Kern V D, Smith J D, Schwuchow J M, Sack F D
Department of Plant Biology, Ohio State University, Columbus, Ohio 43210, USA.
Plant Physiol. 2001 Apr;125(4):2085-94. doi: 10.1104/pp.125.4.2085.
Little is known about whether or how plant cells regulate the position of heavy organelles that sediment toward gravity. Dark-grown protonemata of the moss Ceratodon purpureus displays a complex plastid zonation in that only some amyloplasts sediment along the length of the tip cell. If gravity is the major force determining the position of amyloplasts that sediment, then these plastids should be randomly distributed in space. Instead, amyloplasts were clustered in the subapical region in microgravity. Cells rotated on a clinostat on earth had a roughly similar non-random plastid distribution. Subapical clusters were also found in ground controls that were inverted and kept stationary, but the distribution profile differed considerably due to amyloplast sedimentation. These findings indicate the existence of as yet unknown endogenous forces and mechanisms that influence amyloplast position and that are normally masked in stationary cells grown on earth. It is hypothesized that a microtubule-based mechanism normally compensates for g-induced drag while still allowing for regulated amyloplast sedimentation.
关于植物细胞是否以及如何调节向重力沉降的重细胞器的位置,我们所知甚少。紫萼藓的黑暗生长的原丝体显示出复杂的质体分区,即只有一些造粉体沿着顶端细胞的长度沉降。如果重力是决定沉降造粉体位置的主要力量,那么这些质体应该在空间中随机分布。相反,在微重力条件下,造粉体聚集在根尖下区域。在地球上在回转器上旋转的细胞具有大致相似的非随机质体分布。在倒置并保持静止的地面对照中也发现了根尖下聚集,但由于造粉体沉降,分布轮廓有很大差异。这些发现表明存在尚未知的内源性力量和机制,它们影响造粉体的位置,并且在地球上生长的静止细胞中通常被掩盖。据推测,一种基于微管的机制通常会补偿重力引起的阻力,同时仍允许造粉体进行有调节的沉降。