The arrangement of microtubules in leaves of monocotyledonous and dicotyledonous plants
1989
The first leaf of Avena sativa L., a monocotyledonous plant, grows in a region that lies within 10 mm of the base of the leaf. Cells in that region elongate longitudinally but hardly expand laterally. The orientation of cortical microtubules in the elongating region is transverse in both epidermal and parenchymal cells. The same features of the arrangement of microtubules are also observed in the leaves of Zea mays. Cellulose microfibrils in the cell wall are coaligned with microtubules, lying approximately transverse to the axis of elongation, as if they function as hoops to facilitate the longitudinal elongation of the cell. The cells of growing leaves of Pisum sativum L., a dicotyledonous plant, expand superficially in every direction at every point on the leaf. Cortical microtubules lining the outer walls of epidermal cells are arranged randomly or in parallel. The parallel microtubules are oriented in various directions. In the outer walls of epidermal cells of growing leaves, areas with different pr...
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