860 likes | 868 Views
This talk explores plant defense mechanisms, including hypersensitive response, systemic acquired resistance, and innate immunity, as well as interactions with pests, pathogens, and symbionts.
E N D
Prepare a 10’ talk for Friday March 3 on plant defense responses or describe interactions between plants& pathogens, pests or symbionts Plant defense responses • Hypersensitive response • Systemic acquired resistance • Innate immunity • Phytoalexin synthesis • Defensins and other proteins • Oxidative burst Some possible pests • Nematodes • Rootworms • Aphids • Thrips • Gypsy moths • hemlock woolly adelgid Some possible pathogens • Agrobacterium tumefaciens • Agrobacterium rhizogenes • Pseudomonas syringeae • Pseudomonas aeruginosa • Viroids • DNA viruses • RNA viruses • Fungi • Oomycetes Some possible symbionts • N-fixing bacteria • N-fixing cyanobacteria • Endomycorrhizae • Ectomycorrhizae
Plant Growth Size & shape depends on cell # & cell size Decide when,where and which way to divide
Plant Growth • Size & shape depends on cell # & cell size • Decide which way to divide & which way to elongate • Periclinal = perpendicular to surface
Plant Growth • Size & shape depends on cell # & cell size • Decide which way to divide & which way to elongate • Periclinal = perpendicular to surface: get longer
Plant Growth • Size & shape depends on cell # & cell size • Decide which way to divide & which way to elongate • Periclinal = perpendicular to surface: get longer • Anticlinal = parallel to surface
Plant Growth • Size & shape depends on cell # & cell size • Decide which way to divide & which way to elongate • Periclinal = perpendicular to surface: get longer • Anticlinal = parallel to surface: add more layers
Plant Growth • Decide which way to divide & which way to elongate • Periclinal = perpendicular to surface: get longer • Anticlinal = parallel to surface: add more layers • Now must decide which way to elongate
Plant Growth • Decide which way to divide & which way to elongate • Periclinal = perpendicular to surface: get longer • Anticlinal = parallel to surface: add more layers • Now must decide which way to elongate: which walls to stretch
Plant Cell Walls and Growth Carbohydrate barrier surrounding cell • Protects & gives cell shape
Plant Cell Walls and Growth Carbohydrate barrier surrounding cell • Protects & gives cell shape • 1˚ wall made first • mainly cellulose • Can stretch!
Plant Cell Walls and Growth Carbohydrate barrier surrounding cell • Protects & gives cell shape • 1˚ wall made first • mainly cellulose • Can stretch! • 2˚ wall made after growth stops • Lignins make it tough
Plant Cell Walls and Growth • 1˚ wall made first • mainly cellulose • Can stretch! Control elongation by controlling orientation of cell wall fibers as wall is made
Plant Cell Walls and Growth • 1˚ wall made first • mainly cellulose • Can stretch! Control elongation by controlling orientation of cell wall fibers as wall is made • 1˚ walls = 25% cellulose, 25% hemicellulose, 35% pectin, 5% protein (but highly variable)
Plant Cell Walls and Growth 1˚ walls = 25% cellulose, 25% hemicellulose, 35% pectin, 5% protein (but highly variable) Cellulose: ordered chains made of glucose linked b 1-4
Plant Cell Walls and Growth 1˚ walls = 25% cellulose, 25% hemicellulose, 35% pectin, 5% protein (but highly variable) Cellulose: ordered chains made of glucose linked b 1-4 • Cross-link with neighbors to form strong, stable fibers
Plant Cell Walls and Growth Cellulose: ordered chains made of glucose linked b1-4 • Cross-link with neighbors to form strong, stable fibers • Made by enzyme embedded in the plasma membrane
Plant Cell Walls and Growth Cellulose: ordered chains made of glucose linked b1-4 • Cross-link with neighbors to form strong, stable fibers • Made by enzyme embedded in the plasma membrane • Guided by cytoskeleton
Plant Cell Walls and Growth Cellulose: ordered chains made of glucose linked b1-4 • Cross-link with neighbors to form strong, stable fibers • Made by enzyme embedded in the plasma membrane • Guided by cytoskeleton • Cells with poisoned µtubules are misshapen
Plant Cell Walls and Growth Cellulose: ordered chains made of glucose linked b 1-4 • Cross-link with neighbors to form strong, stable fibers • Made by enzyme embedded in the plasma membrane • Guided by cytoskeleton • Cells with poisoned µtubules are misshapen • Other wall chemicals are made in Golgi & secreted
Plant Cell Walls and Growth Cellulose: ordered chains made of glucose linked b 1-4 • Cross-link with neighbors to form strong, stable fibers • Made by enzyme embedded in the plasma membrane • Guided by cytoskeleton • Cells with poisoned µtubules are misshapen • Other wall chemicals are made in Golgi & secreted • Only cellulose pattern is tightly controlled
Plant Cell Walls and Growth Cellulose pattern is tightly controlled • 6 CES enzymes form a “rosette”: each makes 6 chains -> 36/fiber
Plant Cell Walls and Growth Cellulose pattern is tightly controlled • 6 CES enzymes form a “rosette”: each makes 6 chains -> 36/fiber • Rosettes are guided by microtubules
Plant Cell Walls and Growth Cellulose pattern is tightly controlled • 6 CES enzymes form a “rosette”: each makes 6 chains • Rosettes are guided by microtubules • Deposition pattern determines direction of elongation
Plant Cell Walls and Growth Cellulose pattern is tightly controlled • Deposition pattern determines direction of elongation • New fibers are perpendicular to growth direction, yet fibers form a mesh
Plant Cell Walls and Growth New fibers are perpendicular to growth direction, yet fibers form a mesh Multinet hypothesis: fibers reorient as cell elongates Old fibers are anchored so gradually shift as cell grows
Plant Cell Walls and Growth New fibers are perpendicular to growth direction, yet fibers form a mesh Multinet hypothesis: fibers reorient as cell elongates Old fibers are anchored so gradually shift as cell grows Result = mesh
Plant Cell Walls and Growth 1˚ walls = 25% cellulose, 25% hemicellulose, 35% pectin, 5% protein (but highly variable) Hemicelluloses AKA cross-linking glycans: bind cellulose
Plant Cell Walls and Growth Hemicelluloses AKA cross-linking glycans: bind cellulose Coat cellulose & bind neighbor
Plant Cell Walls and Growth Hemicelluloses AKA cross-linking glycans Coat cellulose & bind neighbor Diverse group of glucans: also linked b 1-4, but may have other sugars and components attached to C6
Hemicelluloses Diverse group of glucans: also linked b 1-4, but may have other sugars and components attached to C6 makes digestion more difficult
Hemicelluloses Diverse group of glucans: also linked b 1-4, but may have other sugars and components attached to C6 makes digestion more difficult Assembled in Golgi
Plant Cell Walls and Growth Hemicelluloses AKA cross-linking glycans A diverse group of glucans also linked b 1-4, but may have other sugars and components attached to C6 makes digestion more difficult Assembled in Golgi Secreted cf woven
Plant Cell Walls and Growth 1˚ walls = 25% cellulose, 25% hemicellulose, 35% pectin, 5% protein (but highly variable) Pectins: fill space between cellulose-hemicellulose fibers
Pectins Pectins: fill space between cellulose-hemicellulose fibers Form gel that determines cell wall porosity(& makes jam)
Pectins Pectins: fill space between cellulose-hemicellulose fibers Form gel that determines cell wall porosity (& makes jam) Acidic, so also modulate pH & bind polars
Pectins Pectins: fill space between cellulose-hemicellulose fibers Form gel that determines cell wall porosity (& makes jam) Acidic, so also modulate pH & bind polars Backbone is 1-4 linked galacturonic acid
Pectins Backbone is 1-4 linked galacturonic acid Have complex sugar side-chains, vary by spp.
Pectins Backbone is 1-4 linked galacturonic acid Have complex sugar side-chains, vary by spp.
Plant Cell Walls and Growth Also 4 main multigenic families of structural proteins
Plant Cell Walls and Growth Also 4 main multigenic families of structural proteins Amounts vary between cell types & conditions
Plant Cell Walls and Growth Also 4 main multigenic families of structural proteins Amounts vary between cell types & conditions • HRGP: hydroxyproline-rich glycoproteins (eg extensin) • Proline changed to hydroxyproline in Golgi
Plant Cell Wall Proteins • HRGP: hydroxyproline-rich glycoproteins (eg extensin) • Proline changed to hydroxyproline in Golgi • Highly glycosylated: helps bind CH2O
Plant Cell Wall Proteins • HRGP: hydroxyproline-rich glycoproteins (eg extensin) • Proline changed to hydroxyproline in Golgi • Highly glycosylated: helps bind CH2O • Common in cambium, phloem
Plant Cell Wall Proteins • HRGP: hydroxyproline-rich glycoproteins (eg extensin) • Proline changed to hydroxyproline in Golgi • Highly glycosylated: helps bind CH2O • Common in cambium, phloem • Help lock the wall after growth ceases
Plant Cell Wall Proteins • HRGP: hydroxyproline-rich glycoproteins (eg extensin) • Proline changed to hydroxyproline in Golgi • Highly glycosylated: helps bind CH2O • Common in cambium, phloem • Help lock the wall after growth ceases • Induced by wounding 2. PRP: proline-rich proteins
Plant Cell Wall Proteins • HRGP: hydroxyproline-rich glycoproteins (eg extensin) • PRP: proline-rich proteins • Low glycosylation = little interaction with CH2O
Plant Cell Wall Proteins • HRGP: hydroxyproline-rich glycoproteins (eg extensin) • PRP: proline-rich proteins • Low glycosylation = little interaction with CH2O • Common in xylem, fibers, cortex
Plant Cell Wall Proteins • HRGP: hydroxyproline-rich glycoproteins (eg extensin) • PRP: proline-rich proteins • Low glycosylation = little interaction with CH2O • Common in xylem, fibers, cortex • May help lock HRGPs together
Plant Cell Wall Proteins • HRGP: hydroxyproline-rich glycoproteins (eg extensin) • PRP: proline-rich proteins • Low glycosylation = little interaction with CH2O • Common in xylem, fibers, cortex • May help lock HRGPs together • GRP: Glycine-rich proteins • No glycosylation = little interaction with CH2O
Plant Cell Wall Proteins • HRGP: hydroxyproline-rich glycoproteins (eg extensin) • PRP: proline-rich proteins • Low glycosylation = little interaction with CH2O • Common in xylem, fibers, cortex • May help lock HRGPs together • GRP: Glycine-rich proteins • No glycosylation = little interaction with CH2O • Common in xylem