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1.
Plant Physiol ; 99(3): 1105-17, 1992 Jul.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-16668977

ABSTRACT

Soybean plants (Glycine max [L.] Merr. cv Williams), which were symbiotic with Bradyrhizobium japonicum, and which grew well upon reduced nitrogen supplied solely through N(2) fixation processes, often exhibited excess accumulation of starch and sucrose and diminished soluble protein in their source leaves. Nitrate and ammonia, when supplied to the nodulated roots of N(2)-fixing plants, mediated a reduction of foliar starch accumulation and a corresponding increase in soluble protein in the source leaves. This provided an opportunity to examine the potential metabolic adjustments by which NO(3) (-) and NH(4) (+) (N) sufficiency or deficiency exerted an influence upon soybean leaf starch synthesis. When compared with soybean plants supplied with N, elevated starch accumulation was focused in leaf palisade parenchyma tissue of N(2)-fixing plants. Foliar activities of starch synthesis pathway enzymes including fructose-1,6-bisphosphate phosphatase, phosphohexoisomerase, phosphoglucomutase (PGM), as well as adenosine diphosphate glucose pyrophosphorylase (in some leaves) exhibited highest activities in leaf extracts of N(2)-fixing plants when expressed on a leaf protein basis. This was interpreted to mean that there was an adaptation of these enzyme activities in the leaves of N(2)-fixing plants, and this contributed to an increase in starch accumulation. Another major causal factor associated with increased starch accumulation was the elevation in foliar levels of fructose-6-phosphate, glucose-6-phosphate, and glucose-1-phosphate (G1P), which had risen to chloroplast concentrations considerably in excess of the K(m) values for their respective target enzymes associated with starch synthesis, e.g. elevated G1P with respect to adenosine diphosphate glucose pyrophosphorylase (ADPG-PPiase) binding sites. The cofactor glucose-1,6-bisphosphate (G1,6BP) was found to be obligate for maximal PGM activity in soybean leaf extracts of N(2)-fixing as well as N-supplemented plants, and G1,6BP levels in N(2)-fixing plant leaves was twice that of levels in N-supplied treatments. However the concentration of chloroplastic G1,6BP in illuminated leaves was computed to be saturating with respect to PGM in both N(2)-fixing and N-supplemented plants. This suggested that the higher level of this cofactor in N(2)-fixing plant leaves did not confer any higher PGM activation and was not a factor in higher starch synthesis rates. Relative to plants supplied with NO(3) (-) and NH(4) (+), the source leaf glycerate-3-phosphate (3-PGA) and orthophosphate (Pi) concentrations in leaves of N(2)-fixing plants were two to four times higher. Although Pi is a physiological competitive inhibitor of leaf chloroplast ADPG-PPiase, and hence, starch synthesis, elevated chloroplast 3-PGA levels in N(2)-fixing plant leaves apparently prevented interference of Pi with ADPG-PPiase catalysis and starch synthesis.

2.
Plant Cell ; 3(4): 407-17, 1991 Apr.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-1668654

ABSTRACT

Polypeptide present in various cell fractions obtained from homogenized maize mesocotyls were separated by sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis, immunoblotted, and screened for cross-reactivity with antibodies against three synthetic polypeptides spanning different regions of the rat heart gap junctional protein connexin43 and the whole mouse liver gap junctional protein connexin32. An antibody raised against a cytoplasmic loop region of connexin43 cross-reacted strongly with a cell wall-associated polypeptide (possibly a doublet) of 26 kilodaltons. Indirect immunogold labeling of thin sections of mesocotyl tissue with this antibody labeled the plasmodesmata of cortical cells along the entire length of the plasmodesmata, including the neck region and the cytoplasmic annulus. Sections labeled with control preimmune serum were essentially free of colloidal gold. An antibody against connexin32 cross-reacted with a 27-kilodalton polypeptide that was present in the cell wall and membrane fractions. Indirect immunogold labeling of thin sections with this antibody labeled the plasmodesmata mainly in the neck region. It is suggested that maize mesocotyl plasmodesmata contain at least two different proteins that have homologous domains with connexin proteins.


Subject(s)
Membrane Proteins/immunology , Plant Proteins/immunology , Zea mays/immunology , Animals , Antibodies/immunology , Cell Fractionation , Cell Wall/immunology , Cell Wall/ultrastructure , Connexins , Cross Reactions , Electrophoresis, Polyacrylamide Gel , Immunoblotting , Microscopy, Electron , Microscopy, Immunoelectron , Rats , Seeds/immunology , Seeds/ultrastructure , Zea mays/ultrastructure
3.
Plant Physiol ; 94(1): 259-67, 1990 Sep.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-16667695

ABSTRACT

Leaf area, chlorophyll content, net CO(2) photoassimilation, and the partitioning of fixed carbon between leaf sucrose and starch and soluble protein were examined in Glycine max (L) Merr. cv Williams grown under three different nitrogen regimes. One group (Nod+/+) was inoculated with Bradyrhizobium and watered daily with a nutrient solution containing 6 millimolar NH(4)NO(3). A second set (Nod+/-) was inoculated and had N(2) fixation as its sole source of nitrogen. A third group (Nod(-)) was not inoculated and was watered daily with a nutrient solution containing 6 millimolar NH(4)NO(3). The mean net micromole CO(2) uptake per square decimeter per hour of the most recently matured source leaves was similar among the three groups of plants, being about 310. Mean leaf area of the source leaves, monitored for net photosynthesis was also similar. However, the mean milligram of chlorophyll per square decimeter of Nod+/- test leaves was about 50% lower than the other groups' leaves and indicated nitrogen deficiency. Thus, Nod+/- utilized their chlorophyll more efficiently for photosynthetic CO(2) uptake than the plants of the other treatments. The ratio of foliar carbohydrate:protein content was high in Nod+/- but low in the plants from the other two treatments. This inverse relationship between foliar protein and carbohydrate content suggests that more fixed carbon is diverted to the synthesis of protein when nitrogen availability is high. It was also found that Nod+/- sequestered more storage protein in their paraveinal mesophyll than plants of the other treatments. This study indicates that when inorganic nitrogen regimes are used to control photosynthate partitioning, then both leaf carbohydrate and leaf protein must be considered as end products of carbon assimilate allocation.

4.
Planta ; 180(1): 105-15, 1989 Dec.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-24201850

ABSTRACT

Immunocytochemical studies using antibodies raised against a 62-kDa membrane protein isolated from developing soybean (Glycine max (L.) Merr.) cotyledons were performed on leaf tissue of spinach (Spinacia oleracea L.). This 62-kDa protein was labeled by 6'-deoxy-6'-(4-azido-2-hydroxy)-benzamidosucrose (HABS), a photoaffinity sucrose analogue (K. G. Ripp et al., 1988, Plant Physiol.88, 1435-1445). Western-blot analysis of spinach plasma-membrane proteins indicated a cross-reactive polypeptide identical in molecular mass to that found in soybean. Indirect immunogold labeling of resin-embedded sections of fully expanded leaf tissue resulted in specific localization of colloidal gold on the sieve-tube plasma membrane. The label was uniform and, except for a few non-specific gold particles over the cell wall, all other cellular organelles and membrane systems were free of label. With the exception of occasional gold particles associated with the companion-cell plasma membrane, all other cell types of the leaf contained little or no label. Control sections treated with non-immune rabbit immunoglobulin-G were also essentially free of label. Immunogold labeling of young leaves, in which the phloem contained no mature sieve-tube members, were free of label for the 62-kDa protein. However, young leaf tissue in which mature or nearly mature sieve tubes could be identified, contained immunolabel associated with the sieve-tube plasma membranes. Similar results were obtained with mature leaf tissue of sugar beet (Beta vulgaris L.). The results of the immunocytochemical studies are consistent with the suggestion that the concentrating step in the phloem-loading process in this species may occur across the sieve-tube plasma membrane.

5.
Plant Physiol ; 88(4): 1381-7, 1988 Dec.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-16666470

ABSTRACT

The response of pearl millet (Pennisetum glaucum [L.]) seedlings to prolonged starvation was investigated at the biochemical and ultrastructural level. After 2 days of darkness the bulk of the seedling carbohydrate reserves were depleted. After 8 days in the dark the respiratory rate had declined to less than 50% of its initial value and the plants had lost half of their total protein content. Unlike the situation with carbohydrate depletion, protein loss was restricted to specific organs. The secondary leaf and stem (including the apical meristem) showed little or no protein loss during this period. In the primary leaf, seed, and roots, protein loss was substantial. In spite of the high rate of protein degradation in the primary leaf and roots, these organs showed no ultrastructural changes suggestive of tissue, cellular, or subcellular degradation. In addition, ribulose bisphosphate carboxylase was not preferentially degraded during starvation and only a small decline in chlorophyll content was observed after 8 days in the dark. During the period from 8 to 14 days, cell death started at the tip of the primary leaf and gradually spread downward. Both shoot and root meristems remained alive up to 14 days. Consequently, the eventual death of the plant was due to the loss of the carbohydrate-producing regions rather than the meristems. We suggest that these results provide an explanation for the high degree of starvation tolerance exhibited by pearl millet.

6.
Stain Technol ; 56(5): 299-305, 1981 Sep.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-7029786

ABSTRACT

An embedding technique has been developed to overcome difficulties that confront light and electron microscopists working with so-called "hard-to-embed" plant tissue. The method was originally described for freeze-dried material. It uses a modified Quickfit Rotaflo Valve and low heat to generate high pressure to aid in the infiltration and embedding of tissue with propylene oxide and plastic. The technique is not too cumbersome and requires 6 days from the dehydration step to the end of the polymerization process. Thick sections (1-2 micrometer) obtained from material prepared by this method stain readily with toluidine blue, and thin sections for the electron microscope stain satisfactorily following standard treatment with uranyl acetate and lead citrate. The thin sections are stable under the beam of the electron microscope. Results indicate that the quality of tissue preservation with this high pressure embedding technique is as good as tht observed using standard embedding methods for electron microscopy.


Subject(s)
Histological Techniques , Microscopy, Electron/methods , Plants/ultrastructure , Plant Cells
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