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1.
Summary Plastid nucleoids (pt nucleoids) were observed during pollen formation, or in generative cells of mature pollen grains using fluorescence microscopy after staining with 4,6-diamidino-2-phenylindole (DAPI). Nuclease C activity was surveyed using SDS-PAGE and agarose gel nuclease assay methods. InMirabilis jalapa, pt nucleoids were observed both in pollen mother cells and the monocellular pollen grains after meiosis, followed by the complete disappearance both in the generative and vegetative cells at the bicellular pollen grain stage. This observation is a direct evidence of maternal plastid inheritance. By contrast, in the generative cells of mature pollen grains fromRhododendron kaempferi, Zygocactus truncatus, Oenothera laciniata, andO. speciosa, pt nucleoids were clearly observed. Thus cytological evidence convinces the mode of biparental plastid inheritance. Nuclease C activity was clearly detected both in the stamen and pistil ofM. jalapa. InR. kaempferi low nuclease C activity was detected in both organs, but the activity in the stamen was much less than in the pistil. InZ. truncatus, O. laciniata, andO. speciosa, the activities were difficult to detect in both organs. These results suggest a significant role of nuclease C for the digestion of pt nucleoids in the generative cells.Abbreviations EGTA ethylene-glycol-bis-(2-aminoethyl ether)-N, N, N, N-tetraacetic acid - DAPI 4,6-diamidino-2-phenylindole - Nuclease C Ca2+ dependent nuclease - SDS-PAGE SDS-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis - pt nucleoids plastid nucleoids  相似文献   

2.
Summary The behavior of organelle nucleoids in the generative cell was examined at the second (pollen grain) mitosis by epifluorescence microscopy after staining with 4,6-diamidino-2-phenylindole (DAPI) inOenothera biennis. TheO. biennis generative cell contained a large number of organelle nucleoids distributed randomly in the cytoplasm before mitosis. The epifluorescence images of the nucleoids could be classified distinctly into two groups which corresponded to plastid nucleoids (pt-nucleoids) and mitochondrial nucleoids (mt-nucleoids). Discrimination between pt- and mt-nucleoids was carried out with the aid of DNA immunogold electron microscopy. At metaphase, both pt- and mt-nucleoids migrated to the pole regions of the generative cell. After mitosis, organelle nucleoids in both of the sperm cells scattered in the cytoplasm again. A quantitative examination of pt-nucleoids on 202 pairs of sperm cells showed that the leading sperm cell (Svn) contained 0–39 pt-nucleoids (19.0 ± 7.4) and the trailing sperm cell (Sua) contained 0–40 pt-nucleoids (15.4 ± 6.5). For mt-nucleoids, examination of 28 pairs of sperm cells showed that Svn contained 5–32 mt-nucleoids (14.5 ± 6.8) and Sua contained 6–30 mt-nucleoids (13.4 ±7.5). These results showed that (1) the number of organelle nucleoids per sperm cell varied considerably in the cells studied; (2) quantitative difference in pt- and mt-nucleoids between Svn and Sua could occur in some gametophytes studied; but (3) it was unlikely that there was any pre-differentiational cytoplasm localization and essential sperm heteromorphy with respect to organelle nucleoid content in the gametophyte population.  相似文献   

3.
Summary The behavior of the generative cell during male gametophyte development inPlumbago zeylanica was examined by epifluorescence microscopy and electron microscopy with organelle nucleoid as a cytoplasm marker. When the thin sections stained with 4,6-diamidino-2-phenylindoIe (DAPI) were observed under an epifluorescence microscope, two types of fluorescence spots were detected in the cytoplasm of the pollen cells before the second mitosis. The spots emitting stronger fluorescence were confirmed as plastid nucleoids and those emitting dimmer fluorescence were mitochondrial nucleoids. Before the first mitosis, both plastid and mitochondrial nucleoids distributed randomly in the cytoplasm of the microspore. A small lenticular generative cell formed with attachment to the interior of the intine after the mitosis. Small vacuoles were found in the lenticular cell. In the cytoplasm of the lenticular cell, both plastid nucleoids and the small vacuoles were distributed randomly at the very beginning but began to migrate in opposite directions immediately. Plastid nucleoids aggregated to the side of the cell that faces the pollen center and the small vacuoles aggregated to the side of the cell that attaches to the inline. As the result, the lenticular generative cell appeared highly polarized in cytoplasm location soon after the first mitosis. In accordance with the definition of the cytoplasm polarization, the primary wall between the generative and the vegetative cells began to flex and the lenticular generative cell started to protrude towards the pollen center. When the generative cell peeled away from the inline, it was spherical in shape with the pole that aggregated plastids towards the vegetative nucleus. But the cell direction appeared to be transformed immediately. The pole that aggregated small vacuoles turned to the position towards the vegetative nucleus and the pole that aggregated plastid nucleoids turned to the position countering to the vegetative nucleus. A cellular protuberance formed at the edge of the pole that aggregated small vacuoles and elongated into a tapered end that got into contact with the vegetative nucleus. The polarization of the cytoplasm kept constant throughout the second mitosis. The small vacuoles that apportioned to the sperm cell which attached the vegetative nucleus (the leading sperm cell) disappeared during sperm cell maturation. Plastid nucleoids were apportioned to the other sperm cell (the trailing sperm cell) completely. Mitochondrial nucleoids became undetectable after the second mitosis.  相似文献   

4.
In the male gametophyte of Pelargonium zonale, generative and sperm cells contain cytoplasmic DNA in high density compared to vegetative cells. Cytoplasmic DNA was examined using the DNA fluorochrome DAPI (4'6-diamidino-2-phenylindole) and observed with epifluorescence and electron microscopy. The microspore cell contains a prominent central vacuole before mitosis; mitochondria and plastids are randomly distributed throughout the cytoplasm. Following the first pollen grain mitosis, neither the vegetative cell nor the early generative cell display a distributional difference in cytoplasmic DNA, nor is there in organelle content at this stage. During the maturation of the male gametophyte, however, a significant discrepancy in plastid abundance develops. Plastids in the generative cell return to proplastids and do not contain large starch grains, while those in the vegetative cell develop starch grains and differentiate into large amyloplasts. Plastid nucleoids in generative and sperm cells in a mature male gametophyte are easily discriminated after DAPI staining due to their compactness, while those in vegetative cells stained only weakly. The utility of the hydrophilic, non-autofluorescent resin Technovit 7100 in observing DAPI fluorescence is also demonstrated.  相似文献   

5.
Summary The behavior of nucleoids during the leucoplast division cycle in the epidermis of onion (Allium cepa) bulbs was investigated using DNA-specific fluorochrome 4'6-diamidino-2-phenylindole (DAPI) staining. The leucoplast was morphologically amoeboid and continuously changed its shape. A dumbbell-shaped leucoplast divided into two spherical daughter ones by constriction in the middle region of the body. Leucoplasts contained 4–10 mostly spherical, oval, partly rodand dumbbell-shaped nucleoids which were dispersed within the bodies. The proportion of one DNA molecule of a T4 phage particle to the small leucoplast nucleoid in the grain density of negative film was 1 to 0.91. Comparison of the present result and another groups' biochemical results suggested that a small leucoplast nucleoid contains one DNA molecule. The dumbbell-shaped leucoplast probably before division contained about twice as many nucleoids as the spherical leucoplast after division, and each half of the dumbbell contained about half the number of nucleoids. Nucleoids increased in number with growth of the leucoplast. The behavior of nucleoids during the leucoplast division cycle in onion bulbs was basically similar to that during the chloroplast division cycle in higher plants and green algae, which was previously reported (Kuroiwa et al. 1981 b).  相似文献   

6.
Microgametophytic plastid nucleoids were quantified for 18 species representing the four core genera of the tribeTrifolieae (Fabaceae),Medicago, Melilotus, Trigonella, andTrifolium. Generative cells of all taxa contained nucleoids, establishing that biparental plastid inheritance is common in theTrifolieae. Nucleoid number and volumes of pollen grains and generative cell nuclei differed among taxa. Nucleoid number was positively correlated with pollen grain and generative cell nuclear volumes, flower size and style length. These relationships disappeared after adjusting nucleoid number for pollen grain and generative cell nuclear volumes. Adjusted nucleoid numbers provided no evidence to support hypotheses that plastid content is associated with ploidy level, mating system, perenniality or size of the reproductive apparatus.  相似文献   

7.
The fates of mitochondrial and plastid nucleoids during pollen development in six angiosperm species (Antirrhinum majus, Glycine max, Medicago sativa, Nicotiana tabacum, Pisum sativum, and Trifolium pratense) were examined using epifluorescence microscopy after double staining with 4',6-diamidino-2- phenylindole (DAPI) to stain DNA and with a potentiometric dye (either DiOC7 or rhodamine 123) for visualization of metabolically active mitochondria. From the pollen mother cell stage to the microspore stage of pollen development, mitochondria and plastids both contained DNA detectable by DAPI staining. However, during the further maturation preceding anthesis, mitochondrial DNA became undetectable cytologically in either the generative or the vegetative cell of mature pollen; even in germinated pollen tubes containing hundreds of metabolically active mitochondria undergoing cytoplasmic streaming, vital staining with DAPI failed to reveal mitochondrial DNA. By the mature pollen stage, plastid DNA also became undetectable by DAPI staining in the vegetative cell. However, in the generative cell of mature pollen the timing of plastid DNA disappearance as detected by DAPI varied with the species. Plastid DNA remained detectable only in the generative cells of pollen grains from species known or suspected to have biparental transmission of plastids. The apparent absence of cytologically detectable organelle genomes in living pollen was further examined using molecular methods by hybridizing organelle DNA-specific probes to digests of total DNA from mature pollen and from other organs of A. majus and N. tabacum, both known to be maternal for organelle inheritance. Mitochondrial DNA was detected in pollen of both species; thus the cytological alteration of mitochondrial genomes during pollen development does not correspond with total mtDNA loss from the pollen. Plastid DNA was detectable with molecular probes in N. tabacum pollen but not in A. majus pollen. Since the organelle DNA detected by molecular methods in mature pollen may lie solely in the vegetative cell, further study of the basis of maternal inheritance of mitochondria and plastids will require molecular methods which distinguish vegetative cell from reproductive cell organelle genomes. The biological effect of the striking morphological alteration of organelle genomes during later stages of pollen development, which leaves them detectable by molecular methods but not by DAPI staining, is as yet unknown.  相似文献   

8.
The morphological changes of plastid nucleoids (pt nucleoids)in the shoot apex and along the axis of the leaf blade in Triticumaestivum L. cv. Asakaze were followed with fluorescence microscopyafter staining with 4'6-diamidino-2-phenylindole (DAPI) andquantified with supersensitive microspectrophotometry. Proplastidsin the shoot apex contained 1–10 spherical pt nucleoids.These pt nucleoids changed to a row of spherical and cup-shapedpt nucleoids in sausage-shaped plastids at the leaf base inboth dark and light conditions, in which active cell divisionwas observed. These structures have a higher copy number ofplastid DNA (pt DNA) (72–78 copies) compared to proplastidsin the shoot apex (32–45 copies) and, therefore, may reflectthat active pt DNA synthesis is in progression. In the dark,the cup-shaped pt nucleoids in the spherical etioplasts, whichoriginated from the sausage-shaped plastids, grew to form ring-shapedpt nucleoids. Each ring-shaped pt nucleoid is sub-divided intosmaller pt nucleoids. Under continuous illumination, similarmorphological changes of pt nucleoids occurred except for distributionof small pt nucleoids into young chloroplasts as well as inmature chloroplasts. However, pt nucleotids of leucoplasts inepidermal and vascular bundle sheath cells did not show conspicuouschanges along the axis of the leaf blade. The significance ofthese observations is discussed in relation to plastid differentiationand to the plastid division cycle. 4 Present address: Faculty of Science, University of Tokyo,Hongo, Bunkyo-ku, Tokyo, 113 (Received August 15, 1989; Accepted April 13, 1990)  相似文献   

9.
Sperm cells within pollen grains and pollen tubes of alfalfa (Medicago sativa L.) were observed at the ultrastructural level, and their plastid DNA was detected by DAPI (4,6-diamidino-2-phenylindole) staining. One sperm pair within the pollen grain and three sperm pairs within pollen tubes were reconstructed in three-dimensions from serial ultrathin sections. The two sperm cells are linked by cytoplasmic bridges in both pollen grains and tubes, and the vegetative nucleus is closely associated with the sperm cells within the pollen tube. The number of plastids and plastid nucleoids (DNA aggregates) in the sperm cell pair, collectively, is not significantly different from that in the generative cell; however, over 60% of the sperm cell plastids contain no DNA detectable with DAPI. The mean number of mitochondria in sperm cells is reduced from that in the generative cell (from 54 to 17), which suggests that paternal mitochondrial inheritance probably does not occur in the genotype investigated. Sperm cells of a pair may vary in their shape within the pollen grain and tube, but the number of plastids and mitochondria is not significantly different between the sperm cells. Therefore, heterospermy is not a factor determining cytoplasmic inheritance patterns in this species.  相似文献   

10.
A. Lüttke  S. Bonotto 《Planta》1981,153(6):536-542
Chloroplast DNA (cpDNA) distribution in the giant unicellular, uninucleate alga Acetabularia mediterranea was analyzed with the DNA-specific fluorochrome 4'6-diamidino-2-phenylindole (DAPI) at various stages of the cell cycle. The number of chloroplasts exhibiting DNA/DAPI fluorescence changes during the cell's developmental cycle: (1) all chloroplasts in germlings contain DNA; (2) the number of plastids with DNA declines during polar growth of the vegetative cell; (3) it increases again prior to the transition from the vegetative to the generative phase; (4) several nucleoids of low fluorescence intensity are present in the chloroplasts of the gametes. The temporal distribution of the number of chloroplasts with DNA appears to be linked to the different mode of chloroplast division and growth during the various stages of development. The chloroplast cycle in relation to the cell cycle is discussed.Abbreviations cpDNA chloroplast DNA - DAPI 4,6-diamidino-2-phenylindole  相似文献   

11.
Summary Apicoplasts (apicomplexan plastids) are nonphotosynthetic, secondary endosymbiotic plastids that are found in most apicomplexans. Although these organelles are essential for parasite survival, their functions, activities, and structures are not well understood. We examined the apicoplast nucleoid ofToxoplasma gondii from a morphological aspect by high-resolution epifluorescence microscopy and electron microscopy. We found unexpectedly large amounts of DNA in the nucleoid and the presence of several division-related structures. Initially, we identified the organellar nucleoids by staining with the DNA-specific dye 4,6-diamidino-2-phenylindole. A single nucleoid was observed per apicoplast, and the fluorescent spot representing the nucleoid was bright and spherical in contrast to the weak and filamentous spot representing the mitochondrial nucleoid. We also measured the DNA content of each apicoplast nucleoid by a video-intensified microscope photon-counting system and determined that the genomic copy number was at least 25, a figure over four times greater than that reported previously. Moreover, several groups of apicoplasts had significantly higher genomic copy numbers. The DNA molecules were accurately divided into two daughter apicoplasts just before nuclear division. In addition, we examined nucleoid segregation and the division apparatus using electron microscopy. However, we failed to observe nucleoid structures, suggesting that the apicoplasts are predominantly composed of nucleoid material. In addition, we observed cap structures at the termini of dividing apicoplasts, a possible plastid-dividing ring, and a microbody-like granule around the constriction. These structures may be involved in apicoplast division.Abbreviations DAPI 4,6-diamidino-2-phenylindole - VIMPCS video-intensified microscope photon counting system - PD ring plastid-dividing ring  相似文献   

12.
P. Hansmann  H. Falk  K. Ronai  P. Sitte 《Planta》1985,164(4):459-472
The size, frequency and distribution of the nucleoids of chloroplasts (cl-nucleoids) and chromoplasts (cr-nucleoids) of the daffodil have been investigated in situ using the DNA-specific fluorochrome 46-diamidino-2-phenylindole. Chromoplasts contain fewer nucleoids (approx. 4) than chloroplasts (> 10), and larger chromoplasts (cultivated form, approx. 4) contain more than smaller ones (wild type, approx. 2). During chromoplast development the nucleoid number decreases in parallel with the chlorophyll content. Each nucleoid contains 2–3 plastome copies on average. In chloroplasts the nucleoids are evenly distributed, whereas they are peripherally located in chromoplasts. The fine structure of isolated cl-and cr-nucleoids, purified either by Sepharose 4B-CL columns or by metrizamide gradients, was investigated electron microscopically. The cl-nucleoids consist of a central protein-rich core with naked DNA-loops protruding from it. In cr-nucleoids, on the other hand, the total DNA is tightly packed within the proteinaceous core. The protein-containing core region of the nucleoids is made up of knotty and fibrillar sub-structures with diameters of 18 and 37 nm, respectively. After proteinase treatment, or incressing ion concentration, most of the proteins are removed and the DNA is exposed even in the case of cr-nucleoids, the stability of which proved to be greater than that of cl-nucleoids. The chemical composition of isolated plastid nucleoids has been determined qualitatively and quantitatively. Chromoplast-nucleoids contain, relative to the same DNA quantity, about six times as much protein as cl-nucleoids. Accordingly the buoyant density of cr-nucleoids in metrizamide gradients is higher than that of cl-nucleoids. In addition to DNA and protein, RNA could be found in the nucleoid fraction. No pigments were present. The cr-and cl-nucleoids have many identical proteins. There are, however, also characteristic differences in their protein pattern which are possibly related to the different expression of the genomes of chloroplasts and chromoplasts. Nucleoids of both plastid types contain some proteins which also occur in isolated envelope membranes (probably partly in the outer membrane) and thus possibly take part in binding the DNA to membranes.Abbreviations cl- chloroplast - cr- chromoplast - DAPI 46-diamidino-2-phenylindole - DNase deoxyribonuclease - kDa kilodaltons - MG purified by metrizamide gradients - SC purified by Sepharose CL-4B column gel filtration - SDS-PAGE sodium dodecylsulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis  相似文献   

13.
Summary Synchronous cultures of the algaDunaliella salina were grown in blue or red light. The relationships between replication of chloroplast DNA, cell size, cell age and the number of chloroplast nucleoids were studied. The replication of chloroplast DNA and the division of chloroplast nucleoids occurred in two separate periods of the chloroplast cycle. DNA replication was concomitant with that in the nucleocytoplasmic compartment but nucleoid division occurred several hours earlier than nuclear division. Red-light-grown cells were bigger and grew more rapidly than those grown in blue light. In newly formed daughter cells, the chloroplast nucleoids were small and spherical and they were localized around the pyrenoid. During the cell cycle they spread to other parts of the chloroplast. The number of DNA molecules per nucleoid doubled during DNA replication in the first third of the cell cycle but decreased several hours later when the nucleoids divided. Their number was fairly constant independent of the different light quality. Cells grown in red light replicated their chl-DNA and divided their nucleoids before those grown in blue light and their daughter cells possessed about 25 nucleoids as opposed to 15.Abbreviations DAPI 4,6-diamidino-2-phenylindole - chl-DNA chloroplast DNA - PAR photosynthetically active radiation  相似文献   

14.
DNA containing structures (nucleoids) were visualized by 4′, 6-diamidino-2-phenylindole (DAPI) fluorescent staining in two groups of cyanophytes (59 filamentous oscillatorialean species and 12 coccal Synechococcus-like organisms) to test the possibility of using nucleoid morphology in cyanophyte taxonomy. The morphology of nucleoids (size, shape, and structure) in oscillatorialean species is specific for individual families. The morphology of the nucleoid in Synechococcus-like species agrees from the proposed separation of the genus Cyanothece from Synechococcus. A much different nucleoid morphology in three species of Cyanothece suggests that these species should be separated into a new genus. On the basis of other characters, the species could be returned to the genus Cyanobacterium. My results indicate that the morphology of nucleoids is a valuable character in the classification of the cyanophytes examined; thus, it is a prospective feature that could be used in the taxonomy of other groups of cyanophytes. Additionally, DAPI staining is not a complicated procedure. The new character is easy to see in samples taken from nature, both living and preserved.  相似文献   

15.
Nakamura  S.  Sakihara  M.  Chibana  H.  Ikehara  T.  Kuroiwa  T. 《Protoplasma》1994,178(3-4):111-118
Summary To study the mechanism of condensation of dispersed plastid (pt) nucleoids into a single pt nucleoid with aging of the cells ofChlamydomonas reinhardtii, two mutants, designated cond-1 and cond-2, were isolated. A plastid of a wild type cell, 6.5 m in diameter, contained ten dispersed spherical pt nucleoids within one week of culture on an agar plate. At about one week of culture, the cell number was saturated and pt nucleoids began to associate with each other, condensing into a single pt nucleoid at three weeks of culture. In contrast, cond-1 and cond-2 cells, which had about 20 and 45 pt nucleoids and whose cell diameters were 7.8 and 9.5 m at one week of culture respectively, still had about 10 and 20 pt nucleoids at even 7 weeks of culture. Doubling times of the three cell types were similar. From genetic analysis, each of the two mutants had one gene mutation. The two mutations are probably linked. The measurement of O2 evolution showed that the two mutations did not affect the photosynthetic system. Lipid contents of the two mutant cells were clearly higher than that of wild type cells. The role of a higher number of pt nucleoids is probably to increase the activity of lipid and/or membrane synthesis for lipid storage.  相似文献   

16.
H. Hashimoto 《Protoplasma》1985,127(1-2):119-127
Summary Nucleoid distribution in chloroplasts and etioplasts at the different developmental stages was examined with the first leaves ofAvena sativa by using a DNA-specific fluorescent probe, 46-diamidino-2-phenylindole (DAPI). In light-grown first leaves, three types of plastid nucleoid distribution were recognized. 1. Peripheral distribution in undeveloped chloroplasts which contain only a few thylakoids in the middle region of the leaf sheath. 2. Ring-like arrangement along the rim of developing and dividing young chloroplasts, of which grana were composed of four to eight layers of thylakoids, at the base of the leaf blade. The plane of the nucleoids' ring is in parallel with the face of the thylakoids. 3. Scattered distribution of 10 to 20 discrete spherular nucleoids in the stroma of fully developed chloroplasts, of which grana were composed of up to 20 thylakoids, in the regions of the middle and the tip of the leaf blade. In dark-grown first leaves two types were recognized. 1. Peripheral distribution in developing and dividing young etioplasts in the leaf sheath and the base of the leaf blade. 2. Scattered distribution of 10 or more discrete spherular nucleoids in fully developed etioplasts, containing extended prothylakoids, in the regions of the middle and the tip of the leaf blade. Ring-like arrangement of nucleoids was not observed in any etioplasts. The results indicates that spatial arrangement of plastid nucleoids dynamically changes in close relationship with the development of the inner membrane systems of plastids.  相似文献   

17.
Summary Dynamic change of plastid nucleoids (pt nucleoids) was followed by fluorescence microscopy after staining with 46-diamidino-2-phenyl indole (DAPI). The fluorescence image was quantified with a supersensitive photonic microscope system based on photon counting and image analysis. The results showed that small pt nucleoids located in the center of proplastids in the dry seed increased in size after imbibition and formed highly organized ring structures in the dark, which divided into ca. 10 pieces within 3 days. Corresponding to this morphological change, DNA content of a plastid multiplied 7.5 fold. Total increase in DNA content of pt nucleoids per cell was 34 times as that of dry seed, as plastid multiplied 4.6 times in the average during this period. Upon light illumination small pt nucleoids having basic genome size were separated from divided pt nucleoids, suggesting a relationship with the formation of thylakoid system. The significance of the procedure established in this study is discussed in analysing the dynamic changes of intracellular small genomes.On leave from Department of Biology, Faculty of Science, Nagoya University, Furocho, Chikusaku, Nagoya 464, Japan.  相似文献   

18.
Summary The mitochondrial nucleoid is a compact structure composed of DNA and protein. By fluorescence microscopy, decondensation of the nucleoids was observed when yeast and tobacco mitochondria were osmotically lysed and subjected to an electric field. Structures stained with ethidium bromide were seen moving toward either the anode or the cathode. Since the movement of deproteinized DNA is toward the anode, the structures moving toward the cathode represent DNA-protein complexes with a net positive charge. Nucleoid decondensation and unfolding of the DNA probably resulted from the removal of weakly bound proteins; yet high-affinity basic proteins were evidently retained yielding cationic DNA-protein structures. Some of the positively charged structures were observed to break, presumably at single-stranded DNA regions, releasing negatively charged particles. The DNA-protein structures were complex branching forms larger than the unit genome, suggesting that multigenomic, concatemeric DNA is present within the mitochondria.Abbreviations DAPI 4,6-diamidino-2-phenylindole - EtBr ethidium bromide - HMG high-mobility group - mt-genome mitochondrial genome - mt-nucleoid mitochondrial nucleoid - PFGE pulsed-field gel electrophoresis - pt-nucleoid plastid nucleoid - ssDNA single-stranded DNA  相似文献   

19.
Summary Synchronous cultures of the green algaScenedesmus quadricauda were grown at different mean irradiances (ranging from 15 Wm–2 to 130Wm–2). At each irradiance, the algae were exposed to illumination regimes which differed in light duration and dark intervals (222 to 240 hours). The cells from these cultures were sampled during their cycles, stained with DAPI and the number of nuclei and chloroplast nucleoids estimated.The nucleoids divided semisynchronously in steps which represented doublings in their number. For each doubling a constant amount of light energy (defined as the product of irradiance and light duration) had to be converted by the cells to become committed to this division. The times to the start of the nucleoid divisions were therefore inversely proportional to the irradiances applied and the final number of nucleoids was proportional to the light duration.Temporal relationships between nuclear and nucleoid divisions were also light dependent. Shortage of light energy caused delay in nucleoid division. The cell division rate was higher than the rate of nucleoid division and consequently, the cells tended to decrease their nucleoid number with decreasing irradiance. With increasing irradiance the start of nucleoid division was gradually shifted toward the beginning of the cell cycle. The rate of nucleoid division exceeded the rate of nuclear and cellular division, thus with increasing irradiance cells with increasing numbers of nucleoids were formed.Abbreviations DAPI 46-diamidino-2-phenylindole - pt-DNA chloroplast DNA  相似文献   

20.
Summary We characterized the behavior of plastid (pt) and mitochondrial (mt) nucleoids during malegametogenesis inPlumbago auriculata in three dimensions. The behavior of pt-nucleoids and mt-nucleoids differed throughout male gametogenesis.Pt-nucleoids were distibuted in a characteristic manner in three stages: in the early microspore, pt-nucleoids assemble around cell nucleus: in the mid-generative cell,pt-nucleoids gather at the internal side of the pollen: in the late-generative cell, pt-nucleoids aggregation turns its pole to the external side of the pollen. We also studied organelle nucleoids in the egg and the central cell by a method in which semi-thick sections of resin-embedded anthers and ovaries were observed by confocal laser scanning microscopy. The number of pt-nucleoids in the sperm cell did not differ significantly from that the behavior of DNA-containing organelles is regulated strictly during male gametogenes inP. auriculata, and that a biparental inheritance of plastids in the Plumbago embryo is more favored than was previously thought.  相似文献   

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