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1.
Summary Ultrastructural observations of dividing cells inBangia vermicularis revealed a type of chloroplast division (plastokinesis) not previously reported in the red algae. The polarity of this prekaryokinetic process serves as a reliable marker of the plane of cytokinesis, a key factor in establishing thallus morphology. At the onset of division one or more invaginations develop in the envelope of the large, lobed chloroplast and proceed centripetally through the stroma in the plane of the thylakoids, forming narrow cytoplasmic channels (CCs). The thylakoids are realigned somewhat, but are not constricted as the chloroplast is divided into two or more units. The number of resulting chloroplasts and the orientation of the CCs are dependent on cell type. Distinctive cylindrical cells at the base of the filamentous region, immediately distal to the holdfast, are shorter than broad and contain a central nucleus surrounded by a doughnutshaped chloroplast. The cylindrical morphology of the thallus is established early in the first periclinal division as multiple plastokinesis commences, generating several radially-arranged daughter chloroplasts. Cleavage of the original chloroplast is completed during subsequent cell divisions in the initial developmental stage, finally resulting in eight chloroplasts that are distributed to an equal number of wedge-shaped radial cells. Cells distal to the actively dividing basal cells are cuboidal and have a peripheral nucleus. Division of the single chloroplast prior to karyokinesis in these cells results in two or four daughter chloroplasts according to cell type. During or following plastokinesis, multilamellar bodies derived from the CE appear to serve as the source of membranes for the developing septum in the channels. Septa link to proliferations of the plasmalemma in areas of slight cell wall (CW) indentations, and are completed between daughter nuclei after karyokinesis, producing a cleavage channel. Subsequently, primary CW material is deposited between the two septal membranes. The shape and arrangement of daughter cells in each of the developmental stages in the thallus are defined by the planes of cell division. These are indicated by both the orientation of CCs and the polar orientation of nuclear division which is always at right angles to the CC.Abbreviations CC cytoplasmic channel - CE chloroplast envelope - CW cell wall - ER endoplasmic reticulum - MLB multilamellar body  相似文献   

2.
Using cultured cells of the hornwortAnthoceros punctatus, the change in the relative chloroplast DNA content in each stage of chloroplast division was investigated to clarify the relationship between the division cycle of a chloroplast and a cell nucleus. Samples of cultured cells were stained with 4′,6-diamidino-2-phenylindole (DAPI) and then observed with an epifluorescence microscope and a chromosome image analyzing system (CHIAS). A chloropiast in cultured cells duplicated DNA with an increase in size. When a chloroplast began to divide, it was constricted in the middle, taking a dumbbell shape, and then divided into two daughter chloroplasts. In cultured cells of this species, the pattern of quantitative change of chloroplast DNA, that is, the DNA replication pattern of chloroplasts, corresponded to that of cell nuclear DNA in mitosis.  相似文献   

3.
Gametogenesis in male and female gametophytes was studied by light microscopy and EM in the dioecious multinucleate green alga Derbesia tenuissima (Moris & De Notaris) P. Crouan & H. Crouan, where male and female gametes differ in size. Gametogenesis was divided into five stages: 32 h (stage 1), 24 h (stage 2), 16 h (stage 3), 8 h (stage 4), and 0.5 h (stage 5) before gamete release. At stage 1, the first sign of gametogenesis observed was the aggregation of gametophyte protoplasm to form putative gametangia. At stage 2, gametangia were separated from the vegetative protoplasm of gametophytes. Morphological changes of nuclei and organelles occurred at this early stage of male gametogenesis, and organelle DNA degenerated. At stage 3, male organelle DNA had completely degenerated, whereas in female gametangia, organelle DNA continued to exist in both chloroplasts and mitochondria. Gametogenesis was almost completed at stage 4 and fully at stage 5. Small male gametes had a DNA‐containing nucleus and a large mitochondrion and one or several degenerated chloroplasts. The mitochondria and plastids were devoid of DNA. The large female gametes had a nucleus and multiple organelles, all of which contained their own DNA. Thus, degeneration of chloroplast DNA along with morphological changes of organelles occurred at male gametogenesis in anisogamous green algae (Bryopsis and D. tenuissima), in contrast with previous studies in isogamous green algae (Chlamydomonas, Acetabularia caliculus, and Dictyosphaeria cavernosa) in which degeneration of chloroplast DNA occurred after zygote formation.  相似文献   

4.
It has been established that organelles, such as mitochondria and plastids, contain organelle-specific DNA and arise from the division of pre-existing organelles (e.g., Possingham and Lawrence, 1983). We propose that organelle DNAs, such as mitochondrial DNA and plastid DNA are not naked in organellesin situ but are organized in each case to form an “organelle nucleus” with basic proteins (Kuroiwa, 1982). The concept of organelle nuclei has changed our ideas about the division of organelles. Thus, the process of organelle division must be composed of two main events: division of the organelle nucleus and organellekinesis (division of the other components of the mitochondrion or plastid). The latter term has been adopted as an appropriate analogue of cytokinesis. We were the first to identify the plastid-dividing ring (PD-ring), which is located in the cytoplasm close to the outer envelope membrane at the constricted isthmus of dividing chloroplasts in the red algaCyanidium caldirum. The PD-ring is about 60 nm in width and 25 nm in thickness, and is a circular bundle of actin-like, fine filaments, each about 4–5 nm in diameter. Since cytochalasin B, an inhibitor of polymerization of actin filaments, inhibits the formation of the PD-ring and, thus, prevents subsequent division of chloroplasts, the PD-ring is thought to be a structure that is essential for the division of plastids (plastidkinesis). The behavior of the PD-ring during a cycle of chloroplast division can be classified into the following four stages on the basis of morphological and temporal differences. The chloroplast growth stage: the small, spherical chloroplast increases in volume and becomes a football-like structure, while the PD-ring from the previous division disappears. Formation of the PD-ring: the somewhat electron-dense body (see below) is fragmented into many, somewhat electron-dense granules, which are aligned along the equatorial region of the chloroplast and fine filaments are formed from the somewhat electron-dense granules in the equatorial region. The fine filaments of the PD-ring align themselves according to the longest axis of their overall domain, i.e., circumferentially. Contraction stage: a bundle of fine filaments begins to contract and generates a deep furrow. Conversion stage: after chloroplast division, the remnants of the PD-ring are converted into somewhat electron-dense bodies. Similar events occur during the second cycle of chloroplast division. Since similar structures are observed extensively in the plastids of algae, moss and higher plants, the PD-ring appears to be an essential structure for the division of plastids in plants.  相似文献   

5.
Chlorarachnion reptans Geitler shows affinities to both the Chlorophyceae and the chloroplast endoplasmic reticulum-containing chromophyte algae in possessing chlorophyll b and chloroplasts which are limited by four membranes, respectively. In the periplastidal compartment surrounding each of the four to eight chloroplasts of a C. reptans cell are putative eukaryotic-sized ribosomes, scattered tubules and vesicles, and a small double-membrane-limited nucleus-like organelle named the nucleomorph. The nucleomorphs display 4′-6-diamidino-2-phenylindole (DAPI)fluorescence which is sensitive to DNase digestion, but not to treatment with RNase. The nucleomorphs also contain a fibrillogranular body which resembles a nucleolus. Nucleomorph division occurs by the sequential infolding of the inner and outer envelope membranes and subsequent constriction in two, with no involvement of microtubules. In all these characteristics, the nucleomorphs of C. reptans are similar to the cryptomonad nucleomorph which has been hypothesized to be the vestigial nucleus of an ancestral red alga which gave rise to the chloroplasts of the Cryptophyceae. The presence of chlorophyll b and the contents and morphology of C. reptans chloroplast compartments suggest a green algal origin for the chloroplasts of these cells. The discovery of a second organism with a DNA-containing, nucleus-like organelle in its chloroplast compartment lends strong support to the hypothesis that the chloroplasts of many algae have evolved from eukaryotic endosymbionts.  相似文献   

6.
H. Kuroiwa  M. Sugai  T. Kuroiwa 《Protoplasma》1988,146(2-3):89-100
Summary The fate of the chloroplasts and chloroplast nuclei (cp-nuclei) was followed during spermatogenesis in the fernPteris vittata L. by epifluorescence microscopy after staining with 4-6-diamidino-2-phenylindole (DAPI) and by quantitation of chloroplast DNA (cp-DNA) by fluorimetry using a video intensified microscope photon counting system (VIMPICS). The spores were grown on solid medium that contained antheridiogen (Anptd), and formed an antheridium initial on the protonema cell. The antheridium initial divided and produced 16 spermatocytes and 3 surrounding cells. The chloroplasts in the spermatocytes decreased in volume as cell division was repeated, until finally the volume of each chloroplast was 1/15 of that of the primary chloroplasts. The DNA content of the chloroplasts was also reduced to 1/5 of the original value and when the sperm matured, the fluorescence of cp-DNA disappeared. In the 16-cell spermatocyte, the recognition of the fluorescence of chlorophyll in the chloroplasts with a green excitation filter became difficult. But, the plastids could be observed until the final stage of the sperm. From these observations, it appears that there are two steps in the metamorphosis of chloroplasts during spermatogenesis in the fern. The first step involves the decrease in the volume of chloroplasts, accompanied by reduction of the DNA content, and the second step involves the change of the physical state of chloroplasts to amyloplasts and the disappearance of the cp-DNA from the amyloplasts.  相似文献   

7.
During development of the first leaf of breadwheat (Triticum aestivum L.) the number of chloroplasts per mesophyll cell increases between three- and four-fold. To establish if chloroplast replication is accompanied by endoreduplication, the nuclear DNA content of the cells was determined by chemical assay of isolated nuclei from mesophyll protoplasts and by microdensitometry of nuclei in mesophyll tissue. The DNA content of the nuclei was constant (27 to 32 pg) at each phase of chloroplast replication. Approximately 93% of the cells had a nuclear DNA content close to the 2C value of 32 pg. It is concluded that chloroplast replication is not dependent on nuclear endoreduplication in seedling leaves of wheat.  相似文献   

8.
The process of basidiospore formation in a mutant strain Fisc of Coprinus macrorhizus, a heterothallic species of Basidiomycete, which forms monokaryotic fruiting bodies was examined. A single nucleus in a young basidium divided mitotically and two daughter nuclei were fused subsequently. The fused nucleus then divided meiotically forming four basidiospores on a basidium. The typical chromosome behaviours in the first meiotic prophase were observed. Synaptonemal complexes were observed in a basidium at the first meiotic prophase. A continuous illumination of fruiting bodies was effective to arrest meiosis in monokaryotic fruiting bodies at the particular stage of meiotic division.  相似文献   

9.
鹤顶兰胚囊发育过程中微管变化的共焦显微镜观察   总被引:3,自引:0,他引:3  
光镜的观察确定了鹤顶兰(Phaius tankervilliae (Aiton) Bl.)胚囊发育属单孢子蓼型。应用免疫荧光标记技术及共焦镜观察了胚囊发育过程中微管分布的变化。当孢原细胞初形成时,细胞内的微管呈网状分布。之后,孢原细胞体积增大发育为大孢子母细胞。大孢子母细胞延长,进入减数分裂Ⅰ。微管由分裂前的网状分布变为辐射状排列。二分体的两个细胞内的微管分布一样,呈辐射状。四分体的近珠孔端的3 个大孢子解体,细胞内的微管消失。靠合点端的功能大孢子内有许多微管呈网状分布。当功能大孢子进入第一次有丝分裂时,细胞内的微管由网状变为辐射状,从核膜伸展至周质。再经两次有丝分裂形成八核胚囊。在核分裂之前微管一般是呈网状分布并紧包围着核。在分裂期间二核和四核胚囊都呈极性现象,微管系统也呈极性分布。微管在八核胚囊内的分布变化情形特别复杂。首先,八核分别作不同程度的移动,其中两个核移向胚囊中央,珠孔端和合点端的3 个核分别互相靠拢,形成3 个区,即中央区、反足区和卵器区。胚囊未形成区时,8 个核都被网状分布的微管包围着。当胚囊明显分成区时,反足区内的微管仍作网状分布。中央区的微管分布则趋疏松,形成篮形结构,包围着液泡和两个极核。在  相似文献   

10.
DNA content of the nucleus in the placoderm desmid, Closterium ehrenbergii Meneghini was measured throughout the life cycle by epifluorescence microspectrophotometry after DNA specific dye [4′,6-diamidino-2-phenylindol (DAPI)] staining. Postulating a mean DNA content of gamete nuclei as 1C, the nucleus of a newly divided vegetative cell was 2C. Most vegetative cells in the stage of exponential growth had a DNA content from 2C to 4C, while most in stationary phase, with the highest frequency of zygote formation, were 2C. They became pre-gametes (2C) upon mixing two heterothallic strains. Four gametes were made by a DNA reduction division of each pre-gamete cell. Therefore, there was a nonmeiotic DNA reduction stage by one half. During germination, the zygote underwent meiosis to produce two gones, each of which contained one surviving nucleus (large nucleus) and one degenerating nucleus (small nucleus). The DNA content of these four nuclei was 1C basically. The DNA of the surviving nucleus duplicated to 2C and further quadruplicated to 4C without cell or nuclear division. These two 4C gones had different cell morphology from ordinary vegetative cells. After the first cell division following meiosis, each gone produced two vegetative cells in which the DNA content became 2C to 4C again.  相似文献   

11.
Chloroplast proliferation was investigated inAdiantum protonemata growing under continuous red light. Cell division is absent when cells are grown under red light. The chloroplast number increases as the cell length increases, therefore the chloroplasts divide in the absence of cell division. Chloroplasts in the basal part of the filamentous protonemal cell migrate gradually toward the cell apex, but there is no large net migration from the tip to the base or vice versa, indicating that chloroplast division takes place in the apical part of the protonemata. Chloroplast number in the apical 100 μm was maintained at about 200 during cell growth at least over eight days. The chloroplasts were either dumbbell- or ellipsoid-shaped. Dumbbell-shaped chloroplasts are abundant everywhere in a protonema, ranging from 30 to 50% of the total chloroplasts. The dumbbell-shaped chloroplasts attached to or very close to the plasma membrane seem to be the ones that are dividing but the dumbbell-shaped ones in the other regions do not divide. These data support the hypothesis that a signal from the plasma membrane induces the dumbbell-shaped chloroplasts to divide.  相似文献   

12.
The ultrastructure of the Conchocelis or filamentous stage of Porphyra leucosticta was investigated. Each cell contains 1 or 2 parietal, stellate chloroplasts with a single pyrenoid in each chloroplast. The centrally located nucleus is irregularly shaped and contains 1–2 nucleoli. The cytoplasm has typical floridean starch grains and nonmernbrane-bound lipid bodies. The cell wall is divided into an outer and an inner wall. Many lomasomes are associated with the cell membrane. Pit connections are found between cells, and their taxonomic significance is discussed.  相似文献   

13.
ABSTRACT. The germinal micronucleus divides six times during conjugation of Paramecium caudatum : this includes two meiotic divisions and one mitosis of haploid nuclei during mating, and three mitoses of a fertilization nucleus (synkaryon). Microsurgical removal of the macronucleus showed that micronuclei were able to divide repeatedly in the absence of the macronucleus, after metaphase of meiosis I of the micronucleus and also after synkaryon formation. When the macronucleus was removed after the first division of synkaryon, in an extreme case the synkaryon divided five times and produced 32 nuclei, compared to three divisions and eight nuclei produced in the presence of the macronucleus. Treatment with actinomycin D (100 μ /ml) inhibited the morphological changes of the macronucleus during conjugation and induced a multimicronucleate state in exconjugants. However, in other cells, it induced production of a few giant micronuclei. We conclude that the micronucleus is able to undergo repeated divisions at any stage of conjugation in the absence of the macronucleus once the factor(s) for induction of the micronuclear division has been produced by the macronucleus. The macronucleus may also produce a regulatory factor required to stop micronucler division.  相似文献   

14.
During conjugation of Paramecium caudatum, there are two well-known stages when nuclear migration occurs. What happens to the nuclei is closely related to their localisations in cells. The first of these stages is the entrance of one meiotic product into the paroral region. This nucleus survives, while the remaining three outside this area degenerate. The second stage is the antero-posterior localisation of eight synkaryon division products. Four posterior nuclei are differentiated into macronuclear anlagen, whereas four anterior nuclei remain as the presumptive micronuclei. In this experiment, the process of the third prezygotic division of P. caudatum was studied with the help of protargol staining. Here, a third nuclear migration was discovered. By two spindle turnings and two spindle elongations, stationary pronuclei were positioned near migratory pronuclei. This positioning of stationary pronuclei could shorten the distance for transferred migratory pronuclei to recognise and reach the stationary pronuclei. This fosters the synkaryon formation of P. caudatum.  相似文献   

15.
Mitosis in Mantoniella squamata (Manton and Parke) Desikachary, a small scale-covered green monad, is presented. Organelle replication precedes nuclear division and begins with the replication of the chloroplast. As the chloroplasts separate, the Golgi and flagellar apparatuses divide. The discoid microbody enlarges and becomes ‘V'-shaped, with the arms extending toward depressions in the pyrenoid stalks of the chloroplasts. At prophase, microtubules produced by an amorphous microtubule organizing center enter the nucleus via polar fenestre. The nuclear membrane remains intact. As the chloroplasts migrate further apart, the spindle pole-to-pole distance increases. By metaphase, daughter-cell lobes are discernible as a cleavage furrow, which appears as early as prophase, and begins to incise the cell. A single Golgi apparatus is situated near the spindle pole; the flagellar apparatus lies adjacent to the pole. The cleavage furrow continues to constrict the cell, resulting in a narrowing isthmus containing the elongate microbody, nucleus and a rootlet system connecting the basal bodies of the daughter flagella. At telophase, no extra-nuclear microtubular systems other than the previously observed rootlet are present and the nuclei remain separated from each other. In cells undergoing multiple divisions to produce more than two daughter cells, the orientation of organelles changes somewhat, with the basal bodies and the Golgi apparatus separating daughter nuclei prior to the onset of cytokinesis. The mechanics of mitosis in Mantoniella are compared with other green monads and the evolutionary implications discussed.  相似文献   

16.
At the ultrastructural level, cell division in Ochromonas danica exhibits several unusual features. During interphase, the basal bodies of the 2 flagella replicate and the chloroplast divides by constriction between its 2 lobes. The rhizoplast, which is a fibrous striated root attached to the basal body of the long flagellum, extends under the Golgi body to the surface of the nucleus in interphase cells. During proprophase, the Golgi body replicates, apparently by division, and a daughter rhizoplast, appears. During prophase, the 2 pairs of flagellar basal bodies, each with their accompanying rhizoplast and Golgi body, begin to separate. Three or 4 flagella are already present at this stage. At the same time, there is a proliferation of microtubules outside the nuclear envelope. Gaps then appear in the nuclear envelope, admitting the microtubules into the nucleus, where they form a spindle. A unique feature of mitosis in O. danica is that the 2 rhizoplasts form the poles of the spindle, spindle microtubules inserting directly onto the rhizoplasts. Some of the spindle microtubules extend from pole to pole; others appear to attach to the chromosomes. Kinetochores, however, are not present. The nuclear envelope breaks down, except, in the regions adjacent, to the chloroplasts; chloroplast ER remains intact throughout mitosis. At late anaphase the chromosomes come to lie against part of the chloroplast ER. This segment of the chloroplast ER appears to be incorporated as part of the reforming nuclear envelope, thus reestablishing the characteristic nuclear envelope—chloroplast ER association of the interphase cell.  相似文献   

17.
Summary. To understand the regulatory mechanisms of chloroplast proliferation, chloroplast replication was studied in cultured leaf disks cut from plants of 25 species. In leaf disks from Brassica rapa var. perviridis, the number of chloroplasts per cell increased remarkably in culture. We examined chloroplast replication in this plant in vivo and in culture media with and without benzyladenine, a cytokinin. In whole plants, leaf cells undergo two phases from leaf emergence to full expansion: an early proliferative stage, in which mitosis occurs, and a differentiational stage after mitosis has diminished. During the proliferative stage, chloroplast replication keeps pace with cell division. In the differentiational phase, cell division ceases but chloroplast replication continues for two or three more cycles, with the number of chloroplasts per cell reaching about 60. In the leaf disks, the number of chloroplasts per cell increased from about 18 to 300 without benzyladenine, and to over 600 with benzyladenine, indicating that this cytokinin enhances chloroplast replication in cultured tissue. We also studied changes in ploidy and cell volume between in vivo cells and cells grown in culture with and without benzyladenine. Ploidy and cell volume increased in a manner very similar to that of the number of chloroplasts, suggesting a relationship between these phenomena.Correspondence and reprints: Department of Biological Sciences, Graduate School of Science, University of Tokyo, Hongo, Tokyo 113-0033, Japan.  相似文献   

18.
The unilocular pistil in Eustachys contains a single ovule with lateral placentation. In E. petraea and E. glauca, the mature ovule is bitegmic, tenuinucellate, and amphitropous with the endostomic micropyle oriented toward the base of the locule. A single hypodermal archesporial cell enlarges to form the megasporocyte. The chalazal dyad member is larger than the micropylar one, and meiosis II is nonsynchronized. Two-thirds of the tetrads are linear and one-third T-shaped. The chalazal megaspore is functional. Initially ovoid, the two-nucleate female gametophyte becomes curved as it enlarges. The four-nucleate stage becomes wider at its extremities and constricted in the center. Synchronous mitotic divisions establish the eight-nucleate stage with four nuclei at each pole separated by a large central vacuole. In E. petraea, the maturation sequence begins with antipodal differentiation, followed by differentiation of the egg apparatus, migration of the polar nuclei to the center, and division of the antipodals to produce twelve cells. The sequence in E. glauca begins with migration of the polar nuclei followed by differentiation of the antipodals, egg apparatus, and antipodal replication to six cells. The polar nuclei fuse to form a secondary nucleus appressed to the egg cell in E. glauca and separated from it by a vacuole in E. petraea. T-tests for length measurements for various stages of development indicate that the functional megaspore and two-nucleate female gametophyte are significantly larger in E. glauca than in E. petraea. There is no significant difference in gametophyte length at the four-nucleate stage, and at the eight-nucleate stage, length in E. petraea surpasses that in E. glauca. This gap widens significantly at the mature stage. Nuclear volumes are significantly greater in E. glauca than in E. petraea in the functional megaspore and two-nucleate stage, but the volumes are similar at the four-nucleate stage. Consideration of the differences in structural complexity between the sporophyte and gametophyte generations leads to the conclusion that the female gametophytes of these species are more distinctive than are the sporophytes.  相似文献   

19.
Cells of Euglena gracilis were synchronized by applying a 14-h light:10-h dark regimen under photoautotrophic conditions and a 10-h light:14-h dark regimen under photoorganotrophic conditions. At a stage just prior to chloroplast division in the cell cycle of these synchronized cultures, chloroplasts temporarily gathered in the posterior part of the cell and were connected to each other by many bridges. Part of the chloroplast aggregate surrounded about half of the nuclear surface, making connections or close contacts at many sites. A chromosome was always attached to the inner membrane of the nuclear envelope at the site of association with the chloroplast. The nucleoids in these aggregate chloroplasts, examined by staining with 4',6-diamidino-2-phenylindole, a DNA fluorochrome, showed profiles of strings or strands with branchings, under photoorganotrophic conditions at least, and some parts of the branchings came close to the site of association with the nucleus. The association between the chloroplast aggregate and the nucleus was also observed in Euglena cells placed in continuous darkness after synchronization under photoorganotrophic conditions, suggesting that these organellar associations are related to the Euglena cell cycle but are not the result of light:dark alternations used for cell synchronization.  相似文献   

20.
Changes in chloroplast number during pea leaf development   总被引:3,自引:0,他引:3  
Protoplasts were prepared from pea (Pisum sativum L.) leaves throughout development and their contents spread in a monolayer to determine the number of chloroplasts per cell. This approach permitted the rapid analysis of more than 100 cells at each stage of development. The average number of chloroplasts per cell increased from 24±10 to 64±20 during greening and expansion of the first true foliage leaves; all cells containing chloroplasts apparently increase their chloroplast number. A parallel increase in the amount of DNA per nucleus was not observed. As the leaves senesced the chloroplast number gradually decreased to 44±12. We have correlated these changes with our previous results on the percentage of chloroplast DNA per cell. Chloroplast multiplication resulted in a 2.7-fold dilution (from 272 to 102) of the number of copies of the chloroplast DNA molecule per plastid.  相似文献   

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