Control of thickness of collenchyma cell walls by pectins
β Scribed by M. C. Jarvis
- Book ID
- 104661406
- Publisher
- Springer-Verlag
- Year
- 1992
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 327 KB
- Volume
- 187
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0032-0935
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β¦ Synopsis
Near-isotropic stresses were generated within collenchyma cell walls of celery (Apium graveolens L.) by exchanging K(+) for Ca(2+) ions, varying the ionic strength and de-esterifying the pectic carboxyl groups, treatments that changed the free-charge density of the pectic polysaccharides. The collenchyma strands swelled radially with increasing free-charge density but there was very little longitudinal swelling. Depolymerising the pectins by Ξ²-elimination also induced much more radial than longitudinal swelling. Supported by earlier work on Nitella, these results indicate that pectins control the interlamellar spacing in cell walls and hold them together across their thickness, particularly against turgor stresses tending to delaminate the walls at the cell corners.
π SIMILAR VOLUMES
The amount of water-soluble pectins was largely increased after extrusion-cooking of lemon fibres. These pectins showed the ability to form a gel in the presence of sucrose and at acidic pH. The gels obtained with the water-extracted pectins after extrusion-cooking and with pectins acid-extracted on