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1.
David G. Fisher  Ray F. Evert 《Planta》1982,155(5):377-387
Both the mesophyll and bundle-sheath cells associated with the minor veins in the leaf of Amaranthus retroflexus L. contain abundant tubular endoplasmic reticulum, which is continuous between the two cell types via numerous plasmodesmata in their common walls. In bundle-sheath cells, the tubular endoplasmic reticulum forms an extensive network that permeates the cytoplasm, and is closely associated, if not continuous, with the delimiting membranes of the chloroplasts, mitochondria, and microbodies. Both the number and frequency of plasmodesmata between various cell types decrease markedly from the bundle-sheath — vascular-parenchyma cell interface to the sicve-tube member — companion-cell interface. For plants taken directly from lighted growth chambers, a stronger mannitol solution (1.4 M) was required to plasmolyze the companion cells and sieve-tube members than that (0.6 M) necessary to plasmolyze the mesophyll, bundle-sheath, and vascular-parenchyma cells. Placing plants in the dark for 48 h reduced the solute concentration in all cell types. Judging from the frequency of plasmodesmata between the various cell types of the vascular bundles, and from the solute concentrations of the various cell types, it appears that assimilates are actively accumulated by the sieve-tube — companion-cell complex from the apoplast.  相似文献   

2.
Minor veins and contiguous tissues of the Spinacia oleracea leaf were analyzed by electron microscopy to determine the characteristics of the component cells and the structure, distribution, and frequency of plasmodesmata between the various cell types of the leaf. Mesophyll and bundle-sheath cells contain components typical of photosynthetic cells although the latter cell type contains smaller chloroplasts and fewer mitochondria and microbodies than the mesophyll cells. In addition, the mesophyll cells contain numerous invaginations of the plasmalemma bordering the chloroplasts and evaginations of the outer membrane of the opposing chloroplast envelope. In places, these membranes appear continuous with each other. The minor veins consist of tracheary elements, xylem parenchyma cells, sieve-tube members, companion and phloem parenchyma cells, and other cells simply designated vascular parenchyma cells. The companion and phloem parenchyma cells are typically larger than the sieve-tube members with the companion cells containing a much denser cytoplasm that the phloem parenchyma. Cytoplasmic connections occur along all possible routes from the mesophyll to the sieve-tube members and consist of either simple or branched plasmodesmata between parenchymatic elements or pore-plasmodesmata between the sieve-tube members and parenchyma cells. The highest frequency of plasmodesmata occurs between the sieve-tube members and companion cells, although the value is essentially the same as between the various parenchymatic elements of the phloem. Compared to several previously studied species, the frequency of plasmodesmata between cell types of the spinach leaf is low. These results are discussed in relation to apoplastic vs. symplastic solute transport and sieve-tube loading in this species.  相似文献   

3.
The minor veins and contiguous tissues of mature leaves of Populus deltoides Bartr. ex Marsh. were examined with the electron microscope to determine the ultrastructural characteristics of the component cells and to determine the structure, distribution, and frequency of plasmodesmata between the various cell types. In addition, plasmolytic studies were carried out to determine the solute concentrations of the various cell types of the minor veins and contiguous tissues. The cells comprising the mesophyll and bundle sheath contain all the components typical of photosynthetic cells. Paraveinal mesophyll cells and bundle-sheath cells have fewer microbodies and smaller chloroplasts than do palisade parenchyma cells. Vascular parenchyma and companion cells tend to intergrade with one another structurally but can be distinguished from one another by their characteristic plastids. The mature, enucleate sieve-tube member is lined by a parietal layer of cytoplasm consisting of plasmalemma, endoplasmic reticulum, mitochondria, plastids, and P-protein. Plasmodesmata occur along all possible routes from the palisade parenchyma cells to the sieve tubes of the minor veins, and their frequency increases with increasing proximity to the sieve-tube members. Plasmolytic studies revealed that the paraveinal mesophyll cells had a higher C50 (estimated mannitol concentration plasmolyzing, on the average, 50% of a given cell type) than any other cell type of the leaf. Concentration gradients existed along the palisade cell/bundle-sheath cell/companion cell (or vascular parenchyma cell) route as well as along the paraveinal mesophyll cell/bundle-sheath cell/companion cell (or vascular parenchyma cell) route. Considering the frequency of plasmodesmata along these routes, it is conceivable that photosynthate diffuses from palisade cells to the companion cells along concentration gradients. Within the minor veins, the C50 was higher for sieve-tube members than for either companion cells or vascular parenchyma cells, indicating that loading of the sieve tubes is an active, energy-dependent process.  相似文献   

4.
The vascular system for the two lodicules in a floret of Dactylis glomerata L. was studied in serial sections. The floret stele contained a few modified tracheary elements and xylem transfer cells enveloped by a phloem of squat sieve-tube members and intermediary cells. A single sieve tube and associated phloem parenchyma exited the right and left sides of the stele and upon nearing the base of each lodicule branched and formed the minor veins of the lodicule. The minor veins underwent limited branching and anastomosing to form a small three-dimensional system which described an arc during its ascent in the adaxial portion of each lodicule. The sieve tubes in the minor veins extended halfway up the lodicule and contained short sieve-tube members with transverse, slightly oblique, or lateral simple sieve plates. The associated phloem parenchyma cells were intermediary cells, companion cells, and less intimate parenchyma cells. Intermediary cells terminated the minor veins and touched the distal ends of the terminal sieve-tube members, which lacked distal sieve plates. Although the transverse area of the sieve-tube members remained constant up the lodicule, the transverse area of the associated phloem parenchyma fluctuated.  相似文献   

5.
Leaves of Sonchus oleraceus (Asteraceae) were examined with the electron microscope to determine plasmodesmatal frequencies and other structural features relating to the collection of photoassimilate and its subsequent loading into minor veins. Few plasmodesmata occur between mesophyll cells, which contain chloroplasts that are sometimes connected to both the plasmalemma and the tonoplast by membranous tubules. The minor veins consist of tracheary elements, sieve-tube members, vascular parenchyma cells, and companion cells. The latter two cell types are transfer cells, with some of the fingerlike wall ingrowths in companion cells being traversed lengthwise by plasmodesmata. The frequencies of plasmodesmata at the mesophyllbundle sheath boundary and within are higher at some interfaces than at corresponding interfaces in nine other species, including some that previously had been characterized as loading assimilate via the symplast. It is thus premature to designate all species containing transfer cells in their minor veins as loading assimilate only via the apoplast.  相似文献   

6.
Vascular bundles and contiguous tissues of leaf blades of sugarcane (Saccharum interspecific hybrid L62–96) were examined with light and transmission electron microscopes to determine their cellular composition and the frequency of plasmodesmata between the various cell combinations. The large vascular bundles typically are surrounded by two bundle sheaths, an outer chlorenchymatous bundle sheath and an inner mestome sheath. In addition to a chlorenchymatous bundle sheath, a partial mestome sheath borders the phloem of the intermediate vascular bundles, and at least some mestome-sheath cells border the phloem of the small vascular bundles. Both the walls of the chlorenchymatous bundlesheath cells and of the mestome-sheath cells possess suberin lamellae. The phloem of all small and intermediate vascular bundles contains both thick- and thin-walled sieve tubes. Only the thin-walled sieve tubes have companion cells, with which they are united symplastically by pore-plasmodesmata connections. Plasmodesmata are abundant at the Kranz mesophyll-cell-bundlesheath-cell interface associated with all sized bundles. Plasmodesmata are also abundant at the bundle-sheathcell-vascular-parenchyma-cell, vascular-parenchyma-cellvascular-parenchyma-cell, and mestome-sheath-cell-vascular-parenchyma-cell interfaces in small and intermediate bundles. The thin-walled sieve tubes and companion cells of the large vascular bundles are symplastically isolated from all other cell types of the leaf. The same condition is essentially present in the sieve-tube-companion-cell complexes of the small and intermediate vascular bundles. Although few plasmodesmata connect either the thin-walled sieve tubes or their companion cells to the mestome sheath of small and intermediate bundles, plasmodesmata are somewhat more numerous between the companion cells and vascular-parenchyma cells. The thick-walled sieve tubes are united with vascular-parenchyma cells by pore-plasmodesmata connections. The vascular-parenchyma cells, in turn, have numerous plasmodesmatal connections with the bundle-sheath cells.This study was supported by National Science Foundation grants DCB 87-01116 and DCB 90-01759 to R.F.E. and a University of Wisconsin-Madison Dean's Fellowship to K. R.-B. We also thank Claudia Lipke and Kandis Elliot for photographic and artistic assistance, respectively.  相似文献   

7.
Minor vein ultrastructure and phloem loading were studied in leaves of the tulip tree (Liriodendron tulipifera; Magnoliaceae). Plasmodesmatal frequencies leading into minor vein companion cells are higher than in species known to load via the apoplast. However, these companion cells are not specialized as "intermediary cells" as they are in species in which the best evidence for symplastic phloem loading has been documented. Mesophyll cells plasmolyzed in 600 mM sorbitol, whereas sieve elements and companion cells did not plasmolyze even in 1.2 M sorbitol, indicating that solute accumulates in the phloem against a steep concentration gradient. Both [(14)C]sucrose and (14)C-labeled photo-assimilate accumulated in the minor vein network, as demonstrated by autoradiography. [(14)C]sucrose accumulation was prevented by p-chloromercuribenzenesulfonic acid, an inhibitor of sucrose-proton cotransport from the apoplast. p-Chloromercuribenzenesulfonic acid largely, but not entirely, inhibited exudation of radiolabeled photoassimilate. The evidence is most consistent with the presence of an apoplastic component to phloem loading in this species, contrary to speculation that the more basal members of the angiosperms load by an entirely symplastic mechanism.  相似文献   

8.
Turgeon R  Medville R 《Protoplasma》2011,248(1):173-180
Phloem loading is the process by which photoassimilates synthesized in the mesophyll cells of leaves enter the sieve elements and companion cells of minor veins in preparation for long distance transport to sink organs. Three loading strategies have been described: active loading from the apoplast, passive loading via the symplast, and passive symplastic transfer followed by polymer trapping of raffinose and stachyose. We studied phloem loading in Amborella trichopoda, a premontane shrub that may be sister to all other flowering plants. The minor veins of A. trichopoda contain intermediary cells, indicative of the polymer trap mechanism, forming an arc on the abaxial side and subtending a cluster of ordinary companion cells in the interior of the veins. Intermediary cells are linked to bundle sheath cells by highly abundant plasmodesmata whereas ordinary companion cells have few plasmodesmata, characteristic of phloem that loads from the apoplast. Intermediary cells, ordinary companion cells, and sieve elements form symplastically connected complexes. Leaves provided with 14CO2 translocate radiolabeled sucrose, raffinose, and stachyose. Therefore, structural and physiological evidence suggests that both apoplastic and polymer trapping mechanisms of phloem loading operate in A. trichopoda. The evolution of phloem loading strategies is complex and may be difficult to resolve.  相似文献   

9.
The phloem-loading-related effects of temperature on leaf ultrastructure were studied in seven species having numerous plasmodesmatal connections between the mesophyll and phloem (symplasmic minor-vein configuration). The response to temperature (between 5 and 30 °C) was characterized by drastic changes in the endoplasmic-reticulum labyrinth (ER labyrinth) of intermediary cells, in the position of the vacuole in bundle-sheath cells, and in the starch content in the chloroplasts of bundle-sheath cells and mesophyll cells. At temperatures above 20 °C, the ER system in the intermediary cells reached its maximal volume, while the vacuole in bundlesheath cells was positioned centripetally (proximal to the intermediary cell). With decreasing temperature, the ER labyrinth in intermediary cells gradually contracted till the ER was fully collapsed at 10 °C and the vacuole in bundle-sheath cells moved to a more centrifugal position. The apparent elimination of photosynthate transport via the ER and plasmodesmata at temperatures lower than 10 °C led to starch accumulation in the chloroplasts of bundle-sheath cells and mesophyll cells. All of these changes were fully temperature-reversible and probably reflect changes in the balance between photosynthate transport and storage. The ultrastructural shifts appear to be correlated with the passage of photosynthate through the intermediary cells and, as a consequence, with the rate of phloem loading at various temperatures. A contraction of the ER/plasmodesmata system imposed by cytoskeletal reorganisation is discussed as the reason for the blockage of phloem loading at low temperatures in association with the general chilling sensitivity of these species.Abbreviations BSC bundle-sheath cell - IC intermediary cell - MC mesophyll cell - PD plasmodesmata - PFD photon flux density - SE/CC-complex sieve element/companion cell complex The authors gratefully acknowledge the financial support by NWO (Dutch Organization for Scientific Research).  相似文献   

10.
K. J. Oparka  P. Gates 《Planta》1981,151(6):561-573
Assimilates entering the developing rice caryopsis traverse a short-distance pathway between the terminal sieve elements of the pericarp vascular bundle and the aleurone layer. The ultrastructure of this pathway has been studied. Sieve elements in the pericarp vascular bundle are smaller than their companion cells.The sieve elements show few connections with surrounding vascular parenchyma elements but are connected to companion cells by compound plasmodesmata. Companion cells, in turn, are connected to vascular parenchyma elements by numerous compound plasmodesmata present in wall thickenings. Assimilates leaving the sieve element — companion cell complex must laterally traverse cells of the pigment strand before they come into contact with the aleurone layer. The pigment strand cells have modified inner walls made up of a suberin-like material. This material may act as a permeability barrier isolating the apoplast from the symplast of the pigment strand. The walls of the pigment strand cells are traversed by numerous plasmodesmata. Water may be conducted to the endosperm through the isolated cell-wall system of the pigment strand while assimilates possibly move via plasmodesmata. High frequencies of plasmodesmata occur at the junction between the pigment strand and the nucellus and also between adjacent cells of the nucellus. By contrast, plasmodesmata are absent between the nucellus and the aleurone layer and also between the nucellus and the seed coat. A predominantly circumferential and symplastic transport pathway is likely between the pigment strand and nucellus. In view of the total absence of plasmodesmata between the nucellus and the aleurone layer assimilates entering the endosperm may have to cross the plasmalemma of the nucellus. It is possible that constraints to the flow of assimilates may occur in the short-distance pathway between the terminal sieve element — companion cell complexes and the endosperm, and this is discussed.  相似文献   

11.
The evolution of minor vein phloem and phloem loading   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
Phylogenetic analysis provides a rational basis for comparative studies of phloem structure and phloem loading. Although several types of minor vein companion cell have been identified, and progress has been made in correlating structural features of these cells with loading mechanisms, little is known about the phylogenetic relationships of the different types. To add to the available data on companion cells, we analyzed the ultrastructure of minor veins in Euonymus fortunei and Celastrus orbiculatis (Celastraceae) leaves and determined that in these species they are specialized as intermediary cells. This cell type has been implicated in symplastic phloem loading. The data were added to published data sets on minor vein phloem characteristics, which were then mapped to a well-supported molecular tree. The analysis indicates that extensive plasmodesmatal continuity between minor vein phloem and surrounding cells is ancestral in the angiosperms. Reduction in plasmodesmatal frequency at this interface is a general evolutionary trend, punctuated by instances of the reverse. This is especially true in the case of intermediary cells that have many plasmodesmata, but other distinguishing characteristics as well, and have arisen independently at least four, and probably six, times in derived lineages. The character of highly reduced plasmodesmatal frequency in minor vein phloem, common in crop plants, has several points of origin in the tree. Thus, caution should be exercised in generalizing results on apoplastic phloem loading obtained from model species. Transfer cells have many independent points of origin, not always from lineages with reduced plasmodesmatal frequency.  相似文献   

12.
Minor-vein anatomy, sugar content, sugar synthesis, and translocation were studied in mature leaves of nine members of the Scrophulariaceae to determine if there is a correlation between companion-cell type and class of sugar translocated. Three types of companion cell were found: intermediary cells with extensive plasmodesmatal connections to the bundle sheath; transfer cells with wall ingrowths and few plasmodesmata; and ordinary companion cells with few plasmodesmata and no wall ingrowths. Alonsoa warscewiczii Regal., Verbascum chaixi Vill., and Mimulus cardinalis Dougl. ex. Benth. have intermediary cells and ordinary companion cells in the minor veins. These plants synthesize large amounts of raffinose and stachyose as well as sucrose. Nemesia strumosa Benth., and Rhodochiton atrosanguineum Zucc. have both intermediary cells and transfer cells and make proportionately less raffinose oligosaccharide than the species above. In N. strumosa, a single sieve element may abut both an intermediary cell and a transfer cell. The minor veins of Asarina scandens (Cav.) Penn. have transfer cells and what appear to be modified intermediary cells that have fewer plasmodesmata than other species, and occasional wall ingrowths. Asarina scandens synthesizes little raffinose or stachyose. Cymbalaria muralis P. Gaertn et al. and Linaria maroccana Hook.f. have only transfer cells and Digitalis grandiflora Mill. has only ordinary companion cells; these species make a trace of galactinol and raffinose, but no stachyose. Translocation experiments indicate that there is long-distance movement of raffinose oligosaccharide in these plants, even when it is synthesized in very small quantities in the leaves. We conclude that intermediary cells are as distinct a cell type as the transfer cell. In contrast to transfer cells, which are specialized for uptake of solute from the apoplast, intermediary cells are specialized for symplastic transfer of photoassimilate from the mesophyll and for synthesis of raffinose oligosaccharide. This supports our contention that raffinose oligosaccharide synthesis and symplastic phloem loading are mechanistically linked (Turgeon and Gowan 1990, Plant Physiol. 94, 1244–1249). Minor-vein anatomy and sugar synthesis may be useful characters in determining the phylogenetic relationships of plants in this family.We thank Andrea Wolfe and Wayne Elisens for helpful discussions on the taxonomy of the Scrophulariaceae. This research was supported by National Science Foundation grant DCB-9104159, U.S. Department of Agriculture Competetive Grant 92-37306-7819, and Hatch funds.  相似文献   

13.
The biochemical pathway of stachyose synthesis was localized by immunocytochemical and 14C-labeling techniques in mature Cucurbita pepo L. leaves. Galactinol synthase (GaS; EC 2.4.1.123), the first unique enzyme in this pathway, was immunolocalized within the intermediary cells of minor veins in conventionally fixed and cryo-fixed, resin-embedded sections using polyclonal anti-GaS antibodies and protein A-gold. Intermediary cells are specialized companion cells with extensive symplastic connections to the bundle sheath. Gold particles were not seen over the non-specialized companion cells of larger veins or over intermediary cells in young leaves prior to the sink-source transition. In another approach to localization, radiolabel was measured in isolated mesophyll tissue and whole tissue of leaves that were lyophilized following a 90-s exposure to 14CO2. Mesophyll, obtained by abrasion of the leaf surface, contained labeled sucrose, galactinol, raffinose and stachyose. However, the latter three labeled compounds constituted a smaller proportion of the neutral fraction than in whole-tissue samples, which also contained minor veins. We conclude that synthesis of galactinol, raffinose, and stachyose occurs in both mesophyll and intermediary cells, predominantly the latter.Abbreviations GaS galactinol synthase - SDS-PAGE sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis We thank John Pierce, Phillip Kerr, and Brace Schweiger for the gift of anti-GaS antibody and M.K. Kandasamy for helpful discussions. This research was supported by National Science Foundation grant DCB-9104159, U.S. Department of Agriculture Competetive Grant 90000854, and Hatch funds.  相似文献   

14.
Raffinose, stachyose, and galactinol are synthesized in intermediary cells (specialized companion cells) of the minor-vein phloem of cucurbits. To better understand the role of these carbohydrates and the regulation of their synthesis and transport, we measured the concentrations of each of the components of the raffinose oligosaccharide synthetic pathway in mesophyll and sieve element-intermediary cell complexes (SE-ICCs) in the leaves of melon (Cucumis melo L. cv. Hale's Best Jumbo). These concentrations are consistent with a polymer-trapping mechanism for phloem loading, with sucrose diffusing from mesophyll into intermediary cells and being made into raffinose and stachyose, which are too large to diffuse back to the mesophyll. To determine carbohydrate concentrations, we developed a method involving microdissected tissues. Blind endings of areoles, and mesophyll surrounding these veins, were separately removed from lyophilized leaf tissue. Carbohydrates were quantitated by high-performance liquid chromatography with pulsed amperometric detection. A small amount of mesophyll remained attached to the blind endings; the carbohydrate contribution of these cells to the vein sample was eliminated by subtraction, based on the amount of chlorophyll. Volumes of cells and subcellular compartments were calculated by morphometric analysis and were used to calculate carbohydrate concentrations. Assuming no subcellular compartmentation, the additive concentration of sugars in the SE-ICCs of minor veins is about 600 mM. Stachyose and raffinose concentrations are about 330 mM and 70 mM, respectively, in SE-ICCs; concentrations of these sugars are much lower in mesophyll (0.2 and 0.1 mM). This is consistent with the view that stachyose and raffinose are unable to pass through the plasmodesmata between intermediary cells and bundle-sheath cells. Sucrose levels appear to be higher in the SE-ICC (about 130mM) than in the mesophyll (about 10 mM), but if compartmentation is taken into account the gradient for sucrose is probably downhill from mesophyll to intermediary cells. Flux through plasmodesmata between the bundle sheath and intermediary cells was calculated and was found to be within the range of values of flux through plasmodesmata reported in the literature.Abbreviations BS-IC bundle sheath-intermediary cell - PC plasmodesmatal channel - SE-ICC sieve element-intermediary cell complex - SEL size exclusion limit We would like to thank Gayle Volk, Philip Laible, Canan Inan, Esther Gowan, Richard Medville, Nathan Wilson, Jessica Plant, and Steven Boese for their help, Thomas Owens, M.V. Parthasarathy, and Ian Merwin for use of equipment, and Nancy Haritatos for suggestions. This research was supported by U.S. Department of Agriculture Competitive Grant 94-37306-0351 (R.T.), the Swiss National Foundation (F.K.), and a NSF/DOE/USDA Cornell Plant Science Center fellowship (E.H.).  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.
The ultrastructural ontogeny of Commelina benghalensis minor-vein elements was followed. The mature minor vein has a restricted number of elements: a sheath of six to eight mestome cells encloses one xylem vessel, three to five vascular parenchyma cells, a companion cell, a thin-walled protophloem sieve-tube member and a thick-walled metaphloem sieve-tube member. The protophloem sieve-tube member (diameter 4–5 m; wall thickness 0.12 m) and the companion cell originated from a common mother cell. The metaphloem sieve-tube member (diameter 3 m; wall thickness 0.2 m) developed from the same precursor cell as the phloem parenchyma cells. Counting the plasmodesmatal frequencies demonstrated a symplastic continuum from mesophyll to the minor-vein phloem. The metaphloem sievetube member and the phloem parenchyma cells are the termini of this symplast. The protophloem sieve-tube member and companion cell constitute an insulated symplastic domain. The symplastic route, mesophyll to metaphloem sieve tube, appears to offer a path for symplastic loading; the protophloem sieve tube may be capable of accumulation from the apoplast. A similar two-way system of loading may exist in a number of plant families. Plasmodesmograms (a novel way to depict cell elements, plasmodesmatal frequencies and vein architecture) of some other species also displayed the anatomical requirements for two routes from mesophyll to sieve tube and indicate the potential coexistence of symplastic and apoplastic loading.  相似文献   

17.
Seminal root tissue of Hordeum vulgare L. var. Barsoy was fixed in glutaraldehyde and osmium tetroxide and studied with the light and electron microscopes. The roots consist of an epidermis, 6–7 layers of cortical cells, a uniseriate endodermis and a central vascular cylinder. Cytologically, the cortical and endodermal cells are similar except for the presence of tubular-like invaginations of the plasmalemma, especially near the plasmodesmata, in the former. The vascular cylinder consists of a uniseriate pericycle surrounding 6–9 phloem strands occurring on alternating radii with an equal number of xylem bundles. The center of the root contains a single, late maturing metaxylem vessel element. Each phloem strand consists of one protophloem sieve element, two companion cells and 1–3 metaphloem sieve elements. The protophloem element and companion cells are contiguous with the pericycle. Metaphloem sieve elements are contiguous with companion cells and are separated from tracheary elements by xylem parenchyma cells. The protoplasts of contiguous cells of the root are joined by various numbers of cytoplasmic connections. With the exception of the pore-plasmodesmata connections between sieve-tube members and parenchymatic elements, the plasmodesmata between various cell types are similar in structure. The distribution of plasmodesmata supports a symplastic pathway for organic solute unloading and transport from the phloem to the cortex. Based on the arrangement of cell types and plasmodesmatal frequencies between various cell types of the root, the major symplastic pathway from sieve elements to cortex appears to be via the companion and xylem parenchyma cells.  相似文献   

18.
Compartmentation of Assimilate Fluxes in Leaves   总被引:2,自引:0,他引:2  
Abstract: Sugar levels in the apoplast of assimilate exporting leaves were studied in two groups of plant species with contrasting structures of companion cells in minor veins. These species are termed either "symplastic" (with intermediary cells) or "apoplastic" (with transfer or ordinary cells). Sugars were measured in intercellular washing fluid after extracting the apoplast by an infiltration-centrifugation technique. During the course of a day, sugar contents in the apoplast were, in general, lower in species with intermediary cells than in species with transfer or ordinary cells. In "symplastic" species, apoplastic sucrose concentrations were between 0.3 and 1 mM. In "apoplastic" species with transfer cells, they ranged between 2 and 6 mM. Apoplastic hexose contents were between 0.3 and 1 mM irrespective of presumed transport mode. "Symplastic" and "apoplastic" plants differed markedly in their response to a'translocation block. In "symplastic" plants, inhibition of assimilate export left apoplastic concentrations of sucrose and hexoses unchanged, whereas in "apoplastic" plants sugar levels increased, the maximal increase being observed with sucrose. In these plants, concentrations of sucrose were two to six times higher in the apoplast under export inhibition than in control leaves. The data suggest a different role of the leaf apoplast in the compartmentation and export of assimilates in the two plant groups under study.  相似文献   

19.
In this brief review an attempt has been made to discuss some of the important features of the vascular anatomy of angiospermous leaves, especially those related to assimilate transport. Accordingly, emphasis has been placed on the small or minor veins, which are closely related spatially to the mesophyll, and which play a major role in the uptake and subsequent transport of photosynthates from the leaf. The small veins are enclosed by bundle sheaths that intervene between the mesophyll and vascular tissues and greatly increase the area for contact with mesophyll cells. In the minor veins of dicotyledonous leaves, parenchymatic cells having organelle-rich protoplasts and numerous cytoplasmic connections with sieve elements dominate quantitatively. It is these so-called intermediary cells that apparently are directly involved with the loading of assimilates into the sieve elements. In the maize leaf the small and intermediate bundles have two types of sieve tubes, relatively thin-walled ones that have numerous cytoplasmic connections with companion cells, and thick-walled ones that lack companion cells but have numerous connections with vascular parenchyma cells. The companion cell-sieve tube complexes are virtually isolated symplastically from other cells of the vascular bundle and from the bundle sheath. Thick-walled sieve tubes similar to those in the maize leaf have been recorded in the leaves of other grasses.  相似文献   

20.
C. E. J. Botha  R. F. Evert 《Planta》1988,173(4):433-441
Small and intermediate vascular bundles and contiguous tissues of the leaf blade ofThemeda triandra var.imberbis (Retz.) A. Camus were examined with transmission and scanning electron microscopes to determine the distribution and frequency of plasmodesmata between various cell types. Plasmodesmata are most abundant at the mesophyll/bundle-sheath cell and bundle-sheath/vascular parenchyma cell interfaces, and their numbers decrease with increasing proximity to both thick- and thin-walled sieve tubes. Among cells of the vascular bundles, the greatest frequency of plasmodesmata occurs between vascular parenchyma cells, followed by that of plasmodesmata between vascular parenchyma cells and companion cells, and then by the pore-plasmodesmata connections between companion cells and thin-walled sieve tubes (sieve tube-companion cell complexes). The sieve tube-companion cell complexes of theT. triandra leaf are not isolated symplastically from the rest of the leaf and, in this respect, differ from their counterparts in theZea mays leaf. However, the thick-walled sieve tubes, like their counterparts inZea mays, lack companion cells and are symplastically connected with vascular parenchyma cells that about the xylem.Abbreviations SEM scanning electron microscope - TEM transmission electron microscope  相似文献   

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