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Research ArticleCELL BIOLOGY AND SIGNAL TRANSDUCTION
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Differentiation of Mucilage Secretory Cells of the Arabidopsis Seed Coat

Tamara L. Western, Debra J. Skinner, George W. Haughn
Tamara L. Western
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Debra J. Skinner
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George W. Haughn
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Published February 2000. DOI: https://doi.org/10.1104/pp.122.2.345

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Abstract

In some plant species, including Arabidopsis, fertilization induces the epidermal cells of the outer ovule integument to differentiate into a specialized seed coat cell type with a unique morphology and containing large quantities of polysaccharide mucilage (pectin). Such seed coat mucilage cells are necessary for neither viability nor germination under normal laboratory conditions. Thus, the Arabidopsis seed coat offers a unique system with which to use genetics to identify genes controlling cell morphogenesis and complex polysaccharide biosynthesis and secretion. As a first step in the application of this system, we have used microscopy to investigate the structure and differentiation of Arabidopsis seed coat mucilage cells, including cell morphogenesis and the synthesis, secretion, and extrusion of mucilage. During seed coat development in Arabidopsis, the epidermal cells of the outer ovule integument grow and differentiate into cells that produce large quantities of mucilage between the primary cell wall and plasma membrane. Concurrent with mucilage production, the cytoplasm is shaped into a column in the center of the cell. Following mucilage secretion the cytoplasmic column is surrounded by a secondary cell wall to form a structure known as the columella. Thus, differentiation of the seed coat mucilage cells involves a highly regulated series of events including growth, morphogenesis, mucilage biosynthesis and secretion, and secondary cell wall synthesis.

  • Received June 21, 1999.
  • Accepted October 17, 1999.
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Differentiation of Mucilage Secretory Cells of the Arabidopsis Seed Coat
Tamara L. Western, Debra J. Skinner, George W. Haughn
Plant Physiology Feb 2000, 122 (2) 345-356; DOI: 10.1104/pp.122.2.345

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Differentiation of Mucilage Secretory Cells of the Arabidopsis Seed Coat
Tamara L. Western, Debra J. Skinner, George W. Haughn
Plant Physiology Feb 2000, 122 (2) 345-356; DOI: 10.1104/pp.122.2.345
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Plant Physiology: 122 (2)
Plant Physiology
Vol. 122, Issue 2
Feb 2000
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More in this TOC Section

  • The Cell Wall of the Arabidopsis Pollen Tube—Spatial Distribution, Recycling, and Network Formation of Polysaccharides
  • Systems Dynamic Modeling of a Guard Cell Cl− Channel Mutant Uncovers an Emergent Homeostatic Network Regulating Stomatal Transpiration
  • Architecture-Based Multiscale Computational Modeling of Plant Cell Wall Mechanics to Examine the Hydrogen-Bonding Hypothesis of the Cell Wall Network Structure Model
Show more CELL BIOLOGY AND SIGNAL TRANSDUCTION

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