Abstract

Cultured roots of the common bindweed, Convolvulus arvensis L. growing at the rate of 15–30 mm/day in sterile nutrient medium were fixed for electron microscopic analysis. The ultrastructure of the quiescent center, the initials of the ground meristem, and the initials of the procambium were studied in order to determine whether sequential structural changes could be correlated with models for specifying the mechanisms by which cell differentiation and cell division might be controlled. The differentiation of cells in the root proper occurs very gradually in linear files from the site of the quiescent center proximally into the different tissue regions. Major structural changes, such as the orientation and subsequent elongation of cells along the longitudinal axis of the root and cell wall changes, indicate that the control of differentiation and perhaps cell division occurs in radial gradients outwardly from the quiescent center.

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