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1.
Summary Based on precise information about the orientations of cellulose microfibrils (CMFs) in the secondary cell wall of theEquisetum hyemale root hair, a geometrical model was recently put forward to account for the deposition orientation of CMFs. The model supposes that synthases spin out the CMFs and that geometrical laws dictate their movement. Taking space-limiting conditions into account, CMF orientation is dependent on cell morphology, the amount of other wall molecules adhering to the CMFs, and the number and distribution pattern of synthases. In the present paper this geometrical model for CMF deposition is further applied to nontip-growing angular cells with varying diameters, cells with tapering morphology, various distribution patterns of synthases, various matrix/fibril ratios, and intercalarily elongating cells. The model can accurately predict the actual wall textures in a great variety of cell walls. In the proposed model for CMF orientation, microtubules are not required as cellular guiding structures for the CMFs, not even in elongating walls. They are supposed to be involved in cell elongation, possibly by delivering wall material including CMF synthases.Abbreviation CMF cellulose microfibril  相似文献   

2.
It is shown that root hairs of most aquatic plants have a helicoidal cell-wall texture. Cell walls of root hairs of the aquatic/marshland plant Ranunculus lingua, however, have an axial microfibril alignment. The occurrence of a helicoidal wall texture is not limited to root hairs of aquatic plants: the terrestrial plant Zebrina purpusii has a helicoidal root-hair wall texture, too. With the exception of the grasses, the occurrence of root hairs with helicoidal cell walls pertains to species with predetermined root-hair-forming cells, trichoblasts. The rotation mode of the helicoid is species-specific. The average angle between fibrils of adjacent lamellae varies from 23° to 40°. In Hydrocharis morsus-ranae, cortical microtubules have a net-axial orientation and thus do not parallel nascent microfibrils. The deposition of the helicoidal cell wall is discussed.In honour of Prof. Dr. H.F Linskens (Nijmegen) on the occasion of his 65th birthday  相似文献   

3.
We discuss a dynamical mathematical model to explain cell wall architecture in plant cells. The highly regular textures observed in cell walls reflect the spatial organisation of the cellulose microfibrils (CMFs), the most important structural component of cell walls. Based on a geometrical theory proposed earlier [A. M. C. Emons, Plant, Cell and Environment 17, 3–14 (1994)], the present model describes the space-time evolution of the density of the so-called rosettes, the CMF synthesizing complexes. The motion of these rosettes in the plasma membrane is assumed to be governed by an optimal packing constraint on the CMFs plus adherent matrix material, that couples the direction of motion, and hence the orientation of the CMF being deposited, to the local density of rosettes. The rosettes are created inside the cell in the endoplasmatic reticulum and reach the cell-membrane via vesicles derived from Golgi-bodies. After being inserted into the plasma membrane they are assumed to be operative for a fixed, finite lifetime. The plasma membrane domains within which rosettes are activated are themselves also supposed to be mobile. We propose a feedback mechanism that precludes the density of rosettes to rise beyond a maximum dictated by the geometry of the cell. The above ingredients lead to a quasi-linear first order PDE for the rosette-density. Using the method of characteristics this equation can be cast into a set of first order ODEs, one of which is retarded. We discuss the analytic solutions of the model that give rise to helicoidal, crossed polylamellate, helical, axial and random textures, since all cell walls are composed of (or combinations of) these textures. Received: 10 July 1999 / Revised version: 7 June 2000 / Published online: 16 February 2001  相似文献   

4.
Cell walls, the extracytoplasmic matrices of plant cells, consist of an ordered array of cellulose microfibrils embedded in a matrix of polysaccharides and glycoproteins. This construction is reminiscent of steel rods in reinforced concrete. How a cell organizes these ordered textures around itself, creating its own desirable environment, is a fascinating question. We believe that nature adopted an economical solution to this design problem: it exploits the geometrical constraints imposed by the shape of the cell and the limited space in which microfibrils are deposited, enabling the wall textures essentially to 'build themselves'. This does not imply that the cell cannot control its wall texture. On the contrary, the cell has ample regulatory mechanisms to control wall texture formation by controlling the insertion of synthases and the distance between individual microfibrils within a wall lamella.  相似文献   

5.
All plant cells are provided with the necessary rigidity to withstand the turgor by an exterior cell wall. This wall is composed of long crystalline cellulose microfibrils embedded in a matrix of other polysaccharides. The cellulose microfibrils are deposited by mobile membrane bound protein complexes in remarkably ordered lamellar textures. The mechanism by which these ordered textures arise, however, is still under debate. The geometrical model for cell wall deposition proposed by Emons and Mulder (Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. 95, 7215–7219, 1998) provides a detailed approach to the case of cell wall deposition in non-growing cells, where there is no evidence for the direct influence of other cellular components such as microtubules. The model successfully reproduces even the so-called helicoidal wall; the most intricate texture observed. However, a number of simplifying assumptions were made in the original calculations. The present work addresses the issue of the robustness of the model to relaxation of these assumptions, by considering whether the helicoidal solutions survive when three aspects of the model are varied. These are: (i) the shape of the insertion domain, (ii) the distribution of lifetimes of individual CSCs, and (iii) fluctuations and overcrowding. Although details of the solutions do change, we find that in all cases the overall character of the helicoidal solutions is preserved.  相似文献   

6.
In this paper, a geometrical model is put forward to account for the deposition orientation of plant cell wall microfibrils (CMFs). The model presupposes the insertion in the plasma membrane of CMF initiation complexes, which, once inserted, are moved through the fluid plane of the plasma membrane by the kinetic force of CMF synthesis, leaving CMFs in their wake. Deposition occurs in a limited space and the CMFs are linked to wall matrix molecules. CMF orientation is governed by the laws of geometry and, taking space-limiting conditions into account, therefore depends on (1) cell geometry, (2) the other wall molecules linked to the CMFs, and (3) the number of CMF initiation complexes inserted into the plasma membrane. The model does not exclude the idea that cortical microtubules may determine initial CMF orientation after cell division by determining the cell elongation direction.  相似文献   

7.
The cell wall of the tip‐growing cells of the giant‐cellular xanthophycean alga Vaucheria frigida is mainly composed of cellulose microfibrils (CMFs) arranged in random directions and the major matrix component into which the CMFs are embedded throughout the cell. The mechanical properties of a cell‐wall fragment isolated from the tip‐growing region, which was inflated by artificially applied pressure, were measured after enzymatic removal of the matrix component by using a protease; the results showed that the matrix component is involved in the maintenance of cell wall strength. Since glucose and uronic acid are present in the matrix component of Vaucheria cell walls, we measured the mechanical properties of the cell wall after treatment with endo‐1,3‐ß‐glucanase and observed the fine structures of its surfaces by atomic force microscopy. The major matrix component was partially removed from the cell wall by glucanase, and the enzyme treatment significantly weakened the cell wall strength without affecting the pH dependence of cell wall extensibility. The enzymatic removal of the major matrix component by using a protease released polysaccharide containing glucose and glucuronic acid. This suggests that the major matrix component of the algal cell walls contains both proteins (or polypeptides) and polysaccharides consisting of glucose and glucuronic acid as the main constituents.  相似文献   

8.
Mine I  Takezaki N  Sekida S  Okuda K 《Planta》2007,226(4):971-979
In the tip-growing filamentous cell of the xanthophycean alga Vaucheria terrestris sensu Götz, a new growing tip develops in the non-growing, cylindrical region of the cell that was exposed by local illumination. The present study examined changes in the strength and extensibility of the cell wall of the new growing tip and in the matrix components of the inner surface of the cell wall. The internal pressure required to rupture the cell walls decreased remarkably during the early to middle stages of growing tip development, but the cell wall hardly extended before rupture. In contrast, during the middle and late stages of development, cell walls were extended by internal pressure. Atomic force microscopy revealed that protease-resistant, fine granular matrix components were present only at the apical portion of a normal growing tip, and were absent in the non-growing cylindrical region. In the early and middle stages of new growing tip development, these matrix components appeared in the cell walls in patches. These results suggest that first cell wall strength decreases and then cell wall extensibility increases in the development of new growing tips, and that protease-resistant, fine granular matrix components may be involved in rendering a cell wall extensible.  相似文献   

9.
Mine I  Okuda K 《Planta》2007,225(5):1135-1146
The mechanical strength of cell walls in the tip-growing cells of Vaucheria terrestris is weakened by treatment with proteolytic enzymes. To clarify the morphological characteristics of the components maintaining cell wall strength, the fine structures of the cell walls, with and without protease treatment, were observed by transmission electron microscopy (TEM) and atomic force microscopy (AFM). Observations indicated that cellulose microfibrils were arranged in random directions and overlapped each other. Most of the microfibrils observed in the inner surface of the cell wall were embedded in amorphous materials, whereas in the outer surface of the cell wall, microfibrils were partially covered by amorphous materials. The matrix components embedding and covering microfibrils were almost completely removed by protease treatment, revealing layers of naked microfibrils deposited deeply in the cell wall. Topographic data taken from AFM observations provided some additional information that could not be obtained by TEM, including more detailed images of the granular surface textures of the matrix components and the detection of microfibrils in the interior of the cell wall. In addition, quantitative AFM data of local surface heights enabled us to draw three-dimensional renderings and to quantitatively estimate the extent of the exposure of microfibrils by the enzymatic treatment.  相似文献   

10.
 The relationship between the cessation of cell expansion and formation of the secondary wall was investigated in the early-wood tracheids of Abies sachalinensis Masters by image analysis and field emission scanning electron microscopy. The area of the lumen and the length of the perimeter of the lumen of differentiating tracheids increased from the cambium towards the xylem. These increases had just ceased in the case of tracheids closest to the cambium in which birefringence was first detected by observations with a polarizing light microscope. Cellulose microfibrils (MFs) deposited on the innermost surfaces of radial walls were not well ordered during the expansion of cells, but well ordered MFs were deposited at the subsequent stage of cell wall formation. The first well ordered MFs were oriented in an S-helix. The well ordered MFs had already been deposited at the tracheids where birefringence was first detected under the polarizing light microscope. These results indicate that the deposition of the well ordered MFs, namely, the formation of the secondary wall, begins before the cessation of cell expansion of tracheids. Therefore, it seems that the expansion of tracheids is restricted by the deposition of the secondary wall because the cell walls become rigid simultaneously with the development of the secondary wall and, therefore, the yield point of cell walls exceeds the turgor pressure of the cell. Received: 3 July 1996 / Accepted: 24 September 1996  相似文献   

11.
Mutations of the secondary cell wall   总被引:6,自引:0,他引:6  
It has not been possible to isolate a number of crucial enzymes involved in plant cell wall synthesis. Recent progress in identifying some of these steps has been overcome by the isolation of mutants defective in various aspects of cell wall synthesis and the use of these mutants to identify the corresponding genes. Secondary cell walls offer numerous advantages for genetic analysis of plant cell walls. It is possible to recover very severe mutants since the plants remain viable. In addition, although variation in secondary cell wall composition occurs between different species and between different cell types, the composition of the walls is relatively simple compared to primary cell walls. Despite these advantages, relatively few secondary cell wall mutations have been described to date. The only secondary cell wall mutations characterised to date, in which the basis of the abnormality is known, have defects in either the control of secondary cell wall deposition or secondary cell wall cellulose or lignin biosynthesis. These mutants have, however, provided essential information on secondary cell wall biosynthesis.  相似文献   

12.
Secondary walls in fibers and vessels are typically deposited in three distinct layers, which are formed by the successive re-orientation of cellulose microfibrils. Although cortical microtubules have been implicated in this process, the underlying mechanisms for the formation of three distinct wall layers are not known. The Fragile Fiber1 (FRA1) kinesin-like protein has been previously shown to be involved in the oriented deposition of cellulose microfibrils and important for cell wall strength in Arabidopsis thaliana. In the present report, we investigated the expression pattern of the FRA 1 gene and studied the effects of FRA1 overexpression on secondary wall deposition. The FRAI gene was found to be expressed not only in cells undergoing secondary wall deposition including developing interfascicular fibers and xylem cells, but also in dividing cells and expanding/elongating parenchyma cells. Overexpression of FRA1 caused a severe reduction in the thickness of secondary walls in interfascicular fibers and deformation of vessels, which are accompanied with a marked decrease in stem strength. Close examination of secondary walls revealed that unlike the wild-type walls having three typical layers with the middle layer being the thickest, the secondary walls in FRA1 overexpressors exhibited an increased number of layers, all of which had a similar width. Together, these results provide further evidence implicating an important role of the FRA1 kinesin-like protein in the ordered deposition of secondary walls, which determines the strength of fibers and vessels.  相似文献   

13.
The xylem of higher plants offers support to aerial portions of the plant body and serves as conduit for the translocation of water and nutrients. Terminal differentiation of xylem cells typically involves deposition of thick secondary cell walls. This is a dynamic cellular process accompanied by enhanced rates of cellulose deposition and the induction of synthesis of specific secondary-wall matrix polysaccharides and lignin. The secondary cell wall is essential for the function of conductive and supportive xylem tissues. Recently, significant progress has been made in identifying the genes responsible for xylem secondary cell wall formation. However, our present knowledge is still insufficient to account for the molecular processes by which this complex system operates. To acquire further information about xylem secondary cell walls, we initially focused our research effort on a set of genes specifically implicated in secondary cell wall formation, as well as on loss-of-function mutants. Results from two microarray screens identified several key candidate genes responsible for secondary cell wall formation. Reverse genetic analyses led to the identification of a glycine-rich protein involved in maintaining the stable structure of protoxylem, which is essential for the transport of water and nutrients. A combination of expression analyses and reverse genetics allows us to systematically identify new genes required for the development of physical properties of the xylem secondary wall.  相似文献   

14.
Changes in texture are an integral part of ripening in most fleshy fruits and these changes are thought to be determined, primarily, by alterations in cell wall structure. Electron energy loss spectroscopy (EELS) imaging was used to obtain quantitative information on the levels of calcium and nitrogen in the cell walls of apple (Malus domestica Borkh. cv. Cox's Orange Pippin) fruits. Samples of fruit cortex were prepared for EELS by high-pressure freezing and molecular distillation drying to minimize loss and redistribution of soluble cell wall components such as calcium. The EELS imaging successfully resolved calcium and nitrogen levels in the middle lamella and primary cell wall. When the elemental compositions of the cell walls of Cox's apples from two sites in the UK were compared at harvest or after 6 months storage, the orchard which always produced consistently firmer fruit had significantly lower levels of cell wall calcium and higher levels of cell wall nitrogen. This result was unexpected since firm texture in apples and other fruits has been commonly associated with elevated levels of fruit calcium. The nitrogen-rich material in the sections used for EELS was insoluble in acidified methanol, indicating that it represented a high-molecular-weight component in the cell wall. Furthermore, total tissue hydroxyproline levels were greatest in material with elevated cell wall nitrogen, suggesting enhanced levels of wall structural proteins in the tissue. These data indicate a correlation between increased amounts of cell wall nitrogen and firm fruit texture. The possible role of cell wall proteins in determining the textural properties of fruit tissue is discussed. Received: 19 November 1998 / Accepted: 28 January 1999  相似文献   

15.
Abstract Autolysis of Aspergillus niger cultures has been studied. The stability of the cell wall fraction was followed throughout a 57-day period of autolysis. The results indicated that both a persistence of existing walls and an extra wall deposition due to continued synthesis of walls or wall components during the first 12 days of autolysis seem to take place.  相似文献   

16.
The effect of a short-term low temperature on cellular characteristics of a frost ring in radiata pine (Pinus radiata) secondary xylem was investigated using various microscopic techniques. Cell walls in the frost ring, that formed in the earlywood due to an abrupt drop in the temperature one night in the Spring, were poorly developed, lacking in the proper thickness and the proportion of wall constituents. In majority of the cases, the cell walls were highly convoluted and the secondary walls developed poorly and incompletely. Judging by irregular deposition of lignin, it appears that the control mechanism ensuring an orderly deposition of monolignols failed to function properly. The highly porous texture of some secondary walls indicated that cellulosic and hemicellulosic framework was affected, which would explain irregular lignification of cell walls. Thus the frost ring constitutes a serious defect in the timber, being a zone of weakness along which the wood is likely to split during processing, such as drying.  相似文献   

17.
Cellulose microfibril angle in the cell wall of wood fibres   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
The term microfibril angle (MFA) in wood science refers to the angle between the direction of the helical windings of cellulose microfibrils in the secondary cell wall of fibres and tracheids and the long axis of cell. Technologically, it is usually applied to the orientation of cellulose microfibrils in the S2 layer that makes up the greatest proportion of the wall thickness, since it is this which most affects the physical properties of wood. This review describes the organisation of the cellulose component of the secondary wall of fibres and tracheids and the various methods that have been used for the measurement of MFA. It considers the variation of MFA within the tree and the biological reason for the large differences found between juvenile (or core) wood and mature (or outer) wood. The ability of the tree to vary MFA in response to environmental stress, particularly in reaction wood, is also described. Differences in MFA have a profound effect on the properties of wood, in particular its stiffness. The large MFA in juvenile wood confers low stiffness and gives the sapling the flexibility it needs to survive high winds without breaking. It also means, however, that timber containing a high proportion of juvenile wood is unsuitable for use as high-grade structural timber. This fact has taken on increasing importance in view of the trend in forestry towards short rotation cropping of fast grown species. These trees at harvest may contain 50% or more of timber with low stiffness and therefore, low economic value. Although they are presently grown mainly for pulp, pressure for increased timber production means that ways will be sought to improve the quality of their timber by reducing juvenile wood MFA. The mechanism by which the orientation of microfibril deposition is controlled is still a matter of debate. However, the application of molecular techniques is likely to enable modification of this process. The extent to which these techniques should be used to improve timber quality by reducing MFA in juvenile wood is, however, uncertain, since care must be taken to avoid compromising the safety of the tree.  相似文献   

18.
P. E. Wittich  P. Graven 《Protoplasma》1995,187(1-4):72-78
Summary In this study we document the development of the phytomelan layer in the outer epidermis of the outer integument ofGasteria verrucosa. Phytomelan has been described as a black, melanin-like substance which is chemically very inert. Using histochemical techniques we show that phytomelan development in the cell wall can be divided into three stages. The first stage is deposition of a callosic layer against the tangential wall, with simultaneous thickening of the adjacent parts of the radial walls. The second stage is the conversion of this callosic wall, which we call a tertiary wall, into a noncallosic inner and outer layer. The inner layer stains predominantly for cellulose and a little for pectin. The outer layer is of unknown composition, since it did not react with the stains that were used. In the third stage the outer tertiary layer becomes black, the phytomelan. The callosic wall deposited in the first developmental stage seems to function as a carbohydrate source and as a mould for the tertiary cell wall. The conversion of the callose in the second stage might be the result of penetration of substances which react with callose. All the components for phytomelan seem to be present in the outer layer before the conversion. Phenolics might be involved in this second conversion.Abbreviations DAP days after pollination - PAS periodic acid Schiff's reagent - PEG polyethylene glycol  相似文献   

19.
Sentinels at the wall: cell wall receptors and sensors   总被引:6,自引:2,他引:4  
The emerging view of the plant cell wall is of a dynamic and responsive structure that exists as part of a continuum with the plasma membrane and cytoskeleton. This continuum must be responsive and adaptable to normal processes of growth as well as to stresses such as wounding, attack from pathogens and mechanical stimuli. Cell expansion involving wall loosening, deposition of new materials, and subsequent rigidification must be tightly regulated to allow the maintenance of cell wall integrity and co-ordination of development. Similarly, sensing and feedback are necessary for the plant to respond to mechanical stress or pathogen attack. Currently, understanding of the sensing and feedback mechanisms utilized by plants to regulate these processes is limited, although we can learn from yeast, where the signalling pathways have been more clearly defined. Plant cell walls possess a unique and complicated structure, but it is the protein components of the wall that are likely to play a crucial role at the forefront of perception, and these are likely to include a variety of sensor and receptor systems. Recent plant research has yielded a number of interesting candidates for cell wall sensors and receptors, and we are beginning to understand the role that they may play in this crucial aspect of plant biology.  相似文献   

20.
Wang SB  Chen F  Sommerfeld M  Hu Q 《Proteomics》2005,5(18):4839-4851
The green alga Haematococcus pluvialis has a plant-like cell wall consisting of glycoproteins and cellulose that is modified during the cell cycle and under various conditions. These features allow Haematococcus to be used as a model organism for studying cell wall biology. Development of the Haematococcus model is hampered by the absence of mutants that could provide insight into the biosynthesis and assembly of wall components. Haematococcus mutants (WM#537 and WM#2978) (WM--wall mutant) with defective cell walls were obtained by chemical mutagenesis. WM#537 features a secondary wall of considerably reduced thickness, whereas WM#2978 possesses a somewhat reduced secondary wall with little intervening space between the wall and plasmalemma. 2-DE revealed that a majority of the cell wall proteins were present in the wild-type and mutant cell walls throughout the cell cycle. PMF identified 55 wall protein orthologs from these strains, including a subset of induced proteins known to be involved in wall construction, remodeling, and defense. Down-regulation of certain wall proteins in the two mutants was associated with the wall defects, whereas overexpression of other proteins may have compensated for the defective walls in the two mutants.  相似文献   

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