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 296 毫秒
1.
Summary The development of mestome sheath cells ofAegilops comosa var.thessalica was studied by electron microscopy. Anatomical and cytological observations show that this grass belongs to the C3 or non-Kranz plants. In the asymmetrically thickened walls of mestome sheath cells a suberized lamella is present. This lamella is deposited asynchronously. In the midrib and the large lateral bundles it appears first in the outer and inner walls and usually later in the radial walls. In the small lateral bundles its appearance is delayed in the inner walls of those cells situated on the xylem side. At maturity the suberized lamella is observed in all cell walls; however, in the small lateral bundles it is partly or totally absent from the walls of some cells situated on the xylem side. Tertiary wall formation is asynchronous as well, for it generally follows the deposition pattern of the suberized lamella.During the development of the mestome sheath cells microtubules show marked changes in their number and orientation, being fewer and longitudinal during suberin deposition. Dictyosomes are very active and may be involved in primary and tertiary wall formation. Endoplasmic reticulum cisternae are abundant and partly smooth, while plasmalemmasomes may function to reduce the plasmalemma extension. However, cytoplasmic structures that are clearly involved in suberin synthesis could not be identified.Suberized lamellae react strongly with silver hexamine. This is probably due to post-fixation with osmium tetroxide.On the basis of structural characteristics the mestome sheath may be regarded as an endodermis (cf., alsoFahn 1974). The significance of this view for water and assimilate exchange between the mesophyll and the bundle is discussed.This report represents a portion of a doctoral dissertation.  相似文献   

2.
Fine structure of plasmodesmata in mature leaves of sugarcane   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
The fine structure of plasmodesmata in vascular bundles and contiguous tissues of mature leaf blades of sugarcane (Saccharum interspecific hybrid L62–96) was studied with the transmission electron microscope. Tissues were fixed in glutaraldehyde, with and without the addition of tannic acid, and postfixed in OsO4. The results indicate that the fine structure of plasmodesmata in sugarcane differs among various cell combinations in a cell-specific manner, but that three basic structural variations can be recognized among plasmodesmata in the mature leaf: 1) Plasmodesmata between mesophyll cells. These plasmodesmata possess amorphous, electron-opaque structures, termed sphincters, that extend from plasma membrane to desmotubule near the orifices of the plasmodesmata. The cytoplasmic sleeve is filled by the sphincters where they occur; elsewhere it is open and entirely free of particulate or spokelike components. The desmotubule is tightly constricted and has no lumen within the sphincters, but between the sphincters it is a convoluted tubule with an open lumen. 2) Plasmodesmata that traverse the walls of chlorenchymatous bundle-sheath cells and mestome-sheath cells. In addition to the presence of sphincters, these plasmodesmata are modified by the presence of suberin lamellae in the walls. Although the plasmodesmata are quite narrow and the lumens of the desmotubules are constricted where they traverse the suberin lamellae, the cytoplasmic sleeves are still discernible and appear to contain substructural components there. 3) Plasmodesmata between parenchymatous cells of the vascular bundles. These plasmodesmata strongly resemble those found in the roots of Azolla, in that their desmotubules are closed for their entire length and their cytoplasmic sleeves appear to contain substructural components for their entire length. The structural variations exhibited by the plasmodesmata of the sugarcane leaf are compared with those proposed for a widely-adopted model of plasmodesmatal structure.Abbreviation ER endoplasmic reticulum 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   

3.
Summary Two free-space marker procedures (Prussian blue and lanthanum nitrate) were employed to determine the pathway(s) followed by water and solutes in the transpiration stream after their introduction into the xylem of small and intermediate bundles, and the effectiveness of the suberin lamellae of the bundle-sheath cells as a barrier to the movement of tracer ions (Fe3+ and La3+). Judged from the distribution of Prussian-blue crystals (insoluble, crystalline deposits resulting from the precipitation of ferric ions by ferrocyanide anions) and lanthanum deposits, water and the tracer ions moved readily from the lumina of the vessels into the apoplast (cell wall continuum) of the phloem and bundle-sheath cells via portions of vessel primary walls not bearing lignified secondary wall thickenings. Prussian blue and lanthanum deposits were abundant on the bundlesheath cell side of the bundle sheath/mesophyll interface but few occurred on that of the mesophyll, indicating that the suberin lamella is an effective barrier to apoplastic movement of both ferric and lanthanum ions. The presence of Prussian-blue crystals and lanthanum deposits in the compound middle lamella of the radial wall of the bundle-sheath cells indicates that the compound middle lamella provides an apoplastic pathway for transpirational water from the xylem to the evaporating surfaces of the mesophyll and epidermal cells.  相似文献   

4.
Peter Olesen 《Planta》1979,144(4):349-358
Simple plasmodesmata between mesophyll and bundle sheath cells in actively expanding leaves of Salsola kali L. and roots of Epilobium hirsutum L. are shown to possess specialized structures, called sphincters, around their neck regions. The sphineters are made visible by the combined effects of tannic acid and heavy metal staining; they are localized just outside that area of the plasmalemma, which forms the collar around the entrance to each plasmodesmos. This localization corresponds to a very active area of the plasmodesmos/olasmalemma complex (i.e. enzyme activity and/or presence of strongly reducing substances).Evidence is presented that these ring structures are structural equivalents to hypothetical sphincters performing some valve function; i.e. participating in the control of rates and directions of symplastic transport of solutes through plasmodesmata. The middle layer of the plasmalemma in the neck region is composed of closely-packed, globular subunits appearing in negative contrast. Apparently, these subunits correspond to particle clusters observed at the plasmodesmatal entrance in freeze-fracture preparations. They appear similar to particle clusters in animal tight junctions, and their possible function in providing electrical coupling via low resistance junctions between plant cells is discussed.  相似文献   

5.
Structural differentiation of Kranz anatomy has been investigated in leaf cross sections of two C-4 Poaceae:Digitaria sanguinalis andSetaria viridis. The study mainly focused on cellular and interfacial features of bundle sheath (BS) and mesophyll (MS) cells of the C-4 structure. Prominent BS, spaced by only two MS cells apart, were surrounded concentrically by a layer of MS cells. BS cells ofS. viridis had centrifugally arranged relatively large chloroplasts containing much starch, but the chloroplasts had agrana to rudimentary grana. Structural and size dimorphisms, when starch was present, were detected between BS and MS chloroplasts. Loosely arranged MS cells had peripherally displaced smaller chloroplasts containing little to none starch. BS chloroplasts ofD. sanguinalis were similar to those ofS. viridis, but had very little starch and well-developed long agranal stroma lamella. Features of MS cells were similar in both species, but well-defined peripheral reticulum (PR) was easily recognized in MS chloroplasts ofS. viridis. Virtually no PR was developed in BS chloroplasts examined. BS cells contained more mitochondria and microbodies, but no structural dimorphism was noticed. The electron-dense suberized lamella were often observed between BS and MS cells, especially in the primary wall of BS cells. It was most frequently found at the BS and MS cell interfaces and terminated in radial walls of the adjacent BS cells. Prominent pits with plasmodesmata (pd) were seen in the walls of both cells. There also were numerous pd in outer tangential walls of the BS cells. The number of pd ranged from 20 to 60. The pd trasversed a segment of cell wall much thinner than the adjacent wall. The current cellular data have been compared to the ultrastructural features known in leaves of other C-4 plants, especially NADP-ME species.  相似文献   

6.
Summary Precipitation of ferrous ions by ferricyanide in transpiring leaves ofThemeda triandra Forsk. produced crystalline deposits, which were visible with the light and electron microscope. Prussian blue crystals were formed within the lumina of the tracheary elements and the apoplast, or cell wall continuum of the vascular tissues and bundle-sheath cells. Little if any deposition was noted within the lignified secondary thickenings of the tracheary elements. The localization pattern suggests that the ferrous ions moved from the lumina of the tracheary elements via the exposed primary walls. Prussian blue crystals were abundant in the outer tangential and radial walls of the bundle-sheath cells. By contrast, crystals were lacking in the walls of neighbouring mesophyll cells, suggesting that the suberin lamella in the bundle-sheath walls effectively inhibited the apoplastic movement of ferrous ions and possibly may impede, or restrict the movement of water across the bundle-sheath/mesophyll interface.  相似文献   

7.
Summary Onion (Allium cepa L. cv. Ebeneezer) roots from vermiculite culture were examined with transmission electron microscopy to detect the plasmodesmata in all tissues. In young root regions, plasmodesmata linked all living cells together in all directions. In old zones, the plasmodesmatal connections of the endodermis to its neighbor tissues were not interrupted by later suberin lamella and cellulosic wall deposition. Moreover, plasmodesmata in the fully mature endodermis usually exhibited a large central cavity. In the exodermis, however, upon deposition of suberin lamellae in long cells, all plasmodesmata that initially linked them to their adjacent cells were severed. Afterwards, the long cells lost the capability of forming wound pit callose and their protoplasts began to degenerate. The mature exodermal layer was symplastically bridged to its neighbors only by the short (passage) cells that lacked suberin lamellae. Compared to the long cells, the short cells not only had thicker cytoplasm surrounding their central vacuoles but also a higher density of mitochondria and rough endoplasmic reticulum, consistent with an active involvement in the transport processes of the root. The above results were obtained by an improved, extended transmission electron microscopy procedure devised to analyze plasmodesmata in cells with suberin lamellae. By prefixing root tissues in glutaraldehyde and acrolein, all cells were well preserved. Postfixation was carried out in osmium tetroxide at a low concentration (0.5%). Following dehydration in acetone and transfer to propylene oxide, infiltration with Spurr's resin was accomplished by incubating samples in the accelerator-free mixture for 4 days, then infiltrating samples in the accelerator-amended mixture for additional 4 days.Abbreviations IE immature exodermis - ME mature exodermis - TBO toluidine blue O - TEM transmission electron microscopy  相似文献   

8.
The leaf of Pyrossia longifolia (Burm.) Morton, an epiphytic fern known to exhibit CAM, was examined by light and electron microscopy. The relatively thick leaf contains a single-layered epidermis, “water-storage” tissue, and a reticulate vascular system embedded in mesophyll tissue not differentiated into palisade and spongy layers. Mesophyll is composed of large, slightly elongate cells each with a thin, parietal layer of cytoplasm and a large central vacuole. The chloroplast-microbody ratio in mesophyll cells indicates that Pyrossia may be a high photorespirer and thus similar in that sense to C3 plants. Mesophyll is separated from the vascular tissue by a tightly-arranged layer of endodermal cells with Casparian strips. The inner layer of mesophyll cells and the endodermal cells lack suberin lamellae. The collateral veins contain sieve elements, tracheary elements, pericycle and vascular parenchyma cells, the latter conspicuously larger than the sieve elements. The vascular parenchyma is the only cell type in the leaf which contains plastids with a peripheral reticulum. The parenchymatic elements of the leaf are connected by plasmodesmata, all of which lack neck constrictions and sphincters, or sphincter-like structures. The connections between sieve elements and adjacent parenchymatic elements are pore-plasmodesmata characterized by prominent wall thickenings on the parenchymatic-element side of the wall. The distribution and relative frequencies of plasmodesmata between the various cell types of the leaf indicate photoassimilates may move either symplastically or by a combination of symplast and apoplast from the mesophyll to the site of phloem loading in the veins.  相似文献   

9.
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   

10.
P. Olesen 《Protoplasma》1978,94(3-4):325-340
Summary InHoya roots most exodermal cells are elongated and a band of suberin lamellae is formed in all their walls early in development; later on carbohydrate tertiary wall layers are deposited inside the suberin lamellae. Some exodermal cells which are restricted to root hair-bearing areas are short and unsuberized but their outer tangential wall is conspicuously thickened. Combined evidence from light microscopy and transmission and scanning electron microscopy reveals the bulk of this cap-formed thickening as a mosaic structure with two different components forming an extensive labyrinth. Irregular masses of a lignified, amorphous substance are separated by radially oriented, tortuous channels containing a very dense, granular-fibrillar material. The innermost wall layer is fibrillar and shows a texture and density similar to the material in the separating channels. The cap contains prominent pits with plasmodesmatal connections between short cells and the epidermis. In mature and non-functional short cells a band of suberin lamellae and eventually tertiary wall layers are deposited.A hypothesis as to the function of the short cells is based on the assumption that the cap functions through differential shrinkage of two components forming the labyrinthine structure. This would ensure a very effective closing of the translocating pathway upon desiccation and shrinkage and a consequent swelling and re-opening upon rehydration. The regulatory function of such mechanism is discussed.  相似文献   

11.
The fine structure of primary, secondary, and tertiary stages of Zea endodermal cell development was investigated. The casparian strip formed in situ in the anticlinal walls and remained at a fixed point relative to the endodermis-pericycle boundary. The only protoplasmic structure that had a constant spatial association with the developing strip was the plasmalemma. Plasmodesmata appeared to be more numerous on the tangential walls than on radial walls; only rarely were they located in the casparian strip. The suberized lamella developed on inner and outer tangential walls before it appeared on the radial walls. No cytoplasmic organelles were found to have any particular spatial association with this layer. The suberized lamella was about 0.04 μm thick except near plasmodesmata and along the adaxial margin of the casparian strip, where it was thicker. Occasionally it failed to form along the abaxial margin of the strip. The adherent affinity between plasmalemma and casparian strip was lost after the strip was covered by suberized lamella. The secondary wall became asymmetrically thickened by differential deposition of successive lamellae. A thin layer of secondary wall material extended across the floor of each pit. Pit cavities often contained mitochondria, and plasmodesmata were restricted to the pits. The plasmodesmata were constricted where they entered the thin layer of secondary wall material and where they penetrated the suberized lamella. The various stages of cell development tended to be asynchronous. No passage cells were observed. Endodermal cell development in Zea closely resembles that described for barley.  相似文献   

12.
Peter Olesen 《Planta》1975,123(2):199-202
Summary In the C4 species Salsola kali L. the frequency of plasmodesmata in the wall between mesophyll and bundle sheath cells has been determined with great precision by the use of transmission and scanning electron microscopy. The frequency of 14×108 cm-2 is rather high compared to values from other plant tissues, but if it is assumed that the postulated exchange of C4-acids occur in the desmotubulus of the plasmodesmata, the fraction of the mesophyll-bundle sheath interface occupied by plasmodesmatal pores is 10-102 times smaller than previously thought.Abbreviations TEM transmission electron microscopy - SEM Scanning electron microscopy  相似文献   

13.
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   

14.
The C4 grass Arundinella hirta is characterized by unusual leaf blade anatomy: veins are widely spaced and files of bundle-sheath-like cells, the distinctive cells, form longitudinal strands that are not associated with vascular tissue. While distinctive cells (DCs) appear to function like bundle sheath cells (BSCs), they differ developmentally in two ways: they are derived from ground meristem rather than procambium and they are formed 1–2 plastochrons later. This study describes ultrastructural features of differentiating of BSCs, DCs, and associated mesophyll cells (MCs) during leaf development. BSCs and DCs differ from adjacent MCs by undergoing earlier cell enlargement, greater rates of chloroplast enlargement, reduction of chloroplast thylakoids at late stages of differentiation, more extensive starch formation, greater wall thickening, and deposition of a suberin lamella. The precocious delimitation of the bundle sheath layer is reflected in earlier BSC enlargement and vacuole growth. Derivation of DCs from ground meristem is correlated with late developmental changes in chloroplast size, wall thickness, and plasmodesmatal density. Despite these differences in timing of events, particularly at early stages, the development of the specialized structural features of BSCs and DCs is essentially similar. Thus, proximity to vascular tissue appears to be nonessential for the coordination and regulation of BSC- and MC-specific developmental events.  相似文献   

15.
Summary Plasmodesmata connecting synchronously developing cells are filled with electron-transparent, homogenous ground cytoplasm. At the middle lamella, their average diameter is about 67 nm; the relative area occupied by plasmodesmata is calculated to be about 8 to 9% of the wall.Plasmodesmata occurring between cells which develop asynchronously are plugged by an electron-dense homogenous material. The plug fits tightly to the plasmalemma inside the plasmodesmatal canal. Occasionally (in 8% of the walls), the closing plugs are also found between synchronously dividing cells. Generally, the plugging takes place in the walls formed at the first stages of development of the antheridial filaments and is probably an irreversible process.It is supposed that the plugging of plasmodesmata is the cause of the appearance of two or more synchronous cell groups within a single filament.  相似文献   

16.
A morphometric analysis of developing leaves of Nicotiana tabacum L. was conducted to determine whether imported photoassimilates could be unloaded by symplastic transport and whether interruption of symplastic transport could account for termination of import. Five classes of veins were recognized, based on numbers of cells in transverse section. Photoassimilate is unloaded primarily from Class III veins in tissue nearing the end of the sink phase of development. Smaller veins (Class IV and V) do not transport or unload photoassimilate in sink tissue because the sieve elements of these veins are immature until after the tissue stops importing. In Class III veins the sieve element-companion cell (SE-CC) complexes are surrounded by phloem parenchyma which abuts the bundle sheath. Along the most obvious unloading route, from SE-CC complex to phloem parenchyma to bundle sheath to mesophyll cells, the frequency of plasmodesmata at each interface increases. To determine whether this pattern of plasmodesmatal contact is consistent with symplastic unloading we first demonstrated, by derivation from Fick's law that the rate of diffusion from a compartment is proportional to a number N which is equal to the ratio of surface area to volume of the compartment multiplied by the frequency of pores (plasmodesmata) which connect it to the next compartment. N was calculated for each compartment within the vein which has the SE-CC complex as its center, and was shown to be statistically the same in all cases except one. These observations are consistent with a symplastic unloading route. As the leaf tissue matures and stops importing, plasmodesmatal frequency along the unloading route decreases and contact area between cells also decreases as intercellular spaces enlarge. As a result, the number of plasmodesmata between the SE-CC complex and the first layer of mesophyll cells declines in nonimporting tissue to 34% of the number found in importing tissue, indicating that loss of symplastic continuity between the phloem and surrounding cells plays a role in termination of photoassimilate unloading.Abbreviation SE-CC sieve element-companion cell  相似文献   

17.
We investigated the phloem loading pathway in barley, by determining plasmodesmatal frequencies at the electron microscope level for both intermediate and small blade bundles of mature barley leaves. Lucifer yellow was injected intercellularly into bundle sheath, vascular parenchyma, and thin-walled sieve tubes. Passage of this symplastically transported dye was monitored with an epifluorescence microscope under blue light. Low plasmodesmatal frequencies endarch to the bundle sheath cells are relatively low for most interfaces terminating at the thin- and thick-walled sieve tubes within this C3 species. Lack of connections between vascular parenchyma and sieve tubes, and low frequencies (0.5% plasmodesmata per μm cell wall interface) of connections between vascular parenchyma and companion cells, as well as the very low frequency of pore-plasmodesmatal connections between companion cells and sieve tubes in small bundles (0.2% plasmodesmata per μm cell wall interface), suggest that the companion cell-sieve tube complex is symplastically isolated from other vascular parenchyma cells in small bundles. The degree of cellular connectivity and the potential isolation of the companion cell-sieve tube complex was determined electrophysiologically, using an electrometer coupled to microcapillary electrodes. The less negative cell potential (average –52 mV) from mesophyll to the vascular parenchyma cells contrasted sharply with the more negative potential (–122.5 mV) recorded for the companion cell-thin-walled sieve tube complex. Although intercellular injection of lucifer yellow clearly demonstrated rapid (0.75 μm s-1) longitudinal and radial transport in the bundle sheath-vascular parenchyma complex, as well as from the bundle sheath through transverse veins to adjacent longitudinal veins, we were neither able to detect nor present unequivocal evidence in support of the symplastic connectivity of the sieve tubes to the vascular parenchyma. Injection of the companion cell-sieve tube complex, did not demonstrate backward connectivity to the bundle sheath. We conclude that the low plasmodesmatal frequencies, coupled with a two-domain electropotential zonation configuration, and the negative transport experiments using lucifer yellow, precludes symplastic phloem loading in barley leaves.  相似文献   

18.
Structural aspects of the leaves of two common festucoids,Festuca ovina andPoa sphondylodes, have been examined employing the electron microscopy. The nature of vascular bundles and of sheaths that surround vascular tissues was discussed in the study. The festucoids exhibited a non-Kranz C-3 anatomy with more than four mesophyll cells separating the bundle sheaths of a leaf blade. Vascular tissues in theseFestuca andPoa leaves were surrounded by a double sheath: an inner distinct mestome sheath (MST) and an outer indistinctive layer of parenchymatous bundle sheath (PBS) cells. The PBS cells were much larger than the MST and had thin walls. The MST cells were relatively small and rectangular inP. sphondylodes and more or less hexangular in transverse sections ofF. ovina. InP. sphondylodes, MST had conspicuously thickened inner tangential walls with asymmetrically uninterrupted suberized lamellae in radial and tangential walls. In most differentiated MST cells, all walls were highly suberized. During suberin deposition, MST cells were quite vacuolated and most of the cytoplasm was present as a thin peripheral layer. However, MST walls inF. ovina revealed very thin suberized lamellae with translucent striations. No chloroplasts were detected inP. sphondylodes, whereas the MST inF. ovina contained small chloroplasts. Plasmodesmata were well developed in the primary pit fields of walls between MST and vascular cells, and between adjacent MST cells. Plasmodesmata were less frequent in the walls between the inner and outer sheath cells. Suberized lamellae were totally absent from the PBS cell walls in all veins. External to the PBS, the mesophyll comprised thin walled cells with abundant intercellular spaces. Peripherally arranged chloroplasts in the mesophyll were numerous and often larger than those of PBS and MST cells. Characteristics associated with C-3 and other ultrastructural features were also discussed in the study.  相似文献   

19.
Summary Cell development in the root apical meristem is thought to be regulated by position-dependent information, but as yet, the underlying mechanism for this remains unknown. In order to examine the potential involvement of the symplasmic transmission of positional signals, plasmodesmatal frequency and distribution was quantitatively analyzed in root apical meristem cell walls ofArabidopsis thaliana during root development. A consistent distribution pattern of plasmodesmata was observed in the root apex over four weeks. While cells within initial tiers were uniformly interconnected, more symplasmic connections between the initial tiers and their immature-cell (primary-meristem) derivatives were observed than within the initial tiers. Immature cells were connected across transverse walls by primary plasmodesmata according to a tissue-specific pattern. Cells of the immature vascular tissue and cortex had the highest plasmodesmatal frequencies, followed by the immature epidermis and root cap. Although the numbers of plasmodesmata in transverse walls (primary plasmodesmata) was reduced in all tissues as the root aged, the tissue-specific distribution remained constant. The extent of symplasmic coupling across the boundaries of each tissue appeared to be limited by fewer secondary plasmodesmata in longitudinal walls. The frequency of all plasmodesmata decreased as the root aged. The primary plasmodesmata within each tissue increased at one week and then dramatically decreased with root age; the frequency of secondary plasmodesmata in longitudinal walls also decreased, but more gradually. These findings are discussed with respect to the roles likely played by plasmodesmata in facilitating transport of position-dependent information during root development.  相似文献   

20.
Immunocytochemical localizations in Vicia faba L. protoplasts and cultures of regenerating Solanum nigrum L. protoplasts support former observations that in plant cells ubiquitin occurs within the cytoplasm, the nucleus, the chloroplasts and at the plasmalemma, but not within the vacuole or the cell wall. Immunoresponses were also observed within mitochondria and associated with the endoplasmic reticulum, which is in accordance with previous findings on animal cells. Moreover, the tonoplast membrane system was found to be labelled. For regenerating S. nigrum protoplasts, evidence is given that ubiquitin plays a role in selective degradation even of whole subcellular structures. Most of the discontinuous plasmodesmata formed in the newly deposited outer cell walls during the early stages of culture disappear later on, except for those near the periphery of division walls or of non-division walls, which are probably used for the formation of continuous cell connections during further culture. Outer-wall plasmodesmata which are destined to disappear show high immunoreactivity to ubiquitin antibody, but no conspicuous immunolabelling was observed with the remaining plasmodesmata. Thus, the selective disintegration of whole plasmodesmatal structures is obviously regulated by ubiquitination of plasmodesmatal proteins. A model for the mechanism of degradation of outer-wall plasmodesmata during extension growth of the cell wall is presented.Dedicated to Professor Dr. Andreas Sievers on the occasion of his retirementThis work was supported by grants to R. K. (Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft) and to M. S. (Bennigsen-Foerder Preis des Landes Nordrhein-Westfalen). We thank Dipl.— Biol. Kirsten Leineweber for help with the V. faba protoplast isolation and Dr. Olaf Parge, Institut für Psychologie und Sozialforschung, Kiel, Germany, for giving assistance with the statistical analysis.  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