DYE-COUPLING IN THE ROOT EPIDERMIS OF ARABIDOPSIS IS PROGRESSIVELY REDUCED DURING DEVELOPMENT

Epidermal cells of the Arabidopsis thaliana root are derived from a ring of 16 or so initials (stem cells) that are located just below the quiescent centre of four central cells. Derivatives of these initials divide transversely in the meristematic region of the root to produce files of cells that s...

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Glavni autori: Duckett, C, Oparka, K, Prior, D, Dolan, L, Roberts, K
Format: Journal article
Izdano: 1994
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author Duckett, C
Oparka, K
Prior, D
Dolan, L
Roberts, K
author_facet Duckett, C
Oparka, K
Prior, D
Dolan, L
Roberts, K
author_sort Duckett, C
collection OXFORD
description Epidermal cells of the Arabidopsis thaliana root are derived from a ring of 16 or so initials (stem cells) that are located just below the quiescent centre of four central cells. Derivatives of these initials divide transversely in the meristematic region of the root to produce files of cells that subsequently elongate and differentiate. There are two kinds of cell file in the epidermis, hair cells and non-hair cells, that are organised in an ordered pattern and become distinguishable within a few divisions of the initials. It is likely that local intercellular communication plays an important role in the early establishment of this pattern, enabling cells to register their position and fate. We have therefore examined the extent to which cells in the root apex are symplastically coupled through plasmodesmata. Using a variety of dye loading methods we show that the undifferentiated cells are dye-coupled i.e. cells in the meristem and the elongation zone are symplastically connected, but that cells gradually become symplastically isolated as the cells differentiate. By the time that visible hair outgrowth is observed the cells of the epidermis are symplastically isolated. This resembles the pattern of gap-junction connectivity observed in many animal systems where cells are coupled at the stage that cell patterns become established, but become progressively more isolated as they differentiate.
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spelling oxford-uuid:f8b6f051-72e0-4478-98be-0fb2b718a3c12022-03-27T12:52:27ZDYE-COUPLING IN THE ROOT EPIDERMIS OF ARABIDOPSIS IS PROGRESSIVELY REDUCED DURING DEVELOPMENTJournal articlehttp://purl.org/coar/resource_type/c_dcae04bcuuid:f8b6f051-72e0-4478-98be-0fb2b718a3c1Symplectic Elements at Oxford1994Duckett, COparka, KPrior, DDolan, LRoberts, KEpidermal cells of the Arabidopsis thaliana root are derived from a ring of 16 or so initials (stem cells) that are located just below the quiescent centre of four central cells. Derivatives of these initials divide transversely in the meristematic region of the root to produce files of cells that subsequently elongate and differentiate. There are two kinds of cell file in the epidermis, hair cells and non-hair cells, that are organised in an ordered pattern and become distinguishable within a few divisions of the initials. It is likely that local intercellular communication plays an important role in the early establishment of this pattern, enabling cells to register their position and fate. We have therefore examined the extent to which cells in the root apex are symplastically coupled through plasmodesmata. Using a variety of dye loading methods we show that the undifferentiated cells are dye-coupled i.e. cells in the meristem and the elongation zone are symplastically connected, but that cells gradually become symplastically isolated as the cells differentiate. By the time that visible hair outgrowth is observed the cells of the epidermis are symplastically isolated. This resembles the pattern of gap-junction connectivity observed in many animal systems where cells are coupled at the stage that cell patterns become established, but become progressively more isolated as they differentiate.
spellingShingle Duckett, C
Oparka, K
Prior, D
Dolan, L
Roberts, K
DYE-COUPLING IN THE ROOT EPIDERMIS OF ARABIDOPSIS IS PROGRESSIVELY REDUCED DURING DEVELOPMENT
title DYE-COUPLING IN THE ROOT EPIDERMIS OF ARABIDOPSIS IS PROGRESSIVELY REDUCED DURING DEVELOPMENT
title_full DYE-COUPLING IN THE ROOT EPIDERMIS OF ARABIDOPSIS IS PROGRESSIVELY REDUCED DURING DEVELOPMENT
title_fullStr DYE-COUPLING IN THE ROOT EPIDERMIS OF ARABIDOPSIS IS PROGRESSIVELY REDUCED DURING DEVELOPMENT
title_full_unstemmed DYE-COUPLING IN THE ROOT EPIDERMIS OF ARABIDOPSIS IS PROGRESSIVELY REDUCED DURING DEVELOPMENT
title_short DYE-COUPLING IN THE ROOT EPIDERMIS OF ARABIDOPSIS IS PROGRESSIVELY REDUCED DURING DEVELOPMENT
title_sort dye coupling in the root epidermis of arabidopsis is progressively reduced during development
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AT oparkak dyecouplingintherootepidermisofarabidopsisisprogressivelyreducedduringdevelopment
AT priord dyecouplingintherootepidermisofarabidopsisisprogressivelyreducedduringdevelopment
AT dolanl dyecouplingintherootepidermisofarabidopsisisprogressivelyreducedduringdevelopment
AT robertsk dyecouplingintherootepidermisofarabidopsisisprogressivelyreducedduringdevelopment