The epidermal surface of the maize root tip
- 1 October 1993
- journal article
- Published by Wiley in New Phytologist
- Vol. 125 (2) , 413-429
- https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1469-8137.1993.tb03894.x
Abstract
The surface of the meristematic epidermis of maize roots is tri‐partite. A helicoidal primary wall follows the contours of the tops of the columnar epidermal cells and is continuous with their buttressed anticlinal walls. Two overlying layers form a smooth covering over the root which obscures the cell outlines. This compound surface is similar architecturally to outer epidermal surfaces of shoots. The two outer layers are distinct structurally and in their staining properties from the wall and are together here referred to as the pellicle. Both pellicle layers are fibrillar but not helicoidal. Their development begins in the boundary between the cap and the root proper and they reach maximum thickness over the meristematic region. The outer layer then disintegrates and is absent from the elongation zone. The inner layer thins irregularly as the columnar cells elongate to their final tabular form and usually persists only over the groove above anticlinal walls and at the base of root hairs. The cell wall thins to about half its maximum thickness during this elongation. Emerging root hairs broach the pellicle and the original primary wall. Remnants of both these layers form a short, tight collar at the base of each hair; this collar adheres to the primary wall of the hair which is continuous with a new, thin wall which is formed interior to the original outer wall of the parent cell. Failure to recognize the complex structure and transitory nature of the epidermal pellicle has led to confusion in the literature regarding the nature of root‐surface and rhizosphere mucilaginous components and their origin. These interpretations are compared with those arising from this study.Keywords
This publication has 31 references indexed in Scilit:
- Transmural exocytosis in maize root capProtoplasma, 1991
- Cell surface inCalluna vulgaris L. hair rootsProtoplasma, 1990
- Cell plate development and delayed formation of the pectic middle lamella in root meristemsProtoplasma, 1988
- Ultrastructural study of the maize epidermal root surface. I. Preservation and extent of the mucilage layerProtoplasma, 1986
- Cell division and regeneration in primary root meristems of Zea mays recovering from cold treatmentEnvironmental and Experimental Botany, 1985
- Adhesion of fungal zoospores to root surfaces is mediated by carbohydrate determinants of the root slimePhysiological Plant Pathology, 1980
- A developmental study of the epidermis of young roots ofZea mays L.Protoplasma, 1979
- The aggregation of wheat rhizoplane fibrils and the accumulation of soil-bound cationsCanadian Journal of Botany, 1975
- Note on an unusual structure in the outer epidermal wall of the Avena coleoptileProtoplasma, 1965
- THE ROOTS OF SOME NORTH APRICAN DESERT‐GRASSES.New Phytologist, 1911