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1.
A simple method for the isolation of plant protoplasts   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
A simple protoplast isolation protocol that was designed to recover totipotent plant protoplasts with relative ease has been described. The key elements of the protocol are, tissue digestion at slightly elevated temperatures and use of protoplast-releasing enzymes that are stable and efficient at higher temperatures. Besides enzymes, the protoplast isolation cocktail consisted of an osmoticum (mannitol or MgSO4), and a protectant (CaCl2 2H2O), all dissolved in distilled water. The protocol has ensured reproducibility, higher yields and is gentle on protoplasts as the protoplasts obtained were amenable to cell wall regeneration and cell division. Plant regeneration was demonstrated forNicotiana tabacum cv. Thompson from protoplasts isolated by this method. Wall regeneration and cell division were obtained in other species. The merits of the protocol are, simple and easy-to-handle procedure, non-requirement of preconditioning of donor plant and explants, incubation without agitation, satisfactory yields, culturability of the protoplasts isolated and applicability of the protocol to a large number of species including mucilage-containing plants.  相似文献   

2.
Summary The cell wall regeneration on protoplasts derived from maize mesophyll cells was compared with wall regeneration on protoplasts derived from suspension cultured cells using light microscopy, transmission electron microscopy, and mass spectrometry. The time course of cell wall regeneration has shown that the mesophyll protoplasts regenerated walls much slower than the protoplasts derived from cultured cells. Moreover, cell wall materials on the mesophyll protoplasts were often unevenly distributed. Electron microscopy has further demonstrated that the mesophyll protoplasts have less organized and compact walls than the protoplasts from cultured cells. Chemical analysis revealed that the mesophyll protoplasts had a lower ratio ofβ-(1–3)-glucan toβ-(1–4)-glucan than protoplasts from cultured cells. The significance of these results for the viability and development of protoplasts in culture is discussed. National Research Council of Canada paper no. 32458.  相似文献   

3.
Protoplasts isolated from cotyledons of a number of cultivars of Brassica napus, B. campestris and B. oleracea were cultured in different media to study the characteristics of cell wall regeneration and cell division at early stages of culture. Time course analysis using Calcolfluor White staining indicated that cell wall regeneration began in some protoplasts 2–4 h following isolation in all cultivars. 30–70% of cultured cotyledon protoplasts exhibited cell wall regeneration at 24 h and about 60–90% at 72 h after the initiation of culture. Results also indicated that a low percentage (0.4–5.4%) of cultured cotyledon protoplasts entered their first cell division one day after initial culture in all twelve cultivars. The percentage of dividing cells increased linearly up to 40% from 1 to 7 day, indicating that cotyledon protoplasts of Brassica had a high capacity for cell division. Factors that influence the level of cell wall regeneration and cell division during cotyledon protoplast culture have been investigated in this study. Cotyledons from seedlings germinated in a dark/dim light regime provided a satisfactory tissue source for protoplast isolation and culture for all Brassica cultivars used. The percentages of protoplasts exhibiting cell wall regeneration and division were significantly influenced by cultivar and species examined, with protoplasts from all five cultivars of B. campestris showing much lower rates of cell wall regeneration than those of B. napus and B. oleracea over 24–120 h, and with the levels of cell division in B. napus cultivars being much higher than those in B. campestris and B. oleracea over 1–9 days. The capacity of cell wall regeneration and cell division in cotyledon protoplast culture of the Brassica species appears under strong genetic control. Cell wall regeneration in protoplast culture was not affected by the culture medium used. In contrast, the composition of the culture medium played an important role in determining the level of cell division, and the interaction between medium type and cultivars was very significant.Abbreviations BA benzylaminopurine - CPW Composition of Protoplast Washing-solution - CW Calcolfluor White - EDTA ethylenediamine-tetraacetic acid - KT Kinetin - Md MS modified Murashige and Skoog medium - 2,4-d 2,4-dichlorophenoxyacetic acid - NAA -naphthaleneacetic acid - IAA indole-3-acetic acid - PAR photosynthetically active radiation - SDS sodium dodecyl sulfate  相似文献   

4.
Summary The time rate of regeneration of the cell wall and reversion of protoplasts of the yeast Nadsonia elongata to cells of normal shape and size has been compared with the capability for regeneration of spheroplasts of this yeast. Nearly all protoplasts in a given culture were able to regenerate new walls and had usually reverted to cells of normal appearance by the 30th h of cultivation. Spheroplasts required only half this time to do this. These results can be interpreted as evidence that regeneration of a wall by protoplasts does not depend upon the presence of a cell wall primer, because the proportion of reverting protoplasts (which lack wall remnants) was the same as that of reverting spheroplasts (which possess them). The presence of wall remnants in spheroplasts appears to have merely an accelerating effect on the formation of a new wall and on subsequent reversion of the spheroplasts to complete cells of normal shape and size.  相似文献   

5.
Summary The growth, cell wall regeneration, and the reversion of the protoplasts ofNadsonia elongata andSchizosaccbaromyces pombe cultivated in nutrient media containing snail enzyme was studied by light and electron microscopy. The protoplasts grew in the presence of snail enzyme and an incomplete cell wall composed of fibrils was formed on their surface. Thus, the presence of snail enzyme inhibited the completion of cell wall structure and, consequently, the reversion of the protoplasts to normal cells. The transfer of these protoplasts to medium free from snail enzyme led first to the completion of the cell wall and then to the reversion of the protoplasts to normal cells. The reported experiments confirmed that the regeneration of the complete cell wall preceded the protoplast reversion.  相似文献   

6.
Protoplasts of Daucus carota L. cultured in a synthetic liquid medium resumed cell division after about 4 days of cultivation. During this lag period, nucleic acid and protein showed only slight increases but the protoplasts commenced cell-wall regeneration soon after the removal of lytic enzymes. The originally spherical protoplasts became ellipsoidal before they underwent division. Radioactive glucose and myo-inositol were readily utilized by the protoplasts. Most of the radioactivity, however, appeared in extracellular polysaccharides and only a small portion was deposited in the regenerated wall. The sugar composition of new cell wall, as studies by chemical analysis and incorporation of labelled precursors, was shown to be considerably different from that of normal cell wall.  相似文献   

7.
The present study was undertaken to set up an experimental system in which barriers to infection of a non-host plant related to the presence of the cell wall, at the level of recognition and/or the necessity of penetrating the cell wall, might be bypassed. Co-cultures betweenFrankia alni subsp.pommerii (strain ACN1 AG ) andBetula papyrifera protoplasts were established. Betula protoplasts remained viable after 2 weeks with no substantial cell wall regeneration. Suppression of the wall barrier was not sufficient to allowFrankia infection under the conditions tested. The non-infectivity ofFrankia on Betula protoplasts may also reflect difficulties inherent to thein vitro environment, which might not permit duplication of infection mechanisms.  相似文献   

8.
Protoplasts ofMarchantia polymorpha L. were isolated from suspension cells. Regeneration of cell walls on the surface of the protoplasts began within a few hr of cultivation. New cell walls completely covered the surface of the protoplasts within 48 hr. Coumarin and 2,6-dichlorobenzonitrile treatment inhibited the formation of the new cell wall. In the initial stage of cell wall regeneration, endoplasmic reticula developed remarkably close to the plasma membrane in the protoplasts, but no development of Golgi bodies was observed at the same locus. This may suggest that the Golgi bodies do not play an active role in the cell wall formation, at least not in very early periods of cell wall regeneration. The development of endoplasmic reticula and an ultrastructural change of plasma membrane from smooth to rough may be important in the cell wall formation of protoplasts.  相似文献   

9.
H. Uhrig  M. Tevini 《Planta》1976,128(2):173-178
Summary The process of cell wall regeneration around two species of higher plant protoplasts has been studied using reflection scanning electron microscopy. The first stage in the process is the formation of short fibres from randomly spaced centres. With protoplasts of tobacco leaf (Nicotiana tabacum L., cv White Burley) these fibres then elongate and interlace apparently at random to give rise to a matted continuous layer of wall. Protoplasts of a suspension culture of grapevine cells (Vitis vinifera L. cv Müller Thurgau) produce short fibres but these fail to elongate. Budding is observed during wall regeneration around vine protoplasts. The results are discussed in terms of the mechanical properties of the wall and its relationship to changes in plasmalemma morphology which are observed during wall formation.Abbreviation SEM scanning electron microscopy  相似文献   

10.
The optimal conditions for protoplast formation ofCandida apicola were by using an enzyme fromArthrobacter sp. in combination with 2-mercaptoethanol. The kinetic data support the two-layered structure model of cell wall for this yeast but the structure of the cell wall depended on the age of cells and culture conditions. To regenerate the protoplasts, the type of osmotic stabilizer was important: sorbitol gave 16 to 30% regeneration. Electron microscopy revealed the presence of vesicles in the sections of protoplasts and whole cells ofCandida apicola grown in production medium and producing glycolipids. In sections of whole cells, vesicle-like structures are located in the periplasmic space and in protoplasts they can either be attached to, or released from, the cell surface. These vesicles are thought to be involved in the transport of the surface-active glycolipids and in the protection of the cell against denaturing effects.  相似文献   

11.
To assess the dynamics of synthesis of the wall by regenerating Candida albicans protoplasts deposition of chitin and mannoproteins were investigated ultrastructurally using wheat germ agglutinin conjugated with either horseradish peroxidase or colloidal gold, and Concanavalin A coupled to ferritin respectively.Freshly prepared protoplasts lacked wheat germ agglutinin receptor sites but after 1–2 h of regeneration, they were detected. After 4–5 h of regeneration, the cell wall showed a discrete structure which was only labelled with wheat germ agglutinin in thin sections. At this stage of regeneration the outermost layer of the wall was labelled with clusters of Concanavalin A-ferritin particles.After 8 h regeneration, the cell wall appeared compact, and homogenously marked with wheat germ agglutinin whereas only the surface layers appeared consistently labelled with Concanavalin A-ferritin.From these observations we conclude that C. albicans protoplasts are able to regenerate in liquid medium a cell wall consisting of a network of chitin fibrils and mannoproteins at least (glucan polymers were not determined in the present cytological study). The former are the fundamental component of the inner layers at early stages of regeneration, whereas the latter molecules are predominant in the outer layers of the wall.Abbreviations WGA-HRP wheat germ agglutinin conjugated with horseradish peroxidase - WGA-Au wheat germ agglutinin conjugated with colloidal gold - Con A-ferritin Concanavalin A coupled to ferritin  相似文献   

12.
It is known that protoplasts derived from either leaves or suspension cultures of a citrus genotype vary greatly in their regeneration capacities; however, the underlying physiological mechanisms are not well known. In this study, oxidative stress and antioxidant systems during in vitro culture of callus-derived protoplasts and leaf mesophyll-derived protoplasts of Ponkan (Citrus reticulata Blanco) were analyzed to gain insights into observed physiological differences. Morphological observations using light microscopy and scanning microscopy have shown that new cell wall materials appeared within 2–3 days, and the integrate cell walls were regenerated approximately after 6 days of culture of the callus protoplasts, whereas no cell wall formation was observed in the mesophyll protoplasts after culture. During the culture, higher levels of H2O2 and malondialdehyde were detected in the mesophyll protoplasts as compared with the callus ones. On the contrary, the callus protoplasts possessed higher activities of antioxidant enzymes (SOD, POD and CAT) and larger amount of glutathione and ascorbic acid (at one time point) than the mesophyll protoplasts during the culture process. The current data indicate that the mesophyll and callus protoplasts displayed remarkable difference in the degree of oxidative stress and the antioxidant systems, suggesting that high levels of antioxidant activities might play an important role in the regeneration of protoplasts.  相似文献   

13.
W. Müller  K. Wegmann 《Planta》1978,139(2):155-158
Four independent kinds of observations indicate that the cell wall regenerated by oat (Avena sativa L.) and corn (Zea mays L.) protoplasts in culture is less well developed than that regenerated by tobacco (Nicotiana tabacum L.) protoplasts. Following wall regeneration the cereal protoplasts remained susceptible to osmotic shock upon transfer to water, showed great enlargement, stained poorly with calcofluor white, and maintained a positive internal electrical potential. The development of a negative membrane potential by tobacco protoplasts in culture often occurred simultaneously with the onset of cell division. Since division was observed only in protoplasts which had regenerated good cell walls and had re-established negative membrane potentials it is suggested that culture conditions which favor these two processes should improve protoplast viability.  相似文献   

14.
The prasinophyte genera Scherffelia and Tetraselmis are the only genera that form a cell wall by an extracellular fusion of scales called a theca. We established a protocol for the production of protoplasts from Scherffelia dubia Pascher emend. Melkonian et Preisig using 3 mM Ellman's reagent (5,5′‐dithio‐bis‐2‐nitrobenozoic acid [DTNB]). Protoplasts analyzed by EM lacked flagella and thecae but were otherwise similar to control cells. In response to treatment with DTNB, many protoplasts synthesized new thecal scales in the Golgi apparatus, indicating that cells attempted to regenerate new cell walls. However, complete regeneration of the thecae only occurred once DTNB was washed out from the medium. At higher DTNB concentrations (5 mM), two protoplasts were found within the parental cell wall and scales accumulated between the plasma membrane of the protoplasts and the original theca but failed to form a new theca.  相似文献   

15.
Carbohydrate binding modules (CBMs) are noncatalytic domains that assist tethered catalytic domains in substrate targeting. CBMs have therefore been used to visualize distinct polysaccharides present in the cell wall of plant cells and tissues. However, most previous studies provide a qualitative analysis of CBM-polysaccharide interactions, with limited characterization of engineered tandem CBM designs for recognizing polysaccharides like cellulose and limited application of CBM-based probes to visualize cellulose fibrils synthesis in model plant protoplasts with regenerating cell walls. Here, we examine the dynamic interactions of engineered type-A CBMs from families 3a and 64 with crystalline cellulose-I and phosphoric acid swollen cellulose. We generated tandem CBM designs to determine various characteristic properties including binding reversibility toward cellulose-I using equilibrium binding assays. To compute the adsorption (nkon) and desorption (koff) rate constants of single versus tandem CBM designs toward nanocrystalline cellulose, we employed dynamic kinetic binding assays using quartz crystal microbalance with dissipation. Our results indicate that tandem CBM3a exhibited the highest adsorption rate to cellulose and displayed reversible binding to both crystalline/amorphous cellulose, unlike other CBM designs, making tandem CBM3a better suited for live plant cell wall biosynthesis imaging applications. We used several engineered CBMs to visualize Arabidopsis thaliana protoplasts with regenerated cell walls using confocal laser scanning microscopy and wide-field fluorescence microscopy. Lastly, we also demonstrated how CBMs as probe reagents can enable in situ visualization of cellulose fibrils during cell wall regeneration in Arabidopsis protoplasts.  相似文献   

16.
Protoplasts have been isolated from young vegetative mycelia ofAgaricus bisporus by an enzyme mixture of novozym and chitinase. Protoplasts were released through ruptures in the wall, initially at the apices, but also later from older parts of the hyphae, indicating that they may lack the cell wall. The process of regeneration of these protoplasts has been investigated in liquid medium in which the protoplasts produced short chains of convoluted cells that finally produced a hypha. Electron microscopy has shown that at the start of regeneration two different kinds of fibrils were produced at the external surface of the protoplasts. Later, the thickness of the cell wall increased, and there was a deposit of amorphous material giving rise to a complete new wall.  相似文献   

17.
In order to investigate the cellular basis of salt tolerance, Colt cherry (Prunus avium ×pseudocerasus) protoplasts from mesophyll tissues and root cell suspension cultures were cultured in the presence of NaCl, KCl or Na2SO4, at normalities of 25, 50, 100 or 200 mN for each salt and with or without 2,6-dichlorobenzonitrile, an inhibitor of cell wall synthesis. Results showed that the acquisition of salt tolerance was concomitant with the onset of cell wall regeneration, with protoplasts exhibiting a greater salt tolerance than cells.Abbreviations DBN 2,6-dichlorobenzonitrile - FDA fluorescein diacetate  相似文献   

18.
Summary The conditions for effective isolation of viable protoplasts from Laminaria japonica with an alginase produced by marine bacterium Alteromonas sp. and a commercially available cellulase were investigated. The highest yields of viable protoplasts (7.910.4x106 cells g–1 FW) were obtained with a hypertonic solution containing 50 % seawater, 25 mM MgCl2, 5 mM HEPES buffer system, and 0.5 M mannitol. Protoplasts were not obtained from thalli of L. japonica when an abalone alginase (abalone acetone powder; AAP: Sigma) was used instead of the bacterial alginase. The isolated protoplasts were cultured in an PESI medium at 5 °C. Complete cell wall formation was observed within 7 days, and dividing cells were first observed in a 9-day-old culture. Some protoplasts regenerated into sheet-shaped thalli and rhizoid structures were also observed on some thalli after 30 to 40 days in culture. This is the first report of protoplast regeneration into plantlets of L. japonica Areschoug (Laminariales, Phaeophyceae).Abbreviations FW Flesh weight - AAP Abalone acetone powder - HEPES N-2-hydroxy-ethylpiperazine-N-2-ethanesulfonic acid - Tris Tris(hyrdoxymethyl)aminomethane - PESI Provasoli's enriched seawater with iodine  相似文献   

19.
The formation of cell wall fibres at the surface of isolated leaf protoplasts has been studied by scanning electron microscopy. Fibres are not formed on incubated protoplasts until a lag period has elapsed. This period is about 8 h for leaf protoplasts of Nicotiana tabacum and about 45 h for leaf protoplasts of Antirrhinum majus. In the case of Antirrhinum protoplasts the length of the lag period is dependent on the concentration of osmoticum present during the incubation period. If regenerating protoplasts are briefly treated with dilute cellulase, the newly formed wall is completely digested. Such protoplasts are capable of producing new fibres at the surface within minutes of their return to a nutrient medium. These results are discussed in terms of the likely source of the lag period and its significance in wall regeneration studies.Abbreviations MS culture medium used at full strength - 0.1 MS culture medium used at one tenth full strength  相似文献   

20.
Protoplasts isolated from both 7-day-old light-grown and 4-day-old dark/dim light-grown cotyledons of four Brassica campestris varieties (Arlo, Sonja, Bunyip and Wonk Bok) were cultured in three liquid media: modified K8P, modified MS and modified Pelletier's B to compare the capacities for cell division and plant regeneration. Following cell wall regeneration the cultured protoplasts from dark/dim light-grown cotyledons of four varieties showed rapid division and high frequency of cell division compared with those isolated from light-grown cotyledons. The frequencies of cell division were significantly influenced by varieties and culture media but only in cultured protoplasts isolated from dark/dim light-grown cotyledons. The interaction between varieties and media was also significant. Cell colonies formed within 7–14 days in protoplast cultures from dark/dim light-grown cotyledons, and calli subsequently grown on a solid medium developed shoots when transferred onto a regeneration medium. Three of four tested varieties (Arlo, Sonja and Bunyip) showed shoot regeneration within 2–3 months after protoplast isolation, with a high degree of reproducibility in Arlo and Bunyip. Regenerated shoots, which were induced to root on half-strength MS medium with 0.1 mg.l–1 IBA, survived in soil and grew to produce siliques and set viable seeds in the greenhouse. The present report is the first to document the production of regenerated plants that set seeds in Brassica campestris from cotyledonary protoplasts.Abbreviations BAP benzylaminopurine - CPW Composition of Protoplast Washing-solution - 2,4-D 2,4-dichlorophenoxyacetic acid - EDTA ethylenediamine-tetraacetic acid - GA3 gibberellic acid - IBA indole-3-butyric acid - IAA indole-3-acetic acid - MS Murashige and Skoog medium - NAA -naphthaleneacetic acid - KT kinetin - FDA fluorescein diacetate - SDS sodium dodecyl sulfate  相似文献   

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