| Literature DB >> 34142249 |
Joanna Jura-Morawiec1, Alexei Oskolski2,3, Philip Simpson4.
Abstract
MAINEntities:
Keywords: Initial cell; Secondary growth; Semi-storied cambium; Tree-like monocots; Vascular cambium
Mesh:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34142249 PMCID: PMC8211609 DOI: 10.1007/s00425-021-03654-9
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Planta ISSN: 0032-0935 Impact factor: 4.116
Fig. 1Examples of arborescent monocotyledons. a Aloe dichotoma, South Africa. b Dracaena draco, Gran Canaria, Spain. c Yucca brevifolia, Mojave Desert, USA. d–f Some details of the respective secondary growth. A thick arrow indicates possible location of the monocot cambium (mc); thin arrows and asterisks indicate intercellular spaces and anticlinal divisions outside the cambium, respectively. gt, secondary ground tissue; vb, secondary vascular bundle; developing secondary vascular bundles are encircled. Scale bar = 100 µm, valid for sections d–f
Fig. 3Characteristics of the shape and arrangement of cambial cells of three arborescent monocots. a Tangential sections through the monocot cambium of A. dichotoma, D. draco, and Y. brevifolia showing the semi-storied arrangement. Examples of stories are indicated with dotted horizontal lines. b Drawings made on the basis of sections with polygonal (2D) representation of cells. Monocot cambium cells are represented as n-sided polygons depending on the number of sides they possess, i.e., 4-sided (yellow), 5-sided (orange), 6-sided (gray), 7-sided (green), 8-sided (light green). In the central scheme, the way of measurement of the polygonal cell (length and width) is illustrated. c Scheme showing three-dimensional shape of the monocot cambium cell (14-sided; seven contacts marked 1–7 are visible, but the remaining seven are not), and corresponding views of the ends and body regions of cells as viewed in transverse sections through the monocot cambium of Y. brevifolia
Quantitative parameters of the monocot cambium
| Trait | |||
|---|---|---|---|
| Cambial cell length (µm)a | 109.44 (79–138) | 119.57 (80–165) | 72.52 (53–89) |
| Cambial cell width (µm)a | 81.59 (44–126) | 73.48 (46–94) | 53.7 (33–72) |
| Width of cambium (number of cells)b | 2–7 | 3–8 | 2–4 |
| Number of cells in storiesb | 2–10 | 2–7 | 2–9 |
an = 100
bn = 20
Fig. 2The monocot cambium and its derivative tissues in tangential view based on an A. dichotoma stem. a–c Selected successive tangential sections from a series of 65 sections covering a radial distance of 227.5 µm that included a tier (blue) of secondary cortex cells (a), cambial cells (b), and secondary ground tissue cells (c). In the lower left corner is the section number for the series. Note the slight changes in cell length and cell shape. Arrows indicate intercellular spaces; an asterisk shows anticlinal division in early vascular bundle differentiation
Comparative characteristics of the monocot cambium and vascular cambium
| Criterion | Monocot cambium | Vascular cambium |
|---|---|---|
| Establishment of cambial cylinder | between the primary cortex and the primary vascular bundlesa,b,c,d | between the primary phloem and xyleme |
| Types of initials | single type of initialsa | two types (fusiform initials and ray initials)e |
| Production of vascular derivatives | unidirectional; secondary phloem and secondary xylem deposited centripetally to the cambial cylinder and organized in secondary vascular bundles embedded in a ground tissuea,b,c,d | bidirectional; secondary phloem deposited centrifugally, and secondary xylem deposited centripetally to the cambial cylinder, vascular tissues are spatially separatede |
| Function | ||
| Cell shape in tangential section | from rectangular through | |
| Cell shape in transverse section | ||
| Cell shape in radial direction | ||
| 3D shape of cells | from decahedral through | |
| Primary pit-fields | ||
| Cells arrangement | nonstoried, | |
| Length of cells | 40–165 µm | ~ 170–8700 µme,f |
| Cell events | ||
| Cells rearrangement | absent | presente,g,h,i |
| Increase in cambium width | ||
| Increase in cambium circumference |
Similarities are in italics
aCheadle (1937)
bSimpson (1975)
cRudall (1991)
dJura-Morawiec et al. (2015)
eLarson (1994)
fBailey (1923)
gKojs et al. (2004b)
hJura et al. (2006)
iWłoch et al. (2013)
jMiodek et al. (2021)
Fig. 4The organization of the monocot cambium. a An increase in monocot cambium circumference is the result of symplastic growth in circumferential direction (green box) whereas an increase in the width of the monocot cambium is the result of symplastic growth in radial direction (orange box). b Criteria for possible identification of the initial cell of the monocot cambium based on the work of Simpson (1975)
Fig. 5A. dichotoma, transverse section of a radial file of monocot cambium. The arrow indicates a thicker, tangential wall adjacent to the secondary cortex. The asterisk indicates an anticlinal cell division, and below this is an early stage in secondary vascular bundle development. Scale bar = 100 µm