Plasmolysis

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Plant cell under diferent enviroments
Plant cell under diferent enviroments
Before plasmolysis...
Before plasmolysis...
...and after.
...and after.

Plasmolysis is an effect of osmosis in plants. Osmosis is the net diffusion of water across a selectively permeable membrane, such as a cell membrane, from an area of higher water concentration to an area of lower water concentration. A plant cell in a more dilute salt solution will absorb water by endosmosis, so that the increased volume of water in the cell will increase pressure, making the protoplasm push against the cell wall, a condition known as turgor. Turgor makes plant cells push against each other in the same way and is the main method of support in non-woody plant tissue. Plant cell walls resist further water entry after a certan point, known as full turgor, which stops plant cells from bursting as animal cells do in the same conditions.

If a plant cell is placed in a more concentrated salt (hypertonic) solution, it loses water and hence turgor pressure, making it flaccid. Plants with cells in this condition wilt. Further water loss causes plasmolysis: pressure decreases to the point where the protoplasm of the cell peels away from the cell wall, leaving gaps between the cell wall and the membrane. Eventually cytorrhysis – the complete collapse of the cell wall – can occur. There is no mechanism in plants to prevent excess water loss in the same way as excess water gain, but plasmolysis can be reversed if the cell is placed in a weaker solution. The equivalent process in animal cells is called crenation. The liquid content of the cell leaks out due to diffusion.

Plasmolysis only occurs in extreme conditions and rarely happens in nature. It is induced in the laboratory by immersing cells in strong saline or sugar solutions to cause exosmosis, often using Elodea plants or onion epidermal cells, which have coloured cell sap so that the process is clearly visible.

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[edit] Sources

  • Longman GCSE Biology by Phil Bradfield and Steve Potter

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