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1.
The metal micronutrients (MN) copper, iron, manganese, and zinc are transported via the phloem in the course of remobilization and circulation. The extent of these processes and transport species are still largely unknown. The Ricinus seedling was used to study the transport of these metal micronutrients as well as their interactions with the plant-endogenous chelator nicotianamine (NA) by daily measurements of the concentrations in the seedling parts and in the sieve tube sap obtained from a cut at the hypocotyl hook. The concentrations of these micronutrients in the phloem exudate decreased slightly from day 4 to day 8 of seedling development. Maximum values at day 4 were 65 μM for Zn, 63 μM for Fe, 27 μM for Cu, and 12 μM for Mn. The phloem transport rates reached maxima of 0.12 nmol cm?2h?1 for Zn and Fe at days 6 and 7, corresponding to the maximum exudation rates. The magnitude of these transport rates were in agreement with the net translocation rates estimated by analyses of the concentrations in the individual seedling parts. The NA content of the seedlings increased from day 0 (seed before sowing) until day 8, from 16 nmol to 474 nmol, which corresponds to an average net synthesis rate of about 100 nmol day?1 between the days 4 and 8. The NA:MN ratio was constant at 0.5 in the seedlings within this period. The NA concentrations and the sum of the concentrations of all four micronutrients in the sieve tube sap showed a constant ratio of 1.25 over the entire experimental period. Thus, both complex partners were subject to a cotransport in the phloem. Removal of the supplying endosperm led to a decrease in MN and NA concentrations in the sieve tube sap to about 80% while an average excess of NA of 1.1 was maintained. Since the concentrations of other amino acids, also possible chelators of metal micronutrients, fall to about 10% after removal of the endosperm, their role seems to be negligible as vehicles of MN transport in the phloem. Thus it is suggested that the divalent micronutrients considered in this study are loaded and maybe transported as NA complexes.  相似文献   

2.
Levels of free tryptophan in the leaves, phloem and xylem saps of Ricinus communis L. were determined by colorimetric assay. Values of 0.38 g ml-1 in root pressure sap and 96.0 g ml-1 in phloem sap were recorded. Tryptophan levels were highest in mature and senescing leaves. Levels of indoleacetic acid (IAA) in the phloem sap and leaves were determined by gas chromatography—mass spectrometry using a deuterated internal standard. A mean value of 13.0 ng ml-1 was recorded in phloem sap. The distribution in the leaves showed an inverse relationship to that of tryptophan, being highest in young leaves.Abbreviations IAA indoleacetic acid - GC-MS Gas chromatography-mass spectrometry - PFP-derivative pentafluoropropionyl-derivative - TLC thin layer chromatography  相似文献   

3.
On the mechanisms of nectar secretion: revisited   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  

Background and Scope

Models of nectar formation and exudation in multilayered nectaries with modified stomata or permeable cuticle are evaluated. In the current symplasmic model the pre-nectar moves from terminal phloem through the symplasm into the apoplasm (cell walls and intercellular spaces) with nectar formation by either granulocrine or eccrine secretion and its diffusion outwards. It is concluded, however, that no secretory granules are actually produced by the endoplasmic reticulum, and that secretory Golgi vesicles are not involved in the transport of nectar sugar. Therefore, the concept of granulocrine secretion of nectar should be discarded. The specific function of the endomembrane system in nectary cells remains unknown. According to the apoplasmic model, the pre-nectar moves from the terminal phloem in the apoplasm and, on the way, is transformed from phloem sap into nectar. However, viewed ultrastructurally, the unloading (terminal) phloem of nectaries appears to be less active than that of the leaf minor veins, and is therefore not actively involved in the secretion of pre-nectar components into the apoplasm. This invalidates the apoplasmic model. Neither model provides an explanation for the origin of the driving force for nectar discharge.

Proposal

A new model is proposed in which nectar moves by a pressure-driven mass flow in the nectary apoplasm while pre-nectar sugars diffuse from the sieve tubes through the symplasm to the secretory cells, where nectar is formed and sugars cross the plasma membrane by active transport (‘eccrine secretion’). The pressure originates as the result of water influx in the apoplasm from the symplasm along the sugar concentration gradient. It follows from this model that there can be no combinations of apoplasmic and symplasmic pre-nectar movements. The mass-flow mechanism of nectar exudation appears to be universal and applicable to all nectaries irrespective of their type, morphology and anatomy, presence or absence of modified stomata, and their own vascular system.  相似文献   

4.
A quantitative physicochemical approach to ion relations of biological solutions is presented, which applied fundamental laws of physical chemistry to these systems and allows analysis of dependent variables ([H+], [OH-] and the dissociation state of partially dissociated ('weak') ions including carbonate species) in relation to independent variables (concentrations of strong and weak ions, dissociation constants and CO2 partial pressure). Within this concept the influence of strong (fully dissociated) ions is confined to their net unbalanced positive charge which is referred to as SID (strong ion difference). The SID concept is then applied to membrane transport processes and ion relations of xylem and phloem sap: simple transmembrane transport of protons between compartments cannot affect pH on either side of the membrane, because rather small deviations from electrical neutrality results in substantial changes of the membrane potential under natural conditions. Thus the membrane ATPases as electrogenic pumps cannot control the pH of adjacent compartments, but they energize secondary active transmembrane ion transport that results in pH changes. The SID approach is shown to be valid by matching pH values calculated from analysis of xylem and phloem saps with actual measured values. Sensitivity analysis based on the SID approach allows (1) to detect inconsistency in determination of composition in the analysed solutions and (2) quantitatively to analyse the influence of ion export or import and variations of pCO2 on pH and dissociation state of weak acids of complex biological solutions. The SID concept thus allows the evaluation of the contribution of a proposed pH-regulating or pH-affecting mechanism on a quantitative physicochemical basis.Key words: Electrical neutrality, membrane potential, pH regulation, phloem sap, SID, xylem sap.   相似文献   

5.
Gabriele Orlich  Ewald Komor 《Planta》1992,187(4):460-474
Ricinus communis cv. Carmencita seedlings with their cotyledons incubated in sucrose solution and their hypocotyls cut to induce exudation of phloem sap, constitute a system of sucrose fluxes into and out of the cotyledons. This system was characterized with respect to quasi-steady-state conditions of sucrose uptake and export and then used to investigate the pathways of sucrose during phloem loading. The redistribution of 14C-labelled internal sucrose between the three compartments, cotyledons (mesophyll), exudate (sieve tubes) and incubation medium (cell-wall space), was measured in the presence or absence of external nonlabelled sucrose. It was found that mesophyll-derived labelled and external sucrose compete at uptake sites in the apoplasm. On the basis of the specific radioactivity of sucrose which reflects the proportionate intermixture of mesophyll-derived and external sucrose in the three compartments, it was determined that about 50% of the sucrose exported is loaded directly from the apoplasm, while the other half takes the route via the mesophyll. It was confirmed that mesophyll-derived sucrose is released into the apoplasm, so that the existence of an indirect apoplasmic loading pathway is established. Calculations depending on the concentration gradients of labelled and non-labelled sucrose in the cell-wall space are presented to quantify tentatively the proportions of direct and indirect apoplasmic as well as symplasmic loading.This work was supported by the Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft (SFB 137). We thank Walter Köckenberger and Ernst Steudle (Bayreuth, FRG) for discussions on the water flow in the exuding Ricinus seedling, and Dietrich Samoray (Bayreuth, FRG) for the conceptual discussions throughout this work.  相似文献   

6.
Plant species which translocate distinct combinations of carbohydrates in the phloem were investigated to assess whether differences in minor-vein anatomy were associated with differences in carbohydrate composition of the phloem sap. In Vicia faba L., a species in which the minor-vein companion cells are modified into transfer cells, sucrose alone was found to be the translocated form of carbohydrate. In Vicia, phloem transport of sucrose was inhibited by pretreatment of leaves with p-chloromercuribenzenesulfonic acid (PCMBS), a known inhibitor of the sucrose carrier. In contrast, in Ocimum basilicum L., a species in which the minor-vein companion cells are of the symplasmically linked intermediary cell type, both sucrose- and raffinose-family oligosaccharides were exported in the phloem. In this species, no PCMBS sensitivity was observed for phloem transport of either sucrose- or raffinose-family oligosaccharides, although a PCMBS-sensitive sucrose carrier was detected in leaf tissues. This carrier did not appear to be involved in phloem loading, rather, it appeared that phloem loading occurred via the symplasm in this species. In the polyoltranslocating species Petroselinum crispum L., the same insensitivity to PCMBS was seen, suggesting that symplasmic phloem loading also occurred. The companion cells were symplasmically connected to the surrounding bundle-sheath cells by numerous H-shaped plasmodesmata but were not intermediary cells, and no raffinose oligosaccharides were exported by Petroselinum. Taken together, the data indicate that apoplasmic transport may be responsible for phloem loading in species in which sucrose alone is exported. However, in those plant species in which a combination of sucrose and any other carbohydrate, including the polyols, is translocated, symplasmic phloem loading may predominate.Abbreviation PCMBS p-chloromercuribenzenesulfonic acid This work was supported by National Science Foundation Grant DCB 8901785 to M.A.M. and by a National Science Foundation Graduate Minority Fellowship to L.L.F. The authors gratefully acknowledge the help of Dr. William W. Thomson in preparing the micrograph.  相似文献   

7.
Nicotianamine: mediator of transport of iron and heavy metals in the phloem?   总被引:18,自引:0,他引:18  
Recent work has demonstrated that minerals in plants are circulated between root and shoot. This occurs during the whole life time and renders possible response to changing environmental conditions. This mineral circulation occurs through intensive solute exchange between xylem and phloem in roots, stems, and leaves. The transport form of heavy metals such as iron, manganes, zinc and copper in the phloem, whether ionic or chelated, is unclear in most cases.
The unusual amino acid nicotianamine (NA) is ubiquitous throughout the plant kingdom. It is a chelator of several divalent transition metals. Its physiological role was investigated with the tomato mutant chloronerva, the only known NA-free multicellular plant. The mutant also exhibits disturbances of its iron metabolism and that of other heavy metals. This leads, among others, to a typical intercostal chlorosis and progressive iron accumulation in the leaves. From the heavy metal chelating properties of NA and from the phenotype of the mutant chloronerva it is concluded that NA is needed for normal distribution of heavy metals in young growing tissues fed via the phloem. This function could be fulfilled by mediating phloem loading or unloading of heavy metals as well as by preventing their precipitation in the alkaline phloem sap. An attempt is made to explain the chloronerva phenotype in the light of the phloem transport hypothesis of chelated iron.  相似文献   

8.
Liao  M. T.  Hedley  M. J.  Woolley  D. J.  Brooks  R. R  Nichols  M. A. 《Plant and Soil》2000,223(1-2):245-254
The effect of rooting media Cu concentration (0.05–20 mg Cu L-1) on amino acid concentrations and copper speciation in the xylem sap of chicory and tomato plants was measured using 6 week old plants grown in a nutrient film technique system (NFT). Irrespective of the Cu concentration in the nutrient solutions, more than 99.68% and 99.74% of total Cu in tomato and chicory xylem sap was in a bound form. When exposed to high Cu concentrations in the rooting media, amino acid concentrations in the sap increased. Relative to other amino acids, the concentrations of glutamine (Gln), histidine (His), asparagine (Asn), valine (Val), nicotianamine (NA) and proline (Pro) in tomato xylem saps, and His, γ-aminobutyric acid (Gaba), glutamic acid (Glu), leucine (Leu), NA and phenylalanine (Phe) in chicory xylem saps showed the greatest increases. The data indicate that induced synthesis of some free amino acids as a specific and proportional response to Cu treatment. For a single complexation amino acid, the solution Cu2+concentration vs pH titration curve for NA at 0.06–0.07 mM was most similar, closely followed by His at 0.5–0.6 mM, to the solution Cu2+concentration behaviour in both tomato and chicory xylem sap. It is concluded that increased Cu concentrations in the rooting media induced selective synthesis of certain amino acid which include NA, His, Asn and Gln which have high stability constants with Cu. NA and His have the highest binding constants for Cu and the concentrations of NA and His in chicory and tomato xylem saps can account for all the bound Cu carried in the sap. This revised version was published online in June 2006 with corrections to the Cover Date.  相似文献   

9.
10.
Phloem loading and unloading of sugars and amino acids   总被引:24,自引:2,他引:22  
In terrestrial higher plants, phloem transport delivers most nutrients required for growth and storage processes. Some 90% of plant biomass, transported as sugars and amino nitrogen (N) compounds in a bulk flow of solution, is propelled though the phloem by osmotically generated hydrostatic pressure differences between source (net nutrient export) and sink (net nutrient import) ends of phloem paths. Source loading and sink unloading of sugars, amino N compounds and potassium largely account for phloem sap osmotic concentrations and hence pressure differences. A symplasmic component is characteristic of most loading and unloading pathways which, in some circumstances, may be interrupted by an apoplasmic step. Raffinose series sugars appear to be loaded symplasmically. However, sucrose, and probably certain amino acids, are loaded into minor veins from source leaf apoplasms by proton symporters localized to plasma membranes of their sieve element/companion cell (se/cc) complexes. Sucrose transporters, with complementary kinetic properties, are conceived to function as membrane transporter complexes that respond to alterations in source/sink balance. In contrast, symplasmic unloading is common for many sink types. Intervention of an apoplasmic step, distal from importing phloem, is reserved for special situations. Effluxers that release sucrose and amino acids to the surrounding apoplasm in phloem loading and unloading are yet to be cloned. The physiological behaviour of effluxers is consistent with facilitated membrane transport that can be energy coupled. Roles of sucrose and amino acid transporters in phloem unloading remain to be discovered along with mechanisms regulating symplasmic transport. The latter is hypothesized to exert significant control over phloem unloading and, in some circumstances, phloem loading.  相似文献   

11.
Nicotianamine (NA) occurs in all plants and chelates metal cations, including FeII, but reportedly not FeIII. However, a comparison of the FeII and ZnII affinity constants of NA and various FeIII-chelating aminocarboxylates suggested that NA should chelate FeIII. High-voltage electrophoresis of the FeNA complex formed in the presence of FeIII showed that the complex had a net charge of 0, consistent with the hexadentate chelation of FeIII. Measurement of the affinity constant for FeIII yielded a value of 1020.6, which is greater than that for the association of NA with FeII (1012.8). However, capillary electrophoresis showed that in the presence of FeII and FeIII, NA preferentially chelates FeII, indicating that the FeIINA complex is kinetically stable under aerobic conditions. Furthermore, Fe complexes of NA are relatively poor Fenton reagents, as measured by their ability to mediate H2O2-dependent oxidation of deoxyribose. This suggests that NA will have an important role in scavenging Fe and protecting the cell from oxidative damage. The pH dependence of metal ion chelation by NA and a typical phytosiderophore, 2′-deoxymugineic acid, indicated that although both have the ability to chelate Fe, when both are present, 2′-deoxymugineic acid dominates the chelation process at acidic pH values, whereas NA dominates at alkaline pH values. The consequences for the role of NA in the long-distance transport of metals in the xylem and phloem are discussed.  相似文献   

12.
Sink regions play a central role in determining assimilate distribution patterns. Two factors are discussed which have a strong effect on the sink strength of a sink, viz. phloem unloading and turgor-sensitive transport. Sink strength may be defined as the capacity of phloem in the sink region to import assimilates from other parts of the plants and to release the imported substances into the sink apoplast.A stem parasitized by Cuscuta represents a very strong sink. A review is presented of data on enhanced phloem unloading, at the site of attachment of Custuta. Recent data on metabolically controlled sucrose and amino acid unloading into the seed coat apoplast of developing legume seeds show a remarkable parallel with phloem unloading in a parasitized Vicia faba stem. Data on turgor-sensitive sucrose and amino acid transport into developing seeds are presented, which throw new light on the pressure flow theory of phloem transport.  相似文献   

13.

Background

Floral nectar contains sugars and amino acids to attract pollinators. In addition, nectar also contains different secondary compounds, but little is understood about their origin or function. Does nectar composition reflect phloem composition, or is nectar synthesized and/or modified in nectaries? Studies where both, the nectar as well as the phloem sap taken from the same plant species were analyzed in parallel are rare. Therefore, phloem sap and nectar from different plant species (Maurandya barclayana, Lophospermum erubescens, and Brassica napus) were compared.

Methodology and Principal Findings

Nectar was collected with microcapillary tubes and phloem sap with the laser-aphid-stylet technique. The nectar of all three plant species contained high amounts of sugars with different percentages of glucose, fructose, and sucrose, whereas phloem sap sugars consisted almost exclusively of sucrose. One possible reason for this could be the activity of invertases in the nectaries. The total concentration of amino acids was much lower in nectars than in phloem sap, indicating selective retention of nitrogenous solutes during nectar formation. Nectar amino acid concentrations were negatively correlated with the nectar volumes per flower of the different plant species. Both members of the tribe Antirrhineae (Plantaginaceae) M. barclayana and L. erubescens synthesized the iridoid glycoside antirrhinoside. High amounts of antirrhinoside were found in the phloem sap and lower amounts in the nectar of both plant species.

Conclusions/Significance

The parallel analyses of nectar and phloem sap have shown that all metabolites which were found in nectar were also detectable in phloem sap with the exception of hexoses. Otherwise, the composition of both aqueous solutions was not the same. The concentration of several metabolites was lower in nectar than in phloem sap indicating selective retention of some metabolites. Furthermore, the existence of antirrhinoside in nectar could be based on passive secretion from the phloem.  相似文献   

14.
Comparisons were made between the free amino acid composition in leaf exudates and that in pure phloem sap, using twin samples taken from a single leaf of two oat (Avena sativa L.) and three barley (Hordeum vulgare L.) varieties. Leaf exudate was collected in a 5 mm EDTA-solution (pH 7.0) from cut leaf blades and phloem sap was obtained through excised aphid (Rhopalosiphum padi L.) stylets. Fluorescent derivatives of amino acids were obtained using 9-fluorenylmethyl chloroformate and were separated by means of high performance liquid chromatography. The total concentration of free amino acids varied considerably in the exudate samples. There was no correlation between the total amino acid content in the exudate samples and that of the corresponding phloem sap samples, but the amino acid composition of the corresponding samples was highly correlated (median R2-value 0.848). There was only limited between-plant variation in phloem sap amino acid composition. Nevertheless, in comparisons involving all samples, many of the amino acids showed significant correlations between their relative amounts in exudate and phloem sap. The results presented here indicate that the exudate technique holds great promise as an interesting alternative to the laborious and time-consuming stylet-cutting technique of obtaining samples for comparative studies of phloem sap.  相似文献   

15.
Phytochelatins (PCs) are glutathione-derived peptides that function in heavy metal detoxification in plants and certain fungi. Recent research in Arabidopsis has shown that PCs undergo long-distance transport between roots and shoots. However, it remains unknown which tissues or vascular systems, xylem or phloem, mediate PC translocation and whether PC transport contributes to physiologically relevant long-distance transport of cadmium (Cd) between shoots and roots. To address these questions, xylem and phloem sap were obtained from Brassica napus to quantitatively analyze which thiol species are present in response to Cd exposure. High levels of PCs were identified in the phloem sap within 24 h of Cd exposure using combined mass spectrometry and fluorescence HPLC analyses. Unexpectedly, the concentration of Cd was more than four-fold higher in phloem sap compared to xylem sap. Cadmium exposure dramatically decreased iron levels in xylem and phloem sap whereas other essential heavy metals such as zinc and manganese remained unchanged. Data suggest that Cd inhibits vascular loading of iron but not nicotianamine. The high ratios [PCs]/[Cd] and [glutathione]/[Cd] in the phloem sap suggest that PCs and glutathione (GSH) can function as long-distance carriers of Cd. In contrast, only traces of PCs were detected in xylem sap. Our results suggest that, in addition to directional xylem Cd transport, the phloem is a major vascular system for long-distance source to sink transport of Cd as PC–Cd and glutathione–Cd complexes.  相似文献   

16.
Drought stress impacts the quality and yield of Pisum sativum. Here, we show how short periods of limited water availability during the vegetative stage of pea alters phloem sap content and how these changes are connected to strategies used by plants to cope with water deficit. We have investigated the metabolic content of phloem sap exudates and explored how this reflects P. sativum physiological and developmental responses to drought. Our data show that drought is accompanied by phloem-mediated redirection of the components that are necessary for cellular respiration and the proper maintenance of carbon/nitrogen balance during stress. The metabolic content of phloem sap reveals a shift from anabolic to catabolic processes as well as the developmental plasticity of P. sativum plants subjected to drought. Our study underlines the importance of phloem-mediated transport for plant adaptation to unfavourable environmental conditions. We also show that phloem exudate analysis can be used as a useful proxy to study stress responses in plants. We propose that the decrease in oleic acid content within phloem sap could be considered as a potential marker of early signalling events mediating drought response.  相似文献   

17.
How arsenic (As) is transported in phloem remains unknown. To help answer this question, we quantified the chemical species of As in phloem and xylem exudates of castor bean (Ricinus communis) exposed to arsenate [As(V)], arsenite [As(III)], monomethylarsonic acid [MMA(V)], or dimethylarsinic acid. In the As(V)- and As(III)-exposed plants, As(V) was the main species in xylem exudate (55%–83%) whereas As(III) predominated in phloem exudate (70%–94%). The ratio of As concentrations in phloem to xylem exudate varied from 0.7 to 3.9. Analyses of phloem exudate using high-resolution inductively coupled plasma-mass spectrometry and accurate mass electrospray mass spectrometry coupled to high-performance liquid chromatography identified high concentrations of reduced and oxidized glutathione and some oxidized phytochelatin, but no As(III)-thiol complexes. It is thought that As(III)-thiol complexes would not be stable in the alkaline conditions of phloem sap. Small concentrations of oxidized glutathione and oxidized phytochelatin were found in xylem exudate, where there was also no evidence of As(III)-thiol complexes. MMA(V) was partially reduced to MMA(III) in roots, but only MMA(V) was found in xylem and phloem exudate. Despite the smallest uptake among the four As species supplied to plants, dimethylarsinic acid was most efficiently transported in both xylem and phloem, and its phloem concentration was 3.2 times that in xylem. Our results show that free inorganic As, mainly As(III), was transported in the phloem of castor bean exposed to either As(V) or As(III), and that methylated As species were more mobile than inorganic As in the phloem.Arsenic (As) is an environmental and food chain contaminant that has attracted much attention in recent years. Soil contamination with As may lead to phytotoxicity and reduced crop yield (Panaullah et al., 2009). Food crops are also an important source of inorganic As, a class-one carcinogen, in human dietary intake, and there is a need to decrease the exposure to this toxin (European Food Safety Authority, 2009). Paddy rice (Oryza sativa) is particularly efficient in As accumulation, which poses a potential risk to the population based on a rice diet (Meharg et al., 2009; Zhao et al., 2010a). Other terrestrial food crops generally do not accumulate as much As as paddy rice; however, where soils are contaminated, relatively high concentrations of As in wheat (Triticum aestivum) grain have been reported (Williams et al., 2007; Zhao et al., 2010b). On the other hand, some fern species in the Pteridaceae family are able to tolerate and hyperaccumulate As in the aboveground part to >1,000 mg kg−1 dry weight (e.g. Ma et al., 2001; Zhao et al., 2002); these plants offer the possibility for remediation of As-contaminated soil or water (Salido et al., 2003; Huang et al., 2004). A better understanding of As uptake and long-distance transport, metabolism, and detoxification is needed for developing strategies for mitigating As contamination, through either decreased As accumulation in food crops or enhanced As accumulation for phytoremediation.The pathways of As uptake by plant roots differ between different As species; arsenate [As(V)] enters plant cells via phosphate transporters, whereas arsenite [As(III)] is taken up via some aquaporins (for review, see Zhao et al., 2009). In rice, a silicic acid efflux protein also mediates As(III) efflux toward stele for xylem loading (Ma et al., 2008). Methylated As species, such as monomethylarsonic acid [MMA(V)] and dimethylarsinic acid [DMA(V)], which may be present in the environment as products of microbial or algal methylation of inorganic As or from past uses of methylated As pesticides, are taken up by rice roots partly through the aquaporin NIP2;1 (for nodulin 26-like intrinsic protein; also named Lsi1; Li et al., 2009). Once inside plant cells, As(V) is reduced to As(III), possibly catalyzed by As(V) reductase(s) such as the plant homologs of the yeast (Saccharomyces cerevisiae) ACR2 (Bleeker et al., 2006; Dhankher et al., 2006; Ellis et al., 2006; Duan et al., 2007). As(III) has a high affinity to thiol (-SH) groups and is detoxified by complexation with thiol-rich phytochelatins (PCs; Pickering et al., 2000; Schmöger et al., 2000; Raab et al., 2005; Bluemlein et al., 2009; Liu et al., 2010). As(III)-PC complexation in roots was found to result in reduced mobility for efflux and for long-distance transport, possibly because the complexes are stored in the vacuoles (Liu et al., 2010). Excess As(III) causes cellular toxicity by binding to the vicinal thiol groups of enzymes, such as the plastidial lipoamide dehydrogenase, which has been shown to be a sensitive target of As toxicity (Chen et al., 2010). The As hyperaccumulating Pteris species differ from nonhyperaccumulating plants because of enhanced As(V) uptake (Wang et al., 2002; Poynton et al., 2004), little As(III)-thiol complexation (Zhao et al., 2003; Raab et al., 2004), and efficient xylem loading of As(III) (Su et al., 2008). Recently, an As(III) efflux transporter, PvACR3, has been found to play an important role in As(III) detoxification by transporting As(III) into vacuoles in Pteris vittata (Indriolo et al., 2010).With the exception of As hyperaccumulators, most plant species have a limited root-to-shoot translocation of As (Zhao et al., 2009). The chemical species of As in xylem exudate have been determined in a number of plant species. As(III) was found to be the predominant species (80%–100%) in the xylem sap of rice, tomato (Solanum lycopersicum), cucumber (Cucumis sativus), and P. vittata even when these plants were fed As(V) (Mihucz et al., 2005; Xu et al., 2007; Ma et al., 2008; Su et al., 2010), suggesting that As(V) is reduced in roots before being loaded into the xylem. In other plant species, such as Brassica juncea (Pickering et al., 2000), wheat, and barley (Hordeum vulgare; Su et al., 2010), As(V) accounted for larger proportions (40%–50%) of the total As in the xylem sap. Studies using HPLC-inductively coupled plasma (ICP)-mass spectrometry (MS) coupled with electrospray (ES)-MS showed no evidence of As(III)-thiol complexation in the xylem sap of sunflower (Helianthus annuus; Raab et al., 2005). When rice plants were exposed to MMA(V) or DMA(V), both As species were found in the xylem sap (Li et al., 2009). Generally, methylated As species are taken up by roots at slower rates than inorganic As, but they are more mobile during the xylem transport from roots to shoots (Marin et al., 1992; Raab et al., 2007; Li et al., 2009).It has been shown that phloem transport contributes substantially to As accumulation in rice grain (Carey et al., 2010). However, little is known about how As is transported in phloem (Zhao et al., 2009). There are no reports on the chemical species of As in phloem exudate. The speciation of As in phloem is important because it dictates how As is loaded in the source tissues and unloaded in the sink tissues, such as grain. Questions with regard to the oxidation state, methylation, and complexation of As in phloem sap remain to be answered. Unlike xylem sap, phloem sap is much more difficult to obtain in sufficient quantities for analysis. In this study, we investigated As speciation in phloem and xylem exudates of castor bean (Ricinus communis), which is widely used as a model plant to investigate phloem transport of solutes (e.g. Hall et al., 1971; Hall and Baker, 1972; Allen and Smith, 1986; Bromilow et al., 1987).  相似文献   

18.
Summary Comparisons were made of the levels of various solutes in xylem (tracheal) sap and fruit tip phloem sap of Lupinus albus (L.) and Spartium junceum (L.). Sucrose was present at high concentration (up to 220 mg ml-1) in phloem but was absent from xylem whereas nitrate was detected in xylem (up to 0.14 mg ml-1) but not in phloem. Total amino acids reached 0.5–2.5 mg ml-1 (in xylem) versus 16–40 mg ml-1 in phloem. Phloem: xylem concentration ratios for mineral nutrients (K, Na, Mg, Ca, Fe, Zn, Mn, Cu) spanned the range 0.7 to 20, the ratios generally reflecting an element's phloem mobility and its availability to the xylem from the roots.The accessibility of nitrate to xylem and phloem was studied in Lupinus. Increasing the nitrate supply to roots from 100 to 1000 mg NO3–Nl-1 increased nitrate spill over into xylem, but nitrate always failed to appear in phloem. However, phloem loading of small amounts of nitrate was induced by feeding 750 or 1000 mg NO3–Nl-1 directly to cut shoots via the transpiration stream. Transfer of reduced nitrogen to phloem was demonstrated by feeding 15NO3 to shoots and recovering 15N-enriched amides and amino acids in phloem sap. Increased nitrate supply to roots led to increased amino acid levels in xylem and phloem but did not alter markedly the balance between individual amino acids.The fate of xylem-fed 14C-labelled asparagine, glutamine and aspartic acid and of photosynthetically fed 14CO2 was studied in Spartium, with reference to phloem transport to seeds. Substantial fractions of the 14C of all sources appeared in non-amino compounds. [14C]asparagine passed largely in unchanged form to the phloem whereas the 14C from aspartic acid or glutamine appeared in phloem attached to other amino acids (e.g. asparagine and glutamic acid). Serine, asparagine and glutamine were the main amino compounds labelled in phloem sap after feeding 14CO2. The wide distribution of 14C amongst free and bound amino acids of seeds suggested that extensive metabolism of phloem-borne solutes occurred in the fruits.  相似文献   

19.
Heike Nowak  Ewald Komor 《Oecologia》2010,163(4):973-984
Leaf-chewing herbivores select food with a protein/carbohydrate ratio of 0.8–1.5, whereas phloem sap, which aphids feed on, has a ratio of ~0.1. Enhanced N fertilization increases the amino acid concentration in phloem sap and elevates the N/C ratio. The study examines: (1) whether aphids select between plants of different N nutrition, (2) whether feeding time correlates with the amino acid composition of phloem sap, and (3) at which stage of probing aphids identify the quality of the plant. Uroleucon tanaceti (Mordvilko) and Macrosiphoniella tanacetaria (Kaltenbach), specialist aphids feeding on tansy (Tanacetum vulgare L.), were reared on this host plant grown essentially hydroponically (in Vermiculite) in the greenhouse on 1, 3, 6, or 12 mM NH4NO3. One and 3 mM NH4NO3 corresponds to the situation found in natural tansy stands. Aphid stylet penetration was monitored by electrical penetration graphs whilst phloem sap was sampled by stylectomy. Both aphid species settled 2–3 times more frequently on plants fertilized with 6 or 12 mM NH4NO3. The phloem sap of these plants contained up to threefold higher amino acid concentrations, without a change in the proportion of essential amino acids. No time differences were observed before stylet penetration of plant tissue. After the first symplast contact, most aphids penetrated further, except M. tanacetaria on low-N plants, where 50% withdrew the stylet after the first probing. The duration of phloem feeding was 2–3 times longer in N-rich plants and the time spent in individual sieve tubes was up to tenfold longer. Aphids identified the nutritional quality of the host plant mainly by the amino acid concentration of phloem sap, not by leaf surface cues nor the proportion of essential amino acids. However, U. tanaceti infestation increased the percentage of methionine plus tryptophan in phloem tenfold, thus manipulating the plants nutritional quality, and causing premature leaf senescence.  相似文献   

20.
The apoplasmic and symplasmic iron pools were determined in roots and leaves of Lycopersicon esculentum Mill. cv. Bonner Beste and its mutant chloronerva. The mutant is auxotrophic for the ubiquitous plant constituent nicotianamine (NA) and exhibits an impaired iron metabolism. Formation of apoplasmic iron pools in roots was dependent on the iron source in the nutrient solution. With Fe-ethylenediaminedi-(2-hydroxyphenylacetate) (FeEDDHA) only a very small apoplasmic iron pool was formed in the roots of both genotypes. Plants grown with FeEDTA increased their apoplasmic iron pool with increasing exogenous iron concentrations in the nutrient solution. The size of the apoplasmic pools in roots did not differ between the wild-type and the mutant (about 85 mol Fe · g–1 DW). By contrast, the symplasmic iron concentrations in roots and leaves of the mutant were significantly higher when compared to the wild-type. An exogenous NA supply to the leaves of the mutant reduced the high symplasmic iron concentrations to the level of the wild-type. Mutant leaves exhibited a gradient of symplasmic iron concentrations depending on the developmental age of the leaves. The oldest leaves contained considerably more symplasmic iron than the youngest. The results demonstrate that the apparent iron deficiency of the mutant is not the consequence of an impaired iron transport from the apoplasm to the symplasm. Therefore, it is concluded that NA is not required for the transport of Fe(II) through the plasmalemma into the cell.Abbreviations BPDS bathophenanthroline disulfonic acid, Na2 salt - FeEDDHA ferric N-N-ethylenediaminedi-(2-hydroxy-phenylacetate) - NA nicotianamine Part 40 in the series The normalizing factor for the tomato mutant chloronerva. For part 39 see Pich et al. (1991)The valuable technical assistance of Mrs. Christa Kallas and Mr. Günter Faupel is gratefully acknowledged.  相似文献   

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