Canny M J
Department of Biology, Carleton University, Ottawa, Canada K1S 5B6.
New Phytol. 1990 Mar;114(3):341-368. doi: 10.1111/j.1469-8137.1990.tb00404.x.
Changes of view on the course of the transpiration stream beyond the veins in leaves are followed from the imbibition theory of Sachs, through the (symplastic) endosmotic theory of Pfeffer (which prevailed almost unquestioned until the late 1930s), to Strugger's experiments with fluorescent dye tracers and the epifluorescence microscope. This latter work persuaded many to return to the apoplastic-(wall)-path viewpoint, which, despite early and late criticisms that were never rebutted, is still widely held. Tracer experiments of the same kind are still frequently published without consideration of the evidence that they do not reveal the paths of water movement. Experiments on rehydration kinetics of leaves have not produced unequivocal evidence for either path. The detailed destinies of the solutes that reach the leaf in the transpiration stream have received little attention. Consideration of physical principles governing flow and evaporation in a transpiring leaf emphasizes that: (1) Diffusion over interveinal distances at the rates in water will account for substantial solute movement in a few minutes, even in the absence of flow. (2) Diffusion can occur also against opposing now. (3) Volume fluxes in veins are determined by the diameter of the largest leaves examined contain high conductance supply veins which are tapped into by low-conductance distributing veins. (4) Edges and teeth of leaves will be places of especially rapid evaporation, and they often have high-conductance veins leading to them. (5) Solutes in the stream will tend to accumulate at leaf margins. On the basis of recent work, the view is maintained that the water of the stream enters the symplast through cell membranes very close to tracheary elements. Also, that this occurs locally over a small area of membrane. Many solutes in the stream are left outside in the apoplast. This produces regions of high solute concentration in the apoplast and an enrichment of solutes in the stream as it perfuses the leaf. Solutes that enter the symplast are not so easily tracked. Suggestions about where some of them may go can be gained from a fluorescent probe that identifies particular cells (scavenging cells) as having H -ATPase porter systems to scrub selected solutes from the stream. Unpublished case-histories are presented which illustrate many aspects of these processes and principles. These are: (1) Maize leaf veins, where the symplastic water path starts at the parenchyma sheath; (2) Lupin veins, where the symplastic path starts at the bundle sheath and where solutes are concentrated in blind terminations; (3) The edges of maize leaves where flow is enhanced by a large vein (open to the apoplast), and solutes are deposited in the apoplast by evaporation; (4) Poplar leaf teeth, which receive strong flows, and where the epithem cells are scavenging cells; (5) Mimosa leaf marginal hairs, which have scavenging cells at their base; (6) Active hydathodes, whose epithem cells are scavenging cells; (7) Pine needle transfusion tissue, which is a site of both solute enrichment (in the tracheids), and scavenging (in the parenchyma); (8) Estimates are made of diffusion coefficients of a solute both along and at right angles to the major diffusive pathway in wheat leaves. The first is 1000 times the second, but is 1/100 of free diffusion in water. Five general themes of the behaviour and organization of the transpiration stream are induced from the facts reviewed. These are: (1) The stream is channelled into courses of graded intensities by the interplay of the physical forces with the anatomical features, each course with a distinct contribution to the processing of the stream. (2) Water enters the symplast at precise locations as close as possible to the tracheary elements. (3) As the stream moves through the leaf its solute concentration is enriched many-fold at predictable sites. (4) Solutes excluded from the symplast diffuse from these sources of high concentration in specially formed wall paths, in precise patterns, at rates which can be measured, and which are low compared with diffusion in water. (5) Other solutes permeate the symplast, often over the surfaces of groups of cells which are organized into recognized structural features. CONTENTS Summary 341 I. What becomes of the transpiration stream ? 342 II. Review 343 III. Preview 355 IV. Overview 361 Acknowledgements 365 References 365.
关于叶片中超出叶脉的蒸腾流路径的观点变化,从萨克斯的吸胀理论,历经普费弗的(共质体)内渗透理论(该理论在20世纪30年代末之前几乎毫无争议地占据主导地位),到施特格用荧光染料示踪剂和落射荧光显微镜所做的实验。后一项工作使许多人回到了质外体(细胞壁)路径的观点,尽管早期和晚期都有批评且从未得到反驳,但该观点仍被广泛持有。同样类型的示踪实验仍经常发表,却未考虑它们并未揭示水分运动路径这一证据。关于叶片复水动力学的实验也未为任何一种路径提供明确的证据。对蒸腾流中到达叶片的溶质的详细命运关注甚少。对控制蒸腾叶片中流动和蒸发的物理原理的思考强调:(1)即使在没有流动的情况下,以水中的速率在叶脉间距离上扩散也会在几分钟内导致大量溶质移动。(2)扩散也可以逆着相反的流动发生。(3)叶脉中的体积通量由所研究的最大叶片的直径决定,叶片含有高导度的供应叶脉,这些叶脉被低导度的分布叶脉分支进入。(4)叶片的边缘和齿将是蒸发特别快的地方,并且它们通常有通向它们的高导度叶脉。(5)蒸腾流中的溶质倾向于在叶边缘积累。基于最近的工作,坚持认为蒸腾流中的水通过非常靠近管状分子的细胞膜进入共质体。而且,这在膜的小区域局部发生。蒸腾流中的许多溶质留在质外体中。这在质外体中产生高溶质浓度区域,并在蒸腾流灌注叶片时使流中的溶质富集。进入共质体的溶质不太容易追踪。关于其中一些溶质可能去向的建议可以从一种荧光探针获得,该探针识别特定细胞(清除细胞)具有H -ATP酶转运系统以从流中清除选定的溶质。给出了未发表的案例历史,说明了这些过程和原理的许多方面。这些是:(1)玉米叶片叶脉,共质体水路径从薄壁组织鞘开始;(2)羽扇豆叶脉,共质体路径从维管束鞘开始,并且溶质在盲端集中;(3)玉米叶片边缘,大的叶脉(通向质外体)增强了流动,并且溶质通过蒸发沉积在质外体中;(4)杨树叶片齿,接收强烈的流动,并且其中通水组织细胞是清除细胞;(5)含羞草叶片边缘毛,其基部有清除细胞;(6)活跃的排水器,其通水组织细胞是清除细胞;(7)松针转输组织,它是溶质富集(在管胞中)和清除(在薄壁组织中)的部位;(8)对溶质在小麦叶片中沿主要扩散路径及其垂直方向的扩散系数进行了估计。第一个是第二个的1000倍,但只是水中自由扩散的1/100。从所回顾的事实中归纳出蒸腾流行为和组织的五个一般主题。这些是:(1)通过物理力与解剖特征的相互作用,蒸腾流被引导到强度分级的路径中,每个路径对蒸腾流的处理有不同的贡献。(2)水在尽可能靠近管状分子的精确位置进入共质体。(3)当蒸腾流穿过叶片时,其溶质浓度在可预测的部位富集许多倍。(4)被共质体排除的溶质从这些高浓度源在特殊形成的细胞壁路径中以可测量的速率、精确的模式扩散,与在水中的扩散相比速率较低。(5)其他溶质渗透共质体,通常在组织成公认结构特征的细胞群表面。目录 摘要341 一、蒸腾流会怎样?342 二、综述343 三、预览355 四、概述361 致谢365 参考文献365 。