Wild-type groundcherry and a huskless version (IMAGE)
Caption
A flowering wild-type groundcherry (left) and a huskless version (right), as seen through electron microscopy. The wild-type’s flower petals are separate from the sepal, which becomes the inflated calyx. In the huskless version, the flower petals and sepal are merged—which prevents inflated calyx development.
Credit
Lippman lab/CSHL, 2022
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