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Journal ArticleDOI

The effect of different growing conditions on water relations parameters of leaf epidermal cells of Tradescantia virginiana L.

TLDR
The results suggest that in T. virginiana cellular water relations are changed mainly by the turgor dependence of ɛ, which has implications for the discussion of pressure/volume curves as measured by the pressure bomb.
Abstract
Tradescantia virginiana L. plants were cultivated under contrasting conditions of temperature, humidity, light quality and intensity, and nutrient status in order to investigate the effect of growth conditions on the water relations parameters of the leaf epidermal cells. Turgor pressure (P), volumetric elastic modulus (ɛ), half-time of water potential equilibration (T1/2), hydraulic conductivity (Lp) were measured with the miniaturized pressure probe in single cells of the upper and lower epidermis of leaves. Turgor differed (range: 0.1 bar to 7.2 bar) between treatments with lowest values under warm and humid conditions and additional supply of fertilizer, and highest values under conditions of low air humidity and low nutrient supply. The volumetric elastic modulus changed by 2 orders of magnitude (range: 3.0 bar to 350 bar, 158 cells), but ɛ was only affected by the treatments, in as much as it was dependent on turgor. The turgor dependence of ɛ, measured on intact leaves of T. virginiana, was similar to that for cells of the isolated (peeled) lower epidermis, where ɛ as a function of turgor was linear over the whole range of turgors. This result has implications for the discussion of pressure/volume curves as measured by the pressure bomb where changes in “bulk leaf ɛ” are frequently discussed as “adaptations” to certain treatments. The measurements of the hydraulic conductivity indicate that this parameter varies between treatments (range of means: 2.4×10-6 cm s-1 bar-1 to 13.4×10-6 cm s-1 bar-1). There was a negative correlation for Lp in cells of intact leaves as a function of turgor which was altered by the growing conditions. However, a correlation with turgor could not be found for cells from isolated epidermis or cells from a uniform population of plants. The large variation in Lp from cell to cell observed in the present and in previous studies was accounted for in a study of 100 cells from a uniform population of plants by the propagation of measurement errors in calculating Lp. The results suggest that in T. virginiana cellular water relations are changed mainly by the turgor dependence of ɛ.

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

Plant aquaporins: multifunctional water and solute channels with expanding roles.

TL;DR: The challenge will be to elucidate gating on a molecular level and cellular level and to tie those findings into plant water relations on a macroscopic scale where various flow pathways need to be considered.
Book ChapterDOI

Plant water status, hydraulic resistance and capacitance

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors introduce the concept and measurement of plant water potential and its components, and then discuss the consequences of gradients in these components within the plant, where the transpirational path of the plant can be regarded as a hydraulic resistor.
Book ChapterDOI

[16] Water flow in plants and its coupling to other processes: An overview

TL;DR: In this article, the authors discuss the vast field of possible couplings between water transport and other processes as they occur, for example, during gas exchange, during water and nutrient uptake into the root, or during the coupled flow of water and assimilates in the phloem.
Journal ArticleDOI

In Situ Measurement of Epidermal Cell Turgor, Leaf Water Potential, and Gas Exchange in Tradescantia virginiana L.

TL;DR: The changes in epidermal cell turgor that were associated with changes in leaf transpiration were larger than the changes in Leaf water potential, indicating the presence of transpirationally induced within-leaf water potential gradients.
Journal ArticleDOI

Computer vision system for automated cell pressure probe operation

TL;DR: An automated cell pressure probe was designed to allow robust measurements of cellular water relations without the limitations caused by operator skill levels (rapid response time, good hand–eye coordination, and manual dexterity).
References
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Book ChapterDOI

Water Relations of Plant Cells

TL;DR: This chapter deals with the determination and meaning of a very important membrane parameter—the reflection coefficient for a solute, which is particularly important for osmosis through leaky membranes.
Journal ArticleDOI

Osmotic Adjustment in Leaves of Sorghum in Response to Water Deficits

TL;DR: From the relationship between turgor potential and relative water content there was an approximate doubling of the volumetric elastic modulus, i.e. a halving of tissue elasticity, as a result of stress preconditioning.
Journal ArticleDOI

Pressure probe technique for measuring water relations of cells in higher plants.

TL;DR: Epsilon can be shown to be a function of both cell turgor pressure and cell volume; epsilon increases with increasing turgar pressure and is higher in larger cells.
Book ChapterDOI

Physical Aspects of Water Relations of Plant Cells

TL;DR: The chapter concludes that the experimental evidence and the theoretical concepts presented reveal the intricate relationships among water transport, turgor pressure, active and passive solute transport processes, and the elastic properties of the cell wall, which themselves control growth in plant cells.
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