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1.
The graviperception of sporangiophores of the fungus Phycomyces blakesleeanus involves gravity-induced absorbance changes (GIACs) that represent primary responses of gravitropism (Schmidt and Galland, 2000). GIACs (DeltaA(460-665)) of sporangiophores were measured in vivo with a micro-dual wavelength spectrometer at 460 and 665 nm. Sporangiophores that were placed horizontally displayed an instant increase of the GIACs while the return to the vertical position elicited an instant decrease. The GIACs are specific for graviperception, because they were absent in a gravitropism mutant with a defective madJ gene. During parabola flights hypergravity (1.8 g) elicited a decrease of the GIACs, while microgravity (0 +/- 3 x 10 (-2) g) elicited an instant increase. Hypergravity that was generated in a centrifuge (1.5-6.5 g) elicited also a decrease of the GIACs that saturated at about 5 g. The GIACs have a latency of about 20 ms or shorter and are thus the fastest graviresponses ever measured for fungi, protists, and plants. The threshold for eliciting the GIACs is near 3 x 10 (-2) g, which coincides numerically with the threshold for gravitropic bending. In contrast to gravitropic bending, which requires long-term stimulation, GIACs can be elicited by stimuli as short as 20 to 100 ms, leading to an extremely low threshold dose (acceleration x time) of about 3 x 10 (-3) g s, a value, which is four orders of magnitude below the ones described for other organisms and which makes the GIACs of Phycomyces blakesleeanus the most sensitive gravi-response in literature.  相似文献   

2.
The interaction between gravitropism and phototropism was analyzed for sporangiophores of Phycomyces blakesleeanus. Fluence rate-response curves for phototropism were generated under three different conditions: (a) for stationary sporangiophores, which reached photogravitropic equilibrium; (b) for sporangiophores, which were clinostated head-over during phototropic stimulation; and (c) for sporangiophores, which were subjected to centrifugal accelerations of 2.3g to 8.4g. For blue light (454 nm), clinostating caused an increase of the slope of the fluence rate-response curves and an increase of the maximal bending angles at saturating fluence rates. The absolute threshold remained, however, practically unaffected. In contrast to the results obtained with blue light, no increase of the slope of the fluence rate-response curves was obtained with near-ultraviolet light at 369 nm. Bilateral irradiation with near-ultraviolet or blue light enhanced gravitropism, whereas symmetric gravitropic stimulation caused a partial suppression of phototropism. Gravitropism and phototropism appear to be tightly linked by a tonic feedback loop that allows the respective transduction chains a mutual influence over each other. The use of tropism mutants allowed conclusions to be drawn about the tonic feedback loop with the gravitropic and phototropic transduction chains. The results from clinostating mutants that lack octahedral crystals (implicated as statoliths) showed that these crystals are not involved in the tonic feedback loop. At elevated centrifugal accelerations, the fluence-rate-response curves for photogravitropic equilibrium were displaced to higher fluence rates and the slope decreased. The results indicate that light transduction possesses a logarithmic transducer, whereas gravi-transduction uses a linear one.  相似文献   

3.
Braun M 《Planta》1996,199(3):443-450
Centrifugal accelerations of 50-250 g were applied to rhizoids of Chara globularis Thuill. at stimulation angles (alpha) of 5-90 degrees between the acceleration vector and the rhizoid axis. After the start of centrifugation, the statoliths were pressed asymmetrically onto the centrifugal flank of the apical cell wall. In contrast to the well-known bending (by bowing) under 1 g, the rhizoids responded in two distinct phases. Following an initial phase of sharp bending (by bulging), which is similar to the negatively gravitropic response of Chara protonemata, rhizoids stopped bending and, in the second phase, grew straight in directions clearly deviating from the direction of acceleration. These response angles (beta) between the axis of the bent part of the rhizoid and the acceleration vector were strictly correlated with the g-level of acceleration. The higher the acceleration the greater was beta. Except for the sharp bending, the shape and growth rate of the centrifuged rhizoids were not different from those of gravistimulated control rhizoids at 1 g. These results indicate that gravitropic bending of rhizoids during enhanced accelerations (5 degrees < or = alpha < or = 90 degrees) is caused not only by subapical differential flank growth, as it is the case at 1 g, but also by also by the centripetal displacement of the growth centre as was recently discussed for the negative gravitropism of Chara protonemata. A hypothesis for cytoskeletally mediated polar growth is presented based on data from positive gravitropic bending of Chara rhizoids at 1 g and from the anomalous gravitropic bending of rhizoids compared with the negatively gravitropic bending of Chara protonemata. The data obtained are also relevant to a general understanding of graviperception in higher-plant organs.  相似文献   

4.
The GRAVI-1 experiment was brought on board the International Space Station by Discovery (December 2006) and carried out in January 2007 in the European Modular Cultivation System facility. For the first run of this experiment, lentil seedlings were hydrated and grown in microgravity for 15 h and then subjected for 13 h 40 min to centrifugal accelerations ranging from 0.29 x 10(-2) g to 0.99 x 10(-2) g. During the second run, seedlings were grown either for 30 h 30 min in microgravity (this sample was the control) or for 21 h 30 min and then subjected to centrifugal accelerations ranging from 1.2 x 10(-2) g to 2.0 x 10(-2) g for 9 h. In both cases, root orientation and root curvature were followed by time-lapse photography. Still images were downlinked in near real time to ground Norwegian User Support and Operations Center during the experiment. The position of the root tip and the root curvature were analyzed as a function of time. It has been shown that in microgravity, the embryonic root curved strongly away from the cotyledons (automorphogenesis) and then straightened out slowly from 17 to 30 h following hydration (autotropism). Because of the autotropic straightening of roots in microgravity, their tip was oriented at an angle close to the optimal angle of curvature (120 degrees -135 degrees ) for a period of 2 h during centrifugation. Moreover, it has been demonstrated that lentil roots grown in microgravity before stimulation were more sensitive than roots grown in 1 g. In these conditions, the threshold acceleration perceived by these organs was found to be between 0 and 2.0 x 10(-3) g and estimated punctually at 1.4 x 10(-5) g by using the hyperbolic model for fitting the experimental data and by assuming that autotropism had no or little impact on the gravitropic response. Gravisensing by statoliths should be possible at such a low level of acceleration because the actomyosin system could provide the necessary work to overcome the activation energy for gravisensing.  相似文献   

5.
Grolig F  Herkenrath H  Pumm T  Gross A  Galland P 《Planta》2004,218(4):658-667
To elucidate the mechanisms of gravity susception that operate in the sporangiophore of Phycomyces blakesleeanus, we characterized the function and topography of a large apical complex of lipid globules. Stage-1 sporangiophores (without sporangium) possess a roughly spherical complex of 100–200 large lipid globules whose center is localized 110 m below the apex. The complex of lipid globules (CLG) is rather stable and is kept in place by positioning forces that resist centrifugal accelerations of up to 150 g. The lipid globules possess an average diameter of 2 to 2.5 m and a density of 0.791 g cm–3, which is below that of typical plant oleosomes. The potential energy which is generated by the buoyancy of a CLG of 100 globules is in the order of 10-17 to 10-16 J, which is 4 to 5 orders of magnitude above thermal noise. The formation of lipid globules can be supressed by raising stage-1 sporangiophores for 24 hs at 5°C. Sporangiophores with a reduced number of lipid globules display gravitropic bending angles that are 3 to 4 times smaller than those of sporangiophores with the normal number of lipid globules. The results suggest that the lipid globules function as gravisusceptors of Phycomyces and that buoyancy is the physical principle for their mode of action. The globules contain -carotene and two distinct fluorescing pigments that are, however, dispensible for graviperception.Abbreviations CLG complex of lipid globules  相似文献   

6.
Using the video centrifuge microscope we constructed, we observed the behavior of Paramecium cells in a solution of graded densities under centrifugal acceleration. Beyond 300g, they not only gather in the zone where the density is closest to theirs, but also orient themselves with their longitudinal axis parallel to the direction of centrifugation turning their anterior ends toward either centripetal or centrifugal direction. Since all of them retain still active swimming capacity, it is possible to calculate their propulsive force from the difference in density between theirs (1.04 g cm-3) and that of the upper or lower layer which they can reach. The propulsive force of single Paramecium cells thus obtained was calculated to be about 7 x 10(-4) dyn.  相似文献   

7.
P. Galland  A. Palit  E. D. Lipson 《Planta》1985,165(4):538-547
The relationship between phototropism and the light-growth response of Phycomyces blakesleeanus (Burgeff) sporangiophores was investigated. After dark adaptation, stage-IVb sporangiophores were exposed to short pulses of unilateral light at 450 nm wavelength. The sporangiophores show a complex reaction to pulses of 30 s duration: maximal positive bending at 3·10-4 and 10-1 J m-2, but negative bending at 30 J m-2. The fluence dependence for the light-growth response also is complex, but in a different way than for phototropism; the first maximal response occurs at 1.8·10-3 J m-2 with a lesser maximum at 30 J m-2. A hypertropic mutant, L85 (madH), lacks the negative phototropism at 30 J m-2 but gives results otherwise similar to the wild type. The reciprocity rule was tested for several combinations of fluence rates and pulse durations that ranged from 1 ms to 30 s. Near the threshold fluence (3·10-5 J m-2), both responses increase for pulse durations below 67 ms and both have an optimum at 2 ms. At a fluence of 2.4·10-3 J m-2, both responses decrease for pulse durations below 67 ms. The hypertropic mutant (madH), investigated for low fluence only, gave similar results. In both strains, the time courses for phototropism and light-growth response, after single short pulses of various durations, show no clear correlation. These results imply that phototropism cannot be caused by linear superposition of localized light-growth responses; rather, they point to redistribution of growth substances as the cause of phototropism.  相似文献   

8.
Free-living cells show distinct gravisensitivities and often use the gravity ('g') vector for their spatial orientation. The rhythmic contractions of the ameboid Myxomycete (acellular slime mold) Physarum polycephalum are a sensitive parameter which can be modified by external stimuli. Space experiments and ground-based 0 x g simulation studies established that the contraction period transiently decreases after a transition from 1 x g to 0 x g with a back-regulating process starting after 30 min. For determination of the threshold of acceleration sensitivity, a slow-rotating centrifuge microscope (NIZEMI--Niedergeschwindigkeits-Zentrifugenmikroskop) was used, providing in space accelerations from 0 x g to 1.5 x g. A stepwise acceleration increase revealed that the lowest acceleration level capable of inducing a response was 0.1 x g. The response to the acceleration increase was an increase in contraction period, in contrast to a stimulus deprivation, which led to a period decrease. The time schedule of the acceleration responses and back-regulating process seems to be fixed, suggesting that every acceleration being above the threshold can induce a complete response-regulation process. The low acceleration-sensitivity threshold favors rather large and dense cell organelles as candidates for the gravity receptor in Physarum.  相似文献   

9.
Summary We constructed a new centrifuge microscope of the stroboscopic type, with which the cytoplasmic streaming inNitella internodal cells under centrifugal acceleration was studied. Under moderate centrifugal acceleration (ca. 50–100×g), the direction of cytoplasmic streaming in an internodal cell ofNitella is parallel to the direction of the subcortical fibrils. The speed of endoplasm flowing contiguous to the subcortical fibrils is neither accelerated nor retarded by moderate centrifugal acceleration. The endoplasmic flow, however, stops suddenly following an electrical stimulus. The endoplasm contiguous to the subcortical fibrils is immobilized transiently at the time of streaming cessation induced by an electrical stimulus under centrifugal acceleration at 50–100×g, even at 900×g. It is suggested that transitory cross bridges between the immobilized endoplasm and the subcortical fibrils are formed at the time of streaming cessation. The bulk endoplasm flows as a whole in the direction parallel to that of the subcortical fibrils and stops promptly upon electrical stimulation. Soon after the stoppage the bulk endoplasm starts to flow passively in the direction parallel to that of the centrifugal acceleration as a result of the centrifugal force.Abbreviations APW artificial pond water - CMS centrifuge microscope  相似文献   

10.
Gravitropic response of sporangiophores ofPilobolus crystallinus was studied by successive microscopic observation of the sporangiophores horizontally placed in the dark (red light) and by analysis of sporangiophore response to centrifugal stimulation. Negative tropism against the gravitative and also centrifugal stimulation was found only in mature sporangiophores after development of sporangium and after the resumption of elongation beneath the fully-developed subsporangial vescle, but there was no response in younger sporangiophores, implying that the gravitative perception system of the sporangiophores is dependent on their developmental stages.  相似文献   

11.
The absolute light sensitivity of Phycomyces sporangiophores was determined by analyzing the intensity dependence of the phototropic bending rate and of the light growth and dark growth responses to step changes of the intensity. We found that the different methods give approximately the same results for the wild-type strain, as well as for several behavioral mutants with defects in the genes madA, madB, and madC. A crucial factor in the determination of thresholds is the light intensity at which the strains grow during the 4 d after inoculation and prior to the experiment. When the wild-type strain grows in the dark, its threshold for the bending rate is 10(-9) W X m-2, compared with 2 X 10(-7) W X m-2 when it is grown under continuous illumination. Further, the maximal bending rate is twice as high in dark-grown strains. This phenomenon is further complicated by the fact that the diameter and growth rate of the sporangiophores also depend on the illumination conditions prior to the experiment: light-grown sporangiophores have an increased diameter and an increased growth rate compared with dark-grown ones. Some of the behavioral mutants, however, are indifferent to this form of light control. Another factor that is controlled by the growth conditions is adaptation: the kinetics of dark adaptation are slower in light-grown sporangiophores than in dark-grown ones. We found empirically a positive correlation between the slower dark adaptation constant and the threshold of the bending rate, which shows that the two underlying phenomena are functionally related.  相似文献   

12.
Schimek C  Eibel P  Grolig F  Horie T  Ootaki T  Galland P 《Planta》1999,210(1):132-142
To elucidate the graviperception of the unicellular fungus, Phycomycesblakesleeanus, sporangiophores were inspected for intracellular structures which relocate with respect to gravity. Two structures, paracrystalline proteins (so-called octahedral crystals) and an aggregate of lipid globules, were identified which showed redistribution upon reorientation of the sporangiophore. Octahedral crystals occur throughout the sporangiophore, including the apical growing zone, and are localized inside vacuoles in which they reside singly or in clusters of up to 40 loosely associated individuals. Upon a 90° reorientation of sporangiophores, crystal clusters sedimented in approximately 50–200 s from the upper to the lower side, corresponding to a speed of 0.5–2 μm s−1. Stage-4 sporangiophores (with sporangium) of three mutants which lack the crystals displayed anormal kinetics of gravitropism and substantially reduced bending angles in comparison to sporangiophores of the wild type. While horizontally placed wild-type sporangiophores reached the vertical position after 10–12 h, the crystal-lacking mutants bent maximally 40°–50° upward. In stage-1 sporangiophores a conspicuous aggregate of lipid globules is positioned about 50 μm below the apex. The globules floated upwards when the sporangiophore was placed horizontally forming in this way a cap-like aggregate. It is proposed that both the sedimenting protein crystals and the upward-floating globules are involved in gravisensing. Received: 23 March 1999 / Accepted: 27 May 1999  相似文献   

13.
The thresholds of graviorientation and gravikinesis in Paramecium biaurelia were investigated during the 5th DLR (German Aerospace Center) parabolic-flight campaign at Bordeaux in June 2003. Parabolic flights are a useful tool for the investigation of swimming behaviour in protists at different accelerations. At normal gravity (1 g) and hypergravity (1 g to 1.8 g), precision of orientation and locomotion rates depend linearly on the applied acceleration as seen in earlier centrifuge experiments. After transition from hypergravity to decreased gravity (minimal residual acceleration of <10(-2) g), graviorientation as well as gravikinesis show a full relaxation with different kinetics. The use of twelve independent cell samples per flight guarantees high data numbers and secures the statistical significance of the obtained data. The relatively slow change of acceleration between periods of microgravity and hypergravity (0.4 g/s) enabled us to determine the thresholds of graviorientation at 0.6 g and of gravikinesis at 0.4 g. The gravity-unrelated propulsion rate of the sample was found to be 874 microm/s, exceeding the locomotion rate of horizontally swimming cells (855 microm/s). The measured thresholds of graviresponses were compared with data obtained from earlier centrifuge experiments on the sounding rocket Maxus-2. Measured thresholds of gravireactions indicate that small energies, close to the thermal noise level, are sufficient for the gravitransduction process. Data from earlier hypergravity experiments demonstrate that mechanosensitive ion channels are functioning over a relative wide range of acceleration. From this, we may speculate that gravireceptor channels derive from mechanoreceptor channels.  相似文献   

14.
Wild-type sporangiophores at stage IVb (final developmental stage after sporangium formation) ofPhycomyces show a pronounced positive phototropism to unilateral white light. We found that the maximal bending angle was larger in thin sporangiophores than in thick ones, and larger in the sporangiophores containing a small amount of β-carotene than in those containing a large amount of it. These phenomena probably occur because of the increase in length of intracellular light path or in the intracellular light-attenuation coefficient, as supported theoretically.  相似文献   

15.
Root growth and cell differentiation were analysed in lentil seedlings grown (1) in microgravity (F microg), (2) on the 1 x g centrifuge (F1 x g), (3) in microgravity and placed on the 1 x g centrifuge for 4 h [F(microg + 1 x g)], (4) on the 1 x g centrifuge and placed in microgravity for 4 h [F(1 x g + microg)]. In microgravity, there were strong oscillations of the root tip, even when the seedlings were grown first on the 1 x g centrifuge [F(1 x g + microg)]. In the [F(microg + 1 x g)] sample, the roots grown in microgravity were oblique with respect to the 1 x g acceleration when the seedlings were placed on the centrifuge. They were therefore gravistimulated. However, root length was similar in the 4 samples after 29 h of growth and growth rate of the root was the same between 25 h and 29 h although it appeared to be slightly greater in the [F(microg + 1 x g)] sample. Cell elongation was analysed as a function of the distance from the root cap junction. Cell length was similar in the seedlings grown in microgravity or on the 1 x g centrifuge. The transfer from the 1 x g centrifuge to microgravity [F(1 x g + microg)] did not modify cell elongation in the roots. Cell length in the roots which were grown in microgravity and gravistimulated [F(microg + 1 x g)] was different from that observed in microgravity but this was only due to gravistimulation. Thus, gravity does not have an effect on cell elongation when the roots are strictly oriented in the vertical position but it does as soon as the root tip deviates from this orientation.  相似文献   

16.
Wendt M  Kuo-Huang LL  Sievers A 《Planta》1987,172(3):321-329
The polar arrangement of cell organelles in Lepidium root statocytes is persistently converted to a physical stratification during lateral centrifugation (the centrifugal force acts perpendicular to the root long axis) or by apically directed centrifugation combined with cytochalasin-treatment. Lateral centrifugation (10 min, 60 min at 10\g or 50\g) causes displacement of amylplasts to the centrifugal anticlinal cell wall and shifting of the endoplasmic reticulum (ER) complex to the centripetal distal cell edge. After 60 min of lateral centrifugation at 10\g or 50\g all roots show a clear gravitropic curvature. The average angle of curvature is about 40° and corresponds to that of roots stimulated gravitropically in the horizontal position at 1\g in spite of the fact that the gravistimulus is 10-or 50-fold higher. Apically directed centrifugation combined with cytochalasin B (25 g\ml-1) or cytochalasin D (2.5 g\ml-1) incubation yields statocytes with the amyloplasts sedimented close to the centrifugal periclinal cell wall and ER cisternae accumulated at the proximal cell pole. Gravitropic stimulation for 30 min in the horizontal position at 1\g and additional 3 h rotation on a clinostat result in gravicurvature of cytochalasin B-treated centrifuged (1 h at 50\g) roots, but because of retarded root growth the angle of curvature is lower than in control roots. Cytochalasin D-treatment during centrifugation (20 min at 50\g) does not affect either root growth or gravicurvature during 3 h horizontal exposure to 1\g relative to untreated roots. As lateral centrifugation enables only short-term contact between the amyloplasts and the distal ER complex at the onset of centrifugation and apically directed centrifugation combined with cytochalasin-treatment even exclude any contact the integrity of the distal cell pole need not necessarily be a prerequisite for graviperception in Lepidium root statocytes.Abbreviations CB cytochalasin B - CD cytochalasin D - ER endoplasmic reticulum - g gravitational acceleration  相似文献   

17.
The gravitactic ciliates Paramecium and Loxodes were cultivated for 15 days in space during the IML-2 spacelab mission. At dedicated times their behavioral responses to different accelerations between 10(-3) x g and 1.5 x g were investigated by using a slow rotating centrifuge microscope (NIZEMI). The threshold for gravitaxis of Paramecium was found to be at > 0.16 x g and < or = 0.3 x g. No adaptation of Paramecium to the conditions of weightlessness was observed over the duration of 15 days. Loxodes showed no graviresponses to increasing accelerations, though it demonstrated gravitaxis after return to earth.  相似文献   

18.
Summary The behavior of cytoplasmic streaming in plasmodial strand ofPhysarum polycephalum was studied under centrifugal acceleration using a centrifuge microscope of the stroboscopic type. Cytoplasmic streaming in the plasmodium was greatly affected by changes in the acceleration. The endoplasmic flow in the centrifugal direction was accelerated, while that in the centripetal was retarded, by centrifugal acceleration. The centrifugal acceleration required to stop the endoplasmic flow in the centripetal direction did not cause total cessation of streaming but always induced a bidirectional flow of endoplasm in one and the same strand. Each profile of velocity distribution of the bidirectional flow was both parabola with flattened apex. One possible cause of the bidirectional flow is discussed.Dedicated to Emeritus Professor Noburo Kamiya on the occasion of his 80th birthday  相似文献   

19.
D. Hodick  A. Sievers 《Protoplasma》1998,204(3-4):145-154
Summary The relationship between the position of the statoliths and the direction and rate of tip growth in negatively gravitropic protonemata ofChara globularis was studied with a centrifuge video microscope. Cells placed perpendicularly to the acceleration vector (stimulation angle 90 °) showed a gradual reduction of the gravitropic curvature with increasing accelerations from 1g to 8g despite complete sedimentation of all statoliths on the centrifugal cell flank. It is argued that the increased weight of the statoliths in hypergravity impairs their acropetal transport which is induced when the cell axis deviates from the normal upright orientation. When the statoliths were centrifuged deep into the apical dome at 6g and a stimulation angle of 170 ° the gravitropic curvature after 1 h was identical to that determined for the same cells at 1g and the same stimulation angle. This indicates that gravitropism in Chara protonemata is either independent of the pressure exerted by the statoliths on an underlying structure or is already saturated at 1g. When the statoliths were moved along the apical cell wall at 8g and the stimulation angle was gradually increased from 170 ° to 220 ° the gravitropic curvature reverted sharply when the cluster of statoliths passed over the cell pole. This experiment supports the hypothesis that in Chara protonemata asymmetrically distributed statoliths inside the apical dome displace the Spitzenkörper and thus the centre of growth, resulting in gravitropic bending. In contrast to the positively gravitropic Chara rhizoids, no modifications either in the transport of statoliths during basipetal acceleration (6g, stimulation angle 0 °, 5 h) or in the subsequent gravitropic response could be detected in the protonemata. The different effects of centrifugation on the positioning of statoliths in Chara protonemata and rhizoids indicate subtle differences in the function of the cytoskeleton in both types of cells.Dedicated to Prof. Dr. Zygmunt Hejnowicz on the occasion of his 70th birthday  相似文献   

20.
To identify the molecular mechanisms of gravitropism in the fungus Phycomyces blakesleeanus we determined several biochemical and physical parameters of paracrystalline protein bodies, so-called octahedral crystals. The crystals, which are present throughout the central vacuoles of the sporangiophore, function as statoliths (Schimek et al., 1999a,b). They possess an average volume of 9.96 microm(3) and a specific mass of 1.26 g cm(-3). SDS-PAGE of purified crystals shows three major proteins with relative molecular masses of 16, 46.5, and 55 kDa. These proteins are absent in gravitropism mutants which lack the crystals. Phototropism mutants (genotype mad) which are graviresponsive (class 1) and those which are defective in gravitropism (class 2) contain the crystals and the three associated proteins. Absorption spectra of isolated crystals and in situ absorption spectra of growing zones indicate the presence of chromophores, probably oxidized and reduced flavins. The flavin nature of the chromophores is also indicated by their fluorescence properties. It appears likely that the chromophores represent an essential part of the statoliths and thus the gravitropic transduction chain.  相似文献   

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