BASIDIOSPORE INITIATION AND EARLY DEVELOPMENT IN COPRINUS CINEREUS |
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Authors: | David J. McLaughlin |
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Affiliation: | Department of Botany, University of Minnesota, St. Paul, 55108 |
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Abstract: | Early basidiospore development in Coprinus cinereus has been divided into four stages: 1) inception, 2) asymmetric growth, 3) equal enlargement, 4) elongation, all based on changes in spore size and shape, wall layering, and cytoplasm. The hilar appendix body formed on the adaxial side of the stage 1 basidiospore, persisted through all stages studied, and predicted the site of the hilar appendix. The hilar appendix formed in stage 2 by modification of certain wall layers. A band of peripheral endoplasmic reticulum covered an average of 38 % of the lower spore wall in stage 3 and was oriented around the axis of growth. Stage 4 was initiated by a break in wall layer 3 at the spore apex and the disappearance of the peripheral endoplasmic reticulum. A pore cap formed on the spore apex during spore elongation. The spore wall consisted at first of three layers and became six layered by deposition of layers between two of the initial layers. Cytoplasmic changes associated with spore growth included presence of small vesicles at stage 1 and larger Golgi vesicles later, absence of mitochondria and probable Golgi cisternae from the spore until stage 3, and presence of a zone nearly free of ribosomes and organelles under the spore apex in stage 4. Functions of the hilar appendix body, peripheral endoplasmic reticulum and the different wall layers in control of spore shape are discussed. |
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