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The influence of sucrose, 2,4-D,and kinetin on the growth,fine structure,and lignin content of cultured sycamore cells
Authors:Marta Carceller  M R Davey  M W Fowler  H E Street
Institution:(1) Present address: Botanical Laboratories, University of Leicester, England;(2) Present address: Facultad de Agronomia y Veterinaria, Fisiologia Vegetal, University of Buenos Aires, Av. San Martin, 4453 Buenos Aires, Argentine;(3) Department of Botany, The University, Nottingham, England
Abstract:Summary When suspensions of sycamore cells are cultured in a synthetic medium containing 1.0 mg/l 2,4-D and 0.25 mg/l kinetin, maximum cell yield is obtained with an initial concentration of 6 per cent sucrose. There is a progressive increase in dry weight per cell, decline in extractive-free weight as a percentage of cell dry weight and increase in lignin content per cell as the initial sucrose concentration is increased from 1 per cent to 15 per cent. The percentage of lignin in the extractive-free cell residue is further enhanced by increasing the level of 2,4-D to 10 mg/l or by growing the cells in an auxin-free medium containing 10 mg/l kinetin.When the cell suspensions are treated with phloroglucinol/HCl it is found that only a proportion of the cells contain lignin, that this lignin occurs in the protoplasts and in plates between the cells, and that lignin is present in the culture medium.Electron micrographs confirmed the absence of any secondary wall such as is characteristic of tracheary elements. Cells cultured in the presence of 6 per cent sucrose or higher levels showed numerous amyloplasts and frequently the presence of electron opaque material. This occurs in the irregular but not frequent wall thickenings, as droplets in the vacuoles and as amorphous sheets between the cells. Pictures showing such electron opaque droplets clustered on the inner face of the tonoplasts suggest that this material is formed in the cytoplasm and released into the vacuoles. In addition these cells are characterised by the presence of fine electron opaque granular material in their vacuoles and external to their protoplasts. Cultures richest in lignin showed the highest content of electron opaque globules in, and amorphous sheets between, the cells and it is suggested that these correspond to lignin or a lignin-hemicellulose complex. In the presence of 15 per cent sucrose many cells showing breakdown of organised structure were observed; they were characterised by the persistence of mitochondria and particularly of the amyloplasts and by their high content of the electron opaque material equated with lignin. This material was also present in the dead cells.
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