首页 | 本学科首页   官方微博 | 高级检索  
相似文献
 共查询到20条相似文献,搜索用时 15 毫秒
1.
Geotropic Curvatures in Roots of Cress (Lepidium sativum)   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
Roots of cress growing between two agar slices develop an asymmetry in the extreme root tip region after 10 to 20 min of horizontal stimulation. After prolonged stimulation (exceeding 50 min) the asymmetry disappears and after 3 h the curvature is distributed over the entire growing region. The course of the initial stages in the geotropic curvature has been followed by light microscopy and scanning electron microscopy. — When stimulated at an angle of 135° with the gravitational force, the asymmetry in the root tip is clearly visible after 10 min of stimulation. The asymmetry in the root cap can be explained by a difference in the elongation rate of the epidermal cells on the upper and lower sides of the stimulated root. The disappearance of the asymmetry is followed by a second phase in which there is a differential growth of the cortical cells on the two sides of the elongation zone. The average growth rate of cells in the upper half of the apical region during the first 50 min of continuous stimulation is 1.5 μm per min, while the elongation rate of the entire root is 16.2 μm per min. Only small modifications in the elongation rates were observed when stimulated and unstimulated roots were rotated parallel to the horizontal axis of a klinostat at 2 rpm. The ultimate curvature developed after 50 min is unaffected by stimulation times exceeding the reaction time which for cress roots has been found to be about 5 min. The two phases in the development of geotropic curvature are discussed in view of the statolith theory.  相似文献   

2.
The movement of auxin in Phaseolus vulgaris roots has been examined after injection of IAA?3H into the basal root/hypocotyl region of intact, dark-grown seedlings. Only a portion of the applied IAA?3H was transported unchanged to the root tip. The major part of the chromatographed, labelled compounds translocated to the roots was indole-3-acetylaspartic acid (IAAsp) and an unidentified compound running near the front in isopropanol, ammonia, water. The velocity of the auxin transport (7.2 mm per hour) was calculated from scintillation countings of methanol extracts from serial sections of the root. An accumulation of radioactive compounds in the extreme root tip, was observed 5 h after the injection of IAA. The influence of exogenous IAA on the geotropical behaviour of the bean seedling roots was examined. Pretreated roots were stimulated for 5 min in the horizontal position and then rotated parallel to the horizontal axis of the klinostat for 60 or 90 min. The resulting geotropic curvature of IAA-injected and control roots showed significantly different patterns of development. When the stimulation was started 5 h after application of the auxin, the geotropic curvature became larger in roots of the injected plants than in the controls. If, however, the translocation period was extended to 20 h the geotropic curvature was significantly smaller in the roots of the injected plants. The auxin injection did not significally affect the rate of root elongation. The change in geotropical behaviour of the roots is interpreted as a result of the influence of the conversion products of the applied IAA on the geotropical responsiveness.  相似文献   

3.
Seedlings of Norway spruce (Picea abies L.) have been found to synthesize anthocyanins in the root tips as well as in the hypocotyls upon irradiation with white light when kept at 4°C for 6–8 days. In addition, it has also been found that the elongation and the geotropic curvature of spruce roots are dependent on the light conditions. The course of the geotropic curvature in spruce roots containing anthocyanins has been followed during a period of 5 h, in which the seedlings were geotropically stimulated continuously in the horizontal position. When the stimulation was performed in white light and in darkness at 21°C, significantly larger curvatures were observed in the roots pretreated at 4°C in darkness than in the roots containing anthocyanins. The specific curvature (curvature in degrees per mm elongation), however, was approximately the same in both types of roots stimulated in white light. This was due to a retarded elongation of the roots pretreated with light at 4°C and containing anthocyanins. A smaller difference in elongation rate between roots with and without anthocyanins was observed in the dark than in the light, but even in the dark the anthocyanin-containing roots grew more slowly than roots without anthocyanins. In order to find out if it is the anthocyanin content or the illumination which affects the elongation and geotropic curvature in the roots, a series of similar experiments was performed using cress seedlings grown at 4°C in light or darkness. Roots of cress seedlings cultivated under conditions which would induce anthocyanin formation in spruce roots exhibited the highest geotropic responses both in light and darkness as compared to cress seedlings grown at 4°C in darkness. As in the case of spruce roots an increase in elongation was observed in cress roots illuminated during the geotropic stimulation. These similarities in the behaviour made it relevant to compare the development of the geotropic curvature in cress and spruce roots.  相似文献   

4.
Previously inverted Lepidium roots were placed in a horizontal position and the amyloplasts in the statocytes of the root cap allowed to fall through their entire range of movement across the cell. Under these conditions the amyloplasts first follow a mainly downward course for 6 to 8 min at a speed between 0.5 and 0.8 μm per min. For the next 10 min they move slightly more slowly in a direction away from the apical end of the cell, still sinking somewhat, but without reaching the plasmalemma along the lower wall. Previous experiments have shown that conditions assumed to allow the amyloplasts to slide parallel to the longitudinal cell walls are those that give rise to the largest geotropic curvatures. Such conditions are for instance (1) stimulation at 135° (root tips pointing obliquely upward) and (2) inversion of roots for 16 min followed by stimulation at 45°. Treatments assumed not to permit extensive sliding of the amyloplasts produce smaller geotropic curvatures, namely (3) stimulation at 45° without pre-inversion and (4) inversion followed by stimulation at 135°. The location of the amyloplasts after these four kinds of treatment has now been determined on photomicrographs and the assumptions concerning the paths and extent of sliding of the amyloplasts confirmed. Observations on electron micrographs showed that under all conditions the amyloplasts are separated from the plasmalemma by other organelles, such as ER, nucleus or vacuoles. In roots rotated for 15 min parallel to the horizontal axis of the klinostat at 2 rpm, the amyloplasts are not clumped together as densely as in normal, inverted or stimulated roots, but they are not scattered over the entire cell volume. The statolith function of the amyloplasts is discussed in view of these and other observations.  相似文献   

5.
In an attempt to explain the influence of gravity on the behaviour of ageotropic plant organs, a pea mutant (Pisum sativum ageotropum) and normal pea (Pisum sativum cv. Sabel) were examined. The mutant has a significantly lower germination rate (large seeds: 25%, small seeds: 10%) than normal pea seeds (55%). Removal of testa increased germination dramatically, the values obtained were 63 and 89%, respectively. Immediately after imbibition the mutant from which the testa had been removed, developed more slowly than normal pea seeds; after 28 h the difference in elongation rate between the two types was reversed. When continuously stimulated geotropically in the horizontal position the elongation in the mutant is larger than in the normal pea roots kept in the same position. During a 24 h period starting 48 h after imbibition the mutant root elongated 45.0 mm while the value for the normal pea root was 11.5 mm. The course of the geotropic curvature in roots of the two types has been followed during a period of 24 h. Normal pea roots develop an asymmetry in the extreme root tip region after 30 min of horizontal stimulation. After prolonged stimulation (exceeding 2 h) the asymmetry has disappeared and the curvature distributed over the entire growth region. When roots of normal pea are stimulated continuously at various angles, the optimum angle of geotropic response is 90° with decreasing responses in the order 135° (i.e. the root tip is pointing obliquely upward) and 45°. The presumed ageotropic behaviour of the mutant has only to a certain extent been confirmed in the present study. When stimulated at 135° a slight positive curvature developed; stimulation at 90° and 45° gave a slight negative curvature.  相似文献   

6.
Summary The positive geotropic responses of the primary roots of Zea mays and Pisum sativum seedlings depend upon at least one growth inhibiting factor which arises in the root cap and which moves basipetally through the apex into the extending zone. The root apex (as distinct from the cap) and the regions more basal to the extending zone are not sources of growth regulators directly involved in the geotropic response. A difference in the concentration or effectiveness of the inhibitory factor(s) arising in the cap must be established between the upper and lower halves of a horizontal root. Positive geotropic curvature in a horizontal root is attributable, at least in part, to a downward lateral transport of inhibitor(s) from the upper to the lower half of the organ.  相似文献   

7.
Mary L. Parker 《Planta》1979,145(5):471-477
When a flowering stalk of Echinochloa colonum is held horizontally, growth is initiated in the lower side of each leaf sheath base, restoring the inflorescence to an upright position. Changes in the gravity vector are perceived by specialised statolithcontaining tissue which is associated with each of the symmetrically-arranged vascular bundles within the leaf sheath bases. The morphological and ultrastructural features of these gravity-sensitive regions have been examined by light and electron microscopy. Each statocyte cell contains a large central vacuole with a thin lining of cytoplasm. Up to 50 spherical starch statoliths lie along the lowermost side of the cells and these sediment readily following geotropic stimulation. Statoliths are found in contact with the plasmalemma, or may be prevented from touching it by bands of microtubules. Dictyosomes and mitochondria are numerous, but endoplasmic reticulum is sparse. The nuclei tend to remain at the original apex of each cell. Statocytes of the leaf sheath base are compared and contrasted with those of the root tip.Abbreviations GMA glycol methacrylate - PAS periodic acid-Schiff's reagent - ER endoplasmic reticulum  相似文献   

8.
When primary root apical tissues of Arabidopsis thaliana were irradiated by heavy-ion microbeams with 120 microm diameter, strong inhibition of root elongation and curvature were observed at the root tip. Irradiation of the cells that become the lower part of the root cap after gravistimulation showed strong inhibition of root curvature, whereas irradiation of the cells that become the upper part of the root cap after gravistimulation did not show severe damage in either root curvature or root growth. Further analysis using smaller area microbeams with 40 microm diameter indicated that the greatest inhibition of curvature occurred at the root tip and the next greatest inhibition occurred in the cells in the lower part of the root cap. These results indicate not only that the root tip and columella cells are the most sensitive sites for root gravity, but also that signalling of root gravity would go through the lower part of the cap cells after perception.  相似文献   

9.
The curvature of roots in response to gravity is attributed to the development of a differential concentration gradient of IAA in the top and bottom of the elongation region of roots. The development of the IAA gradient has been attributed to the redistribution of IAA from the stele to cortical tissues in the elongation region. The gravistimulated redistribution of IAA was investigated by applying [3H]IAA to the cut surface of 5 mm apical primary root segments. The movement of label from the stele-associated [3H]IAA into the root, tip, root cap, and cortical tissues on the top and bottom of the elongation region was determined in vertically growing roots and gravistimulated roots. Label from the stele moved into the region of cell differentiation (root tip) prior to accumulating in the elongation region. Little label was observed in the root cap. Gravistimulation did not increase the amount of label moving from the stele; but gravistimulation did increase the amount of label accumulating in cortical tissues on the lower side of the elongation region, and decreased the amount of label accumulating in cortical tissues on the upper side of the elongation region. Removal of the cap prior to or immediately following gravity stimulation rendered the roots partially insensitive to gravity and also prevented gravity-induced asymmetric redistribution of label. However, removal of the root cap following 30 min of gravistimulation did not alter root curvature or the establishment of an IAA asymmetry across the region of root elongation. These results suggest that a signal originating in the root cap directs auxin redistribution in tissues behind the root cap, leading to the development of an asymmetry of IAA concentration in the elongation region that in turn causes the differential growth rate in the elongation region of a graviresponding root.  相似文献   

10.
The curvature of roots in response to gravity is attributed to the development of a differential concentration gradient of IAA in the top and bottom of the elongation region of roots. The development of the IAA gradient has been attributed to the redistribution of IAA from the stele to cortical tissues in the elongation region. The gravistimulated redistribution of IAA was investigated by applying [3H]IAA to the cut surface of 5 mm apical primary root segments. The movement of label from the stele-associated [3H]IAA into the root, tip, root cap, and cortical tissues on the top and bottom of the elongation region was determined in vertically growing roots and gravistimulated roots. Label from the stele moved into the region of cell differentiation (root tip) prior to accumulating in the elongation region. Little label was observed in the root cap. Gravistimulation did not increase the amount of label moving from the stele; but gravistimulation did increase the amount of label accumulating in cortical tissues on the lower side of the elongation region, and decreased the amount of label accumulating in cortical tissues on the upper side of the elongation region. Removal of the cap prior to or immediately following gravity stimulation rendered the roots partially insensitive to gravity and also prevented gravity-induced asymmetric redistribution of label. However, removal of the root cap following 30 min of gravistimulation did not alter root curvature or the establishment of an IAA asymmetry across the region of root elongation. These results suggest that a signal originating in the root cap directs auxin redistribution in tissues behind the root cap, leading to the development of an asymmetry of IAA concentration in the elongation region that in turn causes the differential growth rate in the elongation region of a graviresponding root.  相似文献   

11.
Roots of cress (Lepidium sativum L, ) seedlings continuouslystimulated at an angle of 135°—root tips pointingobliquely upwards—develop a larger final geotropic curvaturethan roots stimulated at 45° or 90°. This well-knownbehaviour has previously been interpreted as support for thestarch statolith hypothesis. In the present experiments two groups of cress and lettuce (Lactucasativa L.) seedlings were used: (a) the control group in whichthe roots were allowed to curve without adjustment of the stimulationangle, and (b) the test group in which the roots were readjustedat different time intervals to the original stimulation angle.They were stimulated continuously at 45°, 90°, or 135°and the development of root curvatures was followed over a periodof 5–8 h. Initially (1–2 h) the rate of curvature was approximatelythe same for 135° and 90° control and tested cress andlettuce roots. Thereafter the test roots stimulated at 135°followed a linear curvature pattern. Seedlings stimulated at45° and 90° did not show the same linearity in curvaturedevelopment in the test group. The rates of curvature in thetest group were generally higher than in the control group atangles less than 135°. Cress seedlings were examined by light and electron microscopyin order to follow the movement of the cell organelles in thestatocytes. In the statocytes of roots of test seedlings thestarch statoliths were located in the position attained beforethe first readjustment of the stimulation angle. In the statocytesof control roots the starch statoliths followed the curvatureof the root tip sliding along the cell walls and attaining therest position as in normally orientated roots. The behaviour of control and readjusted roots is interpretedas a result of interaction between starch statoliths and endoplasmicreticulum membranes.  相似文献   

12.
Andreas Sievers  Uta Schmitz 《Planta》1973,114(4):373-378
Summary The calyptra of plagiotropic lateral roots of Lepidium sativum L. is composed of three rows of cells. Movable amyloplates, possibly functioning as statoliths, are located only a few central cells of the ontogenetic youngest cell row. Beside the lateral root axis the two innermost statocytes contain a stable complex of rough endoplasmic reticulum, which is preferentially located in the central distal cell corner. In the statocytes lying above the lateral root axis the amyloplasts are sedimented on the ER-complex during growth in direction of the geotropic liminal angle. In the statocyte below the axis the ER-complex is free of amyloplasts. Thus a dorsiventrality exists in the statocytes located above and below the root axis in regard to the arrangement of their organelles.

Herrn Professor Dr. Maximilian Steiner zum 70. Geburtstag.  相似文献   

13.
When roots of cress seedlings (Lepidium sativum L.) are stimulated for 10 min at an angle of 135° (i.e. the root tips are pointing obliquely upward), the resulting geotropic curvatures become larger than after 10 min stimulation at 45°. This well-known behavior has been explained by the better conditions for statoliths, initially located in the floor end of the statocytes, to slide along the cell walls when root tips are pointing upward at 135° than when pointing downward at 45°. Accepting this explanation, one would predict the optimum angle of stimulation to be near 45° when roots had first been kept inverted long enough for their statoliths to accumulate in the opposite end of each functional statocyte. This prediction has been verified in experiments with cress seedlings which were first kept inverted for 16 min, then stimulated for 10 min at given angles, and subsequently rotated parallel to the horizontal axis of the klinostat at 2 rpm. Under these conditions, roots stimulated at 45° curve faster during a 20 to 30 min period on the klinostat than roots stimulated at 135°, but thereafter they stop curving. Roots stimulated at 135°, on the other hand, although initially curving slower than those at 45°, continue curving for at least a whole hour, and attain larger curvatures than the others after 40 min. The optimum shifts from near 45° to near 135° during the course of the klinostat rotation. The behavior of normal and pre-invertcd roots is interpreted as the result of at least two effects: (1) a stimulation due to the movement of amyloplasts, which is enhanced if these are allowed to slide along the cell walls, and (2) a modification of the development of the resulting curvatures by tonic effects, which are inhibitory between stimulation angles 0° and 90°, and absent or enhancing between 90° and 180°.  相似文献   

14.
Heinz Zinke 《Planta》1968,82(1):50-72
Summary In the present work the influence of moist air, of sand and of several solutions on the geotropic behaviour of primary roots is studied. The course of the geotropic movement is the result of a concerted action of positive and negative reactions the intensity and duration of which differ in roots of various species.In pea roots the negative movement appears only during a short stage of development. No direct relation exists between the speed of elongation and the appearance of the negative reaction.Primary roots of Zea mays and of Pisum arvense are indifferent to thigmotropic stimuli. The negative movement has, at least in pea roots a smaller mechanically effective force than the positive movement. Therefore the negative reaction does not appear in sand because it cannot overcome the mechanical resistance of the granular medium.In liquid media pea roots react in another way than in air: here the negative reaction begins later, but it has then more influence on the course of the geotropic curvature.The influence of different cations on the geotropic behaviour and on the elongation of the roots can be understood as a combined action of the osmotic effect and of the specific ionic permeability.In pea roots the negative reaction, which appears during the time from 3 to 6 hours after the induction also depends on a definite level of turgor.Primary roots of Zea mays, which grow in a relatively large angle to the vertical line do not lose their geotropic sensibility. They react like plagiotropic organs.In pea roots relations exist between the development of the positive and the negative reaction and the presence of the cotyledons and the tip of the root.Both reactions are induced at the same time by the gravitional stimulus. Their reaction times, however, are different.The root tip is necessary for the induction of both reactions. The negative curvature also appears when the tip is cut off before the end of the reaction time.The course of the geotropic movement of primary roots is compared with the geotropic behaviour of rhizomes. As a possible explanation of both kinds of reactions a two-hormone-hypothesis is discussed.  相似文献   

15.
Henry Wilkins  R. L. Wain 《Planta》1975,126(1):19-23
Summary Exogeneous application of abscisic acid (ABA) to intact roots of LG 11 maize seedlings inhibits root elongation and induces bending of the root in response to gravity in darkness, even though the roots of these seedlings are not normally positively geotropic in the dark. ABA cannot, however, induce geotropic curvature in dark-exposed decapped roots, thus confirming that the root cap is the site of graviperception in the intact root.Abbreviation ABA abscissic acid  相似文献   

16.
M. Sobotik  D. Haas 《Plant biosystems》2013,147(2):484-489
Abstract

Besides being species‐specific, the inner structure of the root is influenced by the place and time of origin during the growth period. From the root tip up to the base of a particular root, the zones of cell division, cell elongation, formation of root hairs and root branching can be distinguished. The root tip that is covered by a root cap and mucilage is protected against evaporation and water contact. From the end of the lateral parts of the root cap, the cells become exposed to the surrounding environment. The cells can elongate by water uptake or can shrink by water loss. All processes of geotropic growth take place there. In this study, some differences are illustrated using Zea mays plants. Radicle and roots emerging from several nodes of the shoot as well as lateral roots are compared. The distances from the tip and from the base of the root are also very important for characterization of particular root functions. Distinctive features such as root diameter, size of the stele and of the cortex, ratio of cortex to stele, number and width of the xylem vessels, size of cells, special thickenings and stage of lignification as well as symptoms of maturation are observed.  相似文献   

17.
We compared the kinetics of auxin redistribution across the caps of primary roots of 2-day-old maize (Zea mays, cv Merit) seedlings with the time course of gravitropic curvature. [3H] indoleacetic acid was applied to one side of the cap in an agar donor and radioactivity moving across the cap was collected in an agar receiver applied to the opposite side. Upon gravistimulation the roots first curved upward slightly, then returned to the horizontal and began curving downward, reaching a final angle of about 67°. Movement of label across the caps of gravistimulated roots was asymmetric with preferential downward movement (ratio downward/upward = ca. 1.6, radioactivity collected during the 90 min following beginning of gravistimulation). There was a close correlation between the development of asymmetric auxin movement across the root cap and the rate of curvature, with both values increasing to a maximum and then declining as the roots approached the final angle of curvature. In roots preadapted to gravity (alternate brief stimulation on opposite flanks over a period of 1 hour) the initial phase of upward curvature was eliminated and downward bending began earlier than for controls. The correlation between asymmetric auxin movement and the kinetics of curvature also held in comparisons between control and preadapted roots. Both downward auxin transport asymmetry and downward curvature occurred earlier in preadapted roots than in controls. These findings are consistent with suggestions that the root cap is not only the site of perception but also the location of the initial redistribution of effectors that ultimately leads to curvature.  相似文献   

18.
Gravity-Induced Polar Transport of Calcium across Root Tips of Maize   总被引:13,自引:8,他引:5       下载免费PDF全文
Calcium movement across primary roots of maize (Zea mays, L.) was determined by application of 45Ca2+ to one side of the root and collection of radioactivity in an agar receiver block on the opposite side. Ca movement across the root tip was found to be at least 20 times greater than movement across the elongation zone. The rapid movement of Ca across the tip was severely inhibited in roots from which the root cap had been removed. Ca movement across the tip was also strongly retarded in roots pretreated with 2,4-dinitrophenol or potassium cyanide. Orientation of roots horizontally had no effect on Ca movement across the elongation zone but caused a strong asymmetry in the pattern of Ca movement across the tip. In gravistimulated roots, the movement of Ca from top to bottom increased while movement from bottom to top decreased. The data indicate that gravistimulation induces polar movement of Ca toward the lower side of the root cap. An earlier report (Lee, Mulkey, Evans 1983 Science 220: 1375-1376) from this laboratory showed that artificial establishment of calcium gradients at the root tip can cause gravitropic-like curvature. Together, the two studies indicate that Ca plays a key role in linking gravistimulation to the gravitropic growth response in roots.  相似文献   

19.
M. Schurzmann  V. Hild 《Planta》1980,150(1):32-36
The effect of externally applied indoleacetic acid (IAA) and abscisic acid (ABA) on the growth of roots of Zea mays L. was measured. Donor blocks of agar with IAA or ABA were placed laterally on the roots and root curvature was measured. When IAA was applied to vertical roots, a curvature directed toward the donor block was observed. This curvature corresponded to a growth inhibition at the side of the root where the donor was applied. When IAA was applied to horizontal roots from the upper side, normal geotropic downward bending was delayed or totally inhibited. The extent of retardation and the inhibition of curvature were found to depend on the concentration of IAA in the donor block. ABA neither induced curvature in vertical roots nor inhibited geotropic curvature in horizontal roots; thus the growth of roots was not inhibited by ABA. However, when, instead of donor blocks, root tips or coleoptile tips were placed onto vertical roots, a curvature of the roots was observed.Abbreviations ABA abscisic acid - IAA 3-indoleacetic acid  相似文献   

20.
The Mechanism of Geoperception in Lentil Roots   总被引:1,自引:1,他引:0  
The sediment of the amyloplasts in the statocytes of lentilroots was analysed in two different samples of seedlings. Theroots of the first sample (HP) were grown in a horizatal position,whereas thoes of the second sample (VP+20) were grown in a horizontalposition and then exposure to give a response). It is demonstratedthat the statolish can almost enter into contact with the plasmamembrane lining the longitudinal wall of the statocytes of theHP sample. However, these organelles in the VP+20 sample areable to provoke a geotropic stimulation though they are sedimentedat a distance of 0.1350–0.2600 µm from the plasmalemma.From these data it is concluded that the cytoplasmic structureswhich may play a role in the geotropic stimulation are: (1)the endoplasmic reticulum located along the longitudianl wallof the statocytes and (2) the microtubules or the plasmalemmaif the action of the statoliths is transmitted by the parietalcytoplasm. The large aggregations of endoplasmic reticulum whichare situated in the distal part of the central root cap cellswould not have any role in the perception of gravity by roots.These results are discussed in the light of recent work showingthe action of a growth inibitor in the geotropic reaction ofroots.  相似文献   

设为首页 | 免责声明 | 关于勤云 | 加入收藏

Copyright©北京勤云科技发展有限公司  京ICP备09084417号