首页 | 本学科首页   官方微博 | 高级检索  
相似文献
 共查询到20条相似文献,搜索用时 31 毫秒
1.
In diffuse growing cells the orientation of cellulose fibrils determines mechanical anisotropy in the cell wall and hence also the direction of plant and organ growth. This paper reports on the mean or net orientation of cellulose fibrils in the outer epidermal wall of the whole Arabidopsis plant. This outer epidermal wall is considered as the growth-limiting boundary between plant and environment. In the root a net transverse orientation of the cellulose fibrils occurs in the elongation zone, while net random and longitudinal orientations are found in subsequent older parts of the differentiation zone. The position and the size of the transverse zone is related with root growth rate. In the shoot the net orientation of cellulose fibrils is transverse in the elongating apical part of the hypocotyl, and longitudinal in the fully elongated basal part. Leaf primordia and very young leaves have a transverse orientation. Throughout further development the leaf epidermis builds a very complex pattern of cells with a random orientation and cells with a transverse or a longitudinal orientation of the cellulose fibrils. The patterns of net cellulose orientation correlate well with the cylindrical growth of roots and shoots and with the typical planar growth of the leaf blade. On both the shoot and the root surface very specific patterns of cellulose orientation occur at sites of specific cell differentiation: trichome-socket cells complexes on the shoot and root hairs on the root.  相似文献   

2.
During the initial phases of elongation of pea internodes, oat and rice coleoptiles, oat mesocotyls, soybean hypocotyls and dandelion peduncles, net transverse orientation of cellulose wall microfibrils (Mfs) was found in the outer epidermal wall. This paper demonstrates that in all these axes, with the exception of rice coleoptile, net longitudinal orientation of microfibrils occurs in the outer epidermal wall in portions of the axes that were still elongating at the time of sampling. The timing of the transition to net longitudinal orientation and whether the transition proceeded acropetally or basipetally varied with the type of axis under study. The variability of the relationship between extension and the transition from net transverse to net longitudinal orientation suggests that factors other than extension are important in determining the transition. Layers of longitudinal wall microfibrils may be added to the extending epidermal wall to bolster its tensile strength commensurate with its function during and after extension. Attention is drawn to the parallels between the concept of tissue tension in growing axes and the concept that the epidermis functions as a stressed skin in the support of mature plant parts in primary growth.  相似文献   

3.
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   

4.
J Marc  CL Granger  J Brincat  DD Fisher  Th Kao  AG McCubbin    RJ Cyr 《The Plant cell》1998,10(11):1927-1940
Microtubules influence morphogenesis by forming distinct geometrical arrays in the cell cortex, which in turn affect the deposition of cellulose microfibrils. Although many chemical and physical factors affect microtubule orientation, it is unclear how cortical microtubules in elongating cells maintain their ordered transverse arrays and how they reorganize into new geometries. To visualize these reorientations in living cells, we constructed a microtubule reporter gene by fusing the microtubule binding domain of the mammalian microtubule-associated protein 4 (MAP4) gene with the green fluorescent protein (GFP) gene, and transient expression of the recombinant protein in epidermal cells of fava bean was induced. The reporter protein decorates microtubules in vivo and binds to microtubules in vitro. Confocal microscopy and time-course analysis of labeled cortical arrays along the outer epidermal wall revealed the lengthening, shortening, and movement of microtubules; localized microtubule reorientations; and global microtubule reorganizations. The global microtubule orientation in some cells fluctuates about the transverse axis and may be a result of a cyclic self-correcting mechanism to maintain a net transverse orientation during cellular elongation.  相似文献   

5.
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   

6.
This article explores root epidermal cell elongation and its dependence on two structural elements of cells, cortical microtubules and cellulose microfibrils. The recent identification of Arabidopsis morphology mutants with putative cell wall or cytoskeletal defects demands a procedure for examining and comparing wall architecture and microtubule organization patterns in this species. We developed methods to examine cellulose microfibrils by field emission scanning electron microscopy and microtubules by immunofluorescence in essentially intact roots. We were able to compare cellulose microfibril and microtubule alignment patterns at equivalent stages of cell expansion. Field emission scanning electron microscopy revealed that Arabidopsis root epidermal cells have typical dicot primary cell wall structure with prominent transverse cellulose microfibrils embedded in pectic substances. Our analysis showed that microtubules and microfibrils have similar orientation only during the initial phase of elongation growth. Microtubule patterns deviate from a predominantly transverse orientation while cells are still expanding, whereas cellulose microfibrils remain transverse until well after expansion finishes. We also observed microtubule-microfibril alignment discord before cells enter their elongation phase. This study and the new technology it presents provide a starting point for further investigations on the physical properties of cell walls and their mechanisms of assembly.  相似文献   

7.
The molecular mechanism involved in cell wall dynamics has not been well clarified, although it is quite important for organ growth. We characterized a rice mutant, root growth inhibiting (rt), which is defective in root elongation. The rt mutant showed a severe defect in cell elongation at the root-elongating zone with additional collapse of epidermal and cortex cells at the root tip caused by the defect in the smooth exfoliation of root cap cells. Consistent with these phenotypes, expression of the RT gene, which encodes a member of the membrane-anchored endo-1,4-??-d-glucanase, was specifically localized in the root-elongating zone and at the junction between epidermal and root cap cells. The enzymatic analysis of root extracts from the wild-type and rt mutant indicated that RT hydrolyzes noncrystalline amorphous cellulose. The cellulose content was slightly increased but the crystallinity of cellulose was decreased in the rt root. In addition, the hemicellulose composition was different between wild-type and rt roots. The total extensibility was significantly lower in the rt root explants. Based on these results, we concluded that RT is involved in the disassembly of the cell wall for cell elongation in roots as well as for root cap exfoliation from the epidermal cell layer by hydrolyzing the noncrystalline amorphous cellulose fibers of cellulose microfibrils resulting in loosening of the hemicellulose and cellulose interaction.  相似文献   

8.
Paolillo  D. J.  Jr 《Annals of botany》1995,76(6):589-596
Use of the dichroic stain chlor-zinc-iodine revealed that thenet orientation of cellulose wall microfibrils in the outerparadermal wall of the epidermis of seedling wheat leaves isprincipally transverse in the extension zone. The net orientationof microfibrils changes abruptly to principally longitudinalat the end of cell elongation. The net angle of orientationof microfibrils in the extension zone was not a function ofRht-dosage (number of dwarfing alleles), and neither leaf extensionrate nor estimated maximum relative elemental rate of elongationwere functions of microfibril orientation. The results indicatethat elongation rates are not regulated by the net angle oforientation of microfibrils and support the concept that leafextension rate is regulated by the length of the extension zone.Copyright1995, 1999 Academic Press Cellulose wall microfibrils, extension zone, elongation, Rht, wheat, Triticum aestivum L  相似文献   

9.
Cell elongation requires directional deposition of cellulose microfibrils regulated by transverse cortical microtubules. Microtubules respond differentially to suppression of cell elongation along the developmental zones of Arabidopsis thaliana root apex. Cortical microtubule orientation is particularly affected in the fast elongation zone but not in the meristematic or transition zones of thanatos and pom2–4 cellulose-deficient mutants of Arabidopsis thaliana. Here, we report that a uniform phenotype is established among the primary cell wall mutants, as cortical microtubules of root epidermal cells of rsw1 and prc1 mutants exhibit the same pattern described in thanatos and pom2–4. Whether cortical microtubules assume transverse orientation or not is determined by the demand for cellulose synthesis, according to each root zone''s expansion rate. It is suggested that cessation of cell expansion may provide a biophysical signal resulting in microtubule reorientation.  相似文献   

10.
The involvement of cortical microtubules in the control of plant cell expansion was studied in the Arabidopsis root epidermis. In the zone of fast elongation microtubules were transverse to the root axis in all epidermal cells. However when cells entered the differentiation zone cell type-specific microtubule reorientation took place. In the trichoblasts that were then approximately 130 µm long and formed the root hair bulge, the microtubules switched to a random distribution. In the adjoining atrichoblasts microtubules adopted a slightly oblique orientation. In more proximal parts of the differentiation zone atrichoblast microtubules were found in a more oblique and finally in a longitudinal orientation. Upon exposure to ethylene or 1-aminocyclopropane-1-carboxylic acid (ACC – the precursor of ethylene) at a saturating dose, cell elongation abruptly stopped. From then on trichoblast cells reached only a length of about 35 µm, and developed root hairs. Cortical microtubules changed orientation within 10 min. In trichoblasts they adopted the typical random orientation, in atrichoblasts however, they took up a longitudinal orientation. Microtubule reorientation was complete within 60 min. The possible role of microtubules in the control of cell elongation is discussed.  相似文献   

11.
Two models of isolated epidermis were used to demonstrate that the net orientation of cellulose microfibrils in the cell wall is related to mechanical properties of the tissue, and can be used as an indicator for wall anisotropy. In the developing plant epidermis, cells expand in one or two directions in the plane of the plant surface. In epidermis cells actively expanding in one direction (elongation), the orientation of cortical microtubules closely matches the net cellulose orientation. In epidermis cells expanding in two directions, the orientation of the parallel microtubules does not coincide with the net cellulose orientation in the adjacent cell wall. The orientation of cortical microtubules is thus not always a reliable indicator of wall characteristics. In both types of epidermis, a high rate of expansion correlates with a high activity of xyloglucan endotransglycosylase (XET), as determinedin situ. This high activity alone cannot explain unidirectional wall expansion.  相似文献   

12.
Τhe bidirectional relationship between cortical microtubule orientation and cell wall structure has been extensively studied in elongating cells. Nevertheless, the possible interplay between microtubules and cell wall elements in meristematic cells still remains elusive. Herein, the impact of cellulose synthesis inhibition and suppressed cell elongation on cortical microtubule orientation was assessed throughout the developmental zones of Arabidopsis thaliana root apex by whole-mount tubulin immunolabeling and confocal microscopy. Apart from the wild-type, thanatos and pom2-4 mutants of Cellulose SynthaseA3 and Cellulose Synthase Interacting1, respectively, were studied. Pharmacological and mechanical approaches inhibiting cell expansion were also applied. Cortical microtubules of untreated wild-type roots were predominantly transverse in the meristematic, transition and elongation root zones. Cellulose-deficient mutants, chemical inhibition of cell expansion, or growth in soil resulted in microtubule reorientation in the elongation zone, wherein cell length was significantly decreased. Combinatorial genetic and chemical suppression of cell expansion extended microtubule reorientation to the transition zone. According to the results, transverse cortical microtubule orientation is established in the meristematic root zone, persisting upon inhibition of cell expansion. Microtubule reorientation in the elongation zone could be attributed to conditional suppression of cell elongation. The differential responsiveness of microtubule orientation to genetic and environmental cues is most likely associated with distinct biophysical traits of the cells among each developmental root zone.  相似文献   

13.
Using confocal microscopy the organization of tubulin cytoskeleton including endoplasmic and cortical microtubules (CMTs) has been studied in epidermal and cortical cells of the different growth zones of main root of Brassica rapa L. 6-days-old seedlings in control conditions and under clinorotation. It was shown that changes in CMTs orientation occured only in the distal elongation zone (DEZ). In the control, CMT arrays oriented transversely to the root long axis. Under clinorotation appearance of the shorter randomly organized CMTs was observed. Simultaneously, a significant decrease in the cell length in the central elongation zone (CEZ) under clinorotation was detected. It is suggested that the decline of anisotropic growth typical for CEZ cells is connected with CMTs disorientation under clinorotation.  相似文献   

14.
The peripheral cell wall(s) of stems and coleoptiles are 6 to 20 times thicker than the walls of the inner tissues. In coleoptiles, the outer wall of the outer epidermis shows a multilayered, helicoidal cellulose architecture, whereas the walls of the parenchyma and the outer wall of the inner epidermis are unilayered. In hypocotyls and epicotyls both the epidermal and some subepidermal walls are multilayered, helicoidal structures. The walls of the internal tissues (inner cortex, pith) are unilayered, with cellulose microfibrils oriented primarily transversely. Peeled inner tissues rapidly extend in water, whereas the outer cell layer(s) contract on isolation. This indicates that the peripheral walls limit elongation of the intact organ. Experiments with the pressure microprobe indicate that the entire organ can be viewed as a giant, turgid cell: the extensible inner tissues exert a pressure (turgor) on the peripheral wall(s), which bear the longitudinal wall stress of the epidermal and internal cells. Numerous studies have shown that auxin induces elongation of isolated, intact sections by loosening of the growth-limiting peripheral cell wall(s). Likewise, the effect of light on reduction of stem elongation and cell wall extensibility in etiolated seedlings is restricted to the peripheral cell layers of the organ. The extensible inner tissues provide the driving force (turgor pressure), whereas the rigid peripheral wall(s) limit, and hence control, the rate of organ elongation.  相似文献   

15.
Inada  S.  Sato  S. 《Plant and Soil》2000,226(1):117-128
In actively growing cortical cells in the elongation zone of Lemna minor L. roots, both longitudinal (radial and tangential) and transverse walls expand in both length and width. The longitudinal walls of the three types of cortical cells in the root (i.e. outer, middle and inner) showed the largest expansion in the longitudinal axis. In contrast, the inner cortical cells exhibited the least expansion in width, whereas the middle cortical cells displayed the largest expansion in width. Thus, the profiles of the expansion of longitudinal walls were characteristic for the three types of cortical cells. In this study, both the orientation of cortical microtubule (MT) arrays and their dynamic reorientation, and the density of cortical MTs, were documented and correlated to the patterns of cell wall expansion. Significantly, transverse arrays of cortical MTs were most prominent in the radial walls of the inner cortical cells, and least so in those of the middle cortical cells. Toward the base of roots, beyond the elongation zone, the orientation of cortical MTs shifted continuously from transverse to oblique and then to longitudinal. In this case, the rate of shift in the orientation of cortical MTs along the root axis was appreciably faster in the middle cortical cells than in the other two types of cortical cells. Interestingly, the continuous change in cortical MT orientation was not confirmed in the transverse walls which showed much smaller two-dimensional expansion than the radial walls. Additionally, the presence of fragmented or shortened cortical MTs rapidly increased concomitantly with the decrease of transversely oriented cortical MTs. This relationship was especially prominent in the transverse walls of the inner cortical cells, which displayed the least expansion among the three types of cortical cells investigated. In the root elongation zone, the density of cortical MTs in the inner cortical cells was about three times higher than that in the other two cortical cell types. These results indicate that in the early stage of cell expansion, the orientation of cortical MTs determines a preferential direction of cell expansion and both the shifting orientation and density of cortical MTs affect the magnitude of expansion in width of the cell wall.  相似文献   

16.
The root epidermal bulger 1 ( reb1) mutant of Arabidopsis thaliana (L.) Heynh. is characterized by a reduced elongation rate of the primary root and by the bulging of many, but not all, root epidermal cells. In this study, we investigated cell wall structure of root epidermal cells in reb1-1 by using serial sectioning, and light and electron microscopy in combination with immuno-cytochemistry and polysaccharide staining. We found that: (i) Cell bulging in the mutant was initiated in the zone of elongation of the root, and occurred exclusively in trichoblasts. (ii) reb1-1 and wild-type root cells stained identically with anti-pectin antibodies, such as JIM5. In contrast, the anti-arabinogalactan-protein antibodies, JIM14 and LM2, stained all epidermal cells in the wild type and trichoblasts preferentially, but in reb1-1 they stained the atrichoblasts only. (iii) Compared to the wild type, mutant trichoblasts had a thinner outer epidermal cell wall, which presented abnormal periodic acid-thio carbohydrazide silver proteinate (PATAg) staining. In addition, we investigated the organization of cortical microtubules in a reb1-1 mutant line expressing a green-fluorescent protein fused to a microtubule-binding domain from human microtubule-associated protein 4. Microtubules in the swollen trichoblasts of reb1-1 were either disordered or absent entirely. Together our findings indicate that the reb1-1 mutation results in an abnormal trichoblast cell wall, and suggest that cell surface arabinogalactan-proteins are required for anisotropic expansion and for orienting cortical microtubules.  相似文献   

17.
Cell biology and genetics of root hair formation inArabidopsis thaliana   总被引:4,自引:0,他引:4  
Ryan E  Steer M  Dolan L 《Protoplasma》2001,215(1-4):140-149
Summary In this review we integrate the information available on the cell biology of root hair formation with recent findings from the analysis of root hair mutants ofArabidopsis thaliana. The mature Arabidopsis root epidermis consists of root-hair-producing cells and non-root-hair-producing cells. Root hair growth begins with a swelling of the outer epidermal wall. It has been postulated that this is due to a pH-mediated localised cell wall loosening. From the bulge a single root hair emerges which grows by tip growth. The root hair tip consists of a vesicle-rich zone and an organelle-rich subapical zone. The vesicles supply new plasma membrane and cell wall material for elongation. The cytoskeleton and its associated regulatory proteins such as profilin and spectrin are proposed to be involved in the targeting of vesicles. Ca2+ influxes and gradients are present in hair tips, but their function is still unclear. Mutants have been isolated with lesions in various parts of the root hair developmental pathway from bulge identity and initiation, to control of tip diameter and extent and polarity of elongation.Abbreviations [Ca2+]c cytosolic calcium concentration - MT microtubule - PM plasma membrane - VRZ vesicle-rich zone - WT wild type Dedicated to Professor Brian E. S. Gunning on the occasion of his 65th birthday  相似文献   

18.
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   

19.
The radial symmetry of shoots and roots arises from a center of symmetry within the apical meristem. When a lateral axis forms at a distance from the tip, a new center of radial symmetry must arise. We have studied the biophysics of this kind of transformation in the epidermal layer of the succulent Graptopetalum where a stem “regenerates” from organized leaf tissue. Study of the epidermal cell pattern (with scanning electron microscopy) shows that reorganization involves neither a cellular pre-pattern blocked out by oriented cell divisions nor a callus-like stage where cell files, expansion direction, and primary cell wall cellulose orientation are randomized throughout. Rather, developmental events are a function of initial position. In regions of geometrical compatibility between parent axis and prospective lateral, there is little or no modification of files, expansion, or cellulose. In regions requiring 90° changes in orientation, cellulose orientation (studied with polarized light) conforms to the new symmetry first. This is followed later by changes in the surface growth pattern and in the cell division pattern. The early establishment of a circumferential cellulose pattern in the epidermal layer could account for both the cylindrical shape of the new axis and the subsequent rearrangement of directional growth and cell file pattern.  相似文献   

20.
The primary walls of epidermal cells in Avena coleoptiles ranging in length from 2 to 40 mm. have been studied in the electron and polarizing microscopes and by the low-angle scattering of x-rays. The outer walls of these cells are composed of multiple layers of cellulose microfibrils oriented longitudinally; initially the number of layers is between 10 and 15 but this increases to about 25 in older tissue. Where epidermal cells touch, these multiple layers fuse gradually into a primary wall of the normal type between cells. In these radial walls, the microfibrils are oriented transversely. Possible mechanisms for the growth of the multilayered outer wall during cell elongation are discussed.  相似文献   

设为首页 | 免责声明 | 关于勤云 | 加入收藏

Copyright©北京勤云科技发展有限公司  京ICP备09084417号