Secretory Structures in Vegetative and Floral Organs of Hypericum perfoliatum

Hypericum L, the largest genus of Hypericaceae comprising ca. 484 species of shrubs and perennial and annual herbs, is worldwide in a large variety of habitats in subtropical and temperate areas. Hypericum species, namely H. perforatum (St. John’s wort) the most representative species of the genus,...

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Veröffentlicht in:Microscopy and microanalysis 2013-08, Vol.19 (S4), p.45-46
Hauptverfasser: Vieira da Silva, I., Nogueira, T., Ascensão, L.
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Hypericum L, the largest genus of Hypericaceae comprising ca. 484 species of shrubs and perennial and annual herbs, is worldwide in a large variety of habitats in subtropical and temperate areas. Hypericum species, namely H. perforatum (St. John’s wort) the most representative species of the genus, have been used in folk medicine thought the centuries for a large number of ailments. Nowadays, it is well known the therapeutic potentialities of their main compounds, hypericin, pseudohypericin and hyperforin, which justify its clinical use. Despite the intense phytochemical and pharmacological research conducted in Hypericum species during the last decades, morpho-anatomical studies on the glands that produce the bioactive compounds are scarce and fragmented, only H. perforatum was studied in detail. As part as an ongoing project on Hypericum glands, the present research aims to provide information about the morphology, anatomy and histochemistry of the secretory structures present on the aerial organs of H. perfoliatum, one of the seventeen species of Hypericum that occur wild in Portugal. The types of glandular structures and their pattern of distribution on the leaves and flowers were studied by light (MO) and scanning electron microscopy (SEM). Samples for SEM were fixed with glutaraldehyde, dehydrated in a graded acetone series, critical-point dried and coated with gold. For general anatomy samples were fixed in the same fixative and embedded in Leica historesin®. Histochemical tests and standard control procedures were carried out in fresh material to localize in situ the main chemical classes of compounds present in the secretion. Observations were carried out Observations were carried out on a JEOL T220 scanning electron microscope and with a Leica DM-2500 microscope. The aerial organs of H. perfoliatum present four different types of secretory structures (idioblasts, translucent glands, ducts and black nodules), that can occur exclusively in a specific organ or in more than one organ. Tanniniferous secretory cells are frequent in the epidermis, as well as in the ground parenchyma of all organs, where they are scattered together with crystal idioblasts containing druses of calcium oxalate. Translucent glands are spheroidal subepidermical glandular pockets delimited by two or three cell layers of fattened and densely-stained cells (Fig. 1A). They are typically found in the leaves, giving them a perforated appearance. Two types of secretory ducts, cavit
ISSN:1431-9276
1435-8115
DOI:10.1017/S1431927613000846