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Epidermis (botany)

 

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Epidermis (botany)



 
 
The epidermis is a single-layered group of cells that covers plants leaves
Leaf

In botany, a leaf is an above-ground plant Organ specialized for photosynthesis. For this purpose, a leaf is typically flat and thin, to expose the cells containing chloroplast to light over a broad area, and to allow light to penetrate fully into the tissues....
, flowers, roots and stems
Plant stem

A stem is one of two main structural axes of a vascular plant. The stem is normally divided into nodes and internodes, the nodes hold buds which grow into one or more leaf, inflorescence , conifer cones or other stems etc....
. It forms a boundary between the plant
Plant

Plants are Life organisms belonging to the Kingdom Plantae. They include familiar organisms such as trees, herbs, bushes, grasses, vines, ferns, mosses, and green algae....
 and the external world. The epidermis serves several functions, it protects against water loss, regulates gas exchange, secretes metabolic compounds, and (especially in roots) absorbs water and mineral nutrients. The epidermis of most leaves shows dorsoventral anatomy: the upper (adaxial) and lower (abaxial) surfaces have somewhat different construction and may serve different functions.






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The epidermis is a single-layered group of cells that covers plants leaves
Leaf

In botany, a leaf is an above-ground plant Organ specialized for photosynthesis. For this purpose, a leaf is typically flat and thin, to expose the cells containing chloroplast to light over a broad area, and to allow light to penetrate fully into the tissues....
, flowers, roots and stems
Plant stem

A stem is one of two main structural axes of a vascular plant. The stem is normally divided into nodes and internodes, the nodes hold buds which grow into one or more leaf, inflorescence , conifer cones or other stems etc....
. It forms a boundary between the plant
Plant

Plants are Life organisms belonging to the Kingdom Plantae. They include familiar organisms such as trees, herbs, bushes, grasses, vines, ferns, mosses, and green algae....
 and the external world. The epidermis serves several functions, it protects against water loss, regulates gas exchange, secretes metabolic compounds, and (especially in roots) absorbs water and mineral nutrients. The epidermis of most leaves shows dorsoventral anatomy: the upper (adaxial) and lower (abaxial) surfaces have somewhat different construction and may serve different functions. Woody stems and some other stem structures produce a secondary covering called the periderm that replaces the epidermis as the protective covering.

Description


The epidermis is the outermost cell layer of the primary plant body, it is the dermal tissue system of leaves (diagrammed below), stems, roots, flowers, fruits, and seeds; it is usually transparent
Transparency (optics)

In optics, transparency is the material property of allowing light to pass through. In mineralogy, another term for this property is diaphaneity....
 (epidermal cells lack chloroplasts, except for the guard cells.) The cells of the epidermis are structurally and functionally variable. Most plants have an epidermis that is a single cell layer thick. Some plants like Ficus elastica
Ficus elastica

Ficus elastica, also called the rubber fig, rubber bush, rubber plant, or Indian rubber bush is a species of plant in the fig genus, native to northeast India , south to Indonesia ....
 and Peperomia
Peperomia

Peperomia is one of the 2 large genus of the Piperaceae family , with more than 1000 recorded species. Most of them are compact, small perennial plant epiphytes growing on rotten wood....
, which have periclinal cellular division within the protoderm of the leaves, have an epidermis with multiple cell layers. Epidermal cells are tightly linked to each other and provide mechanical strength and protection to the plant. The walls of the epidermal cells of the above ground parts of plants contain cutin
Cutin

Cutin is one of two waxy polymers that are the main components of the plant cuticle which covers all aerial surfaces of plants. The other major cuticle polymer, which is much more readily taphonomy, is cutan....
, and are covered with a cuticle
Plant cuticle

Plant cuticles are a protective waxy covering produced only by the Epidermis of leaf, young shoots and all other aerial plant organs without periderm....
. The cuticle reduces water loss to the atmosphere, it is sometimes covered with wax
Wax

Wax has traditionally referred to a substance that is secreted by bees and used by them in constructing their honeycombs.It is an imprecisely defined term generally understood to be a substance with properties similar to beeswax, namely...
 in smooth sheets or long filaments. Thick wax layers give some plants a whitish or bluish surface color. Surface wax acts as a moisture barrier and protects the plant from intense sunlight and wind. The underside of many leaves have a thinner cuticle than the top side, and leaves of plants from dry climates often have thickened cuticles to conserve water by reducing transpiration.
Leaf Anatomy
The epidermal tissue includes several differentiated cell types: epidermal cells, guard cells, subsidiary cells, and epidermal hairs (trichomes). The epidermal cells are the most numerous, largest, and least specialized. These are typically more elongated in the leaves of monocots than in those of dicots.

Trichome
Trichome

Trichomes, from the Greek language meaning "growth of hair", are fine outgrowths or appendages on plants and certain protists. These are of diverse structure and function....
s or hairs grow out from the epidermis in many species. In root epidermis, epidermal hairs, termed root hairs
Root hairs

Root hair cells, the rhizoids of many vascular plants, are tubular outgrowths of trichoblasts, the hair-forming cells on the Epidermis of a plant root....
 are common and are specialized for absorption of water and mineral nutrients.

In plants with secondary growth
Secondary growth

In many vascular plants, secondary growth is the result of the activity of the vascular cambium. The latter is a meristem that divides to produce secondary xylem plant cells on the inside of the meristem and secondary phloem cells on the outside ....
, the epidermis of roots and stems is usually replaced by a periderm through the action of a cork cambium
Cork cambium

Cork cambium is a biological tissue found in many vascular plants as part of the periderm. The cork cambium is a lateral meristem and is responsible for secondary growth that replaces the Epidermis_ in roots and stems....
.

Guard cells

The leaf and stem epidermis is covered with pore
Pore

Pore may refer to:In animal biology and microbiology:* Sweat pore, an anatomical structure of the skin of humans used for secretion of sweat...
s called stomata (sing., stoma), part of a stoma complex consisting of a pore surrounded on each side by chloroplast-containing guard cells, and two to four subsidiary cells that lack chloroplasts. The stoma complex regulates the exchange of gases and water vapor between the outside air and the interior of the leaf. Typically, the stomata are more numerous over the abaxial (lower) epidermis of the leaf than the (adaxial) upper epidermis. An exception is floating leaves where most or all stomata are on the upper surface. Vertical leaves, such as those of many grasses
Poaceae

Poaceae or Gramineae is a family in the Class Liliopsida of the Magnoliophyta. Plants of this family are usually called grasses; the shrub- or tree-like plants in this family are called bamboo ....
, often have roughly equal numbers of stomata on both surfaces. The number of stomata varies from about 1,000 to over 100,000 per square centimeter of leaf surface.

The stoma is bounded by two guard cells. The guard cells differ from the epidermal cells in the following aspects:

  • The guard cells are bean-shaped in surface view, while the epidermal cells are irregular in shape
  • The guard cells contain chloroplasts, so they can manufacture food by photosynthesis (The epidermal cells do not contain chloroplasts)
  • Guard Cells are the only epidermal cells that can make sugar. According to one theory, in sunlight the concentration of potassium ions (K+) increases in the guard cells. This, together with the sugars formed, lowers the water potential in the guard cells. As a result, water from other cells enter the guard cells by osmosis so they swell and become turgid. Because the guard cells have a thicker cellulose wall on one side of the cell, i.e. the side around the stomatal pore, the swollen guard cells become curved and pull the stomata open.


At night, the sugar is used up and water leaves the guard cells, so they become flaccid and the stomatal pore closes. In this way, they reduce the amount of water vapour escaping from the leaf.

Cell differentiation in the epidermis


The plant epidermis consists of three main cell types: pavement cells, guard cells and their subsidiary cells that surround the stomata and trichome
Trichome

Trichomes, from the Greek language meaning "growth of hair", are fine outgrowths or appendages on plants and certain protists. These are of diverse structure and function....
s, otherwise known as leaf hairs. The epidermis of petals also form a variation of trichomes called conical cells. These cells all develop from the pavement cells, which make up the majority of the plants surface cells. In short, cellular differentiation of the epidermal cells is controlled by two major factors: genetics
Genetics

Genetics , a discipline of biology, is the science of heredity and Genetic variation in living organisms. The fact that living things inherit traits from their parents has been used since prehistoric times to improve crop plants and animals through selective breeding....
 and environmental conditions.

Trichomes develop at a distinct phase during the actual leaf
Leaf

In botany, a leaf is an above-ground plant Organ specialized for photosynthesis. For this purpose, a leaf is typically flat and thin, to expose the cells containing chloroplast to light over a broad area, and to allow light to penetrate fully into the tissues....
 development, under the control of two major trichome specification gene
Gene

A gene is the basic unit of heredity in a living organism. All living things depend on genes. Genes hold the information to build and maintain their cell and pass genetic trait to offspring....
s: TTG and GL1. The process may be controlled by the plant hormone
Plant hormone

Plant hormones are chemicals that regulate plant growth. Plant hormones are signal molecules produced within the plant, and occur in extremely low concentrations....
s gibberellin
Gibberellin

Gibberellins are plant hormones that regulate growth and influence various Biological process, including "stem elongation, germination, dormancy, flowering, sex gene expression, enzyme induction and leaf and fruit senescence."...
s, and even if not completely controlled, gibberellins certainly have an effect on the development of the leaf hairs. GL1 causes endoreplication, the replication of DNA
DNA

Deoxyribonucleic acid is a nucleic acid that contains the genetics instructions used in the development and functioning of all known living organisms and some viruses....
 without subsequent cell division
Cell division

Cell division is a process by which a cell , called the parent cell, divides into two or more cells, called daughter cells. Cell division is usually a small segment of a larger cell cycle....
 as well as cell expansion. GL1 turns on the expression of a second gene for trichome formation, GL2, which controls the final stages of trichome formation causing the cellular outgrowth.

Arabidopsis
Arabidopsis

Arabidopsis is a genus in the family Brassicaceae. They are small flowering plants related to cabbage and Mustard plant. This genus is of great interest since it contains thale cress , one of the model organisms used for studying plant biology and the first plant to have its entire genome sequenced....
 uses the products of inhibitory genes to control the patterning of trichomes, such as TTG and TRY. The products of these genes will diffuse into the lateral
Lateral

Lateral may prefer a :*Lateral, an anatomical direction - see Human anatomical terms#Anatomical directions*Lateral pass, type of pass in American and Canadian football...
 cells, preventing them from forming trichomes and in the case of TRY promoting the formation of pavement cells.

As previously mentioned, conical cells are a form of trichome that occurs on the petal
Petal

A petal is one member or part of the Corolla of a flower. The corolla is the name for all of the petals of a flower; the inner perianth whorl, term used when this is not the same in appearance as the outermost whorl and is used to attract pollinators based on its advertising coloration....
s of flower
Flower

A flower, sometimes known as a bloom or blossom, is the reproduction structure found in flowering plants . The biological function of a flower is to mediate the union of male sperm with female ovum in order to produce seeds....
s. Expression of the gene MIXTA, or its analogue
Analog (chemistry)

In chemistry, analogs or analogues are chemical compound in which one or more individual atoms have been replaced, either with a different atom, or with a different functional group....
 in other species, later in the process of cellular differentiation
Differentiation

Differentiation can mean the following:* The act of finding the derivative in mathematics* Differentiated instruction in education,* Cellular differentiation in biology...
 will cause the formation of conical cells over trichomes. MIXTA is a transcription factor
Transcription factor

In the field of molecular biology, a transcription factor is a protein that binds to specific DNA sequence and thereby controls the transfer of genetic information from DNA to RNA....
.

Stomatal pattering is a much more controlled process, as the stoma effect the plants water retention and respiration capabilities. As a consequence of these important functions, differentiation of cells to form stomata is also subject to environmental conditions to a much greater degree then other epidermal cell types.

Stomata are holes in the plant epidermis that are surrounded by two guard cells, which control the opening and closing of the aperture. These guard cells are in turn surrounded by subsidiary cells which provide a supporting role for the guard cells.

Stomata begin as stomatal meristemoids. The process varies between dicots and monocots. Spacing is thought to be essentially random in dicots though mutant
Mutant

A mutant is an individual, organism, or new genetic character arising or resulting from an instance of mutation, which is a base-pair sequence change within the DNA of a gene or chromosome of an organism resulting in the creation of a new character or Trait not found in the wild type....
s do show it is under some form of genetic control, but it is more controlled in monocots, where stomata arise from specific asymmetric divisions
Asymmetric cell division

An asymmetric cell division produces two daughter cells with different properties. This is in contrast to normal cell divisions, which give rise to equivalent daughter cells....
 of protodermal cells. The smaller of the two cells produced becomes the guard mother cells. Adjacent epidermal cells will also divide asymmetrically to form the subsidiary cells.

Because stomata play such an important role in the plants survival, collecting information of there differentiation if difficult by the traditional means of genetic manipulation, as stomatal mutants tend to be unable to survive. Thus the control of the process is not well understood. Some genes have been identified. TMM is thought to control the timing of stomatal initiation specification and FLP is thought to be involved in preventing further division of the guard cells once they are formed.

Environmental conditions affect the development of stomata, in particular their density
Density

The density of a material is defined as its mass per unit volume. The symbol of density is ....
 on the leaf surface. It is thought that plant hormones, such as ethylene
Ethylene

Ethylene is the chemical compound with the formula C2H4. It is the simplest alkene. Because it contains a carbon-carbon double bond, ethylene is called an unsaturated hydrocarbon or an olefin....
 and cytokines, control the stomata’s developmental response to the environmental conditions. Accumulation of these hormones appears to cause increased stomatal density such as when the plants are kept in closed environments.

Stomatal cells only occur on the leaf epidermis, and it is thought that inhibitory signals must occur on other parts of the plants epidermis to prevent stomatal formation there. These signals could be hormonal, or perhaps gene products transmitted from underlying tissues via the plasmodesmata
Plasmodesmata

Plasmodesmata are microscopic channels which traverse the cell wall of plant cells and enable transport and communication between them. Plants having plasmodesmata include the highest derived charophyceans, Charales and Coleochaetales, as well as all embryophytes, better known as land plants....
.

See also

  • Bark
    BARK

    BARK was an early Electromechanics. BARK was built using standard phone relays, implementing a 32-bit binary machine and could perform addition in 150 ms and multiplication in 250 ms....
  • Cork cambium
    Cork cambium

    Cork cambium is a biological tissue found in many vascular plants as part of the periderm. The cork cambium is a lateral meristem and is responsible for secondary growth that replaces the Epidermis_ in roots and stems....
  • Periderm