Abstract
The physiological constraints on bud burst in woody perennials, including the prerequisite for vascular development remain unresolved. Both light and tissue oxygen status have emerged as important cues for vascular development in other systems, however, light requirement appears to be facultative in grapevine, and the information related to the spatial variability of oxygen in buds is unclear. Here, we analysed apoplastic development at early stages of grapevine bud burst and combined molecular modelling with histochemical techniques to determine the pore size of cell walls in grapevine buds. The data demonstrate that quiescent grapevine buds were impermeable to apoplastic dyes (acid fuchsin and eosin Y) until after bud burst was established. The molecular exclusion size was calculated to be 2.1 nm, which would exclude most macromolecules except simple sugars and phytohormones. In vivo experiments show that grapevine buds were able to resume growth even following excision from the cane, and that the outer scales of grapevine buds may participate in the biochemical repression of bud burst. Furthermore, we demonstrate that the tissue oxygen partial pressure data correlated well with structural heterogeneity within the bud and differences in tissue density. These data consolidate evidence that the meristematic core becomes rapidly oxygenated during bud burst. Taken together, and when put in the context of earlier studies, these data provide solid evidence that the physiological and biochemical events that initiate bud burst reside within the bud, and question the role of long distance signalling in this developmental transition.
Highlights
The apoplastic pore size between the grapevine bud and the mother vine is dynamically regulated in the transition to bud burst.
The molecular exclusion size of the apoplastic connection between the bud and cane is calculated 2.1 nm prior to the initiation of bud burst.
The structural heterogeneity of the bud explains the spatial variance in tissue oxygen status, and the meristematic core is oxygenated during the initiation of bud burst.
Long distance maternal signals are not a requirement for bud burst.
Footnotes
Other authors emails: JS, jeremy.shaw{at}uwa.edu.au; DH, dina.hermawaty{at}research.uwa.edu.au; ZW, zi.wang{at}kuleuven.be; PV, pieter.verboven{at}kuleuven.be; JC, john.considine{at}uwa.edu.au