Effect of osmotic stress on turgor pressure in mung bean root cells
1987
A:PS
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Title
Effect of osmotic stress on turgor pressure in mung bean root cells
Publication Date
1987
Call Number
A:PS
Summary
Turgor pressure in cells of the elongating region of intact mungbean roots was directly measured by using the pressure-probe technique. After the external osmotic pressure had been increased from 0 MPa to 0.5 MPa, turgor pressure rapidly decreased by about 0.5 MPa from 0.65 MPa to 0.14 MPa and root elongation stopped. Subsequent turgor regulation was clearly confirmed, which followed the osmotic adjustment to maintain a constant difference in the osmotic pressure between root-cell sap and the external medium. It took at least 6 h for turgor pressure to recover to an adjusted constant level of about 0.5 MPa due to turgor regulation, but root elongation resumed within only an hour after the osmotic treatment. Therefore, the resumption of root elongation under osmotic stress could not have been directly connected with turgor regulation. Furthermore, since the amounts of decrease in turgor pressure just after applications of various degrees of osmotic stress could be interpreted in relation to those, hydraulic conductivity between the inside and the outside of root cells must be large enough to attain water potentail equilibrium rapidly in response to osmotic stress. We conclude that turgor pressure in the cells of the elongating region of mungbean roots is determined mainly, because of water potential equilibrium. [AS]
Journal Citation
v.28(6):987-994, PLANT AND CELL PHYSIOLOGY
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