PLANT PHYSIOLOGY , Vol 115, Issue 3 1089-1099, Copyright © 1997 by American Society of Plant Biologists
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WHOLE PLANT, ENVIRONMENTAL, AND STRESS PHYSIOLOGY |
Apoplasmic and Protoplasmic Water Transport through the Parenchyma of the Potato Storage Organ
W. Michael, A. Schultz, A. B. Meshcheryakov and R. Ehwald
Institut fur Biologie, Mathematisch-Naturwissenschaftliche Fakultat I, Humboldt-Universitat zu Berlin, Invalidenstrasse 42, 10115 Berlin, Germany (W.M., A.S., R.E.)
Stationary volume fluxes through living and denatured parenchyma slices of
the potato (Solanum tuberosum L.) storage organ were studied to estimate
the hydraulic conductivity of the cell wall and to evaluate the
significance of water transport through protoplasts, cell walls, and
intercellular spaces. Slices were placed between liquid compartments,
steady-state fluxes induced by pressure or concentration gradients of low-
and high-molecular-mass osmotica were measured, and water transport
pathways were distinguished on the basis of their difference in limiting
pore size. The protoplasts were the dominating route for osmotically driven
water transport through living slices, even in the case of a polymer
osmoticum that is excluded from cell walls. The specific hydraulic
conductivity of the cell wall matrix is too small to allow a significant
contribution of the narrow cell wall bypass to water flow through the
living tissue. This conclusion is based on (a) ultrafilter coefficients of
denatured parenchyma slices, (b) the absence of a significant difference
between ultrafilter coefficients of the living tissue slices for osmotica
with low and high cell wall reflection coefficients, and (c) the absence of
a significant interaction (solvent drag) between apoplasmic permeation of
mannitol and the water flux caused by a concentration difference of
excluded polyethylene glycol. Liquid-filled intercellular spaces were the
dominating pathways for pressure-driven volume fluxes through the
parenchyma tissue.