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1.
We tested Wilhelm Hofmeister's hypothesis that the outer layers of herbaceous stem tissues are held in a preferential state of longitudinal tension by more internal stem tissues that are held in a reciprocal state of compression. We measured (1) the biaxial stiffness of dandelion peduncles that were barometrically inflated with a Scholander pressure bomb, and (2) the stiffness and mechanical behavior of different layers of tissues that were surgically manipulated as longitudinal strips placed in uniaxial tension. Hofmeister's hypothesis predicts that stems will shorten and expand in girth as their volume transiently increases (due to barometric or hydrostatic inflation), that they will longitudinally rupture when excessively inflated, and that the principal stiffening agents in their outer tissues will be aligned in the longitudinal direction with respect to stem length. Our experiments confirmed these predictions: (1) the longitudinal strains observed for inflated peduncles were negative and smaller than the circumferential strains such that stems contracted in length and expanded in girth, (2) peduncles longitudinally ruptured when excessively inflated, (3) surgical experiments indicated that the epidermis was stiffer in longitudinal tension than any other immature peduncle tissue and was as stiff as any other tissue region in mature stems, and (4) microscopic analyses showed that the net orientation of cellulose microfibrils in the cell walls of the outer region of stem tissues was parallel to stem length. A strong positive correlation existed between the tensile stiffness of tissues and the net orientation of cell wall microfibrils.  相似文献   

2.
The RNA pseudoknot located at the 5' end of the gene 32 messenger RNA of bacteriophage T2 contains two A-form helical stems connected by two loops, in an H-type pseudoknot topology. A combination of multidimensional NMR methods and isotope labeling were used to investigate the pseudoknot structure, resulting in a more detailed structural model than provided by earlier homonuclear NMR studies. Of particular significance, the interface between the stacked helical stems within the pseudoknot motif is described in detail. The two stems are stacked in a coaxial manner, with an approximately 18 degrees rotation of stem1 relative to stem2 about an axis that is parallel to the helical axis. This rotation serves to relieve what would otherwise be a relatively close phosphate-phosphate contact at the junction of the two stems, while preserving the stabilizing effects of base stacking. The ability of the NMR data to determine pseudoknot bending was critically assessed. The data were found to be a modestly precise indicator of pseudoknot bending, with the angle between the helical axes of stem1 and stem2 being in the range of 15+/-15 degrees. Pseudoknot models with bend angles within this range are equally consistent with the data, since they differ by only small amounts in the relatively short-range interproton distances from which the structure was derived. The gene 32 messenger RNA pseudoknot was compared with other RNA structures with coaxial or near-coaxial stacked helical stems.  相似文献   

3.
We examined the hypothesis that the procumbent growth habit of the rare, columnar cactus Stenocereus eruca is in part the result of a diminution of the mechanical properties of stem tissues by comparing the properties of S. eruca plants with those of the putatively closely related semi-erect shrub S. gummosus. Intact stems and surgically removed anatomically comparable regions of the stems of both species were tested in bending and tension to determine their Young's modulus and breaking stress. A computer program was used to evaluate the contribution of each region to the capacity of entire stems to resist bending forces. Our analyses indicate that the principal stiffening agent in the stems of both species is a peripheral tissue complex (= epidermis and collenchyma in the primary plant body) that has a significantly higher tensile breaking stress and greater extensibility for S. gummosus than that of S. eruca. Computer simulations indicate that the wood of either species contributes little to bending stiffness, except in very old portions of S. gummosus stems, because of its small volume and central location in the stem. These and other observations are interpreted to support the hypothesis that S. eruca evolved a procumbent growth habit as the result of manifold developmental alterations some of which reduced the capacity of tissues to support the weight of stems.  相似文献   

4.
Active phototropic bending of non-elongating and radially growing portion of stems (woody stems) has not been previously documented, whereas negative gravitropic bending is well known. We found phototropic bending in woody stems and searched for the underlying mechanism. We inclined 1-year-old Quercus crispula Blume seedlings and unilaterally illuminated them from a horizontal direction perpendicular to ('normal' illumination) or parallel to ('parallel' illumination) the inclination azimuth. With normal illumination, active phototropic bending and xylem formation could be evaluated separately from the negative gravitropic response and vertical deflection resulting from the weight of the seedlings. One-year-old stems with normal illumination bent significantly, with asymmetrical xylem formation towards the illuminated upper surface and side of the stem, whereas those with parallel illumination showed non-significant lateral bending, with asymmetrical xylem formation only on the upper side. A mechanical model was built on the assumption that a bending moment resulted from the asymmetrical xylem formation during phototropic bending of the woody stems. The model fitted the relationship between the observed spatial distributions of the xylem and the observed lateral bending, and thus supported the hypothesis that phototropic bending of woody stems results from asymmetrical xylem formation, as such occurs during gravitropism.  相似文献   

5.
Cellulose microfibrils are critical for plant cell specialization and function. Recent advances in live cell imaging of fluorescently tagged cellulose synthases to track cellulose synthesis have greatly advanced our understanding of cellulose biosynthesis. Nevertheless, cellulose deposition patterns remain poorly described in many cell types, including those in the process of division or differentiation. In this study, we used field emission scanning electron microscopy analysis of cryo-planed tissues to determine the arrangement of cellulose microfibrils in various faces of cells undergoing cytokinesis or specialized development, including cell types in which cellulose cannot be imaged by conventional approaches. In dividing cells, we detected microfibrillar meshworks in the cell plates, consistent with the concentration at the cell plate of cellulose synthase complexes, as detected by fluorescently tagged CesA6. We also observed a loss of parallel cellulose microfibril orientation in walls of the mother cell during cytokinesis, which corresponded with the loss of fluorescently tagged cellulose synthase complexes from these surfaces. In recently formed guard cells, microfibrils were randomly organized and only formed a highly ordered circumferential pattern after pore formation. In pit fields, cellulose microfibrils were arranged in circular patterns around plasmodesmata. Microfibrils were random in most cotyledon cells except the epidermis and were parallel to the growth axis in trichomes. Deposition of cellulose microfibrils was spatially delineated in metaxylem and protoxylem cells of the inflorescence stem, supporting recent studies on microtubule exclusion mechanisms.  相似文献   

6.
The ability of stem bark to resist bending forces was examined by testing in bending segments of Acer saccharum, Fraxinus americana, and Quercus robur branches with and without their bark. For each species, the bark contributed significantly to the ability of stem segments differing in age to resist bending forces, but its contribution was age-dependent and differed among the three species. The importance of the mechanical role of the bark decreased basipetally with increasing age of F. americana and Q. robur stem segments and was superceded by that of the wood for segments ≥ 6 yr old. A. saccharum bark was as mechanically important as the wood for stem segments 7 yr old but was not a significant stiffening agent for younger or older portions of stems. On average, the stiffness of the bark from all three species was 50% that of the wood. However, the geometric contribution to the flexural rigidity of stems made by the bark (i.e., the bark's second moment of area) was sufficiently large to offset its lower stiffness (Young's modulus) relative to that of the wood. A simple model is presented that shows that the bark must be as mechanically important as the wood when its radial thickness equals 32% that of the wood and its stiffness is 50% that of the wood. Based on this model, which is shown to comply with the data from three species purported to have stiff woods, it is evident that the role of the bark cannot be neglected when considering the mechanical behavior of juvenile woody stems subjected to externally applied bending forces.  相似文献   

7.
Genetically modified tobacco plants (Nicotiana tabacum‘Samsun’)with antisense cinnamyl alcohol dehydrogenase DNA, produce secondaryxylem of a reduced tensile stiffness. These plants were grownalongside control plants. The stems of the plants were flexedor protected from flexing over a period of several weeks. Thetensile moduli and second moments of areas of the differenttissues inside the stems were measured and used to calculatethe bending stiffness of the plants. In tobacco, the cylinderof xylem was found to be the most important tissue in determiningthe bending stiffness of the plants. The thickness of the xylemtissue cylinder increased when plants were subjected to flexuralstimulation. This increased the bending stiffness of the stems.The response to mechanical stimulation was found to be correlatedwith tissue strain and the genetically modified plants wereable to exactly compensate for the reduced modulus of theirxylem tissue by increasing the thickness of the xylem tissuecylinder more than in control plants.Copyright 1999 Annals ofBotany Company. Tobacco plants, stem bending, xylem tissue, second moment of area, thigmomorphogenesis, mechanical strain.  相似文献   

8.
We report the longitudinal variations in stiffness and bulk density of tissue samples drawn from along the length of two Pachycereus pringlei plants measuring 3.69 and 5.9 m in height to determine how different tissues contribute to the mechanical stability of these massive vertical organs. Each of the two stems was cut into segments of uniform length and subsequently dissected to obtain and mechanically test portions of xylem strands, stem ribs, and a limited number of pith and cortex samples. In each case, morphometric measurements were taken to determine the geometric contribution each tissue likely made to the ability of whole stems to resist bending forces. The stiffness of each xylem strand increased basipetally toward the base of each plant where stiffness sharply decreased, reaching a magnitude comparable to that of strands 1 m beneath the stem apex. The xylem was anisotropic in behavior, i.e., its stiffness measured in the radial and in the tangential directions differed significantly. Despite the abrupt decrease in xylem strand stiffness at the stem base, the contribution made by this tissue to resist bending forces increased exponentially from the tip to the base of each plant due to the accumulation of wood. A basipetal increase in the stiffness of the pith (and, to limited extent, that of the cortex) was also observed. In contrast, the stiffness of stem rib tissues varied little as a function of stem length. These tissues were stiffer than the xylem in the corresponding portions of the stem along the upper two-fifths of the length of either plant. Tissue stiffness and bulk density were not significantly correlated within or across tissue types. However, a weak inverse relationship was observed for these properties in the case of the xylem and stem rib tissues. We present a simple formula that predicts when stem ribs rather than the xylem strands serve as the principal stiffening agents in stems. This formula successfully predicted the observed aspect ratio of the stem ribs (the average quotient of the radial and tangential dimensions of rib transections), and thus provided circumstantial evidence that the ribs are important for mechanical stability for the distal and younger regions of the stems examined.  相似文献   

9.
10.
The MRP-Titan Revision stem has proved to be a highly successful implant system for revision arthroplasty of the hip. Good and excellent clinical and radiological results with spontaneous filling of bony defects have been reported, The observation of atrophy of the proximal femur associated with stem diameters > 17mm prompted us to examine the bending stiffness of stems of various diameters. To determine their static bending characteristics, the stems were tested under axial pressure loads in accordance with Euler's buckling case. Dynamic tests were performed with the mono-axial servohydraulic test equipment MTS 810. From a stem diameter of 18 mm upwards, deflection of the stem under loading decreased disproportionately, in direct correlation with the stem stiffness. By optimising the geometry and varying the alloy it is possible to obtain a constant ISD factor for the modular MRP-Titan revision stem CONCLUSION: The MRP-Titan revision stem is a reliable implant system for revision arthroplasty of the hip. Clinical findings of atrophy of the proximal femur associated with stem diameters > 17 mm was found to be correlated with a disproportionate increase in bending stiffness. The aim of further developments will be to reduce the stiffness of larger-diameter stems by making changes to the design and/or to the alloy (Ti15Mo, Ti13Nb13Zr, Ti12Mo6Zr2Fe2).  相似文献   

11.
? Wind is a key mechanical stress for woody plants, so how do shoot traits affect performance in wind? ? We used a vehicle mounted apparatus to measure drag, streamlining and mechanical safety in 127 vertical lead-shoots, 1.2 m long, across 39 species in tropical Australia. ? Shoot dimensions and stem tissue properties were closely coupled so that shoots with low stem specific gravity or larger projected area had thicker stems. Thicker stems provide larger second moment of area (I), which increased shoot safety and bending stiffness but impeded shoot reconfiguration in strong winds, including frontal area reduction. Nonetheless, increasing I also improved streamlining. Streamlining was unrelated to traits except I. Stem tissue material properties only had small effects. Higher modulus of rupture increased shoot safety and higher Young's modulus impeded shoot reconfiguration. ? We found no conflict between bending stiffness and streamlining for woody shoots. Stiffness might help streamlining by increasing damping and stability, thereby reducing flagging in wind. Tissue-level traits did influence shoot-level mechanical safety and behaviour, but shoot geometry was much more important. Variable shoot and stem traits, which all influenced shoot biomechanics, were integrated in shoots to yield a relatively narrow range of outcomes in wind.  相似文献   

12.
It is generally believed that cell elongation is regulated by cortical microtubules, which guide the movement of cellulose synthase complexes as they secrete cellulose microfibrils into the periplasmic space. Transversely oriented microtubules are predicted to direct the deposition of a parallel array of microfibrils, thus generating a mechanically anisotropic cell wall that will favor elongation and prevent radial swelling. Thus far, support for this model has been most convincingly demonstrated in filamentous algae. We found that in etiolated Arabidopsis thaliana hypocotyls, microtubules and cellulose synthase trajectories are transversely oriented on the outer surface of the epidermis for only a short period during growth and that anisotropic growth continues after this transverse organization is lost. Our data support previous findings that the outer epidermal wall is polylamellate in structure, with little or no anisotropy. By contrast, we observed perfectly transverse microtubules and microfibrils at the inner face of the epidermis during all stages of cell expansion. Experimental perturbation of cortical microtubule organization preferentially at the inner face led to increased radial swelling. Our study highlights the previously underestimated complexity of cortical microtubule organization in the shoot epidermis and underscores a role for the inner tissues in the regulation of growth anisotropy.  相似文献   

13.
A hitherto undescribed type of organ, possibly sensory, is reported. It is in the form of small cylindrical projections primarily concentrated on the surface in the area of the reticular lateral-line complex and around the eye of the scup (Stenotomus chrysops). The projection is composed of a central core cell surrounded by an epithelium. Enveloped within the epithelium and parallel to the core cell are six to eight symmetrically arranged ‘bulbs’ with cytoplasmic stems extending to cell bodies within the epidermis proper. A circle of ‘collar’ cells at the base of the cylinder facilitates the observed bending of the projection. Detection of the direction of water movement is hypothesized.  相似文献   

14.
Summary The occurrence of stem deformation in Pinus radiata plantations has been examined previously in terms of the factors leading to the onset of bending symptoms. In this study the influence of seedling family and nitrogen availability on the ability of seedlings to recover from deformation was investigated under glasshouse conditions. Seedlings from four families ranging from resistant to susceptible to stem deformation were used. Stem deformation was induced by loading stems with a known weight and comparing bending moments and rates of recovery. Significant differences between families were found with more susceptible families exhibiting greater initial magnitudes of stem lean. Similarly these families also exhibited greater rates of apical elongation following bending despite the larger stem leans. This resulted in more exaggerated stem bends as a consequence of the recovery of the lower stem pushing the upper stem away from the vertical. The strength characteristics of the stems could not explain differences between families. Susceptibility to stem deformation was explained more by stem slenderness expressed as stem height to root collar diameter.  相似文献   

15.
四种旱生藓类植物的比较结构学观察   总被引:20,自引:1,他引:19  
对新疆产的4种藓类植物茎、叶的表面及内部结构进行了观察,结果表明:尖叶大帽藓(Encalypta rhabdocurpa Schwaegr.)茎的中部结构类似于种子植物(单子叶)根的内皮层,其茎表皮也有类似于种子植物表皮毛(腺毛)的腺体。在阔叶紫萼藓(Grimmia laevigata(Brid.)Brid.)茎的中轴部,厚角组织发达,数层皮部厚壁组织也很发达。小石藓(Weisia controv  相似文献   

16.
Representative shoot segments of the grass speciesArundinariatéctaconsisting of one intact internode and its subtendingnode and clasping leaf sheath were tested to determine the mechanicalinfluence of the leaf sheath on the ability of stems to resistbending and twisting forces. These segments were also used tomeasure shoot morphometry and composite tissue Young's and shearmoduli (EandG,respectively) to simulate the global deformationpatterns attending bending and twisting by means of finite elementanalyses. On average, leaf sheaths contributed 33% of the overallbending stiffness and 43% of the overall torsional stiffnessof stem segments. Comparisons betweenEandGof isolated internodesand leaf sheaths indicated that sheaths were composed of stiffertissues measured either in bending or twisting. Thus, leaf sheathscould act as an external cylindrical brace composed of stiffermaterials than those of the internodes they enveloped. The magnitudesof internodalEandGwere correlated with internodal shape suchthat the ability of internodes to resist twisting relative tothe ability to resist bending forces decreased as internodesbecame more slender or developed thinner walls (both of whichoccur in an acropetal direction from the base to the tip ofshoots). Finite element simulations predicted that, in bending,the leaf sheath laterally braces internodal walls as they tendto ovalize in cross section and push against its inner surfacewhich ovalizes to a lesser extent in the plane normal to thecurvature of shoot flexure. In twisting, the successive ovalizedtransections of internodal walls assumed a helical pattern alongthe length of shoot segments. This helical deformation patternwas attended by an inner lateral contraction of internodal wallsthat was less developed in the leaf sheath that thus provideddecreasing mechanical support to the internode as the lateralcontraction of internodal walls amplified. The twisting of internodesand sheaths was also predicted to concentrate tensile and shearstrains in the nodal diaphragm. Here stress intensities sufficientto produce tissue shear failure were concentrated at two opposingpoints on the surface of the diaphragm. Finite element analysesthus identified a potential weak point in the mechanical constructionof hollow, septate shoots that are, nevertheless, more thanadequately stiff to support their own weight, yet sufficientlyflexible to twist without irreparable damage in normal winds.Copyright1998 Annals of Botany Company Plant stems; nodes; internodes; leaf sheaths; elastic moduli; wind lodging; biomechanics.  相似文献   

17.
The allometric relationship of stem length L with respect to mean stem diameter D was determined for 80 shoots of each of three columnar cactus species (Stenocereus thurberi, Lophocereus schottii, and S. gummosus) to determine whether this relationship accords with that predicted by each of three contending models purporting to describe the mechanical architecture of vertical shoots (i.e., geometric, stress, and elastic similitude, which predict L proportional to D(alpha), with alpha = 1/1, 1/2, and 2/3, respectively). In addition, anatomical, physical, and biomechanical stem properties were measured to determine how the stems of these three species maintain their elastic stability as they increase in size. Reduced major axis regression of L with respect to D showed that alpha = 2.82 ± 0.14 for S. thurberi, 2.32 ± 0.19 for L. schottii, and 4.21 ± 0.31 for S. gummosus. Thus, the scaling exponents for the allometry of L differed significantly from that predicted by each of the three biomechanical models. In contrast, these exponents were similar to that for the allometry previously reported for saguaro. Analyses of biomechanical data derived from bending tests performed on 30 stems selected from each of the three species indicated that the bulk stem tissue stiffness was roughly proportional to L2, while stem flexural rigidity (i.e., the ability to resist a bending force) scaled roughly as L3. Stem length was significantly and positively correlated with the volume fraction of wood, while regression analysis of the pooled data from the three species (i.e., 90 stems) indicated that bulk tissue stiffness scaled roughly as the 5/3-power of the volume fraction of wood in stems. These data were interpreted to indicate that wood served as the major stiffening agent in stems and that this tissue accumulates at a sufficient rate to afford unusually high scaling exponents tot stem length with respect to stem diameter (i.e., disproportionately large increments of stem length with respect to increments in stem diameter). Nevertheless, the safety factor against the elastic failure of stems (computed on the basis of the critical buckling height divided by actual stem length) decreased with increasing stem size tot each species, even though each species maintained an average safety factor equal to two. We speculate that the apparent upper limit to plant height calculated for each species may serve as a biomechanical mechanism for vegetative propagation and the establishment of dense plant colonies by means of extreme stem flexure and ultimate breakage, especially for S. gummosus.  相似文献   

18.
The mechanical strength of a plant stem (a load-bearing organ) helps the plant resist drooping, buckling and fracturing. We previously proposed a method for quickly evaluating the stiffness of an inflorescence stem in the model plant Arabidopsis thaliana based on measuring its natural frequency in a free-vibration test. However, the relationship between the stiffness and flexural rigidity of inflorescence stems was unclear. Here, we compared our previously described free-vibration test with the three-point bending test, the most popular method for calculating the flexural rigidity of A. thaliana stems, and examined the extent to which the results were correlated. Finally, to expand the application range, we present an example of a modified free-vibration test. Our results provide a reference for improving estimates of the flexural rigidity of A. thaliana inflorescence stems.  相似文献   

19.
Cellulose microfibril deposition patterns define the direction of plant cell expansion. To better understand how microfibril alignment is controlled, we examined microfibril orientation during cortical microtubule disruption using the temperature-sensitive mutant of Arabidopsis thaliana, mor1-1. In a previous study, it was shown that at restrictive temperature for mor1-1, cortical microtubules lose transverse orientation and cells lose growth anisotropy without any change in the parallel arrangement of cellulose microfibrils. In this study, we investigated whether a pre-existing template of well-ordered microfibrils or the presence of well-organized cortical microtubules was essential for the cell to resume deposition of parallel microfibrils. We first transiently disrupted the parallel order of microfibrils in mor1-1 using a brief treatment with the cellulose synthesis inhibitor 2,6-dichlorobenzonitrile (DCB). We then analysed the alignment of recently deposited cellulose microfibrils (by field emission scanning electron microscopy) as cellulose synthesis recovered and microtubules remained disrupted at the mor1-1 mutant's non-permissive culture temperature. Despite the disordered cortical microtubules and an initially randomized wall texture, new cellulose microfibrils were deposited with parallel, transverse orientation. These results show that transverse cellulose microfibril deposition requires neither accurately transverse cortical microtubules nor a pre-existing template of well-ordered microfibrils. We also demonstrated that DCB treatments reduced the ability of cortical microtubules to form transverse arrays, supporting a role for cellulose microfibrils in influencing cortical microtubule organization.  相似文献   

20.
A laser micromarking technique on plant epidermis was developed to study how a plant can reduce the stress in bending behavior by controlling the growth and morphogenesis. The negative gravitropism in a pea seedling (Pisum sativum L.) was discussed based on the time-dependent displacement of laser marking points which were formed by spatially-selective laser ablation of the cuticle layer that covers the outer surface of a plant. The elongation of the stem in the horizontal direction was remarkable in the first half of the gravitropism. The elongation percentages of the stem length between laser-marking points at around upper surface, middle, and bottom surface were evaluated to be 2.57, 4.87, and 7.70%, respectively. The characteristic feature of the stem bending in gravitropism is the elongation even at the upper surface region, that is, inside of the bending. This is a different feature from cantilever beams for structural materials like metals and polymers, where the compression of the upper surface and elongation of the bottom surface are caused by bending. Another laser micromarking technique was developed to improve the resolution of a dot-matrix pattern by fluorescent material transfer to a plant through a masking film with a micro-hole matrix pattern. Similar time-dependent displacement behavior was observed for a fluorescent dot-marked stem showing a feedback control loop in the mechanical optimization. These results suggested that plants solve the problem of the stress in stem bending through growth. The laser micromarking is an effective method for studying the mechanical optimization in plants.  相似文献   

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