Your browser doesn't support javascript.
loading
Show: 20 | 50 | 100
Results 1 - 4 de 4
Filter
Add more filters










Database
Language
Publication year range
1.
Protoplasma ; 254(2): 627-633, 2017 Mar.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-27491484

ABSTRACT

The cohesion-tension theory of water ascent (C-T) has been challenged over the past decades by a large body of experimental evidence obtained by means of several minimum or non-invasive techniques. The evidence strongly suggests that land plants acquire water through interplay of several mechanisms covered by the multi-force theory of (U. Zimmermann et al. New Phytologist 162: 575-615, 2004). The diversity of mechanisms includes, for instance, water acquisition by inverse transpiration and thermodynamically uphill transmembrane water secretion by cation-chloride cotransporters (L.H. Wegner, Progress in Botany 76:109-141, 2014). This whole plant perspective was opened by Otto Renner at the beginning of the last century who supported experimentally the strictly xylem-bound C-T mechanism, yet anticipated that the water ascent involves both the xylem conduit and parenchyma tissues. The survey also illustrates the known paradigm that new techniques generate new insights, as well as a paradigm experienced by Max Planck that a new scientific idea is not welcomed by the community instantly.


Subject(s)
Models, Biological , Trees/physiology , Water/physiology , Pectins/metabolism
2.
Methods ; 32(3): 235-40, 2004 Mar.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-14962757

ABSTRACT

Recombinant allergens have become a valuable tool for diagnosis and may also be used for therapy in the near future. To supply the required large amounts of functional recombinant proteins on a cost-effective basis, the production of allergens in plants by molecular farming is an alternative to microbial expression systems. Especially as post-translational modifications of the allergens, e.g., phosphorylation and glycosylation, may be important for recognition by the human immune system, the plant-based production of recombinant allergens enables the correct folding, glycosylation, and other modifications of the recombinant allergen. An introduction to the methods for plant transformation via the tumor-inducing bacterium, Agrobacterium tumefaciens, is given in this paper.


Subject(s)
Agrobacterium tumefaciens , Allergens/genetics , Cloning, Molecular/methods , Genetic Vectors , Nicotiana/genetics , Allergens/biosynthesis , Nicotiana/metabolism , Transfection/methods
3.
Protoplasma ; 219(3-4): 176-83, 2002 May.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-12099218

ABSTRACT

An acid phosphatase (acPAse) activity was released during germination and tube growth of pollen of Lilium longiflorum Thunb. By inhibiting components of the secretory pathway, the export of the acPase activity was affected and tube growth stopped. Brefeldin A (1 microM) and cytochalasin D (1 microM), which block the production and transport of secretory vesicles, respectively, inhibited the acPase secretion. The Ca2+ channel blocker gadolinium (100 microM Gd3+) also inhibited acPase secretion and tube growth, whereas 3 mM caffeine, another Ca2+ uptake inhibitor, stimulated the acPase release, while tube growth was inhibited. The Yariv reagent (beta-D-glucosyl)3 Yariv phenylglycoside stopped tube growth by binding to arabinogalactan proteins of the tube tip cell wall but did not affect acPase secretion. A strong correlation between tube growth and acPase release was detected. The secreted acPase activity had a pH optimum at pH 5.5, a KM of 0.4 mM for p-nitrophenyl phosphate, and was inhibited by zinc, molybdate, phosphate, and fluoride ions, but not by tartrate. In electrophoresis gels the main acPase activity was detected at 32 kDa. The conspicuous correlation between activity of the secretory pathway and acPase secretion during tube elongation strongly indicates an important role of the acPase during pollen tube growth and the secreted acPase activity may serve as a useful marker enzyme assay for secretory activity in pollen tubes.


Subject(s)
Acid Phosphatase/metabolism , Lilium/enzymology , Lilium/growth & development , Phloroglucinol/analogs & derivatives , Acid Phosphatase/chemistry , Brefeldin A/pharmacology , Caffeine/metabolism , Calcium Channel Blockers/pharmacology , Calcium Channels/metabolism , Cytochalasin D/metabolism , Flowers/enzymology , Flowers/growth & development , Germination/drug effects , Glucosides/metabolism , Molybdenum/metabolism , Phloroglucinol/metabolism , Signal Transduction/physiology , Time Factors
4.
Physiol Plant ; 114(3): 327-335, 2002 Mar.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-12060254

ABSTRACT

After Renner had shown convincingly in 1925 that the transpirational water loss generates tensions larger than 0.1 MPa (i.e. negative pressures) in the xylem of cut leafy twigs the Cohesion Theory proposed by Böhm, Askenasy, Dixon and Joly at the end of the 19th century was immediately accepted by plant physiologists. Introduction of the pressure chamber technique by Scholander et al. in 1965 enforced the general belief that tension is the only driving force for water lifting although substantial criticism regarding the technique and/or the Cohesion Theory was published by several authors. As typical for scientific disciplines, the advent of minimal- and non-invasive techniques in the last decade as well as the development of a new, reliable method for xylem sap sampling have challenged this view. Today, xylem pressure gradients, potentials, ion concentrations and volume flows as well as cell turgor pressure gradients can be monitored online in intact transpiring higher plants, and within a given physiological context by using the pressure probe technique and high-resolution NMR imaging techniques, respectively. Application of the pressure probe technique to transpiring plants has shown that negative absolute pressures (down to - 0.6 MPa) and pressure gradients can exist temporarily in the xylem conduit, but that the magnitude and (occasionally) direction of gradients contrasts frequently the belief that tension is the only driving force. This seems to be particularly the case for plants faced with problems of height, drought, freezing and salinity as well as with cavitation of the tensile water. Reviewing the current data base shows that other forces come into operation when exclusively tension fails to lift water against gravity due to environmental conditions. Possible candidates are longitudinal cellular and xylem osmotic pressure gradients, axial potential gradients in the vessels as well as gel- and gas bubble-supported interfacial gradients. The multiforce theory overcomes the problem of the Cohesion Theory that life on earth depends on water being in a highly metastable state.

SELECTION OF CITATIONS
SEARCH DETAIL
...