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1.
Development of the Hypodermal Casparian Band in Corn and Onion Roots   总被引:4,自引:0,他引:4  
A hypodermal Casparian band develops 40–50 mm from theroot tip in corn and 30–40 mm from the root tip in onion.In both plants, the endodermal Casparian band matures about20 mm closer to the root tip than the hypodermal Casparian band.Using the apoplastic fluorescent dye, Calcofluor white M2R (CFW),a permeability barrier could be distinguished in the radialwalls of the hypodermis 40–50 mm from the root tip incorn and onion. In progressively younger regions of the roots,CFW was first excluded from the outer tangential hypodermalwalls and the inner tangential epidermal walls, then the radialepidermal walls so that in very young regions only the outertangential epidermal walls were permeated. In contrast to CFW,the symplastic fluorescent dye, uranin, was translocated fromthe epidermis into the stele at all distances tested (5.0–50mm from the root tips). CFW and uranin at a concentration of0.01% proved nontoxic to corn and onion roots on the basis ofroot growth tests. Key words: Zea mays, Casparian band, Hypodermis, Allium cepa  相似文献   

2.
Lateral root development in onion is accompanied by a variety of anatomical and permeability changes in some cells of the adventitious root. The endodermal Casparian band of the parent root is disrupted early in the development of the lateral but later extends so as to be continuous with the developing Casparian band of the new root. The lateral root emerges through a longitudinal split in the adventitious root exodermis and epidermis. Following this, the cell walls and intercellular air spaces adjacent to the lateral become incrusted with suberin and a small amount of lignin, forming a collar of modified tissue around the lateral. Subsequent radial expansion of the lateral distorts the adjacent cells of the adventitious root and forces a tight association between it and the lateral. The apoplastic permeability of lateral/parent root junctions was tested using Cellufluor, an apoplastic fluorescent dye which binds to cellulose. Prior to lateral root emergence, no dye enters the parent root cortex due to the Casparian band of the exodermis. Immediately after emergence, dye often penetrates through the break in the exodermal Casparian band and diffuses into the first cortical cell layer. However, when the collar of suberized cells develops (two days after lateral root emergence), movement of the dye into an undisturbed adventitious root is usually prevented (i.e., in 77% of the cases examined). In contrast, only 17% of the root systems which were transplanted just prior to treatment excluded the dye. This indicates that the apoplastic seals around the laterals are sensitive to movement and we recommend that only undisturbed root systems be used for permeability studies.  相似文献   

3.
Lehmann H  Stelzer R  Holzamer S  Kunz U  Gierth M 《Planta》2000,211(6):816-822
 In transmission electron microscopy studies, lanthanum ions have been used as electron-opaque tracers to delineate the apoplastic pathways for ion transport in barley (Hordeum vulgare L.) roots. To localize La3+ on the subcellular level, e.g. in cell walls and on the surface of membranes, electron-energy-loss spectroscopy and electron-spectroscopic imaging were used. Seminal and nodal roots were exposed for 30 min to 1 mM LaCl3 and 10 mM LaCl3, respectively. In seminal roots, possessing no exodermis, La3+ diffusion through the apoplast was stopped by the Casparian bands of the endodermis. In nodal roots with an exodermis, however, La3+ diffusion through the cortical apoplast had already stopped at the tight junctions of the exodermal cell walls resembling the Casparian bands of the endodermis. Therefore, we conclude that in some specialized roots such as the nodal roots of barley, the physiological role of the endodermis is largely performed by the exodermis. Received: 28 July 1999 / Accepted: 24 February 2000  相似文献   

4.
PETERSON, C. A. & PERUMALLA, C. J., 1990. A survey of angiosperm species to detect hypodermal Casparian bands. II. Roots with a multiseriate hypodermis or epidermis.
Roots of 25 species which had either a multiseriate hypodermis or a multiseriate epidermis were tested for the presence of a hypodermal Casparian band. All species save one were in the Liliopsida and six were orchids with both soil and aerial roots. Lignosuberized hypodermal Casparian bands were present in all species tested; those with a biseriate hypodermis had bands in both layers and of those with a multiseriate hypodermis, the three species which were tested had bands in every layer. Although Casparian bands can often be recognized by the presence of sinuous walls in longitudinal views of uniseriate hypodermal layers, these sinuosities were not evident in multiseriate hypodermal layers containing Casparian bands. The lack of air spaces, once thought to be a characteristic feature of the hypodermis, did not hold true for some members of the Liliopsida. All walls of the hypodermis were suberized, indicating that suberin lamellae were probably present in addition to Casparian bands. We recommend using the term 'exodermis' to refer to a hypodermis which has a Casparian band. Epidermal walls of non-orchid roots were suberized whereas those of orchids were lignified. Regardless of their type of modification, all epidermal walls were permeable to the apoplastic dye, Cellufluor.  相似文献   

5.
The dimorphic exodermis of the root of onion (Allium cepa L.) consists of long and short cells, both of which have Casparian bands. The long cells and some of the short cells also have suberin lamellae. The proportion of short cells with lamellae increases with distance from the root tip and with plant age, but is not influenced by drought stress. In young regions of onion roots, characterized by a mature endodermis and an immature exodermis, the plasmalemma surface area that can be contacted by the soil solution is 90·9 mm2 per mm length of root, i.e. the sum of the plasmalemma surface areas of the epidermis, immature exodermis, cortical parenchyma and endodermis external to the Casparian band. This is reduced to 14·5–14·7 mm2 by the development of a Casparian band in the exodermis, which cuts off access to the cortical parenchyma, and by the development of suberin lamellae, which cut off access to the plasmalemmae of the long and some of the short cells of the exodermis. Death of all the epidermal cells, a consequence of drought, further reduces this area to 0·205–0·0183 mm2, i.e. the area of the outer tangential plasmalemmae of the short cells without suberin lamellae. In this condition, the root's capacity for ion uptake should be reduced but its capacity to resist water loss to the soil should be increased.  相似文献   

6.
The exodermis: a variable apoplastic barrier.   总被引:29,自引:0,他引:29  
The exodermis (hypodermis with Casparian bands) of plant roots represents a barrier of variable resistance to the radial flow of both water and solutes and may contribute substantially to the overall resistance. The variability is a result largely of changes in structure and anatomy of developing roots. The extent and rate at which apoplastic exodermal barriers (Casparian bands and suberin lamellae) are laid down in radial transverse and tangential walls depends on the response to conditions in a given habitat such as drought, anoxia, salinity, heavy metal or nutrient stresses. As Casparian bands and suberin lamellae form in the exodermis, the permeability to water and solutes is differentially reduced. Apoplastic barriers do not function in an all-or-none fashion. Rather, they exhibit a selectivity pattern which is useful for the plant and provides an adaptive mechanism under given circumstances. This is demonstrated for the apoplastic passage of water which appears to have an unusually high mobility, ions, the apoplastic tracer PTS, and the stress hormone ABA. Results of permeation properties of apoplastic barriers are related to their chemical composition. Depending on the growth regime (e.g. stresses applied) barriers contain aliphatic and aromatic suberin and lignin in different amounts and proportion. It is concluded that, by regulating the extent of apoplastic barriers and their chemical composition, plants can effectively regulate the uptake or loss of water and solutes. Compared with the uptake by root membranes (symplastic and transcellular pathways), which is under metabolic control, this appears to be an additional or compensatory strategy of plants to acquire water and solutes.  相似文献   

7.
We studied the effect of Silicon (Si) on Casparian band (CB) development, chemical composition of the exodermal CB and Si deposition across the root in the Si accumulators rice and maize and the Si non-accumulator onion. Plants were cultivated in nutrient solution with and without Si supply. The CB development was determined in stained root cross-sections. The outer part of the roots containing the exodermis was isolated after enzymatic treatment. The exodermal suberin was transesterified with MeOH/BF3 and the chemical composition was measured using gas chromatography-mass spectroscopy (GC-MS) and flame ionization detector (GC-FID). Laser ablation-inductively coupled plasma-mass spectroscopy (LA-ICP-MS) was used to determine the Si deposition across root cross sections. Si promoted CB formation in the roots of Si-accumulator and Si non-accumulator species. The exodermal suberin was decreased in rice and maize due to decreased amounts of aromatic suberin fractions. Si did not affect the concentration of lignin and lignin-like polymers in the outer part of rice, maize and onion roots. The highest Si depositions were found in the tissues containing CB. These data along with literature were used to suggest a mechanism how Si promotes the CB development by forming complexes with phenols.  相似文献   

8.
Apoplastic transport across young maize roots: effect of the exodermis   总被引:27,自引:0,他引:27  
The uptake of water and of the fluorescent apoplastic dye PTS (trisodium 3-hydroxy-5,8,10-pyrenetrisulfonate) by root systems of young maize (Zea mays L.) seedlings (age: 11–21 d) has been studied with plants which either developed an exodermis (Casparian band in the hypodermis) or were lacking it. Steady-state techniques were used to measure water uptake across excised roots. Either hydrostatic or osmotic pressure gradients were applied to induce water flows. Roots without an exodermis were obtained from plants grown in hydroponic culture. Roots which developed an exodermis were obtained using an aeroponic (=mist) cultivation method. When the osmotic concentration of the medium was varied, the hydraulic conductivity of the root (Lp r in m3 · m−2 · MPa−1 · s−1) depended on the osmotic pressure gradient applied between root xylem and medium. Increasing the gradient (i.e. decreasing the osmotic concentration of the medium; range: zero to 40 mM of mannitol), increased the osmotic Lp r. In the presence of hydrostatic pressure gradients applied by a pressure chamber, root Lp r was constant over the entire range of pressures (0–0.4 MPa). The presence of an exodermis reduced root Lp r in hydrostatic experiments by a factor of 3.6. When the osmotic pressure of the medium was low (i.e. in the presence of a strong osmotic gradient between xylem sap and medium), the presence of an exodermis caused the same reduction of root Lp r in osmotic experiments as in hydrostatic ones. However, when the osmotic concentration of the medium was increased (i.e. the presence of low gradients of osmotic pressure), no marked effect of growth conditions on osmotic root Lp r was found. Under these conditions, the absolute value of osmotic root Lp r was lower by factors of 22 (hydroponic culture) and 9.7 (aeroponic culture) than in the corresponding experiments at low osmotic concentration. Apoplastic flow of PTS was low. In hydrostatic experiments, xylem exudate contained only 0.3% of the PTS concentration of the bathing medium. In the presence of osmotic pressure gradients, the apoplastic flow of PTS was further reduced by one order of magnitude. In both types of experiments, the development of an exodermis did not affect PTS flow. In osmotic experiments, the effect of the absolute value of the driving force cannot be explained in terms of a simple dilution effect (Fiscus model). The results indicate that the radial apoplastic flows of water and PTS across the root were affected differently by apoplastic barriers (Casparian bands) in the exodermis. It is concluded that, unlike water, the apoplastic flow of PTS is rate-limited at the endodermis rather than at the exodermis. The use of PTS as a tracer for apoplastic water should be abandoned. Received: 9 October 1997 / Accepted: 5 February 1998  相似文献   

9.
Wu X  Lin J  Lin Q  Wang J  Schreiber L 《Plant & cell physiology》2005,46(11):1799-1808
The structure and development of endodermal Casparian strips in Pinus bungeana needles and roots were studied by scanning electron microscopy and fluorescence microscopy. Primary pit fields (PFs) frequently occurred in radial walls of Casparian strips isolated from needles, whereas PFs were never detected in Casparian strips from roots. Formation of Casparian strips in needles as well as roots started at the outer parts of the radial walls and they finally occupied the entire radial walls of the endodermis. Fourier transform infrared (FTIR) spectroscopy of Casparian strips isolated from roots revealed significant absorption bands characteristic for suberin. However, in Casparian strips of needles, evidence for suberin was rarely detected by FTIR spectroscopy. The apoplastic permeability of Casparian strips in needles and roots was probed by the apoplastic tracers calcofluor and berberine. Casparian strips in roots efficiently blocked the apoplastic transport (AT) of calcofluor and berberine. Casparian strips in needles blocked the AT of calcofluor, but diffusion of berberine was not inhibited and berberine thiocyanate crystals were detectable in the vascular tissue of the needles. From the data presented, it must be concluded that Casparian strips in needles, which are characterized by the absence of suberin, are more solute permeable compared with Casparian strips in roots.  相似文献   

10.

Background and Aims

Most studies of exodermal structure and function have involved species with a uniseriate exodermis. To extend this work, the development and apoplastic permeability of Iris germanica roots with a multiseriate exodermis (MEX) were investigated. The effects of different growth conditions on MEX maturation were also tested. In addition, the exodermises of eight Iris species were observed to determine if their mature anatomy correlated with habitat.

Methods

Plants were grown in soil, hydroponics (with and without a humid air gap) or aeroponics. Roots were sectioned and stained with various dyes to detect MEX development from the root apical meristem, Casparian bands, suberin lamellae and tertiary wall thickenings. Apoplastic permeability was tested using dye (berberine) and ionic (ferric) tracers.

Key Results

The root apical meristem was open and MEX development non-uniform. In soil-grown roots, the exodermis started maturing (i.e. Casparian bands and suberin lamellae were deposited) 10 mm from the tip, and two layers had matured by 70 mm. In both hydro- and aeroponically grown roots, exodermal maturation was delayed. However, in areas of roots exposed to an air gap in the hydroponic system, MEX maturation was accelerated. In contrast, maturation of the endodermis was not influenced by the growth conditions. The mature MEX had an atypical Casparian band that was continuous around the root circumference. The MEX prevented the influx and efflux of berberine, but had variable resistance to ferric ions due to their toxic effects. Iris species living in well-drained soils developed a MEX, but species in water-saturated substrates had a uniseriate exodermis and aerenchyma.

Conclusions

MEX maturation was influenced by the roots'' growth medium. The MEX matures very close to the root tip in soil, but much further from the tip in hydro- and aeroponic culture. The air gap accelerated maturation of the second exodermal layer. In Iris, the type of exodermis was correlated with natural habitat suggesting that a MEX may be advantageous for drought tolerance.Key words: Iris germanica, roots, culture conditions, development, anatomy, apoplastic tracers, multiseriate exodermis, endodermis, root apical meristem  相似文献   

11.
Cholewa E  Peterson CA 《Plant physiology》2004,134(4):1793-1802
The pathway of Ca(2+) movement from the soil solution into the stele of the root is not known with certainty despite a considerable body of literature on the subject. Does this ion cross an intact, mature exodermis and endodermis? If so, is its movement through these layers primarily apoplastic or symplastic? These questions were addressed using onion (Allium cepa) adventitious roots lacking laterals. Radioactive Ca(2+) applied to the root tip was not transported to the remainder of the plant, indicating that this ion cannot be supplied to the shoot through this region where the exodermis and endodermis are immature. A more mature zone, in which the endodermal Casparian band was present, delivered 2.67 nmol of Ca(2+) mm(-1) treated root length d(-1) to the transpiration stream, demonstrating that the ion had moved through an intact endodermis. Farther from the root tip, a third zone in which Casparian bands were present in the exodermis as well as the endodermis delivered 0.87 nmol Ca(2+) mm(-1) root length d(-1) to the transpiration stream, proving that the ion had moved through an unbroken exodermis. Compartmental elution analyses indicated that Ca(2+) had not diffused through the Casparian bands of the exodermis, and inhibitor studies using La(3+) and vanadate (VO(4)(3-)) pointed to a major involvement of the symplast in the radial transport of Ca(2+) through the endodermis. It was concluded that in onion roots, the radial movement of Ca(2+) through the exodermis and endodermis is primarily symplastic.  相似文献   

12.
PERUMALLA, C. J., PETERSON, C. A. & ENSTONE, D. E., 1990. A survey of angiosperm species to detect hypodermal Casparian bands. I. Roots with a uniseriate hypodermis and epidermis. Roots of 181 species from 53 families were surveyed to determine the frequency of Casparian bands in hypodermal layers. For six species, inconclusive data were obtained. The roots of the remaining 175 species were divided into three categories on the basis of this survey. In the first, a hypodermis is absent (12 species): no wall modifications were observed in the outer cortex and this region was permeable to the apoplastic dye Cellufluor. In the second, a hypodermis is present, but a hypodermal Casparian band is absent (seven species). In roots of six species, no wall modifications were detected in the hypodermis; the one remaining species had lignified phi thickenings which were permeable to Cellufluor. In the third, both a hypodermis and a hypodermal Casparian band are present (156 species). These Casparian bands consisted of suberin deposits throughout the width of the anticlinal walls of the hypodermis. The tangential walls of the hypodermis were also suberized, indicating that suberin lamellae were probably also present. Hypodermal Casparian bands were found in roots of hydrophytic, mesophytic and xerophytic species and in members of primitive as well as advanced families. The widespread occurrence of these bands (in 89% of the species surveyed) suggests that they were present in the type ancestral to the flowering plants and that this feature has been retained by many species in this group. The epidermal cell walls of the majority of species examined were suberized but were permeable to Cellufluor.  相似文献   

13.
Roots of virtually all vascular plants have an endodermis with a Casparian band, and the majority of angiosperm roots tested also have an exodermis with a Casparian band. Both the endodermis and exodermis may develop suberin lamellae and thick, tertiary walls. Each of these wall modifications has its own function(s). The endodermal Casparian band prevents the unimpeded movement of apoplastic substances into the stele and also prevents the backflow of ions that have moved into the stele symplastically and then were released into its apoplast. In roots with a mature exodermis, the barrier to apoplastic inflow of ions occurs near the root surface, but prevention of backflow of ions from the stele remains a function of the endodermis. The suberin lamellae protect against pathogen invasion and possibly root drying during times of stress. Tertiary walls of the endodermis and exodermis are believed to function in mechanical support of the root, but this idea remains to be tested. During stress, root growth rates decline, and the endodermis and exodermis develop closer to the root tip. In two cases, stress is known to induce the formation of an exodermis, and in several other cases to accelerate the development of both the exodermis and endodermis. The responses of the endodermis and exodermis to drought, exposure to moist air, flooding, salinity, ion deficiency, acidity, and mechanical impedance are discussed.  相似文献   

14.
Roots of virtually all vascular plants have an endodermis with a Casparian band, and the majority of angiosperm roots tested also have an exodermis with a Casparian band. Both the endodermis and exodermis may develop suberin lamellae and thick, tertiary walls. Each of these wall modifications has its own function(s). The endodermal Casparian band prevents the unimpeded movement of apoplastic substances into the stele and also prevents the backflow of ions that have moved into the stele symplastically and then were released into its apoplast. In roots with a mature exodermis, the barrier to apoplastic inflow of ions occurs near the root surface, but prevention of backflow of ions from the stele remains a function of the endodermis. The suberin lamellae protect against pathogen invasion and possibly root drying during times of stress. Tertiary walls of the endodermis and exodermis are believed to function in mechanical support of the root, but this idea remains to be tested. During stress, root growth rates decline, and the endodermis and exodermis develop closer to the root tip. In two cases, stress is known to induce the formation of an exodermis, and in several other cases to accelerate the development of both the exodermis and endodermis. The responses of the endodermis and exodermis to drought, exposure to moist air, flooding, salinity, ion deficiency, acidity, and mechanical impedance are discussed.  相似文献   

15.
Forty-three species of seedless vascular plants were assessed for modifications to root cortical cell walls. All species except Lycopodium had an endodermis with distinct Casparian bands. Experiments with the apoplastic tracer berberine hemisulfate showed that walls of all root cortical cells in the two Lycopodium species tested were permeable to this tracer. Although most species examined lacked a hypodermis several Equisetum species had a hypodermis with modified walls. Three Selaginella species had distinct Casparian bands in this cortical cell layer. This layer, therefore, is an exodermis in Selaginella and its presence limited the inward diffusion of the apoplastic tracer berberine hemisulfate.  相似文献   

16.
Adventitious roots of marsh-grown Pontederia cordata were examined to determine cortical development and structure. The innermost layer of the ground meristem forms the endodermis and aerenchymatous cortex. The outermost layer of the early ground meristem undergoes a precise pattern of oblique and periclinal cell divisions to produce a single or double layer of prohypodermis with an anchor cell for each radial file of aerenchyma cells. At maturity, endodermal cell walls are modified only by narrow Casparian bands. The central regions of the ground meristem become proaerenchyma and exhibit asymmetric cell division and expansion. They produce an aerenchymatous zone with barrel-shaped large cells and irregularly shaped small cells traversing the aerenchyma horizontally along radii; some crystalliferous cells with raphides are present in the aerenchyma. The walls of the hypodermis are modified early by polyphenols. The outermost layer of the hypodermis later matures into an exodermis with Casparian bands that are impermeable to berberine, an apoplastic tracer dye. The nonexodermal layer(s) of the hypodermis has suberin-modified walls. Radial files of aerenchyma are usually connected by narrow protuberances near their midpoints, the aerenchyma lacunae having been produced by expansion of cells along walls lining intercellular spaces. We are terming this type of aerenchyma development, which is neither schizogenous nor lysigenous, "differential expansion."  相似文献   

17.
The chemical composition of isolated endodermal cell walls from the roots of the five monocotyledoneous species Monstera deliciosa Liebm., Iris germanica L., Allium cepa L., Aspidistra elatior Bl. and Agapanthus africanus (L.) Hoffmgg. was determined. Endodermal cell walls isolated from aerial roots of M. deliciosa were in their primary developmental state (Casparian bands). They contained large amounts of lignin (6.5% w/w) and only traces of suberin (0.5% w/w). Endodermal cell walls isolated from the other four species were in their tertiary developmental state. Lignin was still the more abundant cell wall polymer with amounts ranging from 3.8% (w/w, A. cepa) to 4.5% (w/w, I. germanica). However, compared to endodermal cell walls in their primary state of development (Casparian bands), tertiary endodermal cell walls contained significantly higher amounts of suberin, ranging from 1.8% (w/w, I. germanica) to 3.0% (w/w, A. africanus). Thus, chemical characterization of endodermal cell walls from five different species revealed that lignin was the dominant cell wall polymer in the Casparian band of M. deliciosa, whereas tertiary endodermal cell walls contained, in addition to lignin, increasing amounts of suberin (I. germanica, A. cepa, A. elatior and A. africanus). Besides the two biopolymers lignin and suberin, cell wall carbohydrates in the range of between 40 and 60% were also quantified. The sum of all cell wall compounds investigated by gas chromatography resulted in a recovery of 50–80% of the dry weight of the isolated cell wall material. Quantitative chromatographic results in combination with microscopic studies are consistent with the existence of a distinct suberin lamella and lignified tertiary wall deposits. From these data it can be concluded that the barrier properties of the endodermis towards the apoplastic transport of ions and water will increase from primary to tertiary endodermal cell walls due to their increasing amounts of suberin. Received: 23 August 1997 / Accepted: 28 January 1998  相似文献   

18.
Water loss from roots back into drying soil is a problem ofpractical importance in plants growing under conditions of verylow substrate water potential, such as dry or saline areas.Root exodermis is relatively impermeable and has been suggestedto play a protective role against water loss. The relative waterretention ability was compared in root segments from exodermal(maize, onion, sunflower, Rhodes grass and sorghum) and non-exodermalspecies (Pisum sativum,Vicia fabaand wheat). Apical and basalsegments from exodermal roots, with different degrees of exodermisdevelopment, were also compared, as were segments from sorghumroots in which the exodermis thickness had been modified bysubjecting the plants to a 30 d water stress treatment. Waterretention was significantly higher in segments from exodermalroots. In each root, water loss was higher in apical than inbasal segments, regardless of the presence of exodermis. Insorghum, prolonged drought treatment increased exodermis thickeningin nodal roots, however, no differences in rates of water losswere observed in segments obtained from control and droughtedplants. Soil sheaths formed around roots of Rhodes grass growingin very dry soil with the epidermis adhering tightly to thesheath. In plants growing in the field, soil sheaths may bemore effective than the exodermis in preventing root water loss.Copyright1999 Annals of Botany Company. Root, exodermis, rhizosheaths, water loss.  相似文献   

19.
The role of rhizosphere yeasts as plant nutrient‐scavenging microsymbionts in resource‐limited Mediterranean‐type heathlands is unknown. This study, therefore, focused on quantitative elemental distribution within the roots of a medicinal sclerophyll, Agathosma betulina (Berg.) Pillans, grown under nutrient‐poor conditions, and colonized by Cryptococcus laurentii. Micro‐particle‐induced X‐ray emission (PIXE) was used to assess quantitative elemental distribution within the roots of A. betulina inoculated with viable C. laurentii, as well as within roots of control plants that received autoclaved yeast. To aid in the interpretation of heterogeneous elemental distribution patterns, apoplastic barriers (Casparian bands) in root tissues were located using fluorescence microscopy. In addition, root cross‐sections were examined for endophytic C. laurentii using light and transmission electron microscopy (TEM). The average concentrations of P, Fe and Mn were significantly (P < 0.05) higher in roots of yeast‐inoculated plants, compared to control plants. Casparian bands were observed in the exodermal cells of both treatments, and the presence of these bands was correlated with elemental enrichment in the epi/exodermal‐outer cortical tissues. Light and TEM micrographs revealed that the yeast was not a root endophyte. This is the first report describing the role of a soil yeast as a plant nutrient‐scavenging microsymbiont.  相似文献   

20.
The laminar pulvinus of primary leaves of Phaseolus coccineus L. was investigated with respect to the total K+ content, the apoplastic K+ content, and the water potential of extensor and flexor sections in relation to the leaf positions in a circadian leaf-movement cycle, as well as the cation-exchange properties of isolated extensor- and flexor-cell walls. Turgid tissue showed a high total but low apoplastic K+ content, shrunken tissue a low total but high apoplastic K+ content. Thus, part of the K+ transported into and out of the swelling or shrinking protoplasts is shuttled between the protoplasts and the surrounding walls, another part between different regions of the pulvinus. The K+ fraction shuttled between protoplasts and walls was found to be 30–40% of the total transported K+ fraction. Furthermore, 15–20% of the total K+ content of the tissue is located in the apoplast when the apoplastic reservoir is filled, 5–10% when the apoplastic reservoir is depleted. The ion-exchange properties of walls of extensor and flexor cells appear identical in situ and in isolated preparations. The walls behave as cation exchangers of hhe weak-acid type with a strong dependence of the activity of fixed negative charges as well as of the K+-storing capacity on pH and [K+] of the equilibration solution. The high apoplastic K+ contents of freshly cut tissues reflect the cation-storing capacity of the isolated walls. We suggest that K+ ions of the Donnan free space are used for the reversible volume changes (mediating the leaf movement) mainly by an electrogenic proton pump which changes the pH and-or the [K+] in the water free space of the apoplast.Abbreviations and symbols DFS Donnan free space - DW dry weight - pK negative logarithm of the equilibrium constant K of the acidic group - WFS water free space - water potential; Indices - cw cell wall - t tissue  相似文献   

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