Suspension-cultured Chenopodium album L. cells are capable of continuous, long-term growth on a boron-deficient medium. Compared with cultures grown with boron, these cultures contained more enlarged and detached cells, had increased turbidity due to the rupture of a small number of cells, and contained cells with an increased cell wall pore size. These characteristics were reversed by the addition of boric acid (>7 M) to the boron-deficient cells. C. album cells grown in the presence of 100 M boric acid entered the stationary phase when they were not subcultured, and remained viable for at least 3 weeks. The transition from the growth phase to the stationary phase was accompanied by a decrease in the wall pore size. Cells grown without boric acid or with 7 M boric acid were not able to reduce their wall pore size at the transition to the stationary phase. These cells could not be kept viable in the stationary phase, because they continued to expand and died as a result of wall rupture. The addition of 100 M boric acid prevented wall rupture and the wall pore size was reduced to normal values. We conclude that boron is required to maintain the normal pore structure of the wall matrix and to mechanically stabilize the wall at growth termination.The ultrastructure and physical properties of plant cell walls are known to be affected by boron deficiency (Kouchi and Kumazawa, 1976; Hirsch and Torrey, 1980; Fischer and Hecht-Buchholz, 1985; Matoh et al., 1992; Hu and Brown, 1994; Findeklee and Goldbach, 1996). Moreover, boron is predominantly localized in the cell wall when plants are grown with suboptimal boron (Loomis and Durst, 1991; Matoh et al., 1992; Hu and Brown, 1994; Hu et al., 1996). In radish, Ͼ80% of the cell wall boron is present in the pectic polysaccharide RG-II (Matoh et al., 1993; Kobayashi et al., 1996), which is now known to exist as a dimer that is cross-linked by a borate ester between two apiosyl residues (Kobayashi et al., 1996; O'Neill et al., 1996). Dimeric RG-II is unusually stable at low pH and is present in a large number of plant species (Ishii and Matsunaga, 1996; Kobayashi et al., 1996 Kobayashi et al., , 1997 Matoh et al., 1996; O'Neill et al., 1996; Pellerin et al., 1996; Kaneko et al., 1997). The widespread occurrence and conserved structure of RG-II (Darvill et al., 1978; O'Neill et al., 1990) have led to the suggestion that borate ester cross-linked RG-II is required for the development of a normal cell wall (O'Neill et al., 1996; Matoh, 1997).One approach for determining the function of boron in plant cell walls is to compare the responses to boron deficiency of growing plant cells that are dividing and synthesizing primary cell walls with those of growth-limited plant cells in which the synthesis of primary cell walls is negligible. Suspension-cultured cells are well suited for this purpose because they may be reversibly transferred from a growth phase to a stationary phase. Continuous cell growth phase is maintained by frequent transfer of the cells into new growth medium...
Changes in the limiting porosity of cell walls, i.e. the size limit for permeation of neutral molecules through the wall, were studied in several higher-plant cell-suspension cultures. For this purpose, samples of biomass ®xed at dierent cultivation times were investigated using a method based on size-exclusion chromatography of polydisperse dextrans before and after equilibration with the extracted cell clusters. In suspension cultures of Chenopodium album L., Dioscorea deltoidea Wall. and Medicago sativa L., the mean size limit (MSL; critical Stokes' radius for exclusion of neutral polymers from half of the intracellular space) was found to vary between 2.4 and 3.8 nm. It decreased signi®cantly during transition from the growth phase to the stationary phase. In the case of the C. album culture this change was found to be irrespective of whether sucrose in the medium was completely depleted at the end of the growth phase or not. The MSL was kept constant for long periods of the stationary phase if cell viability was maintained by repeated sucrose supplement. In a suspension strain of Triticum aestivum L., the MSL of cell wall permeation was comparatively small (1.75 nm) and remained constant during all cultivation phases. Relations between limiting porosity and cell wall growth, loss of pectic compounds to the medium, crosslinking activities and cell wall stiening are discussed.Abbreviations: DPS = dextran probing solution; LCP = limiting cell wall porosity; MSL = mean size limit
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