Background And Aims: Water adhesion forces, water absorption capacity and permeability of the pine exine were investigated to consider a possible function of sporopollenin coatings in the control of water transport.
Methods: The experiments were carried out with sporopollenin capsules obtained from pine pollen consisting of an empty central capsule and two sacci. Changes in the concentration of excluded dextran molecules in the medium were analysed to quantify water absorption by purified exine fragments and the osmotic volume flow out of the intact central capsule.
Key Results: The contact angle of sporopollenin to water is higher than the one to ethanol and lower than the one to n-heptane. The water-filled pore space in pine sporopollenin amounts to only 20.6 % of the matrix volume. A monosaccharide was excluded from 15 % and a trisaccharide from about 38 % of this space. Shrinkage of the central capsule induced by permeable osmotica was transient, whereas that induced by sodium polyacrylate (2100 g mol(-1)) was stable. Values obtained for the hydraulic conductance L(P) of the exine (0.39-0.48 microm s(-1) MPa(-1)) are comparable in size to those of biomembranes. Sodium sulfate solutions induced a significant osmotic flow through the exine (reflection coefficient at least 0.6). The exine around the central capsule can be ruptured by equilibration of its lumen with a concentrated electrolyte solution and subsequent transfer to water. The denatured protoplast along with the intact intine was ejected when pollen grains were subjected to this osmotic shock treatment.
Conclusions: The pine exine is easily wetted with water and does not represent a significant barrier to water exchange either liquid or gaseous. Through osmotic burst, it can be separated from the intine. The effect of salts and small solute molecules on water fluxes may be functionally significant for rehydration upon pollination.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/aob/mci169 | DOI Listing |
Commun Chem
September 2022
Whitehead Institute for Biomedical Research, Cambridge, MA, 02142, USA.
ACS Appl Bio Mater
March 2022
Department of Biology, The Faculty of Science and Arts, Inonu University, 44280 Malatya, Turkey.
Sporopollenin exine capsules (SECs) are highly resistant to heat and various acids and bases. They are also cheap, highly porous, eco-friendly polymer biomaterials with stable microencapsulation capacity. Due to their strong and uniquely shaped exine layers, they can allow growth on metal oxide materials, as a biotemplate for use in different applications.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFData Brief
April 2020
Department of Chemical & Biological Engineering, Colorado State University, Fort Collins, CO, 80523, USA.
The ATR FT-IR spectra of sporopollenin isolated from pollen spores by enzymatic digestion. Sporopollenin is also isolated by solvent extraction, followed by either acidolysis with phosphoric acid, and acetolysis is reported [1]. The FT-IR spectra are supplemented by XPS data of the isolated sporopollenin samples.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPhytochemistry
February 2020
Department of Chemical & Biological Engineering, Colorado State University, Fort Collins, CO, 80521, USA. Electronic address:
In plant spores and pollen, sporopollenin occurs as a structural polymer with remarkable resistance to chemical degradation. This recalcitrant polymer is well-suited to analysis by non-destructive infrared spectroscopy. However, existing infrared characterization of sporopollenin has been limited in scope and occasionally contradictory.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBiochem Biophys Res Commun
October 2016
Fraunhofer-Institut für Keramische Technologien und Systeme, Maria-Reiche-Straße 2, 01109, Dresden, Germany.
A laboratory-based X-ray microscope is used to investigate the 3D structure of unstained whole pollen grains. For the first time, high-resolution laboratory-based hard X-ray microscopy is applied to study pollen grains. Based on the efficient acquisition of statistically relevant information-rich images using Zernike phase contrast, both surface- and internal structures of pine pollen - including exine, intine and cellular structures - are clearly visualized.
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