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Pathogens Agrobacterium tumefaciens Agrobacterium rhizogenes Pseudomonas syringeae Pseudomonas aeruginosa Viroids DNA viruses RNA viruses Fungi oomycetes nematodes Symbionts N-fixers Endomycorrhizae Ectomycorrhizae. Plant Growth Decide which way to divide & which way to elongate
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Pathogens • Agrobacterium tumefaciens • Agrobacterium rhizogenes • Pseudomonas syringeae • Pseudomonas aeruginosa • Viroids • DNA viruses • RNA viruses • Fungi • oomycetes • nematodes • Symbionts • N-fixers • Endomycorrhizae • Ectomycorrhizae
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 • 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 • 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 • 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
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 • May help lock HRGPs & PRPs together
Plant Cell Wall Proteins • HRGP: hydroxyproline-rich glycoproteins (eg extensin) • PRP: proline-rich proteins • 3. GRP: Glycine-rich proteins • No glycosylation = little interaction with CH2O • Common in xylem • May help lock HRGPs & PRPs together 4. Arabinogalactan proteins
Plant Cell Wall Proteins • HRGP: hydroxyproline-rich glycoproteins (eg extensin) • PRP: proline-rich proteins • 3. GRP: Glycine-rich proteins • 4. Arabinogalactan proteins • Highly glycosylated: helps bind CH2O
Plant Cell Wall Proteins • HRGP: hydroxyproline-rich glycoproteins (eg extensin) • PRP: proline-rich proteins • 3. GRP: Glycine-rich proteins • 4. Arabinogalactan proteins • Highly glycosylated: helps bind CH2O • Anchored to PM by GPI
Plant Cell Wall Proteins • HRGP: hydroxyproline-rich glycoproteins (eg extensin) • PRP: proline-rich proteins • 3. GRP: Glycine-rich proteins • 4. Arabinogalactan proteins • Highly glycosylated: helps bind CH2O • Anchored to PM by GPI • Help cell adhesion and cell signaling
Plant Cell Wall Proteins • HRGP: hydroxyproline-rich glycoproteins (eg extensin) • PRP: proline-rich proteins • 3. GRP: Glycine-rich proteins • 4. Arabinogalactan proteins • Highly glycosylated: helps bind CH2O • Anchored to PM by GPI • Help cell adhesion and cell signaling 5. Also many enzymes involved in cell wall synthesis and loosening
Plant Cell Walls and Growth Also many enzymes involved in cell wall synthesis and loosening As growth stops, start making lignins & linking HGRP
Plant Cell Walls and Growth As growth stops, start depositing lignins & linking HGRP Lignins = polyphenolic macromolecules: 2nd most abundant on earth (after cellulose)
Plant Cell Walls and Growth Lignins = polyphenolic macromolecules: 2nd most abundant on earth (after cellulose) Bond hemicellulose: solidify & protect cell wall (nature’s cement): very difficult to digest
Plant Cell Walls and Growth Lignins = polyphenolic macromolecules: 2nd most abundant on earth (after cellulose) Bond hemicellulose: solidify & protect cell wall (nature’s cement): very difficult to digest Monomers are made in cytoplasm & secreted