Smart Pipes: The bundle sheath role as xylem-mesophyll barrier

Arava Shatil-Cohen, Menachem Moshelion

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract

Signs of abiotic toxicity often appear first at the margins of leaves and gradually spread toward the midrib. It has been suggested that the bundle sheath tissue surrounding the shoot vascular system acts as a solute transport-regulating barrier that prevents excessive quantities of toxic ions from entering the leaf and pushes them toward the hydathodes. We examined this hypothesis by examining the distribution of toxic boron (B) in mutant Arabidopsis leaves with flooded mesophyll and comparing it with that observed in control leaves that exuded guttation drops. As opposed to the control plants, which showed classical symptoms of B toxicity (necrosis starting at the leaf margins), in the mutants, necrosis was first observed inside the leaf. We will discuss this result and how it supports the hypothesis that the bundle sheath serves as a selective barrier filtering the xylem-to-leaf radial transport flow and pushing toxic solutes toward the hydathodes.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)1088-1091
Number of pages4
JournalPlant Signaling and Behavior
Volume7
Issue number9
DOIs
StatePublished - Sep 2012

Keywords

  • Abiotic stresses
  • Boron
  • Bundle-sheath
  • Leaf hydraulic

All Science Journal Classification (ASJC) codes

  • Plant Science

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