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cuticle

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cuticle

1. dead skin, esp that round the base of a fingernail or toenail
2. another name for epidermis
3. any covering layer or membrane
4. the protective layer, containing cutin, that covers the epidermis of higher plants
5. the hard protective layer covering the epidermis of many invertebrates
Collins Discovery Encyclopedia, 1st edition © HarperCollins Publishers 2005

cuticle

[′kyüd·ə·kəl]
(anatomy)
The horny layer of the nail fold attached to the nail plate at its margin.
(biology)
A noncellular, hardened or membranous secretion of an epithelial sheet, such as the integument of nematodes and annelids, the exoskeleton of arthropods, and the continuous film of cutin on certain plant parts.
McGraw-Hill Dictionary of Scientific & Technical Terms, 6E, Copyright © 2003 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc.
The following article is from The Great Soviet Encyclopedia (1979). It might be outdated or ideologically biased.

Cuticle

 

(1) In animals, a solid formation on the surface of cells of epithelial tissue. In invertebrates, a derivative of cells of the single-layered integumental epithelium, or hypodermis. The functions of the cuticle are chiefly protective and supportive. In worms and arthropods, it forms a tough body covering. The composition of cuticle includes chitin (which, together with mineral substances and proteins, provides mechanical strength) and lipids (which make the cuticle impervious to water).

In vertebrates, which have a multilayered integumental epithelium to perform the protective function, the cuticle is found mainly on the surface of the epithelial cells that line the viscera (the intestines, the air passages of the respiratory organs, parts of the uriniferous tubules of the kidneys, and the urinary tracts). Each cell has its own cuticle, which is represented completely by the microvilli (the surface of a single cell of the small intestine in man having as many as 2,000). The activity of certain enzymes (for example, alkaline phosphatase, invertases, and maltases) has been discovered in the cuticle, testifying to the active participation of the cuticle in the functional activities of the organs.

(2) In plants, the cuticle is the thin protective film covering the epidermis of the leaves and stems and consisting of cutin. The cuticle is an unstructured formation, lacking corpuscular or fibrillar elements. It is resistant to chemical influences. It is absent in the underwater organs of aquatic plants, and it is poorly developed in plants that live in shade or damp soil. It is especially well developed in plants that must limit transpiration. The smooth, shiny cuticle of the leaves of tropical plants reflects some of the sunlight striking the plants and serves as a shield against excessive insolation. In many xerophytes, the protective properties of the epidermis are reinforced beneath the cuticle by a cuticular layer, which consists of a mixture of polysaccharides, cutin, and waxes. In the majority of xerophytes, the cuticular layer holds pale yellow pigments, which help make the cell wall impenetrable to ultraviolet rays.

M. E. ASPIZ

The Great Soviet Encyclopedia, 3rd Edition (1970-1979). © 2010 The Gale Group, Inc. All rights reserved.
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References in periodicals archive
Chances are, however, that these are cuticular substances and probably not cell vacuole substances from stem cuticle or parenchyma.
Las laminas de impresion cuticular se obtuvieron con ayuda de barniz de unas transparente y laminas portaobjetos (Brunner & Coman 1974 y Juarez et al.
In Drosophila, cuticular hydrocarbons (CHC) have multiple biological roles, especially those related with chemical communication and different behaviors.
Based on morphological, molecular, and cuticular hydrocarbon analysis, we have identified the cockroaches collected from Mobile, Alabama, as the field cockroach, Blattella vaga Hebard.
Tegument covered with abundant setae and granules similar to those on carapace; cuticular pits absent.
Jhansi Lakshmi et al., "Leaf cuticular wax amount and crystal morphology regulate postharvest water loss in mulberry (Morus species)," Plant Physiology and Biochemistry, vol.
O padrao cuticular e semelhante entre as duas especies, descrito como pavimentoso losangico, os quais se diferenciam pela dimensao das escamas, sendo estreitas para D.
Two mechanisms of foliar absorption have been discussed and characterized to a certain extent, namely, the cuticular pathway and the stomatal pathway [3].The present study was carried out to improve the productivity and quality of olive fruit by foliar boron application at appropriate growth stage.
The third segment is symmetrically bell shaped, and it has a near circularly shaped AD surrounded by a so-called velum, a fringe of long and thin cuticular filaments.
The pathogenesis of oestrosis is related to traumatic effects caused by cuticular spines and oral hooks during larval migration, but is mainly caused by molecules secreted and excreted by larvae that induce hypersensitivity immune reaction.
Three general levels of structuring are observed in leaf surfaces: the general shape of the cell, cuticular folds and epicuticular waxes.
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