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1.
Tsitol Genet ; 51(2): 47-58, 2017.
Article in English, Russian | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30484618

ABSTRACT

An overview on the effects of real and simulated microgravity on certain cell components and processes, including new information obtained recently, is presented. Attention is focused on the influence of microgravity on the cytoplasmic membrane state, transcriptome and proteome, cell wall remodeling, and Ca2+-signaling in plant cells that are not specialised to gravity perception. It is emphasized the exceptional significance of the data on the organ-specific remodeling of the transcriptome and proteome in response to space flight, that discovers new advanced approaches to implement the fundamental and applied problems of plant space biology.


Subject(s)
Gene Expression Regulation, Plant , Plant Cells/metabolism , Plant Proteins/genetics , Plants/metabolism , Transcriptome , Weightlessness , Calcium Signaling , Cell Membrane/metabolism , Cell Membrane/ultrastructure , Cell Wall/metabolism , Cell Wall/ultrastructure , Humans , Photosynthesis/physiology , Plant Cells/ultrastructure , Plant Proteins/metabolism , Plants/genetics , Proteome/genetics , Proteome/metabolism , Space Flight , Weightlessness Simulation
2.
Adv Space Res ; 31(10): 2283-8, 2003.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-14686444

ABSTRACT

Changes in the vacuolation in root apex cells of soybean (Glycine max L. [Merr.]) seedlings grown in microgravity were investigated. Spaceflight and ground control seedlings were grown in the absence or presence of KMnO4 (to remove ethylene) for 6 days. After landing, in order to study of cell ultrastructure and subcellular free calcium ion distribution, seedling root apices were fixed in 2.5% (w/v) glutaraldehyde in 0.1 M cacodylate buffer and 2% (w/v) glutaraldehyde, 2.5% (w/v) formaldehyde, 2% (w/v) potassium antimonate K[Sb(OH)6] in 0.1 M K2HPO4 buffer with an osmolarity (calculated theoretically) of 0.45 and 1.26 osmol. The concentrations of ethylene in all spaceflight canisters were significantly higher than in the ground control canisters. Seedling growth was reduced in the spaceflight-exposed plants. Additionally, the spaceflight-exposed plants exhibited progressive vacuolation in the root apex cells, particularly in the columella cells, to a greater degree than the ground controls. Plasmolysis was observed in columella cells of spaceflight roots fixed in solutions with relatively high osmolarity (1.26 osmol). The appearance of plasmolysis permitted the evaluation of the water status of cells. The water potential of the spaceflight cells was higher than the surrounding fixative solution. A decrease in osmotic potential and/or an increase in turgor potential may have induced increases in cell water potential. However, the plasmolysed (i.e. non-turgid) cells implied that increases in water potential were accompanied with a decrease in osmotic potential. In such cells changes in vacuolation may have been involved to maintain turgor pressure or may have been a result of intensification of other vacuolar functions like digestion and storage.


Subject(s)
Glycine max/ultrastructure , Plant Root Cap/ultrastructure , Seedlings/ultrastructure , Space Flight , Vacuoles/physiology , Weightlessness , Calcium/metabolism , Dose-Response Relationship, Drug , Ethylenes/metabolism , Microscopy, Electron , Osmotic Pressure , Plant Growth Regulators/metabolism , Plant Root Cap/drug effects , Plant Root Cap/growth & development , Plant Root Cap/metabolism , Potassium Permanganate/pharmacology , Seedlings/drug effects , Seedlings/growth & development , Seedlings/metabolism , Glycine max/drug effects , Glycine max/growth & development , Glycine max/metabolism
3.
Adv Space Res ; 27(5): 967-72, 2001.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-11596641

ABSTRACT

The antimonate precipitation technique was used to evaluate the effects of microgravity and ethylene on the cellular and subcellular distribution of free calcium ions in soybean root apices. Soybean (Glycine max L. [Merr.]) dry seeds were launched, activated by hydration, and germinated in the presence of KMnO4 (to remove ethylene) and in its absence onboard the space shuttle Columbia during the STS-87 mission. Primary root apices of 6-day old seedlings were fixed for electron microscopy after landing. Ultrastructural studies indicated that antimonate precipitation appeared as individual electron-dense particles which were more or less round in shape and varied in diameter from 10 nm (minimum size beginning from which the particles were well identified) to 90 nm. It was revealed that analyzed root cap cells varied in both the precipitate particle sizes and the amount particles per unit of the cellular area. In both flight and ground control treatments, antimonate precipitation level increases from apical meristem cells to peripheral (secretory) cells of root apices. In root cap statocytes, subcellular localization of precipitate particles was revealed in the cytoplasm, nucleus and small vacuoles. The quantitative analysis showed a reduction of precipitate density in the cytoplasm and the nucleus, and an increase in precipitate density in the vacuoles from statocytes of both spaceflight treatments in comparison with ground controls.


Subject(s)
Calcium/metabolism , Glycine max/metabolism , Plant Root Cap/ultrastructure , Space Flight , Weightlessness , Antimony/pharmacology , Cell Nucleus/metabolism , Cell Nucleus/ultrastructure , Chemical Precipitation , Cytoplasm/metabolism , Cytoplasm/ultrastructure , Ethylenes/antagonists & inhibitors , Meristem/metabolism , Meristem/ultrastructure , Microscopy, Electron , Plant Root Cap/metabolism , Plastids/metabolism , Plastids/ultrastructure , Glycine max/ultrastructure , Vacuoles/metabolism , Vacuoles/ultrastructure
4.
Plant Physiol ; 126(2): 613-21, 2001 Jun.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-11402191

ABSTRACT

The use of plants as integral components of life support systems remains a cornerstone of strategies for long-term human habitation of space and extraterrestrial colonization. Spaceflight experiments over the past few decades have refined the hardware required to grow plants in low-earth orbit and have illuminated fundamental issues regarding spaceflight effects on plant growth and development. Potential incipient hypoxia, resulting from the lack of convection-driven gas movement, has emerged as a possible major impact of microgravity. We developed transgenic Arabidopsis containing the alcohol dehydrogenase (Adh) gene promoter linked to the beta-glucuronidase (GUS) reporter gene to address specifically the possibility that spaceflight induces the plant hypoxia response and to assess whether any spaceflight response was similar to control terrestrial hypoxia-induced gene expression patterns. The staining patterns resulting from a 5-d mission on the orbiter Columbia during mission STS-93 indicate that the Adh/GUS reporter gene was activated in roots during the flight. However, the patterns of expression were not identical to terrestrial control inductions. Moreover, although terrestrial hypoxia induces Adh/GUS expression in the shoot apex, no apex staining was observed in the spaceflight plants. This indicates that either the normal hypoxia response signaling is impaired in spaceflight or that spaceflight inappropriately induces Adh/GUS activity for reasons other than hypoxia.


Subject(s)
Arabidopsis/metabolism , Signal Transduction/genetics , Space Flight , Transgenes , Alcohol Dehydrogenase/genetics , Arabidopsis/drug effects , Arabidopsis/genetics , Calcium/metabolism , Glucuronidase/genetics , Oxygen/metabolism , Plants, Genetically Modified/drug effects , Plants, Genetically Modified/genetics , Plants, Genetically Modified/metabolism
5.
J Gravit Physiol ; 7(2): P79-80, 2000 Jul.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-12697564

ABSTRACT

Phytoferritin is an iron-protein complex analogous to the ferritin found in mammalian, bacteria and fungi cells. Phytoferritin molecules are large proteins, about 10.5 nm in diameter, visualised in an electron microscope as discrete, electron dense particles with iron-containing core, where several thousand atoms of iron lie within the proteinaceous shell (apoferritin). In higher plants, a plastid stroma is the site of phytoferritin storage. Phytoferritin is seen in all types of plastids. It is considered to be a mechanism used by cells to store iron in a non-toxic form. Phytoferritin-bound iron may subsequently be used to form iron-containing components. It was shown that low levels of phytoferritin are synthesised in normal green leaves, whereas chlorotic leaves do not have a measurable amount of phytoferritin and leaves of iron-loaded seedlings contain a high level of total iron, and phytoferritin well-filled by iron. Phytoferritin accumulation was observed in photosynthetic inactivity chloroplasts during senescence and disease. In this study we analised the effects of microgravity and ethylene on production of phytoferritin in the root cap columella cells of soybean seedlings.


Subject(s)
Ferritins/metabolism , Glycine max/metabolism , Plant Root Cap/metabolism , Space Flight , Weightlessness , Ethylenes/pharmacology , Ferritins/drug effects , Organelles/metabolism , Plant Growth Regulators/pharmacology , Plant Root Cap/drug effects , Plant Shoots/drug effects , Plant Shoots/metabolism , Plastids/metabolism , Glycine max/drug effects
6.
J Gravit Physiol ; 6(1): P97-8, 1999 Jul.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-11543045

ABSTRACT

Root apex cells of higher plants have unique structure and functions. In particular, the central cells of root cap are considered as the site of gravity perception in roots and are characterised by structural polarity, including directional sedimentation of amyloplasts with to gravity. Past studies have shown that root growth, structural organisation of the cells, and structural polarity of statocytes were affected in microgravity. Microgravity-grown plants also exhibited enhanced production of ethylene and decreased production of starch relative to ground controls. In this paper, the effects of microgravity and ethylene on ultrastructural organisation of the cells in soybean root apices are presented.


Subject(s)
Glycine max/ultrastructure , Plant Root Cap/ultrastructure , Space Flight , Weightlessness , Microscopy, Electron , Plant Root Cap/metabolism , Plant Roots/cytology , Plant Roots/growth & development , Plant Roots/ultrastructure , Plant Shoots , Plastids/physiology , Plastids/ultrastructure , Glycine max/cytology , Glycine max/growth & development , Starch/metabolism , Vacuoles/physiology
7.
J Biotechnol ; 47(2-3): 155-65, 1996 Jun 27.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-11536757

ABSTRACT

An experiment to study the growth of garden cress roots in microgravity is described. The experiment, denoted RANDOM, was an ESA Biorack experiment in the IML-2 flight in July 1994. In the absence of gravity, it can be anticipated that the roots would show random growth, changing their direction randomly. The hypothesis that such random growth movements occur according to random walk theory, leads to predictions as to the detailed manner in which deviations increase with time. The experiment was designed to test this random walk hypothesis. The paper concentrates on the technological aspects of studying the roots in microgravity. The development of suitable plant chambers, fitting containers developed by ESA, is described as well as the techniques used to grow the seeds between agar slices. hardware was developed to record photographically root movements between the agar slices. Photos were taken once per hour. Some plant chambers were designed to allow fixation of plant material in space. The practical solutions found using glutaraldehyde for prefixation in the Spacelab, within the restrictions given, are described. The experimental results show that the growth pattern in fact followed the prediction from the random walk approach. The average changes in the growth direction stayed constant and equal to zero during the experiment while the squared angular deviations increased proportional to time. Furthermore, plant material prefixed in orbit was permanently fixed after the flight. Light microscopy and electron microscopy pictures are shown as examples of the results achieved. The long prefixation period meant a drawback for the quality of the fixation process. However, sections suitable for study were achieved. The main goals of the RANDOM experiment were therefore achieved.


Subject(s)
Gravitropism/physiology , Plant Roots/growth & development , Space Flight , Weightlessness , Environment, Controlled , Fixatives/adverse effects , Fixatives/pharmacology , Glutaral/adverse effects , Glutaral/pharmacology , Microscopy, Electron , Photography , Plant Development , Plant Roots/drug effects , Plant Roots/ultrastructure , Plants/drug effects , Plants/ultrastructure , Temperature
8.
Photochem Photobiol ; 63(2): 238-42, 1996 Feb.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-11536734

ABSTRACT

Oat (Avena sativa cv Seger) seedlings were irradiated with IR light-emitting diode (LED) radiation passed through a visible-light-blocking filter. Infrared LED irradiated seedlings exhibited differences in growth and gravitropic response when compared to seedlings grown in darkness at the same temperature. Thus, the oat seedlings in this study were able to detect IR LED radiation. These findings call into question the use of IR LED as a safe-light for some photosensitive plant response experiments. These findings also expand the defined range of wavelengths involved in radiation-gravity (light-gravity) interactions to include wavelengths in the IR region of the spectrum.


Subject(s)
Avena/growth & development , Avena/radiation effects , Darkness , Gravitropism/radiation effects , Infrared Rays , Avena/physiology , Gravitation , Gravitropism/physiology , Light , Lighting , Phytochrome/physiology , Phytochrome/radiation effects
9.
Physiol Plant ; 96(2): 169-78, 1996 Feb.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-11541141

ABSTRACT

The dynamics of root growth was studied in weightlessness. In the absence of the gravitropic reference direction during weightlessness, root movements could be controlled by spontaneous growth processes, without any corrective growth induced by the gravitropic system. If truly random of nature, the bending behavior should follow so-called 'random walk' mathematics during weightlessness. Predictions from this hypothesis were critically tested. In a Spacelab ESA-experiment, denoted RANDOM and carried out during the IML-2 Shuttle flight in July 1994, the growth of garden cress (Lepidium sativum) roots was followed by time lapse photography at 1-h intervals. The growth pattern was recorded for about 20 h. Root growth was significantly smaller in weightlessness as compared to gravity (control) conditions. It was found that the roots performed spontaneous movements in weightlessness. The average direction of deviation of the plants consistently stayed equal to zero, despite these spontaneous movements. The average squared deviation increased linearly with time as predicted theoretically (but only for 8-10 h). Autocorrelation calculations showed that bendings of the roots, as determined from the 1-h photographs, were uncorrelated after about a 2-h interval. It is concluded that random processes play an important role in root growth. Predictions from a random walk hypothesis as to the growth dynamics could explain parts of the growth patterns recorded. This test of the hypothesis required microgravity conditions as provided for in a space experiment.


Subject(s)
Brassicaceae/growth & development , Gravitropism/physiology , Plant Roots/growth & development , Space Flight , Weightlessness , Models, Biological , Photography , Time Factors
10.
Physiol Plant ; 95(1): 27-33, 1995 Sep.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-11539922

ABSTRACT

We conducted a series of gravitropic experiments on Avena coleoptiles in the weightlessness environment of Spacelab. The purpose was to test the threshold stimulus, reciprocity rule and autotropic reactions to a range of g-force stimulations of different intensities and durations The tests avoided the potentially complicating effects of earth's gravity and the interference from clinostat ambiguities. Using slow-speed centrifuges, coleoptiles received transversal accelerations in the hypogravity range between 0.l and 1.0 g over periods that ranged from 2 to 130 min. All responses that occurred in weightlessness were compared to clinostat experiments on earth using the same apparatus. Characteristic gravitropistic response patterns of Atuena were not substantially different from those observed in ground-based experiments. Gravitropic presentation times were extrapolated. The threshold at 1.0 g was less than 1 min (shortest stimulation time 2 min), in agreement with values obtained on the ground. The least stimulus tested, 0.1 g for 130 min, produced a significant response. Therefore the absolute threshold for a gravitropic response is less than 0.1 g.


Subject(s)
Avena/growth & development , Cotyledon/growth & development , Gravitropism/physiology , Hypogravity , Space Flight , Weightlessness , Acceleration , Avena/anatomy & histology , Avena/physiology , Centrifugation , Cotyledon/anatomy & histology , Cotyledon/physiology , Gravitation , Gravity Sensing/physiology , Rotation , Temperature , Time Factors
11.
Physiol Plant ; 95(1): 34-8, 1995 Sep.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-11539923

ABSTRACT

Experiments were undertaken to determine if the reciprocity rule is valid for gravitropic responses of oat coleoptiles in the acceleration region below 1 g. The rule predicts that the gravitropic response should be proportional to the product of the applied acceleration and the stimulation time. Seedlings were cultivated on 1 g centrifuges and transferred to test centrifuges to apply a transverse g-stimulation. Since responses occurred in microgravity, the uncertainties about the validity of clinostat simulation of weightlessness was avoided. Plants at two stages of coleoptile development were tested. Plant responses were obtained using time-lapse video recordings that were analyzed after the flight. Stimulus intensities and durations were varied and ranged from 0.1 to 1.0 g and from 2 to 130 min, respectively. For threshold g-doses the reciprocity rule was obeyed. The threshold dose was of the order of 55 g s and 120 g s, respectively, for two groups of plants investigated. Reciprocity was studied also at bending responses which are from just above the detectable level to about 10 degrees. The validity of the rule could not be confirmed for higher g-doses, chiefly because the data were more variable. It was investigated whether the uniformity of the overall response data increased when the gravitropic dose was defined as (gm x t) with m-values different from unity. This was not the case and the reciprocity concept is, therefore, valid also in the hypogravity region. The concept of gravitropic dose, the product of the transverse acceleration and the stimulation time, is also well-defined in the acceleration region studied. With the same hardware, tests were done on earth where responses occurred on clinostats. The results did not contradict the reciprocity rule but scatter in the data was large.


Subject(s)
Avena/growth & development , Cotyledon/growth & development , Gravitropism/physiology , Hypogravity , Space Flight , Weightlessness , Acceleration , Avena/anatomy & histology , Avena/physiology , Centrifugation , Cotyledon/anatomy & histology , Cotyledon/physiology , Gravitation , Gravity Sensing/physiology , Rotation , Time Factors
12.
Plant Cell Environ ; 18(7): 818-22, 1995 Jul.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-11539343

ABSTRACT

Dark-grown wheat coleoptiles developed strong curvatures within 5 h of being transferred in orbit from a 1 g centrifuge to microgravity during an experiment flown on the IML-1 shuttle mission. The curving tendency was strongest in seedlings that were immature, with coleoptiles shorter than 10 mm at the time of transfer. The curvature direction was non-random, and directed away from the caryopsis (the coleptile face adjacent to the caryopsis becoming convex). The curvatures were most marked in the basal third of the coleoptiles, contrasting with phototropic responses, which occur in the apical third. We interpret these curvatures as being nastic, and related to the curvatures commonly reported to occur during clinostat rotation treatments.


Subject(s)
Cotyledon/growth & development , Space Flight , Weightlessness , Carbon Dioxide/metabolism , Centrifugation , Cotyledon/metabolism , Cotyledon/physiology , Ethylenes/metabolism , Gravitation , Light , Plant Growth Regulators/metabolism , Rotation , Time Factors , Triticum/growth & development , Triticum/metabolism , Triticum/physiology
13.
Microgravity Sci Technol ; 7(3): 270-5, 1994 Sep.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-11541487

ABSTRACT

In January 1992, the NASA Shuttle mission STS 42 carried a facility designed to perform experiments on plant gravi- and photo-tropic responses. This equipment, the Gravitational Plant Physiology Facility (GPPF) was made up of a number of interconnected units mounted within a Spacelab double rack. The details of these units and the plant growth containers designed for use in GPPF are described. The equipment functioned well during the mission and returned a substantial body of time-lapse video data on plant responses to tropistic stimuli under conditions of orbital microgravity. GPPF is maintained by NASA Ames Research Center, and is flight qualifiable for future Spacelab missions.


Subject(s)
Environment, Controlled , Plant Physiological Phenomena , Space Flight/instrumentation , Weightlessness , Avena/growth & development , Avena/metabolism , Equipment Design , Evaluation Studies as Topic , Light , Plant Shoots/growth & development , Plant Shoots/metabolism , Triticum/growth & development , Triticum/metabolism , Videotape Recording
14.
Plant Physiol ; 94: 233-8, 1990.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-11537478

ABSTRACT

The principal objective of the research reported here was to determine whether a plant's periodic growth oscillations, called circumnutations, would persist in the absence of a significant gravitational or inertial force. The definitive experiment was made possible by access to the condition of protracted near weightlessness in an earth satellite. The experiment, performed during the first flight of Spacelab on the National Aeronautics and Space Administration shuttle, Columbia, in November and December, 1983, tested a biophysical model, proposed in 1967, that might account for circumnutation as a gravity-dependent growth response. However, circumnutations were observed in microgravity. They continued for many hours without stimulation by a significant g-force. Therefore, neither a gravitational nor an inertial g-force was an absolute requirement for initiation [correction of initation] or continuation of circumnutation. On average, circumnutation was significantly more vigorous in satellite orbit than on earth-based clinostats. Therefore, at least for sunflower (Helianthus annuus L.) circumnutation, clinostatting is not the functional equivalent of weightlessness.


Subject(s)
Gravitropism/physiology , Helianthus/growth & development , Hypocotyl/growth & development , Space Flight/instrumentation , Weightlessness , Acceleration , Centrifugation , Gravitation , Rotation , Vibration , Weightlessness Simulation
15.
Adv Space Res ; 8(12): 141-6, 1988.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-11542210

ABSTRACT

Microgravity experiments designed for execution in Get-Away Special canisters, Hitchhiker modules, and Reusable Re-entry Satellites will be subjected to launch and re-entry accelerations. Crew-dependent provisions for preventing acceleration damage to equipment or products will not be available for these payloads during flight; therefore, the effects of launch and re-entry accelerations on all aspects of such payloads must be evaluated prior to flight. A procedure was developed for conveniently simulating the launch and re-entry acceleration profiles of the Space Shuttle (3.3 and 1.7 x g maximum, respectively) and of two versions of NASA's proposed materials research Re-usable Re-entry Satellite (8 x g maximum in one case and 4 x g in the other). By using the 7 m centrifuge of the Gravitational Plant Physiology Laboratory in Philadelphia it was found possible to simulate the time dependence of these 5 different acceleration episodes for payload masses up to 59 kg. A commercial low-cost payload device, the "Materials Dispersion Apparatus" of Instrumentation Technology Associates was tested for (1) integrity of mechanical function, (2) retention of fluid in its compartments, and (3) integrity of products under simulated re-entry g-loads. In particular, the sharp rise from 1 g to maximum g-loading that occurs during re-entry in various unmanned vehicles was successfully simulated, conditions were established for reliable functioning of the MDA, and crystals of 5 proteins suspended in compartments filled with mother liquor were subjected to this acceleration load.


Subject(s)
Acceleration/adverse effects , Spacecraft/instrumentation , Centrifugation/instrumentation , Crystallization , Equipment Design , Hypergravity , Muramidase/chemistry , Proteins/chemistry , Space Flight/instrumentation , Space Simulation , Weightlessness
16.
Physiol Plant ; 70: 447-52, 1987.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-11539055

ABSTRACT

Circumnutations of hypocotyls of sunflower (Helianthus annuus L. cv. Californicus) were studied under 1 g and 3 g conditions. Root mean square values of the hypocotyl deviation from the plumbline and period of the movements were determined from calculations of the autocorrelation functions of the movements. The amplitude and the period of the circumnutations increased under 3 g as compared to 1 g. A transition from 3 to 1 g or vice versa also caused changes in period and amplitude of the movements. The results are interpreted as a support for the idea that gravity influences the circumnutation parameters in this sunflower variety. A comparison is made with published results on the dwarf sunflower cv. Teddy Bear where the force influence is very small or negligible. Simulations of a model for circumnutations show movements which are in qualitative agreement with the experimental results, provided adaptation to g-levels is included in the model. Finally, the results are discussed with the recent Spacelab-experiment (SL1) as a background.


Subject(s)
Gravitation , Helianthus/growth & development , Hypergravity , Hypocotyl/growth & development , Centrifugation , Computer Simulation , Helianthus/physiology , Hypocotyl/physiology
17.
Ann Bot ; 54(Suppl 3): 19-31, 1984 Nov.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-11538821

ABSTRACT

We report a pioneering attempt to use the NASA Shuttle Orbiter Middeck locker facility to acquire data on plant growth in near weightlessness. The information was needed to confirm the suitability of a plant culture system to be used in an experiment scheduled for the first Spacelab mission. The test was designed to measure germination and early seedling growth in a series of soil mixtures covering a range of water contents. Empirical determination of growth dependence on moisture content was required because both in theory and from Soviet flight experience it seemed possible that the dependence function in near weightlessness could be critically different from what we had measured on Earth. Such a difference could invalidate the future test in Spacelab 1 of gravity dependence of the differential growth process, circumnutation. After two failed attempts sufficient measurements were obtained from the third Shuttle Orbiter flight test to confirm the biocompatibility of the plant culture system--viz. soil moisture content variations had the same effect in near weightlessness as at 1 g. A number of supplemental observations about middeck locker conditions in Shuttle flight are presented. These may prove helpful to would-be experimenters who will plan to take advantage of future Shuttle flight opportunities for biological research.


Subject(s)
Environment, Controlled , Helianthus/growth & development , Space Flight , Weightlessness , Evaluation Studies as Topic , Germination/physiology , Helianthus/physiology , Hypocotyl/growth & development , Hypocotyl/physiology , Research Design , Seeds/growth & development , Soil , Spacecraft/instrumentation , Water
18.
Science ; 225: 230-2, 1984 Jul 13.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-11540799

ABSTRACT

For over half a century and especially since the 1960's a number of plant physiologists, seeking to explain the impressively ubiquitous mechanism that drives and regulates circumnutation in all growing plant organs, have been unable to agree on whether the differential growth process that leads to circumnutational oscillations is gravity dependent. There has been fairly general agreement that the question might be answered, if test plants could be deprived of all significant gravitational stimuli as would be possible in the near weightlessness or free fall environment of satellite orbit. Such an experiment was carried out during the Spacelab 1 mission. Circumnutational oscillations were observed which demonstrated that a protracted input of gravitational information from the environment was not required for initiation or maintenance of circumnutation in sunflower hypocotyls.


Subject(s)
Gravitation , Gravitropism/physiology , Helianthus/growth & development , Space Flight , Weightlessness Simulation , Weightlessness , Helianthus/physiology , Rotation , Temperature , Video Recording
19.
Adv Space Res ; 1(14): 103-7, 1981.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-11541698

ABSTRACT

Dark-grown, 4-day old, Helianthus annuus seedlings were rotated for 20 hr on horizontal clinostats to minimize the amplitude of circumnutation. Then a Plexiglas sheet was placed gently against the tip of the cotyledons. By time-lapse video imaging (using intermittent IR illumination to which the plants were insensitive) movements of the clinostatted plants were observed before, during, and after the period of mechanical contact. Immediately after the Plexiglas sheet was removed residual nutation increased in amplitude almost three-fold, then declined over the next 7 hr to the prestimulation level. This demonstration of enhancement of circumnutation by mechanical contact is consistent with the model of an endogenous oscillator that can be stimulated by factors other than gravity.


Subject(s)
Gravitation , Helianthus/growth & development , Helianthus/physiology , Rotation , Physical Stimulation , Time Factors , Tropism/physiology
20.
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