ABSTRACT
Indirect immunofluorescence performed using sections of actively growing maize root apices fixed and then embedded in low-melting-point Steedman's wax has proved efficient in revealing the arrangements and reorganizations of motility-related cytoskeletal elements which are associated with root cell development and tissue differentiation. This powerful, yet relatively simple, technique shows that specific rearrangements of both microtubular (MT) and actin microfilament (MF) arrays occur in cells as they leave the meristem and traverse the transitional region interpolated between meristem and elongation region. Cytoskeletal and growth analyses have identified the transition zone as critical for both cell and root development; it is in this zone that cell growth is channelled, by the cytoskeleton, into a strictly polarized mode which enables root tips to extend rapidly through the soil in search of water and nutrients. An integrated cytoskeletal network is crucial for both the cytomorphogenesis of individual cells and the overall morphogenesis of the plant body. The latter process can be viewed as a reflection of the tight control which cytoskeletal networks exert not only over cell division planes in the cells within meristematic apices but also over the orientation of cell growth in the meristem and elsewhere. Endoplasmic MTs interconnecting the plasma membrane with the nucleus are suggested to be involved in cell division control; they may also act as a two-way cytoskeletal communication channel for signals passing to and fro between the extracellular environment and the genome. Moreover, the dynamism of endoplasmic MTs exerts direct effects on chromatin structure and the accompanying nuclear architecture and hence can help exert a cellular level of control over cell growth and cell cycle progression. Because the inherent dynamic instability of MTs depends on the concentration of tubulin dimers within the cytoplasm, we propose that when asymmetric cell division occurs, it will result in two daughter cells which differ in the turnover rates of their MTs. This phenomenon could be responsible for different cell fates of daughter plant cells produced by such cell divisions.