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1.
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   

2.
Immunogold labeling was used to study the distribution of (1 → 3)-β-glucans and (1 → 3, 1 → 4)-β-glucans in the rice grain during cellularization of the endosperm. At approximately 3–5 d after pollination the syncytial endosperm is converted into a cellular tissue by three developmentally distinct types of wall. The initial free-growing anticlinal walls, which compartmentalize the syncytium into open-ended alveoli, are formed in the absence of mitosis and phragmoplasts. This stage is followed by unidirectional (centripetal) growth of the anticlinal walls mediated by adventitious phragmoplasts that form between adjacent interphase nuclei. Finally, the periclinal walls that divide the alveoli are formed in association with centripetally expanding interzonal phragmoplasts following karyokinesis. The second and third types of wall are formed alternately until the endosperm is cellular throughout. All three types of wall that cellularize the endosperm contain (1 → 3)-β-glucans but not (1 → 3, 1 → 4)-β-glucans, whereas cell walls in the surrounding maternal tissues contain considerable amounts of (1 → 3, 1 → 4)-β-glucans with (1 → 3)-β-glucans present only around plasmodesmata. The callosic endosperm walls remain thin and cell plate-like throughout the cellularization process, appearing to exhibit a prolonged juvenile state. Received: 7 January 1997 / Accepted: 11 February 1997  相似文献   

3.
Pectic substances are a major component of cell walls in vegetable plants and have an important influence on plant food texture. Cauliflower (Brassica oleracea L. var. botrytis) stem sections at different regions of the mature plant stem have been monitored for tissue-related changes in the native pectic polysaccharides. Chemical analysis detected appreciable differences in the degree of methyl-esterification (ME) of pectic polysaccharides. About 65% of galacturonic acid (GalpA) residues were methyl-esterified in floret tissues. Relative ME showed a basipetal decrease, from 94% in the upper stem to 51% in the lower-stem vascular tissues. The decrease was not related to a basipetal increase in glucuronic acid (GlcpA) residues. The monoclonal antibodies, JIM 5 and JIM 7, produced distinct labelling patterns for the relatively low-methyl-esterified and high-methyl-esterified pectin epitopes, respectively. Labelling was related to cell type and tissue location in the stem. Floret cell walls contained epitopes for both JIM 5 and JIM 7 throughout the wall. Stem vascular tissues labelled more strongly with JIM 5. Whereas pith parenchyma in the upper stem labelled more strongly with JIM 7, in the lower-stem pith parenchyma, JIM 5 labelling predominated. Localization of pectic polysaccharide epitopes in cell walls provides an insight into how structural modifications might relate to the textural and nutritional properties of cell walls. Received: 16 August 1997 / Accepted: 20 December 1997  相似文献   

4.
Eckhard Loos  Doris Meindl 《Planta》1982,156(3):270-273
Isolated cell walls of mature Chlorella fusca consisted of about 80% carbohydrate, 7% protein, and 13% unidentified material. Mannose and glucose were present in a ratio of about 2.7:1 and accounted for most of the carbohydrate. Minor components were glucuronic acid, rhamnose, and traces of other sugars; galactose was absent. After treatment with 2 M trifluoroacetic acid or with 80% acetic acid/HNO3 (10/1, v/v), a residue with a mannose/glucose ratio of 0.3:1 was obtained, probably representing a structural polysaccharide. An X-ray diffraction diagram of the walls showed one diffuse reflection at 0.44 nm and no reflections characteristic of cellulose. Walls from young cells contained about 51% carbohydrate, 12% protein, and 37% unidentified material. Mannose and glucose were also the main sugars; their absolute amounts per wall increased 6–7 fold during cell growth. Walls isolated with omission of a dodecylsulphate/mercaptoethanol/urea extraction step had a higher protein content and, with young walls, a significantly higher glucose and fucose content. These data and other published cell wall analyses show a wide variability in cell wall composition of the members of the genus Chlorella.Abbreviations GLC gas liquid chromatography - TFA trifluoroacetic acid  相似文献   

5.
Changes in texture are an integral part of ripening in most fleshy fruits and these changes are thought to be determined, primarily, by alterations in cell wall structure. Electron energy loss spectroscopy (EELS) imaging was used to obtain quantitative information on the levels of calcium and nitrogen in the cell walls of apple (Malus domestica Borkh. cv. Cox's Orange Pippin) fruits. Samples of fruit cortex were prepared for EELS by high-pressure freezing and molecular distillation drying to minimize loss and redistribution of soluble cell wall components such as calcium. The EELS imaging successfully resolved calcium and nitrogen levels in the middle lamella and primary cell wall. When the elemental compositions of the cell walls of Cox's apples from two sites in the UK were compared at harvest or after 6 months storage, the orchard which always produced consistently firmer fruit had significantly lower levels of cell wall calcium and higher levels of cell wall nitrogen. This result was unexpected since firm texture in apples and other fruits has been commonly associated with elevated levels of fruit calcium. The nitrogen-rich material in the sections used for EELS was insoluble in acidified methanol, indicating that it represented a high-molecular-weight component in the cell wall. Furthermore, total tissue hydroxyproline levels were greatest in material with elevated cell wall nitrogen, suggesting enhanced levels of wall structural proteins in the tissue. These data indicate a correlation between increased amounts of cell wall nitrogen and firm fruit texture. The possible role of cell wall proteins in determining the textural properties of fruit tissue is discussed. Received: 19 November 1998 / Accepted: 28 January 1999  相似文献   

6.
Changes in the limiting porosity of cell walls, i.e. the size limit for permeation of neutral molecules through the wall, were studied in several higher-plant cell-suspension cultures. For this purpose, samples of biomass fixed at different cultivation times were investigated using a method based on size-exclusion chromatography of polydisperse dextrans before and after equilibration with the extracted cell clusters. In suspension cultures of Chenopodium album L., Dioscorea deltoidea Wall. and Medicago sativa L., the mean size limit (MSL; critical Stokes' radius for exclusion of neutral polymers from half of the intracellular space) was found to vary between 2.4 and 3.8 nm. It decreased significantly during transition from the growth phase to the stationary phase. In the case of the C. album culture this change was found to be irrespective of whether sucrose in the medium was completely depleted at the end of the growth phase or not. The MSL was kept constant for long periods of the stationary phase if cell viability was maintained by repeated sucrose supplement. In a suspension strain of Triticum aestivum L., the MSL of cell wall permeation was comparatively small (1.75 nm) and remained constant during all cultivation phases. Relations between limiting porosity and cell wall growth, loss of pectic compounds to the medium, cross-linking activities and cell wall stiffening are discussed. Received: 19 December 1996 / Accepted: 23 April 1997  相似文献   

7.
Microspores of Brassica napus L. cv. Topas, undergo embryogenesis when cultured at 32.5 °C for the first 18–24 h and then at 25 °C. The first division in heat-treated microspores is a symmetric division in contrast to the asymmetric division found after the first pollen mitosis in-planta or in microspores cultured continuously at 25 °C. This asymmetric division is unique in higher plants as it results in daughter cells separated by a non-consolidated wall. The cytoskeleton has an important role in such morphological changes. We examined microtubule (MT) organization during the first 24 h of heat induction in the embryogenic B. napus cv. Topas and the non-embryogenic B. napus breeding line 0025. Preprophase bands (PPBs) of MTs appeared in cv. Topas microspores in late uninucleate microspores and in prophase figures after 4–8 h of heat treatment. However, more than 60% of the PPBs were not continuous bands. In contrast, PPBs were never observed in pollen mitosis; MT strands radiated from the surface of the nuclear envelope throughout microspore maturation to the end of prophase of pollen mitosis I, during in-planta development and in microspores cultured at 25 °C. Following 24 h of heat treatment, over 95% of the microspores appeared to have divided symmetrically as indicated by the similar size of the daughter nuclei, but only 7–16% of the microspores eventually formed embryos. Discontinuous walls were observed in more than 50% of the divisions and it is probable that the discontinuous PPBs gave rise to such wall abnormalities which may then obstruct embryo development. Preprophase bands were not formed in heat-treated microspores of the non-embryogenic line 0025 and the ensuing divisions showed discontinuous walls. It is concluded that the appearance of PPBs in heat-induced microspores marks sporophytic development and that continuous PPBs are required for cell wall consolidation and embryogenesis. It follows that induced structures with two equally condensed nuclei, do not necessarily denote symmetric divisions. Received: 22 October 1998 / Accepted: 28 November 1998  相似文献   

8.
 In order to determine why the activated methyl cycle is up-regulated in plants undergoing defence responses to fungal pathogens we have monitored the utilisation of methyl groups derived from methionine in cell-suspension cultures of alfalfa (Medicago sativa L.) treated for various times with fungal elicitor, by carrying out a parallel labelling study with [35S]methionine and [methyl-3H]methionine. The distribution of the two radiolabels among the medium, soluble cellular components and cell wall was then determined. In the absence of elicitor the utilisation of the two radiolabels was similar. However, in the presence of the elicitor the total incorporation of radioactivity from [methyl-3H]methionine into metabolites was far greater than from [35S]methionine, indicating that the methyl label had been utilised in methylation reactions. Elicitor treatment resulted in up to a sixfold increase in the use of 3H-methyl groups in the methylation of hydrophobic metabolites. In the period 0–24 h after elicitor treatment, increased methylation was directed largely into the synthesis of the isoflavonoid phytoalexin medicarpin and related metabolites. Newly synthesized phytoalexins were exported into the medium, while a significant proportion of the medicarpin accumulating in the cell in the early stages of elicitation was derived from the hydrolysis of its respective conjugate. Elicitor treatment also modified the incorporation of 3H-methyl groups into the cell wall. Between 0 and 24 h after elicitor treatment the methylation of pectin in the cell wall declined. After 24 h, pectin methylation recovered and was associated with an increase in the methylation of other wall-bound polysaccharide components. Since no other major metabolic sink for the increased methylation was determined we conclude that the increased activity of the activated methyl cycle during defence interactions in alfalfa is required to support phytoalexin synthesis and cell wall modifications. Received: 1 August 1996 / Accepted: 24 October 1996  相似文献   

9.
Pectin methyltransferase (PMT) catalyzing the transfer of the methyl group from S-adenosyl-L-methionine (SAM) to the C-6 carboxyl group of galactosyluronic acid residues in pectin was found in a membrane preparation of etiolated hypocotyls from 6-d-old soybean (Glycinemax Merr.). The enzyme was maximally active at pH 6.8 and 35–40 °C, and required 0.5% (w/v) Triton X-100. The incorporation of the methyl group was significantly enhanced by addition of a pectin with a low (22%) degree of methyl-esterification (DE) as exogenous acceptor substrate. The apparent Michaelis constants for SAM and the pectin (DE22) were 0.23 mM and 66 μg · ml−1, respectively. Attachment of the methyl group to the carboxyl group of the pectin via ester linkage was confirmed by analyzing radiolabeled product from incubation of the enzyme with [14C]methyl SAM and the acceptor pectin. Size-exclusion chromatography showed that both enzymatic hydrolysis with a pectin methylesterase and a mild alkali treatment (saponification) led to the release of radioactive methanol from the product. Enzymatic hydrolysis of the product with an endopolygalacturonase degraded it into small pectic fragments with low relative molecular mass, which also supports the idea that the methyl group is incorporated into the pectin. The soybean hypocotyls were fractionated into their cell wall components by successive extraction with water, EDTA, and alkali treatment. Among the resulting polysaccharide fractions, high PMT activity was observed when a de-esterified polysaccharide derived from the EDTA-soluble fraction (the pectic fraction) was added as an alternative acceptor substrate, indicating that the enzyme may be responsible for producing methyl-esterified pectin in vivo. Received: 10 September 1999 / Accepted: 11 October 1999  相似文献   

10.
Cell wall deposition during morphogenesis in fucoid algae   总被引:6,自引:0,他引:6  
Bisgrove SR  Kropf DL 《Planta》2001,212(5-6):648-658
Cell wall deposition was investigated during morphogenesis in zygotes of Pelvetia compressa (J. Agardh) De Toni. Young zygotes are spherical and wall is deposited uniformly, but at germination (about 10 h after fertilization) wall deposition becomes localized to the apex of the tip-growing rhizoid. Wall deposition was investigated before and after the initiation of tip growth by disrupting cytoskeleton, secretion or cellulose deposition; effects on wall strength and structure were examined. All three were involved in generating wall strength in both spherical and tip-growing zygotes, but their relative importance were different at the two developmental stages. Much of the wall strength in young zygotes was dependent on F-actin, whereas cellulose and a sulfated component, probably a fucan (F2), were most important in tip growing zygotes. Some treatments had contrasting effects at the two developmental stages; for example, disruption of F-actin or inhibition of secretion weakened walls in spherical zygotes but strengthened those in tip-growing zygotes. Transmission electron microscopic analysis showed that most treatments that altered wall strength induced modifications of internal wall structure. Received: 12 June 2000 / Accepted: 26 July 2000  相似文献   

11.
 Four proteins were isolated from depectinised elementary fibres of flax (Linum usitatissimum L.), using either alkali or cellulase digestion treatments. All the four proteins were characterized by a deficiency or low contents of hydroxyproline and by high levels of glutamic acid/glutamine and/or aspartic acid/asparagine. The two proteoglycans solubilized with cellulase strongly reacted with β-glucosyl Yariv reagent but not with α-glucosyl Yariv reagent and contained appreciable amounts of alanine, glycine, serine and threonine, suggesting a relationship with cell wall hydroxyproline-deficient arabinogalactan-proteins. The two alkali-extracted proteins did not show any reaction with β-glucosyl Yariv dye. Due to the harsh treatment, they might only partially represent the original proteins. Due to its high level of glycine (41%), one of these proteins might be classified as a glycine-rich protein. The latter polypeptide, of low molecular molar mass, contained 14.6% leucine and might consist of a domain related to leucine-rich proteins. The data show that these proteins and arabinogalactan-protein-like proteoglycans were strongly associated with the secondary walls of flax fibres. Their presence in small amounts (0.1–0.4%), raises the problem of their putative structural role. Received: 22 October 1999 / Accepted: 17 January 2000  相似文献   

12.
Molecular weight distribution of cellulose in primary cell walls   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
W. Blaschek  H. Koehler  U. Semler  G. Franz 《Planta》1982,154(6):550-555
The distribution pattern of the degree of polymerization (DP) of cellulose present in the cell walls of mesophyll- and suspension-cultured cells of tobacco was compared to that of newly synthesized 14C-labeled cellulose from regenerating tobacco protoplasts and suspension-cultured cells. The cellulose was nitrated, and, after fractionation according to differences in solubility in acetone/water, the DP pattern of labeled or unlabeled cellulose nitrate was determined by viscosity measurements. A low (DP<500) and high DP-fraction (DP>2500) of cellulose were predominant in the cell walls of protoplasts, suspension — cultured cells, and mesophyll cells. The average DP of the high molecular weight fraction of cellulose in the cell walls of mesophyll was higher (DP4,000) than in protoplasts or suspension — cultured cells (DP 2,500-3,000). In all cell walls tested, minor amounts of cellulose molecules with a broad spectrum of a medium DP were present. Pulse — chase experiments with either protoplasts or suspension —cultured cells showed that a large proportion of the low and medium DP-cellulose are a separate class of structural components of the cellulose network. The results are discussed in relation to the organization of cellulose in the primary cell wall.Abbreviations DP degree of polymerisation - 2,4-D 2,4-dichlorophenoxyacetic acid - IAA indole-3-acetic acid  相似文献   

13.
To assess protection of the mesophyll cell plasmalemma against O3 by apoplasmic reduced ascorbate (AA), its concentration in the leaf cell wall of common bean (Phaseolus vulgaris L.) was lowered from 0.6 mM to 0.1 mM by pre-exposing plants to continuous darkness for up to 48 h. Subsequent ozonization of ascorbate-deficient leaves with 350–450 nmol O3 mol−1 resulted in a rapid rise of apoplasmic AA within the second hour of the treatment, the concomitant appearance of cytoplasmic marker enzymes in cell wall solute extracts and the development of water-logged spots on leaves. Prior to these events, stomatal conductances had just reached values close to those observed in AA-nondeficient leaves, whereas AA concentration in the cell wall was still 2–4 times lower than in leaves pre-exposed to the normal 10-h dark period. In AA-nondeficient leaves the inital apoplasmic AA level of 0.6 mM was maintained under O3 for 2.5 h; thereafter, it increased moderately. There appeared to be no signs of injury even 2 d after the whole 4.5-h treatment. During the period of equal stomatal conductances, the O3 decay rate in direct reaction with AA in AA-deficient cell walls was estimated to be 50–70% of that occurring in AA-nondeficient leaves. It is suggested that under AA deficiency some threshold for the stability of the plasmalemma was surpassed owing to the more “O3-permeable” cell wall. The mesophyll conductance was found to be stable throughout O3 exposure, indicating that the cytoplasmic O3 defense barrier was not exceeded. Possible changes in oxyradical reactions and in cell wall phenolics are discussed. It is suggested that after prolonged darkness the flow rate of reactive oxygen intermediates to the plasmalemma may also be higher because they are less trapped in direct and peroxidase-catalyzed reactions. Received: 11 February 1998 / Accepted: 18 June 1998  相似文献   

14.
Cell walls of the generic phase of the freshwater red alga Lemanea annulata Kütz were mechanically isolated and chemically characterized. Walls consisted mainly of polysaccharide with lesser quantities of associated protein and lipid. The major wall component was alkali-soluble xylan, comprised mainly of 4-linked β-xylopyranosyl residues and small amounts of 3-O-substituted β-xylopyranosyl residues. Hot water extracts yielded non-sulfated polymers, with 3- or 3,4-linked β-galactosyl residues alternating with 4-linked α-glucuronosyl residues as the predominant structural features. This acid polysaccharide shares many characteristics of the mucilage previously described from the freshwater genus Batrachospermum. Isolated cell walls of L. annulata contained approximately 6% cellulose. Cellobiohydrolase/colloidal gold labelling of cell walls revealed β-4-glycan throughout the fibrillar portion of the wall. Wall protein consisted of at least 17 amino acids, of which threonine and alanine were the most abundant. Polysaccharides of the cell walls of L. annulata differ from those of marine red algae and are similar to those described for other Batrachospermales.  相似文献   

15.
Thimm JC  Burritt DJ  Ducker WA  Melton LD 《Planta》2000,212(1):25-32
Atomic force microscopy (AFM) was used to image celery (Apium graveolens L.) parenchyma cell walls in situ. Cellulose microfibrils could clearly be distinguished in topographic images of the cell wall. The microfibrils of the hydrated walls appeared smaller, more uniformly distributed, and less enmeshed than those of dried peels. In material that was kept hydrated at all times and imaged under water, the microfibril diameter was mainly in the range 6–25 nm. The cellulose microfibril diameters were highly dependent on the water content of the specimen. As the water content was decreased, by mixing ethanol with the bathing solution, the microfibril diameters increased. Upon complete dehydration of the specimen we observed a significant increase in microfibril diameter. The procedure used to dehydrate the parenchyma cells also influenced the size of cellulose microfibrils with freeze-dried material having larger diameters than air-dried material. Received: 16 November 1999 / Accepted: 7 March 2000  相似文献   

16.
Jean-Pierre Métraux 《Planta》1982,155(6):459-466
Changes in the uronide, neutral-polysacharide, and cellulose composition of the cell wall ofNitella axillaris Braun were followed throughout development of the internodes and correlated with changes in growth rate. As the cells increased in length from 4 to 80 mm during development, the relative growth rate decreased. Cell wall thickness, as measured by wall density, increased in direct proportion to diameter, indicating that cell-wall stress did not change during elogation. Cell-wall analyses were adapted to allow determination of the composition of the wall of single cells. The total amounts of uronides, neutral sugars and cellulose all increased during development. However, as the growth rate decreased, the relative proportions of uronides and neutral sugars, expressed as percent of the dry weight of the wall, decreased, while the proportion of cellulose increased. The neutral sugars liberated upon hydrolysis ofNitella walls are qualitatively similar to those found in hydrolysates of higher plant cell walls: glucose, xylose, mannose, galactose, arabinose fucose and rhamnose. Only the percentage of galactose was found to increase in walls of mature cells, while the percentage of all other sugars decreased. The rate of apposition (g of wall material deposited per unit wall surface area per hour) of neutral polysaccharides decreased rapidly with decreasing growth rate during the early stages of development. The rate of apposition of uronides decreased more steadily throughout development, while that of cellulose, after an early decline, remained constant until dropping off at the end of the elongation period. These correlations between decreasing growth rate and decreasing rate of apposition of neutral sugars and uronides indicate that synthesis of these cell-wall components could be involved in the regulation of the rate of cell elongation inNitella.  相似文献   

17.
18.
We discuss a dynamical mathematical model to explain cell wall architecture in plant cells. The highly regular textures observed in cell walls reflect the spatial organisation of the cellulose microfibrils (CMFs), the most important structural component of cell walls. Based on a geometrical theory proposed earlier [A. M. C. Emons, Plant, Cell and Environment 17, 3–14 (1994)], the present model describes the space-time evolution of the density of the so-called rosettes, the CMF synthesizing complexes. The motion of these rosettes in the plasma membrane is assumed to be governed by an optimal packing constraint on the CMFs plus adherent matrix material, that couples the direction of motion, and hence the orientation of the CMF being deposited, to the local density of rosettes. The rosettes are created inside the cell in the endoplasmatic reticulum and reach the cell-membrane via vesicles derived from Golgi-bodies. After being inserted into the plasma membrane they are assumed to be operative for a fixed, finite lifetime. The plasma membrane domains within which rosettes are activated are themselves also supposed to be mobile. We propose a feedback mechanism that precludes the density of rosettes to rise beyond a maximum dictated by the geometry of the cell. The above ingredients lead to a quasi-linear first order PDE for the rosette-density. Using the method of characteristics this equation can be cast into a set of first order ODEs, one of which is retarded. We discuss the analytic solutions of the model that give rise to helicoidal, crossed polylamellate, helical, axial and random textures, since all cell walls are composed of (or combinations of) these textures. Received: 10 July 1999 / Revised version: 7 June 2000 / Published online: 16 February 2001  相似文献   

19.
 It is proposed that inhibition of extensin peroxidase activity leads to a less rigid cell wall and thus promotes cell expansion and plant growth. A low-molecular-weight inhibitor derived from the cell walls of suspension-cultured tomato cells was found to completely inhibit extensin peroxidase-mediated extensin cross-linking in vitro at a concentration of 260 μg/ml. The inhibitor had no effect upon guaiacol oxidation catalyzed by extensin peroxidase or horseradish peroxidase. We have demonstrated that the light-irradiated inhibition of plant growth may be partially offset by inhibition of endogenous extensin peroxidase activity. Overall plant growth was enhanced by up to 15% in the presence of inhibitor relative to control plants. Inhibitor-treated and illuminated tomato hypocotyls grew up to 15% taller than untreated controls. The inhibitor had no effect upon etiolated plants over a 15-d period, suggesting that only low levels of peroxidase-mediated cross-linking can be found in the cell walls of etiolated plants. SDS-PAGE/Western blots of ionically bound protein from both etiolated and illuminated hypocotyls identified a doublet at 57/58.5 kDa which is immuno-reactive with antibodies raised to tomato extensin peroxidase. Levels of the 58.5-kDa protein, determined by SDS-PAGE, were at least threefold higher in illuminated tomato hypocotyls than in etiolated hypocotyls. Three fold higher levels of extensin peroxidase, elevated in-vitro extensin cross-linking activity and 15% higher levels of cross-linked, non-extractable extensin were observed in illuminated tomato hypocotyls compared with etiolated tomato hypocotyls. This suggests that white-light inhibition of tomato hypocotyl growth appears to be mediated, at least partially, by deposition of cell wall extensin, a process regulated by Mr-58,500 extensin peroxidase. Our results indicate that the contribution of peroxidase-mediated extensin deposition to plant cell wall architecture may have an important role in plant growth. Received: 22 July 1999 / Accepted: 11 October 1999  相似文献   

20.
The architectural, compositional and functional characteristics of the cell walls of the leaves of the moss Rhacocarpus purpurascens (Brid.) Par. have been analysed by scanning and transmission electron microscopy, wall-extraction methods, nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) spectroscopy, and water-retention experiments. Four-layered cell walls with a peculiar architecture which, so far, appears to be unique among plants were apparent. The architecture of the walls was not affected by sequential wall-extraction procedures. Subsequent analysis of the residual pre-extracted walls by classical spectro-photometrical methods revealed that the walls are composed of mainly lignin, hemicellulose and cellulose in a ratio of about 9:8:5, determining their integrity. This was supported by NMR spectroscopy. The resonance spectrum showed various characteristics typical of lignin; however, some specific peaks associated with lignin were missing. The walls exhibited no particular properties for external water conduction but seem to be adapted to rapid absorption of fog, dew, or rain. Received: 3 June 1997 / Accepted: 25 February 1998  相似文献   

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