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PLANT PHYSIOLOGY , Vol 115, Issue 1 101-111, Copyright © 1997 by American Society of Plant Biologists
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DEVELOPMENT AND GROWTH REGULATION |
Regulation of Growth Anisotropy in Well-Watered and Water-Stressed Maize Roots (I. Spatial Distribution of Longitudinal, Radial, and Tangential Expansion Rates)
B. M. Liang, R. E. Sharp and T. I. Baskin
Department of Agronomy, Plant Science Unit (B.M.L., R.E.S.), and Division of Biological Sciences (T.I.B.), University of Missouri, Columbia, Missouri 65211
As a system to study the regulation of growth anisotropy, we studied
thinning of the primary root of maize (Zea mays L.) occurring
developmentally or induced by water stress. Seedlings were transplanted
into vermiculite at a water potential of approximately -0.03 MPa
(well-watered) or -1.6 MPa (water-stressed). The diameter of roots in both
treatments decreased with time after transplanting; the water-stressed
roots became substantially thinner than well-watered roots at steady state,
showing that root thinning is a genuine response to water stress. To
analyze the thinning responses we quantified cell numbers and the spatial
profiles of longitudinal, radial, and tangential expansion rates separately
for the cortex and stele. The results showed that there was no zone of
isotropic expansion and the degree of anisotropy varied greatly with
position and treatment. Thinning over time in well-watered roots was caused
by rates of radial and tangential expansion being too low to maintain the
shape of the root. In response to low water potential, cell number in both
tissues was unchanged radially but increased tangentially, which shows that
thinning was caused wholly by reduced cell expansion. Water stress
substantially decreased rates of tangential and radial expansion in both
the stele and cortex, but only in the apical 5 mm of the root; basal to
this, rates were similar in well-watered and water-stressed roots. By
contrast, as in previous studies, longitudinal expansion was identical
between the treatments in the apical 3 mm but in water-stressed roots was
inhibited at more basal locations. The results show that expansion in
longitudinal and radial directions can be regulated independently.
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