2 resultados para Intercellular osmoregulation

em eResearch Archive - Queensland Department of Agriculture


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A concentration as low as 1 μM lead (Pb) is highly toxic to plants, but previous studies have typically related plant growth to the total amount of Pb added to a solution. In the present experiment, the relative fresh mass of cowpea (Vigna unguiculata) was reduced by 10% at a Pb2+ activity of 0.2 μM for the shoots and at a Pb2+ activity of 0.06 μM for the roots. The primary site of Pb2+ toxicity was the root, causing severe reductions in root growth, loss of apical dominance (shown by an increase in branching per unit root length), the formation of localized swellings behind the root tips (due to the initiation of lateral roots), and the bending of some root tips. In the root, Pb was found to accumulate primarily within the cell walls and intercellular spaces.

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The structures and manner with which Pseudocercospora macadamiae penetrates, colonises and proliferates from the pericarp of macadamia fruit was studied using scanning electron microscopy and fluorescence light microscopy. Germ tubes arising from conidia penetrated open stomata within 20 h of inoculation, without observation of specialised infection structures such as appressoria. Colonisation of the pericarp was intercellular, without observation of specialised intracellular infection structures such as haustoria, and was complete from the epidermis to the mesocarp. The fungus proliferated at the epidermis by the formation of conidiophores and conidia on substomatal and protuberant subepidermal stromata. These structures were not observed on the mesocarp surface. The onset of visual husk spot symptoms coincided with an increase in pathogen biomass on the pericarp surface. The progression of symptoms from tan-coloured spots to larger red-brown lesions coincided with the production of conidiophores from substomatal and protuberant subepidermal stromata. The darker the colour of the husk spot lesion, the more frequently protuberant subepidermal stromata were observed. These findings are discussed in the context of observation of other cercosporoid fungi.