1 / 72

Sensory Systems in Plants

Sensory Systems in Plants. Chapter 41. Responses to Light. Pigments other than those used in photosynthesis can detect light and mediate the plant’s response to it

dore
Télécharger la présentation

Sensory Systems in Plants

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Sensory Systems in Plants Chapter 41

  2. Responses to Light Pigments other than those used in photosynthesis can detect light and mediate the plant’s response to it Photoperiodism response to changes in the length of day and night, it is nondirectional Phototropismsare directional growth responses to light Both compensate for plants’ inability to move

  3. Responses to Light Phytochrome (P)consists of two parts: -Chromophore which is light-receptive -Apoprotein which initiates a signal-transduction pathway

  4. Responses to Light The phytochromemolecule exists in two interconvertible forms: -Pris the inactive form -Absorbs red light at 660 nm -Pfris the active form -Absorbs far-red light at 730 nm -Tagged by ubiquitin for degradation in the proteasome

  5. Responses to Light In Arabidopsis, five forms of phytochromes have been characterized: PHYA to PHYE -Involved in several plant growth responses 1. Seed germination -Inhibited by far-red light and stimulated by red light in many plants

  6. Responses to Light 2. Shoot elongation -Etiolation occurs when shoot internodes elongate because red light and active Pfr are not available 3. Detection of plant spacing -Crowded plants receive far-red light bounced from neighboring plants -This increases plant height in competition for sunlight

  7. Responses to Light Phytochromes are involved in many signaling pathways that lead to gene expression -Pr is found in the cytoplasm -When it is converted to Pfr it enters the nucleus -Pfr binds to transcription factors, leading to expression of light-regulated genes

  8. Responses to Light Phytochrome also works through protein-kinase signaling pathways -When Pr is converted to Pfr, its protein kinase domain causes autophosphorylation or phosphorylation of another protein -This initiates a signaling cascade that activates transcription factors leading to expression of light-regulated genes

  9. Phototropisms Phototropic responses including the bending of growing stems to sources of light with blue wavelengths (460-nm range)

  10. Phototropisms A blue-light receptor phototropin 1 (PHOT1) has been characterized -Has two regions -Blue-light activates the light-sensing region of PHOT1 -Stimulates the kinase region of PHOT1 to autophosphorylate -Triggers a signal transduction

  11. Phototropisms

  12. Circadian Clocks Circadian rhythms (“around the day”)are particularly common among eukaryotes Have four characteristics: 1. Continue in absence of external inputs 2. Must be about 24 hours in duration 3. Cycle can be reset or entrained 4. Clock can compensate for differences in temperature

  13. Responses to Gravity Gravitropism is the response of a plant to the gravitational field of the Earth -Shoots exhibit negative gravitotropism; roots have a positive gravitropic response

  14. Responses to Gravity Four general steps lead to a gravitropic response: 1. Gravity is perceived by the cell 2. A mechanical signal is transduced into a gravity-perceiving physiological signal 3. Physiological signal is transduced to other cells 4. Differential cell elongation occurs in the “up” and “down” sides of root and shoot

  15. Responses to Gravity In shoots, gravity is sensed along the length of the stem in endodermal cells surrounding the vascular tissue -Signaling is in the outer epidermal cells In roots, the cap is the site of gravity perception -Signaling triggers differential cell elongation and division in the elongation zone

  16. Stem Response to Gravity Auxin accumulates on lower side of the stem -Results in asymmetrical cell elongation and curvature of the stem upward Two Arabidopsis mutants, scarecrow (scr) and short root (shr) do not show a normal gravitropic response -Due to lack of a functional endodermis and its gravity-sensing amyloplasts

  17. Root Response to Gravity Lower cells in horizontally oriented root cap are less elongated than those on upper side -Upper side cells grow more rapidly causing the root to ultimately grow downward Auxin may not be the long-distance signal between the root cap and elongation zone -However, it has an essential role in root gravitotropism

  18. Responses to Mechanical Stimuli Thigmomorphogenesis is a permanent form change in response to mechanical stresses Thigmotropism is directional growth of a plant or plant part in response to contact -Thigmonastic responses occur in same direction independent of the stimulus Examples of touch responses: -Snapping of Venus flytrap leaves -Curling of tendrils around objects

  19. Responses to Mechanical Stimuli

  20. Responses to Mechanical Stimuli Some turgor movements are triggered by light -This movement maximizes photosynthesis

  21. Responses to Mechanical Stimuli Bean leaves are horizontal during the day when their pulvini are rigid -But become more or less vertical at night as the pulvini lose turgor

  22. Water and Temperature Responses When water and temperature affect plants, responses can be short-term or long-term Dormancy results in the cessation of growth during unfavorable conditions -Often begins with dropping of leaves Abscission is the process by which leaves or petals are shed -One advantage is that nutrient sinks can be discarded, conserving resources

  23. Water and Temperature Responses Abscission involves changes that occur in an abscission zone at the petiole’s base -Hormonal changes lead to differentiation of: -Protective layer = Consists of several layers of suberin-impregnated cells -Separation layer = Consists of 1-2 layers of swollen, gelatinous cells -As pectins break down, wind and rain separate the leaf from the stem

  24. Seed Dormancy Seeds allow plant offspring to wait until conditions for germination are optimal -Legume seeds often last decades and even longer without special care -Seeds that are thousands of years old have been successfully germinated Essential steps leading to dormancy include: -Accumulating food reserves, forming a protective seed coat and dehydration

  25. Responses to Chilling Plants respond to cold temperatures by: 1. Increasing number of unsaturated lipids in their plasma membranes 2. Limiting ice crystal formation to extracellular spaces 3. Producing antifreeze proteins Some plants can undergo deep supercooling -Survive temperatures as low as –40OC

  26. Responses to High Temperatures Plants produce heat shock proteins (HSPs) if exposed to rapid temperature increases -HSPs stabilize other proteins Plants can survive otherwise lethal temperatures if they are gradually exposed to increasing temperature -Acquired thermotolerance

  27. Hormones and Sensory Systems Hormones are chemicals produced in one part of an organism and transported to another part where they exert a response In plants, hormones are not produced by specialized tissues -Seven major kinds of plant hormones -Auxin, cytokinins, gibberellins, brassinosteroids, oligosaccharins, ethylene, and abscisic acid

  28. Auxin Discovered in 1881 by Charles and Francis Darwin -They reported experiments on the response of growing plants to light -Grass seedlings do not bend if the tip is covered with a lightproof cap -They do bend when a collar is placed below the tip

  29. Auxin The Darwins hypothesized that shoots bend towards light in response to an “influence” transmitted downward from the tip Thirty years later, Peter Boysen-Jensen and Arpad Paal demonstrated that the “influence” was actually a chemical

  30. Auxin In 1926, Frits Went performed an experiment that explained all of the previous results -He named the chemical messenger auxin -It accumulated on the side of an oat seedling away from light -Promoted these cells to grow faster than those on the lighted side -Cell elongation causes the plant to bend towards light

  31. Auxin Winslow Briggs later demonstrated that auxin molecules migrate away from the light into the shaded portion of the shoot -Barriers inserted in a shoot tip revealed equal amounts of auxin in both the light and dark sides of the barrier -However, different auxin concentrations produced different degrees of curvature

  32. How Auxin Works Indoleacetic acid (IAA) is the most common natural auxin -Probably synthesized from tryptophan

  33. How Auxin Works The auxin receptor is the transport inhibitor response protein 1 (TIR1) Two families of proteins mediate auxin-induced changes in gene expression -Auxin responses factors (ARFs) -Aux/IAA proteins

  34. How Auxin Works 1. Auxin binds TIR1 in the SCF complex if Aux/IAA is present 2. SCF complex tags Aux/IAA proteins with ubiquitin 3. These are degraded in the proteasome 4. Transcriptional activators of ARF genes are released from repression by Aux/IAA 5. Auxin-induced gene expression

  35. How Auxin Works One of the downstream effects of auxin is an increase in plasticity of the plant cell wall -The acid growth hypothesis provides a model linking auxin to cell wall expansion

More Related