“…As well in the present study, Cook & Graham (1998) (Almonte et al, 2021), have demonstrated the presence of cell wall constituents among the cuticle layers, contradicting the traditional idea that the cuticle is free of polysaccharides and "continuous" (Brongniart, 1830;Jeffree et al, 2006). This cuticle chemical heterogeneity suggests a variation of the hydrophobic property in different regions of the same plant surface, facilitating the bidirectional permeability of water and solutes, the wettability of plant surfaces, altering mechanical resistance and, therefore, changing the interaction with microorganisms and contaminants deposited on these surfaces (Guzmań-Delgado et al, 2014;Almonte et al, 2021). The simpler cuticle detected by TEM analysis in the P. laevis gametophyte (Figures 1F, H) may be related to a lower lipidization, perhaps due to a lower wax content (Figure 3A), observed in the present study, and a greater presence of wall polysaccharides associated with the cuticular layer.…”