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Plant Structure & Transport Systems Chapter 28 & 29
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I. Plant Structures A. Roots : anchor, absorb minerals and water, store carbs 1. Root hairs: individual cells: absorption 2. Tap roots: Main vertical root: anchor 3. Lateral roots: Branch to sides: absorb 4. fibrous roots: mat of shallow roots
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B. Shoots: leaves and stems 1. Stems & Branches: transport & elevation a. veins in stem transport i. xylem cell : water up ii. phloem cells : sugars down b. Elevation advantage.. i. light ii. pollen dispersal
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2. Leaves: photosynthesis/Gas exchange a. mesophyll cells do Photosynthesis i. fill interior of leaf ii. Chloroplasts b. stoma i. opening ii. Allow gas in/out of air spaces inside leaf
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II. Gas Exchange A. Guard Cells: open and close stomata 1.Open stomata let CO 2 in but.. also let water out by transpiration 2. Transpiration in leaf i. water evaporates from mesophyll cells into air space (High ψ to low ψ) ii. Water vapor moves from air space through stomata into air (High ψ to low ψ)
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C. Stomata number & location Drier climate : fewer stomata Aquatic plants : many stoma always open Most stomata on bottom of leaf Stomata open & close in response to stimuli
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D. Guard Cells Open Blue light stimulus received by photoreceptors on guard cells Signal transduction causes active transport of K + into guard cell water flows into cell Increasing turgor pressure Bending guard cells apart= response
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E. Guard Cells Close Stoma ABA hormone = signal molecule produced by plant cells lacking water ABA binds guard cell receptors Signal transduction opens Ca+ and K+ channels reducing solute conc in cell H2O leaves cell. Low turgor pressure due to shrinking vacuole makes cell flaccid Stoma closes
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III. Water Transport A. Into Root 1. hydrophilic cell walls of root tips/root hairs 2. water & minerals flow into cortex extracellular spaces 3. cortex & epidermal cells selectively absorb minerals (high SA) 4. Active transport increases mineral conc.
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Apoplast –extracellular Symplast-cytoplasm
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B. Into Vascular cylinder 1. Endodermis cells regulate what enters vascular cylinder 2. Casparian strip of wax (suberin) forms tight junctions around endodermal cells 3. only what crosses endodermal cell membranes can enter Xylem 4. active transport moves ions increasing osmotic pressure as H 2 O follows
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4. Root pressure pushes xylem sap (water/minerals) up root by bulk flow (fluid movement by pressure)
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C. Up Stem & to veins in leaves (p588) 1. Cohesion-tension hypothesis a. Pulls sap up stem & into leaf veins b. Water evaporates from cell wall of mesophyll cells into air spaces c. Lost water creates tension on water in the rest of the leaf (negative pressure) d. tension and negative pressure potential result in low water potential e. cohesion pulls water toward air space f. adhesion keeps them from falling
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Transpiration https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xGCnuXxbZGk https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xGCnuXxbZGk
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IV Sugar Transport =Translocation A. From sources to sinks 1. summer a. source: mature leaves b. sink: growing structures & root cortex (storage) 2. Spring a. source: root b. sink: growing leaves
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B. Phloem 1. Phloem sap a. high sucrose content (glucose + fructose: easy transport) b. hormones c. maple syrup 2. Phloem cells a. sieve tube cells = pipeline b. companion cells = load sugars
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Plasmodesmata Connect Sieve tube Cells at Sieve plate
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C. Bulk Flow in Phloem: POSITIVE pressure a. pressure built at source by active transport b. pressure reduced at sink by removal of sucrose for storage in cortex cells D. Sugar loading a. companion cells use active transport to move sucrose into sieve tube b. water follows by osmosis c. pressure potential is high: bulk flow
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E. Sugar Storage/Use at sink 1. sugar diffuse out of phloem 2. sugars used for growth 3. sugars converted to starch/stored
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Translocation
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p Phloem loading http://highered.mheducation.com/sites/9 834092339/student_view0/chapter38/ani mation_-_phloem_loading.html http://highered.mheducation.com/sites/9 834092339/student_view0/chapter38/ani mation_-_phloem_loading.html
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V. Plant Growth A. Meristem tissue 1. undifferentiated cells doing mitosis to grow 2. apical meristem in root/shoot tips B. Tropism : growing toward or away 1. Positive = toward, Negative = away 2. phototropism 3. Thigmotropism – touch (vines curl) 4. geotropism
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C. Auxin Mechanism 1. Auxin = plant growth hormone 2. Auxin concentrations control transcription 3. controls genes to regulate differentiation 4. Auxin only made in apical meristem 5. Auxin transported down shoot by Polar transport (faster than diffusion)
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a. Polar bcs Auxin transport proteins only located at base of cells. (at one pole) b. Unidirectional movement
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D. Acid Growth Hypothesis 1. High Auxin concentration = elongation of apical cells (growth) 2. Called Acid Growth bcs high Auxin conc. causes protein pumps to actively transport H + out of the cell (making the cell wall low pH)
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3. Effects of high H+ conc. in cell wall a. Membrane potential created. (voltage across memb.) Memb. Pot. Causes ion uptake by cell Cell becomes hypertonic Osmosis increases turgor pressure b. Low pH. Activates expansins Enzymes that break crosslinks (H-bonds) btwn cellulose fibers Allows cell wall to expand
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4. Result = cell elongates (grows) a.Under uniform light cells grow equally b. Directional light causes dark side cells to elongate more http://bcs.whfreeman.com/thelifewire/content/chp38/3802003.ht ml http://bcs.whfreeman.com/thelifewire/content/chp38/3802003.ht ml http://bcs.whfreeman.com/thelifewire/content/chp38/3802002.ht ml http://bcs.whfreeman.com/thelifewire/content/chp38/3802002.ht ml
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Hormones = signaling molecules carry info from cell to cell 1) Gibberellins – Lengthen stem/root seed germination 2) Auxins – lengthen shoots & apical dominance - decrease abscission (leaf dropping) - fruit formation 3) Cytokinins – cell division - slow aging - decrease apical dominance
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4) Ethylene – directional growth - ripen fruit (is a gass) - promotes senescence (aging) - promotes abscission 5) ABA = Abscisic Acid – induce dormancy - drought tolerance by - closing stomata
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Seed Dormancy A) mature seed produces ABA 1. induces production of proteins to resist dehydration 2. induce seed dormancy B) To germinate ABA levels must come down 1. heavy rain washes ABA out of seed 2. light and cold exposure may also be needed
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