scholarly journals Laser Scanning Confocal Microcopy for Arabidopsis Epidermal, Mesophyll, and Vascular Parenchyma Cells

BIO-PROTOCOL ◽  
2017 ◽  
Vol 7 (5) ◽  
Author(s):  
Christian Elowsky ◽  
Yashitola Wamboldt ◽  
Sally Mackenzie
Holzforschung ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 74 (3) ◽  
pp. 321-331 ◽  
Author(s):  
Caiping Lian ◽  
Shuqin Zhang ◽  
Xianmiao Liu ◽  
Junji Luo ◽  
Feng Yang ◽  
...  

AbstractPits are the main transverse channels of intercellular liquid transport in bamboo. Ramiform pits are a special type of simple pit with two or more branches. However, little is known about the morphology and physiological functions of ramiform pits. The anatomy of plants can provide important evidence for the role of cells. To better understand the ultrastructure and the structure-function relationship of ramiform pits, their characteristics need to be investigated. In this study, both qualitative and quantitative features of ramiform pits were studied using field-emission environmental scanning electron microscopy (FE-ESEM). The samples included the native structures and the replica structures obtained by resin castings. The results show that the ramiform pits have a diverse morphology that can be divided into main categories: type I (the primary branches) and type II (the secondary branches). The distribution of ramiform pits is different in ground parenchyma cells (GPCs) and vascular parenchyma cells (VPCs). The number, the pit aperture diameter and the pit canal length of ramiform pits in the VPCs were, respectively, greater (3-fold), larger (2–3-fold) and shorter (1.3-fold) than those in the GPCs.


1990 ◽  
Vol 68 (2) ◽  
pp. 354-363 ◽  
Author(s):  
David G. Fisher

Four distinct anatomical types of minor veins occur in Cananga odorata leaves. In order of decreasing size, they are (i) type I, with tracheary elements, fibers, vascular parenchyma cells, companion cells, and mostly nacreous-walled sieve-tube members; (ii) type II, with the same cell types except that the sieve-tube members have walls that usually lack nacreous thickenings; (iii) type III, with only vascular parenchyma cells and tracheids; and (iv) type IV (vein endings), with tracheary elements only. The proportions of the total minor vein length occupied by each are type I, 15.1%; type II, 27.2%; type III, 24.4%; and type IV, 33.3%. Thus about 60% of the minor vein network lacks sieve tubes. The average interveinal distance for all minor veins is 121 μm, but the average for veins containing sieve-tubes is 329 μm. Other salient features include vascular parenchyma cells up to 130 μm long, bundle-sheath cells whose lateral protuberances into the mesophyll increase extensively with decreasing vein size, and five layers of horizontally oriented spongy parenchyma cells. These features may facilitate transport of assimilate to the relatively small proportion of the minor vein network that contains sieve tubes.


Holzforschung ◽  
2019 ◽  
Vol 73 (7) ◽  
pp. 629-636 ◽  
Author(s):  
Caiping Lian ◽  
Rong Liu ◽  
Cheng Xiufang ◽  
Shuqing Zhang ◽  
Junji Luo ◽  
...  

Abstract The pits on parenchyma cell walls facilitate transfer of liquids between adjacent cells in the bamboo. To better understand the structure-function relationship of the pits, the structural characteristics of the pits in bamboo parenchyma cells need to be investigated. In this study, the pit structures were studied by field-emission environmental scanning electron microscopy (SEM). The samples included the native structure and the replica structure via resin castings. The results showed that the parenchyma cells possessed various shapes and the pits were diverse. Parenchyma cells exposed both simple and bordered pits. Pitting between vascular parenchyma cells (VPCs) was similar to that of the metaxylem vessel. In particular, a branched pit structure was found for the first time in the parenchyma cell.


Holzforschung ◽  
2009 ◽  
Vol 63 (3) ◽  
Author(s):  
Mariela Speranza ◽  
Ana Gutiérrez ◽  
José Carlos del Río ◽  
Lina Bettucci ◽  
Ángel T. Martínez ◽  
...  

AbstractWood decay experiments were carried out aiming at the selective removal of lipophilic compounds with selected basidiomycetes isolated fromEucalyptus globulusplantations in Uruguay:Dendrophora albobadia,Lentinus tigrinus,Peniophora cinerea,Peniophora lycii, andPhanerochaete crassa. Localization and composition of lipophilic compounds and lignin ofE. globuluswere determined by gas chromatography-mass spectrometry, fluorescence microscopy using filipin staining, confocal laser scanning microscopy (CLSM), and low temperature scanning electron microscopy. Free and esterified sterols, mainly sitosterol, were the predominant lipophilic compounds in the control wood. Sterols were present in ray parenchyma cells, together with polyphenols, and in vessels. This confirms earlier observations indicating that these cell types are the principal source of lipophilic extractives involved in pitch problems during pulping and bleaching. Sterols are also present in the vestures of fiber and vessel pits. Different fungal degradation patterns ofE. globuluswood were determined.P. lyciishowed the highest specificity for lignin degradation during short incubation time together with considerable sterol removal capacity. Ray parenchyma cells and their lumen deposits were strongly degraded byP. lycii. Eucalypt lignin located in vessel walls and fiber cell corners was more resistant to fungal attack, as revealed by CLSM. The initial decay stage ofL. tigrinuswas restricted to vessels and tyloses where the sterol compounds were removed.


2014 ◽  
Vol 2014 ◽  
pp. 1-9 ◽  
Author(s):  
Ming-Fang Qi ◽  
Tao Xu ◽  
Wei-Zhi Chen ◽  
Tian-lai Li

Polygalacturonase (PG) is crucial in plant organ abscission process. This paper investigated the cellular and subcellular localization of PG in ethylene-stimulated abscission of tomato pedicel explants. Confocal laser scanning microscopy of abscission zone sections with the fluorescent probe Cy3 revealed that PG was initially accumulated in parenchyma cells in cortical and vascular tissues after 8 h of ethylene treatment and then extended throughout the abscission zone when the abscission zone separated at 24 h after ethylene treatment. At the subcellular level, transmission electron microscopy with immunogold staining showed that PG showed abundant accumulation in the cortical and vascular tissues at 8 h after ethylene treatment, and the distribution area extended to the central parenchyma cells at 16 h after ethylene treatment. In addition, PGs were observed in the distal and proximal parts of the tomato pedicel explants throughout the abscission process. The results provided a visualized distribution of PG in the pedicel abscission zone and proved that PG was closely related to abscission.


Molecules ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 26 (22) ◽  
pp. 6876
Author(s):  
Nicholas J. Booth ◽  
Penelope M. C. Smith ◽  
Sunita A. Ramesh ◽  
David A. Day

Legumes form a symbiosis with rhizobia, a soil bacterium that allows them to access atmospheric nitrogen and deliver it to the plant for growth. Biological nitrogen fixation occurs in specialized organs, termed nodules, that develop on the legume root system and house nitrogen-fixing rhizobial bacteroids in organelle-like structures termed symbiosomes. The process is highly energetic and there is a large demand for carbon by the bacteroids. This carbon is supplied to the nodule as sucrose, which is broken down in nodule cells to organic acids, principally malate, that can then be assimilated by bacteroids. Sucrose may move through apoplastic and/or symplastic routes to the uninfected cells of the nodule or be directly metabolised at the site of import within the vascular parenchyma cells. Malate must be transported to the infected cells and then across the symbiosome membrane, where it is taken up by bacteroids through a well-characterized dct system. The dicarboxylate transporters on the infected cell and symbiosome membranes have been functionally characterized but remain unidentified. Proteomic and transcriptomic studies have revealed numerous candidates, but more work is required to characterize their function and localise the proteins in planta. GABA, which is present at high concentrations in nodules, may play a regulatory role, but this remains to be explored.


PROTOPLASMA ◽  
1987 ◽  
Vol 138 (2-3) ◽  
pp. 183-186 ◽  
Author(s):  
L. Sennerby-Forsse ◽  
A. P. Singh ◽  
B. Walles

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