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1.
Bioelectrochemistry ; 129: 70-78, 2019 Oct.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31103849

ABSTRACT

Plants can communicate with other plants using wireless pathways in the plant-wide web. Some examples of these communication pathways are: (1) volatile organic compounds' emission and sensing; (2) mycorrhizal networks in the soil; (3) the plants' rhizosphere; (4) naturally grafting of roots of the same species; (5) electrostatic or electromagnetic interactions; and (6) acoustic communication. There is an additional pathway for electrical signal transmission between plants - electrical signal transmission between roots through the soil. To avoid the possibility of communication between plants using mechanisms (1)-(6), soils in pots with plants were connected by Ag/AgCl or platinum wires. Electrostimulation of Aloe vera, tomato, or cabbage plants induces electrotonic potentials transmission in the electro-stimulated plants as well as the plants located in different pots regardless if plants are the same or different types. The amplitude and sign of electrotonic potentials in electrostimulated and neighboring plants depend on the amplitude, rise, and fall of the applied voltage. Experimental results displayed cell-to-cell electrical coupling and the existence of electrical differentiators in plants. Electrostimulation by a sinusoidal wave induces an electrical response with a phase shift. Electrostimulation serves as an important tool for the evaluation of mechanisms of communication in the plant-wide web.


Subject(s)
Aloe/physiology , Brassica/physiology , Electric Stimulation , Solanum lycopersicum/physiology , Aloe/cytology , Brassica/cytology , Cell Communication , Electricity , Solanum lycopersicum/cytology , Plant Leaves/cytology , Plant Leaves/physiology , Plant Roots/cytology , Plant Roots/physiology
2.
Bioelectrochemistry ; 113: 60-68, 2017 Feb.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-27756010

ABSTRACT

Electrostimulation of plants can induce plant movements, activation of ion channels, ion transport, gene expression, enzymatic systems activation, electrical signaling, plant-cell damage, enhanced wound healing, and influence plant growth. Here we found that electrical networks in plant tissues have electrical differentiators. The amplitude of electrical responses decreases along a leaf and increases by decreasing the distance between polarizing Pt-electrodes. Intercellular Ag/AgCl electrodes inserted in a leaf and extracellular Ag/AgCl electrodes attached to the leaf surface were used to detect the electrotonic potential propagation along a leaf of Aloe vera. There is a difference in duration and amplitude of electrical potentials measured by electrodes inserted in a leaf and those attached to a leaf's surface. If the external reference electrode is located in the soil near the root, it changes the amplitude and duration of electrotonic potentials due to existence of additional resistance, capacitance, ion channels and ion pumps in the root. The information gained from this study can be used to elucidate extracellular and intercellular communication in the form of electrical signals within plants.


Subject(s)
Aloe/cytology , Aloe/physiology , Electrophysiological Phenomena , Extracellular Space/metabolism , Electrodes , Plant Leaves/cytology , Plant Leaves/physiology , Soil/chemistry , Surface Properties
3.
BMC Evol Biol ; 15: 29, 2015 Feb 26.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-25879886

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: Aloe vera supports a substantial global trade yet its wild origins, and explanations for its popularity over 500 related Aloe species in one of the world's largest succulent groups, have remained uncertain. We developed an explicit phylogenetic framework to explore links between the rich traditions of medicinal use and leaf succulence in aloes. RESULTS: The phylogenetic hypothesis clarifies the origins of Aloe vera to the Arabian Peninsula at the northernmost limits of the range for aloes. The genus Aloe originated in southern Africa ~16 million years ago and underwent two major radiations driven by different speciation processes, giving rise to the extraordinary diversity known today. Large, succulent leaves typical of medicinal aloes arose during the most recent diversification ~10 million years ago and are strongly correlated to the phylogeny and to the likelihood of a species being used for medicine. A significant, albeit weak, phylogenetic signal is evident in the medicinal uses of aloes, suggesting that the properties for which they are valued do not occur randomly across the branches of the phylogenetic tree. CONCLUSIONS: Phylogenetic investigation of plant use and leaf succulence among aloes has yielded new explanations for the extraordinary market dominance of Aloe vera. The industry preference for Aloe vera appears to be due to its proximity to important historic trade routes, and early introduction to trade and cultivation. Well-developed succulent leaf mesophyll tissue, an adaptive feature that likely contributed to the ecological success of the genus Aloe, is the main predictor for medicinal use among Aloe species, whereas evolutionary loss of succulence tends to be associated with losses of medicinal use. Phylogenetic analyses of plant use offer potential to understand patterns in the value of global plant diversity.


Subject(s)
Aloe/genetics , Plant Leaves/physiology , Africa , Aloe/classification , Aloe/physiology , Biological Evolution , Middle East , Phylogeny , Plants, Medicinal/classification , Plants, Medicinal/genetics , Plants, Medicinal/physiology
4.
Plant Signal Behav ; 9(10): e972887, 2014.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-25482769

ABSTRACT

The memristor, a resistor with memory, was postulated by Chua in 1971 and the first solid-state memristor was built in 2008. Recently, we found memristors in vivo in plants. Here we propose a simple analytical model of 2 types of memristors that can be found within plants. The electrostimulation of plants by bipolar periodic waves induces electrical responses in the Aloe vera and Mimosa pudica with fingerprints of memristors. Memristive properties of the Aloe vera and Mimosa pudica are linked to the properties of voltage gated K(+) ion channels. The potassium channel blocker TEACl transform plant memristors to conventional resistors. The analytical model of a memristor with a capacitor connected in parallel exhibits different characteristic behavior at low and high frequency of applied voltage, which is the same as experimental data obtained by cyclic voltammetry in vivo.


Subject(s)
Electrophysiological Phenomena , Models, Biological , Plant Physiological Phenomena , Aloe/physiology , Electric Stimulation , Electricity , Electrochemical Techniques , Mimosa/physiology
5.
PLoS One ; 9(4): e94908, 2014.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-24755611

ABSTRACT

The net effect of pollen production on fecundity in plants can range from negative--when self-pollen interferes with fecundity due to incompatibility mechanisms, to positive--when pollen availability is associated with increased pollinator visitation and fecundity due to its utilization as a reward. We investigated the responses of bees to pollen and nectar rewards, and the effects of these rewards on pollen deposition and fecundity in the hermaphroditic succulent shrub Aloe tenuior. Self-pollinated plants failed to set fruit, but their ovules were regularly penetrated by self-pollen tubes, which uniformly failed to develop into seeds as expected from ovarian self-incompatibility (or strong early inbreeding depression). Bees consistently foraged for pollen during the morning and early afternoon, but switched to nectar in the late afternoon. As a consequence of this differential foraging, we were able to test the relative contribution to fecundity of pollen- versus nectar-collecting flower visitors. We exposed emasculated and intact flowers in either the morning or late afternoon to foraging bees and showed that emasculation reduced pollen deposition by insects in the morning, but had little effect in the afternoon. Despite the potential for self-pollination to result in ovule discounting due to late-acting self-sterility, fecundity was severely reduced in artificially emasculated plants. Although there were temporal fluctuations in reward preference, most bee visits were for pollen rewards. Therefore the benefit of providing pollen that is accessible to bee foragers outweighs any potential costs to fitness in terms of gender interference in this species.


Subject(s)
Aloe/physiology , Bees/physiology , Behavior, Animal , Plant Nectar/metabolism , Pollen Tube/physiology , Pollen/physiology , Animals , Breeding , Choice Behavior , Fertility , Microscopy, Fluorescence , Ovule/physiology , Pollination/physiology , Time Factors
6.
Plant Signal Behav ; 9(3): e28152, 2014.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-24556876

ABSTRACT

We investigated electrical circuitry of the Venus flytrap, Mimosa pudica and Aloe vera. The goal was to discover if these plants might have a new electrical component--a resistor with memory. This element was postulated recently and the researchers were looking for its presence in different systems. The analysis was based on cyclic current-voltage characteristic where the resistor with memory should manifest itself. We found that the electrostimulation of plants by bipolar sinusoidal or triangle periodic waves induces electrical responses in the Venus flytrap, Mimosa pudica and Aloe vera with fingerprints of memristors. Tetraethylammonium chloride, an inhibitor of voltage gated K(+) channels, transforms a memristor to a resistor in plant tissue. Our results demonstrate that a voltage gated K(+) channel in the excitable tissue of plants has properties of a memristor. This study can be a starting point for understanding mechanisms of memory, learning, circadian rhythms, and biological clocks.


Subject(s)
Aloe/physiology , Droseraceae/physiology , Electricity , Mimosa/physiology , Potassium Channels, Voltage-Gated/physiology
7.
Plant Signal Behav ; 9(7): e29056, 2014.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-25763487

ABSTRACT

A memristor is a resistor with memory, which is a non-linear passive two-terminal electrical element relating magnetic flux linkage and electrical charge. Here we found that memristors exist in vivo. The electrostimulation of the Aloe vera by bipolar sinusoidal or triangle periodic waves induce electrical responses with fingerprints of memristors. Uncouplers carbonylcyanide-3-chlorophenylhydrazone and carbonylcyanide-4-trifluoromethoxy-phenyl hydrazone decrease the amplitude of electrical responses at low and high frequencies of bipolar periodic sinusoidal or triangle electrostimulating waves. Memristive behavior of an electrical network in the Aloe vera is linked to the properties of voltage gated ion channels: the K(+) channel blocker TEACl reduces the electric response to a conventional resistor. Our results demonstrate that a voltage gated K(+) channel in the excitable tissue of plants has properties of a memristor. The discovery of memristors in plants creates a new direction in the modeling and understanding of electrical phenomena in plants.


Subject(s)
Aloe/physiology , Electricity , Plant Leaves/physiology , Potassium Channels, Voltage-Gated/physiology , Electric Impedance , Potassium Channels, Voltage-Gated/metabolism
8.
Rev. Inst. Nac. Hig ; 43(1): 25-34, jun. 2012. graf, tab
Article in Spanish | LILACS, LIVECS | ID: lil-664631

ABSTRACT

La investigación tuvo como propósito obtener la antraquinona contenida en el exudado de Aloe vera (L.) Burm.f. (zábila) mediante el método de cristalización y su identificación mediante la técnica de espectrofotometría de radiación infrarroja. La muestra la conformaron 18 plantas de zábila, recolectadas al oeste de la ciudad Santa Ana de Coro, estado Falcón. Se utilizaron tres métodos para la obtención de antraquinona a partir del exudado de zábila. En el método A, la antraquinona se obtuvo por descenso de la temperatura; en el método B, las muestras fueron liofilizadas y luego se disminuyó la temperatura; y en el método C, la antraquinona se obtuvo mediante un modificador de matriz. Con el método A se obtuvo un rendimiento de antraquinona de 7,65 ± 4,62% p/p; con el método B 5,74 ± 3,25 % p/p y con el método C 25,93 ± 1,49% p/p. El mayor rendimiento de antraquinona se obtuvo con el método de precipitación mediante modificador de matriz.


The purpose of this wok was obtain the anthraquinone from Aloe vera exudate applying method by crystallization and identifies it through spectrophotometric infrared and ultraviolet- visible techniques. The sample were 18 plants of Aloe vera, recollected at west of Coro city, Falcón state. It was used 3 methods to obtain anthraquinone from Aloe vera exudate. In the method A, anthraquinone was obtained by temperature descend; in the method B, the samples were lyophilized and temperature descends; and in the method C, anthraquinone was obtained by matrix modifier. With the method A it was obtained 7,65 ± 4,62% w/w of anthraquinone; with method B 5,74 ± 3,25 % w/w and with the method C 25,93 ± 1,49% w/w. The method with the best efficiency to obtain anthraquinone was the method C.


Subject(s)
Humans , Male , Female , Plants, Medicinal , Anthraquinones/chemistry , Aloe/immunology , Medicine/methods , Pharmacology , Public Health , Aloe/physiology
9.
Plant Biol (Stuttg) ; 13(3): 556-60, 2011 May.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-21489109

ABSTRACT

The pollen of hermaphrodite plants is often utilised by flower-visiting animals. While pollen production has obvious benefits for plant male fitness, its consequences for plant female fitness, especially in self-incompatible hermaphrodite species, are less certain. Pollen production could either enhance seed production though increased pollinator attraction, or reduce it if ovules are discounted by deposition of self pollen, as can occur in species with late-acting self-incompatibility. To test the effects of pollen reward provision on female fitness, we artificially emasculated flowers in two populations of the succulent Aloe maculata (Asphodelaceae), which has a late-acting self-incompatibility system, over the course of its flowering period. Flowers of this species are visited by sunbirds (for nectar) and native bees (for pollen and nectar). We measured floral visitation rates, floral rejection rates, pollen deposition on stigmas and fruit and seed set in both emasculated and non-emasculated plants. We found that flowers of emasculated plants suffered reduced visitation and increased rejection (arrival without visitation) by bees, but not by sunbirds; had fewer pollen grains deposited on stigmas and showed an overall decrease in fruit set and seed set. Rates of seed abortion were, however, greatly reduced in emasculated flowers. This study shows that pollen rewards can be important for seed set, even in self-incompatible plants, which have been assumed to rely on nectar rewards for pollinator attraction. Seed abortion was, however, increased by pollen production, a result that highlights the complexity of selection on pollen production in hermaphrodite flowers.


Subject(s)
Aloe/physiology , Pollination/physiology , Animals , Bees , Birds , Flowers/physiology , Hermaphroditic Organisms , Plant Nectar , Pollen
10.
Bioelectrochemistry ; 81(1): 39-45, 2011 Apr.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-21334987

ABSTRACT

The circadian clock regulates a wide range of electrophysiological and developmental processes in plants. This paper presents, for the first time, the direct influence of a circadian clock on biologically closed electrochemical circuits in vivo. Here we show circadian variation of the plant responses to electrical stimulation. The biologically closed electrochemical circuits in the leaves of Aloe vera and Mimosa pudica, which regulate their physiology, were analyzed using the charge stimulation method. The electrostimulation was provided with different timing and different voltages. Resistance between Ag/AgCl electrodes in the leaf of Aloe vera was higher during the day than at night. Discharge of the capacitor in Aloe vera at night was faster than during the day. Discharge of the capacitor in a pulvinus of Mimosa pudica was faster during the day. The biologically closed electrical circuits with voltage gated ion channels in Mimosa pudica are also activated the next day, even in the darkness. These results show that the circadian clock can be maintained endogenously and has electrochemical oscillators, which can activate ion channels in biologically closed electrochemical circuits. We present the equivalent electrical circuits in both plants and their circadian variation to explain the experimental data.


Subject(s)
Aloe/physiology , Circadian Rhythm , Mimosa/physiology , Plant Leaves/physiology , Algorithms , Aloe/chemistry , Darkness , Electric Capacitance , Electric Impedance , Electrochemistry , Kinetics , Mimosa/chemistry , Photoperiod , Plant Leaves/chemistry
11.
Appl Biochem Biotechnol ; 163(7): 860-8, 2011 Apr.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-20857229

ABSTRACT

Aloe vera L., a member of Liliaceae, is a medicinal plant and has a number of curative properties. We describe here the development of tissue culture method for high-frequency plantlet regeneration from inflorescence axis-derived callus cultures of sweet aloe genotype. Competent callus cultures were established on 0.8% agar-gelled Murashige and Skoog's (MS) basal medium supplemented with 6.0 mg l⁻¹ of 2,4-dichlorophenoxyacetic acid (2,4-D) and 100.0 mg l⁻¹ of activated charcoal and additives (100 mg l⁻¹ of ascorbic acid, 50.0 mg l⁻¹ each of citric acid and polyvinylpyrrolidone, and 25.0 mg l⁻¹ each of L-arginine and adenine sulfate). The callus cultures were cultured on MS medium containing 1.5 mg l⁻¹ of 2,4-D, 0.25 mg l⁻¹ of Kinetin (Kin), and additives with 4% carbohydrate source for multiplication and long-term maintenance of regenerative callus cultures. Callus cultures organized, differentiated, and produced globular embryogenic structures on MS medium with 1.0 mg l⁻¹ of 2,4-D, 0.25 mg l⁻¹ of Kin, and additives (50.0 mg l⁻¹ of ascorbic acid and 25.0 mg l⁻¹ each of citric acid, L-arginine, and adenine sulfate). These globular structures subsequently produced shoot buds and then complete plantlets on MS medium containing 1.0 mg l⁻¹ of 6-benzylaminopurine and additives. A hundred percent regenerated plantlets were hardened in the greenhouse and stored under an agro-net house/nursery. The regeneration system defined could be a useful tool not only for mass-scale propagation of selected genotype of A. vera, but also for genetic improvement of plant species through genetic transformation.


Subject(s)
Culture Techniques/methods , Plant Somatic Embryogenesis Techniques/methods , 2,4-Dichlorophenoxyacetic Acid , Adenine/metabolism , Aloe/physiology , Arginine/metabolism , Ascorbic Acid/metabolism , Biotechnology/methods , Citric Acid/metabolism , Genotype , Kinetin , Plant Growth Regulators , Plant Shoots/genetics , Plant Shoots/growth & development , Plants, Medicinal/genetics , Plants, Medicinal/growth & development , Povidone/chemistry , Regeneration
12.
Bioelectrochemistry ; 81(1): 4-9, 2011 Apr.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-21167797

ABSTRACT

Plant tissue has biologically closed electrical circuits and electric fields that regulate its physiology. The biologically closed electrochemical circuits in the leaves of Aloe vera were analyzed using the charge stimulation method with Ag/AgCl electrodes inserted along a leaf at 1-2 cm distance. The electrostimulation was provided with different timing and different voltages. Strong electrical anisotropy of the leaves was found. In the direction across the leaf the electrical circuits remained passive and linear, while along the leaf the response remained linear only at small voltages not exceeding 1 V. At higher potentials the circuits became strongly non-linear pointing to the opening of voltage gated ion channels in the plant tissues. Changing the polarity of electrodes located along conductive bundles led to a strong rectification effect and to different kinetics of capacitor discharge. Equivalent electrical circuit models of the leaf were proposed to explain the experimental data.


Subject(s)
Aloe/physiology , Plant Leaves/physiology , Anisotropy , Electric Capacitance , Electric Impedance , Electrodes , Electrophysiological Phenomena , Kinetics
13.
Ecology ; 91(6): 1693-703, 2010 Jun.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-20583711

ABSTRACT

Pollen is unique among floral rewards in functioning as both a carrier of gametes and an attractant and nutritious resource for floral visitors. Animals that collect pollen without pollinating (pollen thieves) could reduce siring success of thieved plants and cause pollen limitation of seed set at the population level; however, such impacts on plant reproduction have not been demonstrated experimentally. To test these effects we added hives of native honey bees (Apis mellifera scutellata) to populations of a primarily bird-pollinated plant, Aloe maculata, in eastern South Africa. In field and aviary trials, bee addition increased pollen removal from anthers but decreased pollen deposition on stigmas, and so reduced both male and female pollination components. Further, total seed production decreased with hive addition in the aviary experiment and in three of four field populations, indicating that population-level pollen theft can also compromise reproductive success. In the field, naturally occurring allodapine bees also seemed to act as pollen thieves, outweighing the effect of honey bee hive addition at one of the four aloe populations. Our results highlight the importance of social bees as pollen thieves, even of plants that have evolved in their presence, and the role of dichogamy in promoting pollen theft. Given the commonness of both social bees and dichogamy, pollen theft is likely a much more common influence on floral ecology and evolution than suggested by the sparse literature.


Subject(s)
Aloe/physiology , Bees/physiology , Birds/physiology , Pollen/physiology , Pollination/physiology , Animals , Ecosystem , South Africa
14.
Rev. biol. trop ; Rev. biol. trop;56(3): 1109-1125, sep. 2008. ilus, graf, tab
Article in Spanish | LILACS | ID: lil-637851

ABSTRACT

Reproductive phenology and flower anatomy of the plants Aloe vera and Aloe saponaria (Aloaceae) in Cumana, Venezuela. The reproductive phenology and the floral anatomy of two species of Aloe kept under nursery conditions were analized in eastern Venezuela from September 2001 to September 2002. A. vera flowered between December and May; A. saponaria from November through August. In both species, the anthesis lasted 48 h., the anther dehiscence coincided with the opening of the perianth, the stigma receptivity was higher on the second day of anthesis and nectar production reached 0.34 ml/flower. In A. vera 228±77 yellow flowers on long scapes of 76±11 cm and with 1 - 3 shafts were observed; A. saponaria had 94 ± 33 orange flowers on more compact scapes with 3-5 shafts. The pollen/ovule ratio was 4 115.2 in A. vera and 3 247.1 in A. saponaria, thus they can be classified as compulsory xenogams. Frequent visits of Apis mellifera, Trigona sp., Poliste sp., Eumenes sp., Vespa sp., Leucippus fallax and Amazilia tobaci were recorded. Although both species showed a high production of pollen and nectar, and the presence of potential pollinators, by the end of the flowering period, fruits were only observed in A. saponaria, with a 12 % reproductive efficiency. Coupled with the stigmatic receptivity results and the preliminary intra and interspecific crossing experiments, this suggests the existence of protandry and self-incompatibility as reproductive barriers reducing endogamy in these species. Rev. Biol. Trop. 56 (3): 1109-1125. Epub 2008 September 30.


Se analizó la fenología reproductiva y aspectos anatómicos florales en dos especies de Aloe conservadas en condiciones de vivero en el oriente de Venezuela, de septiembre 2001 a septiembre 2002. A. vera floreció de diciembre a mayo; A. saponaria de noviembre a agosto. En ambas especies, la antesis duró 48 h, la dehiscencia de la antera coincidió con la apertura del perianto, la receptividad del estigma fue mayor al segundo días de antesis y la producción de néctar alcanzó 0.34 ml/flor. En A. vera se observaron 228±77 flores de color amarillo sobre escapos extensos de 76±11 cm y 1-3 ejes; a diferencia de A. saponaria con 94±33 flores anaranjadas en escapos más compactos de 62±5 cm y 3-5 ejes. La relación polen/óvulo fue de 4 151.2 en A. vera y 3 247.1 en A. saponaria, clasificándose como xenógamas obligatorias. Se registraron visitas frecuentes de Apis mellifera, Trigona sp., Poliste sp., Eumenes sp., Vespa sp., Leucippus fallax y Amazilia tobaci. A pesar de que ambas especies manifestaron una elevada producción de polen, néctar y la presencia de potenciales polinizadores, al término de la floración, sólo se observaron frutos en A. saponaria, con una eficiencia reproductiva de 12%, lo cual, junto a los resultados de la receptividad estigmática y los ensayos preliminares de cruzamientos intra e interespecíficos, sugiere la existencia de protandría y autoincompatibilidad como barreras reproductivas que reducen la endogamia en estas especies.


Subject(s)
Animals , Aloe/physiology , Flowers/anatomy & histology , Pollen/physiology , Flowers/physiology , Hymenoptera , Reproduction/physiology , Species Specificity , Venezuela
15.
Plant Cell Environ ; 31(8): 1179-89, 2008 Aug.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-18507804

ABSTRACT

Contractile roots (CRs) that pull shoots further down in the soil are a possible example of convergent evolution in two monocot families, the Agavaceae and the Asphodelaceae. The association between CRs, water uptake and habitat aridity was investigated for agaves, yuccas and aloes by assessing the occurrence of CRs and the amount of root contraction for glasshouse-grown plants with respect to mean annual rainfall of their native habitats. Structural features of CRs as well as root hydraulic conductance were compared with those of non-contractile roots (NCRs). CRs occurred in 55% of the 73 species examined, including 64% of the agaves and 85% of the yuccas, but in none of the aloes despite the occurrence of CRs in related genera. The phylogenetic distribution of CRs was consistent with multiple acquisitions or losses of the trait. The amount of root contraction showed a highly significant negative relationship with mean annual rainfall, although other environmental factors may also be important. Radial hydraulic conductance of the basal (contractile) zone exceeded that of the midroot zone for CRs; for NCRs, the opposite was true. Thus, CRs in the species examined may provide a mechanism for greater water uptake near the soil surface in regions with limited rainfall.


Subject(s)
Adaptation, Physiological , Magnoliopsida/physiology , Plant Roots/physiology , Rain , Agave/cytology , Agave/physiology , Aloe/cytology , Aloe/physiology , Magnoliopsida/cytology , Phylogeny , Plant Roots/cytology , Plant Shoots/physiology , Water/physiology , Yucca/cytology , Yucca/physiology
16.
Rev Biol Trop ; 56(3): 1109-25, 2008 Sep.
Article in Spanish | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-19419032

ABSTRACT

The reproductive phenology and the floral anatomy of two species of Aloe kept under nursery conditions were analized in eastern Venezuela from September 2001 to September 2002. A. vera flowered between December and May; A. saponaria from November through August. In both species, the anthesis lasted 48 h., the anther dehiscence coincided with the opening of the perianth, the stigma receptivity was higher on the second day of anthesis and nectar production reached 0.34 ml/flower. In A. vera 228 +/- 77 yellow flowers on long scapes of 76 +/- 11 cm and with 1 - 3 shafts were observed; A. saponaria had 94 +/- 33 orange flowers on more compact scapes with 3-5 shafts. The pollen/ovule ratio was 4 115.2 in A. vera and 3 247.1 in A. saponaria, thus they can be classified as compulsory xenogams. Frequent visits of Apis mellifera, Trigona sp., Poliste sp., Eumenes sp., Vespa sp., Leucippus fallax and Amazilia tobaci were recorded. Although both species showed a high production of pollen and nectar, and the presence of potential pollinators, by the end of the flowering period, fruits were only observed in A. saponaria, with a 12 % reproductive efficiency. Coupled with the stigmatic receptivity results and the preliminary intra and interspecific crossing experiments, this suggests the existence of protandry and self-incompatibility as reproductive barriers reducing endogamy in these species.


Subject(s)
Aloe/physiology , Flowers/anatomy & histology , Pollen/physiology , Animals , Flowers/physiology , Hymenoptera , Reproduction/physiology , Species Specificity , Venezuela
18.
Nurs Times ; 103(10): 40-1, 2007.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-17388149

ABSTRACT

The moisturising properties of aloe vera have long been known. Examination gloves with aloe coatings are now available on the UK market for use in healthcare settings. This article examines the evidence surrounding the use of these gloves in the workplace to prevent dry, sore hands.


Subject(s)
Aloe , Gloves, Protective/standards , Health Personnel , Occupational Health , Aloe/adverse effects , Aloe/physiology , Dermatitis, Allergic Contact/etiology , Dermatitis, Occupational/etiology , Gloves, Protective/supply & distribution , Hand Dermatoses/etiology , Hand Disinfection , Humans , Materials Testing , Phytotherapy/adverse effects , Phytotherapy/methods , Skin Care/adverse effects , Skin Care/methods
19.
Pak J Biol Sci ; 10(7): 1134-7, 2007 Apr 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-19070066

ABSTRACT

Aloe vera L. is a medicinal plant grown in different parts of the world. Several papers have reported the micropropagation of this plant and its response to different combinations of hormones. In this research, we used A. vera plants grown in south Iran. MS culture medium with twenty-three combinations of hormones were used, including some of those employed previously by other researchers. Ten media showed positive results and the best result was obtained using Kin (1 mg L(-1))+IAA (0.1 mg L(-1)) which has not been reported before. Produced plantlets rooted in free hormone MS medium and transferred into soil. The survival rate was 83%.


Subject(s)
Aloe/physiology , Plant Growth Regulators/metabolism , Aloe/anatomy & histology , Iran , Plant Shoots/anatomy & histology , Plant Shoots/physiology
20.
Ying Yong Sheng Tai Xue Bao ; 13(11): 1381-4, 2002 Nov.
Article in Chinese | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-12624988

ABSTRACT

Aloe plants are the succulents mainly distributed in arid or semi-arid desert in South Africa. TLC analysis indicated that Aole arborescens and Aloe hereroensis contained the high concentration of phenolic derivative metabolites, anthraquinones such as barbaloin, homonataloin, aloeresin and aloenin. In younger leaf, L3 of A. hereroensis, the average content of 4 anthraquinones reached 44.9% of the dry weight of exudates. The similar distribution of the anthraquinones in the two species were found, which showed that the youngest leaves had the highest content, the top part of each leaf had the highest content, and the basal part had the lowest content. Along leaf margin, the content was higher than that of central parts. However, some different distributions were also revealed and compared between the two species. It was inferred that the special distribution of anthraquinones in Aloe was a chemical defense strategy for protection themselves.


Subject(s)
Aloe/chemistry , Anthraquinones/metabolism , Immunity, Innate/physiology , Aloe/physiology , Anthracenes/metabolism , Glucosides/metabolism , Plant Diseases , Plant Leaves/chemistry , Plants, Medicinal/chemistry , Tissue Distribution
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