve element lacks endoplasmic reticulum, organelles (except for few mitochondria) and tonoplast. In OsO4– and glutaraldehyde-fixed elements, slime has a fine, fibrillar appearance. Normally, these fine fibrils are organized into coarser ones which form strands that traverse the cell and the plasmalemma-lined pores of sieve plates and lateral sieve areas.  相似文献   

9.
At maturity the companion cell of the phloem of the sycamore Acer pseudoplatanus has a large nucleus, simple plastids closely sheathed with rough endoplasmic reticulum, and numerous mitochondria. The cytoplasm contains numerous ribosomes, resulting in a very electron-opaque cytoplasm after permanganate fixation. Bodies similar to the spherosomes of Frey-Wyssling et al. (4) are collected in clusters and these also contain bodies of an unidentified nature similar to those found by Buttrose (1) in the aleurone cells of the wheat grain. The pores through the wall between the companion cell and sieve tube are complex and develop from a single plasmodesma. Eight to fifteen plasmodesmata on the companion cell side communicate individually with a cavity in the centre of the wall which is linked to the sieve tube by a single pore about twice the diameter of an individual plasmodesma. This pore is lined with material of an electron opacity equivalent to that of material bounding the sieve plate pores. The development of the cell organelles, the possible role played in the phloem tissue by the companion cell, and the function of the complex pores contained in its wall are discussed.  相似文献   

10.

Background  

The phloem of dicotyledonous plants contains specialized P-proteins (phloem proteins) that accumulate during sieve element differentiation and remain parietally associated with the cisternae of the endoplasmic reticulum in mature sieve elements. Wounding causes P-protein filaments to accumulate at the sieve plates and block the translocation of photosynthate. Specialized, spindle-shaped P-proteins known as forisomes that undergo reversible calcium-dependent conformational changes have evolved exclusively in the Fabaceae. Recently, the molecular characterization of three genes encoding forisome components in the model legume Medicago truncatula (MtSEO1, MtSEO2 and MtSEO3; SEO = sieve element occlusion) was reported, but little is known about the molecular characteristics of P-proteins in non-Fabaceae.  相似文献   

11.
A. Schulz 《Planta》1987,170(3):289-299
Experimental interruption of the root stele of Pisum sativum L. induces in the cortex tissue the development of wound-sieve tubes which bridge the wound and reconnect the vascular stumps. Outside the stele, sieve plates arise from primary pit fields. This origin is confirmed by the distribution of future sieve pores over the original parenchyma cell wall and by remnants of the pitfield cavity in developing sieve plates. Differentiation of wound-sieve elements is similar to that of bundle-sieve elements and includes the chromatolytic disintegration of nuclei as well as the development of typical sieve pores arising from pit-field plasmodesmata. The completion of first woundsieve tubes (indicated by a continuous chain of anilin-blue-positive sieve plates by-passing the wound) was observed 55–62 h after wounding. However, effective translocation, visualized with fluoresceine as a phloem-mobile marker, was not found until 10 h (on average) later. It is suggested that this time delay corresponds to the maturing of the last link within a chain of wound-sieve-tube members. Presumably, enucleate sieve elements with widened pores are a prerequisite for effective phloem translocation.Abbreviations DAPI 4,6-diamidino-2-phenylindole·2 H2O - ER endoplasmic reticulum Preliminary results of this investigation have been presented at the International Phloem Transport Conference in Asilomar, Cal., USA 1985 (cf. Schulz 1986c)  相似文献   

12.
ESAU  KATHERINE 《Annals of botany》1973,37(3):625-632
The phloem of Mimosa pudica L. furnishes an example of definablediversification of the parenchymatic members of the tissue intocompanion cells and parenchyma cells. The companion cells havedense protoplasts which contain the typical organelles of plantcells, including chloroplasts and many ribosomes. The sieveelements and companion cells are interconnected by numerousbranched plasmodesmata. The companion cells degenerate whenthe associated sieve elements cease to function. The parenchymacells have less dense protoplasts than the companion cells.In many parenchyma cells the rough endoplasmic reticulum assumesa tubular form, and bundles of microfilaments are present. Thecytoplasmic ribosomes occur in groups apparently held togetherby fibrils. Chloroplasts, mitochondria (some are exceptionallylong), dictyosomes, microbodies, and microtubules are the othercell components. Whether the parenchyma cells are ontogeneticallyrelated to the sieve elements or not, they do not degeneratewhen the sieve element ceases to function.  相似文献   

13.
In minor veins of leaves of Beta vulgaris L. (sugar beet) yellows virus particles were found both in parenchyma cells and in mature sieve elements. In parenchyma cells the particles were usually confined to the cytoplasm, that is, they were absent from the vacuoles. In the sieve elements, which at maturity have no vacuoles, the particles were scattered throughout the cell. In dense aggregations the particles tended to assume an orderly arrangement in both parenchyma cells and sieve elements. Most of the sieve elements containing virus particles had mitochondria, plastids, endoplasmic reticulum, and plasma membrane normal for mature sieve elements. Some sieve elements, however, showed evidence of degeneration. Virus particles were present also in the pores of the sieve plates, the plasmodesmata connecting the sieve elements with parenchyma cells, and the plasmodesmata between parenchyma cells. The distribution of the virus particles in the phloem of Beta is compatible with the concept that plant viruses move through the phloem in the sieve tubes and that this movement is a passive transport by mass flow. The observations also indicate that the beet yellows virus moves from cell to cell and in the sieve tube in the form of complete particles, and that this movement may occur through sieve-plate pores in the sieve tube and through plasmodesmata elsewhere.  相似文献   

14.
Summary The stem ofPotamogeton natans is characterized by a central stelar vascular system with reduced xylem and abundant phloem. Wide sieve tubes composed of short sieve-tube members joined by simple sieve plates and associated with companion cells establish an effective conduit for assimilates. At each node the phloem forms a network of parallel sieve elements connecting the stem phloem to leaf and bud traces. InP. natans an axillary bud rarely develops into a side branch, its procambial vascular bundles are each connected to the nodal complex via separate anastomoses. Their most unusual components are the anastomosai sieve elements (ANSE), characterized by thin cell walls pitted all over by tiny callose-lined pores resembling plasmodesmata, which can be detected as bright areas by fluorescence microscopy after staining with aniline blue. Several layers of ANSE make up the centre of an anastomosis and link to both the nodal and bud stelar sieve tubes via mediating (MSE) and connecting sieve elements (CSE). The ultrastructural differentiation of ANSE, MSE, and CSE corresponds to that of normal sieve elements, i.e., in the mature stage they are enucleate, evacuolate, and have lost most of their cytoplasm. Their plastids are of form-P2c, containing many cuneate protein crystals, typical of monocotyledonous sieve elements. Quantitative aspects of the pore areas are discussed in relation to the functional significance of bud anastomoses.Abbreviations ANSE anastomosai sieve elements - CSE connecting sieve elements - FM fluorescence microscopy - LM light microscopy - MSE mediating sieve elements - TEM transmission electron microscopy Dedicated to Professor Dr. Rainer Kollmann on the occasion of his retirement  相似文献   

15.
Summary The minor veins ofCucurbita pepo leaves were examined as part of a continuing study of leaf development and phloem transport in this species. The minor veins are bicollateral along their entire length. Mature sieve elements are enucleate and lack ribosomes. There is no tonoplast. The sieve elements, which are joined to each other by sieve plates, contain mitochondria, plastids and endoplasmic reticulum as well as fibrillar and tubular (190–195 diameter) P-protein. Fibrillar P-protein is dispersed in mature abaxial sieve elements but remains aggregated as discrete bodies in mature adaxial sieve elements. In both abaxial and adaxial mature sieve elements tubular P-protein remains undispersed. Sieve pores in abaxial sieve elements are narrow, lined with callose and are filled with P-protein. In adaxial sieve elements they are wide, contain little callose and are unobstructed. The intermediary cells (companion cells) of the abaxial phloem are large and dwarf the diminutive sieve elements. Intermediary cells are densely filled with ribosomes and contain numerous small vacuoles and many mitochondria which lie close to the plasmalemma. An unusually large number of plasmodesmata traverse the common wall between intermediary cells and bundle sheath cells suggesting that the pathway for the transport of photosynthate from the mesophyll to the sieve elements is at least partially symplastic. Adaxial companion cells are of approximately the same diameter as the adaxial sieve elements. They are densely packed with ribosomes and have a large central vacuole. They are not conspicuously connected by plasmodesmata to the bundle sheath.  相似文献   

16.
Abstract

CARBOHYDRATE TRANSLOCATION IN HIGHER PLANTS. I. - BIOCHEMICAL ASPECTS. — The concentration of soluble sugars and of hexose phosphates and the activity of several enzymes involved in hexose activation and polysaccaride synthesis have been investigated, separately, in the phloematic tissue and in the medullar parenchyma of Cucurbita Pepo internodes.

In the phloematic tissue (including sieve tubes, companion cells and phloematic parenchyma) the concentration of free hexoses appeared of about 50% lower, and that of glucose-6-P and of sucrose of about 100% higher then in the medullar parenchyma. Consistent amounts of raffinose were found only in the phloematic tissue. Paper chromatograms of the sieve tube exudate showed the presence of raffinose and sucrose in a ratio close to unity, and no appreciable amounts of free hexoses.

Determination of enzyme activity on preparations obtained from homogenates from the two types of tissue by repeated ammonium sulfate precipitation showed in the phloematic tissue a high activity of the enzymes hexokinase, UDP-kinase, UDPG-pyrophosphorylase and inorganic pyrophosphatase. The presence in the same tissue of galactosekinase, UDP-Gal-pyrophosphorylase and UDPG-epimerase was also ascertained.

On a protein basis, the activity of UDPG-pyrophosphorylase, inorganic pyrophosphatase and hexokinase appared about 3 times higher in the phloematic tissue than in the parenchyma; while this difference between the two tissues was not so marked for phosphofructokinase, and very small for other enzymes such as ATP-ase and phosphomono-esterase.

These results suggest that the very high activity, in the phloem cells neighbouring the sieve tubes, of the enzyme system catalyzing oligopolysaccaride synthesis could be an important component of the mechanism involved in the accumulation of oligopolysaccarides in the sieve tubes, and thus in sugar translocation. A scheme is proposed according to which the ATP and UTP energy would be utilized by the phloem cells to reach and to maintein a concentration of soluble sugars consistently higher than that prevailing in the contiguous tissues.  相似文献   

17.
The conducting elements of phloem in angiosperms are a complex of two cell types, sieve elements and companion cells, that form a single developmental and functional unit. During ontogeny of the sieve element/companion cell complex, specific proteins accumulate forming unique structures within sieve elements. Synthesis of these proteins coincides with vascular development and was studied in Cucurbita seedlings by following accumulation of the phloem lectin (PP2) and its mRNA by RNA blot analysis, enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay, immunocytochemistry and in␣situ hybridization. Genes encoding PP2 were developmentally regulated during vascular differentiation in hypocotyls of Cucurbita maxima Duch. Accumulation of PP2 mRNA and protein paralleled one another during hypocotyl elongation, after which mRNA levels decreased, while the protein appeared to be stable. Both PP2 and its mRNA were initially detected during metaphloem differentiation. However, PP2 mRNA was detected in companion cells of both bundle and extrafascicular phloem, but never in differentiating sieve elements. At later stages of development, PP2 mRNA was most often observed in extrafascicular phloem. In developing stems of Cucurbita moschata L., PP2 was immunolocalized in companion cells but not to filamentous phloem protein (P-protein) bodies that characterize immature sieve elements of bundle phloem. In contrast, PP2 was immunolocalized to persistent ␣ P-protein bodies in sieve elements of the extrafascicular phloem. Immunolocalization of PP2 in mature wound sieve elements was similar to that in bundle phloem. It appears that PP2 is synthesized in companion cells, then transported into differentiated sieve elements where it is a component of P-protein filaments in bundle phloem and persistent P-protein bodies in extrafascicular phloem. This differential accumulation in bundle and extrafascicular elements may result from different functional roles of the two types of phloem. Received: 31 July 1996 / Accepted: 27 August 1996  相似文献   

18.
Endoplasmic reticulum aggregates of ordered structure   总被引:2,自引:1,他引:1  
F. B. P. Wooding 《Planta》1967,76(2):205-208
Summary Membranous bodies with a quasi-crystalline arrangement are present in Acer stem phloem. They only occur in developing sieve elements and are formed by the association of originally randomly arranged endoplasmic reticulum cisternae.  相似文献   

19.
Sieve tubes in metaphloem of palm stems function throughout the life of the plant and merit close investigation. A stem of Sabal palmetto estimated to be 50 years old was sampled extensively. Variation in length of sieve-tube elements throughout this stem was measured and is discussed. In the metaphloem of individual vascular bundles companion cells are not sharply differentiated from other phloem parenchyma cells. Definitive callose deposits and slime are normally absent from mature sieve tubes, even in fixed material. Otherwise no conspicuous structural features which might account for the longevity of sieve tubes can be discerned. Occlusion of phloem strands after leaf fall is initially by callose deposition on sieve plates followed immediately by tylosoid formation. Similar sampling of Cocos nucifera, Washingtonia robusta and to a lesser extent Archontophoenix alexandrae confirmed these results except for quantitative differences.  相似文献   

20.
The Phloem of Nelumbo nucifera Gaertn   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
ESAU  KATHERINE 《Annals of botany》1975,39(4):901-913
In common with other aquatic angiosperms, Nelumbo nucifera Gaertn.has a relatively strongly developed phloem tissue. The vascularsystem consists of discrete collateral bundles in which no cambiumdevelops and the phloem and xylem are separated by a narrowlayer of parenchyma cells. The phloem consists of sieve elements,companion cells, and phloem parenchyma cells. The sieve elementshave transverse end walls with simple sieve plates. The cellsattain considerable width in the late phloem (metaphloem). Thecompanion cells are in vertical strands. In the early phloem(protophloem) of large bundles the sieve tubes and companioncells are eventually obliterated. The parenchyma cells alsoform vertical strands which may contain tannin cells. Some parenchymacells and companion cells are binucleate. The sieve elementsshow ultrastructural features common for these cells in dicotyledons.At maturity, they lack nuclei, ribosomes, and tonoplasts, butretain a plasmalemma, mitochondria, and plastids. The latterare poorly differentiated and form starch. The endoplasmic reticulumis in part stacked, in part it forms a network next to the plasmalemma.The P-protein occurs in two forms. One consists of tubules notassembled in any specific type of array. The other, possiblycomposed of much extended tubules, is assembled in crystallineaggregates which are retained as such in mature cells. The sieveplate pores are lined with callose and plasmalemma. The lateralwalls are relatively thin and the nacreous layer varies in degreeof distinctness.  相似文献   

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