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1.
J Gen Physiol ; 84(1): 101-18, 1984 Jul.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-6747597

RESUMO

Light and dark adaptation of the phototropism of Phycomyces sporangiophores were analyzed in the intensity range of 10(-7)-6 W X m-2. The experiments were designed to test the validity of the Delbrück-Reichardt model of adaptation (Delbrück, M., and W. Reichardt, 1956, Cellular Mechanisms in Differentiation and Growth, 3-44), and the kinetics were measured by the phototropic delay method. We found that their model describes adequately only changes of the adaptation level after small, relatively short intensity changes. For dark adaptation, we found a biphasic decay with two time constants of b1 = 1-2 min and b2 = 6.5-10 min. The model fails for light adaptation, in which the level of adaptation can overshoot the actual intensity level before it relaxes to the new intensity. The light adaptation kinetics depend critically on the height of the applied pulse as well as the intensity range. Both these features are incompatible with the Delbrück-Reichardt model and indicate that light and dark adaptation are regulated by different mechanisms. The comparison of the dark adaptation kinetics with the time course of the dark growth response shows that Phycomyces has two adaptation mechanisms: an input adaptation, which operates for the range adjustment, and an output adaptation, which directly modulates the growth response. The analysis of four different types of behavioral mutants permitted a partial genetic dissection of the adaptation mechanism. The hypertropic strain L82 and mutants with defects in the madA gene have qualitatively the same adaptation behavior as the wild type; however, the adaptation constants are altered in these strains. Mutation of the madB gene leads to loss of the fast component of the dark adaptation kinetics and to overshooting of the light adaptation under conditions where the wild type does not overshoot. Another mutant with a defect in the madC gene shows abnormal behavior after steps up in light intensity. Since the madB and madC mutants have been associated with the receptor pigment, we infer that at least part of the adaptation process is mediated by the receptor pigment.


Assuntos
Adaptação à Escuridão , Fungos/crescimento & desenvolvimento , Luz , Phycomyces/crescimento & desenvolvimento , Adaptação Fisiológica , Mutação , Células Fotorreceptoras/fisiologia , Phycomyces/genética , Limiar Sensorial
2.
J Gen Physiol ; 84(1): 119-32, 1984 Jul.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-6747598

RESUMO

The absolute light sensitivity of Phycomyces sporangiophores was determined by analyzing the intensity dependence of the phototropic bending rate and of the light growth and dark growth responses to step changes of the intensity. We found that the different methods give approximately the same results for the wild-type strain, as well as for several behavioral mutants with defects in the genes madA, madB, and madC. A crucial factor in the determination of thresholds is the light intensity at which the strains grow during the 4 d after inoculation and prior to the experiment. When the wild-type strain grows in the dark, its threshold for the bending rate is 10(-9) W X m-2, compared with 2 X 10(-7) W X m-2 when it is grown under continuous illumination. Further, the maximal bending rate is twice as high in dark-grown strains. This phenomenon is further complicated by the fact that the diameter and growth rate of the sporangiophores also depend on the illumination conditions prior to the experiment: light-grown sporangiophores have an increased diameter and an increased growth rate compared with dark-grown ones. Some of the behavioral mutants, however, are indifferent to this form of light control. Another factor that is controlled by the growth conditions is adaptation: the kinetics of dark adaptation are slower in light-grown sporangiophores than in dark-grown ones. We found empirically a positive correlation between the slower dark adaptation constant and the threshold of the bending rate, which shows that the two underlying phenomena are functionally related.


Assuntos
Adaptação à Escuridão , Fungos/crescimento & desenvolvimento , Luz , Phycomyces/crescimento & desenvolvimento , Mutação , Células Fotorreceptoras/fisiologia , Limiar Sensorial
3.
J Gen Physiol ; 84(5): 739-51, 1984 Nov.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-6512501

RESUMO

The wavelength dependence of phototropic dark adaptation in Phycomyces was studied between 347 and 545 nm. Dark adaptation kinetics were measured for wavelengths of 383, 409, 477, and 507 nm in the intensity range from 6.2 X 10(-2) to 2 X 10(-7) W X m-2. At these wavelengths, dark adaptation follows a biexponential decay as found previously with broadband blue light (Russo, V. E. A., and P. Galland, 1980, Struct. Bonding., 41:71; Lipson, E. D., and S. M. Block, 1983, J. Gen. Physiol., 81:845). We have found that the time constants of the fast and slow components depend critically on the wavelength. At 507 nm, dark adaptation kinetics were found to be monophasic. The phototropic latency after a step down by a factor of 500 was measured for 19 different wavelengths. Maximal latencies were found at 383, 477, and 530 nm; minimal latencies were found at 409 and 507 nm. With irradiation programs that employ different wavelengths before and after the step down, the dark adaptation kinetics depend critically on the sequence in which the two wavelengths are given. We have found too that not only do the adaptation kinetics vary with wavelength, but so also do the phototropic bending rate and the phototropic latencies in experiments without intensity change. The results imply that more than one photoreceptor is mediating phototropism in Phycomyces and that sensory adaptation is regulated by these photoreceptors.


Assuntos
Adaptação à Escuridão , Fungos/fisiologia , Luz , Movimento , Phycomyces/fisiologia , Cinética , Células Fotorreceptoras/fisiologia , Tempo de Reação
4.
Ann N Y Acad Sci ; 838: 14-28, 1998 Feb 09.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-9511792

RESUMO

In this article, we have presented an overview of emerging novel techniques for early-light transillumination imaging as well as nonlinear optical tomography of body organs. The use of light for probing and imaging biomedical media offers the promise for development of safe, noninvasive, and inexpensive clinical imaging modalities with diagnostic ability. The strong scattering of light by biological tissues buries the shadowgram formed by forward-propatating image-bearing photons in the background noise of multiple-scattered light. Several methods for extraction of image-bearing light that capitalize on spatial, temporal and polarization characteristics of transmitted light are reviewed. More recently emerging nonlinear-optical histopathology methods for imaging subsurface structures of tissues in terms of its local spatial symmetry and molecular content are introduced. The progress made so far indicates that some of these techniques are apt to make a transition from laboratory to useful clinical modalities.


Assuntos
Diagnóstico por Imagem , Animais , Polarização de Fluorescência , Humanos , Luz , Fótons , Espalhamento de Radiação
5.
Photochem Photobiol ; 55(2): 247-55, 1992 Feb.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-1542706

RESUMO

Flavins were extracted from sporangiophores of the lower fungus Phycomyces blakesleeanus and identified by HPLC with fluorescence detection. In the wild-type strain NRRL1555 they were found to be present at the following concentrations: riboflavin (5.5 x 10(-6) M), flavin mononucleotide (FMN) (4.0 x 10(-6) M) and flavin adenine dinucleotide (1.4 x 10(-6) M). The HPLC elution profiles of the wild type were compared to a set of behavioral mutants (genotype mad) with specific defects in their light-transduction pathway. The photoreceptor mutants C109 (madB), C111 (madB) and L1 (madC) had normal amounts of flavins. The most prominent changes were found in single mutants with a defective madA gene which contained about 25% of riboflavin and about 10% of FMN and FAD normally found in the wild type. A hypertropic mutant with a defective madH gene contained instead 80% of riboflavin and 120% of FMN and FAD. The double mutant L52 (madA madC) and the triple mutant L72 (madA madB madC) had normal amounts of FAD and FMN. This indicates that the madC mutation, which itself causes loss of light sensitivity and which affects the near-UV/blue-light receptor (Galland and Lipson, 1985, Photochem. Photobiol. 41, 331-335) functions as a restorer of the flavin content in a genetic madA background. The double mutant L51 (madA madB) had about 40% of FMN and FAD, suggesting that the madB mutation functions as a partial restorer of flavin content. The photogravitropic thresholds (450 nm) reported for the wild type and the madA and madH mutants were positively correlated to the endogeneous concentrations of FMN and FAD.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)


Assuntos
Flavinas/metabolismo , Phycomyces/metabolismo , Genes Fúngicos , Mutação , Fotoquímica , Células Fotorreceptoras/metabolismo , Phycomyces/genética , Phycomyces/efeitos da radiação
6.
Photochem Photobiol ; 55(2): 239-45, 1992 Feb.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-1542705

RESUMO

Pterins were extracted with methanol from sporangiophores of the lower fungus Phycomyces blakesleeanus and separated and identified by high performance liquid chromatography (HPLC) with fluorescence detection. The following pterins were found and identified for the wild-type strain NRRL1555: carboxypterin (6.7 x 10(-6) M), neopterin (4.2 x 10(-7) M), xanthopterin (5.3 x 10(-6) M), biopterin (3.9 x 10(-7) M), pterin (9.1 x 10(-7) M), and 6,7-dimethylpterin (1.2 x 10(-6) M). The HPLC elution profiles of the wild type were compared to a set of phototropism mutants (genotype mad) with specific defects in the light-transduction pathway. The mutant profiles were qualitatively similar to those of the wild type. Quantitative differences were, however, discerned for madA, madC, and madH mutants. The madA mutation was associated with increased amounts of biopterin and 6,7-dimethylpterin and a reduction of neopterin, pterin, xanthopterin, and unidentified pterins eluting at 14-18 min. The stimulatory effect of the madA mutation on biopterin and 6,7-dimethylpterin appears to be compensated by a secondary mutation (pde) which is responsible for the loss of 75% of adenosine 3',5'-cyclic monophosphate (cAMP)-phosphodiesterase activity. In a madA pde double mutant the amounts of biopterin and 6,7-dimethylpterin fell below the wild-type level. These results suggest that an increased level of endogenous cAMP represses the biosynthesis of these pterins. The madC mutation increased the amounts of biopterin and xanthopterin and that of the unidentified pterins which could be derivatized to carboxypterin. Single madB mutations had, compared to the wild type, two times higher amounts of biopterin and two times lower amounts of neopterin.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)


Assuntos
Phycomyces/metabolismo , Pterinas/metabolismo , Flavinas/metabolismo , Genes Fúngicos , Mutação , Fotoquímica , Células Fotorreceptoras/metabolismo , Phycomyces/genética , Phycomyces/efeitos da radiação
7.
Photochem Photobiol ; 49(4): 493-9, 1989 Apr.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-2727089

RESUMO

When sporangiophores of the fungus Phycomyces blakesleeanus adapt from high to low fluence rate, dark adaptation (sensitivity recovery) can be accelerated by dim subliminal light [Galland et al. (1989) Photochem. Photobiol. 49, 485-491]. We measured fluence rate-response curves for this acceleration under the following conditions. After sporangiophores were initially adapted symmetrically to a fluence rate of 1 W m-2 (447 nm), they were exposed to unilateral subliminal light (subthreshold for phototropism) of variable wavelength and fluence rate, and then to unilateral test light (447 nm) of fluence rate either 10(-3) or 10(-5) W m-2. The duration of the subliminal light was chosen so that phototropism would not occur during this period. Phototropic latencies could be shortened by subliminal light that was less intense than the test light by several orders of magnitude. In experiments with the final unilateral light of fluence rate 10(-3) W m-2, the 447 nm subliminal light had a threshold (for the acceleration effect) of about 10(-11) W m-2. Yellow light of wavelength 575 nm, which itself is extremely ineffective for phototropism was extremely effective in shortening phototropic latencies in response in response to the test light. At 575 nm, the threshold was about 2 x 10(-12) W m-2. Conversely, near-UV light of wavelength 347 nm, which is highly effective for phototropism, was relatively ineffective (threshold approximately 7 x 10(-8) W m-2) in shortening the phototropic latency. Our results suggest the presence of a novel yellow-light absorbing pigment in Phycomyces that specifically regulates dark adaptation.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)


Assuntos
Adaptação à Escuridão/efeitos da radiação , Luz , Mucorales , Phycomyces , Cinética , Pigmentos Biológicos
8.
Photochem Photobiol ; 49(4): 485-91, 1989 Apr.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-2727088

RESUMO

The dark adaptation kinetics of Phycomyces phototropism depend critically on the experimental protocol. When sporangiophores that had been light-adapted to a fluence rate of 1 W m-2 at 447 nm were exposed to dim unilateral light, the adaptation kinetics showed exponential decay (6 min time constant). However, when light-adapted sporangiophores were kept for variable intervals in darkness (i.e. in presence of traditional red safelight) and then exposed to dim unilateral test light, the decay kinetics of adaptation were biexponential with a rapid decay during the first minute (1 min time constant), followed by a slow recovery (11 min time constant). Thus, the dim subliminal light given after the sporangiophores had been adapted to 1 W m-2, was actually perceived, and exerted control over the dark-adaptation process. The observed acceleration of dark-adaptation kinetics constitutes a novel light effect of the sporangiophore. At wavelength 383 nm this effect was not observed. Because a beta-carotene lacking mutant, L91 (genotype carB), was unmodified in dark-adaptation kinetics measured in the presence or absence of subliminal light, it appears that beta-carotene is not involved in the photocontrol of adaptation.


Assuntos
Adaptação à Escuridão/efeitos da radiação , Luz , Mucorales , Phycomyces , Cinética
9.
Photochem Photobiol ; 63(5): 686-94, 1996 May.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-8628761

RESUMO

Light, gravity and ethylene represent for plants and fungi important environment cues for spatial orientation and growth regulation. Coordination of the frequently conflicting stimuli requires signal-integration sites, which, however, remain largely unidentified. The genetic and physiological basis for signal integration was investigated with a set of phototropism mutants (genotype mad) of the UV- and blue-light-sensitive fungus Phycomyces blakesleeanus, which responds also to gravity, ethylene and nearby obstacles (autochemotropism or avoidance response). Both, class 1 and class 2 mutants display a reduced sensitivity to visible light. Class 1 mutants with defects in genes madA, B, C, I have preserved their sensitivity to gravity and ethylene, whereas class 2 mutants with defects in genes madD,E,F,G,J have lost it. We found that the phototropic sensitivity of class 1 mutants is affected roughly to the same extent in far UV and blue light. In contrast, the sensitivity loss of class 2 mutants is restricted mainly to the near-UV and the blue-light region, whereas the sensitivity to far UV is only mildly affected. This behavior of the class 2 mutants indicates that different photoreceptors mediate phototropism in far-UV and in near-UV/ blue light. The photogravitropic action spectra for two class 2 mutants with defects in genes madF and madJ display distortions between 342 and 530 nm and a bathochromic shift relative to the action spectrum of the wild type. These features indicate that the madF and madJ mutants are affected at the level of the blue-light photoreceptor system. As an implication we infer that an intact near-UV/blue-light photoreceptor system is required even in darkness for negative gravitropism, the ethylene response and autochemotropism. In Phycomyces, signal integration occurs, at least in part, at the level of the near-UV/blue-light photoreceptor system.


Assuntos
Etilenos/farmacologia , Phycomyces/fisiologia , Raios Ultravioleta , Movimento Celular/fisiologia , Movimento Celular/efeitos da radiação , Relação Dose-Resposta à Radiação , Genótipo , Mutação , Fótons , Fototropismo , Phycomyces/genética , Phycomyces/efeitos da radiação
10.
J Photochem Photobiol B ; 11(2): 189-202, 1991 Nov.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-1722819

RESUMO

During adaptation of the photosynthetic apparatus of the green alga Scenedesmus obliquus to various light qualities, the accumulation of chlorophylls and pigment-protein complexes (with specific consideration of chlorophyll a/b-binding (Cab) proteins) and cab-gene expression were determined. The fluence rate dependences for chlorophyll accumulation and cab-gene expression were very different. Very low fluence rates of violet (404 nm), blue (461 nm) and red (650 nm) light below the photosynthetic threshold, i.e. between 10(-3) and 10(-1) mumol m-2 s-1, inhibited all of these reactions in cells grown under heterotrophic conditions. At elevated fluence rates (above 1 mumol m-2 s-1), red light retained its negative regulation, whereas blue light stimulated pigment accumulation. Under autotrophic conditions the pattern was more complex, because chlorophyll accumulation was unaffected by light below the photosynthetic threshold. However, the expression of cab-genes was inhibited by red light but stimulated by blue light. Cells adapted to fluence rates, which ensured photosynthetic energy supply (above 1 mumol m-2 s-1), showed an increase in chlorophyll accumulation, blue light being more effective than red light. The results confirm and extend our previous discovery of two antagonistically acting photoreceptors in Scenedesmus which mediate and coordinate the complex functional and structural changes associated with photosynthetic adaptation. One of these receptor pigments is a blue-light receptor with positive action; the other is a violet-red-light receptor which can operate far below the photosynthetic threshold and exerts a negative regulation.


Assuntos
Clorófitas/genética , Complexos de Proteínas Captadores de Luz , Complexo de Proteínas do Centro de Reação Fotossintética/genética , Northern Blotting , Western Blotting , Clorofila/metabolismo , Clorófitas/efeitos da radiação , Cloroplastos/fisiologia , Cloroplastos/efeitos da radiação , Regulação da Expressão Gênica/efeitos dos fármacos , Luz , Fotossíntese , Poli A/genética , Poli A/isolamento & purificação , Biossíntese de Proteínas , RNA/genética , RNA/isolamento & purificação , RNA Mensageiro , Mapeamento por Restrição
11.
Adv Space Res ; 24(6): 687-96, 1999.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-11542610

RESUMO

The sporangiophores of the zygomycete fungus Phycomyces blakesleeanus contain octahedral crystals with diameters of up to 5 micrometers in their vacuole. The crystals are associated with the intracellular membrane system. In tilted or horizontally placed sporangiophores, the crystals sediment to the respective lower face of the vacuole with a velocity of up to 100 micrometers per minute. The sedimentation is completed within about 2 minutes, well within the latency period for the negative gravitropic response of Phycomyces. Crystal-lacking mutant strains display a smaller maximal bending angle and a reduced gravitropic bending rate in comparison to the wild type. We therefore conclude that the crystals serve as statoliths for gravitropism in Phycomyces.


Assuntos
Proteínas Fúngicas/ultraestrutura , Sensação Gravitacional/fisiologia , Phycomyces/ultraestrutura , Cristalização , Proteínas Fúngicas/química , Gravitropismo/genética , Gravitropismo/fisiologia , Mutação , Phycomyces/química , Phycomyces/genética , Phycomyces/crescimento & desenvolvimento , Vacúolos/ultraestrutura
12.
Plant Biol (Stuttg) ; 16 Suppl 1: 58-68, 2014 Jan.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-24373010

RESUMO

The giant sporangiophore of the single-celled fungus, Phycomyces blakesleeanus, utilises light, gravity and gases (water and ethylene) as environmental cues for spatial orientation. Even though gravitropism is ubiquitous in fungi (Naturwissenschaftliche Rundschau, 1996, 49, 174), the underlying mechanisms of gravireception are far less understood than those operating in plants. The amenability of Phycomyces to classical genetics and the availability of its genome sequence makes it essential to fill this knowledge gap and serve as a paradigm for fungal gravireception. The physiological phenomena describing the gravitropism of plants, foremost adherence to the so-called sine law, hold even for Phycomyces. Additional phenomena pertaining to gravireception, specifically adherence to the novel exponential law and non-adherence to the classical resultant law of gravitropism, were for the first time investigated for Phycomyces. Sporangiophores possess a novel type of gravisusceptor, i.e. lipid globules that act by buoyancy rather than sedimentation and that are associated with a network of actin cables (Plant Biology, 2013). Gravitropic bending is associated with ion currents generated by directed Ca(2+) and H(+) transport in the growing zone (Annals of the New York Academy of Sciences, 2005, 1048, 487; Planta, 2012, 236, 1817). A set of behavioural mutants with specific defects in gravi- and/or photoreception allowed dissection of the respective transduction chains. The complex phenotypes of these mutants led to abandoning the concept of simple linear transduction chains in favour of interacting networks with molecular modules of physically interacting proteins.


Assuntos
Gravitropismo/fisiologia , Phycomyces/fisiologia , Esporos Fúngicos/fisiologia , Luz , Phycomyces/crescimento & desenvolvimento , Phycomyces/efeitos da radiação , Fenômenos Fisiológicos Vegetais/efeitos da radiação , Pesquisa , Esporos Fúngicos/crescimento & desenvolvimento , Esporos Fúngicos/efeitos da radiação
13.
Plant Biol (Stuttg) ; 16 Suppl 1: 158-66, 2014 Jan.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-24373014

RESUMO

We investigated gravitropic bending of sporangiophores of the zygomycete fungus Phycomyces blakesleeanus in response to centrifugal accelerations to test the so-called resultant law of gravitropism ('Resultantengesetz'; Jahrbuch der wissenschaftlichen Botanik, 71, 325, 1929; Der Geotropismus der Pflanzen, Gustav Fischer, Jena, Germany, 1932), which predicts that gravitropic organs orient in a centrifuge rotor parallel to the stimulus vector resulting from the centrifugal acceleration and gravity. Sporangiophores of wild-type strain C171 carAcarR and of several gravitropism mutants were subjected for 7 h to centrifugal accelerations in a dynamic range between 0.01 and 3 × g. The stimulus-response curves that were obtained for C171 carA carR, C2 carA geo and C148 carA geo madC were complex and displayed two response components: a low-acceleration component between 0.01 and 0.5 × g and a high-acceleration component above 0.5 × g. The low acceleration component is characterised by bending angles exceeding those predicted by the resultant law and kinetics faster than that of the second component; in contrast, the high-acceleration component is characterised by bending slightly below the predicted level and kinetics slower than that of the first component. Sporangiophores of the wild-type C171 centrifuged horizontally displayed the opposite behaviour, i.e. low accelerations diminished and high accelerations slightly enhanced bending. Further proof for the existence of the two response components was provided by the phenotype of gravitropism mutants that either lacked the first response component or which caused its overexpression. The tropism mutant C148 with defective madC gene, which codes for a RasGap protein (Fungal Genetics Reports, 60 (Suppl.), Abstract # 211, 2013), displayed hypergravitropism and concomitant deviations from the resultant law that were twice as high as in the wild-type C171. Gravitropism mutants with defects in the genes madF, madG and madJ lacked the low-response component below 0.5 × g. Our data are at variance with the so-called resultant law and imply that gravitropic orientation cannot depend exclusively on the classical sine stimulus (i.e. acting perpendicularly on the side walls); it rather must also be controlled by the cosine stimulus acting parallel to the longitudinal axis of the gravisensing organ. Our studies indicate that the threshold for the cosine response is the same as that of the sine response, and thus close to 0.01 × g.


Assuntos
Gravitropismo/fisiologia , Modelos Biológicos , Phycomyces/fisiologia , Centrifugação , Mutação , Esporos Fúngicos/fisiologia
14.
Plant Biol (Stuttg) ; 16 Suppl 1: 167-78, 2014 Jan.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-23927723

RESUMO

Growth, photo- and gravitropism of sporangiophores of the zygomycete Phycomyces blakesleeanus occur within the apical growing zone, a cylindrical structure (diameter about 100 µm) that reaches about 1.5-2.5 mm below the tip and has growth rates up to 50 µm·min(-1) . To better understand morphogenesis and growth of the giant aerial hypha, we investigated with confocal microscopy and inhibitors the actin cytoskeleton and by in-vivo particle tracking the associated organelle movement. We found stage-1 sporangiophores (without sporangium) possess an actin cytoskeleton with polar zonation. (i) In the apex, abundant microfilaments without preferential orientation entangled numerous nuclei as well as a conspicious complex of some 200 lipid globules. Microfilament patches (≈ 1.6-µm diameter) are clustered in the tip and were found in the apical cortex, whereas short, curved microfilament bundles (≈ 2.3-µm long) prevailed in the subapex. (ii) In a transition zone downwards to the shaft, the microfilaments rearranged into a dense mat of longitudinal microfilaments that was parallel close to the periphery but more random towards the cell centre. Numerous microfilament patches were found near the cortex (≈ 10/100 µm(2) ); their number decreased rapidly in the subcortex. In contrast, the short, curved microfilament bundles were found only in the subcortex. (iii) The basal shaft segment of the sporangiophore (with central vacuole) exhibited bidirectional particle movement over long distances (velocity ≈ 2 µm·s(-1) ) along massive longitudinal, subcortical microfilament cables. The zonation of the cytoskeleton density correlated well with the local growth rates at the tip of the sporangiophore, and appears thus as a structural prerequisite for growth and bending.


Assuntos
Citoesqueleto de Actina/metabolismo , Organelas/metabolismo , Phycomyces/fisiologia , Esporos Fúngicos/fisiologia , Fluorescência , Lipídeos/química , Movimento , Phycomyces/crescimento & desenvolvimento , Esporos Fúngicos/crescimento & desenvolvimento , Coloração e Rotulagem
17.
Protoplasma ; 229(2-4): 117-23, 2006 Dec.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-17180492

RESUMO

Gravitropism is ubiquitous among the fungal taxa; however, the mechanism(s) of gravisusception have overall remained obscure so far. In the vegetative sporangiophore of the zygomycete Phycomyces blakesleeanus some 200 large lipid globules form a conspicuous spherical complex which is positioned in a dense mesh of filamentous actin about 100 microm below the growing tip of the apex. Experimental suppression of that complex by transient growth at low temperature greatly diminishes the gravitropic response of the sporangiophore. With respect to size and abundance of the globules, the complex of lipid globules meets basic physical criteria for a possible function of gravisusception. Accumulations of similar lipid globules of critical size are documented in the apex of gravitropically growing hyphae of the endomycorrhizal fungus Gigaspora margarita (Glomeromycota) and have been described in the hyphal apices of members of various fungal phyla. We suppose that--in contrast to plants which use starch as a carbon storage and amyloplasts as statoliths--the fungi utilise the buoyancy of carbon-storing oil droplets for gravisusception.


Assuntos
Fungos/fisiologia , Gravitação , Gravitropismo , Mecanotransdução Celular , Basidiomycota/fisiologia , Membrana Celular/fisiologia , Polaridade Celular , Citoesqueleto/fisiologia , Sensação Gravitacional , Lipídeos/fisiologia , Vacúolos/fisiologia
18.
Planta ; 205(2): 269-76, 1998 Jun.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-11536872

RESUMO

Phototropism experiments were done with sporangiophores of the fungus Phycomyces blakesleeanus to characterize the interaction between far-UV, blue and red light. Far-UV light elicits negative phototropism (bending away from the light source) while blue light elicits positive phototropism (bending toward the light source). In contrast, red light above 600 nm is phototropically inert. Phototropism was analyzed with light regimens of bilateral or unilateral irradiation with far-UV and blue light. Under bilateral irradiation, in which the two light sources were facing each other, blue light partially inhibited the far-UV-elicited phototropism. A fluence-response curve for this inhibition showed that blue light was maximally effective at fluence rates which exceeded 3 to 57 times that of the far-UV. Tonic red light, which was given from above, abolished to a large extent the antagonistic action of blue light. With a regimen of unilateral irradiation, i.e. when far-UV and blue light were given from the same side, a phototropic balance could be achieved with approximately equal fluence rates of blue and UV light. Above or below this critical balance point the bending was either negative or positive. In this setup the effect of tonic red light was complex. First, it caused an enhancement of the positive or negative bending, and second, it caused at some fluence rates a sign reversal from positive to negative phototropism. The balance point itself was only marginally affected. The data cannot be explained on the basis of a single photoreceptor and support the previous notion of separate far-UV and blue-light receptors. The antagonism between these two receptors probably occurs on the level of a red-light-absorbing receptor intermediate.


Assuntos
Luz , Fototropismo/efeitos da radiação , Phycomyces/crescimento & desenvolvimento , Phycomyces/efeitos da radiação , Relação Dose-Resposta à Radiação , Fótons , Complexo de Proteínas do Centro de Reação Fotossintética , Raios Ultravioleta
19.
Planta ; 183(3): 340-6, 1991 Feb.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-24193743

RESUMO

The fluence-rate and wavelength dependence of chlorophyll synthesis and cell growth of Scenedesmus obliquus were measured under heterotrophic conditions. Cultures were first grown autotrophically under white light from fluorescent lamps (20 W · m(-2)) and were then transferred to a glucose-containing medium in which they were exposed to light of different fluence rates and wavelengths. Fluence rate-response curves, which were obtained with monochromatic blue (453 nm) and red (644 nm) light were complex and indicated the existence of a very low- and a low-irradiance photoreceptor-system with antagonistic modes of interaction. In the very low-irradiance region (10(-10)-10(-6) mol · m(-2) · s(-1)), blue light partially inhibited chlorophyll synthesis. In the low-irradiance region (> 10(-6) mol · m(-2) · s(-1)), chlorophyll synthesis and cell growth were stimulated. At these elevated fluence rates the curve was bell shaped. Red light inhibited chlorophyll synthesis in the very low- as well as in the low-irradiance region. The effects of blue and red light on chlorophyll synthesis and cell growth were unaffected by the photosynthesis inhibitor 3-(3,4-dichlorphenyl)-1,1-dimethylurea (DCMU) showing that photosynthesis per se did not mediate these photoresponses. Based on detailed fluence rate-response curves and also on equal quantum-flux measurements, action spectra were obtained for chlorophyll synthesis and cell growth in the region below 10(-6) mol · m(-2) · s(-1). The action spectra for the very low-irradiance region (inhibition of chlorophyll synthesis and stimulation of cell growth) showed two sharp peaks near 408 and 645 nm. The action spectrum for the low-irradiance region showed stimulation of chlorophyll synthesis between 450 and 480-nm. Below and above this wavelength range an inhibitory action was found. We propose that two photoreceptor systems regulate chlorophyll synthesis, and that these can be distinguished by different thresholds, different spectral sensitivities and also by their antagonistic modes of action. The implications of these findings with respect to autotrophic conditions are discussed.

20.
Planta ; 210(5): 848-52, 2000 Apr.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-10805459

RESUMO

The negative gravitropism of the sporangiophores of Phycomyeces blakesleeanus Burgeff is elicited by different sensory inputs, which include flexure of the growing zone, buoyance of lipid globules and sedimentation of paracrystalline proteins, so-called octahedral crystals (C. Schimek et al., 1999a, Planta 210: 132-142). Gravity-induced absorbance changes (GIACs), which are associated with primary events of gravity sensing, were detected in the growing zones of sporangiophores. After placing sporangiophores horizontally, GIACs were detected after a latency of about 5 min, i.e. 15-25 min prior to gravitropic bending. The spectroscopic properties of the GIACs indicate that gravitropic stimulation could imply the reduction of cytochromes. The GIACs were spectrally distinct from light-induced absorbance changes (LIACs), showing that the primary responses of the light and gravity transduction chains are different. A dual stimulation with gravity and light generated GIAC-LIACs which were distinct from the absorbance changes occurring after the single stimuli and which indicate that light and gravity interact early in the respective transduction chains.


Assuntos
Gravitação , Gravitropismo/fisiologia , Phycomyces/fisiologia , Citocromos/metabolismo , Gravitropismo/genética , Cinética , Modelos Biológicos , Mutação , Oxirredução , Fototropismo/fisiologia , Phycomyces/genética , Quinonas/metabolismo , Transdução de Sinais , Espectrofotometria/métodos
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