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1.
The photosynthetic apparatus contains several protein complexes, many of which are regulated by environmental conditions. In this study, the influences of microgravity on PSI and PSII in Brassica rapa plants grown aboard the space shuttle were examined. We found that Brassica plants grown in space had a normal level of growth relative to controls under similar conditions on Earth. Upon return to Earth, cotyledons were harvested and thylakoid membranes were isolated. Analysis of chlorophyll contents showed that the Chl a/b ratio (3.5) in flight cotyledons was much higher than a ratio of 2.42 in the ground controls. The flight samples also had a reduction of PSI complexes and a corresponding 30% decrease of PSI photochemical activity. Immunoblotting showed that the reaction centre polypeptides of PSI were more apparently decreased (e.g. by 24-33% for PsaA and PsaB, and 57% for PsaC) than the light-harvesting complexes. In comparison, the accumulation of PSII complex was less affected in microgravity, thus only a slight reduction in D1, D2 and LHCII was observed in protein blots. However, there was a 32% decrease of OEC1 in the flight samples, indicating a defective OEC subcomplex. In addition, an average 54% increase of the 54 kDa CF1-beta isoform was found in the flight samples, suggesting that space-grown plants suffered from certain stresses, consistent with implications of the increased Chl a/b ratio. Taken together, the results demonstrated that Brassica plants can adapt to spaceflight microgravity, but with significant alterations in chloroplast structures and photosynthetic complexes, and especially reduction of PSI and its activity.  相似文献   

2.
We carried out a space experiment, denoted as Aniso Tubule, to examine the effects of microgravity on the growth anisotropy and cortical microtubule dynamics in Arabidopsis hypocotyls, using lines in which microtubules are visualized by labeling tubulin or microtubule‐associated proteins (MAPs) with green fluorescent protein (GFP). In all lines, GFP‐tubulin6 (TUB6)‐, basic proline‐rich protein1 (BPP1)‐GFP‐ and spira1‐like3 (SP1L3)‐GFP‐expressing using a constitutive promoter, and spiral2 (SPR2)‐GFP‐ and GFP‐65 kDa MAP‐1 (MAP65‐1)‐expressing using a native promoter, the length of hypocotyls grown under microgravity conditions in space was longer than that grown at 1 g conditions on the ground. In contrast, the diameter of hypocotyls grown under microgravity conditions was smaller than that of the hypocotyls grown at 1 g. The percentage of cells with transverse microtubules was increased under microgravity conditions, irrespective of the lines. Also, the average angle of the microtubules with respect to the transverse cell axis was decreased in hypocotyls grown under microgravity conditions. When GFP fluorescence was quantified in hypocotyls of GFP‐MAP65‐1 and SPR2‐GFP lines, microgravity increased the levels of MAP65‐1, which appears to be involved in the maintenance of transverse microtubule orientation. However, the levels of SPR2 under microgravity conditions were comparable to those at 1 g. These results suggest that the microgravity‐induced increase in the levels of MAP65‐1 is involved in increase in the transverse microtubules, which may lead to modification of growth anisotropy, thereby developing longer and thinner hypocotyls under microgravity conditions in space.  相似文献   

3.
A morphometric analysis of root statocytes was performed on seedlings of lentil ( Lens culinaris L., cv. Verte du Puy) in order to determine the effects of microgravity on the polarity of these cells. Seedlings were grown: (1) on the ground, (2) in microgravity, (3) on a 1 g centrifuge in space, (4) first in microgravity and then placed on a 1 g centrifuge for 3 h. Dry seeds were hydrated in space (except for the ground control) for 25 h in darkness at 22°C in the Biorack facility developed by the European Space Agency. At the end of the experiment, the seedlings were photographed and fixed in glutaraldehyde in the Biorack glove box. The average shape of the statocytes and the location of endoplasmic reticulum, amyloplasts and nucleus in the cells were analysed in the four samples. By considering the cell shape, it appears that the morphology of the statocytes on the ground was different from that observed in the space samples. Cell polarity was similar in microgravity and in the centrifuged samples except for the distribution of the amyloplasts. These organelles were not distributed at random in near zero gravity, and they were more numerous in the proximal than in the distal half. Moreover, the statoliths were more voluminous in microgravity than in the centrifuged samples. The nucleus was closer to the cell center in the statocytes of roots grown in microgravity than in statocytes of roots grown in microgravity and then placed on the 1 g centrifuge for 3 h. It is hypothesized that the nucleus is attached to the cell periphery and that its location is dependent upon gravity.  相似文献   

4.
The influence of microgravity on the susceptibility of soybean roots to Phytophthora sojae was studied during the Space Shuttle Mission STS-87. Seedlings of soybean cultivar Williams 82 grown in spaceflight or at unit gravity were untreated or inoculated with the soybean root rot pathogen P. sojae. At 3, 6 and 7 d after launch while still in microgravity, seedlings were photographed and then fixed for subsequent microscopic analysis. Post-landing analysis of the seedlings revealed that at harvest day 7 the length of untreated roots did not differ between flight and ground samples. However, the flight-grown roots infected with P. sojae showed more disease symptoms (percentage of brown and macerated areas) and the root tissues were more extensively colonized relative to the ground controls exposed to the fungus. Ethylene levels were higher in spaceflight when compared to ground samples. These data suggest that soybean seedlings grown in microgravity are more susceptible to colonization by a fungal pathogen relative to ground controls.  相似文献   

5.
Preparatory experiments for the IML-1 (International Microgravity Laboratory) mission to be flown on the Space Shuttle in January, 1992, were performed on a 14 day flight on Biokosmos 9 (Kosmos 2044) in September 1989. The purpose of the experiment was to study the effect of weightlessness on protoplast regeneration. Problems with late access to the space vehicle meant that the newly isolated protoplasts from hypocotyl cells of rapeseed (Brassica napus L. cv Niklas) and suspension cultures of carrot (Daucus carota L, cv Nobo) had to be stored at 4 degrees C for 36 h prior to the launch of the biosatellite, in order to delay cell wall regeneration until the samples were in orbit. In the flight samples and the ground controls, a portion of the total number of protoplasts regenerated cell walls. The growth of flight rapeseed cells was only 56% compared to the ground control; the respective growth of carrot cells in orbit was 82% of the ground control. Analysis demonstrated that the peroxidase activity and the amount of protein was lower in the flight samples than in the ground controls. The number of different isoenzymes was also decreased in the flight samples. A 54% decrease in the production of cellulose was found in rapeseed, and a 71% decrease in carrot. Hemicellulose production was also decreased in the flight samples compared to the ground controls. Ultrastructural analysis of the cell aggregates from the protoplasts cultured in orbit, demonstrated that hydrolysis and disappearance of reserve starch occurred in the flight cell plastids. The mitochondria were more varied in appearance in the flight samples than in the ground control cells. An increased frequency of the occurrence of folds formed by the plasmalemma together with an increase in the degree of complexity of these folds was also observed. Fluorescence analysis showed a decrease of the calcium content in cell cultures under space flight compared to the ground controls. One general effect of the stay onboard the space vehicle was a retardation of the regeneration processes. Callus cultures obtained from the flight samples grew very slowly compared to callus regenerated from the ground controls, and two years after the Biokosmos 9 flight there appears to be no further growth in the samples exposed to microgravity. Callus cultures from the ground controls, however, continue to grow well. A simulation experiment for IML-l performed in January 1990 at ESTEC (European Space Technology Center), The Netherlands, has resulted in regenerated plants. These observations are discussed and compared to the results obtained on Biokosmos 9.  相似文献   

6.
Pollen and seeds share a developmental sequence characterized by intense metabolic activity during reserve deposition before drying to a cryptobiotic form. Neither pollen nor seed development has been well studied in the absence of gravity, despite the importance of these structures in supporting future long-duration manned habitation away from Earth. Using immature seeds (3-15 d postpollination) of Brassica rapa L. cv. Astroplants produced on the STS-87 flight of the space shuttle Columbia, we compared the progress of storage reserve deposition in cotyledon cells during early stages of seed development. Brassica pollen development was studied in flowers produced on plants grown entirely in microgravity on the Mir space station and fixed while on orbit. Cytochemical localization of storage reserves showed differences in starch accumulation between spaceflight and ground control plants in interior layers of the developing seed coat as early as 9 d after pollination. At this age, the embryo is in the cotyledon elongation stage, and there are numerous starch grains in the cotyledon cells in both flight and ground control seeds. In the spaceflight seeds, starch was retained after this stage, while starch grains decreased in size in the ground control seeds. Large and well-developed protein bodies were observed in cotyledon cells of ground control seeds at 15 d postpollination, but their development was delayed in the seeds produced during spaceflight. Like the developing cotyledonary tissues, cells of the anther wall and filaments from the spaceflight plants contained numerous large starch grains, while these were rarely seen in the ground controls. The tapetum remained swollen and persisted to a later developmental stage in the spaceflight plants than in the ground controls, even though most pollen grains appeared normal. These developmental markers indicate that Brassica seeds and pollen produced in microgravity were physiologically younger than those produced in 1 g. We hypothesize that microgravity limits mixing of the gaseous microenvironments inside the closed tissues and that the resulting gas composition surrounding the seeds and pollen retards their development.  相似文献   

7.
Studies from space flights over the past three decades have demonstrated that basic physiological changes occur in humans during space flight. These changes include cephalic fluid shifts, loss of fluid and electrolytes, loss of muscle mass, space motion sickness, anemia, reduced immune response, and loss of calcium and mineralized bone. The cause of most of these manifestations is not known and until recently, the general approach was to investigate general systemic changes, not basic cellular responses to microgravity. This laboratory has recently studied gene growth and activation of normal osteoblasts (MC3T3-El) during spaceflight. Osteoblast cells were grown on glass coverslips and loaded in the Biorack plunger boxes. The osteoblasts were launched in a serum deprived state, activated in microgravity and collected in microgravity. The osteoblasts were examined for changes in gene expression and signal transduction. Approximately one day after growth activation significant changes were observed in gene expression in 0-G flight samples. Immediate early growth genes/growth factors cox-2, c-myc, bcl2, TGF beta1, bFGF and PCNA showed a significant diminished mRNA induction in microgravity FCS activated cells when compared to ground and 1-G flight controls. Cox-1 was not detected in any of the samples. There were no significant differences in the expression of reference gene mRNA between the ground, 0-G and 1-G samples. The data suggest that quiescent osteoblasts are slower to enter the cell cycle in microgravity and that the lack of gravity itself may be a significant factor in bone loss in spaceflight. Preliminary data from our STS 76 flight experiment support our hypothesis that a basic biological response occurs at the tissue, cellular, and molecular level in 0-G. Here we examine ground-based and space flown data to help us understand the mechanism of bone loss in microgravity.  相似文献   

8.
In mammals spaceflight influences spermatogenesis since spermatogonial germ cell proliferation, compared to synchronous controls, is lightly decreased in irradiated or flown rats. Moreover, changes of the plasmatic testosterone production was described either in flight rats, or in rats maintained in simulated microgravity conditions. The hormonal levels of the astronauts change as it has been previously described, including hormones involved in the regulation of spermatogenesis such as testosterone and luteinizing hormone (LH). In microgravity conditions, human testosterone levels decreased whereas circulating LH levels increased. To study the effect of simulated microgravity on mammalian spermatogenesis we have utilized the Rotary Cell Culture System (RCCS) and we have cultured testicular fragments isolated from prepuberal rats in a chemically defined medium for three days under microgravity conditions. As control we have cultured the same amount of fragments at unit gravity. The morphology of the samples has been studied and the number of proliferating cells has been counted in control samples and in samples maintained in RCCS. The results indicate that the number of duplicating cells in the tubules was significantly increased in the microgravity-cultured fragments. The amount of testosterone secreted in the culture medium has been also evaluated and in RCCS samples the amount of the hormone was higher respect to the control samples.  相似文献   

9.
An immortalized promyelocytic cell line was studied to detect how doxorubicin uptake is affected by microgravity. The purpose of this experiment was to identify the effect that microgravity may have on multidrug resistance in leukocytes. HL60 cells and HL60 cells resistant to anthracycline (HL60/AR) were grown in RPMI and 10% FBS. Upon reaching orbit in the Space Shuttle Endeavour, the cells were robotically mixed with doxorubicin. Three days after mixing, cells were fixed with paraformaldehyde/glutaraldehyde. Ground control experiments were conducted concurrently using a robot identical to the one used on the Shuttle. Fixed cells were analyzed within 2 weeks of launch. Confocal micrographs identified changes in cell structure (transmittance), drug distribution (fluorescence), and microtubule polymerization (fluorescence). Flight cells showed a lack of cytoskeletal polymerization resulting in an overall amorphic globular shape. Doxorubicin distribution in ground cells included a large numbers of vesicles relative to flight cells. There was a greater amount of doxorubicin present in flight cells (85% ± 9.7) than in ground control cells (43% ± 26) as determined by image analysis. Differences in microtubule formation between flight cells and ground cells could be partially responsible for the differences in drug distribution. Cytoskeletal interactions are critical to the function ofP-glycoprotein as a drug efflux pump responsible for multidrug resistance.  相似文献   

10.
The embryonic development of the fresh-water snail Biomphalaria glabrata was examined under microgravity-conditions and compared with the ground control and standard embryos, putting special emphasis on the shell formation. The process of shell formation may be particularly sensitive to the change of gravitational forces. The project aimed at determining whether the processes of mineralization during the formation of the exoskeleton in the growing snail embryo take place normally under microgravity conditions. Twenty-four adult individuals of the tropical freshwater snail B. glabrata were maintained 9 days in the Closed Equilibrated Biological Aquatic System (CEBAS Minimodule) on Space Shuttle flight STS-89. The animals produced spawning packs throughout the duration of the mission so that embryos of all developmental stages were achieved. The embryos developed slightly slower in the CEBAS than under standard conditions, and in older embryos a decreased mineralization of the shell was detected. These phenomena, however, were observed in the flight module as well as in the ground control specimens and was not an effect caused by the microgravity conditions. Embryos of B. glabrata showed a correct morphogenesis under microgravity, no teratological effects were noticed, and the shell formation proceeded normally.  相似文献   

11.
The ultrastructure of root cap columella cells was studied by morphometric analysis in wild-type, a reduced-starch mutant, and a starchless mutant of Arabidopsis grown in microgravity (F-microgravity) and compared to ground 1g (G-1g) and flight 1g (F-1g) controls. Seedlings of the wild-type and reduced-starch mutant that developed during an experiment on the Space Shuttle (both the F-microgravity samples and the F-lg control) exhibited a decreased starch content in comparison to the G-1g control. These results suggest that some factor associated with spaceflight (and not microgravity per se) affects starch metabolism. Elevated levels of ethylene were found during the experiments on the Space Shuttle, and analysis of ground controls with added ethylene demonstrated that this gas was responsible for decreased starch levels in the columella cells. This is the first study to use an on-board centrifuge as a control when quantifying starch in spaceflight-grown plants. Furthermore, our results show that ethylene levels must be carefully considered and controlled when designing experiments with plants for the International Space Station.  相似文献   

12.
Conditions of disuse such as bed rest, space flight, and immobilization result in decreased mechanical loading of bone, which is associated with reduced bone mineral density and increased fracture risk. Mechanisms involved in this process are not well understood but involve the suppression of osteoblast function. To elucidate the influence of mechanical unloading on osteoblasts, a rotating wall vessel (RWV) was employed as a ground based model of simulated microgravity. Mouse MC3T3-E1 osteoblasts were grown on microcarrier beads for 14 days and then placed in the RWV for 24 h. Consistent with decreased bone formation during actual spaceflight conditions, alkaline phosphatase and osteocalcin expression were decreased by 80 and 50%, respectively. In addition, runx2 expression and AP-1 transactivation, key regulators of osteoblast differentiation and bone formation, were reduced by more than 60%. This finding suggests that simulated microgravity could promote dedifferentiation and/or transdifferentiation to alternative cell types; however, markers of adipocyte, chondrocyte, and myocyte lineages were not induced by RWV exposure. Taken together, our results indicate that simulated microgravity may suppress osteoblast differentiation through decreased runx2 and AP-1 activities.  相似文献   

13.
Researchers report on the terrestrial growth of wheat seeds after exposure to microgravity and cosmic radiation in space. Some groups of experimental and control seeds were treated with cysteine before flight. The germination of space-flown seeds was not different from ground controls. Cysteine promoted growth in both experimental and control groups of seeds. Roots tips of seedlings grown from experimental seeds exhibited aberrant cells; preflight treatment with cysteine decreased the number of aberrant cells.  相似文献   

14.
Early processes underlying plant gravity sensing were investigated in rhizoids of Chara globularis under microgravity conditions provided by parabolic flights of the A300-Zero-G aircraft and of sounding rockets. By applying centrifugal forces during the microgravity phases of sounding rocket flights, lateral accelerations of 0.14 g, but not of 0.05 g, resulted in a displacement of statoliths. Settling of statoliths onto the subapical plasma membrane initiated the gravitropic response. Since actin controls the positioning of statoliths and restricts sedimentation of statoliths in these cells, it can be calculated that lateral actomyosin forces in a range of 2 x 10(-14) n act on statoliths to keep them in place. These forces represent the threshold value that has to be exceeded by any lateral acceleration stimulus for statolith sedimentation and gravisensing to occur. When rhizoids were gravistimulated during parabolic plane flights, the curvature angles of the flight samples, whose sedimented statoliths became weightless for 22 s during the 31 microgravity phases, were not different from those of in-flight 1g controls. However, in ground control experiments, curvature responses were drastically reduced when the contact of statoliths with the plasma membrane was intermittently interrupted by inverting gravistimulated cells for less than 10 s. Increasing the weight of sedimented statoliths by lateral centrifugation did not enhance the gravitropic response. These results provide evidence that graviperception in characean rhizoids requires contact of statoliths with membrane-bound receptor molecules rather than pressure or tension exerted by the weight of statoliths.  相似文献   

15.
The growth and development of protoplasts of rapeseed (Brassica napus L. cv Line) and carrot (Daucus carota L. cv. Navona) were studied onboard the Space Shuttle‘Discovery’during an 8-day International Microgravity Laboratory [IML-l) mission in January 1992. The Flight experiments were carried out in‘Biorack'. a fully controlled cell biological experimental facility. under microgravity conditions and in a l-g centrifuge. Parallel experiments were performed in a‘Biorack’module on the ground. After retrieval, some samples were subcultured on appropriate media and analysed for callus growth and regeneration to intact plants. The remainder were used for biochemical analysis. Samples fixed on board the Space Shuttle were kept in l% glutaraldehyde fixative at 4°C for 3–7 days for microscopy analysis after retrieval. Protoplasts exposed to microgravity conditions showed a delay in cell wall synthesis. Cells were swollen in appearance and formed cell aggregates with only few cells. Callus were obtained from protoplasts cultured under microgravity (Fogl). on the l-g centrifuge on board the shuttle (Flg), under normal l-g conditions on the ground (G1g) and on a centrifuge on the ground giving 1.4 g (Gl.4g). Regeneration of intact rapeseed plants was obtained from Flg. Glg and G1.4g. However, no plants were regenerated from protoplasts exposed to microgravity (Fog). Biochemical analysis indicated that the microgravity samples (Fog displayed a reduced packed cell volume, an increased concentration of soluble proteins per cell, and a reduced specific activity of peroxidase in the cytoplasm. Morphometric analysis of fixed samples demonstrated that 3-day old protoplasts under microgravity conditions were significantly larger than protoplasts kept on the l-g centrifuge in space. UItrastructural analysis by transmission electron microscopy showed that protoplasts exposed to microgravity conditions for 3 days had larger vacuoles and a slightly reduced starch content compared to Flg cells. Cell aggregates formed under microgravity conditions (Fog) had an average of 2–I cells per aggregate while aggregates formed under Flg had 8–12 cells.  相似文献   

16.
Network structures created by hydroxycinnamate cross-links within the cell wall architecture of gramineous plants make the cell wall resistant to the gravitational force of the earth. In this study, the effects of microgravity on the formation of cell wall-bound hydroxycinnamates were examined using etiolated rice shoots simultaneously grown under artificial 1 g and microgravity conditions in the Cell Biology Experiment Facility on the International Space Station. Measurement of the mechanical properties of cell walls showed that shoot cell walls became stiff during the growth period and that microgravity suppressed this stiffening. Amounts of cell wall polysaccharides, cell wall-bound phenolic acids, and lignin in rice shoots increased as the shoot grew. Microgravity did not influence changes in the amounts of cell wall polysaccharides or phenolic acid monomers such as ferulic acid (FA) and p-coumaric acid, but it suppressed increases in diferulic acid (DFA) isomers and lignin. Activities of the enzymes phenylalanine ammonia-lyase (PAL) and cell wall-bound peroxidase (CW-PRX) in shoots also increased as the shoot grew. PAL activity in microgravity-grown shoots was almost comparable to that in artificial 1 g-grown shoots, while CW-PRX activity increased less in microgravity-grown shoots than in artificial 1 g-grown shoots. Furthermore, the increases in expression levels of some class III peroxidase genes were reduced under microgravity conditions. These results suggest that a microgravity environment modifies the expression levels of certain class III peroxidase genes in rice shoots, that the resultant reduction of CW-PRX activity may be involved in suppressing DFA formation and lignin polymerization, and that this suppression may cause a decrease in cross-linkages within the cell wall architecture. The reduction in intra-network structures may contribute to keeping the cell wall loose under microgravity conditions.  相似文献   

17.
Calcium loss and muscle atrophy are two of the main metabolic changes experienced by astronauts and crew members during exposure to microgravity in space. Calcium and cytoskeletal events were investigated within sea urchin embryos which were cultured in space under both microgravity and 1 g conditions. Embryos were fixed at time-points ranging from 3 h to 8 days after fertilization. Investigative emphasis was placed upon: (1) sperm-induced calcium-dependent exocytosis and cortical granule secretion, (2) membrane fusion of cortical granule and plasma membranes; (3) microfilament polymerization and microvilli elongation; and (5) embryonic development into morula, blastula, gastrula, and pluteus stages. For embryos cultured under microgravity conditions, the processes of cortical granule discharge, fusion of cortical granule membranes with the plasma membrane, elongation of microvilli and elevation of the fertilization coat were reduced in comparison with embryos cultured at 1 g in space and under normal conditions on Earth. Also, 4% of all cells undergoing division in microgravity showed abnormalities in the centrosome-centriole complex. These abnormalities were not observed within the 1 g flight and ground control specimens, indicating that significant alterations in sea urchin development processes occur under microgravity conditions.  相似文献   

18.
Effect of microgravity on the cell cycle in the lentil root   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
Characteristics of the cell cycle in cortical regions (0–0.6 mm from the root-cap junction) of the primary root of lentil (Lens culinaris L.) during germination in the vertical position on earth were determined by iododeoxyuridine labelling and image analysis. All cells were in the G1 phase at the beginning of germination and the duration of the first cell cycle was about 25 h. At 29 h, around 14% of the cortical nuclei were still in the G2 or M phases of the first cell cycle, whereas 53 and 33% of the nuclei were respectively in the G1 or S phase of the second cell cycle. In parallel, the cell cycle was analysed in root tips of lentil seedlings grown in space during the IML 2 mission (1994), (1) on the 1-g centrifuge for 29 h, (2) on the 1-g centrifuge for 25 h and placed in microgravity for 4 h, (3) in microgravity for 29 h, (4) in microgravity for 25 h and placed on the 1-g centrifuge for 4 h. The densitometric analysis of nuclear DNA content showed that in microgravity there were less cells in DNA synthesis and more cells in G1 than in the controls on the 1-g centrifuge (flight and ground). The comparison of the sample grown continuously on the 1-g centrifuge in space and of the sample grown first in 1-g and then in microgravity indicated that 4 h of microgravity modified cell cycle, increasing the percentage of cells in the G1 phase. On the contrary, the transfer from microgravity to the 1-g centrifuge (for 4 h) did not provoke any significant change in the distribution of the nuclear DNA content. Thus the effect of microgravity could not be reversed by a 4 h centrifugation. As the duration of the first cell cycle in the lentil root meristem is about 25 h, the results obtained are in agreement with the hypothesis that the first cell cycle and/or the second G1 phase was lengthened in absence of gravity. The difference observed in the distribution of the nuclear DNA content in the two controls could be due to the fact that the 1g control on board was subjected to a period of 15 min of microgravity for photography 25 h after the hydration of the seeds, which indicated an effect of short exposure to weightlessness. The mitotic index of cortical cells was greater on the 1-g centrifuge in space than in any other sample (flight and ground) which could show an effect of the centrifugation on the mitosis.  相似文献   

19.
The principal objectives of the space experiment, BRIC-AUX on STS 95, were the integrated analysis of the growth and development of etiolated pea and maize seedlings in space and a study of the effects of microgravity conditions in space on auxin polar transport in these segments. Microgravity significantly affected the growth and development of etiolated pea and maize seedlings. Epicotyls of etiolated pea seedlings were the most oriented toward about 40 to 60 degrees from the vertical. Mesocotyls of etiolated maize seedlings were curved at random during space flight but coleoptiles were almost straight. Finally the growth inhibition of these seedlings in space was also observed. Roots of some pea seedlings grew toward to the aerial space of Plant Growth Chamber. Extensibilities of cell walls of the third internode of etiolated pea epicotyls and the top region of etiolated maize coleoptiles, which were germinated and grown under microgravity conditions in space, were significantly low as compared with those grown on the ground of the earth. Activities of auxin polar transport in the second internode segments of etiolated pea seedlings and coleoptile segments of etiolated maize seedlings were significantly inhibited and promoted, respectively, under microgravity conditions in space. These results strongly suggest that auxin polar transport as well as the growth and development of plants is controlled under gravity on the earth.  相似文献   

20.
Effect of microgravity on recovery of bacterial cells from radiation damage was examined in IML-2, S/MM-4 and S/MM-9 experiments using the extremely radioresistant bacterium Deinococcus radiodurans. The cells were irradiated with gamma rays before the space flight and incubated on board the Space Shuttle. The survival of the wild type cells incubated in space increased compared with the ground controls, suggesting that the recovery of this bacterium from radiation damage was enhanced under the space environment. No difference was observed between the survivals of radiosensitive mutant rec30 cells incubated in space and on the ground. The amount of DNA-repair related RecA protein induced under microgravity was similar to those of ground controls, however, induction of PprA protein, product of a unique radiation-inducible gene (designated pprA) responsible for loss of radiation resistance in repair-deficient mutant, KH311, was enhanced under microgravity compared with ground controls. Recent investigation in vitro showed that PprA preferentially bound to double-stranded DNA carrying strand breaks, inhibited Escherichia coli exonuclease III activity, and stimulated the DNA end-joining reaction catalyzed by DNA ligases. These results suggest that D. radiodurans has a radiation-induced non-homologous end-joining (NHEJ) repair mechanism in which PprA plays a critical role.  相似文献   

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