2 resultados para apertures

em National Center for Biotechnology Information - NCBI


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Changes in DNA methylation during tobacco pollen development have been studied by confocal fluorescence microscopy using a monoclonal anti-5-methylcytosine (anti-m5C) antibody and a polyclonal anti-histone H1 (anti-histone) antibody as an internal standard. The specificity of the anti-m5C antibody was demonstrated by a titration series against both single-stranded DNA and double-stranded DNA substrates in either the methylated or unmethylated forms. The antibody was found to show similar kinetics against both double- and single-stranded DNA, and the fluorescence was proportional to the amount of DNA used. No signal was observed with unmethylated substrates. The extent of methylation of the two pollen nuclei remained approximately constant after the mitotic division that gave rise to the vegetative and generative nuclei. However, during the subsequent development of the pollen, the staining of the generative nucleus decreased until it reached a normalized value of \documentclass[12pt]{minimal} \usepackage{wasysym} \usepackage{amsmath} \usepackage{amsfonts} \usepackage{amssymb} \usepackage{amsbsy} \usepackage{mathrsfs} \setlength{\oddsidemargin}{-69pt} \begin{document} \begin{equation*}\frac{1}{5}\end{equation*}\end{document} of that of the vegetative nucleus. The use of a confocal microscope makes these data independent of possible focusing artefacts. The anti-histone antibody was used as a control to show that, while the antibody staining directed against 5-methylcytosine changed dramatically during pollen maturation, the histone signal did not. We observed the existence of structural dimorphism amongst tobacco pollen grains, the majority having three pollen apertures and the rest with four. However, the methylation changes observed occurred to the same extent in both subclasses.

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Ozone (O3) deleteriously affects organisms ranging from humans to crop plants, yet little is understood regarding the underlying mechanisms. In plants, O3 decreases CO2 assimilation, but whether this could result from direct O3 action on guard cells remained unknown. Potassium flux causes osmotically driven changes in guard cell volume that regulate apertures of associated microscopic pores through which CO2 is supplied to the photosynthetic mesophyll tissue. We show in Vicia faba that O3 inhibits (i) guard cell K+ channels that mediate K+ uptake that drives stomatal opening; (ii) stomatal opening in isolated epidermes; and (iii) stomatal opening in leaves, such that CO2 assimilation is reduced without direct effects of O3 on photosynthetic capacity. Direct O3 effects on guard cells may have ecological and agronomic implications for plant productivity and for response to other environmental stressors including drought.