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LECTURE PRESENTATIONS For CAMPBELL BIOLOGY, NINTH EDITION Jane B. Reece, Lisa A. Urry, Michael L. Cain, Steven A. Wasserman, Peter V. Minorsky, Robert B. Jackson Chapter 36 Resource Acquisition and Transport in Vascular Plants Lectures by Erin Barley Kathleen Fitzpatrick © 2011 Pearson Education, Inc. • The success of plants depends on their ability to gather and conserve resources from their environment • The transport of materials is central to the integrated functioning of the whole plant © 2011 Pearson Education, Inc. Figure 36.2-3 CO2 H2O O2 Light Sugar O2 H2O and minerals CO2 Shoot Architecture and Light Capture • Stems serve as conduits for water and nutrients and as supporting structures for leaves • There is generally a positive correlation between water availability and leaf size © 2011 Pearson Education, Inc. Concept 36.2: Different mechanisms transport substances over short or long distances • There are two major pathways through plants – The apoplast – The symplast © 2011 Pearson Education, Inc. The Apoplast and Symplast: Transport Continuums • The apoplast consists of everything external to the plasma membrane • It includes cell walls, extracellular spaces, and the interior of vessel elements and tracheids • The symplast consists of the cytosol of the living cells in a plant, as well as the plasmodesmata © 2011 Pearson Education, Inc. Figure 36.6 Cell wall Apoplastic route Cytosol Symplastic route Transmembrane route Key Plasmodesma Plasma membrane Apoplast Symplast • Water potential is a measurement that combines the effects of solute concentration and pressure • Water potential determines the direction of movement of water • Water flows from regions of higher water potential to regions of lower water potential • Potential refers to water’s capacity to perform work © 2011 Pearson Education, Inc. • Water potential is abbreviated as Ψ and measured in a unit of pressure called the megapascal (MPa) • Ψ = 0 MPa for pure water at sea level and at room temperature © 2011 Pearson Education, Inc. How Solutes and Pressure Affect Water Potential • Both pressure and solute concentration affect water potential • This is expressed by the water potential equation: Ψ ΨS ΨP • The solute potential (ΨS) of a solution is directly proportional to its molarity • Solute potential is also called osmotic potential © 2011 Pearson Education, Inc. • Pressure potential (ΨP) is the physical pressure on a solution • Turgor pressure is the pressure exerted by the plasma membrane against the cell wall, and the cell wall against the protoplast • The protoplast is the living part of the cell, which also includes the plasma membrane © 2011 Pearson Education, Inc. Water Movement Across Plant Cell Membranes • Water potential affects uptake and loss of water by plant cells • If a flaccid cell is placed in an environment with a higher solute concentration, the cell will lose water and undergo plasmolysis • Plasmolysis occurs when the protoplast shrinks and pulls away from the cell wall Video: Plasmolysis © 2011 Pearson Education, Inc. Figure 36.9 Initial flaccid cell: 0.4 M sucrose solution: Plasmolyzed cell at osmotic equilibrium with its surroundings P 0 S 0.9 0.9 MPa P 0 S 0.9 0.9 MPa (a) Initial conditions: cellular environmental P 0 S 0.7 0.7 MPa Pure water: P 0 S 0 0 MPa Turgid cell at osmotic equilibrium with its surroundings P 0.7 S 0.7 0 MPa (b) Initial conditions: cellular environmental Figure 36.9a Plasmolyzed cell at osmotic equilibrium with its surroundings P 0 S 0.9 0.9 MPa (a) Initial conditions: cellular environmental 0.4 M sucrose solution: P 0 S 0.9 0.9 MPa Initial flaccid cell: P 0 S 0.7 0.7 MPa Figure 36.9b Initial flaccid cell: P 0 S 0.7 0.7 MPa Pure water: P 0 S 0 0 MPa Turgid cell at osmotic equilibrium with its surroundings P 0.7 S 0.7 0 MPa (b) Initial conditions: cellular environmental Transport of Water and Minerals into the Xylem • The endodermis is the innermost layer of cells in the root cortex • It surrounds the vascular cylinder and is the last checkpoint for selective passage of minerals from the cortex into the vascular tissue © 2011 Pearson Education, Inc. • Water can cross the cortex via the symplast or apoplast • The waxy Casparian strip of the endodermal wall blocks apoplastic transfer of minerals from the cortex to the vascular cylinder • Water and minerals in the apoplast must cross the plasma membrane of an endodermal cell to enter the vascular cylinder © 2011 Pearson Education, Inc. Figure 36.10 Casparian strip Pathway along Endodermal cell apoplast Pathway through symplast Plasma membrane Casparian strip Apoplastic route Symplastic route Vessels (xylem) Root hair Epidermis Endodermis Cortex Vascular cylinder (stele) Figure 36.10a Plasma membrane Casparian strip Apoplastic route Symplastic route Vessels (xylem) Root hair Epidermis Endodermis Cortex Vascular cylinder (stele) Figure 36.10b Casparian strip Pathway along apoplast Pathway through symplast Endodermal cell Pulling Xylem Sap: The Cohesion-Tension Hypothesis • According to the cohesion-tension hypothesis, transpiration and water cohesion pull water from shoots to roots • Xylem sap is normally under negative pressure, or tension © 2011 Pearson Education, Inc. Transpirational Pull • Water vapor in the airspaces of a leaf diffuses down its water potential gradient and exits the leaf via stomata • As water evaporates, the air-water interface retreats further into the mesophyll cell walls • The surface tension of water creates a negative pressure potential © 2011 Pearson Education, Inc. • This negative pressure pulls water in the xylem into the leaf • The transpirational pull on xylem sap is transmitted from leaves to roots © 2011 Pearson Education, Inc. Figure 36.12 Cuticle Xylem Upper epidermis Mesophyll Air space Microfibrils in cell wall of mesophyll cell Lower epidermis Cuticle Stoma Microfibril Water Air-water (cross section) film interface Figure 36.13 Xylem sap Outside air 100.0 MPa Mesophyll cells Stoma Leaf (air spaces) 7.0 MPa Trunk xylem 0.8 MPa Water potential gradient Leaf (cell walls) 1.0 MPa Water molecule Transpiration Atmosphere Xylem cells Adhesion by hydrogen bonding Cell wall Cohesion and adhesion in the xylem Cohesion by hydrogen bonding Water molecule Root hair Trunk xylem 0.6 MPa Soil 0.3 MPa Soil particle Water uptake from soil Water