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Bark Advanced article Article Contents Simcha Lev-Yadun, University of Haifa-Oranim, Tivon, Israel . Introduction . Structure and Development . Regulation of Cork Development . Dilatation Online posting date: 16th May 2011 Bark comprises all the tissues outside the vascular cambium of a vascular plant. The majority of the bark of woody plants develops from three meristems: the vascular cambium that gives rise to the secondary phloem, the phellogen that gives rise to the cork and the dilatation meristem that produces parenchyma cells to prevent cracking when the axis increases in diameter. Bark tissues have a critical role in defending plants from pathogens and herbivores through their physical and chemical properties. They also defend from environmental hazards such as sun irradiation, desiccation, wind, flooding, hail, snow and even fire by forming a thick cork layer. The bark has a critical role in storage and transport of organic molecules and in many plants the bark also contributes to photosynthesis. Many of the various defensive and toxic substances found in barks are used by humans as medicines, spices and for various industries. Gene exploring in barks is expected to result in many beneficial molecules for agriculture, medicine, food and industry. Introduction Bark, which includes all tissues formed outside the vascular cambium, is structurally, physiologically and functionally a very complex part of the plant. The major functions of the bark are translocation and storage of organic materials, water storage and wound healing, protection from herbivores and pathogens, protection from environmental hazards, and in the shoot, photosynthesis. In many leafless or almost leafless plants, all or most of a plant’s photosynthesis is performed by the bark. An ecologically important function of bark is to protect trees from fires. Thick barks, being poor conductors of heat, isolate the sensitive live tissues of many tree species from fires. See also: Epidermis: Outer Cell Layer of the Plant ELS subject area: Plant Science How to cite: Lev-Yadun, Simcha (May 2011) Bark. In: Encyclopedia of Life Sciences (ELS). John Wiley & Sons, Ltd: Chichester. DOI: 10.1002/9780470015902.a0002078.pub2 Structure and Development The bark includes primary and secondary phloem, cortex, first periderm, sequent periderms (rhytidome) and tissues formed by dilatation growth (Esau, 1965, 1969; Roth, 1981; Fahn, 1990; Junikka, 1994). The structure of the bark in roots of a given species is usually somewhat less complicated than in the shoot, and the description here refers to the shoot rather than to the root. The wealth of known structures and functions of the bark is never found in a single species, and there are also many variations at different ages and with changing growth conditions in the same individual (Borger, 1973; Roth, 1981; Lev-Yadun and Aloni, 1990). Additional variation is expressed following wounding or pathogen attacks (Borger, 1973). See also: Phloem Structure and Function In woody plants, two regions are distinguished within the bark: the inner bark, which is alive and where certain cells may redifferentiate and become meristematic or change their fate (e.g., parenchyma cells that turn into sclereids); and the outer, dead bark cut off from live tissues by dead isolating cork layers – the rhytidome. We distinguish between primary bark (originating from primary meristems – protoderm, ground meristem and procambium) and secondary bark (originating from secondary meristems – the vascular cambium, the phellogen and dilatation meristem) (Esau, 1969; Fahn, 1990). The contribution of the primary meristems to the primary bark is as follows. The protoderm gives rise to the epidermis, which may exist for many years or may be replaced by cork (periderm). The ground meristem gives rise to the cortex, made of parenchyma, collenchyma, fibres, sclereids, idioblasts of various types, resin ducts, gum ducts or laticifers. The procambium gives rise to the primary phloem, including the primary phloem fibres. In a number of plants, the border between the cortex and the primary phloem is marked by the starch sheath, a layer rich in starch grains, considered to be homologous with the endodermis of the root. An endodermis, with its typical casparian strip, is known from the shoot of only a small number of plants. In addition to these components, in shoots, leaf traces composed of xylem and phloem cross the cortex before they fuse with the central vascular cylinder (Esau, 1965; Fahn, 1990). See also: Cork; Starch and Starch Granules The vascular cambium (a secondary lateral meristem) is the origin of the secondary phloem. The distinction ENCYCLOPEDIA OF LIFE SCIENCES & 2011, John Wiley & Sons, Ltd. www.els.net 1 Bark between the primary and secondary phloem is easy in most gymnosperms and dicotyledons since the secondary phloem has a radial component (the vascular rays) in addition to the axial component, whereas the primary phloem does not include rays. However, hundreds of species produce secondary phloem with no rays as a special adaptation (Larson, 1994; Lev-Yadun and Aloni, 1995). The secondary phloem of many species has many bands of fibres (bast fibres) (Esau, 1965, 1969). When cambial activity produces large amounts of xylem, the phloem is pushed outward, and the old, nonconducting and soft sieve cells collapse and flatten, but the bands of fibres, axial parenchyma, sclereides and rays remain intact (Esau, 1965, 1969; Fahn, 1990). See also: Lateral Meristems; Meristems In many conifers, resin ducts develop in both the primary and secondary bark. They produce resin with species or even genotype-specific chemical composition. In many angiosperms, laticifers or gum ducts develop and produce special resins and latexes. Wounding or pathogen attacks result in the differentiation of additional (traumatic) resin ducts in conifers and gum ducts in many dicotyledons (Fahn, 1979; Fink, 1999). See also: Conifers; Gymnosperms; Latex and Laticifers; Plant Gums At a certain stage of shoot development, a periderm (cork tissue) may appear. The periderm is a secondary tissue formed from a secondary meristem – the phellogen, also known as cork cambium. The function of the periderm is to isolate and thus protect the live tissues from both biotic and abiotic damaging factors (Fahn, 1990; Sandved et al., 1993). In certain trees, the periderm may reach a thickness of dozens of centimetres, but usually it is only several millimetres to several centimetres thick. A well-known case is the giant sequoia of the western USA, in which bark thickness of mature trees ranges from 25 to 80 cm. The periderm is composed mostly of cork (phellem) cells, which die after differentiation, and their secondary cell walls are rich with suberin. The periderm also includes a certain amount of parenchyma (phelloderm) cells, and sometimes, for instance in pines, layers of hard, heavily lignified sclereids within the phellem zone (Fahn, 1990). As with resin and gum ducts, wounding and pathogenesis induces the formation of additional cork tissues (wound periderm) (Borger, 1973). See also: Cork In many plant species, there are many lenticels, which serve as gas exchange shafts through the almost impermeable cork. Lenticels are made of many loosely arranged cells that form a continuity of intercellular spaces with the inner tissues and appear as dots and stripes on the bark surface (Fahn, 1990; Figure 1). Initials of the phellogen mostly divide outward to produce phellem (cork) cells, but in many species a small fraction of its cell divisions are inward, to form the parenchymatic phelloderm. Derivatives of the phellogen are usually arranged in radial files. Initiation of periderm starts at different distances from the shoot apex and from different tissues. The site of phellogen initiation is in the pericycle in the roots, but in the shoot it can initiate in the epidermis, subepidermis or in much deeper layers, such as the cortex or 2 Figure 1 Cross-section of the stem of a small tree of Calotropis procera showing a microscopic view of the secondary xylem with the pores of the water conducting vessels (red bottom part); live part of the bark with the band of latex-forming ducts in the middle and the outer layers of cork with a typical lenticel in the centre (the green stained). old phloem (Fahn, 1990). Although for each organ and species there is a typical cell layer in which phellogen is initiated, there are many exceptions. Genetic, physiological and environmental factors largely influence the timing and location of phellogen initiation. In some plants, phellogen initiation occurs within a short time (only a few days) after an organ is formed, but in others it can be delayed for decades. In some plants, only a first periderm is formed, and this periderm may continue its activity for the rest of the plant’s life. The best-known case of such periderm is the cork oak of the Iberian peninsula, from which most of the global commercial cork originates (Fahn, 1990). In many woody plants, there is a second stage of cork formation – the rhytidome or subsequent periderms. In plants that form subsequent periderms, live parenchyma cells of the secondary phloem redifferentiate and form an internal zone of phellogen. The activity of this phellogen produces a layer of cork cells that isolate all tissues outward to them from nutrients and so cause them to die. All tissues (cork and other tissues) found outward from the innermost subsequent periderm compose the rhytidome (Fahn, 1990). See also: Parenchyma In several tropical tree species, especially trees of the savannah, spines develop on the surface of the trunks (e.g., Hura crepitans). Usually these spines are made of a special type of cork that develops from islands of phellogen (Roth, 1981). In trees, bark tissues usually comprise a much smaller fraction of the trunk volume than wood. Similarly, the effort to study bark development, anatomy and physiology is only a small fraction of that given to wood production. Thus, we do not know much concerning bark biology. The best model plant, Arabidopsis thaliana, has both primary and secondary bark, although it is a rather small annual and most of its secondary bark tissues are formed in the main root. Certain aspects of bark development, however, can be studied in this plant. The secondary phloem, which composes most of the inner bark in trees, is formed by ENCYCLOPEDIA OF LIFE SCIENCES & 2011, John Wiley & Sons, Ltd. www.els.net Bark cambial activity that usually produces 5–15 times more secondary xylem than phloem. Some species, that is, the cork oak, form growth-rings in the cork. However, dating various events using cork rings is not a common practise. The structure of the periderm influences the morphology of the outer surface of woody plants, especially trees. The bark can be smooth or covered by scales of various shapes and sizes. It can peel in small, medium or very large sheets or blocks and can differ in colour (Borger, 1973; Sandved et al., 1993). The functionality of the specific types of bark structure, morphology, shape and size of scales, colour and chemistry are almost not studied and therefore unknown. See also: Arabidopsis thaliana as an Experimental Organism Regulation of Cork Development Several environmental and endogenous conditions induce cork formation: submergence in water, direct strong sun irradiation, mechanical and biotic wounding and ageing. All these factors are known to increase the production of gaseous phytohormone ethylene. It was therefore proposed that ethylene is the major activator for phellogen initiation and activity (Lev-Yadun and Aloni, 1990). Since the cork layer formed is almost impermeable to gases, as a cork layer is formed, the inner cell layers are exposed to increasing levels of ethylene, and more cork formation is induced. In many plant species, there is a gap in phellogen initiation around buds in the nodal region, or a cork-free region in stems and branches beneath buds and major veins of leaves. Therefore, it was proposed that the basipetal polar auxin transport inhibits cork formation in these regions (Lev-Yadun and Aloni, 1990). These cork-free regions later enable suppressed buds to develop quickly and form new branches after damage to the canopy, and not to be disturbed by a heavy, hard layer of cork (Lev-Yadun and Aloni, 1993). See also: Plant Growth Factors and Receptors Dilatation When trees and shrubs or even thick annuals grow in diameter, the outer tissues expand to a certain but limited degree. With additional diameter growth, there is a danger that cracks will be formed, and the sensitive inner tissues will be exposed to biotic and abiotic agents that can endanger the plant. To avoid the formation of such cracks, a special tissue is formed in the outer bark – a dilatation tissue (Esau, 1965, 1969; Roth, 1981; Fahn, 1990). Dilatation is the outcome of one or two processes that co-occur in many species. The first process is dilatation growth as the result of cell expansion. Certain parenchyma cells of the cortex, of the axial phloem parenchyma or the phloem ray parenchyma expand to keep the bark intact (Figure 2). In other cases, groups of these cells enter a phase of cell divisions and form a dilatation meristem. When dilatation occurs in the phloem rays, a distinct funnel-shaped phloem Figure 2 Longitudinal tangential section of the bark of a large tree of Ficus sycomorus showing a microscopic view of the bark in a region of old phloem where dilatation started. The axial fibres and parenchyma form a net of strands while the radial component, the rays (which are spindle-shaped), start to dilate. ray dilatation occurs (Esau, 1965, 1969; Roth, 1981; Fahn, 1990). Dilatation may be very irregular, resulting in the formation of whirled tissues and various shapes of rays. Similarly, meristematic dilatation zones in various other orientations and from other origins occur within the bark in the process of dilatation (Roth, 1981; Lev-Yadun and Aloni, 1992). Dilatation activity results in the production of parenchyma, and later, many of these parenchyma cells may redifferentiate to sclereids (Roth, 1981). Dilatation activity is suppressed in the lower side of leaning trunks, probably by the higher-than-usual auxin levels. Application of ethylene, wounding, or environmental conditions that induce ethylene production results in higher dilatation activity. See also: Phloem Structure and Function The regulation of traumatic resin and gum ducts, and wound cork formation At least two plant hormones (ethylene and jasmonic acid), which are expressed at higher levels than normal following ENCYCLOPEDIA OF LIFE SCIENCES & 2011, John Wiley & Sons, Ltd. www.els.net 3 Bark wounding and pathogen attacks, induce the formation of traumatic resin and gum ducts and wound cork. Ethylene, one of the first known plant hormones, was recognised first as a major inducer of traumatic resin and gum ducts (Fahn, 1988). The role of ethylene in inducing cork formation (Lev-Yadun and Aloni, 1990) and dilatation activity (LevYadun and Aloni, 1992) followed. Later, methyl jasmonate was found to be involved in traumatic resin and gum duct formation (Franceschi et al., 2002; Hudgins et al., 2004). The stress hormone ABA seems to have a role in inducing suberin synthesis (Ginzberg, 2008). The role of other phytohormones and their regulatory networks in these processes, if any, is not clear. The general picture emerging is that the three stress/wounding/defence phytohormones ethylene and ABA are deeply involved in nontraumatic and traumatic bark formation and methyl jasmonate in traumatic bark tissue formation. The role of methyl jasmonate in nontraumatic bark formation is not yet known. The precise hormonal regulation of bark formation at the molecular level is still far from being understood. Gene expression in the bark The study of gene expression and genes involved in regulation of bark formation has practically only begun. We have only a preliminary understanding of the genetic and molecular processes involved in bark biology (e.g., Roach and Deyholos, 2007; Soler et al., 2007, 2008; Barel and Ginzberg, 2008; Wildhagen et al., 2010; Duan et al., 2010). The chances of finding commercially important molecules in the bark and the renewed interest in bast fibres have resulted in a recent modest increase in such studies of the bark but much more should be done. Genomic studies of differentiating cork in the most important source for commercial cork, the cork oak resulted in the classification of about 50 genes belonging to the main pathways for cork biosynthesis (Soler et al., 2007). The seasonal expression of some of these genes was also studied and found to show highest expression in June, a crucial month for cork development in cork oak (Soler et al., 2008). In potato tuber skin, another important model for periderm formation, many of the expressed proteins are not only known plant defence components, but also various enzymes involved in cork formation (Barel and Ginzberg, 2008). In Hevea brasiliensis, the most important source of natural rubber, induced by bark wounding, the treatments of wounding, application of methyl jasmonate or ethylene specifically induced the expression of various genes with two genes up-regulated by all three treatments (Duan et al., 2010). Autumnal storage of proteins in poplar bark after the re-translocation of amino acids from senescing leaves is correlated with day length and temperature. Some of these proteins are known to be storage proteins, some have various physiological functions and the function of others is not known yet (Wildhagen et al., 2010). A much broader and deeper understanding of the genes involved in all aspects of bark biology is expected in the coming years. 4 Fibres in the bark Two types of fibres are found in the bark (bast fibres). Some plants, for example, flax, produce only primary phloem fibres of procambial origin. Others, for example, hemp, kenaf and many trees produce in addition secondary phloem fibres of cambial origin (Esau, 1965, 1969; Fahn, 1990). Uses of bark Products made of bark have been important since ancient times. Several plants are famous for their bast fibres (primary and secondary phloem fibres): flax, hemp, jute, ramie and kenaf. Their fibres are used for textiles, cordage, matting, fishing nets, sails, sacks, paper production, composite materials, etc. Before the invention of plastics, these and other plant fibres were of utmost importance. Cork from the cork oak (Quercus suber) and a long list of secondary cork-based products are used all over the world. Sealing wine bottles is only a small fraction of the uses of cork. Tanning hides with bark tannins to produce leather has been practiced for millennia. Before the age of rubber and plastics, leather was extremely important, and its production commonly needed bark tannins (Hill, 1952). Rubber is mainly produced from the latex exuded from the artificially wounded bark of H. brasiliensis. Many other species produce latex in the bark, but only a small number of species are used for rubber production (Loadman, 2005). Several barks provide chemicals used for medicine. Quinine, the cure for malaria, still a major killer in the tropics, is produced from the bark of several species of the genus Cinchona. Taxol, a drug used against several types of cancer, is extracted from the bark of the Pacific yew (Taxus brevifolia). Curare, probably the best-known muscle-relaxing poison and a source for medicines, is produced by mixing barks of several tropical species. Cinnamon, camphor and several other spices are also produced from tree barks (Sandved et al., 1993). See also: Plant Secondary Metabolism; Taxol; Vegetable Tannins References Barel G and Ginzberg I (2008) Potato skin proteome is enriched with plant defense components. Journal of Experimental Botany 59: 3347–3357. Borger GA (1973) Development and shedding of bark. In: Kozlowski TT (ed.) Shedding of Plant Parts, pp. 205–236. New York: Academic Press. Duan C, Rio M, Leclercq J et al. (2010) Gene expression pattern in response to wounding, methyl jasmonate and ethylene in the bark of Hevea brasiliensis. Tree Physiology 30: 1349–1359. Esau K (1965) Plant Anatomy, 2nd edn. New York: Wiley. Esau K (1969) The Phloem, 2nd edn. Berlin: Gebrüder Borntraeger. Fahn A (1979) Secretory Tissues in Plants. London: Academic Press. Fahn A (1988) Secretory tissues and factors influencing their development. Phyton (Austria) 28: 13–26. Fahn A (1990) Plant Anatomy, 4th edn. Oxford: Pergamon Press. ENCYCLOPEDIA OF LIFE SCIENCES & 2011, John Wiley & Sons, Ltd. www.els.net Bark Fink S (1999) Pathological and Regenerative Plant Anatomy. Berlin: Gebrüder Borntraeger. Franceschi VR, Krekling T and Christianses E (2002) Application of Methyl Jasmonate on Picea abies (Pinaceae) stems induces defense-related responses in phloem and xylem. American Journal of Botany 89: 578–586. Ginzberg I (2008) Wound-periderm formation. In: Schaller A (ed.) Induced Plant Resistance to Herbivory, pp. 131–146. Berlin: Springer-Verlag. Hill AF (1952) Economic Botany, 2nd edn. New York: McGrawHill Book Company Inc. Hudgins JW, Christianses E and Franceschi VR (2004) Induction of anatomically based defense responses in stems of diverese conifers by methyl jasmonate: a phylogenetic perspective. Tree Physiology 24: 251–264. Junikka L (1994) Survey of English macroscopic bark terminology. IAWA Journal 15: 3–45. Larson PR (1994) The Vascular Cambium. Development and Structure. Berlin: Springer-Verlag. Lev-Yadun S and Aloni R (1990) Polar patterns of periderm ontogeny, their relationship to leaves and buds, and the control of cork formation. IAWA Bulletin n.s. 11: 289–300. Lev-Yadun S and Aloni R (1992) Experimental induction of dilatation meristems in Melia azedarach L. Annals of Botany 70: 379–386. Lev-Yadun S and Aloni R (1993) Bark structure and mode of canopy regeneration in trees of Melia azedarach L. Trees 7: 144–147. Lev-Yadun S and Aloni R (1995) Differentiation of the ray system in woody plants. Botanical Review 61: 45–88. Loadman J (2005) Tears of the Tree. The Story of Rubber – A Modern Marvel. Oxford: Oxford University Press. Roach MJ and Deyholos MK (2007) Microarray analysis of flax (Linum usitatissimum L.) stems identifies transcripts enriched in fibre-bearing phloem tissues. Molecular Genetics and Genomics 278: 149–165. Roth I (1981) Structural Patterns of Tropical Barks. Berlin: Gebrüder Borntraeger. Sandved KB, Prance GT and Prance AE (1993) Bark. The Formation, Characteristics, and Uses of Bark Around the World. Portland: Timber Press. Soler M, Serra O, Molinas M et al. (2007) A genomic approach to suberin biosynthesis and cork differentiation. Plant Physiology 144: 419–431. Soler M, Serra O, Molinas M et al. (2008) Seasonal variation in transcript abundance in cork tissue analyzed by real time RT-PCR. Tree Physiology 28: 743–751. Wildhagen H, Dürr J, Ehlting B and Rennenberg H (2010) Seasonal nitrogen cycling in the bark of field-grown grey poplar is correlated with meteorological factors and gene expression of bark storage proteins. Tree Physiology 30: 1096–1110. Further Reading Dusotoit-Coucaud A, Kongsawadworakul P, Maurousset L et al. (2010) Ethylene stimulation of latex yield depends on the expression of a sucrose transporter (HbSUT1B) in rubber tree (Hevea brasiliensis). Tree Physiology 30: 1586–1598. da Ponte-e-Sousa JCA, de A and Neto-Vaz AM (2011) Cork and metals: a review. Wood Science and Technology 45: 183–202. Saveyn A, Steppe K, Ubierna N and Dawson TE (2010) Woody tissue photosynthesis and its contribution to trunk growth and bud development in young plants. Plant, Cell and Environment 33: 1949–1958. Schreiber L (2010) Transport barriers made of cutin, suberin and associated waxes. Trends in Plant Science 15: 546–553. Serra O, Figueras M, Franke R, Prat S and Molinas M (2010) Unraveling ferulate role in suberin and periderm biology by reverse genetics. Plant Signaling & Behavior 5: 953–958. ENCYCLOPEDIA OF LIFE SCIENCES & 2011, John Wiley & Sons, Ltd. www.els.net 5