98,729 research outputs found
Phytoplasma infection in tomato is associated with re-organization of plasma membrane, ER stacks, and actin filaments in sieve elements
Phytoplasmas, biotrophic wall-less prokaryotes, only reside in sieve elements of their host plants. The essentials of the intimate interaction between phytoplasmas and their hosts are poorly understood, which calls for research on potential ultrastructural modifications. We investigated modifications of the sieve-element ultrastructure induced in tomato plants by ‘Candidatus Phytoplasma solani’, the pathogen associated with the stolbur disease. Phytoplasma infection induces a drastic re-organization of sieve-element substructures including changes in plasma membrane surface and distortion of the sieve-element reticulum. Observations of healthy and stolbur-diseased plants provided evidence for the emergence of structural links between sieve-element plasma membrane and phytoplasmas. One-sided actin aggregates on the phytoplasma surface also inferred a connection between phytoplasma and sieve-element cytoskeleton. Actin filaments displaced from the sieve-element mictoplasm to the surface of the phytoplasmas in infected sieve elements. Expression analysis revealed a decrease of actin and an increase of ER-resident chaperone luminal binding protein (BiP) in midribs of phytoplasma-infected plants. Collectively, the studies provided novel insights into ultrastructural responses of host sieve elements to phloem-restricted prokaryotes
The large sieve and random walks on left cosets of arithmetic groups
Applying E. Kowalski's recent generalization of the large sieve we prove that
certain properties expected to be typical (irreducibility of the characteristic
polynomial, absence of squares among the matrix coefficients...) are indeed
verified by most (in a very explicit sense) of the elements of GL(n,A) with
fixed determinant (where A is an intermediate ring between Z and Q that we
specify) or by (special) orthogonal matrices with integral entries and fixed
spinor norm.Comment: 39 page
Diffusion and bulk flow in phloem loading - a theoretical analysis of the polymer trap mechanism in plants
Plants create sugar in the mesophyll cells of their leaves by photosynthesis.
This sugar, mostly sucrose, has to be loaded via the bundle sheath into the
phloem vascular system (the sieve elements), where it is distributed to growing
parts of the plant. We analyze the feasibility of a particular loading
mechanism, active symplasmic loading, also called the polymer trap mechanism,
where sucrose is transformed into heavier sugars, such as raffinose and
stachyose, in the intermediary-type companion cells bordering the sieve
elements in the minor veins of the phloem. Keeping the heavier sugars from
diffusing back requires that the plasmodesmata connecting the bundle sheath
with the intermediary cell act as extremely precise filters, which are able to
distinguish between molecules that differ by less than 20% in size. In our
modeling, we take into account the coupled water and sugar movement across the
relevant interfaces, without explicitly considering the chemical reactions
transforming the sucrose into the heavier sugars. Based on the available data
for plasmodesmata geometry, sugar concentrations and flux rates, we conclude
that this mechanism can in principle function. We find that the water flow
through the plasmodesmata, which has not been quantified before, contributes
only 10-20% to the sucrose flux into the intermediary cells, while the main
part is transported by diffusion. On the other hand, the subsequent sugar
translocation into the sieve elements would very likely be carried
predominantly by bulk water flow through the plasmodesmata. Thus, in contrast
to apoplasmic loaders, all the necessary water for phloem translocation would
be supplied in this way with no need for additional water uptake across the
plasma membranes of the phloem.Comment: 29 pages with 5 figure
Improved thermal isolation of silicon suspended platforms for an all-silicon thermoelectric microgenerator based on large scale integration of Si nanowires as thermoelectric material
Special suspended micro-platforms have been designed as a part of silicon compatible planar thermoelectric microgenerators. Bottom-up grown silicon nanowires are going to bridge in the future such platforms to the surrounding silicon bulk rim. They will act as thermoelectric material thus configuring an all-silicon thermoelectric device. In the new platform design other additional bridging elements (usually auxiliary support silicon beams) are substituted by low conductance thin film dielectric membranes in order to maximize the temperature difference developed between both areas. These membranes follow a sieve-like design that allows fabricating them with a short additional wet anisotropic etch step. © Published under licence by IOP Publishing Ltd.Peer ReviewedPostprint (published version
Does Don Fisher's high-pressure manifold model account for phloem transport and resource partitioning?
The pressure flow model of phloem transport envisaged by Münch (1930) has gained wide acceptance. Recently, however, the model has been questioned on structural and physiological grounds. For instance, sub-structures of sieve elements may reduce their hydraulic conductances to levels that impede flow rates of phloem sap and observed magnitudes of pressure gradients to drive flow along sieve tubes could be inadequate in tall trees. A variant of the Münch pressure flow model, the high-pressure manifold model of phloem transport introduced by Donald Fisher may serve to reconcile at least some of these questions. To this end, key predicted features of the high-pressure manifold model of phloem transport are evaluated against current knowledge of the physiology of phloem transport. These features include: (1) An absence of significant gradients in axial hydrostatic pressure in sieve elements from collection to release phloem accompanied by transport properties of sieve elements that underpin this outcome; (2) Symplasmic pathways of phloem unloading into sink organs impose a major constraint over bulk flow rates of resources translocated through the source-path-sink system; (3) Hydraulic conductances of plasmodesmata, linking sieve elements with surrounding phloem parenchyma cells, are sufficient to support and also regulate bulk flow rates exiting from sieve elements of release phloem. The review identifies strong circumstantial evidence that resource transport through the source-path-sink system is consistent with the high-pressure manifold model of phloem transport. The analysis then moves to exploring mechanisms that may link demand for resources, by cells of meristematic and expansion/storage sinks, with plasmodesmal conductances of release phloem. The review concludes with a brief discussion of how these mechanisms may offer novel opportunities to enhance crop biomass yields
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