Intro to Lab #9 / Chpt. 36 Plant Structure and Transport pg. 744 - 753 QuickTime™ and a TIFF (Uncompressed) decompressor are needed to see this picture. Transport in Did you know, an Plants average size maple tree looses 200 L of water per hour during the summer via. transpiration. What would happen if this water were not replaced by the Question ? • How do plants move materials from one organ to the other ? TRANSPIRATION TRANSPIRATION - when a plant looses water vapor from the inside of the leaf, to the outside environment -via. COHESION - TENSION THEORY water is pulled up from roots to leaves via. higher in the leaf to a Water & mineral absorption to Xylem: • Water absorption from soil - osmosis - aquaporins ROOT HAIRS = increase surface area for the absorption of water & minerals QuickTime™ and a TIFF (Uncompressed) decompressor are needed to see this picture. Water & mineral absorption to Xylem: Mineral absorption – active transport – proton pumps • active transport of H+ proton pumps Water & mineral absorption to Xylem: • Proton pumps – active transport of H+ ions out of cell • chemiosmosis • H+ gradient – creates membrane potential • difference in charge • drives cation uptake – creates gradient • cotransport of other solutes against their gradient proton pumps Transport in uptake and loss by individual Plants cells: The survival of plant cells depends on the ability to balance the uptake & loss of H2O Remember this? *Presence of the cell wall adds physical pressure, this affects movement into the cell negatively! Remember this? *Solute concentration also affects movement: Transport in HowPlants can we predict the direction of osmosis when a plant cell is surrounded by a solution??? Transport in Plants Remember this? Water moves from the solution of higher water potential, to a solution of lower water potential. For plants, it is not just enough to know if the extracellular solution is hypotonic or Remember this? *Measured in MEGAPASCALS • Has two components: –Pressure potential: yr –Solute potential: yp y = yr + yp Remember this? You have to know these two numbers first, when determining water potential. You must know water potential in order to know which direction water will move! Pressure potential: yr Solute potential: yp Remember this? Remember this? any solution will have a negative w.p. adding solutes, lowers w.p. Transport in Plants *Solute concentration affects movement Transport in *ExternalPlants pressure on a solution counters its tendency to take up water due to the presence of solutes Transport in Plants = + P S Transport in Plants the force that = moves water across the membranes of plant cells COHESION - TENSION THEORY water is “pulled” b/c of it’s cohesive property Evolutionary advantage of ROOT HAIRS: add surface area thus increasing amount of H20/mineral solution coming Mycorrhizae increase absorption • Symbiotic relationship between fungi & plant – symbiotic fungi greatly increases surface area for absorption of water & minerals – increases volume of soil reached to plant – increases transport to host plant Mycorrhizae COHESION - TENSION THEORY Because higher water potential outside COHESION TENSION THEORY minerals absorbed from soil into root~ creates “root pressure” that pushes H2O/soil solution into xylem COHESION - TENSION THEORY - QuickTime™ and a TIFF (Uncompressed) decompressor are needed to see this picture. • uptake of soil solution by root hairs to apoplastic route through the cell walls Transport routes in plant cells QuickTime™ and a TIFF (Uncompressed) decompressor are needed to see this picture. COHESION - TENSION THEORY - QuickTime™ and a TIFF (Uncompressed) decompressor are needed to see this picture. • uptake of minerals & water by root hairs to symplastic route - through plasmodesmata Transport routes in plant cells QuickTime™ and a TIFF (Uncompressed) decompressor are needed to see this picture. Controlling the route of water in root • Endodermis – cell layer surrounding vascular cylinder of root – lined with impermeable Casparian strip – forces fluid through selective cell membrane • filtered & forced into xylem cells QuickTime™ and a TIFF (Uncompressed) decompressor are needed to see this picture. Controlling the route of water in root QuickTime™ and a TIFF (Uncompressed) decompressor are needed to see this picture. • some soil solution from apoplast route, diffuses into the symplastic route -through the plasma membrane COHESIO NTENSION THEORY Water then travels thru the root where the Casparian strip forces H2O into REMEMBER: the casparian strip blocks water from entering via. The apoplastic route COHESION - TENSION THEORY - QuickTime™ and a TIFF (Uncompressed) decompressor are needed to see this picture. • only minerals in the symplastic route can detour around the Casparian Strip AND PASS INTO THE VASCULAR Root anatomy eudicot monocot COHESION - TENSION THEORY - QuickTime™ and a TIFF (Uncompressed) decompressor are needed to see this picture. • XYLEM vessels transport water and minerals upward into the shoot system (stem and veins) COHESION - TENSION THEORY problem… this can only take the water “so far” COHESIO NTENSION THEORY At the leaf of the plant, water loss due to Evaporating H2O decreases the water potential of the leaf. Since water flows from higher water potential to lower, the water is pulled up the xylem with the minerals. Transport of sugars in phloem • Loading of sucrose into phloem – flow through cells via plasmodesmata – proton pumps create energy potential/proton gradient • cotransport of sucrose into cells down proton gradient Pressure flow in phloem • Mass flow hypothesis – “source to sink” flow • direction of transport in phloem is dependent on plant’s needs – phloem loading • active transport of sucrose into phloem • increased sucrose concentration decreases H2O potential – water flows in from xylem cells • increase in pressure due to increase in H2O causes flow can flow 1m/hr Maple sugaring Transport in O CO Plants 2 H 2O 2 Transport in O CO Plants 2 H 2O 2 How do environmental influences effect? Transport in turgid flacidPlants Environmental factors influence this rate…