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1.
The main barriers to the movement of water and ions in young roots of Zea mays were located by observing the effects of wounding various cell layers of the cortex on the roots' hydraulic conductivities and root pressures. These parameters were measured with a root pressure probe. Injury to the epidermis and cortex caused no significant change in hydraulic conductivity and either no change or a slight decline in root pressure. Injury to a small area of the endodermis did not change the hydraulic conductivity but caused an immediate and substantial drop in root pressure. When large areas of epidermis and cortex were removed (15–38% of total root mass), the endodermis was always injured and root pressure fell. The hydraulic conductance of the root increased but only by a factor of 1.2–2.7. The results indicate that the endodermis is the main barrier to the radial movement of ions but not water. The major barrier to water is the membranes and apoplast of all the living tissue. These conclusions were drawn from experiments in which hydrostatic-pressure differences were used to induce water flows across young maize roots which had an immature exodermis and an endodermis with Casparian bands but no suberin lamellae or secondary walls. The different reactions of water and ions to the endodermis can be explained by the huge difference in the permeability of membranes to these substances. A hydrophobic wall barrier such as the Casparian band should have little effect on the movement of water, which permeates membranes and, perhaps, also the Casparian bands easily. However, hydrophobic wall depositions largely prevent the movement of ions. Several hours after wounding the endodermis, root pressure recovered to some extent in most of the experiments, indicating that the wound in the endodermis had been partially healed.Abbreviations Lpr hydraulic conductivity of root; T1/2 = half-time of water exchange between root xylem and external medium This research was supported by a grant from EUROSILVA (project no. 39473C) to E.S., and by a Bilateral Exchange Grant jointly funded by the Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft and the Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada to C.A.P. We thank Mr. Burkhard Stumpf for his excellent technicial assistance.  相似文献   

2.
To understand the root function in salt tolerance, radial salt and water transport were studied using reed plants growing in brackish habitat water with an osmotic pressure (πM) of 0.63 MPa. Roots bathed in this medium exuded a xylem sap with NaCl as the major osmolyte and did so even at higher salt concentration (πM up to 1.3 MPa). Exudation was stopped after a small increase of πM (0.26 MPa) using polyethylene glycol 600 as osmolyte. The endodermis of fine lateral roots was found to be the main barrier to radial solute diffusion on an apoplastic path. Apoplastic salt transfer was proven by rapid replacement of stelar Na+ by Li+ in an isomolar LiCl medium. Water fluxes did not exert a true solvent drag on NaCl. Xylem sap concentrations of NaCl in basal internodes of transpiring culms were more than five times higher than in medial and upper ones. It was concluded that the radial NaCl flux was mainly diffusion through the apoplast, and radial water transport, because of the resistance of the cell wall matrix to convective mass flow, was confined to the symplast. Radial salt permeation in roots reduced the water stress exerted by the brackish medium.  相似文献   

3.
The contrasting hydraulic properties of wheat (Triticum aestivum), narrow-leafed lupin (Lupinus angustifolius), and yellow lupin (Lupinus luteus) roots were identified by integrating measurements of water flow across different structural levels of organization with anatomy and modeling. Anatomy played a major role in root hydraulics, influencing axial conductance (Lax) and the distribution of water uptake along the root, with a more localized role for aquaporins (AQPs). Lupin roots had greater Lax than wheat roots, due to greater xylem development. Lax and root hydraulic conductance (Lr) were related to each other, such that both variables increased with distance from the root tip in lupin roots. Lax and Lr were constant with distance from the tip in wheat roots. Despite these contrasting behaviors, the hydraulic conductivity of root cells (Lpc) was similar for all species and increased from the root surface toward the endodermis. Lpc was largely controlled by AQPs, as demonstrated by dramatic reductions in Lpc by the AQP blocker mercury. Modeling the root as a series of concentric, cylindrical membranes, and the inhibition of AQP activity at the root level, indicated that water flow in lupin roots occurred primarily through the apoplast, without crossing membranes and without the involvement of AQPs. In contrast, water flow across wheat roots crossed mercury-sensitive AQPs in the endodermis, which significantly influenced Lr. This study demonstrates the importance of examining root morphology and anatomy in assessing the role of AQPs in root hydraulics.  相似文献   

4.
Water diffusion in maize roots (Zea mays L., cv. Donskaya 1) was investigated with a pulsed gradient NMR using mercuric chloride as an inhibitor of water channels in cell membranes. A novel operation program was applied that allowed selective evaluation of fractional amounts of water transported through various pathways—the apoplastic, symplasmic, and transmembrane routes. The blockage of water channels with HgCl2 reduced the rates of water diffusion by a factor of 1.5–2. This effect was reversible and was removed by the addition of -mercaptoethanol. The coefficient of water diffusion changed with time elapsed after the HgCl2 treatment. The effect of water stress on the rates of water diffusion was similar to that of HgCl2. Remarkably, the water-stressed roots of maize seedlings were insensitive to the inhibitor of water channels. The results are interpreted in terms of redistribution of water flows among various routes in plant tissues. Water stress and mercuric chloride treatments decelerate the transmembrane water transport and promote water flow along the apoplastic pathway. These responses might arise from the reversible regulation of water movement along various transport pathways.  相似文献   

5.
Lehmann H  Stelzer R  Holzamer S  Kunz U  Gierth M 《Planta》2000,211(6):816-822
 In transmission electron microscopy studies, lanthanum ions have been used as electron-opaque tracers to delineate the apoplastic pathways for ion transport in barley (Hordeum vulgare L.) roots. To localize La3+ on the subcellular level, e.g. in cell walls and on the surface of membranes, electron-energy-loss spectroscopy and electron-spectroscopic imaging were used. Seminal and nodal roots were exposed for 30 min to 1 mM LaCl3 and 10 mM LaCl3, respectively. In seminal roots, possessing no exodermis, La3+ diffusion through the apoplast was stopped by the Casparian bands of the endodermis. In nodal roots with an exodermis, however, La3+ diffusion through the cortical apoplast had already stopped at the tight junctions of the exodermal cell walls resembling the Casparian bands of the endodermis. Therefore, we conclude that in some specialized roots such as the nodal roots of barley, the physiological role of the endodermis is largely performed by the exodermis. Received: 28 July 1999 / Accepted: 24 February 2000  相似文献   

6.
Brassinosteroids (BRs) can effectively alleviate the oxidative stress caused by Ca(NO3)2 in cucumber seedlings. The root system is an essential organ in plants due to its roles in physical anchorage, water and nutrient uptake, and metabolite synthesis and storage. In this study, 24-epibrassinolide (EBL) was applied to the cucumber seedling roots under Ca(NO3)2 stress, and the resulting chemical and anatomical changes were characterized to investigate the roles of BRs in alleviating salinity stress. Ca(NO3)2 alone significantly induced changes in the components of cell wall, anatomical structure, and expression profiles of several lignin biosynthetic genes. Salt stress damaged several metabolic pathways, leading to cell wall reassemble. However, EBL promoted cell expansion and maintained optimum length of root system, alleviating the oxidative stress caused by Ca(NO3)2. The continuous transduction of EBL signal thickened the secondary cell wall of casparian band cells, thus resisting against ion toxicity and maintaining water transport.  相似文献   

7.
Freundl E  Steudle E  Hartung W 《Planta》2000,210(2):222-231
The exodermal layers that are formed in maize roots during aeroponic culture were investigated with respect to the radial transport of cis-abscisic acid (ABA). The decrease in root hydraulic conductivity (Lpr) of aeroponically grown roots was stimulated 1.5-fold by ABA (500 nM), reaching Lpr values of roots lacking an exodermis. Similar to water, the radial flow of ABA through roots (JABA) and ABA uptake into root tissue were reduced by a factor of about three as a result of the existence of an exodermis. Thus, due to the cooperation between water and solute transport the development of the ABA signal in the xylem was not affected. This resulted in unchanged reflection coeffcients for roots grown hydroponically and aeroponically. Despite the well-accepted barrier properties of exodermal layers, it is concluded that the endodermis was the more effective filter for ABA. Owing to concentration polarisation effects, ABA may accumulate in front of the endodermal layer, a process which, for both roots possessing and lacking an exodermis, would tend to increase solvent drag and hence ABA movement into the xylem sap at increased water flow (JVr). This may account for the higher ABA concentrations found in the xylem at greater pressure difference. Received: 26 January 1999 / Accepted: 26 May 1999  相似文献   

8.
The effects of a severe water deficit on total root (Lt) and axial (Lx) hydraulic conductances and on the development of the hypodermis, endodermis, and xylem were studied in sorghum (Sorghum bicolor L.). Water deficit was imposed in the upper rooting zone while the lower zones were kept moist. Lt and Lx were based on water flow rates obtained by applying suction to proximal xylem ends of excised roots. The development of the hypodermis, endodermis, and other tissues were examined by staining with fluorescent berberine hemisulfate and phloroglucinol-HCl. The Lt value (x 10−8 meters per second per megapascal) for unstressed control roots was 22.0 and only 5.9 for stressed roots. The low Lt in stressed roots was attributed, in part, to accelerated deposition of lignin and suberin in the hypodermis and endodermis. Calcofluor, an apoplastic tracer that binds to cellulose, was blocked in stressed roots at the lignified and suberized outer tangential walls of the hypodermis but readily penetrated the cortical walls of similar root regions in controls where the casparian band was not developed. Lx per unit root length was about 100 times lower in stressed roots than in controls because of the persistence of late metaxylem cross-walls and the smaller diameter and lower number of conductive protoxylem and early metaxylem vessels.  相似文献   

9.
Water uptake by plant roots: an integration of views   总被引:20,自引:0,他引:20  
Steudle  Ernst 《Plant and Soil》2000,226(1):45-56
A COMPOSITE TRANSPORT MODEL is presented which explains the variability in the ability of roots to take up water and responses of water uptake to different factors. The model is based on detailed measurements of 'root hydraulics' both at the level of excised roots (root hydraulic conductivity, Lpr) and root cells (membrane level; cell Lp) using pressure probes and other techniques. The composite transport model integrates apoplastic and cellular components of radial water flow across the root cylinder. It explains why the hydraulic conductivity of roots changes in response to the nature (osmotic vs. hydraulic) and intensity of water flow. The model provides an explanation of the adaptation of plants to conditions of drought and other stresses by allowing for a `coarse regulation of water uptake' according to the demands from the shoot which is favorable to the plant. Coarse regulation is physical in nature, but strongly depends on root anatomy, e.g. on the existence of apoplastic barriers in the exo- and endodermis. Composite transport is based on the composite structure of roots. A `fine regulation' results from the activity of water channels (aquaporins) in root cell membranes which is assumed to be under metabolic and other control.  相似文献   

10.
The importance of aquaporins for root hydraulic conductance (LP) was investigated along roots of the desert succulent Agave deserti in wet, dry and rewetted soil. Water channel activity was inferred from HgCl2‐induced reductions of LP that were reversible by 2‐mercaptoethanol. Under wet conditions, HgCl2 reduced LP for the distal root region by 50% and for the root region near the shoot base by 36% but did not affect LP for the mid‐root region. For all root regions, LP decreased by 30–60% during 10 d in drying soil and was not further reduced by HgCl2. After soil rewetting, LP increased to pre‐drying values and was again reduced by HgCl2 for the distal and the basal root regions but not the mid‐root region. For the distal region, water channels in the epidermis/exodermis made a disproportionately large contribution to radial hydraulic conductance of the intact segment; for the basal region, water channel activity was highest in the cortex and endodermis. The role of water channels was greatest in tissues in which cells were metabolically active both in the distal root region, where new apical growth occurs in wet soil, and in the basal region, which is the most likely root region to intercept light rainfall.  相似文献   

11.
Water and solute transport along developing maize roots   总被引:15,自引:0,他引:15  
Hydraulic and osmotic properties were measured along developing maize (Zea mays L.) roots at distances between 15 and 465 mm from the root tip to quantify the effects of changes in root structure on the radial and longitudinal movement of water and solutes (ions). Root development generated regions of different hydraulic and osmotic properties. Close to the root tip, passive solute permeability (root permeability coefficient, Psr) was high and selectivity (root reflection coefficient, sr) low, indicative of an imperfect semipermeable root structure. Within the apical 100–150 mm, Psr decreased by an order of magnitude and sr increased significantly. Root hydraulic conductivity (Lpr) depended on the nature of the force (hydrostatic and osmotic). Osmotic Lpr was smaller by an order of magnitude than hydrostatic Lpr and decreased with increasing distance from the root tip. Throughout the root, responses in turgor of cortical cells and late metaxylem to step changes in xylem pressure applied to the base of excised roots were measured at high spatial resolution. The resulting profiles of radial and longitudinal propagation of pressure showed that the endodermis had become the major hydraulic barrier in older parts of the root, i.e. at distances from the apex ä 150 mm. Other than at the endodermis, no significant radial hydraulic resistance could be detected. The results permit a detailed analysis of the root's composite structure which is important for its function in collecting and translocating water and nutrients.Abbreviations and Symbols CPP cell pressure probe - IT root segments with intact tips; - Lpr root hydraulic conductivity - Lprh hydrostatic hydraulic conductivity of root - Lpro osmotic hydraulic conductivity of root - Papp hydrostatic pressure applied to cut end of root - Pc cell turgor - Pc, cor turgor of cortical cell - Pc,xyl turgor of late metaxylem vessel - Pro stationary root pressure - Pr0,seal stationary root pressure of sealed root segment - Psr solute permeability coefficient of root - RPP root pressure probe - TR root segments with tip removed - sr reflection coefficient of root Dedicated to Professor Andreas Sievers on the occasion of his retirement  相似文献   

12.
To mark the apoplastic pathway of ions in the root of the dicotyledonous plant Lepidium sativum we used the heavy element lanthanum, which can be identified by analytical electron microscopy (EELS and ESI). In the front root tip, the primary walls of all meristematic cells contained lanthanum. 10-15 mm behind the root apex, lanthanum was found in the cortex cell walls up to the endodermis, but not in the stele. 20-25 mm from the tip, lanthanum was accumulated in the radial cell walls of the hypodermis, which, however, is not a complete diffusion barrier for ions, so that traces of lanthanum also were found in the cortex cell walls up to the endodermis. This study provides evidence for the presence of two apolastic diffusion barriers in the region of highest water uptake in cress roots.  相似文献   

13.
The root endodermis is characterized by the Casparian strip and by the suberin lamellae, two hydrophobic barriers that restrict the free diffusion of molecules between the inner cell layers of the root and the outer environment. The presence of these barriers and the position of the endodermis between the inner and outer parts of the root require that communication between these two domains acts through the endodermis. Recent work on hormone signaling, propagation of calcium waves, and plant-fungal symbiosis has provided evidence in support of the hypothesis that the endodermis acts as a signaling center. The endodermis is also a unique mechanical barrier to organogenesis, which must be overcome through chemical and mechanical cross talk between cell layers to allow for development of new lateral organs while maintaining its barrier functions. In this review, we discuss recent findings regarding these two important aspects of the endodermis.Soil contains water and dissolved nutrients needed for plant growth, but also holds pathogens and toxic compounds that can be detrimental to the plant. The root system, which is directly in contact with soil particles, can integrate environmental cues to adjust its development in order to optimize nutrient (Péret et al., 2011; Lynch, 2013) and water uptake (Cassab et al., 2013; Lynch, 2013; Bao et al., 2014) or avoid regions of high salinity (Galvan-Ampudia et al., 2013). Once anchored in the soil, roots must deal with the constraints of their local environment and develop specific barriers to balance uptake of nutrients, water, and interactions with symbionts with protection against detrimental biotic and abiotic factors.In young roots, these barriers are mainly formed by the deposition of hydrophobic polymers such as lignin and suberin within the primary cell wall of the endodermis, which separates the pericycle from the cortex (Fig. 1), and of the exodermis, which lies between the cortex and the epidermis (Nawrath et al., 2013). Although formation of an exodermis is species dependent, the endodermis is a distinguishing figure of extant vascular plants (Raven and Edwards, 2001). Within this layer, two barriers (i.e. the Casparian strip and the suberin lamellae) are sequentially deposited and regulate water and nutrient movements between the inner and outer parts of the root. In this review, we discuss how the presence of these two major endodermal barriers affects communication between the different cell layers of the root. We focus on recent articles highlighting the importance of the endodermis in this communication during various biological and developmental processes.Open in a separate windowFigure 1.Endodermal barriers affect radial movement of water and solutes through the root. A, At the root tip, to move from the soil to the outer tissues of the root and then into the stele, water and solute molecules can use either the apoplastic (black lines), symplastic (dotted lines), or transcellular (dashed lines) pathways. B, The deposition of the Casparian strip in the endodermis prevents the free apoplastic diffusion of molecules between the outer part and the inner part of the root forcing molecules to pass through the symplast of endodermal cells. C, The deposition of suberin lamellae prevents the uptake of molecules from the apoplast directly into the endodermis forcing molecules to enter the symplast from more outer tissue layers. Suberin deposition is also likely to prevent the backflow of water and ions out of the stele. Passage cells are unsuberized and may facilitate the uptake of water and nutrients in older parts of the root. Cor, Cortex; End, endodermis; Epi, epidermis; Peri, pericycle; Vasc, vasculature. Figure redrawn and modified from Geldner et al. (2013).  相似文献   

14.
Water moves radially through the root in response to the tension generated by the transpiration stream. This movement occurs through both the cell walls and the protoplasts of the cells intervening between the soil solution and the lumena of the tracheary elements. The mechanism of movement is commonly believed to be diffusion in both these compartments. In the present study, we applied the apoplastic, fluorescent tracer, berberine, to roots of three dicotyledonous (Helianthus annuus L. cv. Mammoth Russian, Phaseolus vulgaris L. cv. Kinghorn wax, and Phaseolus aureus Roxb.) and four monocotyledonous species (Triticum aestivum L., Hordeum vulgare L., Zea mays L. cv. Seneca Chief, and Allium cepa L. cv. Ebeneezer). The tracer was precipitated in place by potassium thiocyanate. The entry of berberine into the main roots of the monocotyledonous species was limited, and no conclusions could be drawn about its movement. Tracer entered more readily into the main roots of dicotyledonous species and its movement by diffusion (in excised roots) was characterized by an evenly advancing diffusion ring in the cortex. However, when short treatment times were used for transpiring plants, some berberine was moved across the cortex by solvent drag, resulting in the formation of isolated crystals near the endodermis in advance of the diffusion ring. The phenomenon of solvent drag, in turn, is indirect evidence for movement of water by bulk flow in the cortical cell walls. Whether or not bulk flow also occurred in lateral roots could not be determined since the narrow width of the cortex and the high permeability of the walls to berberine resulted in very fast progression of the diffusion ring. Received: 11 March 1998 / Accepted: 18 May 1998  相似文献   

15.
Water movement across root tissues occurs by parallel apoplastic, symplastic, and transcellular pathways that the plant can control to a certain extent. Because water channels or aquaporins (AQPs) play an important role in regulating water flow, studies on AQP mRNA and protein expression in different root tissues are essential. Here, we quantified and localized the expression of Zea mays plasma membrane AQPs (ZmPIPs) in primary root tip using in situ and quantitative RT-PCR and immunodetection approaches. All ZmPIP genes except ZmPIP2;7 were expressed in primary roots. Expression was found to be dependent on the developmental stage of the root, with, in general, an increase in expression towards the elongation and mature zones. Two genes, ZmPIP1;5 and ZmPIP2;5, showed the greatest increase in expression (up to 11- and 17-fold, respectively) in the mature zone, where they accounted for 50% of the total expressed ZmPIPs. The immunocytochemical localization of ZmPIP2;1 and ZmPIP2;5 in the exodermis and endodermis indicated that they are involved in root radial water movement. In addition, we detected a polar localization of ZmPIP2;5 to the external periclinal side of epidermal cells in root apices, suggesting an important role in water uptake from the root surface. Finally, protoplast swelling assays showed that root cells display a variable, but globally low, osmotic water permeability coefficient (P f < 10 μm/s). However, the presence of a population of cells with a higher P f (up to 26 μm/s) in mature zone of the root might be correlated with the increased expression of several ZmPIP genes.  相似文献   

16.
The effects of puncturing the endodermis of young maize roots (Zea mays L.) on their transport properties were measured using the root pressure probe. Small holes with a diameter of 18 to 60 [mu]m were created 70 to 90 mm from the tips of the roots by pushing fine glass tubes radially into them. Such wounds injured about 10-2 to 10-3% of the total surface area of the endodermis, which, in these hydroponically grown roots, had developed a Casparian band but no suberin lamellae. The small injury to the endodermis caused the original root pressure, which varied from 0.08 to 0.19 MPa, to decrease rapidly (half-time = 10-100 s) and substantially to a new steady-state value between 0.02 and 0.07 MPa. The radial hydraulic conductivity (Lpr) of control (uninjured) roots determined using hydrostatic pressure gradients as driving forces was larger by a factor of 10 than that determined using osmotic gradients (averages: Lpr [hydrostatic] = 2.7 x 10-7 m s-1 MPa-1; Lpr [osmotic] = 2.2 x 10-8 m s-1 MPa-1; osmotic solute: NaCl). Puncturing the endodermis did not result in measurable increases in hydraulic conductivities measured by either method. Thus, the endodermis was not rate-limiting root Lpr: apparently the hydraulic resistance of roots was more evenly distributed over the entire root tissue. However, puncturing the endodermis did substantially change the reflection ([sigma]sr) and permeability (Psr) coefficients of roots for NaCl, indicating that the endodermis represented a considerable barrier to the flow of nutrient ions. Values of [sigma]sr decreased from 0.64 to 0.41 (average) and Psr increased by a factor of 2.6, i.e. from 3.8 x 10-9 to 10.1 x 10.-9 m s-1(average). The roots recovered from puncturing after a time and regained root pressure. Measurable increases in root pressure became apparent as soon as 0.5 to 1 h after puncturing, and original or higher root pressures were attained 1.5 to 20 h after injury. However, after recovery roots often did not maintain a stable root pressure, and no further osmotic experiments could be performed with them. The Casparian band of the endodermis is discontinuous at the root tip, where the endodermis has not yet matured, and at sites of developing lateral roots. Measurements of the cross-sectional area of the apoplasmic bypass at the root tip yielded an area of 0.031% of the total surface area of the endodermis. An additional 0.049% was associated with lateral root primordia. These areas are larger than the artificial bypasses created by wounding in this study and may provide pathways for a "natural bypass flow" of water and solutes across the intact root. If there were such a pathway, either in these areas or across the Casparian band itself, roots would have to be treated as a system composed of two parallel pathways (a cell-to-cell and an apoplasmic path). It is demonstrated that this "composite transport model of the root" allows integration of several transport properties of roots that are otherwise difficult to understand, namely (a) the differences between osmotic and hydrostatic water flow, (b) the dependence of root hydraulic resistance on the driving force or water flow across the root, and (c) low reflection coefficients of roots.  相似文献   

17.
Lucifer Yellow (LYCH) and carboxyfluorescein (CF) served in Medicago truncatula roots and root nodules as the markers of apoplastic and symplastic transport, respectively. The aim of this study was to understand better the water and photoassimilate translocation pathways to and within nodules. The present study shows that in damaged roots LYCH moves apoplastically through the vascular elements but it was not detected within the nodule vascular bundles. In intact roots, the outer cortex was strongly labeled but the dye was not present in the interior of intact root nodules. The inwards movement of LYCH was halted in the endodermis. When the dye was introduced into a damaged nodule by infiltration, it spread only in the cell walls and the intercellular spaces up to the inner cortex. Our research showed that in addition to the outer cortex, the inner tissue containing bacteroid-infected cells is also an apoplastic domain. Our results are consistent with the hypothesis that nodules do not receive water from the xylem but get it and photoassimilates from phloem. A comparison between using LYCH and LYCH followed by glutaraldehyde fixation indicates that glutaraldehyde is responsible for fluorescence of some organelles within root nodule cells. The influence of the fixation on nodule fluorescence has not been reported before but must be taken into consideration to avoid errors. An attempt was made to follow carboxyfluorescein (6(5) CF) translocation from leaflets into roots and root nodules. In root nodules, CF was present in all or a couple of vascular bundles (VB), vascular endodermis and some adjacent cells. The leakage of CF from the VBs was observed, which suggests symplastic continuity between the VBs and the nodule parenchyma. The lack of CF in inner tissue was observed. Therefore, photoassimilate entry to the infected region of nodule must involve an apoplastic pathway.  相似文献   

18.
Transverse hydraulic redistribution by a grapevine   总被引:4,自引:0,他引:4  
Root hydraulic redistribution has been shown to occur in numerous plant species under both field and laboratory conditions. To date, such water redistribution has been demonstrated in two fundamental ways, either lifting water from deep edaphic sources to dry surface soils or redistributing water downward (reverse flow) when inverted soil Ψs gradients exist. The importance of hydraulic redistribution is not well documented in agricultural ecosystems under field conditions, and would be important because water availability can be temporally and spatially constrained. Herein we report that a North American grapevine hybrid (Vitis riparia × V. berlandieri cv 420 A) growing in an agricultural ecosystem can redistribute water from a restricted zone of available water under a drip irrigation emitter, laterally across the high resistance pathways of the trunk and into roots and soils on the non-irrigated side. Deuterium-labelled water was used to demonstrate lateral movement across the vine's trunk and reverse flow into roots. Water redistribution from the zone of available water and into roots distant from the source occurred within a relatively short time frame of 36 h, although overnight deposition into rhizosphere soils around the roots was not detected. Deuterium was eventually detected in rhizosphere soils adjacent to roots on the non-irrigated side after 7 d. Application of identical amounts of water with the same deuterium enrichment level (2%) to soils without grapevine roots showed that physical transport of water through the vapour phase could not account for either downward or transverse movement of the label. These results confirmed that root presence facilitated the transport of label into soils distant from the wetted zone. When deuterium-labelled water was allowed to flow directly into the trunk above the root–trunk interface, reverse flow occurred and lateral movement across the trunk and into roots originating around the collar region did not encounter large disproportionate resistances. Rapid redistribution of water into the entire root system may have important implications for woody perennial cultivars growing where water availability is spatially heterogeneous. Under the predominantly dry soil conditions studied in this investigation, water redistributed into roots may extend root longevity and increase the vines water capacitance during periods of high transpiration demand. These benefits would be enhanced by diminished water loss from roots, and could be equally important to other cited benefits of hydraulic redistribution into soils such as enhancement of nutrient acquisition.  相似文献   

19.

Main conclusion

MAX2/strigolactone signaling in the endodermis and/or quiescent center of the root is partiallysufficient to exert changes in F-actin density and cellular trafficking in the root epidermis, and alter gene expression during plant response to low Pi conditions.Strigolactones (SLs) are a new group of plant hormones that regulate different developmental processes in the plant via MAX2, an F-box protein that interacts with their receptor. SLs and MAX2 are necessary for the marked increase in root-hair (RH) density in seedlings under conditions of phosphate (Pi) deprivation. This marked elevation was associated with an active reduction in actin-filament density and endosomal movement in root epidermal cells. Also, expression of MAX2 under the SCARECROW (SCR) promoter was sufficient to confer SL sensitivity in roots, suggesting that SL signaling pathways act through a root-specific, yet non-cell-autonomous regulatory mode of action. Here we show evidence for a non-cell autonomous signaling of SL/MAX2, originating from the root endodermis, and necessary for seedling response to conditions of Pi deprivation. SCR-derived expression of MAX2 in max2-1 mutant background promoted the root low Pi response, whereas supplementation of the synthetic SL GR24 to these SCR:MAX2 expressing lines further enhanced this response. Moreover, the SCR:MAX2 expression led to changes in actin density and endosome movement in epidermal cells and in TIR1 and PHO2 gene expression. These results demonstrate that MAX2 signaling in the endodermis and/or quiescent center is partially sufficient to exert changes in F-actin density and cellular trafficking in the epidermis, and alter gene expression under low Pi conditions.
  相似文献   

20.
This study investigated aerenchyma formation and function in adventitious roots of wheat (Triticum aestivum L.) when only a part of the root system was exposed to O2 deficiency. Two experimental systems were used: (1) plants in soil waterlogged at 200 mm below the surface; or (2) a nutrient solution system with only the apical region of a single root exposed to deoxygenated stagnant agar solution with the remainder of the root system in aerated nutrient solution. Porosity increased two‐ to three‐fold along the entire length of the adventitious roots that grew into the water‐saturated zone 200 mm below the soil surface, and also increased in roots that grew in the aerobic soil above the water‐saturated zone. Likewise, adventitious roots with only the tips growing into deoxygenated stagnant agar solution developed aerenchyma along the entire main axis. Measurements of radial O2 loss (ROL), taken using root‐sleeving O2 electrodes, showed this aerenchyma was functional in conducting O2. The ROL measured near tips of intact roots in deoxygenated stagnant agar solution, while the basal part of the root remained in aerated solution, was sustained when the atmosphere around the shoot was replaced by N2. This illustrates the importance of O2 diffusion into the basal regions of roots within an aerobic zone, and the subsequent longitudinal movement of O2 within the aerenchyma, to supply O2 to the tip growing in an O2 deficient zone.  相似文献   

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