Hl. Gorton et Tc. Vogelmann, EFFECTS OF EPIDERMAL-CELL SHAPE AND PIGMENTATION ON OPTICAL-PROPERTIES OF ANTIRRHINUM PETALS AT VISIBLE AND ULTRAVIOLET WAVELENGTHS, Plant physiology, 112(3), 1996, pp. 879-888
We used the Mixta(+) and mixta(-) lines of Antirrhinum majus as a mode
l system to investigate the effects of epidermal cell shape and pigmen
tation on tissue optical properties in the visible and ultraviolet (UV
) spectral regions. Adaxial epidermal cells of Mixta(+) flowers have a
conical-papillate shape; in the mixta(-) line the cells are slightly
domed. Mixta(+) cells contained significantly more anthocyanin and oth
er flavonoids than mixta(-) cells when plants were grown under either
high- or low-UV conditions. Mixta(+) cells focused light (3.5-4.7 time
s incident) within their pigmented interiors, whereas mixta(-) cells f
ocused light (2.1-2.7 times incident) in the unpigmented mesophyll. UV
light penetrated the epidermis (commonly 20-50% transmittance at 312
nm) mainly through the unpigmented peripheral regions of the cells tha
t were similar for the two lines, so that overall penetration through
Mixta(+) and mixta(-) epidermises was equal. However, maximum UV absor
ption in the central region of epidermal cells was slightly greater in
Mixta(+) than mixta(-), and intact Mixta(+) flowers reflected less li
ght in the spectral regions with intermediate flavonoid absorbance. In
both cases, about 50 to 75% of the difference could be attributed to
cell shape and resulting changes in the optical pathlength or focusing
.