What's the difference between cambium and phloem?

Cambium


Definition:

  • (n.) A series of formative cells lying outside of the wood proper and inside of the inner bark. The growth of new wood takes place in the cambium, which is very soft.
  • (n.) A fancied nutritive juice, formerly supposed to originate in the blood, to repair losses of the system, and to promote its increase.

Example Sentences:

  • (1) The cells of the cambium layer are destroyed and the collagen of the fibrous layer undergoes depolymerization.
  • (2) By retaining the cortex, the cambium layer is preserved, and this is thought to have a better osteogenic capacity than vascularized periosteal grafts.
  • (3) Different stages of cellular development were identified in the botryoid sarcomas, with the most immature cells of the cambium layer devoid of external basement membrane around the tumor cells, although the stroma contained finely dispersed basement membrane material and some cells contained intracytoplasmic laminin or type IV collagen, indicative of the synthesis of these proteins.
  • (4) The maximal flavylogen concentrations were in the phloem and cambium from mature stems, where all three fractions were richly present.
  • (5) The specific activities and the activities per cell of these enzymes varied during differentiation of cambium to xylem according to the type polysaccharide synthesized.
  • (6) At the final stage of the differentiation of cambium to xylem there was a decrease in activity of the enzymes directly involved in producing the soluble precursors of pectin (DUP-D-galactose 4-epimerase and UDP-L-arabinose 4-epimerase and an increase in those producing the precursors of hemicellulose (UDP-D-glucose dehydrogenase and UDP-D-glucuronate decarboxylase).
  • (7) In 17 experiments the periosteum was wrapped around the grafts with the cambium layer facing the bone, and in seven experiments with the cambium layer facing the muscle.
  • (8) In 17 adolescent rabbits, a rectangular graft of periosteum was elevated from the medial aspect of each proximal tibia and folded back on itself so that its deep (cambium) layer was facing outward on both sides.
  • (9) The purpose of this study was to determine if the hyaline-like cartilage produced in major full-thickness defects of a joint surface, treated by a free periosteal graft and subjected to continuous passive motion (CPM), originated exclusively from the progenitor cells of the cambium of the graft.
  • (10) A graft of periosteum from the proximal tibia was wrapped around a disc of bone from the same area (cambium layer of the periosteum facing outward), then press-fitted into the defect.
  • (11) The cambium then regenerates along a path where the ratio of auxin to sucrose concentration is similar to that at the original cambium, and its orientation (as regards xylem and phloem formation) is determined by the direction of the gradient in this ratio.
  • (12) Heterotopically-induced bones are not covered by a periosteal membrane with a functioning cambium layer.
  • (13) Maintenance of integrity of the cambium layer of the periosteal graft is emphasized.
  • (14) A similar increase has been found for the ratios determined for xylem tissue compared with those for cambium.
  • (15) Apart from the superficial epithelium the lesions can be subdivided into a subepithelial myxoid-fibrous zone followed by a proliferative capillary fibroblastic cambium layer.
  • (16) The new bone was formed by the osteogenic cells of the cambium layer in both types of graft.
  • (17) The capillary fibroblastic cambium zone disappears and areas of hyalinization are enlarged.
  • (18) In Series 1 with the cambium layer of the periosteum facing the bone, after 20 weeks a tubular bone with Haversian system and bone marrow was seen.
  • (19) There was intense proliferation in the cells of the cambium layer of the periosteum, with differentiation to chondroblasts and osteoblasts, suggesting that this layer was the primary tissue responsible for development of the callus.
  • (20) Degranulating MCs conversely decreased near the cambium layer of the periosteum.

Phloem


Definition:

  • (n.) That portion of fibrovascular bundles which corresponds to the inner bark; the liber tissue; -- distinguished from xylem.

Example Sentences:

  • (1) A computer model predicts that SA should move rapidly in phloem.
  • (2) Pinwheel inclusions (PWs) were found in cells of callus tissue derived from explants of secondary phloem parenchyma of carrot (Daucus carota) storage root and grown on a basal medium containing zeatin and indoleacetic acid or coconut milk, naphthalene acetic acid, or combinations of these.
  • (3) Pumpkin phloem exudate contains two abundant phloem proteins: PP1 is a 96-kD protein that forms polymeric filaments in vivo, and PP2 is a 48-kD dimeric lectin.
  • (4) The labelled ethephon is translocated in a higher concentration in the phloem after foliar dissepiment application.
  • (5) When the CoYMV promoter is used to drive expression of the beta-glucuronidase reporter gene in stably transformed tobacco plants, beta-glucuronidase activity occurs primarily in the phloem, the phloem-associated cells, and the axial parenchyma of roots, stems, leaves, and flowers.
  • (6) Virus particles were present in all cell types of the epidermis, mesophyll, phloem, and xylem.
  • (7) Polyclonal antibodies raised against pumpkin phloem exudate were used to isolate several cDNAs corresponding to PP1 and PP2.
  • (8) For both cultivars, the phloem, mesophyll, parenchyma and epidermis were the most susceptible tissues to bacterial attack.
  • (9) The occurrence of annulate lamellae (AL) in differentiating phloem of Sonchus oleraceus (Compositae) singly infected with sowthistle yellow vein virus (SYVV) and doubly infected with a combination of SYVV and beet yellow stunt virus is documented by electron microscopy.
  • (10) BYDV, a phloem restricted luteovirus, occurs in very low concentration in grasses.
  • (11) Ultrastructural examination of leaf tissue of Nicotiana benthamiana infected with Indian cassava mosaic virus (ICMV) revealed abnormalities in phloem and, occasionally, xylem cells.
  • (12) The possibility of a symplastic pathway of solute movement from the phloem to the syncytium is suggested.
  • (13) Sieve cells and sieve tube members can be macerated from the phloem of various organs of woody and herbaceous species by autoclaving the tissue in a mild macerating medium.
  • (14) In transgenic tobacco the GS3A promoter directed GUS expression in the phloem cells of the vasculature in leaves, stems and roots.
  • (15) Light and electron microscopical observations of the cells of the phloem of Cucurbita maxima have shown that two distinct types of P-protein bodies are formed: a larger type which arises as fine fibrils and a smaller type which apparently arises as groups of tubules.
  • (16) A biochemical and cytochemical study has been made of the distribution of ATPase in mature and differentiating phloem cells of Nicotiana tabacum and of the substrate specificity and effects of fixation on enzyme activity.
  • (17) We report here that a soybean 62-kD sucrose binding protein is associated with the plasma membrane of several cell types engaged in sucrose transport, including the mesophyll cells of young sink leaves, the companion cells of mature phloem, and the cells of the developing cotyledons.
  • (18) It also adhered, though in much smaller numbers, to the uncut surfaces of mesophyll, epidermal, and phloem cell walls.
  • (19) With the exception of the phloem and the crown of the parenchyma, which borders the medullary lacuna, the walls of the tissues of both treated and untreated straw were lignified.
  • (20) The content of the vitamins in the phloem depends on the quantity of the yeast organisms in it.

Words possibly related to "cambium"

Words possibly related to "phloem"