Abstract

In cap cells of intact plant roots exposed to 1mM uranyl for 30 min or less, uranyl crystals were found only in cell walls and in secretory products which had been extruded from the protoplast. In roots exposed for 10–20 hr to 0.1mm uranyl, packets of uranyl crystals bound to secretory products were found within the protoplasts of those exterior cells which contained accumulations of secretory products between the cell wall and protoplast. Although the evidence indicated that these packets of crystals entered the protoplast pinocytotically, results with these specialized exterior cells did not apply to the vast majority of root cap cells in which, after prolonged exposure to 0.1mm uranyl, crystals were concentrated in vacuoles. In roots exposed to 1 or 5mm uranyl for 1 hr, the plasmalemma of interior cap cells was much thicker (13.1 nm) than normal (8.2 nm), and many invaginations and vesicular structures were found near the protoplast surface. Crystals were confined to cell walls except for a few found in vesicles with thickened membranes. Serial sections indicated that most vesicular structures with thickened membranes were in contact with the cell wall, but a few, including some which contained uranyl crystals, were within the protoplast. These results provide evidence of pinocytotic activity in intact plant cells exposed to a toxic heavy metal.

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