Abstract
Two polyclonal antisera, anti-xyloglucan (anti-XG) and anti-polygalacturonic acid/rhamnogalacturonan I (anti-PGA/RG-I), which recognize, respectively, noncellulosic β-(1→4)-D-glucan containing polysaccharides and the unesterified forms of the acidic pectic polysaccharide polygalacturonic acid/rhamnogalacturonan I, were used to localize epitopes recognized by the two antisera in the root tip of oat (Avena sativa). Immunoblot analysis shows that epitopes recognized by the anti-XG antibodies are present in both the mixed linkage β-(1→3)-(1→4)-D-glucans (MG) and in xyloglucan (XG). Immunogold electron microscopy shows that the cell walls of meristematic, cortical, epidermal, columella, and peripheral cells contain significant amounts of such epitopes. In contrast, the molecules that carry these MG/XG epitopes appear to be sparse in the expanded middle lamella of meristematic cells, but dense in the expanded middle lamella of peripheral root cap cells. This finding suggests that the porosity of the middle lamella is altered in peripheral root cap cells to facilitate mucilage secretion. In contrast, few PGA/RG-I epitopes were detected in any cell walls of any of the cell types examined. Double immunogold labeling experiments revealed an intriguing localization pattern of MG/XG and of PGA/RG-I epitopes in the peripheral mucilage-secreting cells of the root cap. Whereas MG/XG epitopes were abundant in the cell wall, they were sparse in both the secreted mucilage and in intracellular secretory vesicles. In marked contrast, PGA/RG-I epitopes were detected at high density in intracellular secretory vesicles, but unexpectedly, were quite sparse in both the cell wall and in the mucilage. These immunolabeling patterns are consistent with the hypotheses that the synthesis and secretion of particular β-D-glucans is subject to both activation and down-regulation during cell development and differentiation and that post-secretory alterations of pectic polysaccharides, such as enzymatic release of RG-I-type mucilage molecules from PGA/RG-I precursors, may occur in the peripheral cell walls of the oat root cap.
Published Version
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