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1.
Root hairs of Elodea canadensis develop only from cells which undergo a particular series of developmental steps. These cells, the trichoblasts, are formed as the smaller, proximal product of an asymmetric division, and immediately enter a prolonged phase of synthesis. Histochemical tests show that large amounts of RNA and protein accumulate in the vastly enlarged nucleolus and cytoplasm, while histone increases in the enlarging nucleus. Cytophotometry shows that DNA in the nucleus reaches polyploid levels. Throughout the synthetic phase, almost to the point of root hair initiation at 9.5 mm proximal to the meristem initials, vacuolation is delayed and the trichoblasts elongate less extensively. All results suggest that this synthesis is the type which normally follows cell division, but is greatly enhanced in the trichoblast. In contrast, the initially larger atrichoblasts only accumulate RNA, DNA, and protein in the region from 1 mm to 2 mm proximal to the meristem tip, and they then enter a phase of extensive vacuolation and elongation.  相似文献   

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Peptide uptake by plant roots from degraded soybean‐meal products was analyzed in Brassica rapa and Solanum lycopersicum. B. rapa absorbed about 40% of the initial water volume, whereas peptide concentration was decreased by 75% after 24 h. Analysis by reversed‐phase HPLC showed that number of peptides was absorbed by the roots during soaking in degraded soybean‐meal products for 24 h. Carboxyfluorescein‐labeled root hair‐promoting peptide was synthesized, and its localization, movement, and accumulation in roots were investigated. The peptide appeared to be absorbed by root hairs and then moved to trichoblasts. Furthermore, the peptide was moved from trichoblasts to atrichoblasts after 24 h. The peptide was accumulated in epidermal cells, suggesting that the peptide may have a function in both trichoblasts and atrichoblasts. Copyright © 2012 European Peptide Society and John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.  相似文献   

4.
Root hairs: Specialized tubular cells extending root surfaces   总被引:2,自引:0,他引:2  
Root hairs are tubular extensions of epidermal cells that have their origin either in any protoderm cell or in specialized protoderm cells called trichoblasts. These latter cells are the result of an asymmetric cytokinesis determined by the positioning of a pre-prophase band of microtubules. The smaller sibling cell is the trichoblast and specializes physiologically and structurally prior to root hair outgrowth. Several genes are involved in the initiation and outgrowth of root hairs. Elongation of root hairs is by tip growth, and, correlated with this, cytoplasmic organelles and cytoskeletal elements show a polarized distribution; the apical dome consists of numerous vesicles, many associated with cell wall synthesis. The relationship between cellulose microfibril deposition and the pattern of cortical microtubules has received considerable attention, as has the role of the cytoskeleton and calcium in controlling cytoplasmic streaming. Root hairs extend the absorbing surface of the root and therefore have been studied in terms both of physiological characteristics of the plasma membrane and uptake of water and of various ions in the soil solution. Many plant species develop soil sheaths (rhizosheaths) which protect the root surface from desiccation and harbour various microorganisms; root hairs are intimately involved in these sheaths. Various growth regulators have been studied in terms of their effect on the structure and function of root hairs. Root hairs play a significant role in the interaction between plants and nitrogen-fixing microorganisms (e.g.,Rhizobium, Frankia) and symbiotic mycorrhizal fungi.  相似文献   

5.
Equisetum trichoblasts are densely cytoplasmic, containing numerous starch-containing plastids, mitochondria, and concentrations of rough endoplasmic reticulum with attached polysomes. Numerous vesicles of Golgi origin are present, containing a lightly staining fibrillar material; these vesicles appear to fuse with the wall. The outer tangential and radial walls become thickened while the inner tangential wall remains thin with numerous plasmodesmata. As the trichoblasts develop into root hairs, vacuolation occurs, resulting in large vacuoles. This may represent autolytic vacuolation. The cytoplasm of the root hairs is similar to that of the trichoblasts.  相似文献   

6.
Structural sterols are abundant in the plasma membrane of root apex cells in Arabidopsis thaliana. They specifically accumulate in trichoblasts during the prebulging and bulge stages and show a polar accumulation in the tip during root hair elongation but are distributed evenly in mature root hairs. Thus, structural sterols may serve as a marker for root hair initiation and growth. In addition, they may predict branching events in mutants with branching root hairs. Structural sterols were detected using the sterol complexing fluorochrome filipin. Application of filipin caused a rapid, concentration-dependent decrease in tip growth. Filipin-complexed sterols accumulated in globular structures that fused to larger FM4-64–positive aggregates in the tip, so-called filipin-induced apical compartments, which were closely associated with the plasma membrane. The plasma membrane appeared malformed and the cytoarchitecture of the tip zone was affected. Trans-Golgi network/early endosomal compartments containing molecular markers, such as small Rab GTPase RabA1d and SNARE Wave line 13 (VTI12), locally accumulated in these filipin-induced apical compartments, while late endosomes, endoplasmic reticulum, mitochondria, plastids, and cytosol were excluded from them. These data suggest that the local distribution and apical accumulation of structural sterols may regulate vesicular trafficking and plasma membrane properties during both initiation and tip growth of root hairs in Arabidopsis.  相似文献   

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The involvement of cortical microtubules in the control of plant cell expansion was studied in the Arabidopsis root epidermis. In the zone of fast elongation microtubules were transverse to the root axis in all epidermal cells. However when cells entered the differentiation zone cell type-specific microtubule reorientation took place. In the trichoblasts that were then approximately 130 µm long and formed the root hair bulge, the microtubules switched to a random distribution. In the adjoining atrichoblasts microtubules adopted a slightly oblique orientation. In more proximal parts of the differentiation zone atrichoblast microtubules were found in a more oblique and finally in a longitudinal orientation. Upon exposure to ethylene or 1-aminocyclopropane-1-carboxylic acid (ACC – the precursor of ethylene) at a saturating dose, cell elongation abruptly stopped. From then on trichoblast cells reached only a length of about 35 µm, and developed root hairs. Cortical microtubules changed orientation within 10 min. In trichoblasts they adopted the typical random orientation, in atrichoblasts however, they took up a longitudinal orientation. Microtubule reorientation was complete within 60 min. The possible role of microtubules in the control of cell elongation is discussed.  相似文献   

10.
It is shown that root hairs of most aquatic plants have a helicoidal cell-wall texture. Cell walls of root hairs of the aquatic/marshland plant Ranunculus lingua, however, have an axial microfibril alignment. The occurrence of a helicoidal wall texture is not limited to root hairs of aquatic plants: the terrestrial plant Zebrina purpusii has a helicoidal root-hair wall texture, too. With the exception of the grasses, the occurrence of root hairs with helicoidal cell walls pertains to species with predetermined root-hair-forming cells, trichoblasts. The rotation mode of the helicoid is species-specific. The average angle between fibrils of adjacent lamellae varies from 23° to 40°. In Hydrocharis morsus-ranae, cortical microtubules have a net-axial orientation and thus do not parallel nascent microfibrils. The deposition of the helicoidal cell wall is discussed.In honour of Prof. Dr. H.F Linskens (Nijmegen) on the occasion of his 65th birthday  相似文献   

11.
The root epidermal bulger 1 ( reb1) mutant of Arabidopsis thaliana (L.) Heynh. is characterized by a reduced elongation rate of the primary root and by the bulging of many, but not all, root epidermal cells. In this study, we investigated cell wall structure of root epidermal cells in reb1-1 by using serial sectioning, and light and electron microscopy in combination with immuno-cytochemistry and polysaccharide staining. We found that: (i) Cell bulging in the mutant was initiated in the zone of elongation of the root, and occurred exclusively in trichoblasts. (ii) reb1-1 and wild-type root cells stained identically with anti-pectin antibodies, such as JIM5. In contrast, the anti-arabinogalactan-protein antibodies, JIM14 and LM2, stained all epidermal cells in the wild type and trichoblasts preferentially, but in reb1-1 they stained the atrichoblasts only. (iii) Compared to the wild type, mutant trichoblasts had a thinner outer epidermal cell wall, which presented abnormal periodic acid-thio carbohydrazide silver proteinate (PATAg) staining. In addition, we investigated the organization of cortical microtubules in a reb1-1 mutant line expressing a green-fluorescent protein fused to a microtubule-binding domain from human microtubule-associated protein 4. Microtubules in the swollen trichoblasts of reb1-1 were either disordered or absent entirely. Together our findings indicate that the reb1-1 mutation results in an abnormal trichoblast cell wall, and suggest that cell surface arabinogalactan-proteins are required for anisotropic expansion and for orienting cortical microtubules.  相似文献   

12.
Ultrastructure was investigated along the files of developing epidermal cells in the root tip of a model plant Medicago sativa, in which all rhizodermal cells are potential hair-forming trichoblasts. Differentiation at subcellular level was observed up to the stage of bulge initiation in the trichoblasts. Root hair initiation indicated by the emergence of bulges from trichoblasts was detected at various distances from the root tip and, it was independent of the trichoblast size. During rhizodermal cell differentiation, starch grains accumulated in the plastids. Nuclei located in the central part of the young, meristematic cells moved towards the inner periclinal wall as the central vacuole enlarged. The bulging region of the trichoblasts located opposite the nucleus and was rich in mitochondria, ER, ribosomes, and Golgi bodies, and contained also vesicles enclosing fibrillar material. This material responded positively to phosphotungstic acid, which was used for detection of cell wall polysaccharides. The cell wall thickness within the bulging domain was significantly lower than in other parts of trichoblasts. We suggest that internalization of cell wall polysaccharides occurs within the bulging area, contributing to local thinning of the cell wall and providing a source of osmotically active compounds for maintaining turgor in the trichoblast. Thus, the internalization process might be necessary for root hair outgrowth.  相似文献   

13.
Ma  Zhong  Walk  Thomas C.  Marcus  Andrew  Lynch  Jonathan P. 《Plant and Soil》2001,236(2):221-235
Low phosphorus availability regulates root hair growth in Arabidopsis by (1) increasing root hair length, (2) increasing root hair density, (3) decreasing the distance between the root tip and the point at which root hairs begin to emerge, and (4) increasing the number of epidermal cell files that bear hairs (trichoblasts). The coordinated regulation of these traits by phosphorus availability prompted us to speculate that they are synergistic, that is, that they have greater adaptive value in combination than they do in isolation. In this study, we explored this concept using a geometric model to evaluate the effect of varying root hair length (short, medium, and long), density (0, 24, 48, 72, 96, and 120 root hairs per mm of root length), tip to first root hair distance (0.5, 1, 2, and 4 mm), and number of trichoblast files (8 vs. 12) on phosphorus acquisition efficiency (PAE) in Arabidopsis. SimRoot, a dynamic three-dimensional geometric model of root growth and architecture, was used to simulate the growth of Arabidopsis roots with contrasting root hair parameters at three values of phosphorus diffusion coefficient (D e=1×10–7, 1×10–8, and 1×10–9 cm2 s–1) over time (20, 40, and 60 h). Depzone, a program that dynamically models nutrient diffusion to roots, was employed to estimate PAE and competition among root hairs. As D e decreased from 1×10–7 to 1×10–9 cm2 s–1, roots with longer root hairs and higher root hair densities had greater PAE than those with shorter and less dense root hairs. At D e=1×10–9 cm2 s–1, the PAE of root hairs at any given density was in the order of long hairs > medium length hairs > short hairs, and the maximum PAE occurred at density = 96 hairs mm–1 for both long and medium length hairs. This was due to greater competition among root hairs when they were short and dense. Competition over time decreased differences in PAE due to density, but the effect of length was maintained, as there was less competition among long hairs than short hairs. At high D e(1×10–7 cm2 s–1), competition among root hairs was greatest among long hairs and lowest among short hairs, and competition increased with increasing root hair densities. This led to a decrease in PAE as root hair length and density increased. PAE was also affected by the tip to first root hair distance. At low D e values, decreasing tip to first root hair distance increased PAE of long hairs more than that of short hairs, whereas at high D e values, decreasing tip to first root hair distance increased PAE of root hairs at low density but decreased PAE of long hairs at very high density. Our models confirmed the benefits of increasing root hair density by increasing the number of trichoblast files rather than decreasing the trichoblast length. The combined effects of all four root hair traits on phosphorus acquisition was 371% greater than their additive effects, demonstrating substantial morphological synergy. In conclusion, our data support the hypothesis that the responses of root hairs to low phosphorus availability are synergistic, which may account for their coordinated regulation.  相似文献   

14.
Plant root hair formation is initiated when specialized elongating root epidermis cells (trichoblasts) assemble distinct domains at the plasma membrane/cell wall cell periphery complexes facing the root surface. These localities show accumulation of expansin and progressively transform into tip-growing root hair apices. Experimentation showed that trichoblasts made devoid of microtubules (MTs) were unaffected in root hair formation, whereas those depleted of F-actin by the G-actin sequestering agent latrunculin B had their root hair formation blocked after the bulge formation stage. In accordance with this, MTs are naturally depleted from early outgrowing bulges in which dense F-actin meshworks accumulate. These F-actin caps remain associated with tips of emerging and growing root hairs. Constitutive expression of the GFP-mouse talin fusion protein in transgenic Arabidopsis, which visualizes all classes of F-actin in a noninvasive mode, allowed in vivo confirmation of the presence of distinct F-actin meshworks within outgrowing bulges and at tips of young root hairs. Profilin accumulates, at both the protein and the mRNA levels, within F-actin-enriched bulges and at tips of emerging hairs. ER-based calreticulin and HDEL proteins also accumulate within outgrowing bulges and remain enriched at tips of emerging hairs. All this suggests that installation of the actin-based tip growth machinery takes place only after expansin-associated bulge formation and requires assembly of profilin-supported dynamic F-actin meshworks.  相似文献   

15.
The development of the epidermal layer of roots of Zea is traced from the quiescent centre to the zone where root hairs develop. In the zone of cell division a three layered coat forms on the outside of the epidermal cells consisting of the outer epidermal walls, overlaid by a two-layered pellicle composed of a thick fibrillar inner layer of polysaccharide, and a thin fibrillar outer layer of protein. The epidermal cells divide several times in the same longitudinal file but rarely across a radius to give a new longitudinal file. Thus, the radial walls become much thicker than all but the original transverse walls, and packets of up to 32 daughter cells derived from a single initial may be distinguished. The pellicle develops during these divisions as a continuum over the outer walls of the daughter cells. It is proposed that the pellicle provides a stiffening to the forward end of the root which permits it to penetrate soil without bending. Support for this hypothesis is shown by the Zea mays mutant Ageotropic in which the pellicle is absent, the epidermal surface is disorganized, and which grows crookedly through soil. In the zone of extension growth of normal roots of two Zea species the pellicle thins and disappears. Circumferential strips of the pellicle were peeled off the young epidermal cells and could be stretched to twice their length. This deformation is partly the result of the pellicle stretching and breaking above the attachments of the radial walls. After normal thinning of the pellicle, detachment of the radial walls at their outer ends produces a corrugated surface in the proximal zone of the root tips. In dicotyledons (e.g., soybean), there is no similar pellicle, but a stiff root tip is produced by a long multi-layered root cap, the proximal portion of which covers the elongating epidermal surface.  相似文献   

16.
The post-embryonic architecture of higher plants is derived from the activity of two meristems that are formed in the embryo: the shoot meristem and the root meristem. The epidermis of the shoot is derived from the outermost layer of cells covering the shoot meristem through repeated anticlinal divisions. By contrast, the epidermis of the root is derived from an internal ring of cells, located at the centre of the root meristem, by a precise series of both periclinal and anticlinal divisions. Each epidermis has an independent origin. In Arabidopsis the mature shoot epidermis is composed of a small number of cell types: hair cells (trichomes), stomatal guard cells and other epidermal cells. In shoots, hairs take the form of branched trichomes that are surrounded at their base by a ring of accessory cells in a sheet of epidermal cells. The root epidermis is composed of two cell types: trichoblasts that form root hair cells and atrichoblasts that form non-hair cells. Mutations affecting both the patterning and the morphogenesis of cells in both shoot and root epidermis have recently been described. Most of these mutations affect development in a single epidermis, but at least one, ttg, is involved in development in both epidermal systems.  相似文献   

17.
Root hairs develop from bulges on root epidermal cells and elongate by tip growth, in which Golgi vesicles are targeted, released and inserted into the plasma membrane on one side of the cell. We studied the role of actin in vesicle delivery and retention by comparing the actin filament configuration during bulge formation, root hair initiation, sustained tip growth, growth termination, and in full-grown hairs. Lipochito-oligosaccharides (LCOs) were used to interfere with growth ( De Ruijter et al . 1998 , Plant J. 13, 341–350), and cytochalasin D (CD) was used to interfere with actin function. Actin filament bundles lie net-axially in cytoplasmic strands in the root hair tube. In the subapex of growing hairs, these bundles flare out into fine bundles. The apex is devoid of actin filament bundles. This subapical actin filament configuration is not present in full-grown hairs; instead, actin filament bundles loop through the tip. After LCO application, the tips of hairs that are terminating growth swell, and a new outgrowth appears from a site in the swelling. At the start of this outgrowth, net-axial fine bundles of actin filaments reappear, and the tip region of the outgrowth is devoid of actin filament bundles. CD at 1.0 μ m , which does not affect cytoplasmic streaming, does not inhibit bulge formation and LCO-induced swelling, but inhibits initiation of polar growth from bulges, elongation of root hairs and LCO-induced outgrowth from swellings. We conclude that elongating net-axial fine bundles of actin filaments, which we call FB-actin, function in polar growth by targeting and releasing Golgi vesicles to the vesicle-rich region, while actin filament bundles looping through the tip impede vesicle retention.  相似文献   

18.
Eight functional actin genes are present in ARABIDOPSIS: The functional characterization of these genes in loss-of-function mutants is difficult, because highly conserved isovariants are generally expressed in the same tissue. We isolated a novel semi-dominant mutant allele (act2-2D) of an actin gene, ACT2, with a missense mutation which causes an amino acid substitution at the surface of the ACT2 protein. ACT2 promoter::ACT2-2D transgenic plants showed the same phenotype as act2-2D, indicating that act2-2D is a dominant-negative mutant. act2-2D exhibited defects in the initiation and elongation of root hairs, the elongation of root epidermal cells, and growth in aerial portions. Specifically, radial cell expansion was reduced and occasional cell death occurred in trichoblasts but not in atrichoblasts of the root epidermis. In contrast, cell division patterns in the root meristem were not affected. act2-3, a loss-of-function ACT2 mutant, did not develop most of these morphological abnormalities. Actin filament (F-actin) bundles in root epidermal cells of act2-2D were shorter than in the wild type and in the loss-of-function mutant. We conclude that defective F-actin polymerization caused the aberrant cell morphology in a dominant-negative manner, and that ACT2 functions in cell elongation and root hair formation.  相似文献   

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Calcium gradients underlie polarization in eukaryotic cells. In plants, a tip‐focused Ca2+‐gradient is fundamental for rapid and unidirectional cell expansion during epidermal root hair development. Here we report that three members of the cyclic nucleotide‐gated channel family are required to maintain cytosolic Ca2+ oscillations and the normal growth of root hairs. CNGC6, CNGC9 and CNGC14 were expressed in root hairs, with CNGC9 displaying the highest root hair specificity. In individual channel mutants, morphological defects including root hair swelling and branching, as well as bursting, were observed. The developmental phenotypes were amplified in the three cngc double mutant combinations. Finally, cngc6/9/14 triple mutants only developed bulging trichoblasts and could not form normal root hair protrusions because they burst after the transition to the rapid growth phase. Prior to developmental defects, single and double mutants showed increasingly disturbed patterns of Ca2+ oscillations. We conclude that CNGC6, CNGC9 and CNGC14 fulfill partially but not fully redundant functions in generating and maintaining tip‐focused Ca2+ oscillations, which are fundamental for proper root hair growth and polarity. Furthermore, the results suggest that these calmodulin‐binding and Ca2+‐permeable channels organize a robust tip‐focused oscillatory calcium gradient, which is not essential for root hair initiation but is required to control the integrity of the root hair after the transition to the rapid growth phase. Our findings also show that root hairs possess a large ability to compensate calcium‐signaling defects, and add new players to the regulatory network, which coordinates cell wall properties and cell expansion during polar root hair growth.  相似文献   

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