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1.
The wall structure of cortical parenchyma cells swollen by coumarinor colchicine was investigated using replicating and sectioningtechniques. Three main types of microfibrillar orientation, which were foundto be similar to those of the wall structure of the controlcells, were observed in the innermost surface of the walls ofboth coumarin- and colchicine-treated cells; one was parallel,one was oblique, and the third was perpendicular to the maincell axis. No microtubules were found in the cortical cytoplasm of colchicine-treatedcelb. However, both longitudinally and transversely orientedmicrotubules, the distribution of which was sparse, were observedimmediately under the plasmalemma of control and coumarin-treatedcells. These observations are discussed in relation to the changesin cell shape and microfibrillar orientation. (Received September 16, 1975; )  相似文献   

2.
The microtubules in highly synchronized aplanospores of twogiant marine algae, Boergesenia forbesii and Valonia ventricosa,were examined by immunofluorescence microscopy throughout theregeneration of the cell wall. Microtubule orientation was alwaysrandom up to 20 h after wounding, although the orientation ofcellulose microfibrils changed from random to parallel withinthat time period. When the rhizoid cells were in the stage ofelongation at 7 to 10 days after wounding, highly ordered microtubuleswere always observed along the longitudinal cell axis exceptat the very tip of the cells where random ones were found. Incontrast, the microfibrils in the innermost lamellae of newlysynthesized cell walls showed three different orientations,that is, transverse, longitudinal and oblique to the longitudinalcell axis. These observations suggest that microtubules maycontrol cell shape, but not the orientation of microfibrils.The mechanism of cell wall construction in these algae is discussedin relation to the self-assembly mechanism thought to operatein the construction of helicoidal cell walls. 3 Present address: Polymer Research Laboratory, Mitsui ToatsuChemicals, Inc., Yokohama, Kanagawa 244, Japan. (Received November 18, 1987; Accepted April 11, 1988)  相似文献   

3.
Summary The thickened sieve cell wall of white pine is shown to comprise a crossed-helical polylamellate structure in which the predominant microfibrillar orientation is greater than 45° with respect to the cell axis. The previously reported observation that microfibrils may be oriented other than parallel to the plane of the cell wall is disputed and it is demonstrated that such an appearance may derive from appropriately oblique sectioning of the wall.  相似文献   

4.
The role of cellulose microfibril orientation in determining cell wall mechanical anisotropy and in the control of the wall plastic versus elastic properties was studied in the adaxial epidermis of onion bulb scales using the constant-load (creep) test. The mean or net cellulose orientation in the outer periclinal wall of the epidermis was parallel to the long axis of the cells. In vitro cell wall extensibility was 30-90% higher in the direction perpendicular to the net microfibril orientation than parallel to it. This was the case for the size of the initial deformation occurring just after the load application and for the rate of time-dependent creep. Loading/unloading experiments confirmed the presence of a real irreversible component in cell wall extension. The plastic component of the time-dependent deformation was higher perpendicular to the net cellulose orientation than parallel to it. An acid buffer (pH 4.5) increased the creep rate by 25-30% but this response was not related to cellulose orientation. The present data provide direct evidence that the net orientation of cellulose microfibrils confers mechanical anisotropy to the walls of seed plants, a characteristic that may be relevant to understanding anisotropic cell growth.  相似文献   

5.
The arrangement of wall microfibrils on the inner surface ofcortical cells in pea roots was observed by a replica method.In the elongating region, microfibrils were deposited transverselyto the root axis. After cell elongation stopped, the orientationof microfibril deposition changed discontinuously from a transverseto an oblique one. The change occurred at 6–7 mm fromthe root tip. The oblique orientation seemed to change discontinuouslyto another oblique one as time passed. (Received January 24, 1986; Accepted May 15, 1986)  相似文献   

6.
The effect of plant hormones was studied on the growth of excised coleoptile segments of wheat plantlets grown under daylight conditions. In addition to the change in growth, that in the orientation of microtubules and cellulose microfibrils was investigated in parenchyma cells. Following a 6-h treatment gibberellin, and still more kinetin, stímulated the thickening of segments, which became evident also in an altered orientation of microtubules. Whereas in the control the microtubules and wall microfibrils were oriented randomly, following gibberellin treatment they were all parallel and formed an acute angle with the longitudinal cell axis. A still more pronounced difference resulted after kinetin treatment, when microtubules were localized parallel with the longitudinal cell axis. Auxin had the opposite effect: it stimulated the elongation of the segments, which became evident in a transverse orientation of both wall microtubules and microfibrils.  相似文献   

7.
Fourier-transform infrared (FT-IR) microspectroscopy was used to investigate both the chemical composition of, and the effects of an applied strain on, the structure of the Chara corallina cell wall. The inner layers of the cell wall are known to have a transverse cellulose orientation with a gradient through the thickness to longitudinal orientation in the older layers. In both the native state and following the removal of various biopolymers by a sequential extraction infrared dichroism was used to examine the orientation of different biopolymers in cell-wall samples subjected to longitudinal strain. In the Chara system, cellulose microfibrils were found to be aligned predominantly transverse to the long axis of the cell and became orientated increasingly transversely as longitudinal strain increased. Simultaneously, the pectic polysaccharide matrix underwent molecular orientation parallel to the direction of strain. Following extraction in CDTA, microfibrils were orientated transversely to the strain direction, and again the degree of transverse orientation increased with increasing strain. However, the pectic polysaccharides of the matrix were not detected in the dichroic difference spectra. After a full sequential extraction, the cellulose microfibrils, now with greatly reduced crystallinity, were detected in a longitudinal direction and they became orientated increasingly parallel to the direction of strain as it increased.  相似文献   

8.
Microfibrillar structure, cortical microtubule orientation andthe effect of amiprophos-methyl (APM) on the arrangement ofthe most recently deposited cellulose microfibrils were investigatedin the marine filamentous green alga, Chamaedoris orientalis.The thallus cells of Chamaedoris showed typical tip growth.The orientation of microfibrils in the thick cell wall showedorderly change in longitudinal, transverse and oblique directionsin a polar dependent manner. Microtubules run parallel to thelongitudinally arranged microfibrils in the innermost layerof the wall but they are never parallel to either transverseor obliquely arranged microfibrils. The ordered change in microfibrilorientation is altered by the disruption of the microtubuleswith APM. The walls, deposited in the absence of the microtubules,showed typical helicoidal pattern. However, the original crossedpolylamellate pattern was restored by the removal of APM. Thissuggests that cortical microtubules in this alga do not controlthe direction of microfibril orientation but control the orderedchange of microfibril orientation. Amiprophos-methyl, Chamaedoris orientalis, coenocytic green alga, cortical microtubule, microfibrillar structure, tip growth  相似文献   

9.
The mechanism by which cortical microtubules (MTs) control the orientation of cellulose microfibril deposition in elongating plant cells was investigated in cells of the green alga, Closterium sp., preserved by ultrarapid freezing. Cellulose microfibrils deposited during formation of the primary cell wall are oriented circumferentially, parallel to cortical MTs underlying the plasma membrane. Some of the microfibrils curve away from the prevailing circumferential orientation but then return to it. Freeze-fracture electron microscopy shows short rows of particle rosettes on the P-face of the plasma membrane, also oriented perpendicular to the long axis of the cell. Previous studies of algae and higher plants have provided evidence that such rosettes are involved in the deposition of cellulose microfibrils. The position of the rosettes relative to the underlying MTs was visualized by deep etching, which caused much of the plasma membrane to collapse. Membrane supported by the MTs and small areas around the rosettes resisted collapse. The rosettes were found between, or adjacent to, MTs, not directly on top of them. Rows of rosettes were often at a slight angle to the MTs. Some evidence of a periodic structure connecting the MTs to the plasma membrane was apparent in freeze-etch micrographs. We propose that rosettes are not actively or directly guided by MTs, but instead move within membrane channels delimited by cortical MTs attached to the plasma membrane, propelled by forces derived from the polymerization and crystallization of cellulose microfibrils. More widely spaced MTs presumably allow greater lateral freedom of movement of the rosette complexes and result in a more meandering pattern of deposition of the cellulose fibrils in the cell wall.Abbreviations E-face exoplasmic fracture face - MT microtubule - P-face protoplasmic fracture-face  相似文献   

10.
D Montezinos  R M Brown 《Cytobios》1978,23(90):119-139
Cell wall biogenesis in the unicellular green alga Oocystis apiculata has been studied. Under normal growth conditions, a cell wall with ordered microfibrils is synthesized. In each layer there are rows of parallel microfibrils. Layers are nearly perpendicular to each other. Terminal linear synthesizing complexes are located in the plasma membrane, and they are capable of bidirectional synthesis of cellulose microfibrils. Granule bands associated with the inner leaflet of the plasma membrane appear to control the orientation of newly synthesized microfibrils. Subcortical microtubules also are present during wall synthesis. Patterns of cell wall synthesis were studied after treatment with EDTA and EGTA as well as divalent cations (MgSO4, CaSO4, Cacl2). 0.1 M EDTA treatment for 15 min results in the disassociation of the terminal complexes from the ends of microfibrils. EDTA-treated cells followed by 15 min treatment with MgSO4 results in reaggregation of the linear complexes into a paired state, remote from the original ends to which they were associated. After 90 min treatment with MgSO4, normal synthesis resumes. EGTA and calcium salts do not affect the linear complexes or microfibril orientation. Treatments with colchicine and vinblastine sulphate do not depolymerize the microtubles, but the wall microfibril orientation is altered. With colchicine or vinblastine, the change in orientation from layer to layer is inhibited. The process is reversible upon removal of the drugs. Lumicolchicine has no effect upon microfibril orientation, but granule bands are disorganized. Treatment with coumarin, a known inhibitor of cellulose synthesis, causes the loss of visualization of subunits of the terminal complexes. The possibility of the existence of a membrane-associated colchicine-sensitive orientation protein for cellulose microfibrils is discussed. Transmembrane modulation of microfibril synthesis and orientation is presented.  相似文献   

11.
Results of trials using chemical and enzymatic wall extractants for the removal of matrix materials for in situ observations of newly deposited microfibrils are described. Observations were then made of the orientation of microfibrils on the inner walls of differentiating and maturing fibres and parenchyma cells under the FESEM. Orientation changes were similar in both cell types. During very early primary wall development, deposition of microfibrils was in more or less axial alignment, which was later superseded by microfibrils in transverse orientation (90o to the long axis). A transverse orientation of microfibrils remained throughout much of primary wall synthesis, until an abrupt shift occurred to a sloped orientation during late primary wall synthesis. Microfibrils of the first secondary wall layer were in axial alignment or steeply sloped. In subsequent secondary wall deposition there was an alternation between a transverse and a sloped or axial alignment in maturing fibres and parenchyma cells.  相似文献   

12.
Polarotropism was induced inAdiantum (fern) protonemata grown under polarized red light by turning the electrical vector 45 or 70 degrees. One hour after the light treatment, tropic responses became apparent in many cells as a slight distortion of the apical dome. Changes in the position of the circumferentially-arranged cortical microtubule band (Mt-band) (Murataet al., 1987) and the arrangement of microfibrils around the subapical part of protonemata were investigated in relation to the polarotropic responses. Twenty minutes after turning the electrical vector, preceding the morphological change of cell shape, the Mt-band began to change its orientation from perpendicular to oblique to the initial growing axis. After 30 min, the Mt-band changed its orientation further under 45 degrees polarized light, but under light rotated 70 degrees, it began to disappear. In phototropic responses induced by local irradiation of a side of the subapical part of a protonema with a non-polarized red microbeam, the Mt-band on the irradiated side disappeared or became faint within 20 min, but neither disappearance nor a change of orientation of Mts occurred on the non-irradiated side. One hour after turning the electrical vector 45 degrees, in half of the cells tested, the innermost layer of microfibrils in the subapical part of the protonema changed its orientation from perpendicular to oblique to the growing axis, corresponding to the changes in the orientation of the Mt-band. After 2 hr, those changes were obvious in all cells examined. The same basic results on the orientation of microfibrils were obtained with protonemata cultured for 2 hr under 70 degrees polarized light. The role of the Mt-band in tropic responses is discussed.  相似文献   

13.
Werner Herth 《Planta》1983,159(4):347-356
The cell-wall structure and plasma-membrane particle arrangement during cell wall formation of the filamentous chlorophycean alga Spirogyra sp. was investigated with the freeze-fracture technique. The cell wall consists of a thick outer slime layer and a multilayered inner wall with ribbon-like microfibrils. This inner wall shows three differing orientations of microfibrils: random orientation on its outside, followed by axial bundles of parallel microfibrils, and several internal layers of bands of mostly five to six parallel associated microfibrils with transverse to oblique orientation. The extraplasmatic fracture face of the plasma membrane shows microfibril imprints, relatively few particles, and “terminal complexes” arranged in a hexagonal package at the end of the imprint of a microfibril band. The plasmatic fracture face of the plasma membrane is rich in particles. In places, it reveals hexagonal arrays of “rosettes”. These rosettes are best demonstrable with the double-replica technique. These findings on rosette arrays of the zygnematacean alga Spirogyra are compared in detail with the published data on the desmidiacean algae Micrasterias and Closterium.  相似文献   

14.
Kazuo Takeda  Hiroh Shibaoka 《Planta》1981,151(4):385-392
Throughout the entire period of cell growth, the microfibrils on the inner surface of the outer tangential walls of the epidermal cells of Vigna angularis epicotyls are running parallel to one another and their orientation differs from cell to cell. Although transverse, oblique and longitudinal microfibrils can be observed irrespective of cell age, the frequency distribution of microfibril orientation changes with age. In young cells, transversely oriented microfibrils predominate. In cells of medium age, which are still undergoing elongation, transverse, oblique and longitudinal microfibrils are present in quite similar frequencies. In old, non-growing cells, longitudinally oriented microfibrils are predominent. A decrease in the relative frequency of transversely oriented microfibrils with cell age was also observed in the radial epidermal walls.  相似文献   

15.
The cellulose system of the cell wall ofMicrasterias denticulataandMicrasterias rotatawas analyzed by diffraction contrast transmission electron microscopy, electron diffraction, and X-ray analysis. The studies, achieved on disencrusted cell ghosts, confirmed that the cellulose microfibrils occurred in crisscrossed bands consisting of a number of parallel ribbon-like microfibrils. The individual microfibrils had thicknesses of 5 nm for a width of around 20 nm, but in some instances, two or three microfibrils merged into one another to yield larger monocrystalline domains reaching up to 60 nm in lateral size. The orientation of the cellulose ofMicrasteriasis very unusual, as it was found that in the cell wall, the equatorial crystallographic planes of cellulose having ad-spacing of 0.60 nm [(110) in the Iβ cellulose unit cell defined by Sugiyamaet al.,1991,Macromolecules24, 4168–4175] were oriented perpendicular to the cell wall surface. Up to now, such orientation has been found only inSpirogyra,another member of the Zygnemataceae group. The unusual structure of the secondary wall cellulose ofMicrasteriasmay be tentatively correlated with the unique organization of the terminal complexes, which in this alga occur as hexagonal arrays of rosettes.  相似文献   

16.
A fine structure of cell wall lamellae in a coenocytic green algaBoergesenia forbesii was examined by electron microscopy. The wall has a polylamellate structure containing cellulose microfibrils 25 to 30 nm in diameter. The outer surface of the cell was covered by a thin structureless lamella, underneath which existed a lamella containing randomly-oriented microfibrils. The major part of the wall consisted of two types of lamellae, multifibrillar lamella and a transitional, matrix-rich one. In the former, microfibrils were densely arranged more or less parallel with each other. In the transitional lamella, existing between the multifibrillar ones, the microfibril orientation shifted about 30° within the layer. The fibril orientation also shifted 30° between adjacent transitional and multifibrillar layers, and consequently the microfibril orientation in the neighboring multifibrillar layers shifted 90°. It was concluded that the orientation rotated counterclockwise when observed from inside the cell. Each lamella in the thallus wall become thinner with cell expansion, but no reorientation of microfibrils in the outer old layers was observed. In the rhizoid, the outer lamellae sloughed off with the tip growth.  相似文献   

17.
Polarizing and interference microscopes were employed to measure overall orientation of microfibrils and dry matter (expressed in optical thickness) in the cell wall of Nitella rhizoids. The microfibrils are aligned predominantly parallel to the cell's long axis (positively birefrengent), except in the apical dome where the arrangement appears to be random. The optical thickness, however, is greater at the very tip and the base region. The wall contains about 50-60% of acid extractable amorphous, noncrystalline substance. This extraction does not make a significant change in the alignment, but the remaining dry matter becomes less at the tip and increases slightly toward the base. The alignment parallel to the direction of cell growth in the rhizoidal cell is different from that of the elongating Nitella internodal cell where the alignment is transverse.  相似文献   

18.
The orientation of the triclinic phase of cellulose in the cell wall of Valonia ventricosa J. Agardh was investigated by X-ray- and electron-diffraction analysis. In addition to the well-documented uniplanar-axial organization of the cell wall which requires that the a * axis should be always perpendicular to the wall surface, the direction of this axis was also found to be pointing outward from the plasma membrane side of the wall. This unidirectionality was persistent throughout the various layers that constitute the cell wall and also for the three microfibrillar orientations that occur in Valonia cell walls. The unidirectionality of the a * axis indicates, in particular, that the Valonia cellulose microfibrils are not twisted along their axis. These observations are consistent with a cellulose biosynthetic scheme where a close association exists between terminal-complex orientations and those of the cellulose microfibrils. In this context, the unidirectionality of the a * axis of cellulose seems to be related to the restricted mobility of the terminal complexes which are able to slide in the plasma membrane but not to rotate along their long axis.Abbreviations TC terminal complex This work was initiated during a visit of J.F.R at Grenoble in the framework of a France-Québec exchange program. J.S. was recipient of a CNRS fellowship. The diagram in Fig. 8 was kindly drawn for us by Miss Yukie Saito from the Department of Forest Products, the University of Tokyo.  相似文献   

19.
Burk DH  Ye ZH 《The Plant cell》2002,14(9):2145-2160
It has long been hypothesized that cortical microtubules (MTs) control the orientation of cellulose microfibril deposition, but no mutants with alterations of MT orientation have been shown to affect this process. We have shown previously that in Arabidopsis, the fra2 mutation causes aberrant cortical MT orientation and reduced cell elongation, and the gene responsible for the fra2 mutation encodes a katanin-like protein. In this study, using field emission scanning electron microscopy, we found that the fra2 mutation altered the normal orientation of cellulose microfibrils in walls of expanding cells. Although cellulose microfibrils in walls of wild-type cells were oriented transversely along the elongation axis, cellulose microfibrils in walls of fra2 cells often formed bands and ran in different directions. The fra2 mutation also caused aberrant deposition of cellulose microfibrils in secondary walls of fiber cells. The aberrant orientation of cellulose microfibrils was shown to be correlated with disorganized cortical MTs in several cell types examined. In addition, the thickness of both primary and secondary cell walls was reduced significantly in the fra2 mutant. These results indicate that the katanin-like protein is essential for oriented cellulose microfibril deposition and normal cell wall biosynthesis. We further demonstrated that the Arabidopsis katanin-like protein possessed MT-severing activity in vitro; thus, it is an ortholog of animal katanin. We propose that the aberrant MT orientation caused by the mutation of katanin results in the distorted deposition of cellulose microfibrils, which in turn leads to a defect in cell elongation. These findings strongly support the hypothesis that cortical MTs regulate the oriented deposition of cellulose microfibrils that determines the direction of cell elongation.  相似文献   

20.
Cao Y  Shen D  Lu Y  Huang Y 《Annals of botany》2006,97(6):1091-1094
BACKGROUND AND AIMS: Raman spectroscopy can be used to examine the orientation of biomacromolecules using relatively thick samples of material, whereas more traditional means of analysing molecular structure require prior isolation of the components, which often destroys morphological features. In this study, Raman spectroscopy was used to examine the outer epidermal cell walls of wheat stems. METHODS: Polarized Raman spectra from the epidermal cell walls of wheat stem were obtained using near-infrared-Fourier transform Raman scattering. By comparing spectra taken with Raman light polarized perpendicular or parallel to the longitudinal axis of the cell, the orientation of macromolecules in the cell wall was investigated. KEY RESULTS: The net orientation of macromolecules varies in the epidermal cell walls of the different components of wheat stem. The net orientation of cellulose is parallel to the longitudinal axis of the cells, whereas the xylan and the phenylpropane units of lignin tend to lie perpendicular to the longitudinal axis of the cells, i.e. perpendicular to the net orientation of cellulose in the epidermal cell walls. CONCLUSIONS: The results imply that cellulose, lignin and xylan form a relatively ordered network that defines the mechanical and structural properties of the cell wall. Such results are likely to have a significant impact on the formulation of definitive models for the static and growing cell wall.  相似文献   

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