Abstract
In the root epidermis of Hydrocharis morsus-ranae L. distinctive trichoblasts, which later grow out as root hairs, are formed by the unequal division of protodermal (immature epidermal) cells. The trichoblast is the more proximal product of this division. Trichoblasts differ from adjacent epidermal cells in manner of growth, in size, amount of cytoplasm, degree of succinic dehydrogenase and cytochrome oxidase activity, and in the structure of their plastids. Plastids in the trichoblasts gradually become colorless and of less complex structure with increasing distance from the root tip, in contrast to those in adjacent epidermal cells. The trichoblasts do not divide, but they elongate to a considerable extent in the most distal 3000 μ of the root tip and less extensively in the next 3000 μ. By contrast the sister cells and their products divide, but the individual products do not become markedly longer than the mother cell until situated more than 3000 μ from the root tip, when they undergo extensive elongation. The trichoblasts are thus characterized by delayed maturation and inhibition of cytokinesis; it is suggested that delayed maturation is a necessary prerequisite for differentiation of root hairs in this and other species.
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