Orientation of macromolecules in the walls of elongating carrot cells
Open Access
- 1 December 1993
- journal article
- Published by The Company of Biologists in Journal of Cell Science
- Vol. 106 (4) , 1347-1356
- https://doi.org/10.1242/jcs.106.4.1347
Abstract
When round cells from a carrot cell suspension culture are diluted into fresh medium without auxin, the cells elongate to almost 50 times their original diameter within three days. This process of elongation is accom-panied by changes in both the composition and the orientation of cell wall polymers. We have obtained infor-mation on the orientation of wall polymers in elongating cells by two complementary techniques, one using microscopy and one spectroscopy. Images obtained by the fast-freeze, deep-etch, rotary-shadowed replica tech-nique show that walls of round carrot cells have no net orientation of cellulose microfibrils, and that many thin fibres can be seen cross-linking microfibrils. Walls of elongated carrot cells, in contrast, show a marked net orientation of microfibrils at right angles to the axis of elongation. Fourier Transform Infrared (FTIR) spectra obtained from defined areas of single cell walls show that walls of round carrot cells contain more protein, esters and phenolics in a given area (10 m 10 m) than walls of elongated carrot cells, that contain proportionally more carbohydrate. The orientation of particular func-tional groups, with respect to the direction of elongation of the cell, can be determined by inserting a polariser into the path of the infrared beam, before it passes through a cell wall sample mounted on the stage of the microscope accessory. In the walls of elongated cells, ester bands, amide bands characteristic of proteins, and stretching frequencies in the carbohydrate region of the spectrum all show a net orientation transverse to the long axis of the cells. In the walls of round carrot cells, however, there is no such net orientation of polymers. Spectra obtained from 25 m-thick fresh sections of the etiolated stem of a carrot seedling show that different wall components are polarised in different tissue types. These techniques have therefore enabled us to define dif-ferences in both the composition and the architecture of walls of elongating cells at the level of a single cell, and to suggest that polymers not previously thought to be ordered, such as pectin and protein, are strictly oriented in some wall types.Keywords
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