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Secretory tissues in the East African shrubby aloes
Authors:J BEAUMONT  D F CUTLER  T REYNOLDS  J G VAUGHAN
Institution:King's College Kensington, Campden Hill Road, London W8 7AM;Jodrell Laboratory, Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew, Richmond, Surrey TW9 3DS;King's College Kensington, Campden Hill Road, London W8 7AM
Abstract:Examination of Aloe leaf sections revealed the presence of three types of cells at the phloem pole of the vascular bundles, aloin cells, outer bundle sheath cells and fibres. Three species contain fibres alone and produce a sparse exudate with few components staining purple with Fast Blue B on thin-layer chromatograms. The majority of species have aloin cells of various sizes and in the tetraploid species these produce a copious exudate containing anthraquinone and chromone derivatives. It is suggested that the aloin cells act as storage tissue and that the compounds are synthesized in the surrounding layer of cells of smaller diameter, many of which can be seen to contain globules of unknown constitution. Anatomical observations support the idea that the shrubby tetraploid Aloe species are derived from a form similar to the diploid Aloe morijensis. Two forms of this species have been described, one with fibres only and few exudate components and another with both fibres and aloin cells and an exudate containing compounds of the tetraploid species. A line of diploid plants similar in anatomy and chemistry to the first form is represented by A. fibrosa and A. babatiensis while a line of tetraploids with affinities to the second form is represented by A. nyeriensis, A. cheranganiensis, A. elgonica, A. dawei and A.yavellana.
Keywords:Aloë  aloin cells  fibres
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