Search results for "Primordium"

showing 9 items of 19 documents

Space matters: meristem expansion triggers corona formation in Passiflora

2015

Background and aims Flower meristems differ from vegetative meristems in various aspects. One characteristic is the capacity for ongoing meristem expansion providing space for new structures. Here, corona formation in four species of Passiflora is investigated to understand the spatio-temporal conditions of its formation and to clarify homology of the corona elements. Methods One bird-pollinated species with a single-rowed tubular corona (Passiflora tulae) and three insect-pollinated species with three (P. standleyi Killip), four (P. foetida L. ‘Sanctae Martae’) and six (P. foetida L. var. hispida) ray-shaped corona rows are chosen as representative examples for the study. Flower developmen…

InsectabiologyPassifloraMeristemPlant ScienceOriginal ArticlesFlowersMeristemSpace (mathematics)biology.organism_classificationCoronaPassifloraBirdsPassiflora tulaeGermanyBotanyReceptacleAnimalsPrimordiumPollination
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Towards an ontogenetic understanding of inflorescence diversity

2013

Backgrounds and aims Conceptual and terminological conflicts in inflorescence morphology indicate a lack of understanding of the phenotypic diversity of inflorescences. In this study, an ontogeny-based inflorescence concept is presented considering different meristem types and developmental pathways. By going back to the ontogenetic origin, diversity is reduced to a limited number of types and terms. Methods Species from 105 genera in 52 angiosperm families are investigated to identify their specific reproductive meristems and developmental pathways. Based on these studies, long-term experience with inflorescences and literature research, a conceptual framework for the understanding of infl…

OntogenyMeristemArticlesBiodiversityPlant ScienceBiologyMeristemMagnoliopsidaInflorescenceRacemeBotanyPrimordiumInflorescenceLeafySensu strictoCell ProliferationPanicleAnnals of Botany
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Can changes in starch content and peroxidase activity be used as rooting phase markers for rhododendron leaf bud cuttings?

2011

We examined whether peroxidase activity in cutting bases and leaves and starch content in cutting bases can be used as rooting phase markers in the elepidote rhododendron cv. 'Babites Baltais' (Rhododendron L.). Changes in peroxidase activity in cutting leaves and bases, as well as starch content in cutting bases, were determined in relation to anatomical stages of rhizogenesis in leaf bud cuttings treated with 1% indole-3-butyric acid (IBA+) or without IBA (IBA–). The pattern of change of peroxidase activity was similar in cutting bases and leaves of IBAleaf bud cuttings. Three phases of adventitious root formation were identified: induction, initiation and expression. During the induction…

Root formationRhododendronbiologyAdventitious rootStarchfood and beveragesInduction PhaseStarchPlant ScienceLeaf bud cuttings:NATURAL SCIENCES::Biology [Research Subject Categories]Cuttingchemistry.chemical_compoundchemistryBotanybiology.proteinPrimordiumPeroxidasePeroxidase
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Comparative analysis of leaf shape development inEschscholzia californicaand other Papaveraceae-Eschscholzioideae

2011

Dissected leaves in Papaveraceae-Eschscholzioideae have an architecture frequently encountered in the basal eudicot clade Ranunculales that could represent an ancestral condition for eudicots. Developmental morphology of foliage leaves was investigated using scanning electron microscopy and focusing on primordium formation activity (primary morphogenesis) at the leaf margin. Eschscholzia californica, E. lobii, and Hunnemannia fumariaefolia had a polyternate-acropetal mode of leaf dissection. Segment formation continued around the whole leaf blade periphery. Differences in mature leaf architecture was traced to variations in regional blastozone activity and duration. Epidermal cell size meas…

biologyfungiMorphogenesisfood and beveragesPlant Sciencebiology.organism_classificationEschscholziaBasal (phylogenetics)RanunculalesBotanyLeaf bladeGeneticsPapaveraceaePrimordiumEudicotsEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsAmerican Journal of Botany
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Factors controlling adventitious bud induction and plant regeneration in matureJuniperus oxycedrus leaves cultured in vitro

1994

The morphogenetic capacity of matureJuniperus oxycedrus L. leaves cultured in vitro has been studied, noting nutritive, hormonal, and environmental factors inducing differentiation and development of adventitious shoots. Bud primordia formed directly from the leaves. Highest bud differentiation rates were obtained when the explants were cultured for at least 21 days on a modified Schenk and Hildebrandt solidified medium containing 0.5 μM benzyladenine under a 16-h photoperiod. Maximum bud development and elongation was achieved on cytokinin-free medium containing 4% (wt/vol) sucrose and 0.05% (wt/vol) activated charcoal. Regenerated shoots were excised and induced to root on media with auxi…

chemistry.chemical_classification1-Naphthaleneacetic acidbiologyfood and beveragesPlant Sciencebiology.organism_classificationchemistry.chemical_compoundchemistryMicropropagationAuxinBotanyCytokininShootPrimordiumJuniperus oxycedrusBiotechnologyExplant cultureIn Vitro Cellular & Developmental Biology - Plant
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The ambiguous role of 2,4-dichlorophenoxyacetic acid in wheat tissue culture

1986

The very basal, highly immature regions of dissected young leaves of Triticum aestivum L. cv. Kite formed adventitious roots on a nutrient medium supplemented with comparatively low concentrations (0.16 to 0.63 μM) of 2,4-dichlorophenoxyacetic acid (2,4-D). Higher concentrations (up to 640 μM) had to be applied to stimulate growth from more mature regions higher up the leaf. Yet, already at 2.5 μM roots were less distinct and more callus-like, and eventually (at 10 to 640 μM) only a subculturable callus of apparently suppressed, slowly proliferating root primordia developed. Furthermore, at the most basal, highly immature regions growth was significantly retarded when the auxin concentratio…

chemistry.chemical_classification24-Dichlorophenoxyacetic acidPhysiologyfungifood and beveragesCell BiologyPlant ScienceGeneral MedicineMeristemBiologyCell biologychemistry.chemical_compoundTissue cultureBasal (phylogenetics)NutrientchemistryAuxinCallusBotanyGeneticsPrimordiumPhysiologia Plantarum
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Chloramphenicol effects on adventitious root production by radish hypocotyls

1990

Abstract The excision of the root accelerates greatly the formation of adventitious roots in the hypocotyl of etiolated radish seedlings, but if the seedlings develop in CAP 1×10−4M, no adventitious root are induced after cutting. IAA either alone or associated with CAP, significantly increases the number of primordia in normal hypocotyls if given at the moment of cutting, while it has not stimulatory effect on the hypocotyls of seedlings grown in CAP. IAA has significant effect on both elongation and tickening of hypocotyl segments prepared from seedlings grown in CAP, and this could indicate a specific action of the inhibitor either on a particular process or on particular cells. The endo…

chemistry.chemical_classificationChloramphenicolfungifood and beveragesPlant ScienceBiologyHypocotylPericyclechemistryAuxinEtiolationBotanymedicinePrimordiumEndodermisElongationEcology Evolution Behavior and Systematicsmedicine.drugGiornale botanico italiano
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In vitro morphogenesis of grapevine (Vitis vinifera L.) inflorescence primordia, cvs Pinot Noir and Chardonnay

1998

Hormonal regulatory processes controlling in vitro morphogenesis of grapevine inflorescence primordia, excised from latent buds from November to April, were investigated. Cytokinin (benzylaminopurine, BAP), gibberellin (GA3) and auxin (3-indolebutyric acid, IBA) were used at 1 mg/L. BAP induced branch development and flower calyx differentiation. GA3 first promoted the elongation of inflorescence rachis and then promoted flower differentiation up to the formation of normal calyx and calyptra (the fused petals), while anthers and pistils were also present but not functional. IBA did not seem to be directly involved in these morphogenetic processes. After culturing for 6–7 weeks, explants bec…

chemistry.chemical_classificationfungifood and beveragesFlower differentiationOrganogenesisHorticultureBiologyCalyxchemistry.chemical_compoundchemistryAuxinCallusBotanyCytokininPetalPrimordiumAustralian Journal of Grape and Wine Research
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2014

Morphogenesis in plants is usually reconstructed by scanning electron microscopy and histology of meristematic structures. These techniques are destructive and require many samples to obtain a consecutive series of states. Unfortunately, using this methodology the absolute timing of growth and complete relative initiation of organs remain obscure. To overcome this limitation, an in vivo observational method based on Epi-Illumination Light Microscopy (ELM) was developed and tested with a male inflorescence meristem (floral unit) of the handkerchief tree Davidia involucrata Baill. (Nyssaceae). We asked whether the most basal flowers of this floral unit arise in a basipetal sequence or, altern…

fungiMorphogenesisfood and beveragesContext (language use)Plant ScienceBiologyMeristembiology.organism_classificationDavidia involucrataInflorescenceLive cell imagingBotanyPrimordiumNyssaceaeFrontiers in Plant Science
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