Pfautsch Sebastian, Hölttä Teemu, Mencuccini Maurizio
Hawkesbury Institute for the Environment, University of Western Sydney, Locked Bag 1797, Penrith 2751, NSW, Australia
Department of Forest Sciences, University of Helsinki, PO Box 27, FIN-00014, Finland.
Tree Physiol. 2015 Jul;35(7):706-22. doi: 10.1093/treephys/tpv058. Epub 2015 Jul 9.
Not long ago, textbooks on plant physiology divulged the view that phloem and xylem are separate transport systems with exclusive functions. Phloem was flowing downwards providing roots with carbohydrates. Xylem transported water upwards from roots to leaves. This simplified view has changed forever. Today we have a much-refined understanding of the complex transport mechanisms, regulatory functions and surprisingly ingenuous solutions trees have evolved to distribute carbohydrates and water internally to fuel growth and help mediate biotic and abiotic stresses. This review focuses on functional links between tissues of the inner bark region (i.e., more than just phloem) and the xylem, facilitated by radially aligned and interconnected parenchyma cells, called rays. Rays are usually found along the entire vertical axis of tree stems, mediating a number of transport processes. We use a top-down approach to unveil the role of rays in these processes. Due to the central role of rays in facilitating the coupling of inner bark and xylem we dedicate the first section to ray anatomy, pathways and control mechanisms involved in radial transport. In the second section, basic concepts and models for radial movement through rays are introduced and their impacts on water and carbon fluxes at the whole-tree level are discussed. This section is followed by a closer look at the capacitive function of composite tissues in stems where gradual changes in water potential generate a diurnal 'pulse'. We explain how this pulse can be measured and interpreted, and where the limitations of such analyses are. Towards the end of this review, we include a brief description of the role of radial transport during limited availability of water. By elucidating the strong hydraulic link between inner bark and xylem, the traditional view of two separate transport systems dissolves and the idea of one interconnected, yet highly segregated transport network for carbohydrates and water arises.
不久前,植物生理学教材还宣扬韧皮部和木质部是具有专属功能的独立运输系统这一观点。韧皮部向下流动,为根部提供碳水化合物。木质部则将水从根部向上运输到叶片。这种简化的观点已彻底改变。如今,我们对复杂的运输机制、调节功能以及树木进化出的令人惊讶的巧妙解决方案有了更为精细的理解,这些机制用于在树木内部分配碳水化合物和水分,以支持生长并帮助应对生物和非生物胁迫。本综述聚焦于内皮层区域(即不仅仅是韧皮部)组织与木质部之间的功能联系,这种联系由径向排列且相互连接的薄壁细胞(即射线)促成。射线通常沿树干的整个垂直轴分布,介导多种运输过程。我们采用自上而下的方法来揭示射线在这些过程中的作用。由于射线在促进内皮层与木质部耦合方面的核心作用,我们在第一部分专门介绍射线的解剖结构、径向运输所涉及的途径及控制机制。在第二部分,我们介绍通过射线进行径向运输的基本概念和模型,并讨论它们对整树水平的水分和碳通量的影响。在这部分之后,我们将更深入地探讨茎中复合组织的电容功能,其中水势的逐渐变化会产生昼夜“脉冲”。我们解释了如何测量和解读这种脉冲,以及此类分析的局限性所在。在本综述接近尾声时,我们简要描述了在水分供应有限期间径向运输的作用。通过阐明内皮层与木质部之间强大的水力联系,关于两个独立运输系统的传统观点瓦解,取而代之的是一个相互连接但又高度分隔的碳水化合物和水分运输网络的概念。