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1.
Transpiration of cuticular membranes isolated from the lower stomatous surface of Hedera helix (ivy) leaves was measured using a novel approach which allowed a distinction to be made between gas phase diffusion (through stomatal pores) and solid phase diffusion (transport through the polymer matrix membrane and cuticular waxes) of water molecules. This approach is based on the principle that the diffusivity of water vapour in the gas phase can be manipulated by using different gases (helium, nitrogen, or carbon dioxide) while diffusivity of water in the solid phase is not affected. This approach allowed the flow of water across stomatal pores ('stomatal transpiration') to be calculated separately from the flow across the cuticle (cuticular transpiration) on the stomatous leaf surface. As expected, water flux across the cuticle isolated from the astomatous leaf surface was not affected by the gas composition since there are no gas-filled pores. Resistance to flux of water through the solid cuticle on the stomatous leaf surface was about 11 times lower than cuticular resistance on the astomatous leaf surface, indicating pronounced differences in barrier properties between cuticles isolated from both leaf surfaces. In order to check whether this difference in resistance was due to different barrier properties of cuticular waxes on both leaf sides, mobility of 14C-labelled 2,4-dichlorophenoxy-butyric acid 14C-2,4-DB) in reconstituted cuticular wax isolated from both leaf surfaces was measured separately. However, mobility of 14C-2,4-DB in reconstituted wax isolated from the lower leaf surface was 2.6 times lower compared with the upper leaf side. The significantly higher permeability of the ivy cuticle on the lower stomatous leaf surface compared with the astomatous surface might result from lateral heterogeneity in permeability of the cuticle covering normal epidermal cells compared with the cuticle covering the stomatal cell surface.  相似文献   

2.
Transport properties of cuticular waxes from 40 different plant species were investigated by measuring desorption rates of 14C-labelled octadecanoic acid from isolated and subsequently reconstituted wax. Diffusion coefficients (D) of octadecanoic acid in reconstituted waxes, calculated from the slopes of the regression lines fitted to the linearized portions of desorption kinetics, ranged from 1.2 × 10?19 m2 s?1 (Senecio kleinia leaf) to 2.9 × 10?17 m2 s?1 (Malus cf. domestica fruit). Cuticular water permeabilities (cuticular transpiration) measured with intact cuticular membranes isolated from 24 different species varied from 1.7 × 10?11 m s?1 (Vanilla planifolia leaf) up to 2.1 × 10?9 m s?1 (Malus cf. domestica fruit), thus covering a range of more than 2 orders of magnitude. Cuticular water permeabilities were highly correlated with diffusion coefficients of octadecanoic acid in isolated cuticular wax of the same species. It is therefore possible to estimate cuticular barrier properties of stomatous leaf surfaces or of leaves where isolation of the cuticle is impossible by measuring D of octadecanoic acid in isolated waxes of these leaves.  相似文献   

3.
植物角质层蜡质的化学组成研究综述   总被引:5,自引:0,他引:5  
曾琼  刘德春  刘勇 《生态学报》2013,33(17):5133-5140
角质层是植物与外界的第一接触面,而角质层蜡质则是由位于角质层外的外层蜡质和深嵌在角质层中的内层蜡质两部分构成。植物角质层蜡质成分极其复杂,具有重要的生理功能。综述了有关植物角质层蜡质的化学组成信息,探讨了目前植物角质层蜡质化学成分研究中存在的一些问题,展望了角质层蜡质成分的研究前景。  相似文献   

4.
Surface lipids and plant defenses   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
The major function of the plant epidermis is to form the cuticle, a functional permeability barrier of the cell wall which prevents excessive water loss and the entry of harmful substances and pathogens into the host. This type of cell wall modification is mainly composed of a polyester matrix, cutin, and soluble waxes embedded in the matrix and deposited on the external surface. Cuticle-associated proteins may also be important. Recent observations are starting to reveal complex inter-relationships between cuticular lipids and immunity. This suggests that the cuticle is not simply a physical barrier, but a dynamic host defense with signaling circuits and effector molecules. Furthermore, these studies have also demonstrated that cuticular lipids and immunity may intersect in common pathways, although the significance of this is not fully understood. In this review, we examine the functions of the plant cuticle in host–pathogen interactions, and discuss the possibilities of integrating the membrane and cuticular glycerolipid biosynthesis.  相似文献   

5.
Benny Chefetz 《Plant and Soil》2007,298(1-2):21-30
The sorption of organic compounds by plant cuticular matter has been extensively investigated; however, little has been studied regarding the effect of plant cuticle degradation on their role in the sorption of organic compounds in soils. The sorption of phenanthrene was studied in soil samples which had been incubated for up to 9 months with three different types of plant cuticle isolated from tomato fruits, pepper fruits and citrus leaves. The main change in the diffuse reflectance Fourier-transform infrared (DRIFT) spectra during incubation of the cuticles was related to cutin decomposition. The peaks assigned to methyl and ethyl vibration and C=O vibration in ester links decreased with decomposition. In general, with all samples, the phenanthrene sorption coefficients calculated for the whole incubated soils (K d) decreased with incubation time. In contrast, the carbon-normalized K d values (K oc) did not exhibit a similar trend for the different cuticles during incubation. The origin of the cuticle also affected the linearity of the sorption isotherms. With the tomato and citrus cuticle samples, the Freundlich N values were close to unity and were stable throughout incubation. However with the green pepper cuticle, the N values exhibited a significant decrease (from 0.98 to 0.70). This study demonstrates that the structural composition of the plant cuticle affects its biodegradability and therefore its ability to sorb organic compounds in soils. Of the residues originating from plant cuticular matter in soils, the cutan biopolymer and lignin-derived structures appear to play a dominant role in sorption as decomposition progresses. Responsible Editor: Alfonso Escudero.  相似文献   

6.
Due to their unique physical properties, waxes are high-value materials that are used in a variety of industrial applications. They are generated by chemical synthesis, extracted from fossil sources, or harvested from a small number of plant and animal species. As a result, the diversity of chemical structures in commercial waxes is low and so are their yields. These limitations can be overcome by engineering of wax biosynthetic pathways in the seeds of high-yielding oil crops to produce designer waxes for specific industrial end uses. In this review, we first summarize the current knowledge regarding the genes and enzymes generating the chemical diversity of cuticular waxes that accumulate at the surfaces of primary plant organs. We then consider the potential of cuticle biosynthetic genes for biotechnological wax production, focusing on selected examples of wax ester chain lengths and isomers. Finally, we discuss the genes/enzymes of cuticular alkane biosynthesis and their potential in future metabolic engineering of plants for the production of renewable hydrocarbon fuels.  相似文献   

7.
David A. Bird   《Plant science》2008,174(6):563-569
The aerial surfaces of plants are enveloped by a waxy cuticle, which among other functions serves as a barrier to limit non-stomatal water loss and defend against pathogens. The cuticle is a complex three-dimensional structure composed of cutin (a lipid polyester matrix) and waxes (very long chain fatty acid derivatives), which are embedded within and layered on top of the cutin matrix. Biosynthesis of cuticular lipids is believed to take place solely within aerial epidermal cells. Once synthesized, both the waxes and the cutin precursors must leave the cytoplasm, pass through the hydrophilic apoplastic space, and finally assemble to form the cuticle. These processes of secretion and assembly are essentially unknown. Initial steps toward our understanding of these processes were the characterization of CER5/ABCG12/WBC12 and more recently ABCG11/WBC11, a pair of ABC transporters required for cuticular lipid secretion. ABCG12 is involved in wax secretion, as mutations in this gene result in a lower surface-load of wax and a concomitant accumulation of lipidic inclusions within the epidermal cell cytoplasm. Mutations in ABCG11 result in a similar wax phenotype as cer5 and similar cytoplasmic inclusions. In contrast to cer5, however, abcg11 mutants also show significantly reduced cutin, post-genital organ fusions, and reduced growth and fertility. Thus, for the first time, a transporter is implicated in cutin accumulation. This review will discuss the secretion of cuticular lipids, focusing on ABCG12, ABCG11 and the potential involvement of other ABC transporters in the ABCG subfamily.  相似文献   

8.
Cuticular waxes from grape berry cuticle of Vitis vinifera L. have been investigated by X-ray diffraction, differential scanning calorimetry and gas chromatography. The waxes were mainly composed of n-alcohols and n-fatty acids and a considerable amount (about 30%) of the cyclic terpenoid oleanolic acid. The physical techniques used showed that the waxes have a high degree of molecular order in spite of the presence of the cyclic component. Molecular dynamics of the reconstituted waxes were measured to characterize the transport properties of the cuticular waxes that form the transport-limiting barrier of plant cuticles. For this purpose, the diffusion coefficient of labelled cholesterol, imitating the terpenoic acid, was measured. The value obtained was around 10-21 m2 s-1 indicating a low mobility of the cyclic part of the reconstituted waxes. Temperature dependence of the diffusion coefficient was studied in the range of 5-45C. Arrhenius plot analysis yielded a high activation energy, 196.4 kJ mol-1, of the diffusion process. This indicates dense molecular packing of reconstituted cuticular waxes.  相似文献   

9.

Background

Most aerial plant parts are covered with a hydrophobic lipid-rich cuticle, which is the interface between the plant organs and the surrounding environment. Plant surfaces may have a high degree of hydrophobicity because of the combined effects of surface chemistry and roughness. The physical and chemical complexity of the plant cuticle limits the development of models that explain its internal structure and interactions with surface-applied agrochemicals. In this article we introduce a thermodynamic method for estimating the solubilities of model plant surface constituents and relating them to the effects of agrochemicals.

Results

Following the van Krevelen and Hoftyzer method, we calculated the solubility parameters of three model plant species and eight compounds that differ in hydrophobicity and polarity. In addition, intact tissues were examined by scanning electron microscopy and the surface free energy, polarity, solubility parameter and work of adhesion of each were calculated from contact angle measurements of three liquids with different polarities. By comparing the affinities between plant surface constituents and agrochemicals derived from (a) theoretical calculations and (b) contact angle measurements we were able to distinguish the physical effect of surface roughness from the effect of the chemical nature of the epicuticular waxes. A solubility parameter model for plant surfaces is proposed on the basis of an increasing gradient from the cuticular surface towards the underlying cell wall.

Conclusions

The procedure enabled us to predict the interactions among agrochemicals, plant surfaces, and cuticular and cell wall components, and promises to be a useful tool for improving our understanding of biological surface interactions.
  相似文献   

10.
The cuticle, a hydrophobic protective layer on the aerial parts of terrestrial plants, functions as a versatile defensive barrier to various biotic and abiotic stresses and also regulates water flow from the external environment.1 A biopolyester (cutin) and long-chain fatty acids (waxes) form the principal structural framework of the cuticle; the functional integrity of the cuticular layer depends on the outer ''epicuticular'' layer as well as the blend consisting of the cutin biopolymer and ''intracuticular'' waxes.2 Herein, we describe a comprehensive protocol to extract waxes exhaustively from commercial tomato (Solanum lycopersicum) fruit cuticles or to remove epicuticular and intracuticular waxes sequentially and selectively from the cuticle composite. The method of Jetter and Schäffer (2001) was adapted for the stepwise extraction of epicuticular and intracuticular waxes from the fruit cuticle.3,4 To monitor the process of sequential wax removal, solid-state cross-polarization magic-angle-spinning (CPMAS) 13C NMR spectroscopy was used in parallel with atomic force microscopy (AFM), providing molecular-level structural profiles of the bulk materials complemented by information on the microscale topography and roughness of the cuticular surfaces. To evaluate the cross-linking capabilities of dewaxed cuticles from cultivated wild-type and single-gene mutant tomato fruits, MAS 13C NMR was used to compare the relative proportions of oxygenated aliphatic (CHO and CH2O) chemical moieties.Exhaustive dewaxing by stepwise Soxhlet extraction with a panel of solvents of varying polarity provides an effective means to isolate wax moieties based on the hydrophobic characteristics of their aliphatic and aromatic constituents, while preserving the chemical structure of the cutin biopolyester. The mechanical extraction of epicuticular waxes and selective removal of intracuticular waxes, when monitored by complementary physical methodologies, provides an unprecedented means to investigate the cuticle assembly: this approach reveals the supramolecular organization and structural integration of various types of waxes, the architecture of the cutin-wax matrix, and the chemical composition of each constituent. In addition, solid-state 13C NMR reveals differences in the relative numbers of CHO and CH2O chemical moieties for wild-type and mutant red ripe tomato fruits. The NMR techniques offer exceptional tools to fingerprint the molecular structure of cuticular materials that are insoluble, amorphous, and chemically heterogeneous. As a noninvasive surface-selective imaging technique, AFM furnishes an effective and direct means to probe the structural organization of the cuticular assembly on the nm-μm length scale.  相似文献   

11.
The cuticle is the major barrier against uncontrolled water loss from leaves, fruits and other primary parts of higher plants. More than 100 mean values for water permeabilities determined with isolated leaf and fruit cuticles from 61 plant species are compiled and discussed in relation to plant organ, natural habitat and morphology. The maximum barrier properties of plant cuticles exceed that of synthetic polymeric films of equal thickness. Cuticular water permeability is not correlated to the thickness of the cuticle or to wax coverage. Relationships between cuticular permeability, wax composition and physical properties of the cuticle are evaluated. Cuticular permeability to water increases on the average by a factor of 2 when leaf surface temperature is raised from 15 degrees C to 35 degrees C. Organic compounds of anthropogenic and biogenic origin may enhance cuticular permeability. The pathway taken by water across the cuticular transport barrier is reviewed. The conclusion from this discussion is that the bulk of water diffuses as single molecules across a lipophilic barrier while a minor fraction travels along polar pores. Open questions concerning the mechanistic understanding of the plant cuticular transport barrier and the role the plant cuticle plays in ensuring the survival and reproductive success of an individual plant are indicated.  相似文献   

12.
Cuticular transport properties of intact leaves, isolated cuticularmembranes and reconstituted cuticular waxes of the three treespecies Prunus laurocerasus L., Ginkgo biloba L. and Juglansregia L. were measured using six different 14C-labelled compounds,benzoic acid, salicylic acid, 2,4-dichlorophenoxy acid, metribuzin,4-nitrophenol, and atrazine. For the same compound and the samespecies, the permeance of the intact leaf and the isolated cuticlewas equal. This provides strong evidence demonstrating thattransport properties of cuticles are not altered during isolation.Additionally, diffusion coefficients of the 14C-labelled compoundsin isolated and subsequently reconstituted cuticular wax ofthe three tree species were measured. Permeances of intact leavesand isolated cuticles could be predicted from diffusion coefficients,wax/water partition coefficients and the thickness of the transport-limitingwax layer with a mean deviation of about 1.7. This providesevidence that transport properties of recrystallized cuticularwaxes do indeed reflect barrier properties of isolated cuticularmembranes and intact leaves with in situ waxes. Thus, it canbe concluded that the investigation of cuticular permeabilityusing the three independent experimental systems of differentcomplexity give comparable results. Finally, it was observedthat permeances and diffusion coefficients measured with P.laurocerasus were always significantly lower than those measuredwith G. biloba and J. regia. This is interpreted as an ecologicaladaptation of the respective species. The evergreen speciesP. laurocerasus must be more adapted to environmental stresssuch as drought and frost injury compared to the two deciduousspecies G. biloba and J. regia. Key words: Cuticular permeability, diffusion coefficient, leaf surface, permeance, plant cuticle, transport  相似文献   

13.
Systemic crop protection products are commonly sprayed onto foliage, whereupon the active substances must penetrate into the leaves in order to become biologically active. Penetration of the plant cuticle is the rate-limiting step. The diffusion of organic non-electrolytes within cuticles is a purely physical process that can be described and analysed in the same way as is done for diffusion in synthetic polymer membranes. Solute mobilities in cuticles vary considerably between plant species. For a given species they decrease with increasing solute size, and this size selectivity holds for all of the plant species investigated so far. Wax extraction from leaf cuticles increases the mobility of solutes tremendously, but size selectivity is not affected. Furthermore, diffusion within plant cuticles is extremely temperature dependent. An analogous increase in solute mobility can be achieved by using accelerators, which enhance the fluidity of the polymer matrix and of the waxes. The effects of temperature and plasticizers on the diffusion of non-electrolytes in wax and the cutin matrix have been used to characterize the nature of the lipophilic pathway. The 'free volume' theory can be used to explain the influence of the size and shape of the solute, and its dependence on temperature. The physico-chemical nature of the diffusion pathway has been shown, by thermodynamic analysis, to be identical for a wide range of solute lipophilicities. This approach also explains the mode of action and the intrinsic activity of plasticizers.  相似文献   

14.
Diffusion coefficients for thirteen lipophilic organic compounds in reconstituted waxes of Fagus sylvatica L. and Picea abies (L.) Karst. were measured to characterise the transport properties of the cuticular waxes that form the transport-limiting barrier of plant cuticles. Desorption kinetics (relative amounts desorbed versus time) were asymptotic, but could be linearized up to 50% desorption by plotting relative amounts desorbed versus the square root of time. Diffusion coefficients calculated from the slopes of the linear regressions ranged from 10–22 to 10–17 m2·s–1 and decreased with increasing molecular size. This size dependency of diffusion coefficients was analysed, assuming an exponential dependence of the diffusion coefficients on molar volumes, which allowed cuticular transport properties to be related to the physical structure of the wax. Furthermore, the fact that the barrier properties of Fagus wax are less pronounced than those of Picea is interpreted as an ecological adaptation of the respective tree species to their habitats at the level of their cuticular transport barriers.Abbreviation D diffusion coefficient The authors gratefully acknowledge financial support by the Schwerpunkt Programm Baumphysiologie of the Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft.  相似文献   

15.
The effect of waxes on the mobilities of organic solutes in isolated leaf cuticular membranes (CM) of six species was investigated using compounds with molar volumes ranging from 99 cm3 mol–1 (salicylic acid) to 349 cm3 mol–1 (cholesterol). When log(solute mobility) was plotted versus molar volumes straight lines were obtained for all plant species showing that the mobilities decreased exponentially with increasing molar volumes of solutes. The slopes of these graphs represent the size selectivity of the CM. Extracting waxes from the CM using chloroform–methanol had no effect on size selectivity, but absolute values of mobilities increased by 28-fold ( Citrus grandis L. and Camellia assamica L.) to 759-fold ( Ilex paraguariensis St.-Hil). Since the removal of waxes did not affect size selectivity it is argued that extraction reduced the path lengths and these values are a measure for tortuosity, that is the ratio of path lengths in CM and MX. Mobilities in the polymer matrix of extracted cuticles did not differ much among species with the exception of C. assamica . Although the mobilities in CM of I. paraguariensis and C. assamica were similar, the mobilities in the polymer matrix of C. assamica were almost 40-fold lower than in I. paraguariensis . Neither the mobilities in CM and MX nor the tortuosity were correlated with thickness of CM or amounts of wax.  相似文献   

16.
Study of the pear leaf cuticle (Pyrus communis L. ‘Bartlett‘), in both intact and enzymatically isolated forms, has revealed that the cuticular membrane is separated from the underlying epidermal cell wall by a layer of pectic substances which extend into but not through the membrane. A layer of embedded birefringent waxes occurs towards the outer surface of the cuticular membrane. Platelet-like epicuticular waxes are deposited on the outer surface. The upper cuticular membrane is astomatous. The lower epidermis is stomatous, and the outer cuticular membrane is continuous with that lining the substomatal cavity. The lower cuticular membrane is also generally thicker than the upper, and both the upper and lower cuticular membranes are thicker over veinal than over mesophyll tissue. The birefringence frequently is discontinuous over anticlinal walls and over veinal tissue. The lower cuticle appears to contain fewer embedded waxes (as indexed by birefringence) than the upper. Enzymatic isolation of the cuticular membrane from the underlying tissues does not appear to cause any discernible change in structure as viewed with a light microscope. These findings are discussed in light of current knowledge concerning penetration of foliar applied substances into the leaf.  相似文献   

17.
Plant cuticles form the interface between epidermal plant cells and the atmosphere. The cuticle creates an effective barrier against water loss, bacterial and fungal infection and also protects plant tissue from UV radiation. It is composed of the cutin matrix and embedded soluble lipids also called waxes. Chemical composition of cuticular waxes and physiological properties of cuticles are affected by internal regulatory mechanisms and environmental conditions (e.g. drought, light, and humidity). Here, we tested the effect of drought stress simulation by the exogenous application of abscisic acid (ABA) on cuticular wax amount and composition. ABA-treated plants and control plants differed in total aboveground biomass, leaf area, stomatal density and aperture, and carbon isotope composition. They did not differ in total wax amount per area but there were peculiar differences in the abundance of particular components. ABA-treated plants contained significantly higher proportions of aliphatic components characterized by chain length larger than C26, compared to control plants. This trend was consistent both between and within different functional groups of wax components. This can lead to a higher hydrophobicity of the cuticular transpiration barrier and thus decrease cuticular water loss in ABA-treated plants. At both ABA-treated and control plants alcohols with chain length C24 and C26 were predominant. Such a shift towards wax compounds having a higher average chain length under drought conditions can be interpreted as an adaptive response of plants towards drought stress.  相似文献   

18.
Evidence obtained on the relation between the pH of the medium and the growth of intact stem sections is compatible with the acid-growth theory only if the proton conductance of the cuticle is so low that the cuticle is an effective barrier to the entry or exit of protons from the tissue. By measuring the rate at which protons cross frozen-thawed epidermal strips of sunflower (Helianthus annuus L.) and soybean hypocotyls (Glycine max Morr.) and enzymically isolated cuticles of Berberis aquifolium Persh. and tomato (Lycopersicum esculentum Mill.) fruit, we have now demonstrated the low proton conductance of the cuticular layer. Unless the conductance is enhanced by abrasion of the cuticle or by removal of the cuticular waxes, proton movement into and out of a tissue across the cuticle will be significant only over long time periods.  相似文献   

19.
20.

Main conclusion

The Arabidopsis cuticle, as observed by electron microscopy, consists primarily of the cutin/cutan matrix. The cuticle possesses a complex substructure, which is correlated with the presence of intracuticular waxes. The plant cuticle is composed of an insoluble polyester, cutin, and organic solvent soluble cuticular waxes, which are embedded within and coat the surface of the cutin matrix. How these components are arranged in the cuticle is not well understood. The Arabidopsis cuticle is commonly understood as ‘amorphous,’ lacking in ultrastructural features, and is often observed as a thin (~80–100 nm) electron-dense layer on the surface of the cell wall. To examine this cuticle in more detail, we examined cuticles from both rapidly elongating and mature sections of the stem and compared the preservation of the cuticles using conventional chemical fixation methods and high-pressure freezing/freeze-substitution (HPF/FS). We found that HPF/FS preparation revealed a complex cuticle substructure, which was more evident in older stems. We also found that the cuticle increases in thickness with development, indicating an accretion of polymeric material, likely in the form of the non-hydrolyzable polymer, cutan. When wax was extracted by chloroform immersion prior to sample preparation, the contribution of waxes to cuticle morphology was revealed. Overall, the electron-dense cuticle layer was still visible but there was loss of the cuticle substructure. Furthermore, the cuticle of cer6, a wax-deficient mutant, also lacked this substructure, suggesting that these fine striations were dependent on the presence of cuticular waxes. Our findings show that HPF/FS preparation can better preserve plant cuticles, but also provide new insights into the fine structure of the Arabidopsis cuticle.
  相似文献   

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