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Plant Physiol, May 2002, Vol. 129, pp. 1-2
ON THE INSIDE
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A Transformant with Reduced Arabinan in Its Pectin |
Pectins are complex cell wall
polysaccharides that cement neighboring plant cells together and embed
the load-bearing structures of the cell wall (cellulose microfibrils
and hemicelluloses). Assigning specific functions to particular pectin
types is in its infancy, in part, because of the limited number of
transformants and mutants available with modified pectic polymers in
their walls. In this report, Skjøt et al. (pp.
95-102) describe the generation of potato (Solanum
tuberosum) tuber transformants that produce pectic
rhamnogalacturonan I (RGI) with a low level of arabinosylation.
This feat was accomplished by targeting a rat -2,6 sialyl
transferase-endo- -1,5-arabinanase fusion protein to the Golgi
compartment of potato tuber cells, with the effect that the arabinan
side-chains on RGI are hydrolyzed at the site of pectin biosynthesis.
Sugar composition analyses of RGI isolated from transformed and
wild-type (WT) tubers showed that the Ara content was decreased by
approximately 70% in transformed cell walls compared with wild type.
This transformant should be useful in settling fundamental debates
concerning the role of arabinans in cell wall structure: For example,
are arabinans rigid, structural components of the cell wall or mobile,
fluidizing agents?
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Gibberellin and Cortical Wound Repair |
In Japan, cucumber (Cucumis sativus) is often
grafted onto squash (Cucurbita pepo) stock to prevent
damage from soil-borne diseases. In this procedure, the apical tip and
first leaf of the squash stock are removed, but the cotyledons of the
scion and stock are preferentially left on the hypocotyl to improve grafting efficiency. Although the exact role of the cotyledon in the
formation of the graft union is not understood, it is possible that the
cotyledon produces compounds required for the formation of the graft
union. In this issue, Asahina et al. (pp. 201-210) cut
cucumber hypocotyls to one-half of their diameter transversely and
performed morphological and histochemical analyses of the process of
tissue reunion in the cortex. Cell division in the cortex commenced
3 d after cutting, and the cortex was nearly fully united within
7 d. Cell division during tissue reunion was strongly inhibited
when the cotyledon was removed. The application of gibberellin (GA) to
the apical tip of the cotyledon-less plant reversed this inhibition.
Moreover, cell division in the cortex was inhibited by treatment of the
cotyledon with uniconazole-P (an inhibitor of GA biosynthesis). The
requirement of GA for tissue reunion in cut hypocotyls was also evident
from studies of the GA-deficient gib-1 mutant of tomato
(Lycopersicon esculentum). These novel results suggest that
GA, possibly produced in the cotyledons, is essential for cell division
during the cortical repair of cut hypocotyls.
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The Advantage of Small Chloroplasts |
Why do the photosynthetic cells of higher plants contain so many
small chloroplasts rather than a few large ones? In this issue,
Jeong et al. (pp. 112-121) adopt a novel approach to this
question. The authors use tobacco (Nicotiana tabacum) transformants that have been modified, by the overexpression of NtFtsZ1-2 (a gene involved in plastid division), to contain
only one to three enlarged chloroplasts per mesophyll cell (Fig.
1). Despite the similarities in
photosynthetic components and ultrastructure of photosynthetic
machinery between WT and transgenic plants, the overall growth of
transgenic plants under low- and high-light conditions was retarded. In
WT plants, the chloroplasts moved toward the face position under
low-light conditions, and toward the profile position under high-light
conditions. In contrast, chloroplast rearrangement in transgenic plants
in response to light conditions was not evident. The defective positive
phototaxis of the enlarged chloroplasts under low-light conditions may
decrease light absorption and, hence, growth. Under high-light
conditions, defective negative phototaxis may cause the amount of
absorbed light to exceed the photosynthetic utilization capacity,
resulting in photodamage to the photosynthetic machinery and decreased
growth. The evidence presented suggests that the presence of a large
number of small and/or rapidly moving chloroplasts in the cells of
higher land plants permits more effective chloroplast
phototaxis.

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Figure 1.
Light (A and B) and confocal (C and D)
photomicrographs of protoplasts from wild type (A and C) and
transformed cells containing a few, giant chloroplasts (B and
D).
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Are Bundle Sheath Extensions Light Guides? |
Heterobaric leaves are characterized by the occurrence of
transparent regions in the leaf blade that are easily seen as a network
of bright lines on a dark green background under low magnification with
transmitted light. These transparent areas are created because the
bundle sheaths of these leaves extend to the epidermises on both sides
of the leaf, forming bundle sheath extensions (BSEs), which project as
ribs on both surfaces of the lamina. Many plant tissues or single cells
can behave as light guides or transparent windows, transferring light
to the neighboring cells. For example, the leaves of some underground
growing desert plants possess areas from which photosynthetic
parenchyma layers are absent. The epidermis and the underlying water
storage tissue in these window-leaved plants are transparent to allow
light penetration to the internal chlorenchyma layers. This anatomical
adaptation presumably developed to allow photosynthesis to occur
underground so as to reduce water losses and heat load of the leaves.
It has been hypothesized that BSEs, apart from their water-conducting,
mechanical, and protective functions, may also behave as "transparent
windows," transferring visible light to internal layers of mesophyll.
In this issue, Nikolopoulos et al. (pp. 235-243) report on
their attempts to test this hypothesis. Image analysis showed that the
percentage of photosynthetically active leaf area (PALA) of the
heterobaric leaves of 31 plant species ranged from 91% in
Malva sylvestris to only 48% in Gynerium
sp. Although a significant portion of the leaf surface does not
correspond to photosynthetic tissue, the photosynthetic capacity of
these leaves, expressed per unit of area, was not considerably affected
by the size of their transparent leaf area. The results suggest that
although the PALA of heterobaric leaves is reduced, the photosynthetic
performance of each transparent area is increased, possibly due to the
light-transferring capacity of BSEs. This morphological adaptation may
have allowed for increases in leaf thickness without reductions in
photosynthesis, an advantageous adaptation in xerothermic environments.
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Why Miniature's Endosperm Is Miniature |
The "miniature" endosperm of the mn1 mutant
of maize (Zea mays) is drastically reduced in size, its
weight being only 20% that of the WT. The cause of the
mn1 seed phenotype is the loss of cell wall invertase.
Conceivably, the reduced size of the mn1 mutant
endosperm could result from impairments in cell mitosis, cell
expansion, or in the endoreduplication process that commonly occurs in
developing endosperm. During endoreduplication, multiple rounds of DNA
replication take place, but this is not followed by chromosome
condensation, segregation, or cytokinesis: The result is enlarged,
highly polyploid cells. To distinguish between these three
possibilities, Vilhar et al. (pp. 23-30) made detailed comparisons of various cytological parameters of developing WT and
mn1 maize kernels. They analyzed the spatial distribution of
endosperm cells by sizes and endopolyploidy levels (C-values) using image cytometry, and on the basis of longitudinal sections, constructed a three-dimensional model of the endosperm. Compared to WT, the number of cells in the miniature endosperm was
55%, while the endosperm volume was only 25%, indicating that in
addition to impaired cell proliferation there is also a reduction in
the cell size. However, they detected no alterations in the progress of
endoreduplication in the mutant as compared to the WT. These results
are consistent with the hypothesis that the cleavage of Suc cell wall
invertase during the early stages of seed development plays a critical
role in providing hexose sugars for the maintenance of cell division
and cell expansion.
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FOOTNOTES |
www.plantphysiol.org/cgi/doi/10.1104/pp.900031.
Peter V. Minorsky
Department of Natural Sciences Mercy College Dobbs Ferry, NY 10522
© 2002 American Society of Plant Physiologists
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