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1.
P. E. Pilet  D. Ney 《Planta》1978,144(1):109-110
A method using optical microfibers permitted localized exposure of the cap or the elongating part of growing maize (Zea mays L.) roots to white light. When the cap was illuminated, a strong and very rapid inhibition of the elongation rate of the roots was found. When the light microbeam was directed at the elongating region, the roots continued to grow at the same rate as before the illumination.  相似文献   

2.
We have earlier published observations showing that endogenous alterations in growth rate during gravitropism in maize roots (Zea mays L.) are unaffected by the orientation of cuts which remove epidermal and cortical tissue in the growing zone (Björkman and Cleland, 1988, Planta 176, 513–518). We concluded that the epidermis and cortex are not essential for transporting a growth-regulating signal in gravitropism or straight growth, nor for regulating the rate of tissue expansion. This conclusion has been challenged by Yang et al. (1990, Planta 180, 530–536), who contend that a shallow girdle around the entire perimeter of the root blocks gravitropic curvature and that this inhibition is the result of a requirement for epidermal cells to transport the growth-regulating signal. In this paper we demonstrate that the entire epidermis can be removed without blocking gravitropic curvature and show that the position of narrow girdles does not affect the location of curvature. We therefore conclude that the epidermis is not required for transport of a growth-regulating substance from the root cap to the growing zone, nor does it regulate the growth rate of the elongating zone of roots.  相似文献   

3.
4.
Jean-Marc Versel  Guy Mayor 《Planta》1985,164(1):96-100
The elongation rate, the gradient of the local elongation rate and the surface pH of maize roots were measured over 12 h. A data bank was constituted by storing these values. By sorting these results on the basis of different elongation rates, different classes of root were obtained. Two classes were chosen: the low-growth roots and the high-growth roots. The mean growth of these two root classes was stable with time and differed significantly from one another. The surface pH of the elongation zone was the same for the roots of these two classes, but the roots selected for their higher growth rate had a larger acid efflux in this zone.  相似文献   

5.
Björkman T  Cleland RE 《Planta》1988,176(4):513-518
In order to determine the role of the epidermis and cortex in gravitropic curvature of seedling roots of maize (Zea mays L. cv. Merit), the cortex on the two opposite flanks was removed from the meristem through the growing zone; gravitropic curvature was measured with the roots oriented horizontally with the cut flanks either on the upper and lower side, or on the lateral sides as a wound control. Curvature was slower in both these treatments (53° in 5 h) than in intact roots (82°), but there was no difference between the two orientations in extent and rate of curvature, nor in the latent time, showing that epidermis and cortex were not the site of action of the growth-regulating signal. The amount of cortex removed made no difference in the extent of curvature. Curvature was eliminated when the endodermis was damaged, raising the possibility that the endodermis or the stele-cortex interface controls gravitropic curvature in roots. The elongation rate of roots from which just the epidermis had been peeled was reduced by 0.01 mM auxin (indole-3-acetic acid) from 0.42 to 0.27 mm h-1, contradicting the hypothesis that only the epidermis responds to changes in auxin activity during gravistimulation. These observations indicate that gravitropic curvature in maize roots is not driven by differential cortical cell enlargement, and that movement of growth regulator(s) from the tip to the elongating zone is unlikely to occur in the cortex.Abbreviations df degrees of freedom - IAA indole-3-acetic acid  相似文献   

6.
Excision and subsequent incubation of the apices (1 cm) of wheat (Triticum aestivum L.) seedling roots in simple media severely reduced elongation from 28 mm·(24 h)-1 in intact roots to a maximum of 2 mm·(24 h)-1 in excised roots. The reduction in growth was accompanied by a loss of cell turgor in the growing zone but was correlated with a hardening of the cell walls in this region. Rheological properties were measured as percent extensibility (both plastic and elastic) using a tensiometer, and as instantaneous volumetric elastic modulus ( i) using the pressure probe. Excision decreased plastic and elastic properties with a half-time of some 60 min. Plastic extension was reduced from 2.5% to 0.9% and elastic from 4.8% to 2.6% for an 8-g load. By contrast, i was increased by excision. The observed reduction in root elongation rate was accompained by a reduction in mature cell length from 240 m to 40 m and a shortening of the zone of cell expansion.Symbol i instantaneous volumetric elastic modulus  相似文献   

7.
A. Chanson  P. E. Pilet 《Planta》1982,154(6):556-561
The tips of intact maize (cv. LG 11) roots, maintained vertically, were pretreated with a droplet of buffer solution or a bead of anion exchange resin, both containing [214-C]abscisic acid (ABA). A significant basipetal ABA movement was observed and two metabolites of ABA (possibly phaseic acid and dihydrophaseic acid) were found. ABA pretreatment enhanced the gravireaction of 10 mm apical root segments kept both in the dark and in the light. The possibility that ABA could be one of the endogenous growth inhibitors produced or released by the cap cells is discussed.Abbreviations ABA abscisic acid - 3,3-DGA 3,3-dimethyl-glutaric acid - DPA dihydrophaseic acid - PA phaseic acid - GCMS gas chromatography-mass spectrometry  相似文献   

8.
Roots of Zea mays were maintained in a vertical orhorizontal position and the local elongation rate and H+ fluxes were measured using Sephadex beads containing a pH indicator. When the roots were kept horizontally, the growth of the lower side was strongly inhibited and that of the upper side slightly stimulated as compared with vertical roots. The H+ extrusion, which was greatest in the elongation zone, was strongly inhibited on the lower side and slightly stimulated on the upper side as compared with vertical roots.  相似文献   

9.
Lewis J. Feldman 《Planta》1981,153(5):471-475
Growth inhibitors were assayed from extracts of intact (attached) and of excised (cultured) root caps of Zea mays L., cv. Merit, the roots of which show a positive geotropic response only after exposure to light. If caps are intact at the time of illumination, at least two inhibitory substances are produced, an acid inhibitor and a neutral inhibitor, whereas if caps are detached from roots, placed in culture and then illuminated only the neutral inhibitor is formed. Cycloheximide retards inhibitor production in both intact and cultured caps. When [14C]mevalonic acid is included in the culture medium and the caps are illuminated, 15–25% of the recoverable 14C cochromatographs with the neutral inhibitor, whereas in caps cultured in the dark, this radiolabelling pattern is not observed. Cyloheximide in the light reduces the incorporation of 14C into compounds cochromatographing at the Rf of the neutral inhibitor. It is suggested that the neutral inhibitor may be important in the light-induced bending of roots.Abbreviations ABA abscisic acid - CH cycloheximide  相似文献   

10.
The level of endogenous Indol-3-yl-acetic acid (IAA) measured by gas chromatography-mass spectrometry in the elongating zone of intact primary roots of Zea mays showed a good linear correlation with the growth rate of these roots. When they were treated with IAA, their relative elongation decreased; this indicates a supraoptimal content of endogenous IAA. However, the growth of some of the relatively rapidly extending roots was enhanced by such treatment. Interactions between endogenous and applied IAA in the control of root growth are discussed.Abbreviations GC-MS gas chromatography-mass spectrometry - IAA Indol-3-yl-acetic acid  相似文献   

11.
Immunofluorescence labeling of cortical microtubules (MTs) was used to investigate the relationship between MT arrangement and changes in growth rate of the upper and lower sides of horizontally placed roots of maize (Zea mays L. cv. Merit). Cap cells and cells of the elongation zone of roots grown vertically in light or darkness showed MT arrangements that were transverse (perpendicular) to the growth direction. Microtubules of cells basal to the elongation zone typically showed oblique orientation. Two hours after horizontal reorientation, cap cells of gravicompetent, light-grown and curving roots contained MTs parallel to the gravity vector. The MT arrangement on the upper side of the elongation zone remained transverse but the MTs of the outer four to five layers of cortical cells along the lower side of the elongation zone showed reorientation parallel to the axis of the root. The MTs of the lower epidermis retained their transverse orientation. Dark-grown roots did not curve and did not show reorientation of MTs in cells of the root cap or elongation zone. The data indicate that MT depolymerization and reorientation is correlated with reduction in growth rate, and that MT reorientation is one of the steps of growth control of graviresponding roots.Abbreviations MT microtubule - QC quiescent center This work was supported by National Science Foundation grant IBN-9118094.  相似文献   

12.
Gravitropism in roots has been proposed to depend on a downward redistribution of calcium across the root cap. However, because of the many calcium-binding sites in the apoplast, redistribution might not result in a physiologically effective change in the apoplasmic calcium activity. To test whether there is such a change, we measured the effect of gravistimulation on the calcium activity of statocyte cell walls with calcium-specific microelectrodes. Such a measurement must be made on a tissue with gravity sensing cells at the surface. To obtain such a tissue, decapped maize roots (Zea mays L. cv. Golden Cross Bantam) were grown for 31 h to regenerate gravitropic sensitivity, but not root caps. The calcium activity in the apoplasm surrounding the gravity-sensing cells could then be measured. The initial pCa was 2.60 ± 0.28 (approx 2.5 mM). The calcium activity on the upper side of the root tip remained constant for 10 min after gravistimulation, then decreased 1.7-fold. On the lower side, after a similar lag the calcium activity increased 1.6-fold. Control roots, which were decapped but measured before recovering gravisensitivity (19 h), showed no change in calcium activity. To test whether this gradient is necessary for gravitropic curvature, we eliminated the calcium activity gradient during gravitropism by applying a mobile calcium-binding site (di-nitro-BAPTA; 1,2-bis(2-amino-5-nitro-phenoxy)ethane-N,N,N,N-tetraacetic acid) to the root cap; this treatment eliminated gravicurvature. A calcium gradient may be formed by proton-induced calcium desorption if there is a proton gradient. Preventing the formation of apoplastic pH gradients, using 10 and 50 mM 2-(N-morpholino)ethanesulfonic acid (Mes) buffer or 10 mM fusicoccin to stimulate proton excretion maximally, did not inhibit curvature; therefore the calcium gradient is not a secondary effect of a proton gradient. We have found a distinct and rapid differential in the apoplasmic calcium activity between the upper and lower sides of gravistimulated maize root tips which is necessary for gravitropism.Abbreviations BAPTA 1,2-bis(2-aminophenoxy)ethane-N,N,N,N-tetraacetic acid - FC fusicoccin - Mes 2-(N-morpholino)ethanesulfonic acid The authors thank Phyllis Woolwine for drawing Fig. 1, Dr. Sarbjit Virk for assistance with total calcium measurements, Dr. Paul Sampson for statistical advice, and Michael Newton for developing the EM algorithm to analyze the time-series data. This work was supported by NASA grant NAGW-1394 and by a NASA Research Associateship to T.B. through NASA grant NAGW-70.  相似文献   

13.
Randy Moore  James D. Smith 《Planta》1984,162(4):342-344
Ten-d-old seedlings of Zea mays L. cv. Tx 5855 treated with 1-methyl-3-phenyl-5-(3-[trifluoromethyl]phenyl)-4-(1H)-pyridinone (Fluridone) were analyzed for abscisic acid (ABA) content using high-performance liquid chromatography with an analysis sensitivity of 2.5 ng ABA g-1 fresh weight (FW). Seedlings were divided into three portions: leaves, detipped roots, and root tips (terminal 1.5 mm). Control plants (water treatment only; no Fluridone) were characterized by the following amounts of ABA: leaves, 0.114±0.024 (standard deviation) g ABA g-1 FW; detipped roots, 0.260±0.039±g ABA g-1 FW; root tips, no ABA detected. We did not detect any ABA in tissues of Fluridone-treated plants. Primary roots of treated and untreated seedlings were strongly graviresponsive, with no significant differences between the curvatures or the growth rates of primary roots of Fluridone-treated and control seedlings. These results indicate that 1) Fluridone completely inhibits ABA synthesis, and 2) ABA is not necessary for positive gravitropism by primary roots of Zea mays.Abbreviations ABA abscisic acid - Fluridone 1-methyl-3-phenyl-5-(3-[trifluoromethyl]phenyl)-4-(1H)-pyridinone - FW fresh weight - SD standard deviation  相似文献   

14.
Ishikawa H  Hasenstein KH  Evans ML 《Planta》1991,183(3):381-390
We used a video digitizer system to measure surface extension and curvature in gravistimulated primary roots of maize (Zea mays L.). Downward curvature began about 25 +/- 7 min after gravistimulation and resulted from a combination of enhanced growth along the upper surface and reduced growth along the lower surface relative to growth in vertically oriented controls. The roots curved at a rate of 1.4 +/- 0.5 degrees min-1 but the pattern of curvature varied somewhat. In about 35% of the samples the roots curved steadily downward and the rate of curvature slowed as the root neared 90 degrees. A final angle of about 90 degrees was reached 110 +/- 35 min after the start of gravistimulation. In about 65% of the samples there was a period of backward curvature (partial reversal of curvature) during the response. In some cases (about 15% of those showing a period of reverse bending) this period of backward curvature occurred before the root reached 90 degrees. Following transient backward curvature, downward curvature resumed and the root approached a final angle of about 90 degrees. In about 65% of the roots showing a period of reverse curvature, the roots curved steadily past the vertical, reaching maximum curvature about 205 +/- 65 min after gravistimulation. The direction of curvature then reversed back toward the vertical. After one or two oscillations about the vertical the roots obtained a vertical orientation and the distribution of growth within the root tip became the same as that prior to gravistimulation. The period of transient backward curvature coincided with and was evidently caused by enhancement of growth along the concave and inhibition of growth along the convex side of the curve, a pattern opposite to that prevailing in the earlier stages of downward curvature. There were periods during the gravitropic response when the normally unimodal growth-rate distribution within the elongation zone became bimodal with two peaks of rapid elongation separated by a region of reduced elongation rate. This occurred at different times on the convex and concave sides of the graviresponding root. During the period of steady downward curvature the elongation zone along the convex side extended farther toward the tip than in the vertical control. During the period of reduced rate of curvature, the zone of elongation extended farther toward the tip along the concave side of the root. The data show that the gravitropic response pattern varies with time and involves changes in localized elongation rates as well as changes in the length and position of the elongation zone. Models of root gravitropic curvature based on simple unimodal inhibition of growth along the lower side cannot account for these complex growth patterns.  相似文献   

15.
Herbicide residues may affect seedlings during early stages of their development. We studied this possibility by the use of light and electron microscopy after incubation of germinating seeds ofPisum sativum L. andZea mays L. with different concentrations of chlorsulfuron and metsulfuron-methyl. By in vitro experiments, we have shown that both herbicides caused growth reduction of the very young roots, and severe ultrastructural alterations and injuries of the root caps of both species. Chlorsulfuron caused increase of electron-dense material in the vacuoles, cytoplasmic degeneration even in the inner secretory cell layers of the cap, and disruption of the amyloplast envelopes with release of the statolithic starch grains. In the initial cell complex of the root cap, the herbicides caused the formation of large concentric aggregates of the rough ER and wall disformations in the cells adjacent to this complex. Scanning electron microscopic observations revealed a decrease of the slime layer ensheathing the root cap and the subapical root surface.We conclude that even in early stages of seed germination, both herbicides seriously affect the gravity perception centre (consisting of the statocytes), and the secretory tissue of the root caps, thus probably disturbing the processes of gravitropism and the protective slime secretion of the roots.  相似文献   

16.
Ultrastructural investigations of root caps (Zea mays) have shown a correlation between the depletion of extracellular Ca2+ resources by treatment of intact roots with 50 mM EGTA and changes in the activity of peripheral cap cells, involving reductions in the quantity and changes in the appearance of Golgi apparatus-derived material. In EGTA-treated roots the development of the Golgi apparatus of peripheral cap cells was severely altered and there was no evidence of a granular secretory product, which was encountered in the vesicles of dictyosomes of control roots. Vesicles of dictyosomes of EGTA-treated roots were small and the development of dictyosomes was reminiscent of that encountered in central cap cells of control roots. A decrease in amyloplast numbers brought about by EGTA was concomitant with reduced secretory activity. EGTA treatment was also associated with a redistribution of amyloplasts located in central cap cells. Decreased cap volume arising from EGTA treatment was considered indicative of a decline in overall cap activity. Proposals are made with regard to the integration of intercellular activities in the response of plant roots to stimulus-modulated signals. It is suggested that alterations in peripheral cap cell secretory activity arising from the redistribution of Ca2+ may account for the anisotropic growth response of gravireactive roots.  相似文献   

17.
Frictional resistance to a penetrating body can account for more than 80% of the total resistance to penetration of soil. We measured the frictional resistance between growing root caps of maize and pea and ground and smooth glass surfaces, which was linearly correlated to load, allowing calculation of the coefficient of kinetic friction and adhesion. Coefficients of kinetic friction between the root caps and the ground and smooth glass surfaces were approximately 0.04 and 0.02, respectively, the first measurements of the frictional properties of root tips at rates approaching those of root elongation, and an order of magnitude smaller than those previously reported. Results suggest that roots are well designed for penetrating soil, and encounter only small frictional resistance on the root cap. These data provide important parameters for modelling soil stresses and deformation around growing root tips.  相似文献   

18.
Abstract: The control of maize root growth by root cap mucilage and extracellular calcium (Ca) was examined. Special attention was paid to the influence of these factors on cellular aspects of root growth, such as cell shape and organization of the microtubular (MT) cytoskeleton. Externally supplied Ca impaired the transition of early post-mitotic cells from a more-or-less apolar mode of expansion to a strictly anisotropic mode of elongation accompanied by their more rapid growth. However, this inhibitory effect of Ca was not associated with any re-arrangement of the cortical MTs, their transverse arrays, with respect to the root axis, being maintained under these conditions. Root mucilage, collected from donor root caps and placed around root tips, exerted a similar effect on cell shapes as did externally supplied Ca. In contrast, roots grown in a medium of low Ca content, or from which the root cap mucilage was continually removed, had more elongated cell shapes in their post-mitotic growth regions when compared to the control roots. These findings are consistent with a notion that Ca is present in the root cap mucilage in physiologically relevant amounts and can mediate growth responses in both the PIG region and the apical part of the elongation zone. Integrating several known effects of Ca ions on growth at the root apex, a hypothesis is proposed that a Ca-mediated and MT-independent control of cell growth in the PIG region might be involved in morphogenetic root movements (e.g. gravitropism), and that root growth responses could be initiated by an asymmetric distribution of extracellular calcium, or root cap slime, around the growing root tip.  相似文献   

19.
Hensel W 《Protoplasma》1984,119(1-2):121-134
Summary Statocytes in root caps ofLepidium sativum L. were examined by means of ultrathin serial sections to evaluate the amount and distribution of cortical microtubules. The microtubules encircle the cell, oriented normal to the root length axis. In the distal cell edges, microtubules form a network, separating the distal complex of endoplasmic reticulum from the plasmalemma. Preprophase bands in meristem cells are observable rarely, structures which can be regarded as nucleating sites for microtubules are lacking. During ageing of the root cap cells, the number of microtubules increases in combination with a decrease of microtubule length. Development of the roots on a horizontal clinostat preserves a younger developmental stage of the microtubule system regarding amount and length of the individual microtubules. Evidence for an involvement of microtubules in graviperception is low, whereas their role in orienting cellulose microfibrils cannot be ruled out. Compression of the distal network of microtubules after centrifugation of the roots indicates that microtubules in statocytes ofLepidium sativum L. roots might function in stabilizing the distal complex of endoplasmic reticulum.  相似文献   

20.
Acetabularia acetabulum (Linn.) P.C. Silva, is a useful system for studying changes in shape because it is large, morphologically complex unicell. The middle, or gametophore lobe of the cap grows radially from the stalk axis as a disc and the fully grown cap can be one of several shapes: flat, concave, convex, and saddle. The shape of the cap normally changes during the first three and a half weeks of reproductive development: individual caps within a population change shape in a stereotypical progression, with the majority proceeding from concave to flat to saddle. Marking the existing surface of caps with carbon grains revealed that the majority of growth occurs near the center, not at the perimeter, of caps. The shape of the mature cap appeared to be independent of algal height, number of gametophores per cap, and final cap diameter. Removing the rhizoid, which contains the nucleus, suggested that the contribution of the nucleus may be important for changes in shape during early cap growth. Based on these data, we present a simple model of cap shape development that suggests both differential growth and biophysical factors may contribute to the final shape of caps of A. acetabulum. Received: 7 January 1998 / Accepted: 7 March 1998  相似文献   

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