Abstract

The quantitative changes of chloroplast ultrastructure and dimensions in mesophyll (MC) and bundle sheath (BSC) cells, associated with the onset of leaf senescence, were followed along the developmental leaf blade gradient of the third leaf of maize (Zea mays L.). To ascertain whether the rapidity of structural changes associated with the transition of chloroplasts from mature to senescent state is a heritable trait, the parental and the first filial generations of plants were used. The heterogeneity of leaf blade, associated with the development of maize leaf (with the oldest regions at the apex and the youngest ones at the base) was clearly discernible in the ultrastructure and dimensions of chloroplasts; however, there were differences in the actual pattern of chloroplast development between both genotypes as well as between both cell types examined. While the course of MC chloroplasts' development at the onset of leaf senescence in maize hybrid followed that of its parent rather well, this did not apply for the BSC chloroplasts. In this case, each genotype was characterized by its own distinguishable developmental pattern, particularly as regards the accumulation of starch inclusions and the associated changes of the size and shape of BSC chloroplasts.

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