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Permeability of the Plasmalemma as Compared with that of the Tonoplast
Author(s) -
Haapala Eva
Publication year - 1960
Publication title -
physiologia plantarum
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.351
H-Index - 146
eISSN - 1399-3054
pISSN - 0031-9317
DOI - 10.1111/j.1399-3054.1960.tb08038.x
Subject(s) - protoplast , protoplasm , vacuole , biophysics , cytoplasmic streaming , botany , sodium , chemistry , biology , biochemistry , cytoplasm , organic chemistry
In recent years there has been an increasing tendency to regard the tonoplast as the decisive diffusion barrier of the protoplast. The plasmalemma has been assumed to be more or less freely permeable, especially to ions (Brooks 4, Arisz 1, Epstein 8, Briggs and Robertson 3, Sutcliffe 12). This view is, however, based on observations which are far from unequivocal. In the following we shall try to elucidate the question of the relative permeability and susceptibility of the two plasma membranes towards sodium hydroxide and sodium carbonate. The tests were made on internodal cells of Nitellopsis obtusa , staminal hairs of Tradescantia virginiana and T. zcbrina and epidermal cells of Allium cepa var. sanguinetim. These cells show protoplasmic streaming and either contain anthocyanins or were stained with neutral red. In these experiments the plasmalemma, or some other layer outside the streaming part of the protoplasm, is assumed to be more or less impermeable towards sodium hydroxide as long as protoplasmic streaming is going on in the cells lying in the strongly alkaline solution. On the other hand, by the time the colour of the cell sap changes a considerable amount of NaOH must have passed through the whole protoplast, including both plasmalemma and tonoplast. The principal object of the experiments was, therefore, to compare (a) the time necessary to stop the protoplasmic streaming, irreversibly, with (b) the time required for the colour of the vacuole to change either to yellow (neutral red) or to blue (anthocyanin).

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