In:
American Journal of Botany, Wiley, Vol. 83, No. 11 ( 1996-11), p. 1391-1405
Abstract:
The C 4 grass Arundinella hirta is characterized by unusual leaf blade anatomy: veins are widely spaced and files of bundle‐sheath‐like cells, the distinctive cells, form longitudinal strands that are not associated with vascular tissue. While distinctive cells (DCs) appear to function like bundle sheath cells (BSCs), they differ developmentally in two ways: they are derived from ground meristem rather than procambium and they are formed 1–2 plastochrons later. This study describes ultrastructural features of differentiating of BSCs, DCs, and associated mesophyll cells (MCs) during leaf development. BSCs and DCs differ from adjacent MCs by undergoing earlier cell enlargement, greater rates of chloroplast enlargement, reduction of chloroplast thylakoids at late stages of differentiation, more extensive starch formation, greater wall thickening, and deposition of a suberin lamella. The precocious delimitation of the bundle sheath layer is reflected in earlier BSC enlargement and vacuole growth. Derivation of DCs from ground meristem is correlated with late developmental changes in chloroplast size, wall thickness, and plasmodesmatal density. Despite these differences in timing of events, particularly at early stages, the development of the specialized structural features of BSCs and DCs is essentially similar. Thus, proximity to vascular tissue appears to be nonessential for the coordination and regulation of BSC‐ and MC‐specific developmental events.
Type of Medium:
Online Resource
ISSN:
0002-9122
,
1537-2197
DOI:
10.1002/ajb2.1996.83.issue-11
DOI:
10.1002/j.1537-2197.1996.tb13933.x
Language:
English
Publisher:
Wiley
Publication Date:
1996
detail.hit.zdb_id:
2053581-8
SSG:
12
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