Quantification of plasmodesmata density on cell interfaces of plant tissues, particularly of leaves, has been a long-standing challenge. Using electron microscopy alone to quantify plasmodesmata is difficult because of the limited surface area coverage per image and hence the need to examine large numbers of sections for robust quantification. Fluorescence microscopy provides the larger surface area coverage per image but can only visualize pit fields and not individual plasmodesma. Moreover, in pigmented tissue like leaves, imaging cell interfaces beyond the epidermal layer would also require accurate sectioning. The advent of tissue clearing techniques such as PEA-CLARITY provided the opportunity to capture all pit fields within the leaf without resorting to sectioning. This paved the way toward the development of a more robust and precise plasmodesmata density quantification method by combining the three-dimensional immunolocalization fluorescence microscopy with scanning electron microscopy (SEM). Here, I describe a protocol to quantify plasmodesmata density on cell interfaces between mesophyll and bundle sheath in C and C monocot leaves.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-1-0716-2132-5_7 | DOI Listing |
Hortic Res
November 2024
Hubei Provincial Engineering Laboratory for New Fertilizers/Key Laboratory of Arable Land Conservation (Middle and Lower Reaches of Yangtze River), Ministry of Agriculture and Rural Affairs, Huazhong Agricultural University, Shizhishan Street, Hongshan District, Wuhan, Hubei, 430070 China.
Soluble sugars contribute to the taste and flavor of citrus fruit. Potassium (K), known as a quality element, plays key roles in improving sugar accumulation and fruit quality, but the mechanism is largely unknown. This study aims to elucidate how K improves sugar accumulation by regulating carbon flow from source leaves to fruit in Newhall navel orange.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPlant J
December 2024
Australian Research Council Centre of Excellence for Translational Photosynthesis, Plant Sciences Division, Research School of Biology, Australian National University, Canberra, Australian Capital Territory, Australia.
Plasmodesmata (PD) are nanochannels that facilitate cell-to-cell transport in plants. More productive and photosynthetically efficient C plants form more PD at the mesophyll (M)-bundle sheath (BS) interface in their leaves than their less efficient C relatives. In C leaves, PD play an essential role in facilitating the rapid metabolite exchange between the M and BS cells to operate a biochemical CO concentrating mechanism, which increases the CO partial pressure at the site of Rubisco in the BS cells and hence photosynthetic efficiency.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPlant Cell Physiol
December 2024
Pediatrics-Nutrition, Children's Nutrition Research, Baylor College of Medicine, 1100 Bates, Houston, TX 77030, USA.
Research on elemental distribution in plants is crucial for understanding nutrient uptake, environmental adaptation and optimizing agricultural practices for sustainable food production. Plant trichomes, with their self-contained structures and easy accessibility, offer a robust model system for investigating elemental repartitioning. Transport proteins, such as the four functional cation exchangers (CAXs) in Arabidopsis, are low-affinity, high-capacity transporters primarily located on the vacuole.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFNew Phytol
July 2024
Cell and Developmental Biology, John Innes Centre, Norwich Research Park, Norwich, NR4 7UH, UK.
Plasmodesmata are plasma membrane-lined connections that join plant cells to their neighbours, establishing an intercellular cytoplasmic continuum through which molecules can travel between cells, tissues, and organs. As plasmodesmata connect almost all cells in plants, their molecular traffic carries information and resources across a range of scales, but dynamic control of plasmodesmal aperture can change the possible domains of molecular exchange under different conditions. Plasmodesmal aperture is controlled by specialised signalling cascades accommodated in spatially discrete membrane and cell wall domains.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPlants (Basel)
February 2024
Laboratory of Cell and Developmental Biology, Wageningen University and Research, Droevendaalsesteeg 1, 6708 PB Wageningen, The Netherlands.
During plant development, mobile proteins, including transcription factors, abundantly serve as messengers between cells to activate transcriptional signaling cascades in distal tissues. These proteins travel from cell to cell via nanoscopic tunnels in the cell wall known as plasmodesmata. Cellular control over this intercellular movement can occur at two likely interdependent levels.
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