Rumen Bacterial Interrelationships with Plant Tissue During Degradation Revealed by Transmission Electron Microscopy

Author:

Akin Danny E.12,Burdick Donald12,Michaels Gene E.12

Affiliation:

1. Richard B. Russell Agricultural Research Center, Athens, Georgia 30604

2. Department of Microbiology, University of Georgia, Athens, Georgia 30602

Abstract

The mode of rumen bacterial degradation of cell walls in coastal bermudagrass [ Cynodon dactylon (L) Pers.] differed with the plant tissue type. Bacteria degraded thin, primary cell walls of mesophyll and phloem apparently by extracellular enzymes and without prior attachment; thick-walled bundle sheath and epidermal cells apparently were degraded after bacterial attachment, in some types by an extracellular substance, to the plant cell walls. Rumen bacteria split the nondegraded cuticle from the epidermis by preferentially attacking the cell just underneath the cuticle. The propensity for bacterial attachment to lignified cells of the vascular tissue was low, and bacterial degradation of these cells did not occur after 72 h of incubation.

Publisher

American Society for Microbiology

Subject

General Pharmacology, Toxicology and Pharmaceutics,General Immunology and Microbiology,General Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology,General Medicine

Reference21 articles.

1. Rumen microbial degradation of grass tissue revealed by scanning electron microscopy;Akin D. E.;Agron. J.,1973

2. Pasture quality and ruminant nutrition. m. Hydrolysis of ryegrass structural carbohydrates with carbohydrases in relation to rumen digestion;Bailey R. W.;N. Z. J. Agr. Res.,1971

3. Microbial digestion in the rumen (and caecum), with special reference to the decomposition of structural cellulose;Baker F.;Nutr. Abstr. Rev.,1947

4. Fine structural observations on the epidermis. I. The epidermal cell wall;Chafe S. C.;Planta,1972

5. A method for the study of cellulose digestion by washed suspensions of rumen microorganisms;Cheng E. W.;J. Dairy Sci.,1955

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