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
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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