JoVE Logo

Zaloguj się

34.21 : The Apoplast and Symplast

Plant growth depends on its ability to take up water and dissolved minerals from the soil. The root system of every plant is equipped with the necessary tissues to facilitate the entry of water and solutes. The plant tissues involved in the transport of water and minerals have two major compartments - the apoplast and the symplast. The apoplast includes everything outside the plasma membrane of living cells and consists of cell walls, extracellular spaces, xylem, phloem, and tracheids. The symplast, in contrast, consists of the entire cytosol of all living plant cells and the plasmodesmata - which are the cytoplasmic channels interconnecting the cells.

There are several potential pathways for molecules to move through the plant tissues: The apoplastic, symplastic, or transmembrane pathways. The apoplastic pathway involves the movement of water and dissolved minerals along cell walls and extracellular spaces. In the symplastic route, water and solutes move along the cytosol. Once in this pathway, materials need to cross the plasma membrane when moving from cell to neighboring cell, and they do this via the plasmodesmata. Alternatively, in the transmembrane route, the dissolved minerals and water move from cell to cell by crossing the cell wall to exit one cell and enter the next. These three pathways are not mutually exclusive, and some solutes may use more than one route to varying degrees.

Another potential route is the vacuolar pathway, but this route is mostly restricted to water molecule movement. Here, water moves through the vacuoles of plant cells through osmosis. The mechanism is similar to the symplastic route, but instead of transport being limited to the cytosol, the water passes through the vacuoles. Further, vacuolar transport is facilitated by two proton pumps - ATPase and PPase - that energize the solute uptake. Vacuoles also comprise of specialized transport proteins - the aquaporins - that participate in the transport of water and solutes such as glucose and sucrose.

Tagi

ApoplastSymplastWater TransportMineral TransportExtracellular SpacesCell WallsAir SpacesPlasma MembranesPH ChangesExcretion Of ProtonsToxinsCytoplasmInterconnected Plant CellsSignal MoleculesHormonesCytokininCell ProliferationSmall RNAsDefense ResponsesPlant PathogensSelectively Permeable MembranePlant Growth

Z rozdziału 34:

article

Now Playing

34.21 : The Apoplast and Symplast

Plant Structure, Growth, and Nutrition

49.8K Wyświetleń

article

34.1 : Wprowadzenie do różnorodności roślin

Plant Structure, Growth, and Nutrition

43.6K Wyświetleń

article

34.2 : Nienaczyniowe rośliny bezpestkowe

Plant Structure, Growth, and Nutrition

63.2K Wyświetleń

article

34.3 : Beznasienne rośliny naczyniowe

Plant Structure, Growth, and Nutrition

59.3K Wyświetleń

article

34.4 : Wprowadzenie do roślin nasiennych

Plant Structure, Growth, and Nutrition

60.5K Wyświetleń

article

34.5 : Podstawowa anatomia roślin: korzenie, łodygi i liście

Plant Structure, Growth, and Nutrition

55.8K Wyświetleń

article

34.6 : Komórki i tkanki roślinne

Plant Structure, Growth, and Nutrition

57.7K Wyświetleń

article

34.7 : Merystemy i wzrost roślin

Plant Structure, Growth, and Nutrition

42.9K Wyświetleń

article

34.8 : Pierwotny i wtórny wzrost korzeni i pędów

Plant Structure, Growth, and Nutrition

54.3K Wyświetleń

article

34.9 : Morfogeneza

Plant Structure, Growth, and Nutrition

25.2K Wyświetleń

article

34.10 : Akwizycja światła

Plant Structure, Growth, and Nutrition

8.4K Wyświetleń

article

34.11 : Pozyskiwanie wody i minerałów

Plant Structure, Growth, and Nutrition

29.8K Wyświetleń

article

34.12 : Transport zasobów na krótkie odległości

Plant Structure, Growth, and Nutrition

15.6K Wyświetleń

article

34.13 : Ksylem i transport zasobów napędzany transpiracją

Plant Structure, Growth, and Nutrition

23.4K Wyświetleń

article

34.14 : Regulacja transpiracji przez aparaty szparkowe

Plant Structure, Growth, and Nutrition

27.7K Wyświetleń

See More

JoVE Logo

Prywatność

Warunki Korzystania

Zasady

Badania

Edukacja

O JoVE

Copyright © 2025 MyJoVE Corporation. Wszelkie prawa zastrzeżone