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Plant Physiol, May 2001, Vol. 126, pp. 27-31
In Vivo Observation of Cavitation and Embolism Repair Using
Magnetic Resonance Imaging1,[w]
N. Michele
Holbrook,*
Eric T.
Ahrens,
Michael J.
Burns,2 and
Maciej A.
Zwieniecki
Department of Organismic and Evolutionary Biology, Harvard
University, Cambridge, Massachusetts 02138 (N.M.H., M.A.Z.); Department
of Biological Sciences, Carnegie Mellon University, Pittsburgh,
Pennsylvania 15213 (E.T.A.); and Jet Propulsion Laboratory, California
Institute of Technology, Pasadena, California 91109 (M.J.B.)
 |
ABSTRACT |
Magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) was used to noninvasively monitor
the status of individual xylem vessels in the stem of an intact,
transpiring grape (Vitis vinifera) plant over a period of approximately 40 h. Proton density-weighted MRI was used to visualize the distribution of mobile water in the stem and individual xylem vessels were scored as either water or gas filled (i.e. embolized). The number of water-filled vessels decreased during the
first 24 h of the experiment, indicating that approximately 10 vessels had cavitated during this time. Leaf water potentials decreased
from 1.25 to 2.1 MPa during the same period. Watering increased
leaf water potentials to 0.25 MPa and prevented any further
cavitation. Refilling of xylem vessels occurred as soon as the lights
were switched off, with the majority of vessels becoming refilled with
water during the first 2 to 3 h in darkness. These measurements
demonstrate that MRI can be used to monitor the functional status of
individual xylem vessels, providing the first method to study the
process of cavitation and embolism repair in intact plants.
 |
INTRODUCTION |
Transport of water through xylem
vessels may become disrupted by breakage of water columns under high
levels of tension or freezing temperatures (Tyree and Sperry,
1989 ). Because gas-filled vessels cannot transmit tensions, embolized
vessels are permanently lost from the water transport system unless a
mechanism exists to reconnect the water column. The idea that embolized
vessels might be restored to their functional state is not new, but has generally been thought to be limited to situations in which the entire
vascular system could be pressurized due to active solute transport by
the roots (Cochard et al., 1994 ; Fisher et al., 1997 ). Recent studies,
however, suggest that cavitated vessels may be repaired even when the
water in neighboring conduits is under tension (Salleo et al., 1996 ;
McCully et al., 1998 ; Zwieniecki and Holbrook, 1998 ; Pate and Canny,
1999 ; Tyree et al., 1999 ; Melcher et al., 2001 ). Embolism
removal is thought to require positive pressures to force the gas into
solution, making it difficult to understand how this process could take
place against a background of negative water potentials (Holbrook and
Zwieniecki, 1999 ). Although there has been some progress on how this
local compartmentalization might occur (Zwieniecki and Holbrook, 2000 ),
a mechanism that reconciles xylem tension and embolism repair has not,
in our opinion, been fully articulated.
A major factor limiting our understanding of embolism repair is the
lack of an in vivo method for examining changes in the functional
status of individual vessels. All of the methods currently used to
study refilling, such as temporal changes in hydraulic conductivity
(Zwieniecki and Holbrook, 1998 ), percent loss conductivity (Salleo et
al., 1996 ), or proportion of gas-filled conduits (McCully et al., 1998 ;
Pate and Canny, 1999 ), require destructive sampling. In this paper, we
use high-resolution magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) to follow the
status of individual xylem vessels in the stem of an intact grape
(Vitis vinifera) plant. MRI is well suited for studies of
embolism repair because it can image inside optically opaque subjects,
it is noninvasive, it is compatible with longitudinal investigations,
and it does not require the use of any exogenous chemical tracers
(MacFall and Van As, 1996 ; Chudek and Hunter, 1997 ). However, previous
studies using MRI to study water transport in plant stems do not have
the spatial resolution to distinguish individual xylem vessels (Johnson
et al., 1987 ; Köckenberger et al., 1997 ). In addition, MRI
studies of water transport have tended to use plants small enough to
fit entirely within the magnet (Kuchenbrod et al., 1996 ;
Köckenberger et al., 1997 ). Because vines have large diameter
xylem vessels and relatively flexible stems, they are well suited for
MRI studies of water transport. Here we present the first direct
observations of xylem cavitation and embolism repair in an intact plant.
 |
RESULTS |
As expected, regions of high water density in the
Mr images corresponded with xylem vessels
(Fig. 1). At the start of the experiment,
leaf water potential was 1.25 MPa and the
Mr image contained several regions with a
low density of vessels, indicating that some cavitation had already
occurred (Fig. 2). Over the next 24 h, approximately 10 additional vessels cavitated (Fig. 2). During this
period, leaf water potentials fell to 2.1 MPa. There was no obvious
spatial pattern to which vessels cavitated; on one side of the stem the
cavitated vessels were somewhat clumped, whereas on the other side they
were evenly dispersed.

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Figure 1.
Cross section of grape stem using light microscope
(A) or MRI (B). Scale bar in A = 2 mm. Note that the bark can be seen
in the MRI image, but only the wood is present in the anatomical cross
section (A).
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Figure 2.
Time course of total number of vessels visible in
the MRI images and leaf water potential as a function of time. A
through C show representative MRI images, with white arrows marking
vessels that were initially water filled (A), then gas-filled and hence
not visible (B), and finally refilled with water (C). A QuickTime movie
of all 39 images can be viewed at www.plantphysiol.org.
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After the plant was rewatered, leaf water potentials increased rapidly
to 0.25 MPa. During the period in which the lights remained on there
was no change in the number of visible vessels in the MRI image. Once
the lights were turned off, the number of water-filled vessels
increased markedly (Fig. 2). After the first hour in the dark, the
number of water-filled vessels was approximately equal to the start of
the experiment. The number of water-filled vessels continued to
increase over the next 12 h, although the rate of increase slowed
with time. During this period there was no evidence of root exudation
from a short side branch at the base that had been freshly cut. At the
end of the experiment the plant was severed at the base and there were
no visible signs of root exudation.
 |
DISCUSSION |
The images presented demonstrate that MRI can be used
noninvasively to monitor the functional state of individual xylem
vessels, thus opening new possibilities for studying embolism repair in intact plants. By combining MRI with more detailed physiological measurements such as sapflow and in situ thermocouple psychrometry, we
will be able to delineate the conditions under which repair occurs.
Because MRI can be used to image flow velocities (Bourgeois and
Decorps, 1991 ; Köckenberger et al., 1997 ; Kuchenbrod et al., 1998 ) as well as water density, further studies could determine whether
refilled vessels are able to subsequently transport water during
periods of active transpiration. In addition, monitoring through more
than one drying cycle could be used to determine if previously
cavitated vessels are more prone to cavitation in the future.
In the grapevine examined in this study, cavitation occurred while the
plant was actively transpiring and the leaves were turgid. Cavitation
appeared to occur at random within the stem, although some areas lost
more vessels than did others. There was no evidence of embolism repair,
as determined by the reappearance of water in xylem vessels, although
the leaves were illuminated. This was true even after the plant was
watered and leaf water potentials substantially increased. Repair was
first observed in the measurement immediately after the lights were
turned off, and continued to occur, although at a decreased rate, over
the next 12 h. This suggests that in grapevines embolism repair
may require both an increase in water potential and a cessation of flow
through the xylem. Other species, however, are reported to repair
cavitated vessels during periods of active transpiration (McCully et
al., 1998 ). MRI studies of these species will allow us to pinpoint the
conditions under which such repair occurs.
Grapes are well known for their capacity to generate root pressure
(Hale, 1727 ; Sperry et al., 1987 ). Prior to leaf expansion, grapes use
root pressure to refill xylem vessels that had become air filled during
the winter (Sperry et al., 1987 ). We did not observe any signs of root
exudation during this study despite careful visual examination.
However, in the absence of additional measurements, we recognize that
the possibility of root pressure being responsible for the observed
repair cannot be eliminated.
The major technical breakthrough of this study is the application
of high-resolution MRI to investigate the dynamic changes in xylem
transport capacity at the level of individual vessels. Previous use of
MRI to study water transport in plants has lacked the spatial
resolution needed to determine the functional status of individual
xylem vessels (Johnson et al., 1987 ; Kuchenbrod et al., 1996 ;
Köckenberger et al., 1997 ). In addition, the small size of the
plants used in previous studies makes it unlikely that substantial
tensions were generated within the xylem. The major limitation to MRI
studies of xylem transport arises from the need to have exclusive use
of the expensive microscopy instrumentation for extended periods of
time and the physical constraints on suitable plant material associated
with having to position the region of interest within the MRI magnet.
In the case of the instrument used in this study, this meant that
one-half of the plant (either all of the leaves or all of the roots and
soil) had to be threaded through a 4-cm-diameter constriction in the
center of the magnet bore. The ability to observe xylem processes in
vivo, however, greatly outweighs these limitations and provides a new
approach for understanding factors influencing the maintenance of water transport capacity in the xylem.
 |
MATERIALS AND METHODS |
Observations were made on a grape (Vitis vinifera
L. var. Concord) plant growing in an 8-L pot. The plant had been
previously pruned such that at the time of measurements it had an
unbranched shoot approximately 4 m in length. Measurements were
made using a vertical wide-bore (89-mm) 500-MHz, 11.7-tesla
magnetic resonance microscopy system (Bruker Instruments Inc.,
Billerica, MA) located at the Biological Imaging Center (California
Institute of Technology). A laboratory-built 1-cm-diameter radio
frequency (RF) surface coil and resonant tank circuit was
mounted directly onto the stem and was used for both RF
excitation and reception. A single turn surface coil was utilized
because of its high quality factor and its ease in placement along the
stem. The loss in reception homogeneity due to this geometry was not a
serious drawback because the coil diameter exceeded that of the stem by
approximately 40%, and a single, small, tip angle RF
excitation pulse (approximately 3°) was utilized in the
gradient echo sequence. After mounting the coil, the shoot was
carefully inserted into the magnet bore. The portion of the plant
protruding out the top of the magnet was coiled beneath a light
assembly that provided approximately 300 µmol photons
photosynthetically active radiation m 2
s 1 to the leaves.
Images were acquired using a two-dimensional Fourier transform gradient
echo protocol with a small tip angle excitation pulse (Callaghan,
1991 ). The repetition time and echo time were equal to 50 and 4.5 ms,
respectively. Two transverse image slices were acquired simultaneously
at 55-min intervals over a period of 45 h. Each slice was 1.5 mm
thick and separated by 1.75 mm. The in-plane image resolution was
20 × 20 µm. Signal averaging was required to obtain a
satisfactory signal-to-noise ratio of order of 10 within vessels, and
this limited the temporal resolution per acquisition to approximately
20 min. Because the MRI method used here visualizes the distribution of
mobile water (Callaghan, 1991 ), vessels containing embolisms are easily
distinguished from filled vessels.
The plant was continuously illuminated during the first 31 h of
the experiment. At 24 h into the experiment the plant was rewatered (approximately 3 L of water added to the pot). After 9 more h
the lights were turned off and the imaging continued for an additional
12 h. Leaf water potentials were measured using a pressure
chamber. To avoid substantial reductions in leaf area and thus changes
in plant water balance during the MRI measurements, the water
potentials of only six leaves were measured. After the MRI session was
completed, the stem was sectioned in the plane where the MRI images
were taken.
The time-dependent populations of filled and embolized vessels were
quantified from time lapse data through a fixed image plane. The number
of water-filled vessels in each MRI slice was counted by comparing each
image to the last frame (frame 39) of that slice's sequence. The final
image was printed on a transparency and all distinct (i.e.
water-filled) vessels were counted and circled. The other images
(1-38) were then printed on paper and overlain, one at a time, on a
back-lit reference image (frame 39). The number of missing vessels was
counted for each of the frames and subtracted from the total number of
vessels in frame 39.
 |
ACKNOWLEDGMENT |
We wish to thank the greenhouse staff at the Huntington Gardens
(Pasadena, CA) for generously providing greenhouse space.
 |
FOOTNOTES |
Received December 18, 2000; returned for revision February 6, 2001; accepted February 15, 2001.
1
This work was supported by the Andrew W. Mellon
Foundation, by the National Science Foundation (grant no. IBN 0078155),
and by the U.S. Department of Agriculture (grant no. NRICGP 9800878). Core support for the imaging system was provided in part by the Human
Brain Project (grant no. DA08944), with contributions from the National
Institute on Drug Abuse and the National Institute of Mental Health
(grant no. MH61223), and the National Center for Research Resources
(grant no. RR13625).
2
Present address: Revise, Inc., 79 Second Avenue,
Burlington, MA 01803.
[w]
The online version of this article contains Web-only
data. The supplemental material is available at www.plantphysiol.org.
*
Corresponding author; e-mail holbrook{at}oeb.harvard.edu; fax
617-496-5854.
 |
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