A STUDY OF THE DISTRIBUTION OF CARBON-14 LABELLED COMPOUNDS IN STEM RUST INFECTED WHEAT LEAVES

1960 ◽  
Vol 38 (4) ◽  
pp. 635-642 ◽  
Author(s):  
Dalton Wang

Glucose-U-C14, glycine-2-C14, benzimidazole-2-C14, as well as C14O2, were fed to rusted leaves of Little Club wheat. Radioautographs of whole leaves gave similar results to those of previous investigators, indicating greater radioactivity in rust ed tissue sections. However, when quantitative measurements were made the results indicated that rusted tissue sections do not contain more radioactivity than the healthy tissue sections despite the apparent accumulation of labelled com pounds at infection sites indicated by radioautographs of the treated leaves. The apparent accumulation of radioactivity at the infection sites of rusted leaves may not, therefore, represent the actual concentration of the labelled compounds throughout the infected leaf. The phenomenon of radioactivity accumulation indicated by radioautographs may be attributed to two factors: (a) the geometric factor in respect to radioactive sources to the X-ray film and (b) the specific distribution in respect to the higher radioactivity in the rapidly growing regions of the fungus.

1961 ◽  
Vol 39 (7) ◽  
pp. 1595-1604 ◽  
Author(s):  
Dalton Wang

The accumulation of radioactivity from carbon-14 dioxide assimilation at infection sites of Uromyces phaseoli was studied. The accumulated radioactivity was found to reside essentially in starch, which has been clearly demonstrated in this study to be the result of de novo synthesis from carbon-14 dioxide at the infection site and not due to an enhanced translocation of photosynthates from non-infected leaf areas and subsequent starch synthesis.It was also shown that U. phaseoli induced an increase in the chlorophyll content of the host tissue located at the periphery of the rust colony as it developed, and a concomitant increase in starch accumulation.Unlike the ‘green island' induced by powdery mildew in wheat leaves reported by Allen, the 'green island' induced by U. phaseoli in bean leaves is the result of pigment retention in the host tissue within the domain of influence of the parasite. The chlorophyll in the 'green island' was found to be photosynthetically active. Results from experiments of photosynthesis with 'green islands' provided the unequivocal evidence to support the idea of de novo synthesis of starch at the sites of rust infection.


1967 ◽  
Vol 45 (11) ◽  
pp. 2137-2153 ◽  
Author(s):  
A. Fuchs ◽  
R. Rohringer ◽  
D. J. Samborski

Wheat leaves infected with stem rust, especially those of susceptible plants, contained more phenylalanine and tyrosine than healthy leaves. The utilization of phenylalanine was increased in both the susceptible and resistant reaction, but the utilization of tyrosine was increased only in the susceptible reaction. No evidence of interconversion of these amino acids was obtained.In n-butanol extracts, which contained glycosides, many constituents were labelled after feeding of L-phenylalanine-U-14C. Most of the n-butanol extractives from resistant-reacting leaves contained more label than those from susceptible-reacting leaves or from healthy leaves. However, one of the n-butanol extractives from susceptible-reacting leaves was 5–10 times as active as that isolated from the other tissues.With L-phenylalanine-U-14C and ferulate-U-14C as precursors, more activity was recovered in insoluble than in soluble esters (of ferulate and p-coumarate). With L-tyrosine-U-14C as precursor, the reverse was observed. After infection, the proportion of label in insoluble esters increased more in resistant leaves than it did in susceptible leaves, regardless of the precursor used.A major portion of the activity from these precursors was recovered in the insoluble residue that contained protein and other polymers. In the experiment with L-phenylalanine-U-14C, this residue was fractionated into protein and non-hydrolyzable material. Susceptible-reacting leaves contained equal amounts of activity in these fractions, while resistant-reacting leaves incorporated 2.5 times as much activity into the non-hydrolyzable material as into protein.


Author(s):  
A. L. Kastengren ◽  
C. F. Powell ◽  
K.-S. Im ◽  
Y.-J. Wang ◽  
J. Wang

The near-nozzle structure of several nonevaporating biodiesel-blend sprays has been studied using X-ray radiography. Radiography allows quantitative measurements of the fuel distribution in sprays to be made with high temporal and spatial resolution. Measurements have been made at different values of injection pressure, ambient density, and with two different nozzle geometries to understand the influences of these parameters on the spray structure of the biodiesel blend. These measurements have been compared with corresponding measurements of Viscor, a diesel calibration fluid, to demonstrate the fuel effects on the spray structure. Generally, the biodiesel-blend spray has a similar structure to the spray of Viscor. For the nonhydroground nozzle used in this study, the biodiesel-blend spray has a slightly slower penetration into the ambient gas than the Viscor spray. The cone angle of the biodiesel-blend spray is generally smaller than that of the Viscor spray, indicating that the biodiesel-blend spray is denser than the Viscor spray. For the hydroground nozzle, both fuels produce sprays with initially wide cone angles that transition to narrow sprays during the steady-state portion of the injection event. These variations in cone angle with time occur later for the biodiesel-blend spray than for the Viscor spray, indicating that the dynamics of the injector needle as it opens are somewhat different for the two fuels.


1961 ◽  
Vol 39 (6) ◽  
pp. 1393-1407 ◽  
Author(s):  
Michael Shaw

Wang (Can. J. Botany, 38, 635–642 (1960)) concluded that the accumulation of radioactivity observed on radioautographs at infection sites on rusted leaves fed with C14-labelled substances was 'apparent' rather than real. The ‘accumulation ratio’ is defined as the ratio of the specific activities (c.p.m./mg dry weight of intact tissue) of rust-infected to uninfected areas of infected leaves. Theoretical considerations relating to the radioautography of leaves labelled with C14 and to the measurement of ‘accumulation ratios’ by extraction of C14-labelled substances from rusted and uninfected segments of infected leaves, as well as experimental data, show that Wang's conclusion is not generally applicable.Experimentally, it was shown using polymethacrylate C14 sources that differences in distance between sources and X-ray film of the order of 100 μ had no effect on the intensity of autoradiographs. Rust-infected leaves, fed with radioactive glucose, were radiographed between X-ray plates. Localization of radioactivity at infection sites was observed on both ‘dorsal’ and ‘ventral’ radiographs, indicating a real accumulation per unit area. Ventral were more radioactive than dorsal surfaces. The main development of the fungus occurred on the former. Radioautography revealed that C14 from glucose-1-C14, glucose-6-C14, and uniformly labelled glucose fed to excised wheat leaves became localized at 10-day-old rust infections in 2 hours. ‘Accumulation ratios’ calculated from the specific activity of leaf segments remained close to 1.0 for at least 6 hours after introduction of the tracer, but increased to more than 2 after 24 hours. When ‘accumulation ratios’ were calculated from the specific activities of individual pustules (excised with a punch 1 mm in diameter) and interpustular disks, values greater than 1 were observed in 2 hours, thus confirming the results of autoradiography. Differences between the ‘accumulation ratios’ observed with glucose-6-C14 and glucose-1-C14 were consistent with an increased role of the pentose phosphate pathway at infection sites. Incorporation of C14 from uniformly labelled glucose into the alcohol-insoluble fraction of rusted leaf segments was 2.5-fold that in uninfected segments in 6 hours and 3.65-fold in 24 hours. The humin formed during hydrochloric acid hydrolysis accounted for approximately 50% of the activity of the alcohol-insoluble material. The ‘accumulation ratio’ for the alcohol-soluble material was only 1.56 after 24 hours.All the results support the view (Shaw and Samborski, Can. J. Botany, 34, 389–405 (1956)) that there is a quantitative, metabolically dependent accumulation of C14 from radioactive glucose at vigorous rust infections. The relative roles of fungus and host in this process are discussed briefly.


1986 ◽  
Vol 83 (1) ◽  
pp. 77-87 ◽  
Author(s):  
M.D. Kendall ◽  
A. Warley

Mast cell granules were examined by fully quantitative X-ray microanalysis of 20 cells in freeze-dried cryosections. The mast cells were situated mainly in the connective tissue of the thymic capsule of five adult male Carworth Sprague Europe rats. In addition 30 red blood cells were analysed from the same sections. Nineteen of the mast cells had granules rich in S and K. One cell had smaller granules, and in this cell the granules contained high [Ca] and [P] instead of high [S] and [K]. In the majority of cells (13) the S:K ratio was highly correlated and less than 2.2, whereas in the remaining six cells the individual granule ratios were very variable in any one cell and much higher. The mean granule [K] (994 +/− 57 mmol kg-1 dry wt) was about four times the mean cytoplasmic level of 227 +/− 81 mmol kg-1 dry wt. The existence of this difference in concentration between the granules and the cytoplasm suggests that the K in the granules must be bound. The relationship between the [K] and [S] is discussed with regard to the possible binding of heparin and amines in the granules.


The measurement of the intensity of an X-ray beam in absolute units is in theory most satisfactorily accomplished by a determination of its heating effect. The method, however, is attended by considerable experimental difficulties, so that its application is very limited, and in practice it is usual to replace it by a determination of the ionization produced when the beam is passed through a gas. To correlate the ionization with an absolute intensity requires a quantitative knowledge of the details of the interaction between the X-rays and the molecules concerned and of the ionization of the gas by the ejected electrons. It sometimes happens that the processes involved about which we know least are relatively unimportant, so that a fairly reliable correlation can be made; and much work has been done on the application of the ionization method to X-ray dosimetry. But in general a quantitative correlation between ionization and intensity is not possible. A further study of the ionization of gases by X-rays is therefore desirable; moreover it may be made to yield important information concerning the processes involved. The early development of the physics of X-rays contains many examples of this, and more recently an important contribution has been made by Stockmeyer. The events leading to the ionization of a heavy gas are exceedingly complicated, whereas in the light gases (hydrogen and helium) some of these events are absent or else occur to a negligible extent, so that the interpretation of experiments with the latter becomes simpler and more reliable. These gases are therefore specially worthy of study. Moreover, for them the application of quantum mechanics leads to the most definite results for comparison with experiment, and in particular permits of a direct test of some aspects of Dirac’s theory of recoil scattering. The ionization due to the gas itself is, however, very small, and may even be less than the secondary ionization due to electrons liberated from the chamber walls. The technique used in ionization measurements with heavy gases is therefore unsuitable. Hitherto the only attempt made to extend such measurements to light gases is an experiment carried out in 1915 on hydrogen by Shearer who, however, obtained very variable results and an ionization markedly smaller than that to be expected from recoil electrons alone. Moreover his experimental method is now open to criticism in view of our greater knowledge of X-rays, and in particular the fluorescent radiation used was of doubtful homogeneity. The present paper will describe a new technique suitable for quantitative measurements of the ionization produced by X-rays in light gases, and in another paper it will be applied to a re-investigation of hydrogen.


1985 ◽  
Vol 40 (9-10) ◽  
pp. 743-744 ◽  
Author(s):  
Karl-Heinz Kogel ◽  
Birgit Heck ◽  
Gerd Kogel ◽  
Bruno Moerschbacher ◽  
Hans-Joachim Reisener

Abstract An elicitor of the lignification response in wheat leaves was isolated from the germ-tube walls of wheat stem rust. The active compound causes metabolic changes typically correlated with the resistance response, i.e. the formation of lignin or lignin-like polymers in affected epidermal and mesophyll cells and the increased activities of enzymes involved in the phenylpropanoid-pathway.


1976 ◽  
Vol 20 ◽  
pp. 403-410
Author(s):  
R. D. Lear ◽  
H. A. Van Rinsvelt ◽  
W. S. Adams

The 3.8 MeV proton beam from the University of Florida Van de Graaff accelerator has been used to perform trace element analysis of approximately 1200 samples (mostly from autopsies) of human tissues by proton-induced X-ray emission analysis (PIXE). Fifteen different organs and a variety of diseases have been studied. Preliminary data are presented indicating the variations of various elements in human kidney as a function of age. Analysis of samples from infants also indicate essential and non-essential elements in human kidney. On the average twelve trace elements (with atomic number equal to or larger than nineteen) are observed in each organ. Quantitative measurements have been made on several elements including K, Ca, Mn, Fe, Cu, Zn, Pb, Br, Rb, Sr, Cd, and Ba.


1981 ◽  
Author(s):  
Robert L. Kauffman ◽  
Gary L. Stradling ◽  
Edward L. Pierce ◽  
Hector Medecki

Science ◽  
1956 ◽  
Vol 124 (3224) ◽  
pp. 683-684 ◽  
Author(s):  
V. M. MOSLEY ◽  
D. B. SCOTT ◽  
R. W. G. WYCKOFF
Keyword(s):  
X Ray ◽  

Sign in / Sign up

Export Citation Format

Share Document