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1.
The gross composition of the outer epidermal cell wall from third internodes of Pisum sativum L. cv. Alaska grown in dim red light, and the effect of auxin on that composition, was investigated using interference microscopy. Pea outer epidermal walls contain as much cellulose as typical secondary walls, but the proportion of pectin to hemicellulose resembles that found in primary walls. The pectin and hemicellulose fractions from epidermal peels, which are enriched for outer epidermal wall but contain internal tissue as well, are composed of a much higher percentage of glucose and glucose-related sugars than has been found previously for pea primary walls, similar to non-cellulosic carbohydrate fractions of secondary walls. The epidermal outer wall thus has a composition rather like that of secondary walls, while still being capable of elongation. Auxin induces a massive breakdown of hemicellulose in the outer epidermal wall; nearly half the hemicellulose present is lost during 4 h of growth in the absence of exogenous sugar. The percentage breakdown is much greater than has been seen previously for whole pea stems. It has been proposed that a breakdown of xyloglucan could be the basis for the mechanical loosening of the outer wall. This study provides the first evidence that such a breakdown could be occurring in the outer wall.M.S. Bret-Harte would like to thank Dr. Peter M. Ray, of Stanford University, for helpful discussions and for technical and editorial assistance, Dr. Winslow R. Briggs, of the Camegie Institude of Washington, for the use of experimental facilities and for helpful discussions, Dr. Wendy K. Silk, of the University of California, Davis, for helpful discussions and financial support, Dr. Paul B. Green for financial support, and Drs. John M. Labavitch and L.C. Greve, of the University of California, Davis, for performing the -cellulose analysis on short notice, in response to a request by an anonymous reviewer. This work was supported by a National Science Foundation Graduate Fellowship to M.S. B.-H., National Science Foundation Grant DCB8801493 to Paul B. Green, and the generosity of Wendy K. Silk (Department of Land, Air, and Water Resources, University of California, Davis) during the final writing.  相似文献   

2.
The effect of auxin on the mass per area in the outer epidermal walls of third internodes of Pisum sativum L. cv. Alaska grown in dim red light was investigated using interference microscopy, and rates of net deposition of wall material were calculated. Examination of these net rates under different growth conditions showed that there is no simple relationship between the deposition of mass and growth. Net deposition can be proportional to growth when sufficient substrate for wall synthesis is available, as in intact plants, and in segments treated with indole-3-acetic acid (IAA) plus glucose. Net deposition can cause thickening of the walls when growth is small, as in the case of segments kept without IAA in the presence or absence of glucose, or segments whose growth is inhibited with mannitol. When substrate is limited and growth is large, however, wall expansion can occur with no net deposition, or an actual net loss of wall material can even take place. Auxin appears to induce a breakdown in the walls of segments treated in the absence of glucose, although it promotes synthesis when glucose is present. It is likely that IAA always induces a breakdown of wall material, but that the breakdown is masked when substrate is available for synthesis. Our results indicate that pea epidermal cells have two different auxin-stimulated mechanisms, wall synthesis and wall breakdown, potentially available to loosen their outer epidermal walls to bring about cell enlargement, alternatives which could be employed to different extents depending on substrate conditions.Abbreviation IAA indole-3-acetic acid M.S. Bret-Harte would like to thank Drs. Peter M. Ray, Stanford University, Winslow R. Briggs, Carnegie Institute of Washington, Stanford, Calif. USA, and Wendy K. Silk, of the University of California Davis USA, for helpful discussions, Dr. Briggs and the Carnegie Institute of Washington for the use of experimental facilities, and Dr. Ray for editorial assistance. This work was supported by a National Science Foundation Graduate Fellowship to M.S.B.-H., a National Science Foundation Postdoctoral Fellowship to T.I.B., and National Science Foundation grant DCB8801493 to P.B.G.  相似文献   

3.
The function of the epidermis in auxinmediated elongation growth of maize (Zea mays L.) coleoptile segments was investigated. The following results were obtained: i) In the intact organ, there is a strong tissue tension produced by the expanding force of the inner tissues which is balanced by the contracting force of the outer epidermal wall. The compression imposed by the stretched outer epidermal wall upon the inner tissues gives rise to a wall-pressure difference which can be transformed into a water-potential difference between inner tissues and external medium (water) by removal of the outer epidermal wall. ii) Peeled segments fail to respond to auxin with normal growth. The plastic extensibility of the inner-tissue cell walls (measured with a constant-load extensiometer using living segments) is not influenced by auxin (or abscisic acid) in peeled or nonpeeled segments. It is concluded that auxin induces (and abscisic acid inhibits) elongation of the intact segment by increasing (decreasing) the extensibility specifically in the outer epidermal wall. In addition, tissue tension (and therewith the pressure acting on the outer epidermal wall) is maintained at a constant level over several hours of auxin-mediated growth, indicating that the inner cells also contribute actively to organ elongation. However, this contribution does not involve an increase of cell-wall extensibility, but a continuous shifting of the potential extension threshold (i.e., the length to which the inner tissues would extend by water uptake after peeling) ahead of the actual segment length. Thus, steady growth involves the coordinated action of wall loosening in the epidermis and regeneration of tissue tension by the inner tissues. iii) Electron micrographs show the accumulation of striking osmiophilic material (particles of approx. 0.3 m diameter) specifically at the plasma membrane/cell-wall interface of the outer epidermal wall of auxin-treated segments. iv) Peeled segments fail to respond to auxin with proton excretion. This is in contrast to fusicoccin-induced proton excretion and growth which can also be readily demonstrated in the absence of the epidermis. However, peeled and nonpeeled segments show the same sensitivity to protons with regard to the induction of acid-mediated in-vivo elongation and cell-wall extensibility. The observed threshold at pH 4.5–5.0 is too low to be compatible with a second messenger function of protons also in the growth response of the inner tissues. Organ growth is described in terms of a physical model which takes into account tissue tension and extensibility of the outer epidermal wall as the decisive growth parameters. This model states that the wall pressure increment, produced by tissue tension in the outer epidermal wall, rather than the pressure acting on the inner-tissue walls, is the driving force of growth.Abbreviations and symbols E el, E pl elastic and plastic in-vitro cell-wall extensibility, respectively - E tot E el+E pl - FC fusicoccin - IAA indole-3-acetic acid - IT inner tissue - ITW inner-tissue walls - OEW outer epidermal wall - osmotic pressure - P wall pressure - water potential  相似文献   

4.
P. Schopfer 《Planta》1991,183(1):139-142
Artificial carbohydrate antigen (Yariv reagent), fluorescence-labeled -l-fucose-binding lectin, and -D-galactose-binding lectin were used to localize arabinogalactan protein in sections of maize (Zea mays L.) coleoptiles. All three probes bind to cell walls of vascular tissue and the outer epidermis. Intense staining is obtained at the outer and inner faces of the growth-controlling outer epidermal wall. At the inner face of this wall the auxin-inducible osmiophilic particles, hitherto observed only by electron microscope (Kutschera et al. 1987, Planta 170, 168–180), are strongly stained by all three probes and can therefore be identified as deposits of arabinogalactan protein. It is proposed that this proteoglycan acts as an epidermal wallloosening factor in auxin-mediated coleoptile growth.Abbreviation AGP arabinogalactan protein I thank Dr. R. Bergfeld for the electron micrograph of Fig. 13. This work was supported by the Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft.  相似文献   

5.
In axial organs of juvenile plants, the phytohormone auxin (indole-3-acetic acid, IAA) rapidly mediates cell wall loosening and hence promotes turgor-driven elongation. In this study, we used rye (Secale cereale) coleoptile sections to investigate possible effects of IAA on the proteome of the cells. In a first set of experiments, we document that IAA causes organ elongation via promotion of expansion of the rigid outer wall of the outer epidermis. A quantitative comparison of the proteome (membrane-associated proteins), using two-dimensional difference gel electrophoresis (2-D DIGE), revealed that, within 2 h of auxin treatment, at least 16 protein spots were up- or down-regulated by IAA. These proteins were identified using reverse-phase liquid chromatography electrospray tandem mass spectrometry. Four of these proteins were detected in the growth-controlling outer epidermis and were further analysed. One epidermal polypeptide, a small Ras-related GTP-binding protein, was rapidly down-regulated by IAA (after 0.5 h of incubation) by -35% compared to the control. Concomitantly, a subunit of the 26S proteasome was up-regulated by IAA (+30% within 1 h). In addition, this protein displayed IAA-mediated post-translational modification. The implications of these rapid auxin effects with respect to signal transduction and IAA-mediated secretion of glycoproteins (osmiophilic nano-particles) into the growth-controlling outer epidermal wall are discussed.  相似文献   

6.
Auxin-mediated elongation growth of isolated subapical coleoptile segments of maize (Zea mays L.) is controlled by the extensibility of the outer cell wall of the outer epidermis (Kutschera et al., 1987). Here we investigate the hypothesis that auxin controls the extensibility of this wall by changing the orientation of newly deposited microfibrils through a corresponding change in the orientation of cortical microtubules. On the basis of electron micrographs it is shown that cessation of growth after removal of the endogenous source of auxin is correlated with a relative increase of longitudinally orientated microfibrils and microtubules at the inner wall surface. Conversely, reinduction of growth by exogenous auxin is correlated with a relative increase of transversely orientated microfibrils and microtubules at the inner wall surface. These changes can be detected 30–60 min after the removal and addition of auxin, respectively. The functional significance of directional changes of newly desposited wall microfibrils for the control of elongation growth is discussed.  相似文献   

7.
Edelmann HG  Sievers A 《Planta》1995,196(2):396-399
In various studies, auxin (IAA)-induced coleoptile growth has been reported to be closely correlated with an increased occurrence of osmiophilic particles (OPs) at the inner surface of the outer, growth-limiting epidermal cell wall, indicating a possible function related to the mechanism of IAA-induced wall loosening. In order to test whether changes in cell elongation rates of upper and lower flanks (UFs, LFs, respectively) during graviresponsive growth are reflected in appropriate changes in the occurrence of OPs, rye (Secale cereale L.) coleoptiles either as segments or as part of intact seedlings, were gravitropically stimulated by positioning them horizontally for 2 h. Ultrastructural analyses within the UFs and LFs of the upward-bending coleoptiles revealed a distinct imbalance in the occurrence of OPs. The number of OPs per transverse epidermal cell section of the elongation-inhibited UF on average amounted to twice the number of OPs counted in epidermal cell sections of the faster-growing LF. As a hypothesis, the results lead us to suggest that OPs are involved in the mechanism of wall loosening and that temporary growth inhibition of epidermal cells of the UF during upward bending is mediated by inhibition of OP entry into the cell walls. Thereby, more OPs accumulate near the inner surface of the outer wall of epidermal cells of the UF compared with the LF.  相似文献   

8.
Cell-wall acidification and electrical reactions (depolarization and hyperpolarization) are typical auxin responses in maize (Zea mays L.) coleoptiles. In an attempt to test the role of the outer epidermis in these responses, they have been measured and compared in intact and peeled coleoptile fragments. To exclude interactions between parenchymal and epidermal cells, the coleoptile pieces were completely stripped of their outer epidermis. This preparation was monitored by means of a scanning electron microscope. When externally applied indole-3-acetic acid was tested, we found that neither cell-wall acidification nor the electrical membrane responses depended on the presence of intact epidermal cells.Abbreviations IAA Indole-3-acetic acid - MES 2-[N morpholino-ethane-sulfonic acid - TRIS 2-Amino-2-hydroxymethyl-1,3-propanediol We thank Kuki Kaethner for her excellent technical assistance. This work was supported by the Hessische Graduiertenförderung and the Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft.  相似文献   

9.
Auxin-induced elongation of epicotyl segments of azuki bean ( Vigna angularis Ohwi et Ohashi cv. Takara) was suppressed by a fucose-binding lectin from Tetragonolobus purpureas Moench and by polyclonal antibodies raised against xyloglucan heptasaccharide (Xyl3Glc4) when the cuticle present in the outer surface of epicotyls was abraded. In contrast, elongation of non-abraded segments was not influenced by the lectin or the antibodies. Epicotyl segments, from which the epidermal and the outer cortical cells had been removed, elongated rapidly for 2 h and than only slowly. Auxin slightly stimulated elongation of the inner tissue segments in the phase of slow growth. Neither in the presence nor in the absence of auxin did the lectin or the antibodies affect elongation of the inner tissue segments. The split portions of outer surface-abraded epicotyl segments incubated in buffer extended outward, and auxininhibited this outward bending. The lectin and the antibodies reversed the effect of auxin on bending. The fucose-binding lectin pretreated with fucose or the immunoglobulin fraction obtained from preimmune serum exhibited little or no inhibitory effect on auxin-induced elongation of abraded or split segments. These results support the view that a breakdown of xyloglucans in the epidermal cell walls plays an essential role in auxin-induced elongation in dicotyledons.  相似文献   

10.
In a previous study (Nick and Schäfer 1991, Planta 185, 415–424), unilateral blue light had been shown, in maize coleoptiles, to induce phototropism and a stable transverse polarity, which became detectable as stable curvature if counteracting gravitropic stimulation was removed by rotation on a horizontal clinostat. This response was accompanied by a reorientation of cortical microtubules in the outer epidermis (Nick et al. 1990, Planta 181, 162–168). In the present study, this stable transverse polarity is shown to be correlated with stability of microtubule orientation against blue light and changes of auxin content. The role of auxin in this stabilisation was assessed. Although auxin can induce reorientation of microtubules it fails to induce the stabilisation of microtubule orientation induced by blue light. This was even true for gradients of auxin able to induce a bending response similar to that ellicited by phototropic stimulation. Experiments involving partial irradiation demonstrated different perception sites for phototropism and polarity induction. Phototropism starts from the very coleoptile tip and involves transmission of a signal (auxin) towards the subapical elongation zone. In contrast, polarity induction requires local action of blue light in the elongation zone itself. This blue-light response is independent of auxin.This work was supported by the Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft and two grants of the Studienstiftung des Deutschen Volkes and the Human Frontier Science Program Organization to P.N.  相似文献   

11.
The peripheral cell wall(s) of stems and coleoptiles are 6 to 20 times thicker than the walls of the inner tissues. In coleoptiles, the outer wall of the outer epidermis shows a multilayered, helicoidal cellulose architecture, whereas the walls of the parenchyma and the outer wall of the inner epidermis are unilayered. In hypocotyls and epicotyls both the epidermal and some subepidermal walls are multilayered, helicoidal structures. The walls of the internal tissues (inner cortex, pith) are unilayered, with cellulose microfibrils oriented primarily transversely. Peeled inner tissues rapidly extend in water, whereas the outer cell layer(s) contract on isolation. This indicates that the peripheral walls limit elongation of the intact organ. Experiments with the pressure microprobe indicate that the entire organ can be viewed as a giant, turgid cell: the extensible inner tissues exert a pressure (turgor) on the peripheral wall(s), which bear the longitudinal wall stress of the epidermal and internal cells. Numerous studies have shown that auxin induces elongation of isolated, intact sections by loosening of the growth-limiting peripheral cell wall(s). Likewise, the effect of light on reduction of stem elongation and cell wall extensibility in etiolated seedlings is restricted to the peripheral cell layers of the organ. The extensible inner tissues provide the driving force (turgor pressure), whereas the rigid peripheral wall(s) limit, and hence control, the rate of organ elongation.  相似文献   

12.
Leaves of Passerina are inversely ericoid. Adaxial epidermal cells are relatively small; abaxial ones are large and tanniniferous. Mucilaginous epidermal cells are usually present in many Thymelaeaceae, including Passerina , mainly in the abaxial epidermis. They are unequally divided by a periclinal wall-like septum into two separate compartments: (1) the outer, adjacent to the cuticle, containing mostly tanniniferous substances and (2) the inner, containing mucilage. This type of epidermis has often been incorrecdy described as uni-, bi- or multiseriate. Transmission electron microscopy revealed mucilage, characterized by microfibrils, embedded between die innermost wall-like septum and outermost layers of the inner periclinal cell wall. As accumulation of mucilage increases, the innermost (adjacent to the cell contents) layer of the original periclinal cell wall is pressed against the cytoplasm, thus forming a clearly demarcated cellulose periclinal wall which divides the epidermis cell into two compartments, the inner wiuh mucilage and the outer comprising the cell lumen. Existing controversy is critically discussed. Our observations confirm the authenticity of mucilagination in epidermal cell walls.  相似文献   

13.
Segments of the 4th and 5th internodes of light-grown pea seedlings were used for the study of control of stem elongation. With 5th internodes, at low turgor as well as at water saturation auxin primarily appeared to cause a change in cell wall properties of the epidermis but it showed little effect on expansion af the inner tissue. This was confirmed by comparison of expansion between peeled and unpeeled segments, split tests and by measurements of stress-relaxation properties of the epidermal cell wall. Segments with the central part re-moved elongated well in response to auxin, but the isolated epidermis showed neither auxin-induced elongation nor cell wall loosening. A fungal β-1,3-glucanase appeared, at least partly, to have a similar effect as that of auxin on elongation, by changing cell wall properties of the epidermal cell wall. Peeled segments of 4th internodes expanded very little and auxin had little effect on their epidermal cell wall properties.  相似文献   

14.
Neelima Sinha  Margaret Lynch 《Planta》1998,206(2):184-195
In the absence of wounding, the epidermis is only rarely involved in cell or organ fusion events; in fact, intact epidermal layers prevent graft unions. In Zea mays L. the mutation adherent1 (ad1) shows abnormal fusions between cells and organs. Fusions involve epidermal cells of vegetative and floral organs and occur early in the ontogeny of organs. Even so, epidermal cell types differentiate normally in the fused regions and internal tissue identities are maintained. In contrast, the extracellular matrix (cell wall and cuticle) of the epidermal cells is perturbed. Epidermal cell walls in adherent leaves are thicker than normal. Epicuticular wax particles appear reduced in size and number and altered in shape in mutant leaves. In addition, the outer epidermal cell walls of adherent leaves fluoresce when stained with aniline blue, a reagent that binds to callose. Immunolocalizations to specific cell wall epitopes suggest that pectins but not arabinogalactans may have a role in the fusion events. Taken together, these results suggest that the ad1 mutation results in cell-wall and epicuticular-wax defects similar to responses seen in wounding, pollination by incompatible pollen, or pathogen attack. Since cell wall components and epicuticular waxes are extracellular secreted products, the ad1 mutation may disrupt normal functioning and/or composition of the secretory pathway and its cargo. Received: 30 January 1998 / Accepted: 5 March 1998  相似文献   

15.
Robert E. Cleland 《Planta》1991,186(1):75-80
A controversy exists as to whether or not the outer epidermis in coleoptiles is a unique target for auxin in elongation growth. The following evidence indicates that the outer epidermis is not the only auxin-responsive cell layer in either Avena sativa L. or Zea mays L. coleoptiles. Coleoptile sections from which the epidermis has been removed by peeling elongate in response to auxin. The magnitude of the response is similar to that of intact sections provided the incubation solution contains both auxin and sucrose. The amount of elongation is independent of the amount of epidermis removed. Sections of oat coleoptiles from which the epidermis has been removed from one side are nearly straight after 22 h in auxin and sucrose, despite extensive growth of the sections. These data indicate that the outer epidermis is not a unique target for auxin in elongation growth, at least in Avena and maize coleoptiles.Abbreviations IAA indole-3-acetic acid - PCIB p-chlorophenoxyiso-butyric This research was supported by grants from the National Aeronautics and Space Administration and from the U.S. Department of Energy. The help of S. Ann Dreyer is gratefully acknowledged.  相似文献   

16.
中国凤仙花科植物叶表皮特征及其分类学意义   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
利用光学显微镜观察凤仙花科106份样本材料、36种代表植物的叶表皮微形态特征。结果表明:该科植物叶表皮微形态特征种内稳定,对于种间及属间关系的界定具有重要的分类学价值。上表皮细胞的形状及垂周壁的式样种间差异明显,各分类群间有明显的界限,是种间界定的重要依据,因此上表皮微形态特征具有重要的的分类学价值,基于上表皮的微形态特征将研究的36种代表植物划分为5个类型。下表皮的微形态特征虽更为多样,种间差异显著,可用于种间界定,但对于属下划分难以提供有价值的性状。该科植物叶表皮微形态特征与宏观形态特征的相关性较弱,与地理分布格局的相关性较强,关系更为密切。同一地理分布区域内的种类宏观形态特征虽然差别明显,但叶表皮微形态特征却表现出较强的一致性,这似乎也反映了叶表皮微形态这一性状受环境饰变的影响比较明显。综上所述,叶表皮微形态特征可为凤仙花科的系统发育,尤其是凤仙花属种间界定提供有价值的分类学佐证  相似文献   

17.
H. Edelmann  R. Bergfeld  P. Schonfer 《Planta》1989,179(4):486-494
The involvement of cell-wall polymer synthesis in auxin-mediated elongation of coleoptile segments from Zea mays L. was investigated with particular regard to the growth-limiting outer epidermis. There was no effect of indole acetic acid (IAA) on the incorporation of labeled glucose into the major polysaccharide wall fractions (cellulose, hemicellulose) within the first 2 h of IAA-induced growth. 2,6-Dichlorobenzonitrile inhibited cellulose synthesis strongly but had no effect on IAA-induced segment elongation even after a pretreatment period of 24 h, indicating that the growth response is independent of the apposition of new cellulose microfibrils at the epidermal cell wall. The incorporation of labeled leucine into total and cell-wall protein of the epidermis was promoted by IAA during the first 30 min of IAA-induced growth. Inhibition of IAA-induced growth by protein and RNA-synthesis inhibitors (cycloheximide, cordycepin) was accompanied by an inhibition of leucine incorporation into the epidermal cell wall during the first 30 min of induced growth but had no effect on the concomitant incorporation of monosaccharide precursors into the cellulose or hemicellulose fractions of this wall. It is concluded that at least one of the epidermal cell-wall proteins fulfills the criteria for a growth-limiting protein induced by IAA at the onset of the growth response. In contrast, the synthesis of the polysaccharide wall fractions cellulose and hemicellulose, as well as their transport and integration into the growing epidermal wall, appears to be independent of growth-limiting protein and these processes are therefore no part of the mechanism of growth control by IAA.Abbreviations CHI cycloheximide - COR cordycepin - DCB 2,6-dichlorobenzonitrile - GLP growth-limiting protein(s) - IAA indole-3-acetic acid  相似文献   

18.
In some plants, particularly herbaceous species, a considerable proportion of incident ultraviolet-B radiation (UV-B, 280-320 nm) penetrates into the leaf mesophyll where it is potentially damaging to nucleic acids and the photosyn-thetic machinery. We used optical techniques to look at the spatial variation in UV-B penetration through the epidermis of foliage of two herbaceous species (Chenopodium album and Smilacina stellata)and a conifer (Picea pun-gens). Measurements of UV-B penetration in intact foliage with a fibre-optic microprobe revealed that 300 nm radiation reached 161±36μm (mean±SD) into leaves of C. album, 154±40μm in S. stellata and 17±2μm in P. pungens, with epidermal transmittance being 39±14%, 55±19% and 0%, respectively. A thin polymer film was developed which fluoresced blue when irradiated by UV-B. Fresh epidermal leaf peels were placed over the film and irradiated with UV-B, and microscopic examination of the film from below allowed us to determine the spatial pattern of UV-B penetration through the epidermis. In herbaceous species, film fluorescence below cell walls, but not epidermal and guard cell protoplasts indicated that UV-B transmittance was much greater through anticlinal cell wall regions than protoplasts. Ultraviolet-B transmittance through large areas of epidermal cells could be induced by plasmolysis. Epidermal transmittance was also relatively high through stomal pores (and what appear to be nuclei in Smilacina), but relatively low through stomatal guard cells. Results from the fluorescing film technique were substantiated by direct measurements of UV-B transmittance through epidermal peels with a fibre-optic microprobe run paradermally along the bottom or inner side of irradiated peels. In Smilacina, we estimate that UV-B epidermal transmittance was up to 90% through anticlinal cell wall regions, but <10% through protoplast areas. In contrast to herbaceous species, we did not detect any UV-B transmittance through the epidermis of P. pungens with either the fluorescing film or the fibre-optic microprobe technique. The epidermis appears to be a much more spatially uniform UV-B filter in conifers than in these herbaceous species.  相似文献   

19.
Previous research has suggested that the epidermis of dicotyledonous stems is the primary site of auxin action in elongation growth. We show for pea (Pisum sativum L.) epicotyl sections that this hypothesis is incorrect. In buffer (pH 6.5), sections from which the outer cell layers were removed (peeled) elongated slowly and to the same extent as intact sections. Addition of 10 micromolar indoleacetic acid to this incubation medium caused peeled sections to grow to the same extent and with the same kinetics as auxin-treated nonpeeled sections. This indicates that both epidermis and cortical tissues have the ability to respond rapidly to auxin and that the epidermis is not the sole site of auxin action in dicotyledonous stems. Previous reports that peeled pea sections respond poorly to auxin may have resulted from an acid extension of these sections due to the use of distilled water as the incubation medium.  相似文献   

20.
We have earlier published observations showing that endogenous alterations in growth rate during gravitropism in maize roots (Zea mays L.) are unaffected by the orientation of cuts which remove epidermal and cortical tissue in the growing zone (Björkman and Cleland, 1988, Planta 176, 513–518). We concluded that the epidermis and cortex are not essential for transporting a growth-regulating signal in gravitropism or straight growth, nor for regulating the rate of tissue expansion. This conclusion has been challenged by Yang et al. (1990, Planta 180, 530–536), who contend that a shallow girdle around the entire perimeter of the root blocks gravitropic curvature and that this inhibition is the result of a requirement for epidermal cells to transport the growth-regulating signal. In this paper we demonstrate that the entire epidermis can be removed without blocking gravitropic curvature and show that the position of narrow girdles does not affect the location of curvature. We therefore conclude that the epidermis is not required for transport of a growth-regulating substance from the root cap to the growing zone, nor does it regulate the growth rate of the elongating zone of roots.  相似文献   

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