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Lipids in xylem sap of woody plants across the angiosperm phylogeny
Authors:H Jochen Schenk  Joseph M Michaud  Kerri Mocko  Susana Espino  Tatiana Melendres  Mary R Roth  Ruth Welti  Lucian Kaack  Steven Jansen
Institution:1. Department of Biological Science, California State University Fullerton, 800 N. State College Boulevard, Fullerton, CA, 92831 USA;2. Kansas Lipidomics Research Center, Division of Biology, Kansas State University, Manhattan, KS, 66506 USA;3. Institute of Systematic Botany and Ecology, Ulm University, Albert-Einstein-Allee 11, Ulm, D-89081 Germany
Abstract:Lipids have been observed attached to lumen-facing surfaces of mature xylem conduits of several plant species, but there has been little research on their functions or effects on water transport, and only one lipidomic study of the xylem apoplast. Therefore, we conducted lipidomic analyses of xylem sap from woody stems of seven plants representing six major angiosperm clades, including basal magnoliids, monocots and eudicots, to characterize and quantify phospholipids, galactolipids and sulfolipids in sap using mass spectrometry. Locations of lipids in vessels of Laurus nobilis were imaged using transmission electron microscopy and confocal microscopy. Xylem sap contained the galactolipids di- and monogalactosyldiacylglycerol, as well as all common plant phospholipids, but only traces of sulfolipids, with total lipid concentrations in extracted sap ranging from 0.18 to 0.63 nmol ml?1 across all seven species. Contamination of extracted sap from lipids in cut living cells was found to be negligible. Lipid composition of sap was compared with wood in two species and was largely similar, suggesting that sap lipids, including galactolipids, originate from cell content of living vessels. Seasonal changes in lipid composition of sap were observed for one species. Lipid layers coated all lumen-facing vessel surfaces of L. nobilis, and lipids were highly concentrated in inter-vessel pits. The findings suggest that apoplastic, amphiphilic xylem lipids are a universal feature of angiosperms. The findings require a reinterpretation of the cohesion-tension theory of water transport to account for the effects of apoplastic lipids on dynamic surface tension and hydraulic conductance in xylem.
Keywords:angiosperms  apoplast  cohesion-tension theory  galactolipids  lipidomics  phospholipids  vessel volume  xylem  xylem sap  Laurus nobilis
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