Albanian
Albanian
Arabic
Armenian
Azerbaijani
Belarusian
Bengali
Bosnian
Catalan
Czech
Danish
Deutsch
Dutch
English
Estonian
Finnish
Français
Greek
Haitian Creole
Hebrew
Hindi
Hungarian
Icelandic
Indonesian
Irish
Italian
Japanese
Korean
Latvian
Lithuanian
Macedonian
Mongolian
Norwegian
Persian
Polish
Portuguese
Romanian
Russian
Serbian
Slovak
Slovenian
Spanish
Swahili
Swedish
Turkish
Ukrainian
Vietnamese
Български
中文(简体)
中文(繁體)
Plant Physiology 1994-Feb

Cuticle Biosynthesis in Rapidly Growing Internodes of Deepwater Rice.

Vetëm përdoruesit e regjistruar mund të përkthejnë artikuj
Identifikohuni Regjistrohu
Lidhja ruhet në kujtesën e fragmenteve
S. Hoffmann-Benning
H. Kende

Fjalë kyçe

Abstrakt

Submergence induces rapid elongation of deepwater rice (Oryza sativa L.) internodes. This adaptive feature allows deepwater rice to grow out of the water and to survive flooding. The growth response of submerged deepwater rice plants is, ultimately, elicited by gibberellin (GA). Little attention has been given to the synthesis and role of the cuticle during plant growth. We investigated two questions regarding the cuticle in rapidly elongating deepwater rice internodes: (a) how does cuticle formation keep pace with internodal growth, which can reach rates of up to 5 mm/h; and (b) does the cuticle contribute to tissue stress in rice internodes? Treatment with GA for 48 h caused an up to 60-fold increase in the incorporation of [14C]palmitic acid and an up to 6-fold increase in the incorporation of [14C]oleic acid into the cuticle of growing internodes. GA also caused a qualitative change in the incorporation pattern of palmitic acid into several cutin monomers, the most prominent of which was tentatively identified by thin-layer chromatography as a derivative of dihydroxyhexadecanoic acid. Rapidly growing plant organs exhibit longitudinal tissue stress: the epidermal cell layer is under tension with a tendency to contract, whereas the internal cells are under compression with a tendency to expand. As a result of tissue stress, longitudinally sliced sections of elongating internodes bend outward upon isolation from the plant. Treating rapidly growing rice internodes with cutinase reduced such outward bending, indicating that the cuticle contributes to tissue stress. Based on these results, we propose that rapidly elongating structures such as deepwater rice internodes constitute an excellent system to study cuticle formation at the biochemical and cellular level.

Bashkohuni në faqen
tonë në facebook

Baza e të dhënave më e plotë e bimëve medicinale e mbështetur nga shkenca

  • Punon në 55 gjuhë
  • Kurime bimore të mbështetura nga shkenca
  • Njohja e bimëve nga imazhi
  • Harta GPS interaktive - etiketoni bimët në vendndodhje (së shpejti)
  • Lexoni botime shkencore në lidhje me kërkimin tuaj
  • Kërkoni bimë medicinale nga efektet e tyre
  • Organizoni interesat tuaja dhe qëndroni në azhurnim me kërkimet e lajmeve, provat klinike dhe patentat

Shkruani një simptomë ose një sëmundje dhe lexoni në lidhje me barërat që mund të ndihmojnë, shtypni një barishte dhe shikoni sëmundjet dhe simptomat që përdoren kundër.
* I gjithë informacioni bazohet në kërkimin shkencor të botuar

Google Play badgeApp Store badge