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The effect of caffeine,different fixation regimes and low temperature on microtubules in the cells of higher plants
Authors:B. E. Juniper  J. R. Lawton
Affiliation:(1) Botany School, South Parks Road, OX1 3RA Oxford;(2) The Grassland Research Institute, Hurley, SL6 5LR Maidenhead, Berkshire, U.K.;(3) Present address: Department of Botany, University of Durban-Westville, Durban, South Africa
Abstract:Caffeine, (1:3:7-tri-methyl-xanthine), either as a prefixation treatment or included with glutaralde-hyde as the primary fixative, destroys or disorganises the microtubules associated with the formation of secondary walls in fibres from the flowering stem of the grass Lolium temulentum L. There is no observable effect of caffeine treatment on the microtubules associated with primary wall formation in collenchyma and young fibres from L. temulentum or in root cap cells of Zea mays L. and Phaseolus vulgaris L. The microtubules associated with primary wall formation are destroyed by cold treatment but not those associated with secondary wall formation. Tannic acid included in the fixative shows the microtubules associated with secondary wall formation in fibres of L. temulentum to be composed of 13 subunits. Treatment with lanthanum hydroxide does not stain the core or the halo of the microtubules.Abbreviation PIPES Piperazine N-N- bis 2 ethanol sulphonic acidThe Grassland Research Institute is financed through the Agricultural Research Council
Keywords:Caffeine  Cold temperature  Lanthanum  Microtubules  Plant cells  Tannic acid
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