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1.
The growth rate of Phycomyces blakesleeanus sporangiophores was found to be very sensitive to sudden changes in the oxygen concentration. A change from 20% to 15% oxygen elicits a transient decrease in the growth rate which returns to normal 10 min after altering the concentration. After a step change to 10% oxygen, the growth rate shows two minima at 6–8 and 30–35 min and it reaches about 80% of its original value 50 min after this change. A threshold curve for this negative growth response shows that sporangiophores begin to sense a decrease in the oxygen concentration from 20% to 17%. Seven phototropically abnormal mutants with defects in the genes madA to madG were tested for the oxygen response. Two strains, C149madD120 and C316madF48, were found to have recoveries different from those of the wild type after step changes from 20% to 10% oxygen.  相似文献   

2.
Wild-type sporangiophores at stage IVb (final developmental stage after sporangium formation) ofPhycomyces show a pronounced positive phototropism to unilateral white light. We found that the maximal bending angle was larger in thin sporangiophores than in thick ones, and larger in the sporangiophores containing a small amount of β-carotene than in those containing a large amount of it. These phenomena probably occur because of the increase in length of intracellular light path or in the intracellular light-attenuation coefficient, as supported theoretically.  相似文献   

3.
The interaction between gravitropism and phototropism was analyzed for sporangiophores of Phycomyces blakesleeanus. Fluence rate-response curves for phototropism were generated under three different conditions: (a) for stationary sporangiophores, which reached photogravitropic equilibrium; (b) for sporangiophores, which were clinostated head-over during phototropic stimulation; and (c) for sporangiophores, which were subjected to centrifugal accelerations of 2.3g to 8.4g. For blue light (454 nm), clinostating caused an increase of the slope of the fluence rate-response curves and an increase of the maximal bending angles at saturating fluence rates. The absolute threshold remained, however, practically unaffected. In contrast to the results obtained with blue light, no increase of the slope of the fluence rate-response curves was obtained with near-ultraviolet light at 369 nm. Bilateral irradiation with near-ultraviolet or blue light enhanced gravitropism, whereas symmetric gravitropic stimulation caused a partial suppression of phototropism. Gravitropism and phototropism appear to be tightly linked by a tonic feedback loop that allows the respective transduction chains a mutual influence over each other. The use of tropism mutants allowed conclusions to be drawn about the tonic feedback loop with the gravitropic and phototropic transduction chains. The results from clinostating mutants that lack octahedral crystals (implicated as statoliths) showed that these crystals are not involved in the tonic feedback loop. At elevated centrifugal accelerations, the fluence-rate-response curves for photogravitropic equilibrium were displaced to higher fluence rates and the slope decreased. The results indicate that light transduction possesses a logarithmic transducer, whereas gravi-transduction uses a linear one.  相似文献   

4.
The lag period for the second positive curvature was examined inPilobolus crystallinus sporangiophores. The lag period for curvature development was 20–30 min at lower fluence rates than 6.32 nmol/m2s but greatly extended at higher fluence rates. When a 20-min symmetrical irradiation with blue light was applied before a 20-min unilateral blue light irradiation, sporangiophores bent as much as those unilaterally and continuously irradiated for 40 min. However, when a 20-min unilateral irradiation was followed by a 20-min symmetrical irradiation, sporangiophores did not show any curvature. That is, the reaction during the first 20 min of the lag period is independent of light direction. This light-direction-independent lag period is considered to be the duration required for adaptation. The lag period for phototropism was also extended when fluence rate was reduced after the start of irradiation. These results suggested that an adaptation process is involved in phototropism ofPilobolus.  相似文献   

5.
P. Galland  A. Palit  E. D. Lipson 《Planta》1985,165(4):538-547
The relationship between phototropism and the light-growth response of Phycomyces blakesleeanus (Burgeff) sporangiophores was investigated. After dark adaptation, stage-IVb sporangiophores were exposed to short pulses of unilateral light at 450 nm wavelength. The sporangiophores show a complex reaction to pulses of 30 s duration: maximal positive bending at 3·10-4 and 10-1 J m-2, but negative bending at 30 J m-2. The fluence dependence for the light-growth response also is complex, but in a different way than for phototropism; the first maximal response occurs at 1.8·10-3 J m-2 with a lesser maximum at 30 J m-2. A hypertropic mutant, L85 (madH), lacks the negative phototropism at 30 J m-2 but gives results otherwise similar to the wild type. The reciprocity rule was tested for several combinations of fluence rates and pulse durations that ranged from 1 ms to 30 s. Near the threshold fluence (3·10-5 J m-2), both responses increase for pulse durations below 67 ms and both have an optimum at 2 ms. At a fluence of 2.4·10-3 J m-2, both responses decrease for pulse durations below 67 ms. The hypertropic mutant (madH), investigated for low fluence only, gave similar results. In both strains, the time courses for phototropism and light-growth response, after single short pulses of various durations, show no clear correlation. These results imply that phototropism cannot be caused by linear superposition of localized light-growth responses; rather, they point to redistribution of growth substances as the cause of phototropism.  相似文献   

6.
A small blue-light beam (50 μm in diam) was used to examine light-growth response and phototropism inPilobolus crystallinus sporangiophores. Continuous irradiation by microbeam of a region 100–150 μm from the apex promoted the growth of a dark-adapted sporangiophore for about 15 min after a lag period of 1–2 min. After the promotion, the growth rate fell below that before the irradiation. Irradiation of the apex of sporangiophore slightly promoted the growth but strongly inhibited the growth after the promotion. A smaller light beam (10 μm in diam) applied continuously at grazing incidence along one side of the sporangiophore caused bending toward the shaded side, implying that the irradiated side grew more rapidly than the shaded side and that the lens effect is involved in the phototropism of young sporangiophores ofP. crystallinus. The involvement of the lens effect was confirmed by the fact that a carotenoid-less mutant was 1.5–2 times more sensitive to unilateral blue light than the wild type, probably because of a smaller intracellular light attenuation during passage through the mutant cell.  相似文献   

7.
The absolute sensitivity of sporangiophores of Phycomyces blakesleeanus to centrifugal acceleration was determined on a clinostat centrifuge. The centrifuge provides centrifugal accelerations ranging from 10(-4) to 6 x g. The rotor of the centrifuge, which accommodates 96 culture vials with single sporangiophores, is clinostatted, that is, turning "head over", at slow speed (1 rev min(-1)) while it is running. The negative gravitropism of sporangiophores is characterized by two components: a polar angle, which is measured in the plane of bending, and an aiming-error angle, which indicates the deviation of the plane of bending from the vector of the centrifugal acceleration. Dose-response curves were generated for both angles with centrifugations lasting 3, 5, and 8 h. The threshold for the polar angle depends on the presence of statoliths, so-called octahedral protein crystals in the vacuoles. The albino strain C171 carAcarR (with crystals) has a threshold near 10(-2) x g while the albino strain C2 carAgeo-3 (without crystals) has a threshold of about 2 x 10(-1) x g. The threshold for the aiming error angle is ill defined and is between 10(-2) and 10(-1) x g. The threshold for the polar angle of the wild type NRRL 1555 (with crystals) is near 8 x 10(-2) x g.  相似文献   

8.
Ginkgo biloba 《Flora》2004,199(5):437
Although the subject of several studies, the phylogeny of Ginkgo biloba is still ambiguous. Most of the morphological and some palaeontological studies assume a close relationship to conifers, but other palaeontological studies regard the origin of Ginkgo biloba in groups that exhibit a pinnate bauplan like Peltaspermales or Dicranophyllales. This divergence has led to controversial interpretations of male sporangiophores and leaves. Attempting to resolve this, here we have investigated the male cones and leaves of short-shoots by SEM and light-microscopy. Our results indicate that the male sporangiophores are simple structures, and the observed formation of thickened cell walls at the sterile adaxial side of the sporangiophores, similar to the endothecium of the sporangia, gives weak support for a precursor of Ginkgo-sporangiophores that displayed simple male sporangiophores with radial arrangement of the sporangia. Thus, our interpretations of the male sporangiophores of Ginkgo biloba allude to a relationship with Coniferales, Gnetales and Cordaitales and reject a close relationship of Ginkgo biloba with pinnate groups like Cycadaceae, as assumed by some molecular studies. In contrast to previous studies on long-shoot leaves, our results on short-shoot leaves give no indication for a compound character of Ginkgo leaves. Moreover, we infer that Ginkgo leaves could be derived from a simple bauplan, by two modifications of the basic growth pattern of conifer leaves, assuming that the dissection of Ginkgo leaves is secondary. Although more comparative investigations are necessary, our results support a coniferophyte origin of the Ginkgoales.  相似文献   

9.
Cole  S. C. J.  Yon  R. J. 《Planta》1985,163(3):401-404
Phototropic reversal of Phycomyces sporangiophores can be elicited by a change to darkness during steady-state phototropism. The reversal lasts 25–30 min under these conditions. Control experiments show that the reversal is not caused by gravitropism. Tropic reversal is also elicited by the removal of a barrier during an avoidance response, showing that the reversal occurs at the output of the sensory transduction chain.  相似文献   

10.
Grolig F  Herkenrath H  Pumm T  Gross A  Galland P 《Planta》2004,218(4):658-667
To elucidate the mechanisms of gravity susception that operate in the sporangiophore of Phycomyces blakesleeanus, we characterized the function and topography of a large apical complex of lipid globules. Stage-1 sporangiophores (without sporangium) possess a roughly spherical complex of 100–200 large lipid globules whose center is localized 110 m below the apex. The complex of lipid globules (CLG) is rather stable and is kept in place by positioning forces that resist centrifugal accelerations of up to 150 g. The lipid globules possess an average diameter of 2 to 2.5 m and a density of 0.791 g cm–3, which is below that of typical plant oleosomes. The potential energy which is generated by the buoyancy of a CLG of 100 globules is in the order of 10-17 to 10-16 J, which is 4 to 5 orders of magnitude above thermal noise. The formation of lipid globules can be supressed by raising stage-1 sporangiophores for 24 hs at 5°C. Sporangiophores with a reduced number of lipid globules display gravitropic bending angles that are 3 to 4 times smaller than those of sporangiophores with the normal number of lipid globules. The results suggest that the lipid globules function as gravisusceptors of Phycomyces and that buoyancy is the physical principle for their mode of action. The globules contain -carotene and two distinct fluorescing pigments that are, however, dispensible for graviperception.Abbreviations CLG complex of lipid globules  相似文献   

11.
Weinkove, D., Poyatos, J. A., Greiner, H., Oltra, E., Avalos, J., Fukshansky, L., Barrero, A. F., and Cerdá-Olmedo, E. 1998. Mutants ofPhycomyceswith decreased gallic acid content.Fungal Genetics and Biology25, 196–203. Most plants and some fungi accumulate phenols. Two hydroxybenzoic acids, gallic and protocatechuic acids, are abundant in the giant sporangiophores of the zygomycetePhycomyces blakesleeanus,much more so than in the basal mycelium or the culture medium. The actual concentrations vary with illumination, age of the culture, and composition of the medium. We devised a simple screening procedure to isolatehbamutants whose sporangiophores contained less gallic acid than the wild type. The most useful mutant had very low concentrations of hydroxybenzoic acids in the sporangiophores, but about the same as the wild type in the basal mycelium and the medium. The mutant was only slightly different from the wild type in growth and morphology. Mutant and wild-type sporangiophores grew away from ultraviolet C sources (260 nm) equally well. Contrary to previous conjectures, ultraviolet tropism does not depend on the ultraviolet absorption of gallic acid or other free hydroxybenzoic acids in the sporangiophore. Against expectations, phenols did not impair DNA extraction: sporangiophores produced better DNA preparations than basal mycelia and thehbamutant only slightly better than the wild type.  相似文献   

12.
For decades, Gnetales appeared to be closely related to angiosperms, the two groups together forming the anthophyte clade. At present, molecular studies negate such a relationship and give strong support for a systematic position of Gnetales within or near conifers. However, previous interpretations of the male sporangiophores of Gnetales as pinnate with terminal synangia conflict with a close relationship between Gnetales and conifers. Therefore, we investigated the morphogenesis of the male reproductive structures of Welwitschia mirabilis and Ephedra distachya by SEM and light microscopy. The occurrence of reduced apices to both halves of the antherophores of W. mirabilis gives strong support for the assumption that the male ‘flowers’ of W. mirabilis represent reduced compound cones. We assume that each half of the antherophore represents a lateral male cone that has lost its subtending bract. Although both halves of the antherophores of Ephedra distachya lack apical meristems, the histological pattern of the developing antherophores supports interpreting them as reduced lateral male cones as well. Therefore, the male sporangiophores of Gnetales represent simple organs with terminal synangia. Although extant conifers do not exhibit terminal synangia, similar sporangiophores are reported for some Cordaitales, the hypothetical sister group of conifers. Moreover, several Paleozoic conifers exhibit male cones with terminal sporangia or synangia. Therefore, we propose that conifers, Cordaitales and Gnetales originated from a common ancestor that displayed simple sporangiophores with a terminal cluster of sporangia.  相似文献   

13.
Schmidt W  Galland P 《Planta》2000,210(5):848-852
 The negative gravitropism of the sporangiophores of Phycomyces blakesleeanus Burgeff is elicited by different sensory inputs, which include flexure of the growing zone, buoyance of lipid globules and sedimentation of paracrystalline proteins, so-called octahedral crystals (C. Schimek et al., 1999a, Planta 210: 132–142). Gravity-induced absorbance changes (GIACs), which are associated with primary events of gravity sensing, were detected in the growing zones of sporangiophores. After placing sporangiophores horizontally, GIACs were detected after a latency of about 5 min, i.e. 15–25 min prior to gravitropic bending. The spectroscopic properties of the GIACs indicate that gravitropic stimulation could imply the reduction of cytochromes. The GIACs were spectrally distinct from light-induced absorbance changes (LIACs), showing that the primary responses of the light and gravity transduction chains are different. A dual stimulation with gravity and light generated GIAC-LIACs which were distinct from the absorbance changes occurring after the single stimuli and which indicate that light and gravity interact early in the respective transduction chains. Received: 2 September 1999 / Accepted: 9 November 1999  相似文献   

14.
Stage-specific nucleolytic activity was identified in cell-free extracts (CFEs) ofPhycomyces. Such activity was not detected in spore germlings or mycelia for the first 36 h after the start of cultivation. However, it was detected in mycelia more than 48 h after the start of cultivation, as well as sporangiophores and sporangia. The nucleolytic activity was completely inhibited by the addition of EDTA or G-actin to the CFE, and the various results together suggest that the activity was due to deoxyribonuclease I (DNase I).  相似文献   

15.
Summary We constructed a new centrifuge microscope of the stroboscopic type, with which the cytoplasmic streaming inNitella internodal cells under centrifugal acceleration was studied. Under moderate centrifugal acceleration (ca. 50–100×g), the direction of cytoplasmic streaming in an internodal cell ofNitella is parallel to the direction of the subcortical fibrils. The speed of endoplasm flowing contiguous to the subcortical fibrils is neither accelerated nor retarded by moderate centrifugal acceleration. The endoplasmic flow, however, stops suddenly following an electrical stimulus. The endoplasm contiguous to the subcortical fibrils is immobilized transiently at the time of streaming cessation induced by an electrical stimulus under centrifugal acceleration at 50–100×g, even at 900×g. It is suggested that transitory cross bridges between the immobilized endoplasm and the subcortical fibrils are formed at the time of streaming cessation. The bulk endoplasm flows as a whole in the direction parallel to that of the subcortical fibrils and stops promptly upon electrical stimulation. Soon after the stoppage the bulk endoplasm starts to flow passively in the direction parallel to that of the centrifugal acceleration as a result of the centrifugal force.Abbreviations APW artificial pond water - CMS centrifuge microscope  相似文献   

16.
A low-speed centrifuge was used to study the tropic responses of Phycomyces sporangiophores in darkness to the stimulus of combined gravitational and centrifugal forces. If this stimulus is constant the response is a relatively slow tropic reaction, which persists for up to 12 hours. The response is accelerated by increasing the magnitude of the gravitational-centrifugal force. A wholly different tropic response, the transient response, is elicited by an abrupt change in the gravitational-centrifugal stimulus. The transient response has a duration of only about 6 min. but is characterized by a high bending speed (about 5°/min.). An analysis of the distribution of the transient response along the growing zone shows that the active phase of the response has a distribution similar to that of the light sensitivity for the light-growth and phototropic responses. Experiments in which sporangiophores are centrifuged in an inert dense fluid indicate that the sensory mechanism of the transient response is closely related to the physical deformation of the growing zone caused by the action of the gravitational-centrifugal force on the sporangiophore as a whole. However, the response to a steady gravitational-centrifugal force is most likely not connected with this deformation, but is probably triggered by the shifting of regions or particles of differing density relative to one another inside the cell.  相似文献   

17.
Glass microelectrodes were inserted into the growing zone of sporangiophores of Phycomyces blakesleeanus that had been submersed in artificial pond water. The membrane potential (inside negative) increased with increasing pH of the bathing solution from an average of ?98 mV at pH 5 up to ?131 mV at pH 7. Removal of Ca2+ from the medium hyperpolarized the membrane potential in the wild type, but caused a significant depolarization in the blue-light-insensitive madC mutant. KCN, diethylstilbestrol, and N,N′-dicyclohexylcarbodiimide depolarized the membrane potential in both the wild type and the madC mutant, while fusicoccin had no effect. Endogenous ion current of up to 2 μA cm?2 was measured in the growing zone of sporangiophores with an extracellular vibrating electrode. The current density and current pattern varied with the pH of the medium. At pH 5 most sporangiophores had weak inward current along the growing zone, whereas at pH 7 most sporangiophores had strong outward current. The response of the membrane potential to specific inhibitors and the presence of an endogenous ion current indicate an electrogenic H+-ATPase in the plasma membrane. The results show a negative correlation between growth rate of sporangiophores growing in buffered aqueous medium and magnitude of membrane potential, as well as density of outward current. They also indicate an important role of protons in controlling the growth of Phycomyces sporangiophores.  相似文献   

18.
The resting nuclei in hyphae, sporangiophores and sporangiospores of sporangia and sporangiola of Thamnidium elegans consist of a large centrals nucleolus and a shell of chromatin surrounding the nucleolus. Division of the nucleus in hyphae and sporangiospores is achieved by elongation and constriction.  相似文献   

19.
The yielding properties of the cell wall, irreversible wall extensibility (m) and yield threshold (Y), are determined for stage I sporangiophores of Phycomyces blakesleeanus from in-vivo creep experiments, and compared to the values of m and Y previously determined for stage IVb sporangiophores using the same pressureprobe method (Ortega et al., 1989, Biophys. J. 56, 465). In either stage the sporangiophore enlarges (grows) predominately in length, in a specific region termed the growing zone, but the growth rates of stage I (5–20 urn · min–1) are smaller than those of stage IVb (30–70 m · min–1). The results demonstrate that this difference in growth rate is the consequence of a smaller magnitude of m for stage I sporangiophores; the obtained values of P (turgor pressure), Y, and P-Y (effective turgor for irreversible wall extension) for stage I sporangiophores are slightly larger than those of stage IVb sporangiophores. Also, it is shown that the magnitude of m for the stage I sporangiophore is regulated by altering the length of the growing zone, Lg. A relationship between m and Lg is obtained which can account for the difference between values of m determined for stage I and stage IVb sporangiophores. Finally, it is shown that similar changes in the magnitude of m and (which have been used interchangeably in the literature as a measure of irreversible wall extensibility) may not always represent the same changes in the cell-wall properties.Abbreviations and Symbols L length - Lg length of growing zone - m irreversible wall extensibility - P turgor pressure - Y yield threshold - (P-Y) effective turgor for irreversible wall extension - relative irreversible wall extensibility - g relative irreversible wall extensibility of the growing zone (m/Lg) This work was supported by National Science Foundation grant DCB-8801717 to J.K.E. Ortega.  相似文献   

20.
Human infection by Cunninghamella bertholletiae occurs almost exclusively in immunocompromised patients. Infections due to this microorganism have been most frequently diagnosed in patients with hematological malignancies, with neutropenia and in diabetes mellitus patients. This work reports a case of fungal infection by Cunninghamella bertholletiae isolated from blood in a man with a complex clinical picture, involving diabetes and pharmacological immunosupression. Blood culture at room temperature and at 37 °C on Sabouraud agar grew a single mold with characteristic properties of Cunninghamella. In the microscopic morphology, were found wide, non-septate, branching hyphae with erect sporangiophores terminated in swollen vesicles and sporangioles borne off the vesicles. C. bertholetiae was identified after subculture on Sabouraud dextrose agar at 45 °C. The patient died 15 days after the beginning of amphotericin B therapy.  相似文献   

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