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Structure and cytochemistry of the procambium in Salix buds during dormancy and dormancy breaking
Authors:Britt Berggren
Affiliation:Dept of Botany, Univ. of Stockholm, S-106 91 Stockholm, Sweden.
Abstract:This report presents a combined investigation of ultrastructural and enzymatic changes in the procambium from late winter to early spring. In January the procambial cells of dormant Salix buds have a convoluted plasma membrane with many plasmalemmasomes, numerous lipid bodies, large stacks of rough ER and plastids surrounded by smooth ER profiles. Several small lysosomes show activity of ATPase and acid phosphatases. In addition ER, nuclear envelopes, dictyosomes, and thylakoids have ATPase activity, and ER and plasmalemma, and nuclei also show acid phosphatase activity. In February metabolism seems to increase as indicated by lysosomes with membranous formations, dilated ER, nuclear envelopes, spiny vesicles, and polysomes. ATPase activity occurs in plasmalemma and vacuoles, and acid phosphatases in the middle lamella region of walls, in plasmalemma, vacuoles, ER, and nuclei. At the end of March, when growth starts inside the buds, but before they break, the stacks of rough ER disappear, and the vacuoles coalesce. Most of the lipid bodies have disappeared and the plastids have accumulated starch. Cell division and differentiation of procambial cells to protophloem and protoxylem have started. The distribution of ATPase increases; activity is found in walls and plasmalemma, and only a few small vacuoles still have ATPase and acid phosphatase activity. Notable is the appearance of ATPase in mitochondrial cristae and nucleoli and the occurrence of rather high levels also in endomembranes and dictyosomes.
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