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 31 毫秒
1.
A fine structure of cell wall lamellae in a coenocytic green algaBoergesenia forbesii was examined by electron microscopy. The wall has a polylamellate structure containing cellulose microfibrils 25 to 30 nm in diameter. The outer surface of the cell was covered by a thin structureless lamella, underneath which existed a lamella containing randomly-oriented microfibrils. The major part of the wall consisted of two types of lamellae, multifibrillar lamella and a transitional, matrix-rich one. In the former, microfibrils were densely arranged more or less parallel with each other. In the transitional lamella, existing between the multifibrillar ones, the microfibril orientation shifted about 30° within the layer. The fibril orientation also shifted 30° between adjacent transitional and multifibrillar layers, and consequently the microfibril orientation in the neighboring multifibrillar layers shifted 90°. It was concluded that the orientation rotated counterclockwise when observed from inside the cell. Each lamella in the thallus wall become thinner with cell expansion, but no reorientation of microfibrils in the outer old layers was observed. In the rhizoid, the outer lamellae sloughed off with the tip growth.  相似文献   

2.
Mine I  Okuda K 《Planta》2007,225(5):1135-1146
The mechanical strength of cell walls in the tip-growing cells of Vaucheria terrestris is weakened by treatment with proteolytic enzymes. To clarify the morphological characteristics of the components maintaining cell wall strength, the fine structures of the cell walls, with and without protease treatment, were observed by transmission electron microscopy (TEM) and atomic force microscopy (AFM). Observations indicated that cellulose microfibrils were arranged in random directions and overlapped each other. Most of the microfibrils observed in the inner surface of the cell wall were embedded in amorphous materials, whereas in the outer surface of the cell wall, microfibrils were partially covered by amorphous materials. The matrix components embedding and covering microfibrils were almost completely removed by protease treatment, revealing layers of naked microfibrils deposited deeply in the cell wall. Topographic data taken from AFM observations provided some additional information that could not be obtained by TEM, including more detailed images of the granular surface textures of the matrix components and the detection of microfibrils in the interior of the cell wall. In addition, quantitative AFM data of local surface heights enabled us to draw three-dimensional renderings and to quantitatively estimate the extent of the exposure of microfibrils by the enzymatic treatment.  相似文献   

3.
The crystalline ultrastructure and orientation of cellulose microfibrils in the cell wall of Valonia macrophysa were investigated by means of high-resolution electron microscopy of ultrathin (approx. 28 nm) sections. With careful selection of imaging conditions, ultrastructural aspects of the cell wall that had remained unresolved in previous studies were worked out by direct imaging of crystal lattice of cellulose microfibrils. It was confirmed that each microfibril is a single crystal having a lateral dimension of 20·20 nm2, because lattice images of 0.39 nm resolution were clearly recorded with no major disruption in the whole area of the cross section of the microfibril. There was no evidence for the existence of 3.5-nm elementary fibrils which have been considered to be basic crystallographic and morphological units of cellulose in general. It was also confirmed that the axial directions (crystallographic fiber direction) of adjacent microfibrils in each single lamella of the cell wall are opposite to each other.  相似文献   

4.
How cell wall elasticity, plasticity, and time‐dependent extension (creep) relate to one another, to plant cell wall structure and to cell growth remain unsettled topics. To examine these issues without the complexities of living tissues, we treated cell‐free strips of onion epidermal walls with various enzymes and other agents to assess which polysaccharides bear mechanical forces in‐plane and out‐of‐plane of the cell wall. This information is critical for integrating concepts of wall structure, wall material properties, tissue mechanics and mechanisms of cell growth. With atomic force microscopy we also monitored real‐time changes in the wall surface during treatments. Driselase, a potent cocktail of wall‐degrading enzymes, removed cellulose microfibrils in superficial lamellae sequentially, layer‐by‐layer, and softened the wall (reduced its mechanical stiffness), yet did not induce wall loosening (creep). In contrast Cel12A, a bifunctional xyloglucanase/cellulase, induced creep with only subtle changes in wall appearance. Both Driselase and Cel12A increased the tensile compliance, but differently for elastic and plastic components. Homogalacturonan solubilization by pectate lyase and calcium chelation greatly increased the indentation compliance without changing tensile compliances. Acidic buffer induced rapid cell wall creep via endogenous α‐expansins, with negligible effects on wall compliances. We conclude that these various wall properties are not tightly coupled and therefore reflect distinctive aspects of wall structure. Cross‐lamellate networks of cellulose microfibrils influenced creep and tensile stiffness whereas homogalacturonan influenced indentation mechanics. This information is crucial for constructing realistic molecular models that define how wall mechanics and growth depend on primary cell wall structure.  相似文献   

5.
The cell wall of the tip‐growing cells of the giant‐cellular xanthophycean alga Vaucheria frigida is mainly composed of cellulose microfibrils (CMFs) arranged in random directions and the major matrix component into which the CMFs are embedded throughout the cell. The mechanical properties of a cell‐wall fragment isolated from the tip‐growing region, which was inflated by artificially applied pressure, were measured after enzymatic removal of the matrix component by using a protease; the results showed that the matrix component is involved in the maintenance of cell wall strength. Since glucose and uronic acid are present in the matrix component of Vaucheria cell walls, we measured the mechanical properties of the cell wall after treatment with endo‐1,3‐ß‐glucanase and observed the fine structures of its surfaces by atomic force microscopy. The major matrix component was partially removed from the cell wall by glucanase, and the enzyme treatment significantly weakened the cell wall strength without affecting the pH dependence of cell wall extensibility. The enzymatic removal of the major matrix component by using a protease released polysaccharide containing glucose and glucuronic acid. This suggests that the major matrix component of the algal cell walls contains both proteins (or polypeptides) and polysaccharides consisting of glucose and glucuronic acid as the main constituents.  相似文献   

6.
H. J. Pluymaekers 《Protoplasma》1982,112(1-2):107-116
Summary The cell wall of root hairs ofLimnobium stoloniferum is composed of two fibrillar layers: an outer layer with a dispersed texture and an inner layer with a helicoidal texture. In stained oblique sections the helicoidal layer appears as a series of bow-shaped structures. In sections which were shadow-casted after the embedding medium was removed, the following properties of the helicoidal layer can be directly observed. (1) It is build up of superimposed lamellae. (2) Each lamella consists of parallel oriented microfibrils. (3) Going into the helicoidal layer, there is a counter-clockwise discontinuous rotation of the microfibril orientation in successive lamellae. (4) Between adjacent lamellae the average angular displacement of the microfibril orientation is about 23 degrees. The dispersed outer layer is also polylamellated, but with randomly arranged microfibrils in each lamella. Both layers are present in the lateral wall as well as in the apical wall of the root hairs. Observations indicate that in the cell wall of the tip the parallel oriented microfibrils of the outermost helicoidal lamellae become distorted towards a dispersed arrangement. The suggestion is made that the dispersed outer layer is derived from the helicoidal layer.  相似文献   

7.
Enlargement of the cell wall requires separation of cellulose microfibrils, mediated by proteins such as expansin; according to the multi-net growth hypothesis, enlargement passively reorients microfibrils. However, at the molecular scale, little is known about the specific movement of microfibrils. To find out, we examined directly changes in microfibril orientation when walls were extended slowly in vitro under constant load (creep). Frozen-thawed cucumber hypocotyl segments were strained by 20-30% by incubation in pH 4.5 buffer or by incubation of heat-inactivated segments in alpha-expansin or a fungal endoglucanase (Cel12A). Subsequently, the innermost layer of the cell wall was imaged, with neither extraction nor homogenization, by field-emission scanning electron microscopy (FESEM) and atomic force microscopy (AFM). AFM images revealed that sample preparation for FESEM did not appreciably alter cell wall ultrastructure. In both FESEM and AFM, images from extended and non-extended samples appeared indistinguishable. To quantify orientational order, we used a novel algorithm to characterize the fast Fourier transform of the image as a function of spatial frequency. For both FESEM and AFM images, the transforms of non-extended samples were indistinguishable from those of samples extended by alpha-expansin or Cel12A, as were AFM images of samples extended by acidic buffer. We conclude that cell walls in vitro can extend slowly by a creep mechanism without passive reorientation of innermost microfibrils, implying that wall loosening agents act selectively on the cross-linking polymers between parallel microfibrils, rather than more generally on the wall matrix.  相似文献   

8.
T. Fujino  T. Itoh 《Protoplasma》1994,180(1-2):39-48
Summary The cell wall of a green alga,Oocystis apiculata, was visualized by electron microscopy after preparation of samples by rapid-freezing and deep-etching techniques. The extracellular spaces clearly showed a random network of dense fibrils of approximately 6.4 nm in diameter. The cell wall was composed of three distinct layers: an outer layer with a smooth appearance and many protuberances on its outermost surface; a middle layer with criss-crossed cellulose microfibrils of approximately 15–17 nm in diameter; and an inner layer with many pores between anastomosing fibers of 8–10 nm in diameter. Both the outer and the inner layer seemed to be composed of amorphous material. Cross-bridges of approximately 4.2 nm in diameter were visualized between adjacent microfibrils by the same techniques. The cross-bridges were easily distinguished from cellulose microfibrils by differences in their dimensions.  相似文献   

9.
Formation of macromolecular lignin in ginkgo cell walls. In the lignifying process of xylem cell walls, macromolecular lignin is formed by polymerization of monolignols on the pectic substances, hemicellulose and cellulose microfibrils that have deposited prior to the start of lignification. Observation of lignifying secondary cell walls of ginkgo tracheids by field emission scanning electron microscopy suggested that lignin-hemicellulose complexes are formed as tubular bead-like modules surrounding the cellulose microfibrils (CMFs), and that the complexes finally fill up the space between CMFs. The size of one tubular bead-like module in the middle layer of the secondary wall (S2) was tentatively estimated to be about 16+/-2 nm in length, about 25+/-1 nm in outer diameter, with a wall thickness of 4+/-2 nm; the size of the modules in the outer layer of the secondary wall (S1) was larger and they were thicker-walled than that in the middle layer (S2). Aggregates of large globular modules were observed in the cell corner and compound middle lamella. It was suggested that the structure of non-cellulosic polysaccharides and mode of their association with CMFs may be important factors controlling the module formation and lignin concentration in the different morphological regions of the cell wall.  相似文献   

10.
This is the first of two papers dealing with the relationshipbetween growth and the mechanical properties of the wall ininternodal cells of Nitella opaca L. The submicroscopic structure of the cell wall of this alga,as determined by chemical analysis, X-ray crystallography, polarizingmicroscopy, electron microscopy, swelling measurements, andinfra-red spectrography, is described in detail and the changesduring growth are recorded. It has been found that the wallcontains cellulose in the form of cellulose I (type B). Theconstituent microfibrils are preferentially oriented, usuallyin slow helices with considerable angular dispersion about thecommon direction. They are arranged in discrete layers withpectic substances providing an amorphous matrix between microfibrillar-reinforcedlaminations. It is shown that, as the cell elongates, both thestreaming direction in the cell and the mean microfibrillarorientation in the wall change in such a way as to allow thepossibility of a causal connexion between streaming and microfibrillarorientation in a new wall lamella. The orientation in such alamella is undoubtedly modified by subsequent passive extensionmuch as implied in the multi-net growth hypothesis of Roelofsen.  相似文献   

11.
A method for the ultrastructural investigation of fiber cross-sections based on atomic force microscopy in combination with image analysis is presented. A uniform distribution of pores across the matrix material within the fiber wall was revealed by impregnation of pulp fibers with poly(ethylene glycol). The effects of chemical and mechanical processing on the pore and matrix structure and on the arrangement of the cellulose fibril aggregates were investigated. During chemical processing, changes in the fiber ultrastructure occur: a broadening of the pore and matrix lamella widths in combination with a reduction in their number and an enlargement of the cellulose fibril aggregates. It was found that pores formed during pulping are evenly distributed across the fiber wall in the transverse direction. In contrast, refining increases the pore and matrix lamella width in the fiber wall closest to the middle lamella an effect which gradually decrease in size toward the lumen side.  相似文献   

12.
On the Lamellar Structure of the Tracheid Cell Wall   总被引:2,自引:0,他引:2  
Abstract: It is clear that cross sections of wood cells show a lamellar structure. This paper investigates the orientation of this lamellar structure of spruce (Picea abies) tracheids using atomic force microscopy (AFM) and scanning electron microscopy (SEM). Cross sections of spruce wood were produced through fracturing in longitudinal bending and tensile testing. When investigated with SEM, the fracture surfaces show a structure of mostly larger radial lamellae, in the order of 30 - 100 nm, i.e., agglomerations of a few cellulose aggregates. Thin transverse sections of the fracture zones investigated with atomic force microscopy show concentric lamellae with a width in the order of a single cellulose aggregate, i.e., 15 - 25 nm. No structural connection to the splinters in the radial direction can be seen. It is suggested that the radial lamellar structure is a consequence of the energy released during fracturing of the wood samples and that the undistorted wood has a concentric lamellar structure on a smaller structural level.  相似文献   

13.
Characteristics of the deposition of cellulose microfibrilsduring formation of polylamellate walls and the arrangementof cortical microtubules in the tip-growing bipolar cells ofChamaedoris orientalis were examined by replica preparationmethods and indirect immunofluorescence microscopy. The polylamellatewall is made up of two or three kinds of wall lamella whichdiffer in terms of the orientation of microfibrils. Individuallamellae were periodically initiated one after another fromthe pole that was situated exactly at each growing apex of thecell and they were deposited basipetally. The orientation ofmicrofibrils in each lamella was constant during deposition.Microfibrils in different lamellae were deposited at the sametime through the cell wall but the timing of the depositionwas staggered between neighboring lamellae so that the microfibrilswould not be interwoven. By contrast, cortical microtubuleswere persistently arranged longitudinally all over the celland no focal points to which they converged helically were visible,even around the cell apices. The mechanisms that regulate theformation of the polylamellate wall are discussed and a modelfor interpreting the involvement of the cortical microtubulesin such mechanisms is proposed. (Received July 31, 1989; Accepted January 27, 1990)  相似文献   

14.
Fourier-transform infrared (FT-IR) microspectroscopy was used to investigate both the chemical composition of, and the effects of an applied strain on, the structure of the Chara corallina cell wall. The inner layers of the cell wall are known to have a transverse cellulose orientation with a gradient through the thickness to longitudinal orientation in the older layers. In both the native state and following the removal of various biopolymers by a sequential extraction infrared dichroism was used to examine the orientation of different biopolymers in cell-wall samples subjected to longitudinal strain. In the Chara system, cellulose microfibrils were found to be aligned predominantly transverse to the long axis of the cell and became orientated increasingly transversely as longitudinal strain increased. Simultaneously, the pectic polysaccharide matrix underwent molecular orientation parallel to the direction of strain. Following extraction in CDTA, microfibrils were orientated transversely to the strain direction, and again the degree of transverse orientation increased with increasing strain. However, the pectic polysaccharides of the matrix were not detected in the dichroic difference spectra. After a full sequential extraction, the cellulose microfibrils, now with greatly reduced crystallinity, were detected in a longitudinal direction and they became orientated increasingly parallel to the direction of strain as it increased.  相似文献   

15.
The process of root hair formation has been studied by light-, transmission-and scanning electron microscopy. In the course of root hair development a break of the outer cell wall is observed by electron microscopy. It apparently occurs after the break of the fibrillar layer. The break of the outer layer of the cell wall is assumed to represent the break of the outer mucilage, the cuticle and the adjoining amorphous matrix with irregularly oriented cellulose microfibrils. The scheme of successive ultrastructural changes in the outer cell wall pattern during root hair formation is presented.  相似文献   

16.
Two models of isolated epidermis were used to demonstrate that the net orientation of cellulose microfibrils in the cell wall is related to mechanical properties of the tissue, and can be used as an indicator for wall anisotropy. In the developing plant epidermis, cells expand in one or two directions in the plane of the plant surface. In epidermis cells actively expanding in one direction (elongation), the orientation of cortical microtubules closely matches the net cellulose orientation. In epidermis cells expanding in two directions, the orientation of the parallel microtubules does not coincide with the net cellulose orientation in the adjacent cell wall. The orientation of cortical microtubules is thus not always a reliable indicator of wall characteristics. In both types of epidermis, a high rate of expansion correlates with a high activity of xyloglucan endotransglycosylase (XET), as determinedin situ. This high activity alone cannot explain unidirectional wall expansion.  相似文献   

17.
Models of the primary cell wall are discussed in relation to results obtained by the present authors from studies of the primary cell wall of lupin and mung bean hypocotyls. A structure of the primary cell wall is suggested that differs in several respects from structures already proposed. It has a non-covalent interaction of much of the pectin, hemicellulose and glycoprotein, and a more direct interaction of the glycoprotein and cellulose microfibrils. An idea of scale is introduced through a consideration of degree of polymerization and monomer size of polymers, and of the volume of the cellulose microfibrils. Wall structure is discussed in relation to polymer orientation and elongation of the primary cell wall.  相似文献   

18.
Complete cellulase, an endoglucanase (EGV) with cellulose-binding domain (CBD) and a mutant endoglucanase without CBD (EGI) were utilized for the hydrolysis of a fully bleached reed Kraft pulp sample. The changes of microfibrils on the fiber surface were examined with tapping mode atomic force microscopy (TM–AFM) phase imaging. The results indicated that complete cellulase could either peel the fibrillar bundles along the microfibrils (peeling) or cut microfibrils into short length across the length direction (cutting) during the process. After 24 h treatment, most orientated microfibrils on the cellulose fiber surface were degraded into fragments by the complete cellulase. Incubation with endoglucanase (EGV or EGI) also caused peeling action. But no significant size reduction of microfibrils length was observed, which was probably due to the absence of cellobiohydrolase. The AFM phase imaging clearly revealed that individual EGV particles were adsorbed onto the surface of a cellulose fiber and may be bound to several microfibrils.  相似文献   

19.
Gauldie RW 《Tissue & cell》1999,31(2):138-153
Atomic force microscopy (AFM) of the crystalline ultrastructure of otoliths fromPagrus major(Sparidae),Macruronus novaezelandiae(Merlucciidae),Oncorhynchus tshawytscha(Salmonidae),Sebastes alutus(Scorpaenidae), andHoplostethus atlanticus(Trachichthyidae) showed regular deposition of lamellae in the size range 13-490 nm. The orientation of lamellae in the {010} plane was the same as lamellae in crystals of mineral aragonite. Lamellae in mineral aragonite were in the size range 15-45 nm. Lamellae observed in the otolith ofM. novaezelandiaeby transmission electron microscopy showed a range of widths (25-225 nm) similar to lamellae observed by AFM. The observed lamella widths were in the size range that has been described for sub-daily and daily microincrements in otoliths. Observed lamellae widths were also in the size range of alpha-recoil trajectories of(222)Rn and provide a potential diffusion sink correction for the(222)Rn losses in radionuclide method of ageing otoliths. Comparison of the orientations of lamellae to templates based on the Bragg unit cell structure of twinned aragonite indicated that the lamellae resulted from polysynthetic twinning on the {010} aragonite crystal face. Additional cyclic twinning occurred on the {110} face of the aragonite crystal and sometimes led to pseudohexagonal crystals, whose sizes were orders of magnitude larger than lamellae. The organic matrix of the otolith was visible by atomic force and transmission electron microscopy at the nanometer level of resolution, but the organic matrix was confined to the {110} twinning plane of symmetry of the otolith crystal.  相似文献   

20.
A central issue in the understanding of Marfan syndrome deals with the functional architecture of fibrillin-containing microfibrils. Fibrillin-rich microfibrils are long extracellular matrix fibrillar components exhibiting a 50 nm periodic beaded-structure with a width of around 20–25 nm after rotary shadowing and a 10–12 nm diameter when observed in ultra-thin sections. They are composed of fibrillin monomers more or less associated with many other components which are, for the most part, poorly characterized up to date. They are known to be elastic but few data have been accumulated to understand their properties. Atomic force microscopy (AFM) allowed us to morphologically differentiate fibrillin-rich microfibrils from other fibrillar components and to investigate the thin structure of these beaded filaments in their native state. They showed, in AFM, a periodic beaded structure ranging from 50 to 60 nm and a width of about 40 nm. The different sizes of fibrillin-containing microfibrils previously observed after rotary shadowing and in ultra-thin sections was resolved with our technique and is revealed to be 10 nm in diameter. Each beaded microfibril appears to be composed of heterogeneous beads connected by 2–3 arms. An orientation of the microfibrils has been shown, and allows us to propose a complementary model of microfibrillar monomer association.  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