scholarly journals Meristematic activity of the Endodermis and the Pericycle in the primary thickening in monocotyledons: considerations on the "PTM"

2005 ◽  
Vol 77 (2) ◽  
pp. 259-274 ◽  
Author(s):  
Nanuza L. de Menezes ◽  
Delmira C. Silva ◽  
Rosani C.O. Arruda ◽  
Gladys F. Melo-de-Pinna ◽  
Vanessa A. Cardoso ◽  
...  

This paper proposes a new interpretation for primary thickening in monocotyledons. The anatomy of the vegetative organs of the following species was examined: Cephalostemon riedelianus (Rapataceae), Cyperus papyrus (Cyperaceae), Lagenocarpus rigidus, L. junciformis (Cyperaceae), Echinodorus paniculatus (Alismataceae) and Zingiber officinale (Zingiberaceae). The endodermis with meristematic activity was observed in the root of all the species, in the stem of Cyperus, Cephalostemum and Lagenocarpus rigidus, and in the leaf trace of Cyperus and leaf of Echinodorus. Considering the continuity of tissues through the root, stem and leaf, the authors conclude that in the stem the pericycle remains active throughout the life of the plant as the generator of the vascular tissue. The "Primary Thickening Meristem" is in fact the pericycle plus the endodermis and its derivatives (or only the pericycle). Close to the stem apex, the assemblage of seems to be a unique meristem, giving rise to the inner cortex and vascular tissues.

2007 ◽  
Vol 65 (5) ◽  
pp. 603-614 ◽  
Author(s):  
Rejane L. Freitas ◽  
Claudine M. Carvalho ◽  
Luciano G. Fietto ◽  
Marcelo E. Loureiro ◽  
Andrea M. Almeida ◽  
...  

Plant Disease ◽  
2014 ◽  
Vol 98 (9) ◽  
pp. 1281-1281 ◽  
Author(s):  
I. Malbrán ◽  
C. A. Mourelos ◽  
M. S. Mitidieri ◽  
B. L. Ronco ◽  
G. A. Lori

The green belt area surrounding the city of La Plata, Argentina, produces more than 70% (around 280 ha) of the lettuce (Lactuca sativa L.) cultivated under greenhouse for fresh consumption in the country. In February 2011, April 2012, and December 2013, butterhead lettuce plants from cv. Lores showing wilt and stunted growth symptoms, red-to-brown discoloration of vascular tissues, and yellow leaves were found in greenhouses in La Plata. Sections of tap root, crown and stem from symptomatic plants showing dark-brown streaking of the vascular tissue were surface sterilized and isolations were made. A total of 21 monosporic isolates obtained from different lettuce production fields were identified as Fusarium oxysporum Schltdl. based on morphological characteristics (2). Vegetative compatibility group (VCG) analysis (1) was conducted on 11 of these isolates and all isolates belonged to the same VCG. To fulfil Koch's postulates, two pathogenicity tests were conducted with these 11 isolates in winter (July 2012) and summer (December 2013). Healthy 20-day-old butterhead lettuce seedlings of two cultivars (Reina de Mayo and Lores in the winter and summer tests, respectively) were inoculated by dipping the roots of each plant in a spore suspension (~3 × 105 CFU ml−1), planted in 1-liter pots containing autoclaved soil and grown in a greenhouse with only natural daylight. Control treatments were prepared by dipping the seedling roots in sterilized distilled water. All inoculated plants showed wilt symptoms 15 to 20 days after inoculation (dai) and 45 to 50 dai in the summer and winter pathogenicity tests, respectively. The delay in the appearance of symptoms observed during the winter test is consistent with the effect of planting date on the development and final incidence of Fusarium wilt of lettuce reported by Matheron et al. (3). No symptoms were observed in control treatments. F. oxysporum was re-isolated from vascular tissues of the stems of symptomatic plants and the formae speciales lactucae J.C. Hubb. & Gerik was confirmed by PCR using the specific primer pair GYCF1 and R943 (4). The identification of only one VCG for the tested isolates agrees with the hypothesis of seed transmission of the pathogen, which might explain the dissemination of Fusarium wilt of lettuce in geographically distant areas (2). Studies are being carried out to determine the race of these Argentinian isolates of F. oxysporum f. sp. lactucae. To our knowledge, this is the first report of F. oxysporum f. sp. lactucae infecting lettuce in Argentina. References: (1) J. C. Correll et al. Phytopathology 77:1640, 1987. (2) J. F. Leslie and B. A. Summerell. The Fusarium Laboratory Manual. Blackwell Publishing, Ames, IA, 2006. (3) M. E. Matheron et al. Plant Dis. 89:565, 2005. (4) G. C. Y. Mbofung and B. M. Pryor. Plant Dis. 94:860, 2010.


Author(s):  
Xiao Lu ◽  
Ling Han ◽  
Xiaomei Guo ◽  
Mengjun Wang ◽  
Sam Baradarian ◽  
...  

ObjectiveWe evaluated swine and bovine pulmonary visceral pleura (PVP) in artery patch-angioplasty in swine model of high-fat diet.BackgroundArterial patch-angioplasty is frequently used for repair or reconstruction of arteries. An autologous patch is often limited by the number and dimension of donor tissue and can result in donor complications. Furthermore, mechanical mismatch is a cause of poor performance of vascular reconstruction. Here, we introduce a readily available patch biomaterial with similar compliance as native arteries.MethodsThe PVP was peeled from swine and bovine lungs by hydro-dissection. The swine and bovine PVPs were crosslinked with glutaraldehyde and then sterilized. The swine PVP (sPVP) patches were implanted in the carotid and femoral arteries of six Yorkshire pigs that were fed a regular diet and euthanized at 2 and 4 months postoperative. The bovine PVP (bPVP) patches were implanted in the carotid artery of six Yucatan pigs that were fed a high-fat diet and euthanized at 4 months postoperative. Patency was evaluated by ultrasound and angiography. Neo-endothelium and media were evaluated by histologic examination.ResultsAll arteries in patch-angioplasties remained patent with no adhesions, inflammation, or aneurysms. Biomarkers of endothelial cells (e.g., Factor VIII and eNOS) were detected in the neo-endothelial cells. We observed endothelial cell–cell junctions in the confluent neo-endothelium in the PVP patches. Neo-media composed of vascular smooth muscle developed similar as native arteries. In the hypercholesterolemic model, we observed the accumulation of cholesterol in both arterial tissues and in the neo-vascular tissues in the PVP patches. Protein expressions of lipid transport and metabolism (e.g., APOE-1, ABCA, and PACK9) were also observed in both arterial and neo-vascular tissues.ConclusionThe PVP patch-angioplasty overcomes the pitfalls of compliance mismatch of synthetic patches and has a non-thrombogenic surface. The proliferation of vascular cells assembled to generate the neo-endothelium and media in the patch-angioplasties to support long-term patency. The neo-vascular tissue in PVP patch-angioplasty also developed similar cellular functions for lipid transport and metabolism compared with native arteries in hypercholesterolemia.


2009 ◽  
Vol 52 (6) ◽  
pp. 1473-1483 ◽  
Author(s):  
Vera Fatima Gomes Alves Pereira Lima ◽  
Nanuza Luiza de Menezes

Aspects related to the nature of stem thickening in monocotyledons have been the subject of many studies. Primary thickening has been attributed to the Primary Thickening Meristem (PTM). According to most authors, it gives rise, besides the adventitious roots, to the vascular tissues and part of the cortex. In other words, it has centripetal and centrifugal activity. For some authors, however, it gives rise only to the vascular system, and for others, only to part of the cortex. However, this work demonstrated that PTM corresponds to the pericycle in the meristematic phase or to the pericycle associated with the endodermis, also with meristematic activity. It was observed that the pericycle was responsible for the formation of the vascular system of the rhizome and of the adventitious roots; the endodermis gave rise to cell layers with radial disposition which comprised the inner portion of the stem cortex, and which corresponded to the region known as the derivatives of the meristematic endodermis (DME). A continuity was also demonstrated between the tissues of the stem and root in species of Scleria Berg. (Cyperaceae).


1957 ◽  
Vol 35 (4) ◽  
pp. 463-475 ◽  
Author(s):  
Beatrice E. Murray

An ontogenetic study of adventitious stem formation on root segments of creeping-rooted alfalfa clones is presented. Unusual meristematic activity is evident first in the phellogen near a lateral rootlet. Continued activity in that region gives rise to a primordial dome from which adventitious stems eventually emerge. Concomitantly, in the subjacent phloem parenchyma cells dedifferentiation and subsequent redifferentiation into vascular tissues occurs. Thus a vascular system is formed which extends from the adventitious stems to the cambium region of the root and, in some instances, to the cambium of the lateral rootlet. Adventitious stems are initiated in secondary tissues of the root. Factors such as age of root, culture treatment, and inherent differences have an influence on adventitious stem initiation.


Author(s):  
Alexandru Tomescu

The stele concept is one of the oldest enduring concepts in plant biology. This paper reviews the concept and its foundations, and builds an argument for an updated view of steles and their evolution. The history of studies of stelar organization has generated a widely ranging array of definitions of the stele that determine the way we classify steles and construct scenarios about the evolution of stelar architecture. Because at the level of the organism biological evolution proceeds by, and is reflected in, changes in development, concepts of structure need to be grounded in development in order to be relevant in an evolutionary perspective. For the stele, most of the traditional definitions that incorporate development have viewed it as the totality of tissues that either originate from procambium – currently the prevailing view – or are bordered by a boundary layer (e.g., endodermis). A definition of the stele that would bring consensus between these perspectives recasts the stele as a structural entity of dual nature. Here, I review briefly the history of the stele concept, basic terminology related to stelar organization, and traditional classifications of the steles. I then revisit boundary layers from the perspective of histogenesis as a dynamic mosaic of developmental domains. I use classic and recent anatomical and molecular data to reaffirm and explore the importance of boundary layers for stelar organization. Drawing on data from comparative anatomy, developmental regulation, and the fossil record, I offer a model for a stele concept that integrates both the boundary layer and the procambial perspective, consistent with a dual nature of the stele. The dual stele model posits that stelar architecture is determined in the apical meristem by two major cell fate specification events: a first one that specifies a provascular domain and its boundaries, and a second event that specifies a procambial domain (which will mature into conducting tissues) from cell subpopulations of the provascular domain. If the position and extent of the developmental domains defined by the two events are determined by different concentrations of the same morphogen (most likely auxin), then the distribution of this organizer factor in the shoot apical meristem, as modulated by changes in axis size and the effect of lateral organs, can explain the different stelar configurations documented among tracheophytes. This model provides a set of working hypotheses that incorporate assumptions and generate implications that can be tested empirically. The model also offers criteria for an updated classification of steles that is in line with current understanding of plant development. In this classification, steles fall into two major categories determined by the configuration of boundary layers – boundary protosteles and boundary siphonosteles, each with subtypes defined by the architecture of the vascular tissues. Validation the dual stele model and, more generally, in-depth understanding of the regulation of stelar architecture, will necessitate targeted efforts in two areas: (i) the regulation of procambium, vascular tissue, and boundary layer specification in all extant vascular plants, considering that most of the diversity in stelar architecture is hosted by seed-free plants, which are the least explored in terms of developmental regulation; (ii) the configuration of vascular tissues and, especially, boundary layers, in as many extinct species and lineages as possible.


2019 ◽  
Author(s):  
Eva-Sophie Wallner ◽  
Virginie Jouannet ◽  
Thomas Greb

ABSTRACTAs a prerequisite for constant growth, plants can produce vascular tissues at different sites in their postembryonic body. In particular, the formation of vascular tissues during longitudinal and radial expansion of growth axes differs fundamentally with respect to its anatomical configuration. This raises the question to which level regulatory mechanisms of vascular tissue formation are shared throughout plant development. Here, we show that, similar as primary phloem formation during longitudinal growth, the cambium-based formation of secondary phloem depends on the function of SMXL genes. Using promoter reporter lines, we observe that SMXL4 and SMXL5 activities are associated with different stages of secondary phloem formation in Arabidopsis stems and the specific loss of SMXL5 function results in the absence of secondary phloem. Interestingly, the additional disruption of SMXL4 activity increases cell proliferation rates in the cambium region without that secondary phloem is formed. Based on genome-wide transcriptional profiling and expression analyses of phloem-related markers we conclude that early steps of phloem formation are impaired in smxl4;smxl5 double mutants and that additional cambium-derived cells fail in establishing any phloem-related feature. Our results show that molecular mechanisms determining primary and secondary phloem share important features but differ slightly with SMXL5 playing a more dominant role in the formation of secondary phloem.


2018 ◽  
Vol 140 (10) ◽  
Author(s):  
Nir Emuna ◽  
David Durban ◽  
Shmuel Osovski

Despite major advances made in modeling vascular tissue biomechanics, the predictive power of constitutive models is still limited by uncertainty of the input data. Specifically, key measurements, like the geometry of the stress-free (SF) state, involve a definite, sometimes non-negligible, degree of uncertainty. Here, we introduce a new approach for sensitivity analysis of vascular hyperelastic constitutive models to uncertainty in SF measurements. We have considered two vascular hyperelastic models: the phenomenological Fung model and the structure-motivated Holzapfel–Gasser–Ogden (HGO) model. Our results indicate up to 160% errors in the identified constitutive parameters for a 5% measurement uncertainty in the SF data. Relative margins of errors of up to 30% in the luminal pressure, 36% in the axial force, and over 200% in the stress predictions were recorded for 10% uncertainties. These findings are relevant to the large body of studies involving experimentally based modeling and analysis of vascular tissues. The impact of uncertainties on calibrated constitutive parameters is significant in context of studies that use constitutive parameters to draw conclusions about the underlying microstructure of vascular tissues, their growth and remodeling processes, and aging and disease states. The propagation of uncertainties into the predictions of biophysical parameters, e.g., force, luminal pressure, and wall stresses, is of practical importance in the design and execution of clinical devices and interventions. Furthermore, insights provided by the present findings may lead to more robust parameters identification techniques, and serve as selection criteria in the trade-off between model complexity and sensitivity.


1970 ◽  
Vol 23 (3) ◽  
pp. 709 ◽  
Author(s):  
TP O'brien ◽  
S Zee ◽  
JG Swift

Wooding and Northcote (1965), Gunning, Pate, and Briarty (1968), Gunning and Pate (1969), and Pate and Gunning (1969) have drawn attention recently to the presence of cells with wall ingrowths in a number of sites in plants at which one might expect short-distance transport of considerable quantities of solutes. Gunning and Pate (1969) suggested that these cells be called "transfer cells" and surveyed their distribution in the leaves of a large sample of Angiosperms. These cells have not been found in the leaves of any grasses, and they have been demonstrated in the Gramineae only in the embryo sac of maize (Diboll 1968). In this paper, transfer cells are illustrated in the vascular tissue at the coleoptilar node in wheat, and the possible functions of these cells at this site are discussed.


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