Summary
Cell walls of mature epidermal and hypodermal cells are autofluorescent when viewed under ultraviolet or blue light. This autofluorescence develops in a centripetal direction, beginning in the outer tangential wall of the epidermis and ending in the inner tangential wall of the hypodermis. The intercellular regions between the epidermis and hypodermis and between the hypodermis and the cortex are dense and also become autofluorescent. Although the walls of the hypodermis provide a barrier to the movement of a high molecular weight fluorescent dye, the walls of the epidermis are permeable. Histochemical studies indicate that lipids and polyphenolics are components of the epidermal and hypodermal cell walls. Both layers are resistant to the wall-degrading enzyme Driselase and to concentrated sulphuric acid, whereas the cortex is digested with both treatments. Observations with the transmission electron microscope show that a complex suberin lamella encases each hypodermal cell but is absent from the epidermis. However, the outer tangential wall and radial walls of the epidermal cells are complex in that layers of different densities are present. Some of these layers, as well as the intercellular regions and the radial walls of the hypodermal cells, bind ferric ions when tissue is fixed in ferric chloride-glutaraldehyde indicating the presence of poly-phenolics in these regions. An extracellular layer covering the outer tangential wall of the epidermis stained positively with a number of histochemical tests for polyphenolics.
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Peterson, C.A., Peterson, R.L. & Robards, A.W. A correlated histochemical and ultrastructural study of the epidermis and hypodermis of onion roots. Protoplasma 96, 1–21 (1978). https://doi.org/10.1007/BF01279571
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/BF01279571