Improved preservation of the form and contents of wall vesicles and the golgi apparatus in freeze substituted hyphae ofSaprolegnia |
| |
Authors: | I Brent Heath Karen Rethoret A Larry Arsenault F Peter Ottensmeyer |
| |
Institution: | (1) Department of Biology, York University, 4700 Keele Street, M3J 1P3 Downsview, Ontario, Canada;(2) Physics Division, Ontario Cancer Institute, Toronto |
| |
Abstract: | Summary Secretory vesicles involved in cell wall synthesis (wall vesicles) and the Golgi apparatus have been compared in conventionally fixed and freeze substituted hyphae of the oomycete fungusSaprolegnia ferax. Wall vesicles freeze substituted in various fluids range from spherical to tubular and contain an intensely staining, phosphorous rich matrix. In contrast diverse conventional fixations cause artefactual constrictions in most tubular vesicles and loss of their intensely staining contents. These data are interpreted to show the existence of an intravesicular skeletal system, with cellular regulation, to determine vesicle morphology and intravesicular synthesis of a hypothetical phosphorylated glycolipid cell wall precursor. Whilst freeze substitution gives superior preservation of wall vesicle morphology, it does not demonstrate any preferential association between wall vesicles and microtubules thus suggesting that microtubules are only indirectly involved in wall vesicle transport. Freeze substitution is superior to conventional fixation for analysis of the Golgi apparatus because it uniquely reveals both differentiation of a specific single cisterna in each Golgi body and greater differences in membrane thicknesses throughout the endomembrane system. |
| |
Keywords: | Cell wall synthesis Freeze substitution Fungal hyphae Golgi bodies Secretory vesicles Tip growth |
本文献已被 SpringerLink 等数据库收录! |
|