Croxdale J, Smith J, Yandell B, Johnson J B
Department of Botany, University of Wisconsin, Madison 53706.
Dev Biol. 1992 Jan;149(1):158-67. doi: 10.1016/0012-1606(92)90272-i.
The cell lineage theory, which explains stomatal patterning in monocot leaves as a consequence of orderly divisions, was studied in Tradescantia. Data were collected to test the theory at three levels of organization: the individual stoma; stomata distributed in one dimension, in linear fashion along cell files; and stomata apportioned in two dimensions, across the length and breadth of the leaf. In an attempt to watch the patterning process through regeneration, stomata in all visible stages of development were laser ablated. The results showed that the formation of stomatal initials was highly regular, and measurements of stomatal frequency and spacing showed that pattern was determined near the basal meristem when the stomatal initials arose. Following the origin of initials, the pattern was not readjusted by division of epidermal cells. Stomatal initials were not committed when first present and a small percentage of them arrested. The arrested cells, unlike stomata, were consistently positioned in cell files midway between a developed pair of stomata. At the one-dimensional level of pattern, stomata in longitudinal files were separated by a variable number of epidermal cells and the frequency of these separations was not random. The sequential spacing of stomata also was not random, and stomata separated by single epidermal cells were grouped into more short and long series than expected by chance. The stomatal pattern across the width of the leaf resulted from cell files free of stomata which alternated with cell files containing stomata, but not with a recurring periodicity. Files lacking stomata were found only over longitudinal vascular bundles. Laser ablations of developing stomata did not disrupt the pattern in nearby cells or result in stomatal regeneration. We conclude that the cell lineage theory explains pattern as an individual stomatal initial arises from its immediate precursor and satisfactorily accounts for the minimum spacing of stomata in a cell file, i.e., stoma-epidermal cell-stoma. However, the theory does not explain the collective stomatal pattern along the cell files, at the one-dimensional level of patterning. Nor does the theory account for the for the two-dimensional distribution of stomata in which regions devoid of stomata alternate with regions enriched with stomata, but not in a highly regular nor haphazard manner. We suggest that the grouping of epidermal cells and stomata separated by single epidermal cells in cell files may result from cell lineages at a specific position in the cell cycle as they traverse the zone where stomatal initials form.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
细胞谱系理论将单子叶植物叶片气孔模式的形成解释为有序分裂的结果,本研究以紫露草为对象进行了验证。研究人员从三个组织层面收集数据来检验该理论:单个气孔;沿细胞列呈线性分布于一维空间的气孔;分布于叶片长宽二维空间的气孔。为了通过再生过程观察模式形成过程,研究人员对处于所有可见发育阶段的气孔进行了激光消融。结果表明,气孔原始细胞的形成高度规则,气孔频率和间距的测量结果显示,当气孔原始细胞出现时,模式在基部分生组织附近就已确定。在原始细胞形成之后,表皮细胞的分裂并未对模式进行重新调整。气孔原始细胞刚出现时并未定型,其中一小部分会停滞发育。与气孔不同,停滞的细胞始终位于一对已发育气孔中间的细胞列中。在一维模式层面,纵向细胞列中的气孔被数量不等的表皮细胞隔开,这些间隔的频率并非随机分布。气孔的顺序间距也不是随机的,被单个表皮细胞隔开的气孔比随机预期的情况更多地聚集成短系列和长系列。叶片宽度方向上的气孔模式是由不含气孔的细胞列与含气孔的细胞列交替形成的,但并非周期性重复。不含气孔的细胞列仅出现在纵向维管束上方。对发育中的气孔进行激光消融并不会破坏附近细胞的模式,也不会导致气孔再生。我们得出结论,细胞谱系理论可以解释单个气孔原始细胞从其直接前体细胞产生时的模式形成,并令人满意地解释了细胞列中气孔的最小间距,即气孔 - 表皮细胞 - 气孔。然而,该理论无法解释一维模式层面上沿细胞列的集体气孔模式。该理论也无法解释气孔在二维空间中的分布情况,即不含气孔的区域与富含气孔的区域交替出现,但并非高度规则或随意的方式。我们认为,细胞列中被单个表皮细胞隔开的表皮细胞和气孔的聚集可能是由于细胞谱系在细胞周期的特定位置穿过气孔原始细胞形成区域所致。(摘要截选至400字)