In plants the rate of endocytotic-like and exocytotic-like membrane exchange between the plasma membrane and an intracellular membrane reservoir depends upon a mechanical parameter, the tension of the plasma membrane. In this paper we discuss the relevance of this striking property to physiological
Determination of physical membrane properties of plant cell protoplasts via the electrofusion technique: prediction of optimal fusion yields and protoplast viability
✍ Scribed by Werner Mehrle; Beatrix Naton; Rüdiger Hampp
- Publisher
- Springer
- Year
- 1990
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 810 KB
- Volume
- 8
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0721-7714
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✦ Synopsis
By variation of physical parameters (field strength, pulse duration) which result in electrofusion and electroporation, properties of the plasma membrane of different types of plant cell protoplasts were analyzed. The lower threshold for that field pulse intensity at which membrane breakdown occurred (recorded as fusion event) depended on pulse duration, protoplast size, and protoplast type (tobacco, oat; vacuolated, evacuolated). This fusion characteristic of plant protoplasts can also be taken as a measure of the charging process of the membrane and allows thus a non-invasive determination of the time constant and the specific membrane capacitance. Although the fusion yield was comparable at pulse duration/field strength couples of, e.g., 10 μs/1.5 kV*cm(-1) and 200 μs/0.5 kV*cm(-1), hybrid viability was not. Rates of cell wall regeneration and cell division of tobacco mesophyll protoplasts were not affected but may have been increased at short pulse duration/high field strength. Plating efficiency, in contrast, was significantly decreased with longer pulse duration at low field strengths.
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