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1.
We examined the kinetics of electrotropic curvature in solutions of low electrolyte concentration using primary roots of maize (Zea mays L., variety Merit). When submerged in oxygenated solution across which an electric field was applied, the roots curved rapidly and strongly toward the positive electrode (anode). The strength of the electrotropic response increased and the latent period decreased with increasing field strength. At a field strength of 7.5 volts per centimeter the latent period was 6.6 minutes and curvature reached 60 degrees in about 1 hour. For electric fields greater than 10 volts per centimeter the latent period was less than 1 minute. There was no response to electric fields less than 2.8 volts per centimeter. Both electrotropism and growth were inhibited when indoleacetic acid (10 micromolar) was included in the medium. The auxin transport inhibitor pyrenoylbenzoic acid strongly inhibited electrotropism without inhibiting growth. Electrotropism was enhanced by treatments that interfere with gravitropism, e.g. decapping the roots or pretreating them with ethyleneglycol-bis-[β-ethylether]-N,N,N′,N′-tetraacetic acid. Similarly, roots of agravitropic pea (Pisum sativum, variety Ageotropum) seedlings were more responsive to electrotropic stimulation than roots of normal (variety Alaska) seedlings. The data indicate that the early steps of gravitropism and electrotropism occur by independent mechanisms. However, the motor mechanisms of the two responses may have features in common since auxin and auxin transport inhibitors reduced both gravitropism and electrotropism.  相似文献   

2.
3.
The root cap of Lepidium sativum under our culture conditions was found to contain 7 (or occasionally 8) storeys of starch-containing cells. In the youngest one (or two) of these storeys the amyloplasts are small and the cells appear embryonic. In the 6 non-embryonic storeys the amyloplasts are large. Upon inversion of the root, the amyloplasts in the 3 youngest of the 6 non-emhryonic storeys start falling toward the opposite end of the cell at about 72 μ per h (at 21 C), hut they maintain this speed for only 6 to 12 min, after which they virtually come to a stop. As a result, it takes 10 to 12 min before any of the amyloplasts get approximately as close to the ceiling as they were to the floor before the inversion; and this is true only of the 2 youngest of the non-embryonic storeys. When the root is placed horizontal, whether coming from the normal or the inverted position, the amyloplasts reach the lower, longitudinal wall in 15 min or less. The positions of the amyloplasts in the cells of the 3 oldest starch-containing storeys are erratic and show little, if any, dependency on the preceding time of inversion.  相似文献   

4.
The dynamic actin cytoskeleton has been proposed to be linked to gravity sensing in plants but the mechanistic understanding of these processes remains unknown. We have performed detailed pharmacological analyses of the role of the dynamic actin cytoskeleton in gravibending of maize (Zea mays) root apices. Depolymerization of actin filaments with two drugs having different mode of their actions, cytochalasin D and latrunculin B, stimulated root gravibending. By contrast, drug-induced stimulation of actin polymerization and inhibition of actin turnover, using two different agents phalloidin and jasplakinolide, compromised the root gravibending. Importantly, all these actin drugs inhibited root growth to similar extents suggesting that high actin turnover is essential for the gravity-related growth responses rather than for the general growth process. Both latrunculin B and cytochalasin D treatments inhibited root growth but restored gravibending of the decapped root apices, indicating that there is a strong potential for effective actin-mediated gravity sensing outside the cap. This elusive gravity sensing outside the root cap is dependent not only on the high rate of actin turnover but also on weakening of myosin activities, as general inhibition of myosin ATPases induced stimulation of gravibending of the decapped root apices. Collectively, these data provide evidence for the actin turnover-mediated gravity sensing outside the root cap.Key Words: actin cytoskeleton, gravisensing, graviresponding, root cap  相似文献   

5.
The effects of 120 mM NaCl on the anatomy and ultrastructureof the root tip of cultured excised pea roots was investigatedafter 24 h exposure to salinity. In the meristematic cells mitochondrialdamage was apparent and these cells showed increased vacuolation.The root cap was already severely affected after 24 h exposureto salinity and clumping of the cap amyloplasts around the cellnuclei was apparent. The possibility that salinity may affectroot gravitropic responses is discussed. Pisum sativum L. cv. Alaska, salinity, roots, root culture, amyloplasts, ultrastructure  相似文献   

6.
Plasmodesmata linking the root cap and root in primary rootsZea mays are restricted to approx. 400 protodermal cells borderingapprox. 110000 µm2 of the calyptrogen of the root cap.This area is less than 10% of the cross-sectional area of theroot-tip at the cap junction. Therefore, gravitropic effectorsmoving from the root cap to the root can move symplasticallyonly through a relatively small area in the centre of the root.Decapped roots are non-responsive to gravity. However, decappedroots whose caps are replaced immediately after decapping arestrongly graviresponsive. Thus, gravicurvature occurs only whenthe root cap contacts the root, and symplastic continuity betweenthe cap and root is not required for gravicurvature. Completelyremoving mucilage from the root tip renders the root non-responsiveto gravity. Taken together, these data suggest that gravitropiceffectors move apoplastically through mucilage from the capto the root. Calyptrogen, open meristem, protoderm, root cap, root gravitropism, Zea mays  相似文献   

7.
The root cap is a universal feature of angiosperm, gymnosperm, and pteridophyte roots. Besides providing protection against abrasive damage to the root tip, the root cap is also involved in the simultaneous perception of a number of signals – pressure, moisture, gravity, and perhaps others – that modulate growth in the main body of the root. These signals, which originate in the external environment, are transduced by the cap and are then transported from the cap to the root. Root gravitropism is one much studied response to an external signal. In the present paper, consideration is given to the structure of the root cap and, in particular, to how the meristematic initial cells of both the central cap columella and the lateral portion of the cap which surrounds the columella are organized in relation to the production of new cells. The subsequent differentiation and development of these cells is associated with their displacement through the cap and their eventual release, as border cells, from the cap periphery. Mutations, particularly in Arabidopsis, are increasingly playing a part in defining not only the pattern of genetic activity within different cells of the cap but also in revealing how the corresponding wild-type proteins relate to the range of functions of the cap. Notable in this respect have been analyses of the early events of root gravitropism. The ability to image auxin and auxin permeases within the cap and elsewhere in the root has also extended our understanding of this growth response. Images of auxin distribution may, in addition, help extend ideas concerning the positional controls of cell division and cell differentiation within the cap. However, firm information relating to these controls is scarce, though there are intriguing suggestions of some kind of physiological link between the border cells surrounding the cap and mitotic activity in the cap meristem. Open questions concern the structure and functional interrelationships between the root and the cap which surmounts it, and also the means by which the cap transduces the environmental signals that are of critical importance for the growth of the individual roots, and collectively for the shaping of the root system. Current address (Peter W. Barlow): School of Biological Sciences, University of Bristol, Woodland Road, Bristol BS8 1UG, UK  相似文献   

8.
The root cap is a universal feature of angiosperm, gymnosperm, and pteridophyte roots. Besides providing protection against abrasive damage to the root tip, the root cap is also involved in the simultaneous perception of a number of signals – pressure, moisture, gravity, and perhaps others – that modulate growth in the main body of the root. These signals, which originate in the external environment, are transduced by the cap and are then transported from the cap to the root. Root gravitropism is one much studied response to an external signal. In the present paper, consideration is given to the structure of the root cap and, in particular, to how the meristematic initial cells of both the central cap columella and the lateral portion of the cap which surrounds the columella are organized in relation to the production of new cells. The subsequent differentiation and development of these cells is associated with their displacement through the cap and their eventual release, as “border cells”, from the cap periphery. Mutations, particularly in Arabidopsis, are increasingly playing a part in defining not only the pattern of genetic activity within different cells of the cap but also in revealing how the corresponding wild-type proteins relate to the range of functions of the cap. Notable in this respect have been analyses of the early events of root gravitropism. The ability to image auxin and auxin permeases within the cap and elsewhere in the root has also extended our understanding of this growth response. Images of auxin distribution may, in addition, help extend ideas concerning the positional controls of cell division and cell differentiation within the cap. However, firm information relating to these controls is scarce, though there are intriguing suggestions of some kind of physiological link between the border cells surrounding the cap and mitotic activity in the cap meristem. Open questions concern the structure and functional interrelationships between the root and the cap which surmounts it, and also the means by which the cap transduces the environmental signals that are of critical importance for the growth of the individual roots, and collectively for the shaping of the root system.  相似文献   

9.
Role of Root Hairs and Lateral Roots in Silicon Uptake by Rice   总被引:19,自引:0,他引:19       下载免费PDF全文
The rice plant (Oryza sativa L. cv Oochikara) is known to be a Si accumulator, but the mechanism responsible for the high uptake of Si by the roots is not well understood. We investigated the role of root hairs and lateral roots in the Si uptake using two mutants of rice, one defective in the formation of root hairs (RH2) and another in that of lateral roots (RM109). Uptake experiments with nutrient solution during both a short term (up to 12 h) and relatively long term (26 d) showed that there was no significant difference in Si uptake between RH2 and the wild type (WT), whereas the Si uptake of RM109 was much less than that of WT. The number of silica bodies formed on the third leaf in RH2 was similar to that in WT, but the number of silica bodies in RM109 was only 40% of that in WT, when grown in soil amended with Si under flooded conditions. There was also no difference in the shoot Si concentration between WT and RH2 when grown in soil under upland conditions. Using a multi-compartment transport box, the Si uptake at the root tip (0-1 cm, without lateral roots and root hairs) was found to be similar in WT, RH2, and RM109. However, the Si uptake in the mature zone (1-4 cm from root tip) was significantly lower in RM109 than in WT, whereas no difference was found in Si uptake between WT and RH2. All these results clearly indicate that lateral roots contribute to the Si uptake in rice plant, whereas root hairs do not. Analysis of F(2) populations between RM109 and WT showed that Si uptake was correlated with the presence of lateral roots and that the gene controlling formation of lateral roots and Si uptake is a dominant gene.  相似文献   

10.
Al3+, the predominant form of solubilized aluminum at pH values below 5.0, has been shown to exert a profound inhibitory effect on root elongation. Al is known to accumulate at the root apex. The plasma membrane represents the first potential target for Al toxicity, due to its pronounced binding to phospholipids. Al appears to alter both the structure and functions of the plasma membrane, and a great deal of research has been conducted concerning the interactions between Al and the plasma membrane. In this review, recent findings regarding the interactions between Al and the plasma membrane are described, specifically findings involving Al-induced alterations in the structure and function of the plasma membrane.Key Words: acid soil, aluminum, plasma membrane, tolerance, toxicity  相似文献   

11.
12.
The effect of the purified host-selective toxin victorin C, a cyclized penta peptide, was compared to that of CCCP and vanadate on membrane functions of susceptible leaves, roots, and single root cap cells of Avena sativa with conventional electrophysiology. The plasmalemma depolarized irreversibly by about 80 millivolts and to below the diffusion potential within 1 hour. Concentrations as low as 12.5 picomolar were effective in the susceptible but not the resistant cultivar. Electrical membrane potential difference changes were independent of pH and could not be prevented by fusicoccin or Ca2+. Membranes began to depolarize after a lag phase that never was shorter than 6.5 minutes, even with concentrations as high as 1.25 micromolar. Membrane depolarization was accompanied by a distinct decrease in specific membrane resistance from 4.5 to 1.0 ohm times square meter on average. These changes were followed by K+ and Cl efflux and extracellular alkalinization. ATP level and O2 uptake did not decrease within 2 hours. It is concluded that the victorin-induced deleterious membrane alterations are not caused by direct interaction with the plasmalemma H+-ATPase, K+ channels, lipid structure, nor energy metabolism, but they seem to be triggered by a cascade of events leading to an unspecific increase in membrane permeability.  相似文献   

13.
Root caps were isolated and cultured aseptically on variousdefined media. Under appropriate culture conditions plus suitableillumination a substance able to produce a positive geotropicresponse (i.e. a downward bending of roots) was formed in isolatedroot caps. The presence of this substance, or root cap inhibitor,was assessed by substituting cultured caps in place of capsof dark-grown roots. Normally these roots if kept in continuousdarkness will not respond to gravity (i.e. no bending). Optimalroot cap inhibitor production occurs on a relatively simplemedium, lacking sucrose, but supplemented with 10–9 MIAA. Protein synthesis is necessary for inhibitor productionand/or expression, whereas DNA synthesis is not.  相似文献   

14.
Root Growth Inhibitors from Root Cap and Root Meristem of Zea mays L.   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
A micro-assay based on the growth inhibition of root segmentsof the seminal roots of Zea mays has been used to investigatethe root-growth-inhibiting substances in root caps and meristemsrespectively of the roots of Zea mays. This micro-assay is sensitiveto 50 pg of IAA or less. Paper chromatography of the acid fractionof methanolic extracts shows the presence of one main inhibitorin root caps and a different main inhibitor in root meristems.Neither is IAA, whose presence in meristems is sometimes indicatedby small inhibitions (or stimulations) at the characteristicRf of IAA. A Commelina leaf-epidermis assay shows the presenceof one stomata-closing ABA-like substance in root caps and onein meristems, one corresponding in Rf to the main root-growthinhibitor from the root cap. The implications of these findingsfor the geotropic responses of roots is briefly discussed.  相似文献   

15.
The root cap is the site of gravity perception. In the study of caps of primary roots of corn (Zea mays L.), we compared the ultrastructure of geotropically responding roots that had received a 661 nm (red) irradiation (60 second) with nonresponding dark control roots kept in the dark, at comparable times following geotropic stimulation for a total of 150 minutes. The outstanding differences in the light-exposed root caps at the ultrastructural level were: (a) significantly more Golgi apparatus (dictyosomes) were found in the top than in the bottom of red-exposed cells; a random distribution is seen in the dark control cells; (b) the nucleus preferred the top in a greater number of the red-exposed cells; (c) the pattern of mitochondria localization was identical in both treatments, a greater preference for the top; however, the number of mitochondria was reduced in the bottom of red-treated cap cells as compared to the control cells. A lowering in number in the bottom of the red-treated cells was noted also in the dictyosomes; and (d) in a small percentage of cells that showed a preferential distribution of endoplasmic reticulum (ER), more red-exposed cells than controls, during the period 30 to 135 minutes after stimulation, had less ER in the top; however, a majority of the cells in both treatments showed no preferred position for ER distribution. Commonalities in ultra-structural behavior also existed between the red- and dark-treated root cap cells: (a) sedimentation of amyloplasts, with no difference in total number between treatments; and (b) a close association between amyloplasts and ER in both groups.

Polarization of organelles occurred in both the geotropically responding and nonresponding roots. The differences in dictyosome and nuclear localization, and dictyosome and mitochondrial number could be correlated with the tropic response in the red-exposed roots and no response in the dark roots, which in turn could be related to the reported hormonal events in the geotropism of roots.

  相似文献   

16.
Nickel Toxicity and Distribution in Maize Roots   总被引:5,自引:0,他引:5  
A new histochemical method for Ni determination has been developed and employed to study the pattern of Ni distribution in plant tissues. Two-day-old seedlings of maize (Zea mays L.) were transferred onto 15, 20, 25, and 35 M Ni(NO3)2 solutions in the presence of 3 mM Ca(NO3)2, and Ni localization in shoot and root tissues was investigated at days 2 and 7 of the incubation. Following two days of incubation, Ni was found in all root tissues, and its content increased with the period of exposure and from the tip to the root base. Independent of root region and tissue, Ni content in the protoplasts exceeded that in the cell walls. Ni penetrated the endodermal barrier and accumulated in the endodermis and pericycle to the highest concentration. Ni accumulation in the pericycle restricted root branching. Ni did not affect the final cell length, and the inhibition of root growth resulted from suppressed cell division. In the shoots, Ni content was below the level discerned by the dimethylglyoximine method; we therefore conclude that maize belongs to excluder plants, with their root systems functioning as a barrier limiting heavy metal intake by aboveground organs. The pattern of Ni transport differs from that of Cd and Pb; this difference stands for specific toxic effects of Ni, including an arrest of root branching.  相似文献   

17.
The inhibition of root growth by aluminum (Al) is well established, yet a unifying mechanism for Al toxicity remains unclear. The association between cell growth and endogenously generated ionic currents measured in many different systems, including plant roots, suggests that these currents may be directing growth. A vibrating voltage microelectrode system was used to measure the net ionic currents at the apex of wheat (Triticum aestivum L.) roots from Al-tolerant and Al-sensitive cultivars. We examined the relationship between these currents and Al-induced inhibition of root growth. In the Al-sensitive cultivar, Scout 66, 10 micromolar Al (pH 4.5) began to inhibit the net current and root elongation within 1 to 3 hours. These changes occurred concurrently in 75% of experiments. A significant correlation was found between current magnitude and the rate of root growth when data were pooled. No changes in either current magnitude or growth rate were observed in similar experiments using the Al-tolerant cultivar Atlas 66. Measurements with ion-selective microelectrodes suggested that H+ influx was responsible for most of the current at the apex, with smaller contributions from Ca2+ and Cl fluxes. In 50% of experiments, Al began to inhibit the net H+ influx in Scott 66 roots at the same time that growth was affected. However, in more than 25% of cases, Al-induced inhibition of growth rate occurred before any sustained decrease in the current or H+ flux. Although showing a correlation between growth and current or H+ fluxes, these data do not suggest a mechanistic association between these processes. We conclude that the inhibition of root growth by Al is not caused by the reduction in current or H+ influx at the root apex.  相似文献   

18.
Recovery of Geotropism after Removal of the Root Cap   总被引:4,自引:0,他引:4  
Removal of the cap from the primary roots of Zea mays and Triticumaestivum renders the roots unresponsive to gravity. In bothspecies a geotropic response is recovered before a new cap hasstarted to regenerate. Immediately after decapping amyloplastsstart to develop in cells of the root apex and it is proposedthat as the development of amyloplasts continues so they becomefunctional as gravity sensors. It is also suggested that theamyloplasts may be the source of an inhibitor that has beenpostulated to be the intermediary between the perception ofgravity and the geotropic response.  相似文献   

19.
The relationship between aluminium (Al) uptake and growth inhibitionwas studied in tobacco cells (Nicotiana tabacum L. cv. Samsun;nonchlorophyllic cell line) in suspension culture. Cells atthe logarithmic phase of growth were treated with 100 µMA1C13 in modified Murashige-Skoog medium prepared without Piand EDTA (pH 4.0) for up to 21 h. After treatment, the inhibitionof cell growth by Al was estimated from the growth of the Al-treatedcells relative to that of the control cells during post-treatmentculture. Neither Al uptake nor the inhibition of the growthoccurred with less than a 10-h exposure but then both parametersincreased rapidly, reaching maximum values after an 18-h exposure.When cells were treated with AlCl3 at various concentrationsfor 18 h, the extent of growth inhibition was found to be afunction of the Al content of the cells. The dose-response curve(Al uptake versus growth inhibition) resembled the curve expectedfor "single-hit" kinetics. Extrapolation from the curve suggestedthat the uptake of 1 x 1011 Al atoms per cell is the minimumdose that inhibits cell growth. Cells of stationary phase wereresistant to Al and did not take up Al, an indication that theuptake of Al depends on the active growth of cells. Resultsof several types of experiment (hematoxylin staining, washingwith chelators, digestion of cell walls) indicated that Al wasincorporated inside the cells. Together, therefore, our resultssuggest that the amount of Al absorbed by the cells is a determiningfactor in the inhibition of growth by Al. 1Present address: Department of Biology, Faculty of Science,Hirosaki University Hirosaki, Aomori, 036 Japan  相似文献   

20.
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