| Literature DB >> 22639598 |
Youssef Chebli1, Anja Geitmann.
Abstract
Future space missions and implementation of permanent bases on Moon and Mars will greatly depend on the availability of ambient air and sustainable food supply. Therefore, understanding the effects of altered gravity conditions on plant metabolism and growth is vital for space missions and extra-terrestrial human existence. In this mini-review we summarize how plant cells are thought to perceive changes in magnitude and orientation of the gravity vector. The particular advantages of several single-celled model systems for gravity research are explored and an overview over recent advancements and potential use of these systems is provided.Entities:
Keywords: gravimorphogenesis; gravitropism; gravity; hyper-gravity; micro-gravity; pressure model; statocyte; statolith
Year: 2011 PMID: 22639598 PMCID: PMC3355640 DOI: 10.3389/fpls.2011.00056
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Plant Sci ISSN: 1664-462X Impact factor: 5.753
Figure 1General principles used in gravity research. (A) Centrifugation increases the magnitude of the g-vector resulting in a hyper-gravity stimulus. (B) True micro-gravity conditions can be obtained on orbital platforms or during the free-fall phases of sounding rockets and parabolic flights. (C) Omnilateral micro-gravity is achieved by continuously rotating the specimen, either in 2D or 3D. This does not change the magnitude of the g-force, but it eliminates the effect of the unidirectional stimulus caused by the g-vector. (D) Turning a specimen changes the orientation of the g-vector relative to the specimen.
Figure 2Concepts of cellular gravisensing in plants. (A) In statolith-based gravisensing the sedimentation or change of position of intracellular organelles with higher density triggers a signal most likely based on a change in trans-membrane ion fluxes. (B) According to the gravitational pressure model the weight of the protoplast causes the forces acting on the membrane–cell wall connections at the upper and lower sides of the cells to be different. (C) The tensegrity model predicts that cellular distortion due to a change in g-force affects the pre-stress in the cytoskeletal array of the cell which in turn changes biochemical activities. (D) A variation of the tensegrity model is based on a change in cytoskeletal pre-stress being caused by the weight of heavy organelles that are tethered to the cytoskeletal filaments such as the nucleus.
Figure 3Spatial profile of mechanical properties and biochemical processes in the cell wall of growing pollen tubes. Mechanical modeling has shown that the precise spatial distribution of endomembrane trafficking, cell wall assembly processes and cross-linking of cell wall polymers determines the cellular morphogenesis, and the resulting shape in growing plant cells. These processes occur particularly rapidly in pollen tubes making them an ideal model system for experiments based on short-term exposure to micro-gravity.