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  • 1
    ISSN: 1432-2048
    Keywords: Bundle sheath ; Leaf (plasmodesmata) ; Mesophyll ; Plasmodesmatal frequency ; Srevetubes ; Themeda ; Vascular bundle
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Abstract Small and intermediate vascular bundles and contiguous tissues of the leaf blade ofThemeda triandra var.imberbis (Retz.) A. Camus were examined with transmission and scanning electron microscopes to determine the distribution and frequency of plasmodesmata between various cell types. Plasmodesmata are most abundant at the mesophyll/bundle-sheath cell and bundle-sheath/vascular parenchyma cell interfaces, and their numbers decrease with increasing proximity to both thick- and thin-walled sieve tubes. Among cells of the vascular bundles, the greatest frequency of plasmodesmata occurs between vascular parenchyma cells, followed by that of plasmodesmata between vascular parenchyma cells and companion cells, and then by the pore-plasmodesmata connections between companion cells and thin-walled sieve tubes (sieve tube-companion cell complexes). The sieve tube-companion cell complexes of theT. triandra leaf are not isolated symplastically from the rest of the leaf and, in this respect, differ from their counterparts in theZea mays leaf. However, the thick-walled sieve tubes, like their counterparts inZea mays, lack companion cells and are symplastically connected with vascular parenchyma cells that about the xylem.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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  • 2
    ISSN: 1615-6102
    Keywords: Apoplastic Barrier ; Bundle sheath ; Grass leaf anatomy ; Prussian blue ; Suberin lamella ; Themeda
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Summary Precipitation of ferrous ions by ferricyanide in transpiring leaves ofThemeda triandra Forsk. produced crystalline deposits, which were visible with the light and electron microscope. Prussian blue crystals were formed within the lumina of the tracheary elements and the apoplast, or cell wall continuum of the vascular tissues and bundle-sheath cells. Little if any deposition was noted within the lignified secondary thickenings of the tracheary elements. The localization pattern suggests that the ferrous ions moved from the lumina of the tracheary elements via the exposed primary walls. Prussian blue crystals were abundant in the outer tangential and radial walls of the bundle-sheath cells. By contrast, crystals were lacking in the walls of neighbouring mesophyll cells, suggesting that the suberin lamella in the bundle-sheath walls effectively inhibited the apoplastic movement of ferrous ions and possibly may impede, or restrict the movement of water across the bundle-sheath/mesophyll interface.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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