首页 | 本学科首页   官方微博 | 高级检索  
相似文献
 共查询到20条相似文献,搜索用时 46 毫秒
1.
Exine development in pollen of Caesalpinia japonica was studied using high resolution scanning electron microscopy, with attention to the initial developmental process of protectum formation and composition. The protectum is originated on the protuberant sites of the invaginated plasma membrane during the early tetrad stage. The present study shows that the initial protectum is composed of irregularly oriented fibrous threads. The fibrous threads accumulate and form a network on the plasma membrane. Granules 10–20 nm in diameter gradually aggregate within the network of fibrous threads during the tetrad stage. Subsequently the fibrous threads are almost masked by the granules. The developing protectum has a coarse texture within the callosic tetrad envelope. At the free microspore stage the granular protectum becomes homogeneous. The present study suggests that the protectum consists of an association of fibrous threads and granules. The fibrous threads may function as receptors and/or the skeleton of the developing exine.  相似文献   

2.
Ultrastructural changes during omniaperturate pollen development in Trillium kamtschaticum Pall, was examined using transmission electron microscopy. The pollen mother cells are not enveloped within a thick callosic wall. The microspores resulting from successive meiosis are divided by scanty deposition of callosic wall in the tetrad. A primexine/exine template is not recognizable within the tetrad during formation of exinous components. Preexinous globules, originating from vesicles in the callosic wall, accumulate electron-dense materials and develop into exinous globules. The preexinous globules have ca 10 nm wide contacts with tilted and invaginated plasma membrane of the microspore within the callosic wall. After dissolution of the callosic wall, the microspores separate and mitosis subsequently leads to the formation of a generative cell and vegetative cell encased in a loose aggregation of developing exinous globules. When the generative cell is at the pollen grain surface, the channeled zone is initiated at the opposite side of the microspore on the surface of the vegetative cell. Just before pollen maturity, a new layer develops under the channeled zone. Thus, development of the omniaperturate pollen grains of T. kamtschaticum involves some processes that are distinct from those of Canna and Heliconia and some that are similar.  相似文献   

3.
Genetically fixed polarities in pollen tetrad development lead to different, but family-specific arrangements of particular ektexine elements in the two unrelated angiosperm familiesEricaceae andOnagraceae. In the former, the so-called viscin threads are inserted on the distal, in the latter on the proximal pollen face only. Despite their diametrically opposed configurations, the viscin threads of the two families have attained identical functions in pollination ecology by convergent evolution.  相似文献   

4.
Masamichi Takahashi 《Grana》2013,52(6):309-312
The exine development in Illicium was investigated using transmission electron and field emission scanning electron microscopy. The protectum and procolumellae appear on protruding sites of the microspore cytoplasm in the early tetrad stage. The protectum takes the form of a reticulate pattern with perforations within the callosic wall. After dissolution of the callosic wall, the central part of muri rises to form tectal ridges. The developing tectum, shows an echinate appearance in sectional view and has perforations at both sides around each lumen. There are two kinds of columellae; those forming continuous rings around each lumen and others which are individual rods standing beneath the tectum. The present developmental study in Illicium showed that the initial simple reticulate pattern formed within the callosic wall develops into the complex reticulate exine pattern of the differentiating tectum during the free microspore stage. The tectum has an angular shape with perforations and is supported by the two kinds of columellae.  相似文献   

5.
In the recessive genic male sterile line 9012A of Brassica napus, pollen development is affected during the tetrad stage. According to the light and electron microscopy analysis of tapetal cells and tetrads, the sterile tapetal cells swelled with expanded vacuoles at the early tetrad stage and finally filled the center of the locules where a majority of tetrads encased with the thick callose wall collapsed and degraded. We suggested that an absence of callase, which is a wall-degrading enzyme stored in the vacuoles of tapetal cells before secretion, resulted in the failure of tetrad separation. Moreover, transmission electron microscopy analysis showed that the secretory tapetal cells were not observed in sterile anthers, which indicated that the transition of the tapetum from the parietal type to the secretory type was probably aberrant. In plants, degeneration of the tapetum is thought to be the result of programmed cell death (PCD). PCD of tapetal cells was investigated by terminal deoxynucleotidyl transferase-mediated dUTP nick-end labeling assay and signals indicative of deoxyribonucleic acid fragmentation were detected much earlier in sterile anther than in fertile anther. This suggests that tapetal breakdown does not occur by the normal procession of PCD and might be following an alternative mechanism of unscheduled apoptosis in line 9012A. This research supports the hypothesis that premature PCD is associated with male sterility in B. napus.  相似文献   

6.
Pollen development in Hibiscus syriacus L. (Malvaceae) was studied with light (LM), scanning (SEM) and transmission (TEM) electron microscopes, with special attention to the formation of extremely long spines of the pollen grains. At the early tetrad stage, probacules are initiated directly on the plasma membrane and grow in coincidence with the height of primexine matrix within a callosic wall. Subsequently, a pretectum appears at the top of the probacules and then a foot layer is formed by accumulation of white line centered lamellations. Before dissolution of the callosic wall, a reticulate patterned pretectum is established around the microspores. There is not, however, any morphological indication on the initiation of the spines during the tetrad period within a callosic wall. It is after dissolution of the callosic wall that the spines of exine begin to form by the apposition of lamellated sheets. The lamellated sheets show a concentric configuration around the developing supratectal spines. The mature pollen grain is spheroidal, polycolporate, 160–170 μm in diameter, with supratectal spines 20–25 μm long. The supratectal spines of Hibiscus pollen are not homologous with the other exinous protrusions which are determined within the callosic wall during tetrad stage.  相似文献   

7.
Pollen ontogeny contributes significantly to the evolutionary analysis and the understanding of the reproductive biology of seed plants. Although much research on basal angiosperms is being carried out there are still many important features about which little is known in these taxa, such as the sporophytic structures related to pollen development and morphology. In this study, pollen development of Magnolia liliflora was analyzed by optical microscopy and transmission electron microscopy. The aim of this paper was to supply data that will help characterize basal angiosperms. Microsporogenesis is of the successive type, so that tetrads are decussate or isobilateral. The callosic walls form by the centripetal growth of furrows. The secretory tapetum develops orbicules, which start to form in the microspore tetrad stage. Pollen grains are shed at the bicellular stage. The exine wall has a granular infratectum. Ultrastructural changes observed in the cytoplasm of microspores and tapetal cells are related to the development of the pollen grain wall and orbicules. Centrifugal cell plates are more usual for the successive type of microsporogenesis. The presence of the successive type of microsporogenesis with callosic walls formed by the centripetal growth of furrows could reflect the fact that the successive type in Magnoliaceae is derived from the simultaneous type. The granular infratectum of the ectexine and the presence of orbicules could indicate that this species is one of the most evolved of the genus.  相似文献   

8.
The quartet (qrt) mutants of Arabidopsis thaliana produce tetrad pollen in which microspores fail to separate during pollen development. Because the amount of callose deposition between microspores is correlated with tetrad pollen formation in other species, and because pectin is implicated as playing a role in cell adhesion, these cell-wall components in wild-type and mutant anthers were visualized by immunofluorescence microscopy at different stages of microsporogenesis. In wild-type, callose was detected around the pollen mother cell at the onset of meiosis and around the microspores during the tetrad stage. Microspores were released into the anther locule at the stage where callose was no longer detected. Deposition and degradation of callose during tetrad pollen formation in qrt1 and qrt2 mutants were indistinguishable from those in wild-type. Enzymatic removal of callose from wild-type microspores at the tetrad stage did not release the microspores, suggesting that callose removal is not sufficient to disperse the microspores in wild-type. Pectic components were detected in the primary wall of the pollen mother cell. This wall surrounded the callosic wall around the pollen mother cell and the microspores during the tetrad stage. In wild-type, pectic components of this wall were no longer detectable at the time of microspore release. However, in qrt1 and qrt2 mutants, pectic components of this wall persisted after callose degradation. This result suggests that failure of pectin degradation in the pollen mother cell wall is associated with tetrad pollen formation in qrt mutants, and indicates that QRT1 and QRT2 may be required for cell type-specific pectin degradation to separate microspores.  相似文献   

9.
The histochemistry of different developmental stages of the pollen wall, aperture, and Ubisch bodies of Triticum aestivum is examined with light and transmission electron microscopy. Various parts of the callosic envelope of the tetrad spores stain differentially. At the late tetrad stage, the probacules and the coat of pro-Ubisch bodies are densely stained for acidic polysaccharides, protein, and neutral polysaccharides. The protectum and the core of pro-Ubisch bodies are moderately stained. Upon release of microspores from the callosic cell envelope, the stainability for acidic polysaccharides increases in the exine and in the wall of Ubisch bodies, becoming very intense in the wall of mature pollen grains and Ubisch bodies. The stainability for neutral polysaccharides is decreased in the mature pollen wall and in the Ubisch bodies, while the stainability for protein increases. The results also indicate the probability of the presence of unsaturated lipids and the absence of free aldehydes in the pollen wall and Ubisch bodies.  相似文献   

10.
Summary Male cones ofPodocarpus macrophyllus D. Don enter a period of dormancy lasting almost a year after the differentiation of archesporial tissue. The cell walls of the sporogenous and tapetal cells are different in composition from those of the cells comprising the wall of the microsporangium. The walls of tapetal cells undergo complete dissolution but the naked protoplasts do not invade the cavity of the microsporangium, and eventually degeneratein situ. Sporopollenin-containing bodies are formed on the tapetal plasmalemma although no specific tapetal organelles can be singled out as sites of synthesis of sporopollenin precursors. The original walls of the microspore mother cells are broken down completely and replaced by a thin callose-like wall. No cytomictic channels are formed prior to or during early meiosis. The outer nuclear membrane of the sporogenous cells forms numerous vesicles which likely play an important role in preparing the cell for meiosis and in the breakdown of the original sporogenous cell wall and the formation of the new wall. Pronounced evaginations and invaginations of the nuclear envelope during the tetrad stage are seen which again indicate vital nucleo-cytoplasmic exchange at the time when species specific sexine layer is being laid down. The microspore protoplast synthesizes a portion of sporopollenin precursors. Sexine and part of nexine I are laid down during the tetrad stage on lamellae of unit membrane dimensions while nexines II and III are formed after the dissolution of the tetrads by the coalescence of small, electron dense particles. Cells of the male gametophyte are initially separated from each other by distinct cell walls often traversed by plasmodesmata. Mature pollen grains have appreciable reserves of protein, lipid and starch. Results of histochemical and scanning electron microscopical observations are also reported and discussed.  相似文献   

11.
Light and electron microscope observations characterized the layers that comprise Vigna vexillata L. pollen walls, and identified the timing of their development. Exine sculpturings form an unusually coarse ektexinous reticulum. The structure of the ektexine is granular; this differs from the columellate/tectate type of structure typical of most angiosperm pollen. The ektexine overlies a homogeneous-to-lamellar, electron-dense endexine, which in turn surrounds a thick, microfibrillar intine. Pollen grains are triporate and operculate, with Zwischenkörper and thickened intine underlying the apertures. The ektexine forms during the tetrad period of microspore development, the endexine and Zwischenkörper during the free microspore stage, and the intine during the bicelled (pollen) stage. Coarsely reticulate exine sculpturings and the granular structure of the patterned exine wall of the pollen grains are features that make this species suitable for detailed studies of pollen wall pattern formation.  相似文献   

12.
This report describes the ultrastructural development of plasmodial tapetum and pollen wall of Butomus umbellatus. The tapetum contains extensive arrays of rough endoplasmic reticulum, vesicles from which are responsible for the formation of sporopollenin-like bodies. The tapetum is also involved in the formation of other forms of sporopollenin precursors. Development of pollen wall continues after microspores are released from their callosic walls; they are then enclosed by plasmodial tapetum. The activity and products of the plasmodial tapetum show substantial correlation with pollen wall development, particularly ektexine formation. In B. umbellatus, the tapetum intrudes into the anther locule at early microspore stage. This timing of plasmodial intrusion occurs at a later stage of pollen development as compared to those in the advanced monocotyledons. We report the rough endoplasmic reticulum origin of sporopollenin-like bodies and their occurrence in the plasmodial tapeta of B. umbellatus.  相似文献   

13.
Summary The development of sporogenous and tapetal cells in the anthers of male-fertile and cytoplasmic male-sterile sugar beet (Beta vulgaris L.) plants was studied using light and transmission electron microscopy. In general, male-sterile anthers showed a much greater variability in developmental pattern than male-fertile anthers. The earliest deviation from normal anther development was observed to occur in sterile anthers at meiotic early prophase: there was a degeneration or irregular proliferation of the tapetal cells. Other early aberrant events were the occurrence of numerous small vesicles in the microspore mother cells (MMC) and a disorganized chromatin condensation. Deviations that occurred in sterile anthers at later developmental stages included: (1) less distinct inner structures in the mitochondria of both MMC and tapetal cells from middle prophase onwards. (2) dilated ER and nuclear membranes at MMC prophase, in some cases associated with the formation of protein bodies. (3) breakdown of cell walls in MMCs and tapetal cells at late meiotic prophase. (4) no massive increase in tapetal ER at the tetrad stage. (5) a general dissolution of membranes, first in the MMC, then in the tapetum. (6) abortion of microspores and the occurrence of a plasmodial tapetum in anthers reaching the microspore stage. (7) no distinct degeneration of tapetal cells after microspore formation. Thus, it seems that the factors that lead to abortive microsporogenesis are structurally expressed at widely different times during anther development. Aberrant patterns are not restricted to the tetrad stage but occur at early prophase.  相似文献   

14.
In Onagraceae, pollen is shed in mature tetrads in most Epilobieae, many species of Ludwigia (Jussiaeeae), and two closely related species of the large genus Camissonia (Onagreae). Mature tetrads of Camissonia cardiophylla and representative species of Epilobium and Ludwigia were examined with light, scanning, and transmission electron microscopes. Morphological diagnoses of monad units indicated that individual taxa could be readily distinguished. Statistical analyses of tetrads which remained after acetolysis treatment revealed significant differences in the strength of the binding mechanisms. Mechanisms of tetrad cohesion were found to consist of two principal types. Common to all taxa is cohesion of pollen wall surfaces at the aperture margins; this mechanism is well known in many angiosperm groups. With the exception of Camissonia, the remaining taxa also display binding by means of short exine fragments between adjacent pollen units. These fragments, termed bridges and reported here for the first time, are located in the area extending from the aperture margins to near the center of the proximal exine faces. Thin sections reveal that layers of the bridges are identical with those of the exine. Comparisons were made between bridges and viscin threads, both of which occur on the proximal faces of the grains. Viscin threads are present on all pollen grains in Onagraceae and exhibit distinctive morphologies, and bridges were viewed morphogenetically as related to viscin threads but including an endexine layer and occupying a position near the apertures where cohesion of wall surfaces also occurs. In an evolutionary sense, the formation of mature tetrads almost certainly occurred independently in Camissonia and may have done so in Ludwigia and the Epilobieae.  相似文献   

15.
Summary Establishment of a tapetal plasmodium in postmeiotic stages in anther locules ofTradescantia virginiana encloses the tetrads in membrane-limited compartments. The perispore membrane (PSM), around each tetrad, is derived from composite tapetal cell plasma membranes. The tapetum acquires an abundance of ER and ribosomes and by the late tetrad stage the PSM and its underlying cytoplasm exhibit specialized features, studied here by ZnIO impregnation, osmium maceration, application of indirect immunofluorescence employing antitubulin, conventional thin sectioning and the Thiéry reaction. These features include: labyrinthine convolutions of the PSM resulting from migration of membranous sacs and their partial fusion to the PSM, an intimate relationship of tubular ER with the convoluted PSM, and microtubules underlying the PSM and among the membranous sacs. At the same time membrane-bound granules, comparable to but smaller and simpler than tapetal orbicules of secretory tapeta, form in the convolutions. It is postulated that the ER supplies precursors of sporopollenincontaining parts of the spore wall, that the PSM-associated microtubules stabilise the whole secretory apparatus at the tapetum-spore interface, and that the precursors are expelled into the lumen bounded by the PSM and then accreted upon the orbicule-like granules or the developing spore wall. With dissolution of the callosic wall, the plasmodium invades the intermicrosporal spaces of late tetrads, the PSM unfolding its elaborations and becoming closely appressed to the exinous surfaces of individual spores. Microtubules, although present during this phase of invasion, do not seem to propel the invasion processes and may have roles in shape maintenance. During pollen mitosis and enlargement the tapetal cytoplasm accumulates lipidic globules. A late phase of Golgi activity precedes accumulation of vesicles or vacuoles near the spores, these being bounded by single or multiple tripartite membranes. With anther desiccation, portions of plasmodium are deposited on the pollen surface in the form of tryphine, the deposits containing stacked membrane-like bilayers.  相似文献   

16.
Anther development of the C-cytoplasmic male-sterile (cms C) and the normal cytoplasm version (N) in the W182BN corn inbred was studied by light and electron microscopy. Deviation from normal pollen development was first observed in the tapetal cells at the tetrad stage of development. Two types of tapetal abnormalities were observed in plants with C cytoplasm. The first behaved like the N anther until the tetrad stage, when numerous small vacuoles appeared in the tapetal cells. Inner and radial tapetal cell walls broke down normally, but irregular Ubisch body deposition was observed, and exine development was inhibited and delayed. The tapetum and microspores disintegrated at the intermediate microspore stage. The second type of tapetum was highly vacuolated at the early tetrad stage, with dense inner and radial cell walls that remained intact and enlarged when the tetrads aborted. No organellar abnormalities, such as the mitochondrial changes observed in cms T, were observed in C anthers.  相似文献   

17.
Abstract

Using light and electron microscopy, we have studied the microsporogenesis and tapetal development of the feathers in two different low producing clones of Picolit giallo (sp. Vitis vinifera). In these clones while the productivity of the main branches (fertile branches originated from buds, formed in the previous year, that remained silent during the winter) is very low, that of the feathers (fertile branches derived from annual buds) is always normal.

The microsporogenesis and tapetal development proceed normally in almost all the examined anthers; it is remarkable that at the tetrad stage the tapetal cells appear well structured without any degeneration symptom, unlike what observed for the main branches. Moreover in most of the mature anthers the pollen grains are numerous, pleinty of organelles and show sometimes thickenings in the callose layer under their wall. The tapetal cells of these anthers have disappeared. Only in few anthers we observed the presence of collapsed pollen grains and tapetal cells with anomalous development, that are still present when the pollen grains are mature. This rare situation for the feathers is on the contrary frequent for the main branches.  相似文献   

18.
当归花药的发育   总被引:1,自引:1,他引:0  
  相似文献   

19.
Two new recessive male-sterile mutants of Zea mays (Poaceae), or maize, were studied to identify the timing of pollen abortion and to examine the involvement of anther wall cell layers. The results of test crosses indicated that these mutants were not allelic with any known male-sterile mutants of maize. Light and transmission electron microscopy were used to compare pollen development in homozygous male-sterile mutants to that in fertile heterozygous siblings. In both mutants, microspores abort soon after release from the meiotic tetrad. However, the two mutations have strikingly different phenotypes. Large lipid bodies accumulate in the tapetal cells as the microspores vacuolate and die in the mutant ms25. Large vacuoles appear in both the tapetal cells and the young microspores as they begin to disintegrate in the mutant ms26. Because abnormal tapetal cell morphology is detected in both mutants, it is possible that both of these mutations affect the expression of genes in tapetal cells.  相似文献   

20.
Wall development of tricolpate pollen of sunflower was studied by light and by scanning and transmission electron microscopy. The wall and colpi are initiated during the tetrad stage, producing a young, spinulate, two-layered exine (ektexine and endexine) separated by a “spacer layer.” After release from the tetrads, the individual microspores round up and enlarge. The exine layers increase in thickness and complexity from sporopollenin contributed by the tapetum and microspores. During the mid-vacuolate microspore stage, the tapetum becomes plasmodial and surrounds the developing microspores. At the vacuolate pollen stage, after the wall and colpi are completely formed, the plasmodial tapetum breaks down and releases its contents into the locule. Some of the contents are presumably utilized by the pollen to make storage reserves while other components, such as lipids and proteins, fill the spaces within the pollen wall exine. Pollen wall ontogeny provides a scheme of terms for mature composite walls in general. The various events associated with microsporogenesis in sunflower are compared with those reported in other pertinent studies.  相似文献   

设为首页 | 免责声明 | 关于勤云 | 加入收藏

Copyright©北京勤云科技发展有限公司  京ICP备09084417号