Abstract

Cucumber seedlings were germinated for 24 h at 25 °C and half were immersed in a 500 mM ethanol solution for 2 h. After rinsing, seedlings were chilled for 96 h at 2 °C. Control and ethanol-treated samples were taken for light and electron microscopy immediately before and after chilling, and after re-warming for 24 and 72 h. Preliminary experiments revealed visual chilling symptoms such as pinching of the root in a region just above the root tip. This region was excised under a microscope, fixed, and mounted for microscopic observations. The cortical cells of ethanol-treated seedlings before chilling appeared to be irregular in shape with irregular edges, and some epidermal damage was evident. Chilling caused much more epidermal damage in the control seedlings when compared to the ethanol-treated seedlings. After chilling, cortical cells in the control seedlings were observed to be irregularly shaped while those treated with ethanol had round cells. Upon re-warming, control seedlings exhibited increasing epidermal damage with broken cell walls, while ethanol-treated seedlings exhibited more differentiation in the stele.

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