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In the first part (Part A) of this volume on transport, there was
an emphasis on the processes occurring at the membranes bounding
the cells. It was convenient to distinguish active and passive
processes of transport across the membranes, and to recognize that
certain transport processes may be regulated by internal factors in
the cells such as cytoplasmic pH, concentrations of ions, of malate
or of sugar in the vacuoles, or the hydrostatic pressure. Cells in
tissues and organs show the same kinds of properties as individual
cells, but in addition there can be cell to cell transport related
to the organization of the tissue. Firstly cells within a tissue
are separated from the external solutions by a diffusion path
comprising parts of the cell walls and intercellular spaces; more
generally this extra-cytoplasmic part of the tissue has been called
the apoplasm. A similar term is "free space." Secondly, the anatomy
of cells in tissues seems to allow some facilitated, local
transport between cells in a symplasm. Entry into the symplast and
subsequent transport in a symplasmic continuum seems to be
privileged, in that ions may not have to mix with the bulk of the
cytoplasm and can pass from cell to cell in particular cytoplasmic
structures, plasmodesmata. In Chara plants, this kind of transport
is found operating across the multi-cellular nodes as the main
means of transport between the long internodal cells.
As plant physiology increased steadily in the latter half of the
19th century, problems of absorption and transport of water and of
mineral nutrients and problems of the passage of metabolites from
one cell to another were investigated, especially in Germany.
JUSTUS VON LIEBIG, who was born in Darmstadt in 1803, founded
agricultural chemistry and developed the techniques of mineral
nutrition in agricul ture during the 70 years of his life. The
discovery of plasmolysis by NAGEL! (1851), the investigation of
permeability problems of artificial membranes by TRAUBE (1867) and
the classical work on osmosis by PFEFFER (1877) laid the
foundations for our understanding of soluble substances and osmosis
in cell growth and cell mechanisms. Since living membranes were
responsible for controlling both water movement and the substances
in solution, "permeability" became a major topic for investigation
and speculation. The problems then discussed under that heading
included passive permeation by diffusion, Donnan equilibrium
adjustments, active transport processes and antagonism between
ions. In that era, when organelle isolation by differential
centrifugation was unknown and the electron microscope had not been
invented, the number of cell membranes, their thickness and their
composition, were matters for conjecture. The nature of cell
surface membranes was deduced with remarkable accuracy from the
reactions of cells to substances in solution. In 1895, OVERTON, in
U. S. A. , published the hypothesis that membranes were probably
lipid in nature because of the greater penetration by substances
with higher fat solubility.
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