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1.
Distribution of pectins in cell walls of maturing anther of Allium cepa L. was investigated. The monoclonal antibodies against defined epitopes of pectin were used: JIM5 recognizing unesterified pectin and JIM7 recognizing esterified pectin. It has been found that the cell walls of all anther tissues mainly contain esterified pectins. In the somatic tissues only small amounts of unesterified pectins are present in the cell wall junctions and adjacent middle lamellae and in the cell walls of the connective tissue. Thickening of the epiderm cell walls and growth of trabeculae in endothecium are completed through deposition of esterified pectins. In the cell walls of the middle layer and tapetum, unesterified pectins have been found only prior to their disintegration. The primary wall of microsporocytes is made up mainly of esterified pectins. Unesterified pectins occur outside microsporocytes only prior to the callose isolation stage. The presence of esterified pectins has also been detected on the surface of the callose wall surrounding dividing microsporocytes. Lysis of those pectins takes place after microsporogenesis, simultaneously with the lysis of the callosic walls. Before these processes pectins are unesterified. In the sporoderm of pollen grains mainly esterified pectins occur. They have been localized in the intine and aperture. The level of unesterified pectins in the intine is markedly lower.  相似文献   

2.
 The ratio of loculus volume to the volume of the entire anther began to increase from the microspore mother cell stage and reached 32.3% at anthesis. The content of the loculus was examined in Lilium during pollen development and two waves could be distinguished. From the premeiotic stage until the vacuolated microspore stage, the loculus consisted of neutral polysaccharides, pectins and proteins. These substances originated from tapetal activity from the premeiotic stage until the young microspore stage. Dictyosomes and rough endoplasmic reticulum seemed to be involved in tapetal secretion, although, in some mitochondria, vesicles progressively developed as early as premeiosis and increased until the young microspore stage, which could reveal their involvement in the secretion process. At this stage, numerous cytoplasmic vesticles containing material similar to the locular material fused with the plasma membrane of the tapetum so that vesicle content was in contact with the loculus. It seems that tapetal and callose wall degradation at the late tetrad stage may also have contributed to the production of material in the loculus. From pollen mitosis to anthesis, the anther loculus contained mainly the pollenkitt which was synthesized in the tapetum between the young microspore stage and the vacuolated microspore stage. At the young microspore stage, proplastids divided and developed into elaioplasts and smooth endoplasmic reticulum (SER) increased dramatically. Pollenkitt had a double origin: some droplets were extruded directly from the plastid stroma through the plastid envelopes; the others were unsaturated lipid globules, which presumably derived from the interaction between SER saccules and plastids. Received: 2 September 1997 / Revision accepted: 12 March 1998  相似文献   

3.
The Nelumbonaceae are a small family of aquatic angiosperms comprising Nelumbo nucifera and Nelumbo lutea. Historically, the genus has been considered to be closely related to Nymphaeales, however new systematic work has allied Nelumbo with lower eudicots, particularly Platanus. In recent years, studies of pollen development have contributed greatly to the understanding of phylogenetic relationships, but little has been known about these events in Nelumbo. In this paper, pollen and anther development are morphologically described for the first time in N. lutea. A comprehensive ontogenetic sequence is documented, including the sporogenous tissue, microspore mother cell, tetrad, free spore, and mature pollen grain stages. The deposition of a microspore mother cell coat and callose wall, the co-occurrence of both tetrahedral and tetragonal tetrads, the formation of a primexine in tetrads, and primexine persistence into the late free spore stage are shown. The majority of exine development occurs during the free spore stage with the deposition of a tectate-columellate ectexine, a lamellate endexine, and an unusual granular layer below and intermixed with the endexine lamellae. A two-layered intine forms rapidly during the earliest mature pollen stage. Major events of anther development documented include the degradation of a secretory-type tapetum during the free spore stage and the rapid formation of U-shaped endothecial thickenings in the mature pollen grain stage. The majority of mature pollen grains are tricolpate, however less common monosulcate and diaperturate grains also develop. Co-occurring aperture types in Nelumbo have been suggested to be an important transition in angiosperm aperture number. However, aperture variability in Nelumbo may be correlated with the lateness of aperture ontogeny in the genus, which occurs in the early free spore stage. This character, as well as other details of pollen and anther ontogeny in Nelumbo, are compared to those of Nymphaeales and Platanus in an effort to provide additional insight into systematic and phylogenetic relationships. Although Nelumbo is similar to both groups in several characters, the ontogenetic sequence of the genus is different in many ways.  相似文献   

4.
The apertural inner layer (intine) of Euphorbia L. pollen grains has a characteristic but original structure that has paired thickenings, one on either side of the colpus. To determine the nature and role of this intine layer, pollen grains of Euphorbia peplus L. were germinated in vivo and in vitro. The germination process involves wall changes that facilitate formation of the pollen tube and its subsequent growth. In the thickenings of the intine of E. peplus, the unesterified pectin epitopes are more densely localised in the inner part of the middle intine. No such epitopes are located in the intine portion adjacent to the plasma membrane (cellulosic endintine). Unesterified pectin epitopes are also localised in the outer part of the intine but are restricted to the centre of the aperture, around and in the pore. The de-esterification of pectins is very advanced at the time of dehiscence and pollen germination. The stratification of the aperture intine may take the following pathway at the time of germination: the thin outer zone of the intine in the pore region becomes disorganised and undergoes dissolution with liberation of unesterified and esterified pectins; the middle intine thickenings undergo an important elastic modification, but without liberation of unesterified pectins; the cellulosic inner intine is the progenitor of the pollen tube wall. This special intine of E. peplus is an adaptation to the hydration process preceding germination, increasing intine and pollen grain wall elasticity.  相似文献   

5.
 Water deficit during meiosis in microspore mother cells of wheat (Triticum aestivum L.) induces male sterility, which reduces grain yield. In plants stressed during meiosis and then re-watered, division of microspore mother cells seems to proceed normally, but subsequent pollen development is arrested. Stress-affected anthers generally lack starch. We employed light microscopy in conjunction with histochemistry to compare the developmental anatomy of water-stress-affected and normal anthers. The earliest effects of stress, detectable between meiosis and young microspore stages, were the degeneration of meiocytes, loss of orientation of the reproductive cells, and abnormal vacuolization of tapetal cells. Other effects observed during subsequent developmental stages were deposition of starch in the connective tissue where it is normally not present, hypertrophy of the middle layer or endothecial cells, and deposition of sporopollenin-like substances in the anther loculus. The resulting pollen grains lacked both starch and intine. These results suggest that abnormal degeneration of the tapetum in water-stressed anthers coupled with a loss of orientation of the reproductive cells could be part of early events leading to abortion of microspores. Received: 19 July 1996 / Revision accepted: 6 November 1996  相似文献   

6.
Summary The monoclonal antibodies JIM 5 (against unesterified pectin), JIM 7 (against methyl esterified pectin), MAC 207 (against arabinogalactan proteins, AGPs), and JIM 8 (against a subset of AGPs) were utilized singly or in combinations for immunogold labelling of germinated pollen grains and pollen tubes ofNicotiana tabacum. Pectins were localized in the inline of pollen grain, unesterified pectin being more abundant than the esterified one. AGPs were co-localized with pectin in the inline, but were present preferably close to the plasma membrane. In pollen tubes, AGPs, unesterified and esterified pectins were co-localized in the outer and middle layers of the cell wall. The density of the epitopes was not uniform along the length of the pollen tube, but showed alterations. In the pollen tube tip wall esterified pectin was abundantly present, but not AGPs. In the cytoplasm esterified pectin and AGPs were detected in Golgi derived vesicles, indicating their role in the pathway of the cell wall precursors. In the cell wall of generative cell only AGPs, but no pectins were localized. The co-localization of pectins and AGPs in the cell wall of pollen grain and pollen tube might play an important role, not only in maintenance of the cell shape, but also in cell-cell interaction during pollen tube growth and development.Abbreviations AGP arabinogalactan protein - BSA bovine serum albumin - GA glutaraldehyde - MAb monoclonal antibody - NGS normal goat serum - PFA paraformaldehyde  相似文献   

7.
This study aimed to elucidate the anther wall development, pollen wall development, and exine structure of Trochodendron aralioides Siebold and Zuccarini, a tree with primitive vessels but long considered to lack vessel elements in its wood. The anther wall is the basic type: epidermis, endothecium layer, three middle layers, and tapetum. The anther tapetum is glandular and cells are uniseriate. Microspore mother cells undergo meiosis with simultaneous cytokinesis to produce tetrahedral tetrads enclosed within a callose wall. Before development of the protectum, primexine is inserted against the callose, and the plasma membrane is invaginated. Then, the probacula are elongated under the protectum and arise basally from the plasma membrane. The foot layer formation is concomitant with callose wall dissolution. The foot layer is thick, and the endexine is thin. The foot layer and the endexine are both continuous. The intine is initially formed in the vacuolated microspore stage. Hollow Ubisch bodies are observed on the inner surface of the tapetum in free microspore stage. Pollen grains are tricolporate and 2-celled at the time of shedding. The numerous anthers of a single flower are at different development stages in both protandrous and protogynous individuals.  相似文献   

8.
The tapetal development ofCichorium intybus L. is investigated using LM and TEM and discussed in relation to the development in other species. During the second meiotic division the tapetal cells become binucleate and lose their cell walls. They intrude the loculus at the time of microspore release from the meiotic callose walls, which means that a locular cavity is never present in this species. During pollen development they tightly junct the exine, especially near the tips of the spines. During the two-celled pollen grain stage they degenerate and most of their content turns into pollenkitt. Until anther dehiscence they keep their individuality, which means that these intruding tapetal cells never fuse to form a periplasmodium. The ultrastructural cytoplasmatic changes during this development are discussed in relation to possible functions.  相似文献   

9.
In the present study, microsporogenesis, microgametogenesis and pollen wall ontogeny in Campsis radicans (L.) Seem. were studied from sporogenous cell stage to mature pollen using transmission electron microscopy. To observe the ultrastructural changes that occur in sporogenous cells, microspores and pollen through progressive developmental stages, anthers at different stages of development were fixed and embedded in Araldite. Microspore and pollen development in C. radicans follows the basic scheme in angiosperms. Microsporocytes secrete callose wall before meiotic division. Meiocytes undergo meiosis and simultaneous cytokinesis which result in the formation of tetrads mostly with a tetrahedral arrangement. After the development of free and vacuolated microspores, respectively, first mitotic division occurs and two-celled pollen grain is produced. Pollen grains are shed from the anther at two-celled stage. Pollen wall formation in C. radicans starts at tetrad stage by the formation of exine template called primexine. By the accumulation of electron dense material, produced by microspore, in the special places of the primexine, first of all protectum then columellae of exine elements are formed on the reticulate-patterned plasma membrane. After free microspore stage, exine development is completed by the addition of sporopollenin from tapetum. Formation of intine layer of pollen wall starts at the late vacuolated stage of pollen development and continue through the bicellular pollen stage.  相似文献   

10.
C. Clément  J. C. Audran 《Protoplasma》1995,187(1-4):172-181
Summary Anthers ofLilium were for the first time investigated at the ultrastructural level in order to appreciate the possible ways of sugar transport in the microsporangium. Our results have shown that the cells of the outer anther wall layers and the cell of the connective were interconnected by plasmodesmata, thus allowing assimilates to travel through the symplasmic pathway from the vascular bundle to the most internal middle layer (ML 1). ML 1 was devoid of cell communication throughout pollen development. Tapetal cells were also lacking plasmodesmata on their external face towards ML 1, but adjacent tapetal cells developed lateral junctions: the tapetum could represent a syncytium. Sugars destinated to pollen in the loculus have then to cross the ML 1 and the tapetal layers by the apoplasmic pathway; it is suggested that these two envelopes could be involved in the control of sugar transport from the outer anther wall layers to the locular fluid. Before microspore mitosis, the tapetum degenerated but ML 1 remained structurally unchanged. During pollen development, the guard cells of stomata were lacking cell communication, and preserved their starch content, which could be the sign of photosynthesis within the anther wall. In order to check whether these structural disconnections in anther tissues corresponded to physiological barriers, isolated pollen and stamens were cultivated during the anther maturation phase, on a medium containing increasing concentrations of sucrose (0 M, 1/6 M, 1/2 M, 1 M). After 7 days of culture, isolated pollen was engorged with starch grains and was unable to germinate, whereas in cultivated stamens, pollen did not contain any starch grain: sporophytic tissues, however, accumulated abnormal amylaceous reserves. These results strongly suggest that the anther wall layers, in particular ML 1, starve pollen with sugars during its maturation. They are acting as a physiological buffer storing nutriment surplus in starch grains.Abbreviations ML 1 middle layer 1 - ML 2 middle layer 2 - PAS periodic acid Schiff - PATAg periodic acid thiosemicarbazide silver nitrate  相似文献   

11.
Nexine and intine development in Silene alba (Caryophyllaceae) was investigated by electron microscopy and enzyme cytochemistry. Nexine-2 forms by deposition of sporopollenin along unit membrane lamellae closely associated with the microspore plasma membrane in the late tetrad stage. After the callose wall dissolves, electron density increases along the tangentially oriented fibers of the proximal primexine, forming nexine-1. When the exine is essentially complete, the intine begins to develop. In the nearly mature microspore, acid phosphatase activity appears in the peripheral cytoplasm just prior to its extrusion into the intine of the mature pollen grain.  相似文献   

12.
13.
To gain further insight into the abortive stages and ultrastructural changes leading to pollen degeneration of a novel cytoplasmic male sterile radish 805A, we compared differences of cellular and subcellular structure of sterile anther with fertile anther by light and electron microscopy analysis. Two types of locule degeneration in sterile anther were detected, of which the time of degeneration occurred and completed was different. In type I, abnormality of pollen mother cells (PMCs) and tapetal cells, including condensation of cytoplasm and large vacuoles within tapetal cells, was shown at PMC stage. In type II, meiosis and early tetrad stage progressed normally except for large vacuoles that appeared in tapetal cells. Ultrastructural alterations of the cellular organization were observed in the type II locules, such as chromatin condensation at the periphery of the nucleus and degeneration of the karyotheca, compared with normal pollen development. The results suggested that the cytoplasmic male sterility anther degeneration was probably caused by dysfunctions of tapetum and vacuolation of tapetum, PMCs, and microspores. Thus, the identical factors, which induced CMS in the same cytoplasmic and nuclear genetic background, might affect development of tapetum and microspore at different stages during the cytoplasmic male sterile 805A anther development.  相似文献   

14.
A male-sterile mutant of Arabidopsis thaliana was isolated by T-DNA tagging screening. Using transmission electron microscopy analysis, we revealed that the microspores of this mutant did not have normal thick primexine on the microspore at the tetrad stage. Instead, a moderately electron-dense layer formed around the microspores. Although microspores without normal primexine failed to form a proper reticulate exine pattern at later stages, sporopollenin was deposited and an exine-like hackly structure was observed on the microspores during the microspore stage. Thus, this mutant was named hackly microspore (hkm). It is speculated that the moderately electron-dense layer was primexine, which partially played its role in sporopollenin deposition onto the microspore. Cytological analysis revealed that the tapetum of the hkm mutant was significantly vacuolated, and that vacuolated tapetal cells crushed the microspores, resulting in the absence of pollen grains within the anther at anthesis. Single nucleotide polymorphism analysis demonstrated that the hkm mutation exists within the MS1 gene, which has been reportedly expressed within the tapetum. Our results suggest that the critical process of primexine formation is under sporophytic control .  相似文献   

15.
Anther and pollen development in male-fertile and male-sterile green onions was studied. In the male-fertile line, both meiotic microspore mother ceils and tetrads have a callose wall. Mature pollen grains are 2-celled. The elongated generative cell with two bended ends displays a PAS positive cell wall. The tapetum has the character of both secretory and invasive types. From microspore stage onwards, many oil bodies or masses accumulate in the cytoplasm of the tapetal cells. The tapetum degenerates at middle 2-celled pollen stage. In male-sterile line, meiosis in microspore mother cells proceeds normally to form the tetrads. Pollen abortion occurs at microspore with vacuole stage. Two types of pollen abortion were observed. In type I, the protoplasts of the microspores contract and gradually disintegrate. At the same time the cytoplasm of microspores accumulates oil bodies which remain in the empty pollen. The tapetal cells behave normally up to the microspore stage and early stage of microspore abortion, but contain fewer oil bodies or masses than those in the male-fertilt line. At late stage of microspore abortion, three forms of the tapetal ceils can be observed: (1) the tapetal cells with degenerating protoplasts become flattened, (2) the tapetal cells enlarge but protoplasts retractor, (3) the cells break down and tile middle layer enlarges. In type Ⅱ, the cytoplasm degenerates earlier than the nucleus of the microspores and no protoplast is found in the anther locule. There are fibrous thickenings iii the endothecium of both types. It is difficult to verify whether the tapetum behavior and pollen abortion is the cause or the effect.  相似文献   

16.
17.
在真核细胞中,除了线粒体和叶绿体ATPase的功能是合成ATP外,其余部位ATPase是水解ATP以获取生物能量的代谢酶,在生物体细胞内广泛存在。探索ATPase在细胞中的分布状态是研究细胞生理状态的一种重要手段。ATPase在细胞中的多少可反映出细胞当时的生活状态,这一特征已被初步用于探索小麦和水稻雄性不育的细胞生物学研究中,希望通过比较可育花药和不育花药中ATPase的分布差异寻找雄性不育的机理,发现  相似文献   

18.
In safflower, the anther wall at maturity consists of a single epidermis, an endothecium, a middle layer and the tapetum. The tapetum consists mainly of a single layer of cells. However, this single-layer appearance is punctuated by loci having ‘two-celled’ groupings due to additional periclinal divisions in some tapetal cells. Meiotic division in microsporocytes gives rise to tetrads of microspores. The primexine is formed around the protoplasts of microspores while they are still enveloped within the callose wall. Just prior to microgametogenesis, the microspores enlarge through the process of vacuolation, and the exine wall pattern becomes established. Microgametogenesis results in the formation of 3-celled pollen grains. The two elongated sperm cells appear to be connected. The exine wall is highly sculptured with a distinct tectum, columellae, a foot layer, an endexine and a thin intine. Similar to other members of the Asteraceae family, the tapetum is of the invasive type. The most novel finding of this study is that in addition to the presence of invasive tapetal cells, a small population of ‘non-invasive’ tapetal cells is also present. The tapetal cells next to the anther locules in direct contact with the microspores become invasive and start to grow into the space between developing microspores. These tapetal cells synthesize tryphine and eventually degenerate at the time of gametogenesis releasing their content into the anther locules. A smaller population of non-invasive tapetal cells is formed as a result of periclinal divisions at the time of tapetum differentiation. These cells are not exposed to the anther locules until the degeneration of the invasive tapetal cells. The non-invasive tapetal cells have a different cell fate as they synthesize pollenkitt. This material is responsible for allowing some pollen grains to adhere to each other and to the anther wall after anther dehiscence. This observation explains the out-crossing ability of Carthamus species and varieties in nature.  相似文献   

19.

Background and Aims

The Arabidopsis thaliana pollen cell wall is a complex structure consisting of an outer sporopollenin framework and lipid-rich coat, as well as an inner cellulosic wall. Although mutant analysis has been a useful tool to study pollen cell walls, the ultrastructure of the arabidopsis anther has proved to be challenging to preserve for electron microscopy.

Methods

In this work, high-pressure freezing/freeze substitution and transmission electron microscopy were used to examine the sequence of developmental events in the anther that lead to sporopollenin deposition to form the exine and the dramatic differentiation and death of the tapetum, which produces the pollen coat.

Key Results

Cryo-fixation revealed a new view of the interplay between sporophytic anther tissues and gametophytic microspores over the course of pollen development, especially with respect to the intact microspore/pollen wall and the continuous tapetum epithelium. These data reveal the ultrastructure of tapetosomes and elaioplasts, highly specialized tapetum organelles that accumulate pollen coat components. The tapetum and middle layer of the anther also remain intact into the tricellular pollen and late uninucleate microspore stages, respectively.

Conclusions

This high-quality structural information, interpreted in the context of recent functional studies, provides the groundwork for future mutant studies where tapetum and microspore ultrastructure is assessed.  相似文献   

20.
Pollen wall development in Sorghum bicolor is morphologically and temporally paralleled by the formation of a prominent orbicular wall on the inner tangential surface of the tapetum. In the late tetrad stage, a thin, nearly uniform primexine forms around each microspore (except at the pore site) beneath the intact callose; concurrently, small spherical bodies (pro-orbicules) appear between the undulate tapetal plasmalemma and the disappearing tapetal primary wall. Within the primexine, differentially staining loci appear, which only develop into young bacula as the callose disappears. Thus, microspore walls are devoid of a visible exine pattern when released from tetrads. Afterwards, sporopollenin accumulates simultaneously on the primexine and bacula, forming the exine, and on the pro-orbicules, forming orbicules. Channels develop in the tectum and nexine, and both layers thicken to complete the microspore exine. Channeled sporopollenin also accumulates on the orbicules. A prominent sporopollenin reticulum interconnects the individual orbicules to produce an orbicular wall; this wall persists even after the tapetal protoplasts degenerate and after anthesis. While the pollen grains become engorged with reserves, a thick intine, containing conspicuous cytoplasmic channels, forms beneath the exine. Fibrous material collects beneath the orbicular wall. The parallel development and morphological similarities between the tapetal and pollen walls are discussed.  相似文献   

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