Endogenous Nutrients are Concentrated in Specific Tissues in the Zea mays Seedling
Document Type
Article
Publication Date
2-2021
Department
Biological & Earth Sciences
Abstract
K, P, Cl, and Ca are distributed in tissue-specific patterns in Zea mays seedlings. These elements were mapped and analyzed using a relatively simple semi-quantitative technique, i.e., fast freezing, followed by freeze fracturing, then freeze drying, and finally scanning electron microscopy/energy-dispersive spectroscopy (SEM/EDS). In the radicle, endogenously derived (i.e., from seed) K and P transition from being homogenous in the apical meristem to tissue-specific in older regions. At 3 mm from the radicle apex, K concentration is approximately 40 mM in mid-cortex and decreases by approximately 50% at 15 mm. From 3 to 55 mm, P concentration in pericycle is approximately twice that found in adjacent regions. Ca is not detectable in younger portions of the radicle by SEM/EDS, but in older regions, it is present at 13 mM in mid-cortex. K concentration values of entire radicles analyzed with inductively coupled plasma optical emission spectrometry (ICP-OES) exceeded the SEM/EDS values. For Ca, the reverse was true. But, SEM/EDS analysis did not include several vascular tissues that contained high concentrations of K and low concentrations of Ca. The inception of lateral root primordia was accompanied by a localized decrease in Ca in cortical regions that were centrifugal to the primordium tip. A region of O-rich cells in endosperm was identified centripetal to the aleurone. These results indicate that (1) outer, mid-, and inner cortical regions, as well as the adjacent tissues, have distinct ion accumulation properties, and (2) ions are concentrated in some radicle tissues prior to development of Casparian strips.
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1007/s00709-021-01606-4
First Page
863
Last Page
878
Publication Title
Protoplasma
Recommended Citation
Pesacreta, T.C., Acharya, A. & Hasenstein, K.H. Endogenous nutrients are concentrated in specific tissues in the Zea mays seedling. Protoplasma 258, 863–878 (2021). https://libcatalog.atu.edu:2217/10.1007/s00709-021-01606-4
Comments
At the time of publication, Dr. Aniruddha Acharya was affiliated with the University of Louisiana at Lafayette.