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Plant Physiology

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Plant Physiology Solute transport Solute transport Plant cells separated from their environment by a thin plasma membrane (and the cell wall) Must facilitate and ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Plant Physiology


1
Plant Physiology
  • Solute transport

2
Solute transport
  • Plant cells separated from their environment by a
    thin plasma membrane (and the cell wall)
  • Must facilitate and continuously regulate the
    inward and outward traffic of selected molecules
    and ions as the cell
  • Takes up nutrients
  • Exports wastes
  • Regulates turgor pressure
  • Send chemical signals to other cells

3
Two perspectives formembrane transport
  • Cellular level
  • Contribution to cellular functions
  • Contribution to ion homeostasis (i.e., balance)
  • Whole-plant level
  • Contribution to water relations
  • Contribution to mineral nutrition
  • Contribution to growth and development

4
Moving into cells and between compartments
requires membrane to be crossed
  • Composed of a phospholipid (LipidPhosphate
    group) bilayer and proteins.
  • The phospholipid sets up the bilayer structure
  • Phospholipids have hydrophilic heads and fatty
    acid tails.
  • Such organization makes plasma membrane
    selectively permeable to ions and molecules.

5
Membrane potential
  • Membrane potential is the difference
    in electrical potential between the interior and
    the exterior of a biological cell
  • Arise because charged solutes cross membranes at
    different rates
  • Create a driving force for ionic transport
  • KCl Solution example
  • K and Cl- ions diffuse at different rates across
    the membranes
  • Membranes are more permeable to K than to Cl-
  • Initially diffuse at different rates unless they
    achieve equilibrium

Potential as a result of diffusion
6
Electrogenic pumps and membrane potential
  • Electrogenic pumps are ATPases (enzymes that
    split ATP)
  • ATPases use ATP energy to pump out protons (H)
    to create charge gradients
  • H gradients create a type of battery to power
    transport and maintain ion homeostasis

Electroneutral? -Na/K -ATPase animal
cellsElectrogenic - H/K -ATPase animal gastric
mucosaElectroneutral
7
Electrogenic pumps and membrane potential
  • To prove this
  • Add cyanide (CN)
  • Rapidly poisons mitochondria, so cells ATP is
    depleted
  • Membrane potential falls to levels seen with
    diffusion
  • So membrane potential has too parts
  • Diffusion
  • Electrogenic ion transport
  • Requires energy

8
Ion homeostasis within plant cells
  • Plant cells segregate ions based upon
  • Function or role
  • Potential toxicity
  • This segregation creates a balance
  • Creating and maintaining the balance may require
    energy

9
Ion homeostasis within plant cells
  • Ion concentrations in cytosol and vacuole are
    controlled by passive (dashed) and active (solid)
    transport processes
  • In most plant cells vacuole takes up 90 of the
    cell volume
  • Contains bulk of cells solutes
  • Control of cytosol ion concs is important for the
    regulations of enzyme activity
  • Cell wall is not a permeability barrier
  • It is NOT a factor in solute transport

10
Passive vs active transport
  • Passive or active transport depends on the
    gradient in electrochemical potential
  • The electrochemical potential has 2 parts
  • Concentration
  • Charge (Electrical)
  • The two parts together dictate the
    electrochemical potential for a compartment of a
    cell

11
Passive v. active transport
  • Passive transport
  • Movement down the electrochemical gradient
  • From a more positive electrochemical potential
  • to a more negative electrochemical potential
  • Active transport
  • Movement against electrochemical gradient
  • From a more negative electrochemical potential
  • to a more positive electrochemical potential

12
Electrochemical potential versuswater potential
  • Just like water potential, solutes alone must
    follow the rules of the electrochemical potential
    and move passively
  • If this is not what the cell or plant tissue
    needs, two components are required somewhere to
    counteract this natural tendency
  • Energy
  • Membrane transport proteins

13
Summary of membrane transport
  • Facilitate the passage of ions and other polar
    molecules
  • Arabidopsis thaliana contains 849 membrane
    proteins (4.8 of genome)
  • Three types of membrane transporters enhance the
    movement of solutes across plant cell membranes
  • Channels passive transport
  • Carriers passive/active transport
  • Pumps- active transport

14
Simple diffusion
  • Movement down the gradient in electrochemical
    potential
  • Movement between phospholipid bilayer components
  • Bidirectional if gradient changes
  • Slow process

15
Channels
  • Transmembrane proteins that work as selective
    pores
  • Transport through these passive
  • The size of the pore determines its transport
    specifity
  • Movement down the gradient in electrochemical
    potential
  • Unidirectional
  • Very fast transport
  • Limited to ions and water

16
Channels
  • Sometimes channel transport involves transient
    binding of the solute to the channel protein
  • Channel proteins have structures called gates.
  • Open and close pore in response to signals
  • Light
  • Hormone binding
  • Only potassium can diffuse either inward or
    outward
  • All others must be expelled by active transport.

K form the environment, opening of stomata
Release of K into xylem Closing of stomata
17
Remember the aquaporin channel protein?
  • There is some diffusion of water directly across
    the bi-lipid membrane.
  • Aquaporins Integral membrane proteins that form
    water selective channels allows water to
    diffuse faster
  • Facilitates water movement in plants
  • Alters the rate of water flow across the plant
    cell membrane NOT direction

18
Carriers
  • Do not have pores that extend completely across
    membrane
  • Substance being transported is initially bound to
    a specific site on the carrier protein
  • Carriers are specialized to carry a specific
    organic compound
  • Binding of a molecule causes the carrier protein
    to change shape
  • This exposes the molecule to the solution on the
    other side of the membrane
  • Transport complete after dissociation of molecule
    and carrier protein

19
Carriers
  • Moderate speed
  • Slower than in a channel
  • 100-1000 ions or molecules/second
  • Binding to carrier protein is like enzyme binding
    site action
  • Can be either active or passive
  • Passive action is sometimes called facilitated
    diffusion
  • Unidirectional

20
Active transport
  • To carry out active transport
  • The membrane transporter must couple the uphill
    transport of a molecule with an energy releasing
    event
  • This is called Primary active transport
  • Energy source can be
  • The electron transport chain of mitochondria
  • The electron transport chain of chloroplasts
  • Absorption of light by the membrane transporter
  • Such membrane transporters are called PUMPS

21
Primary active transport- Pumps
  • Movement against the electrochemical gradient
  • Unidirectional
  • Very slow
  • Significant interaction with solute
  • Direct energy expenditure

22
pump-mediated transport against the gradient
(secondary active transport)
  • Involves the coupling of the uphill transport of
    a molecule with the downhill transport of another
  • (A) the initial conformation allows a proton from
    outside to bind to pump protein
  • (B) Proton binding alters the shape of the
    protein to allow the molecule S to bind

23
pump-mediated transport against the gradient
(secondary active transport)
  • (C) The binding of the molecule S again alters
    the shape of the pump protein. This exposes the
    both binding sites, and the proton and molecule
    S to the inside of the cell
  • (D) This release restores both pump proteins to
    their original conformation and the cycle begins
    again

24
pump-mediated transport against the gradient
(secondary active transport)
  • Two types
  • (A) Symport
  • Both substances move in the same direction across
    membrane
  • (B) Antiport
  • Coupled transport in which the downhill movement
    of a proton drives the active (uphill) movement
    of a molecule
  • In both cases this is against the concentration
    gradient of the molecule (active)

25
pump-mediated transport against the gradient
(secondary active transport)
  • The proton gradient required for secondary active
    transport is provided by the activity of the
    electrogenic pumps
  • Membrane potential contributes to secondary
    active transport
  • Passive transport with respect to H (proton)

26
Ion homeostasis in plant cells
  • Tonoplast antiporters move sugars, ions and
    contaminants to the cytoplasm from the vacuole
  • Anion channels maintain charge balance between
    the cytoplasm and vacuole
  • Ca channels work to control second messenger
    levels cell signaling paths between vacuole and
    cytoplasm

27
Ion transport in roots
  • As all plant cells are surrounded by a cell wall,
    Ions can be carried through the cell wall space
    with out entering an actual cell
  • The apoplast
  • Just as the cell walls form a continuous space,
    so do the cytoplasms of neighboring cells
  • The symplast

28
Ion transport in roots
  • All plant cells are connected by plasmodesmata.
  • In tissues where large amounts of intercellular
    transport occurs neighboring cells have large
    numbers of these.
  • As in cells of the root tip
  • Ion absorption in the root is more pronounced in
    the root hair zone than other parts of the root.
  • An Ion can either enter the root apoplast or
    symplast but is finally forced into the symplast
    by the casparian strip.

29
Ion transport in roots
  • Once the Ion is in the symplast of the root it
    must exit the symplast and enter the xylem
  • Called Xylem Loading.
  • Ions are taken up into the root by an active
    transport process
  • Ions are transported into the xylem by passive
    diffusion
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