로그인

Plant cells maintain appropriate osmotic balance in extreme conditions. For instance, plants in dry environments store water in vacuoles, limit the opening of their stoma, and have thick, waxy cuticles to prevent unnecessary water loss. Some species of plants that live in salty environments store salt in their roots. As a result, water osmosis occurs in the root from the surrounding soil.

Tonicity

Tonicity describes the capacity of a cell to lose or gain water depending on the solute concentration outside. Organisms such as plants, fungi, bacteria, and protists, have cell walls surrounding the plasma membrane. Three possible scenarios alter the volume of a cell: hypertonicity, hypotonicity, and isotonicity.

Hypotonic environment

In hypotonic environments, there is a higher concentration of solutes inside plant cells than outside. Water enters the cell via osmosis and causes it to swell. Because the cell wall limits the expanding plasma membrane, the cell does not lyse. By limiting expansion, the cell wall allows cells to become turgid, resulting in the stiffening of plants.

Plant cytoplasm is always slightly hypertonic to the cellular environment, and water will always enter a cell if water is available. The force generated when an influx of water causes the plasma membrane to push against the cell wall is called turgor pressure. Turgor pressure keeps non-woody plants upright.

Hypertonic Environments

Conversely, the extracellular fluid becomes hypertonic in a dry climate, causing water to leave the cell through osmosis. In this condition, the cell cannot shrink because the cell wall is not flexible. As a result, vacuoles decrease in size the cell membrane detaches from the wall and constricts the cytoplasm. This process is called plasmolysis. Thus, plants lose turgor pressure and wilt.

Tags

TonicityOsmotic BalancePlant CellsVacuolesStomaWater LossHypertonicityHypotonicityIsotonicityOsmosisTurgor PressurePlasmolysisCell WallCytoplasm

장에서 31:

article

Now Playing

31.3 : Tonicity in Plants

Plant Cell Structure and Organization

25.9K Views

article

31.1 : 식물 조직

Plant Cell Structure and Organization

5.9K Views

article

31.2 : 식물 세포벽

Plant Cell Structure and Organization

3.4K Views

article

31.4 : 셀룰로오스 및 펙틱 다당류

Plant Cell Structure and Organization

3.4K Views

article

31.5 : 세포벽 증착에서 미세소관의 역할

Plant Cell Structure and Organization

2.2K Views

article

31.6 : 플라스모데스마타

Plant Cell Structure and Organization

2.6K Views

article

31.7 : 식물의 세포 접착

Plant Cell Structure and Organization

2.5K Views

JoVE Logo

개인 정보 보호

이용 약관

정책

연구

교육

JoVE 소개

Copyright © 2025 MyJoVE Corporation. 판권 소유