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1.
Experiments are described in which the tensile strength, the initial (Youngs') modulus, and other mechanical properties of the bacterial cell wall were obtained as functions of relative humidity (RH) in the range of 20 to 95%. These properties were deduced from tensile tests on bacterial thread, a fiber consisting of many highly aligned cells of Bacillus subtilis, from which residual culture medium had been removed by immersion in water. Reasons are given to support the idea that the mechanical properties of bacterial thread relate directly to those of the cylinder wall and that they are not influenced by septa, cytoplasm, or the thread assembly. The data show that the cell wall, like many other heteropolymers, is visco-elastic. When dry, it behaves like a glassy polymer with a tensile strength of about 300 MPa and a modulus of about 13 GPa. When wet, its behavior is more like a rubbery polymer with a tensile strength of about 13 MPa and a modulus of about 30 MPa. Thus, the cell wall is stronger than previously reported. Walls of this strength would be able to bear a turgor pressure of 2.6 MPa (about 26 atm). The dynamic behavior suggests a wide range of relaxation times. The way in which mechanical behavior depends strongly on humidity is discussed in terms of possible hydrogen bond density and the ordering of water molecules. Cell walls in threads containing residual culture medium TB are, except at low RH, 10 times more flexible and about 4 times less strong. All of their mechanical properties appear to vary with change in RH in a manner similar to those of walls from which the culture medium has been washed, but with a downshift of about 18% RH.  相似文献   

2.
Bacterial threads of Bacillus subtilis have been immersed in, and redrawn from, water of various pH values, in solutions of (NH4)2SO4 and NaCl of various concentrations, and in lysozyme solutions. The changes in the tensile strength, elastic modulus, and other mechanical properties of the bacterial cell wall due to these treatments were obtained. The data show that change in pH has little effect but that as the salt concentration is increased, the cell walls become more ductile. A high salt concentration (1 M NaCl) can reduce the modulus by a factor of 26 to 13.5 MPa at 81% relative humidity and the strength by a factor of only 2.5. Despite attacking the septal-wall region of the cellular filaments, lysozyme has no effect on the mechanical properties. There is no significant change in the stress relaxation behavior due to any of the treatments. The dependence of mechanical properties on the salt concentration is discussed in terms of the polyelectrolyte nature of cell walls. The evidence presented in this and the accompanying paper (J. J. Thwaites and U.C. Surana, J. Bacteriol., 173:197-203, 1991) supports the idea that the peptidoglycan in bacterial cell wall is an entanglement network with a large degree of molecular flexibility, with some order but no regular structure.  相似文献   

3.
Mechanical properties of peptidoglycan as determined from bacterial thread   总被引:3,自引:0,他引:3  
Experiments are described in which the tensile strength, the extensibility and the initial Young's modulus of bacterial cell wall have been determined as functions of relative humidity in the range 11-98%. Data on stress relaxation and recovery are also given. Standard fibre-measuring technique has been used on 'bacterial thread', made from a cell-separation-suppressed mutant of Bacillus subtilis. The data show that peptidoglycan, the load bearing polymer in the cell wall, behaves very much like other viscoelastic polymers. Its mechanical behaviour when dry is that of a glassy polymer with tensile strength about 300 MPa and modulus about 20 GPa. When wet, it is weaker and much less stiff with tensile strength about 3 M Pa and modulus 10 M Pa. The relaxation data indicate a wide spectrum of relaxation times. The results are discussed in terms of the structure of peptidoglycan and its orientation in the bacterial cell wall. The way in which mechanical behaviour depends strongly on humidity is compared with that of other biopolymers in terms of possible hydrogen-bond density and the ordering of water molecules. The possibility of a well-defined glass transition is briefly examined.  相似文献   

4.
Toole GA  Gunning PA  Parker ML  Smith AC  Waldron KW 《Planta》2001,212(4):606-611
Previous mechanical studies using algae have concentrated on cell extension and growth using creep-type experiments, but there appears to be no published study of their failure properties. The mechanical strength of single large internode cell walls (up to 2 mm diameter and 100 mm in length) of the charophyte (giant alga) Chara corallina was determined by dissecting cells to give sheets of cell wall, which were then notched and fractured under tension. Tensile tests, using a range of notch sizes, were conducted on cell walls of varying age and maturity to establish their notch sensitivity and to investigate the propagation of cracks in plant cell walls. The thickness and stiffness of the walls increased with age whereas their strength was little affected. The strength of unnotched walls was estimated as 47 ± 13 MPa, comparable to that of some grasses but an order of magnitude higher than that published for model bacterial cellulose composite walls. The strength was notch-sensitive and the critical stress intensity factor K 1c was estimated to be 0.63 ± 0.19 MNm−3/2, comparable to published values for grasses. Received: 4 April 2000 / Accepted: 21 July 2000  相似文献   

5.
We describe a high-pressure reactor system suitable for simultaneous hyperbaric and hydrostatic pressurization of bacterial cultures at elevated temperatures. For the deep-sea thermophile ES4, the growth rate at 500 atm (1 atm = 101.29 kPa) and 95 degrees C under hydrostatic pressure was ca. three times the growth rate under hyperbaric pressure and ca. 40% higher than the growth rate at 35 atm.  相似文献   

6.
We describe a high-pressure reactor system suitable for simultaneous hyperbaric and hydrostatic pressurization of bacterial cultures at elevated temperatures. For the deep-sea thermophile ES4, the growth rate at 500 atm (1 atm = 101.29 kPa) and 95 degrees C under hydrostatic pressure was ca. three times the growth rate under hyperbaric pressure and ca. 40% higher than the growth rate at 35 atm.  相似文献   

7.
Electromechanical Interactions in Cell Walls of Gram-Positive Cocci   总被引:28,自引:19,他引:9       下载免费PDF全文
Isolated cell walls of Staphylococcus aureus and Micrococcus lysodeikticus were found to expand and contract in response to changes in environmental pH and ionic strength. These volume changes, which could amount to as much as a doubling of wall dextran-impermeable volume, were related to changes in electrostatic interactions among fixed, ionized groups in wall polymers, including peptidoglycans. S. aureus walls were structurally more compact in the hydrated state and had a higher maximum charge density than M. lysodeikticus walls. However, they were less responsive to changes in electrostatic interactions, apparently because of less mechanical compliance. In media of nearly neutral pH, S. aureus walls had a net positive charge whereas M. lysodeikticus walls had a net negative charge. These charge differences were reflected in Donnan distributions of mobile ions between wall phases and bulk medium phases. Cell walls of unfractionated cocci also could be made to swell and contract, and wall tonus in intact cells appeared to be set partly by electrostatic interactions and partly by mechanical tension in the elastic structures due to cell turgor pressure. The experimental results led to the conclusions that bacterial cell walls have many of the properties of polyelectrolyte gels and that peptidoglycans are flexible polymers. A reasonable mechanical model for peptidoglycan structure might be a sort of three-dimensional rope ladder with relatively rigid, polysaccharide rungs and relatively flexible polypeptide ropes. Thus, the peptidoglycan network surrounding cocci appeared to be predominantly an elastic restraining structure rather than a rigid shell.  相似文献   

8.
Plant cell walls provide form and mechanical strength to the living plant, but the relationship between their complex architecture and their remarkable ability to withstand external stress is not well understood. Primary cell walls are adapted to withstand tensile stresses while secondary cell walls also need to withstand compressive stresses. Therefore, while primary cell walls can with advantage be flexible and elastic, secondary cell walls must be rigid to avoid buckling under compressive loads. In addition, primary cell walls must be capable of growth and are subjected to cell separation forces at the cell corners. To understand how these stresses are resisted by cell walls, it will be necessary to find out how the walls deform internally under load, and how rigid are specific constituents of each type of cell wall. The most promising spectroscopic techniques for this purpose are solid-state nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR), and Fourier-transform infrared (FTIR) and Raman microscopy. By NMR relaxation experiments, it is possible to probe thermal motion in each cell-wall component. Novel adaptations of FTIR and Raman spectroscopy promise to allow mechanical stress and strain upon specific polymers to be examined in situ within the cell wall.  相似文献   

9.
At autopsy, 13 nonstenotic human left anterior descending coronary arteries [71.5 +/- 7.3 (mean +/- SD) yr old] were harvested, and related anamnesis was documented. Preconditioned prepared strips (n = 78) of segments from the midregion of the left anterior descending coronary artery from the individual layers in axial and circumferential directions were subjected to cyclic quasi-static uniaxial tension tests, and ultimate tensile stresses and stretches were documented. The ratio of outer diameter to total wall thickness was 0.189 +/- 0.014; ratios of adventitia, media, and intima thickness to total wall thickness were 0.4 +/- 0.03, 0.36 +/- 0.03, and 0.27 +/- 0.02, respectively; axial in situ stretch of 1.044 +/- 0.06 decreased with age. Stress-stretch responses for the individual tissues showed pronounced mechanical heterogeneity. The intima is the stiffest layer over the whole deformation domain, whereas the media in the longitudinal direction is the softest. All specimens exhibited small hysteresis and anisotropic and strong nonlinear behavior in both loading directions. The media and intima showed similar ultimate tensile stresses, which are on average three times smaller than ultimate tensile stresses in the adventitia (1,430 +/- 604 kPa circumferential and 1,300 +/- 692 kPa longitudinal). The ultimate tensile stretches are similar for all tissue layers. A recently proposed constitutive model was extended and used to represent the deformation behavior for each tissue type over the entire loading range. The study showed the need to model nonstenotic human coronary arteries with nonatherosclerotic intimal thickening as a composite structure composed of three solid mechanically relevant layers with different mechanical properties. The intima showed significant thickness, load-bearing capacity, and mechanical strength compared with the media and adventitia.  相似文献   

10.
Abstract. The biophysical basis for the changes in cell elongation rate during gravitropism was examined in aetiolated cucumber ( Cucumis sativus L.) hypocotyls. Bulk osmotic pressures on the two sides of the stem and in the epidermal cells were not altered during the early time course of gravitropism. By the pressureprobe technique, a small increase in turgor (0.3 bar, 30 kPa) was detected on the upper (inhibited) side, whereas there was a negligible decrease in turgor on the lower (stimulated) side. These small changes in turgor and water potential appeared to be indirect, passive consequences of the altered growth and the small resistance for water movement from the xylem, and indicated that the change in growth was principally due to changes in wall properties. The results indicate that the hydraulic conductance of the watertransport pathway was large (.25 h 1 bar 1) and the water potential difference supporting cell expansion was no greater than 0.3 bar (30 kPa). From pressureblock experiments, it appeared that upon gravitropic stimulation (1) the yield threshold of the lower half of the stem did not decrease and (2) the wall on the upper side of the stem was not made more rigid by a cross-linking process. Mechanical measurements of the stress/strain properties of the walls showed that the initial development of gravitropism did not involve an alteration of the mechanical behaviour of the isolated walls. Thus, gravitropism in cucumber hypocotyls occurs principally by an alteration of the wall relaxation process, without a necessary change in wall mechanical properties.  相似文献   

11.
We examined the relationship between the bulk elastic modulus (epsilon) of an individual leaf obtained by the pressure-volume (P-V) technique and the mechanical properties of cell walls in the leaf. The plants used were Quercus glauca and Q. serrata, an evergreen and a deciduous broad-leaved tree species, respectively. We compared epsilon and Young's modulus of leaf specimens determined by the stretch technique at various stages of their leaf development. The results showed that epsilon increased from approximately 5 to 20 MPa during leaf development, although other potential determinants of epsilon such as the apoplastic water content in the leaf and the diameter of a palisade tissue cells remained almost constant. epsilon in these two species was similar at every developmental stages, although the apparent mechanical strength of the leaf lamina and thickness of mesophyll cell walls were greater in Q. glauca. There were significant linear relationships between Young's modulus and epsilon (P < 0.01; R (2) = 0.78 and 0.84 in Q. glauca and Q. serrata, respectively) with small y-intercepts. From these results, we conclude that epsilon is closely related to the reversible properties of the cell walls. From the estimation of epsilon based on a physical model, we suggest that the effective thickness of cell walls responsible for epsilon is smaller than the observed wall thickness.  相似文献   

12.
50% breaking point pressures of pollen grain walls of eleven species were determined. The breaking point pressures of most pollen grain walls are equivalent to those reported in the literature for other types of living cell walls such as bacterial spore coats, algal cell walls, mold sporophyte cells, and dicot suspension culture cells. The strongest pollen grain walls are two or three orders of magnitude stronger, however. Pollen grain walls are proportionately very thick in comparison to other types of cell walls. It is this thickness, not the construction or physical properties of the pollen grain wall, that most probably accounts for their strength.  相似文献   

13.
In order to characterize further the mechanical properties of coleoptile cell walls, stress relaxation measurements were made on methanol-boiled sections of Avena coleoptiles. Relaxation was measured both in mechanically conditioned specimens and in specimens which had not been previously extended. In both cases the relaxation was proportional to log time. Mechanical conditioning increased the relaxation modules and decreased the relative rate of relaxation. In contrast, pretreatment of the live coleoptiles with indoleacetic acid reduced the relaxation modulus and the absolute rate of relaxation but did not affect the relative rate of relaxation. Essentially similar pictures of the mechanical properties of coleoptile walls are obtained from stress relaxation and creep tests; the wall behaves as a nonlinear viscoelastic material.  相似文献   

14.
The cell wall of the tip‐growing cells of the giant‐cellular xanthophycean alga Vaucheria frigida is mainly composed of cellulose microfibrils (CMFs) arranged in random directions and the major matrix component into which the CMFs are embedded throughout the cell. The mechanical properties of a cell‐wall fragment isolated from the tip‐growing region, which was inflated by artificially applied pressure, were measured after enzymatic removal of the matrix component by using a protease; the results showed that the matrix component is involved in the maintenance of cell wall strength. Since glucose and uronic acid are present in the matrix component of Vaucheria cell walls, we measured the mechanical properties of the cell wall after treatment with endo‐1,3‐ß‐glucanase and observed the fine structures of its surfaces by atomic force microscopy. The major matrix component was partially removed from the cell wall by glucanase, and the enzyme treatment significantly weakened the cell wall strength without affecting the pH dependence of cell wall extensibility. The enzymatic removal of the major matrix component by using a protease released polysaccharide containing glucose and glucuronic acid. This suggests that the major matrix component of the algal cell walls contains both proteins (or polypeptides) and polysaccharides consisting of glucose and glucuronic acid as the main constituents.  相似文献   

15.
The mechanical properties of plant organs depend upon anatomical structure, cell-cell adhesion, cell turgidity, and the mechanical properties of their cell walls. By testing the mechanical responses of Arabidopsis mutants, it is possible to deduce the contribution that polymers of the cell wall make to organ strength. We developed a method to measure the tensile parameters of the expanded regions of turgid or plasmolyzed dark-grown Arabidopsis hypocotyls and applied it to the fucose biosynthesis mutant mur1, the xyloglucan glycosyltransferase mutants mur2 and mur3, and the katanin mutant bot1. Hypocotyls from plants grown in the presence of increasing concentrations of dichlorobenzonitrile, an inhibitor of cellulose synthesis, were considerably weakened, indicating the validity of our approach. In order of decreasing strength, the hypocotyls of mur2 > bot1 and mur1 > mur3 were each found to have reduced strength and a proportionate reduction in modulus compared with wild type. The tensile properties of the hypocotyls and of the inflorescence stems of mur1 were rescued by growth in the presence of high concentrations of borate, which is known to cross-link the pectic component rhamnogalacturonan II. From comparison of the mechanical responses of mur2 and mur3, we deduce that galactose-containing side chains of xyloglucan make a major contribution to overall wall strength, whereas xyloglucan fucosylation plays a comparatively minor role. We conclude that borate-complexed rhamnogalacturonan II and galactosylated xyloglucan contribute to the tensile strength of cell walls.  相似文献   

16.
Transformants and mutants with altered cell wall composition are expected to display a biomechanical phenotype due to the structural role of the cell wall. It is often quite difficult, however, to distinguish the mechanical behavior of a mutant's or transformant's cell walls from that of the wild type. This may be due to the plant's ability to compensate for the wall modification or because the biophysical method that is often employed, determination of simple elastic modulus and breakstrength, lacks the resolving power necessary for detecting subtle mechanical phenotypes. Here, we apply a method, determination of relaxation spectra, which probes, and can separate, the viscoelastic properties of different cell wall components (i.e. those properties that depend on the elastic behavior of load-bearing wall polymers combined with viscous interactions between them). A computer program, BayesRelax, that deduces relaxation spectra from appropriate rheological measurements is presented and made accessible through a Web interface. BayesRelax models the cell wall as a continuum of relaxing elements, and the ability of the method to resolve small differences in cell wall mechanical properties is demonstrated using tuber tissue from wild-type and transgenic potatoes (Solanum tuberosum) that differ in rhamnogalacturonan I side chain structure.  相似文献   

17.
The mechanical behavior of plant tissues and its dependency on tissue geometry and turgor pressure are analytically dealt with in terms of the theory of cellular solids. A cellular solid is any material whose matter is distributed in the form of beamlike struts or complete “cell” walls. Therefore, its relative density is less than one and typically less than 0.3. Relative density is the ratio of the density of the cellular solid to the density of its constitutive (“cell wall”) material. Relative density depends upon cell shape and the density of cell wall material. It largely influences the mechanical behavior of cellular solids. Additional important parameters to mechanical behavior are the elastic modulus of “cell walls” and the magnitude of internal “cell” pressure. Analyses indicate that two “stiffening” agents operate in natural cellular solids (plant tissues): 1) cell wall infrastructure and 2) the hydrostatic influence of the protoplasm within each cellular compartment. The elastic modulus measured from a living tissue sample is the consequence of both agents. Therefore, the mechanical properties of living tissues are dependent upon the magnitude of turgor pressure. High turgor pressure places cell walls into axial tension, reduces the magnitude of cell wall deformations under an applied stress, and hence increases the apparent elastic modulus of the tissue. In the absence of turgid protoplasts or in the case of dead tissues, the cell wall infrastructure will respond as a linear elastic, nonlinear elastic, or “densifying” material (under compression) dependent upon the magnitude of externally applied stress. Accordingly, it is proposed that no single tangent (elastic) modulus from a stress-strain curve of a plant tissue is sufficient to characterize the material properties of a sample. It is also suggested that when a modulus is calculated that it be referred to as the tissue composite modulus to distinguish it from the elastic modulus of a noncellular solid material.  相似文献   

18.
The primary cell walls of growing and fleshy plant tissue mostly share a common set of molecular components, cellulose, xyloglucan (XyG), and pectin, that are required for both inherent strength and the ability to respond to cell expansion during growth. To probe molecular mechanisms underlying material properties, cell walls and analog composites from Acetobacter xylinus have been measured under small deformation and uniaxial extension conditions as a function of molecular composition. Small deformation oscillatory rheology shows a common frequency response for homogenized native cell walls, their sequential extraction residues, and bacterial cellulose alone. This behavior is characteristic of structuring via entanglement of cellulosic rods and is more important than cross-linking with XyG in determining shear moduli. Compared with cellulose alone, composites with XyG have lower stiffness and greater extensibility in uniaxial tension, despite being highly cross-linked at the molecular level. It is proposed that this is due to domains of cross-linked cellulose behaving as mechanical elements, whereas cellulose alone behaves as a mat of individual fibrils. The implication from this work is that XyG/cellulose networks provide a balance of extensibility and strength required by primary cell walls, which is not achievable with cellulose alone.  相似文献   

19.
20.
Plant mechanical strength is an important agronomic trait of rice. An ethyl methane sulfonate (EMS)-induced rice mutant, fragile plant 2 (fp2), showed morphological changes and reduced mechanical strength. Genetic analysis indicated that the brittle of fp2 was controlled by a recessive gene. The fp2 gene was mapped on chromosome 10. Anatomical analyses showed that the fp2 mutation caused the reduction of cell length and cell wall thickness, increasing of cell width, and the alteration of cell wall structure as well as the vessel elements. The consequence was a global alteration in plant morphology. Chemical analyses indicated that the contents of cellulose and lignin decreased, and hemicelluloses and silicon increased in fp2. These results were different from the other mutants reported in rice. Thus, fp2 might affect the deposition and patterning of microflbrils, the biosynthesis and deposition of cell wall components, which influences the formation of primary and secondary cell walls, the thickness of cell walls, cell elongation and expansion, plant morphology and plant strength in rice.  相似文献   

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