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1.
Tsitol Genet ; 41(1): 30-5, 2007.
Article in Ukrainian | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-17427415

ABSTRACT

The effects of microgravity and ethylene on morphology and ultrastructural organization of mitochondria in root statocytes of soybean seedlings grown for 6 days on the board of the space shuttle Columbia during the STS-87 mission were investigated. The spaceflight seedlings and the ground-grown control seedlings were grown in BRIG (Biological Research in Canister) in the presence of KMnO4 to remove ethylene. It was revealed that irrespectively of KMnO4 treatment the mitochondria in the spaceflight seedlings were characterized by round or oviform and by low electron density of organelle matrix, whereas the organelles in the ground controls were polymorphic in shape and had higher electron density of matrix. The possible mechanisms of morphological and ultrastructural rearrangements of mitochondria that may be involved in adaptation processes of soybean seedlings to microgravity conditions are discussed.


Subject(s)
Glycine max/growth & development , Mitochondria/ultrastructure , Spacecraft , Weightlessness , Ethylenes , Microscopy, Electron , Mitochondria/drug effects , Mitochondrial Size/drug effects , Plant Root Cap/drug effects , Plant Root Cap/growth & development , Plant Root Cap/ultrastructure , Potassium Permanganate/pharmacology , Seedlings/drug effects , Seedlings/growth & development , Seedlings/ultrastructure , Glycine max/drug effects , Glycine max/ultrastructure
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.
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
5.
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
6.
J Gravit Physiol ; 5(1): P147-8, 1998 Jul.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-11542330

ABSTRACT

Establishing the role of gravity in plant requires information about how gravity regulates the metabolism of individual cells. Plant cells and tissues in vitro are valuable models for such purpose. Disrupted intercellular relations in such models have allowed to elucidate both the gravity role in non-specialised to gravity plant cells and the correlative relation role of an intact plant organism. The data obtained from non-numerous space and clinostat experiments with plant cells in vitro have demonstrated that their metabolism is sensitive to g-environment. The most experiments have shown a decrease in the biomass production and cell proliferation of spaceflight samples compared with ground controls, although there is study reporting of increased biomass production in an anise suspension culture and D. carota crown gall tissue culture. At the same time, results of experiments with single carrot cells and tomato callus culture demonstrated similarities in differentiation process in microgravity and in ground controls. Noted ultrastructural arrangement in cells, especially mitochondria and plastids, have been related to altered energy load and functions of organelles in microgravity, as well as changes in the lipid peroxidation and the content of malonic dyaldehyde in a haplopappus tissue culture under altered gravity supposed with modification of membrane structural-functional state. This article focuses on growth aspects of the cultured cells in microgravity and under clinostat conditions and considers those aspects that require further analysis.


Subject(s)
Biomass , Gravitation , Gravity Sensing/physiology , Space Flight , Weightlessness Simulation , Weightlessness , Asteraceae/cytology , Asteraceae/growth & development , Cells, Cultured , Culture Techniques , Pisum sativum/cytology , Pisum sativum/growth & development , Rotation
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