Antibodies were raised against lectin purified from the sieve-tube exudate of Cucurbita maxima. Immunocytochemistry, using peroxidase-labelled antibodies and Protein A-colloidal gold, was employed to determine the location of the lectin within the tissues and cells of C. maxima and other cucurbit species. The anti-lectin antibodies bound to P-protein aggregates in sieve elements and companion cells, predominantly in the extrafascicular phloem of C. maxima. This may reflect the low rate of translocation in these cells. Under the electron microscope, the lectin was shown to be a component of P-protein filaments and was also found in association with the sieve-tube reticulum which lines the plasmalemma. The anti-lectin antibodies reacted with sieve-tube proteins from other species of the genus Cucurbita but showed only limited reaction with other genera. We suggest that the lectin serves to anchor P-protein filaments and associated proteins to the parietal layer of sieve elements.
The occurrence of high haemagglutinating (lectin) activity in phloem exudate from three cucurbit species is reported. The protein responsible for this lectin activity in Cucurbita maxima Duch. has been isolated by cation exchange chromatography on Sepharose and identified by gel electrophoresis. The lectin showed agglutinating activity at concentrations as low as 0.1 μg/ml. No sugar, including those transported in the phloem of these species, interacted with agglutination. The lectin could not be extracted from cucurbit seed, but appeared in 5-day old seedlings. The possible role of a lectin in the sieve element is discussed.
A B S T RAe T Under appropriate experimental conditions, phytochrome controls leaflet closure in Albizzia by regulating differential turgor changes in motor cells of the pulvinule, Closure occurs when subepidermal dorsal cells expand and ventral cells become compressed; reopening involves the reverse changes. The internal cells surrounding the vascular core remain relatively unchanged during leaflet movement. Fine structural studies revealed several unusual features of the motor cells including: (1) fibrils oriented parallel to one another in the cytoplasmic matrix; (2) numerous spherosomes that appear to coalesce and enlarge to form vacuoles; and (3) a multivacuolate condition.
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