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Plant Physiology 88:815-822 (1988)
© 1988 American Society of Plant Biologists

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Metabolism and Enzymology

Metabolite Diffusion into Bundle Sheath Cells from C4 Plants

Relation to C4 Photosynthesis and Plasmodesmatal Function

Hendrik Weiner1, James N. Burnell, Ian E. Woodrow, Hans W. Heldt1 and Marshall D. Hatch

Division of Plant Industry, CSIRO, GPO Box 1600, Canberra City A.C.T. 2601, Australia

The present studies provide the first measurements of the resistance to diffusive flux of metabolites between mesophyll and bundle sheath cells of C4 plants. Species examined were Panicum miliaceum, Urochloa panicoides, Atriplex spongiosa, and Zea mays. Diffusive flux of metabolites into isolated bundle sheath cells was monitored by following their metabolic transformation. Evidence was obtained that the observed rapid fluxes occurred via functional plasmodesmata. Diffusion constants were determined from the rate of transformation of limiting concentrations of metabolites via cytosolic enzymes with high potential velocities and favorable equilibrium constants. Values on a leaf chlorophyll basis ranged between 1 and 5 micromoles per minute per milligram of chlorophyll per millimolar gradient depending on the molecular weight of the metabolite and the source of bundle sheath cells. Diffusion of metabolites into these cells was unaffected by a wide variety of compounds including respiratory inhibitors, monovalent and divalent cations, and plant hormones, but it was interrupted by treatments inducing cell plasmolysis. The molecular weight exclusion limit for permeation of compounds into bundle sheath cells was in the range of 850 to 900. These cells provide an ideal system for the quantitative study of plasmodesmatal function.


1 Present address: Institut für Biochemie der Pflanze, Universität Göttingen, 3400 Göttingen, FRG.




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Copyright © 1988 by the American Society of Plant Biologists