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Article
Regulation of Solute Flux Through Plasmodesmata in the Root Meristem
Plant Physiology (2011)
  • Heidi L. Rutschow
  • Tobias Baskin, University of Massachusetts - Amherst
  • Eric M. Kramer
Abstract

Plasmodesmata permit solutes to move between cells nonspecifically and without having to cross a membrane. This symplastic connectivity, while straightforward to observe using fluorescent tracers, has proven difficult to quantify. We use fluorescence recovery after photobleaching, combined with a mathematical model of symplastic diffusion, to assay plasmodesmata-mediated permeability in the Arabidopsis (Arabidopsis thaliana) root meristem in wild-type and transgenic lines, and under selected chemical treatments. The permeability measured for the wild type is nearly 10-times greater than previously reported. Plamodesmal permeability remains constant in seedlings treated with auxin (30 nm indoleacetic acid for 2 and 24 h; 100 nm indoleacetic acid for 2 h); however, permeability is diminished in two lines previously reported to have impaired plasmodesmal function as well as in wild-type seedlings treated for 24 h with 0.6 mm tryptophan. Moreover, plasmodesmal permeability is strongly altered by applied hydrogen peroxide within 2 h of treatment, being approximately doubled at a low concentration (0.6 mm) and nearly eliminated at a higher one (6 mm). These results reveal that the plasmodesmata in the root meristem carry a substantial flux of small molecules and that this flux is subject to rapid regulation.

Disciplines
Publication Date
February 16, 2011
Publisher Statement

DOI: http:/​/​dx.​doi.​org/​10.​1104/​pp.​110

This article was harvested from PubMed Central.
Citation Information
Heidi L. Rutschow, Tobias Baskin and Eric M. Kramer. "Regulation of Solute Flux Through Plasmodesmata in the Root Meristem" Plant Physiology Vol. 155 Iss. 4 (2011)
Available at: http://works.bepress.com/tobias_baskin/22/