Abstract

As the ovule of Plantago ovata matures into a seed its epidermal cells are transformed from undifferentiated parenchyma to thin-walled containers of almost pure mucilage. During this process the volume of the cells increases 60–80 fold, and the protoplast degenerates to a remnant. Rapid cell expansion begins with pollination and is accompanied by an increase in the size of the nucleus and nucleolus, a change in the random arrangement of ribosomes, a decrease in the thickness of cell walls, and synthesis of starch. Deposition of mucilage inside vacuoles and between the plasma membrane and cell wall accompanies a marked increase in the number and size of Golgi vesicles. Histochemical evidence using the thiocarbohydrazide-osmium vapor method shows polysaccharide to be present within Golgi vesicles while they are still attached to the Golgi apparatus. Mucilage deposition is associated with further cell expansion, separation of the protoplast from the cell wall, fusion of vacuoles and extra protoplasmic space, and the disappearance of starch.

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