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1.
Electron microscopy of glutaraldehyde-osmium-fixed samples of haploid myxamoebae and diploid plasmodia of the myxomycete Physarum flavicomum Berk. reveal dissimilar spindle apparatus during mitosis in the two cell types. Myxamoebae exhibit an astral type of mitosis with centrioles at the poles and nuclear envelope breakdown during prophase. Plasmodial nuclei lack centrioles at mitosis and have an intranuclear spindle, with nuclear envelope persisting during the entire division. Coated vesicles are noted during prophase and telophase in myxamoebae and their role in spindle formation and dispersion is suggested.  相似文献   

2.
Sperm formation was studied in the fern, Marsilea, and the cycad, Zamia, with particular emphasis on the centrioles. In Marsilea, the mature sperm possesses over 100 flagella, the basal bodies of which have the typical cylindrical structure of centrioles. Earlier observations by light microscopy suggested that these centrioles arise by fragmentation of a body known as the blepharoplast. In the youngest spermatids the blepharoplast is a hollow sphere approximately 0.8 µ in diameter. Its wall consists of closely packed immature centrioles, or procentrioles. The procentrioles are short cylinders which progressively lengthen during differentiation of the spermatid. At the same time they migrate to the surface of the cell, where each of them puts out a flagellum. A blepharoplast is found at each pole of the spindle during the last antheridial mitosis, and two blepharoplasts are found in the cytoplasm before this mitosis. Blepharoplasts are also found in the preceding cell generation, but their ultimate origin is obscure. Before the last mitosis the blepharoplasts are solid, consisting of a cluster of radially arranged tubules which bear some structural similarity to centrioles. In Zamia, similar stages are found during sperm formation, although here the number of flagella on each sperm is close to 20,000 and the blepharoplast measures about 10 µ in diameter. These observations are discussed in relation to theories of centriole replication.  相似文献   

3.
Samples from synchronized cultures of Blastocladiella emersonii were examined by electron microscopy from the late log phase to the completion of zoospore differentiation. Log-phase plants contain the usual cytoplasmic organelles but also have an unusual system of large tubules ca. 45 mμ diam that ramify in organized bundles throughout the protoplast. After induction, zoosporangium differentiation requires a 2-hr period in which the nuclei divide, a cross wall forms to separate the basal rhizoid region, and an apical papilla is produced. Nuclear division in B. emersonii is intranuclear with a typical microtubular spindle apparatus and paired, unequal, extranuclear centrioles at each pole. The papilla is formed by a process of localized cell wall breakdown and deposition of the papilla material by secretory granules. Differentiation of zoospores begins when one of the two centrioles associated with each nucleus elongates to form a basal body. The flagella fibers arise from the basal body and elongate into an expanding vesicle formed by the fusion of small secondary vesicles. The cleavage planes are formed by fusion of vesicles similar to those associated with flagellum initiation. When cleavage is complete, each sporangium contains ca. 250–260 uninucleate spore units with their flagella lying in the cleavage planes. Probable fusion of mitochondria to produce the single mitochondrion of the zoospore occurs after cleavage; the mitochondrion does not take its position around the basal body and rootlets until just before zoospore release. The ribosomal nuclear cap is organized and enclosed by a membrane formed through fusion of many small vesicles during a short period near the end of differentiation.  相似文献   

4.
By making appropriate crosses between heterothallic sexual clones of Didymium iridis we can recover apogamic lines in the F1 generation. In this organism, heterothallic forms typically produce a haploid myxamoebal stage, but recently two diploid myxamoebal clones homozygous for mating types were discovered. When these are crossed, A2A2 x A5A5, tetraploid Plasmodia are produced which later yield diploid F1 meiospores. Sixty-four percent of the single-spore-derived clones produce both myxamoebae and Plasmodia, while the remainder do not progress past the myxamoebal stage. These results are consistent with the predictions that from tetraploid nuclei, mating types should segregate in the meiospores in a ratio of 1A2A2:4A2A5:1A5A5, and that myxamoebae heterozygous, A2A5, for mating type should yield Plasmodia apogamously. As the means for verifying relative ploidy levels of myxamoebae and Plasmodia, nuclear DNA was measured with a scanning microspectrophotometer.  相似文献   

5.
Transmission electron microscopy of serial thin sections was used to reconstruct several early developmental stages of the blepharoplast in Coleochaete pulvinata spermatids. These were compared to published studies of blepharoplast development in Charales and the closest relatives of charophycean green algae among embryophytes, i.e., hornworts and liverworts. Bicentriolar centrosomes such as occur in bryophytes and fern allies were not observed in Coleochaete. Centriole replication in C. pulvinata was orthogonal as in Charales. The resulting two daughter centrioles were oriented perpendicularly and joined proximally by electron-dense material. Their orthogonal relationship was maintained throughout blepharoplast development by a massive, banded connective which appeared early. In spermatids of hornworts and liverworts, a multilayered structure (MLS) develops in association with two centrioles destined to become flagellar basal bodies. When the MLS of these lower land plants is sectioned at right angles to the long axis of the microtubular layer, the MLS is observed to lie beneath cross sections of both centrioles. In contrast, when developing MLSs of C. pulvinata and Charales are similarly sectioned, they occur beside a cross section of just one of the two centrioles. In C. pulvinata (as in other charophytes), MLS lamellae are oriented at a 90-degree angle to the long axis of the S1 microtubules from the beginning. This contrasts with the 40–45 degree angle between the MLS lamellae and S1 microtubules universally reported for archegoniates. In early C. pulvinata spermatids, spline microtubules are closely associated with an anterior mitochondrion having a low stromal density and few cristae. An anterior mitochondrion is typically associated with blepharoplast development in hornworts and liverworts, but has not previously been reported to occur in Coleochaete or any other charophycean alga. In Coleochaete, as in hornworts and liverworts, but unlike Charales, structure of mature blepharoplasts reflects early blepharoplast ontogeny. Very little change in positional relationships among blepharoplast components (flagella, connective, MLS) occurs during development. These character-state differences are of importance in cladistic analyses of charophycean algae and lower land plants.  相似文献   

6.
The ultrastructure of the mature spermatozoa and spermatogenesis of the bivalve Scrobicularia plana are described. Support cells extend from the basal lamina to the lumen of the testis and are laterally connected to the germinal epithelium. Germ cells present intercellular bridges and flagella since the spermatogonial stage. While spermatogonia and spermatocytes appear connected to support cells by desmosome-like junctions, elongated spermatids are held at the acrosomal region by support cell finger-like processes. During spermiogenesis, the acrosomal vesicle differentiates from a golgian saccule and then migrates to the nuclear apex. A microtubular manchette arising from centrioles surrounds the acrosomal vesicle, the nucleus, and the mitochondria at the time these three organelles start their elongation, disappearing after that. The mature spermatozoon of S. plana lacks a distinct midpiece because the mitochondria extend from the region of the pericentriolar complex along the nucleus anteriorly for approximately 1.4 μm. The features of this bivalve type of modified spermatozoon are compared with those of other animal groups having similar modifications.  相似文献   

7.
ABSTRACT. The flagellated protozoon Trichomonas vaginalis, parasite of the human urogenital tract, possesses a well developed microtubule system organized in highly differentiated structures. We have shown by immunoblotting that monospecific anti-sheep brain tubulin antibodies are able to react with the microtubular tubulin of T. vaginalis. These antibodies were used to study the microtubular system of T. vaginalis both in interphase and mitosis by indirect immunofluorescence. The interphase microtubular pattern, characterized by an axostyle, a pelta, four anterior flagella, and a recurrent flagellum, displayed remarkable changes at the onset of mitosis: the axostyle disappeared, and two pole bodies connected by a short spindle became evident; chromosomal fibers arose while pole-to-pole fibers elongated. The last phases of mitosis were marked by the disappearance of chromosomal fibers, the appearance of two small axostyles, and the depolymerization of the pole-to-pole bundle. At the end of mitosis, the normal interphase microtubule pattern was observed.  相似文献   

8.
Behaviors of male and female gametes, planozygotes and their microtubular cytoskeletons of a marine green alga Bryopsis maxima Okamura were studied using field emission scanning electron microscopy, high‐speed video microscopy, and anti‐tubulin immunofluorescence microscopy. After fusion of the biflagellate male and female gametes, two sets of basal bodies lay side by side in the planozygote. Four long female microtubular roots extended from the basal bodies to the cell posterior. Four short male roots extended to nearly half the distance to the posterior end. Two flagella, one each from the male and female gametes, become a pair. Specifically, the no. 2 flagellum of the female gamete and one male flagellum point to the right side of the eyespot of the female gamete, which is located at the cell posterior and which is associated with 2s and 2d roots of the female gamete. This spatial relationship of the flagella, microtubular roots, and the eyespot in the planozygote is retained until settlement. During forward swimming, the planozygote swings the flagella backward and moves by flagellar beating. The male and female flagella in the pair usually beat synchronously. The cell withdraws the flagella and becomes round when the planozygote settles to the substratum 20 min after mixing. The axoneme and microtubular roots depolymerize, except for the proximal part and the basal bodies. Subsequently, distinct arrays of cortical microtubules develop in zygotes until 30 min after mixing. These results are discussed with respect to the functional significance of the spatial relationships of flagellar apparatus‐eyespot‐cell fusion sites in the mating gametes and planozygote of green algae.  相似文献   

9.
M. Glyn  K. Gull 《Protoplasma》1990,158(3):130-141
Summary The transformation ofPhysarum polycephalum flagellates to myxamoebae is characterised by disappearance of the flagellum. This transition, from the flagellate to the myxamoeba was observed by phase contrast light microscopy and recorded by time lapse video photography to determine whether flagellates shed their flagella or they are absorbed within the cell. In addition, the kinetics of flagellum disappearance were also studied. Our observations indicate that the flagellum was absorbed within the cell; the process occurred within seconds. Flagellum resorbtion was preceded by typical morphological cell changes. The shape of the nucleus altered and its mobility within the cell decreased. It was not possible to observe the flagellum within the cell with phase contrast video recordings. Thin section electron microscopy was used to study this intracellular phenomenon. Several stages of flagellum dissolution could be identified within the cell. The two most important stages were: an axoneme surrounded by the flagellar membrane within a plasma membrane lined pocket or vacuole and the naked axoneme without its membrane, free within the cell cytoplasm. The existence of cytoplasmic microtubules prevented identification of any further dissolution stages of the flagellum. A group of microtubules adjacent to the flagellum but within the cytoplasm was observed in flagellates and also in those cells which possesed enveloped axonemes. The flagellum did not dissociate from the kinetosomes before resorbtion.Immunofluorescence studies with the 6-11-B-1 monoclonal antibody indicated that acetylated microtubules exist in myxamoebae after transformation from flagellates for up to 40 min. Acetylated tubulin is not limited to the centrioles in these cells.  相似文献   

10.
11.
Behaviors of the flagellar apparatuses (flagella, basal bodies, microtubular roots, etc.), mating structures and eyespots of gametes during the fertilization of Monostroma nitidum were studied using field emission scanning electron microscopy and transmission electron microscopy. The biflagellate isogamete (mt+ and mt?) mating structure has a position that is converse between mt+ and mt? gametes relative to the flagellar beat plane and the eyespot. After the adhesion of mt+ and mt? gametes, gamete fusion occurred between the two mating structures. The cell fusion plane expanded to the cell surface as circumscribed by 1s–2d roots in mt+ gamete and 1d–2s roots in the mt? gamete. Two sets of flagellar apparatuses lay side by side in the planozygote and soon become mutually close. The no. 1 basal body of mt+ gamete and the no. 2 basal body of mt? gamete rotated in a counterclockwise direction, as viewed from the cell anterior. Then, the no. 2 basal body of mt+ gamete and the no. 1 basal body of mt? gamete slid into a face to face position. Finally, four flagella and basal bodies exhibited a cruciate arrangement. The basal bodies of the opposing pair (no. 1 and no. 2) were offset in a counterclockwise orientation by the basal body diameter. The 1s and 2d roots of the mt+ gamete lay nearly parallel to the 1d and 2s roots of the mt? gamete, respectively, at the cell fusion plane. Because of the asymmetric localization of the mating structure, association, and subsequent rearrangement of basal bodies and microtubular roots, two eyespots lay on the same side of the planozygote. After the settlement of the planozygote, the flagellar apparatus started to disintegrate in the zygote cytoplasm.  相似文献   

12.
Vibrio parahaemolyticus, the flagellated nonswarming marine bacteria were induced to swarm on solid media under three different conditions: growth at 20–26°C on medium containing 1% NaCl, growth on a medium in a sealed Petridish and growth on H2O2-treated medium. The morphological transformations observed in cells during swarming of V. parahaemolyticus are similar to those found jor the naturally swarming Vibrio alginolyticus. The mechanism of swarming in both species involves massive formation of peritrichous flagella and a negative chemotactive response to metabolic byproducts.  相似文献   

13.
Interisolate crosses between haploid (mean DNA = 0.32) CR 5-5 (A2) myxamoebae and polyploid (mean DNA = 1.80) CR 2–25 (A5) myxamoebae of the myxomycete Didymium iridis result in plasmodia that have the haploid (mean DNA = 0.32) DNA content rather than the predicted polyploid value. F1 clones possess the mating type allele of the CR 5-5 clone only, and they also have the same mean DNA content as CR 5-5 myxamoebae. Crosses between these F1 clones and CR 2–25 myxamoebae again resulted in the production of haploid plasmodia. Hence, the polyploid CR 2–25 clone appears to induce the CR 5-5 clone to produce plasmodia without involving itself in nuclear fusion.  相似文献   

14.
THE EFFECTS OF COLCHICINE ON SPERMATOGENESIS IN NITELLA   总被引:1,自引:1,他引:0       下载免费PDF全文
Treatment of Nitella antheridia with colchicine results in various sperm abnormalities, depending upon duration of exposure and subsequent recovery. Early effects of treatment include disappearance of spindle fibers and a cessation of ordered cell wall formation in dividing cells. Sperm released from antheridia treated for 24 hr and allowed to recover for 4–5 days possess branched flagella. After a recovery period of 6–10 days the sperm appear normal; however, following longer recovery periods, the sperm exhibit variations in size and number of flagella. Branched flagella contain a variety of microtubule patterns ranging from branches containing a single microtubule to flagella with an excess of microtubules. Spermatids which differentiate in the presence of colchicine lack flagella and a microtubular sheath. Nuclear contents undergo condensation stages; however, the nucleus as a whole does not undergo the orderly elongation and coiling characteristic of untreated Nitella spermatids. Long-term colchicine treatment followed by a recovery period produces atypical microtubules and microtubular aggregations in the spermatid. The results indicate that colchicine affects not only polymerization of microtubule subunits but also factors responsible for their ordered spatial relationships in the cell. The presence of microtubules is a prerequisite for normal morphological changes during spermiogenesis.  相似文献   

15.
R. A. Andersen 《Protoplasma》1985,128(2-3):94-106
Summary Flagellated vegetative cells of the colonial golden algaSynura uvella Ehr, were examined using serial sections. The two flagella are nearly parallel as they emerge from a flagellar pit near the apex of the cell. The photoreceptor is restricted to swellings on the flagella in the region where they pass through the apical pore in the scale case and the swellings are not associated with the cell membrane or an eyespot. A unique ring-like structure surrounds the axonemes of both flagella at a level just above the transitional helix. The basal bodies are interconnected by three striated, fibrous bands. Four short (<100 nm) microtubules lie between the basal bodies at their proximal ends. Two rhizoplasts extend down from the basal bodies and separate into numerous fine striated bands which lie over the nucleus. Three- and four-membered microtubular roots arise from the rhizoplasts and extend apically together. As the roots reach the cell anterior, the three-membered root bends and curves clockwise to form a large loop around the flagella; the four-membered root bends anticlockwise and terminates under the distal end of the three-membered root as it completes the loop. There are four absolute orientations, termed Types 1–4, in which the flagellar apparatus can occur. With each orientation type the positions of the Golgi body, nucleus, rhizoplasts, chloroplasts and microtubular roots change with respect to the flagella, basal bodies and photoreceptor. Two new basal bodies appear in pre-division cells, and three short microtubules appear in a dense substance adjacent to each new basal body. Based upon the positions of new pre-division basal bodies, a hypothesis is proposed to explain why there are four orientations and how they are maintained through successive cell divisions.  相似文献   

16.
Flagellar and basal body development during cell division was studied in the biflagellate green alga Spermatozopsis similis Preisig et Melkonian by light microscopy of immobilized living cells, statistical analysis of flagellar lengths during the cell cycle, and electron microscopy of cells and isolated cytoskeletons. Interphase cells display two flagella of unequal/subequal length. An eyespot located in an anterior lobe of the chloroplast is connected to the basal body bearing the shorter flagellum by means of a five-stranded microtubular root. Until cell division, the two parental flagella attain the same length. During cell division, each cell forms two new flagella that grow to a length of 1.5 μm before they are distributed in a semiconservative fashion together with the parental flagella to the two progeny cells at cytokinesis. During the following interphase, the flagella newly formed during the preceding cell division grow to attain the same length as the parental flagella until the subsequent cell division. The shorter of the two flagella of a cell thus represents the developmentally younger flagellum, which transforms to the mature state during two consecutive cell cycles. Interphase cells display only two flagella-bearing basal bodies; two nascent basal bodies are formed during cell division and are connected to the microtubular d-roots of respective parental basal bodies with which the newly formed basal bodies are later distributed to the progeny cells. During segregation, basal body pairs shaft into the 11/5 o'clock direction, thus conserving the 1/7 o'clock configuration of basal body pairs of interphase cells. Prior to chloroplast and cell division, an eyespot is newly formed near the cell posterior in close association with a 1s microtubular root, while the parental eyespot is retained. During basal body segregation, eyespot-root connections for both the old and newly formed eyespots are presumably lost, and new associations of the eyespots with the 2s roots of the newly formed basal bodies are established during cytokinesis. The significance of this “eyespot-flagellar root developmental cycle” for the absolute orientation of the progeny cells is discussed.  相似文献   

17.
Summary Upon squashing of the pollen grain, the isolated generative cell ofNicotiana tabacum looses its spindle shape to become spherical; this phenomenon is independent of the sucrose concentration used. The time necessary for this change can vary from 1 min (0% sucrose) to 20 min (30% sucrose). The microtubular cytoskeleton was studied by means of immunofluorescence and electron microscopy. Just after isolation, 5 to 15 clearly visible bundles in microtubules organized in a basket-like structure are present. After 15 min in medium with 15% sucrose, the microtubular cytoskeleton disappears, and a diffusely spread tubulin can be observed. Neither the addition of 10–20 M taxol to the medium, nor the omission of Ca2+ to the medium has any effect on the changes in cell shape and loss of microtubular bundles after isolation.Abbreviations GC Generative cell - SC sperm cell - BK Brewbaker and Kwack - CLSM confocal laser scanning fluorescence micros copy  相似文献   

18.
Spermatogenesis in the charophyte Nitella has been followed in antheridia prepared for light and electron microscopy. The antheridial filament cells contain paired centrioles which are similar in structure and behavior to the centrioles of animal cells. In the early spermatid, the centrioles undergo an initial elongation at their distal ends and become joined by a spindle-shaped fibrous connection. At the same time, their proximal ends are closely associated with the development of a layer of juxtaposed microtubules which will form the microtubular sheath. The architectural arrangement of these microtubules suggests that they constitute a cytoskeletal system, forming a framework along which the mitochondria and plastids become aligned and along which the nucleus undergoes extensive elongation and differentiation. The microtubular sheath persists in the mature sperm. During mid-spermatid stages, the centrioles give rise to the flagella and concomitantly undergo differentiation to become the basal bodies. The Golgi apparatus goes through a period of intensive activity during mid-spermatid stages, then decreases in organization until it can no longer be detected in the late spermatid. An attempt is made to compare similarities between plant and animal spermiogenesis.  相似文献   

19.
L. Mir  A. Moisand  M. Wright 《Protoplasma》1983,118(2):124-134
Summary The microtubules structure of two stable diploid amoebal strains, each resulting from the fusion of two haploid amoebae has been studied by electron microscopy. Tridimensional reconstructions showed that these diploid amoebae-typically possessed two proflagellar apparatuses,i.e., two microtubule organizing centers 1 (mtoc 1) and two pairs of centrioles with their associated microtubular arrays. These observations account for the high frequency of biflagellated amoebae in these two strains. The presence of two mtoc 1 may account for the high percentage of mitotic abnormalities which was observed under phase contrast microscopy and electron microscopy and is in agreement with a role of the mtoc 1 as a mitotic center during mitosis. However, the presence of numerous normal mitotic apparatuses raises the question of the regulations which play a role in the mitotic process. The unusual distribution of centrioles and the unusual pro-flagellar apparatuses which were produced suggest that in interphase the anterior centriole is a necessary structure for the morphogenesis of the microtubular arrays 2 and 3 and that the posterior centriole is a necessary structure for the morphogenesis of the microtubular arrays 4 and 5.  相似文献   

20.
Cell structure, cell adhesion, and stalk formation have been examined by electron microscopy in the colonial flagellate, Cephalothamnium cyclopum. Each cell is obconical or spindle-shaped, pointed posteriorly and truncated anteriorly. The cell membrane is underlain by epiplasm 0.1 μm thick in the posterior region, but bands of microtubules support the anterior region which is differentiated into a flagellar pocket, oral apparatus and contractile vacuole. Each of 2 flagella, joined a short way above their bases by an interflagellar connective, has a paraxial rod and mastigonemes. One flagellum is free and is important in food gathering while the other is recurrent and lies in a shallow groove on the ventral cell surface but projects posteriorly into the stalk. The basal bodies of these flagella are bipartite structures connected by a pair of striated rootlets with accessory microtubular fibers. The oral apparatus consists of a funnel-shaped buccal cavity and cytostome. It is supported by helical and longitudinal microtubules and also has nearby striated and microtubular fibers. Possible roles of associated oral vesicles in relation to ingestion are discussed. A reticulate mitochondrion houses a massive kinetoplast which has a fibrillar substructure resembling that of dinoflagellate chromosomes. Adjacent flagellates adhere by laminate extensions of their posterior regions and attach by their recurrent flagella to a communally secreted stalk composed of finely fibrillar material. This study indicates that Cephalothamnium belongs in the order Kinetoplastida, and has many features in common with members of the family Bodonidae.  相似文献   

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