| Literature DB >> 33817165 |
Jiqian Xiang1, Jiajia Ming1, Hongqing Yin1, Yunfen Zhu1, Yajie Li1, Lan Long1, Ziyun Ye1, Haiying Wang1, Xiaoe Wang2, Fan Zhang2, Yongkang Yang1, Chaodong Yang2.
Abstract
The perennial selenium (Se) hyperaccumulator Cardamine hupingshanensis (Brassicaceae) thrives in aquatic and subaquatic Se-rich environments along the Wuling Mountains, China. Using bright-field and epifluorescence microscopy, the present study determined the anatomical structures and histochemical features that allow this species to survive in Se-rich aquatic environments. The roots of C. hupingshanensis have an endodermis with Casparian walls, suberin lamellae, and lignified secondary cell walls; the cortex and hypodermal walls have phi (Φ) thickenings; and the mature taproots have a secondary structure with a periderm. The stems possess a lignified sclerenchymal ring and an endodermis, and the pith and cortex walls have polysaccharide-rich collenchyma. Air spaces are present in the intercellular spaces and aerenchyma in the cortex and pith of the roots and shoots. The dense fine roots with lignified Φ thickenings and polysaccharide-rich collenchyma in the shoots may allow C. hupingshanensis to hyperaccumulate Se. Overall, our study elucidated the anatomical features that permit C. hupingshanensis to thrive in Se-rich aquatic environments.Entities:
Keywords: Cardamine hupingshanensis; air spaces; collenchyma; endodermis; lignified Φ thickenings; sclerenchyma ring
Year: 2019 PMID: 33817165 PMCID: PMC7874794 DOI: 10.1515/biol-2019-0035
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Open Life Sci ISSN: 2391-5412 Impact factor: 0.938