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1.
Summary The structure of sperm cells and their association with the vegetative nucleus in pollen tubes ofNicotiana tabacum grown in styles were observed with the electron microscope, demonstrating the existence of a male germ unit. The two sperm cells are arranged in tandem and are closely associated with the vegetative nucleus, which always takes the lead. The leading sperm cell (SC 1) has a long and narrow cytoplasmic projection which lies within the enclaves of the much lobed vegetative nucleus, thus forming a physical association. The trailing sperm cell (SC 2) and the SC 1 are not only joined by a common transverse cell wall but also are surrounded by a periplasm bounded by the plasma membrane of the sperm cells and that of the vegetative cell, thus forming a structural connection. The sperm cells are elongated, with cytoplasmic projections at the anterior end of the SC 1 and at both ends of the SC 2. The cytoplasm of both sperm cells includes mitochondria, endoplasmic reticulum, dictyosomes, ribosomes, small vacuoles and axially oriented microtubules. No plastids were observed.Abbreviations DAPI 4,6-diamino-2-phenylindole - MGU male germ unit - MT microtubule - SC 1 the leading sperm cell physically associated with the vegetative nucleus - SC 2 the trailing sperm cell  相似文献   

2.
Summary In mature tricellular pollen of rapeseed,Brassica campestris L., the pair of sperm cells are held together within the common plasma membrane of the vegetative cell and are closely associated with the vegetative nucleus. Serial thin sections were cut of entire sperm cell associations of 7 pollen grains, and 3-dimensional coordinated information obtained by digitization. Precise lengths and placement of the sperm cells and vegetative nucleus in three dimensions were computed and stereoscopic images generated and confirmed by two manually constructed 3-dimensional models. The sperm cell most closely associated with the vegetative nucleus, possessed a long tail, > 10 m in length, that penetrated through a passage in the highly convoluted nucleus. This long tail contained a forked array of microtubules in all 7 grains examined. Arrays of microtubules occurred in the second sperm cell, aligned within plasma-membrane evaginations or ridges.  相似文献   

3.
Pollen grains of Brassica campestris L. var. acephala DC and B. oleracea L. were serially sectioned and examined using transmission electron microscopy to determine the three-dimensional organization of sperm cells within the microgametophyte and the quantity of membrane-bound organelles occurring within each cell. Sperm cells occur in pairs within each pollen grain, but are dimorphic, differing in size, morphology and mitochondrial content. The larger of the two sperm cells (Svn) is distinguished by the presence of a blunt evagination, which in B. oleracea wraps around and lies within shallow furrows on the vegetative nucleus and in B. campestris can penetrate through internal enclaves of the vegetative nucleus. This sperm cell contains more mitochondria in both species than the second sperm cell (Sua). This latter cell is linked to the first by a common cell junction with the S vn, but is not associated with the vegetative nucleus and lacks a cellular evagination. Such differences are indicative of a system of cytoplasmic heterospermy in which sperm cells possess significantly different quantities of mitochondria.Abbreviations mtDNA mitochondrial DNA - Sua sperm cell unassociated with the vegetative nucleus - Svn Sperm cell physically associated with the vegetative nucleus  相似文献   

4.
S. D. Russell  D. D. Cass 《Protoplasma》1981,107(1-2):85-107
Summary Male gametes ofPlumbago zeylanica were examined in pollen grains and tubes using light and electron microscopy of chemically and physically fixed tissues, and Nomarski interference microscopy of isolated, living sperm cells. Male gametes are elongate, spindleshaped cells containing a nucleus, mitochondria, ER, ribosomes, vesicles, dictyosomes, probable microfilaments, and a variable number of plastids. In mature pollen grains ofP. zeylanica, the two sperm cells are directly linked; they share a transverse cell wall with plasmodesmata and are enclosed together by the inner vegetative cell plasma membrane. One of these two sperms is also associated with the vegetative nucleus as a consistent feature of pollen grain organization. The basis of this association appears to be a long, narrow projection of the sperm cell (averaging < 1 m wide and about 30 m long) which wraps around the periphery of the vegetative nucleus and occupies embayments of that nucleus. This association is maintained throughout pollen tube growth but becomes less extensive near the completion of tube growth and is severed following tube discharge. The consistent occurrence of the sperm-vegetative nucleus association in pollen grains, tubes and isolated pollen cytoplasm suggests that the two structures may be directly connected, but attempts to visualize this type of connection were unsuccessful. Possibly, the entwining nature and extent of complementary interfaces between vegetative nucleus and sperm may have a role in stabilizing their association. Functionally, the two sperms and vegetative nucleus appear to travel as a linked unit within the pollen tube, possibly increasing the effectiveness of gamete delivery and helping to ensure nearly simultaneous transmission of sperms into the receptive megagametophyte.  相似文献   

5.
M. Kar  J. Feierabend 《Planta》1984,162(5):385-391
Pollen grains of Plumbago zeylanica L. were serially sectioned and examined using transmission electron microscopy to determine the three-dimensional organization of sperm cells within the microgametophyte and the quantity of membrane-bound organelles occurring within each cell. Sperm cells occur in pairs within each pollen grain, but are dimorphic, differing in size, morphology and organelle content. The larger of the two sperm cells (Svn) is distinguished by the presence of a long (approx. 30 m) projection, which wraps around and lies within embayments of the vegetative nucleus. This cell contains numerous mitochondria, up to two plastids and, infrequently, microbodies. It is characterized by a larger volume and surface area and contains a larger nucleus than the other sperm cell. The second sperm cell (Sua) is linked by plasmodesmata with the Svn, but is unassociated with the vegetative nucleus. It is smaller and lacks a cellular projection. The Sua contains relatively few mitochondria, but numerous (up to 46) plastids and more microbodies than the other sperm. The degree of dimorphism in their content of heritable cytoplasmic organelles must at fertilization result in nearly unidirectional transmission of sperm plastids into just one of the two female reproductive cells, and preferential transmission of sperm mitochondria into the other.Abbreviations Sua sperm cell unassociated with the vegetative nucleus - Svn sperm cell physically associated with the vegetative nucleus 1=Russell and Cass (1981)  相似文献   

6.
Summary The structure of the generative cell and its association with the vegetative nucleus in the pollen tube ofCyphomandra betacea Sendt. were observed with the electron microscope. The generative cell, bounded by its own plasma membrane and the inner plasma membrane of the vegetative cell, possesses the cytoplasmic extension which lies within the embayments of a vegetative nucleus. The generative cell contains the normal complement of organelles and, especially, microtubules which cluster into several groups adjacent to the plasma membrane, oriented along the longitudinal axis of the cell. In the pollen tube reaching the lower end of the style aftersemivivo pollination, both of the sperm cells are elongated and polyribosomes and microtubules are the outstanding feature in the cytoplasm. The two sperm cells are connected by a common transverse cell wall, while cytoplasmic channels exist in both the periplasm of the two sperm cells and the transverse wall. The leading sperm cell (Svn) is closely associated with the vegetative nucleus. Thus the present study demonstrates the existence of the male germ unit in the pollen tube ofC. betacea. The possible cytoplasmic continuity between the sperm cells and between the gametes and vegetative cell is considered.Abbreviations Svn sperm cell physically associated with the vegetative nucleus - Sua sperm cell unassociated with the vegetative nucleus - RER rough endoplasmic reticulum - SER smooth endoplasmic reticulum  相似文献   

7.
Generative and sperm cells were examined at four stages of development from generative cell formation to sperm cell maturation using serial transmission electron microscopy. The generative cell and vegetative nucleus are associated in a male germ unit association during pollen maturation and tube elongation, except for generative cell mitosis. At late stages of prophase, this association loosens; the generative cell separates from the vegetative nucleus at metaphase. Slender, unbranched, or occasionally branched projections may be found at one or both ends of the generative cell, or they may be single, blunt, and short. Slender projections are rare during anaphase and telophase. The vegetative nucleus moves back into apposition with one sperm cell at the end of mitosis. During the re-establishment of the association, the vegetative nucleus first touches the end of the leading sperm cell and then moves next to the middle of the sperm nucleus. As the sperm cells enter interphase, a conventional association is re-established between one cell and the vegetative nucleus through one or more long and slender cytoplasmic extensions; these associations are maintained throughout later passage in the pollen tube. During maturation, a significant increase occurs in the surface area of the sperm cells (particularly in the sperm cell in association with the vegetative nucleus), and a lesser increase in nuclear volume and surface area. Other sperm cell parameters, including those of heritable organelles, remain unchanged during sperm cell maturation.  相似文献   

8.
Summary Brassica napus pollen development during the formation of the generative cell and sperm cells is analysed with light and electron microscopy. The generative cell is formed as a small lenticular cell attached to the intine, as a result of the unequal first mitosis. After detaching itself from the intine, the generative cell becomes spherical, and its wall morphology changes. Simultaneously, the vegetative nucleus enlarges, becomes euchromatic and forms a large nucleolus. In addition, the cytoplasm of the vegetative cell develops a complex ultrastructure that is characterized by an extensive RER organized in stacks, numerous dictyosomes and Golgi vesicles and a large quantity of lipid bodies. Microbodies, which are present at the mature stage, are not yet formed. The generative cell undergoes an equal division which results in two spindle-shaped sperm cells. This cell division occurs through the concerted action of cell constriction and cell plate formation. The two sperm cells remain enveloped within one continuous vegetative plasma membrane. One sperm cell becomes anchored onto the vegetative nucleus by a long extension enclosed within a deep invagination of the vegetative nucleus. Plastid inheritance appears to be strictly maternal since the sperm cells do not contain plastids; plastids are excluded from the generative cell even in the first mitosis.  相似文献   

9.
H. S. Yu  S. Y. Hu  S. D. Russell 《Protoplasma》1992,168(3-4):172-183
Summary The organization of the sperm cells and vegetative nucleus (male germ unit) ofNicotiana tabacum was examined 18 h after semivivo pollination using transmission electron microscopy, computerassisted serial section reconstruction and quantitative cytology. Based on a measurement of 11 cellular parameters in nine reconstructed sperm cell pairs, there are no statistically significant differences between the two cells. The Svn is characterized by a strapshaped cytoplasmic extension that is physically associated with the surface of the vegetative nucleus. The nucleus is located adjacent to the sperm crosswall, with sperm organelles being distributed between the nucleus and the extension. The Sua is a tapered cell with cytoplasmic areas at both poles and deep axial invaginations near the crosswall. This cell has a centrally-located nucleus and a largely polar distribution of organelles. Three mechanisms for cytoplasmic diminution were observed that appear to contribute actively to the loss of cytoplasmic volume and organelles: (1) enucleated cytoplasmic body production in the Sua; (2) vesiculation at the tip of the cytoplasmic projection of the Svn; and (3) vesicle-containing body accumulation in the periplasm of both the Svn and Sua.Abbreviations 3-D three-dimensional - ECB enucleated cytoplasmic body - MGU male germ unit - Svn leading sperm cell - Sua trailing sperm cell - TEM transmission electron microscopy - VCB vesicle-containing body  相似文献   

10.
Chen SH  Liao JP  Kuang AX  Tian HQ 《Plant cell reports》2006,25(11):1138-1142
The two sperm cells of Torenia fournieri are dimorphic. The dimorphic character suggests that they might be preferentially involved in fertilization during in vivo fusion with the egg cell and central cell. To probe the mechanism of preferential fertilization, it is necessary to use the most current molecular techniques. For this purpose, populations of >1000 individuals of the two dimorphic sperm cells, Sua (unassociated with the vegetative nucleus) and Svn (associated with the vegetative nucleus) were isolated from pollen tubes that had grown out of the cut ends of the styles. The two sperm cells released from pollen tubes remained attached to one another. When the two attached sperm cells were transferred into a solution containing 0.01% cellulose, 0.01% pectinase, and 5% mannitol, the connection between the two cells disappeared, and they were easily separated using a micromanipulator. The collection of these two individual populations containing over a thousand cells will permit research on gametic recognition at the molecular level.  相似文献   

11.
The male germ cells of angiosperm plants are neither free-living nor flagellated and therefore are dependent on the unique structure of the pollen grain for fertilization. During angiosperm male gametogenesis, an asymmetric mitotic division produces the generative cell, which is completely enclosed within the cytoplasm of the larger pollen grain vegetative cell. Mitotic division of the generative cell generates two sperm cells that remain connected by a common extracellular matrix with potential intercellular connections. In addition, one sperm cell has a cytoplasmic projection in contact with the vegetative cell nucleus. The shared extracellular matrix of the two sperm cells and the physical association of one sperm cell to the vegetative cell nucleus forms a linkage of all the genetic material in the pollen grain, termed the male germ unit. Found in species representing both the monocot and eudicot lineages, the cytoplasmic projection is formed by vesicle formation and microtubule elongation shortly after the formation of the generative cell and tethers the male germ unit until just prior to fertilization. The cytoplasmic projection plays a structural role in linking the male germ unit, but potentially plays other important roles. Recently, it has been speculated that the cytoplasmic projection and the male germ unit may facilitate communication between the somatic vegetative cell nucleus and the germinal sperm cells, via RNA and/or protein transport. This review focuses on the nature of the sperm cell cytoplasmic projection and the potential communicative function of the male germ unit.  相似文献   

12.
Summary The male germ unit ofPetunia hybrida was examined quantitatively and qualitatively at the ultrastructutral level. Three-dimensional reconstructions, the determination of nuclear and cytoplasmic volumes and surface areas, and organelle counts were obtained from serial ultrathin sections and computer analysis. In the mature pollen grain, an elongated generative cell is found in direct physical association with and partially surrounded by the vegetative nucleus. The mature generative cell lacks plastids and has mitochondria equally distributed at both of its tapering ends. In the pollen tube, the sperm cells are physically associated by cytoplasmic connections to each other and to the surrounding vegetative cell membrane. At full style length, the lobed vegetative nucleus and sperm pair are found in close association near the end of the pollen tube. The two sperms of a pair are not strongly dimorphic.  相似文献   

13.
Summary Ultrastructural analysis of the mature viable unhydrated pollen of maize,Zea mays from dehiscent anthers shows that the sperm cells are physically distant, each bounded by an envelope comprising their own plasma membrane and the inner plasma membrane of the vegetative cell. The chondriome is unusual in containing one or more filamentous complexes, up to 12m in length appressed to the side of the sperm nucleus. The extensions at each end of the elongate sperm cells contain longitudinally-oriented arrays of endoplasmic lamellae. In a three-dimensional reconstruction of serial thin sections, there is a long J-shaped sperm, c. 35 × 5m and up to 1m in thickness, sited within pointed evaginations of the vegetative nucleus and a second shorter sperm c. 20 × 5m and up to 3.5m in thickness.Abbreviations PA-TCH-SP periodic acid-thiocarbohydrazide-silver proteinate - DAPI 4,6-diamino-2-phenylindole - SC sperm cell - Sn sperm nucleus - Ua-Pb Uranyl acetate-lead citrate staining - ER endoplasmic reticulum  相似文献   

14.
Summary Shortly before and during division, the generative cell of barley (Hordeum vulgare L.) is located near the vegetative nucleus, in the peripheral layer of the highly vacuolated vegetative cell at the aperture pole. This position is also characteristic of the two resulting sperm cells. Conventional mitosis of the generative cell is followed by cytokinesis through cell plate formation. Just after division, the two sperm cells are enclosed together within a common inner vegetative cell plasma membrane, and they gradually separate from each other only during pollen maturation. The space between the generative or sperm cell plasma membrane and the vegetative cell plasma membrane is very thin and appears to be devoid of a cell wall. Both the generative cell and the young sperm cells contain a normal set of organelles; plastids devoid of starch are only sporadically observed. Our data indicate that in Hordeum vulgare the generative cell divides after migrating inside the pollen grain. This follows the pattern of development well established for several species with tricellular pollen.  相似文献   

15.
Prior research has indicated that the two sperm cells of Nicotiana tabacum are dimorphic, suggesting that they may participate in preferential fertilization during in vivo fusion with the egg and central cells. To probe the mechanism of potential preferential fertilization in this plant, it will be necessary to use modern sensitive molecular techniques. For this purpose, two individual populations of two sperm cells, constituting the Svn (associated with the vegetative nucleus) and Sua (unassociated with the vegetative nucleus), were isolated in the thousands from tobacco pollen tubes with a micromanipulator as a preliminary step toward research on gametic recognition using molecular techniques. Microelectrophoresis of paired sperm cells from a single pollen tube was conducted at different developmental stages. Sperm cells isolated from 1-, 2-, 3- and 4-cm stylar lengths migrated to the negative pole, with the Sua displaying significantly greater electrophoretic mobility than the Svn, reflecting a more positively charged cell surface on the Sua. The sperm cells isolated from 1-cm style are very sensitive to electron potential in an electrophoretic field, presumably reflecting that they are still in a young state. Differences in cell surface charge between the Sua and Svn may be related with cell fate during fertilization. Supported by National Natural Science Foundation of CHINA (30170060)  相似文献   

16.
Summary The behavior of the generative cell during male gametophyte development inPlumbago zeylanica was examined by epifluorescence microscopy and electron microscopy with organelle nucleoid as a cytoplasm marker. When the thin sections stained with 4,6-diamidino-2-phenylindoIe (DAPI) were observed under an epifluorescence microscope, two types of fluorescence spots were detected in the cytoplasm of the pollen cells before the second mitosis. The spots emitting stronger fluorescence were confirmed as plastid nucleoids and those emitting dimmer fluorescence were mitochondrial nucleoids. Before the first mitosis, both plastid and mitochondrial nucleoids distributed randomly in the cytoplasm of the microspore. A small lenticular generative cell formed with attachment to the interior of the intine after the mitosis. Small vacuoles were found in the lenticular cell. In the cytoplasm of the lenticular cell, both plastid nucleoids and the small vacuoles were distributed randomly at the very beginning but began to migrate in opposite directions immediately. Plastid nucleoids aggregated to the side of the cell that faces the pollen center and the small vacuoles aggregated to the side of the cell that attaches to the inline. As the result, the lenticular generative cell appeared highly polarized in cytoplasm location soon after the first mitosis. In accordance with the definition of the cytoplasm polarization, the primary wall between the generative and the vegetative cells began to flex and the lenticular generative cell started to protrude towards the pollen center. When the generative cell peeled away from the inline, it was spherical in shape with the pole that aggregated plastids towards the vegetative nucleus. But the cell direction appeared to be transformed immediately. The pole that aggregated small vacuoles turned to the position towards the vegetative nucleus and the pole that aggregated plastid nucleoids turned to the position countering to the vegetative nucleus. A cellular protuberance formed at the edge of the pole that aggregated small vacuoles and elongated into a tapered end that got into contact with the vegetative nucleus. The polarization of the cytoplasm kept constant throughout the second mitosis. The small vacuoles that apportioned to the sperm cell which attached the vegetative nucleus (the leading sperm cell) disappeared during sperm cell maturation. Plastid nucleoids were apportioned to the other sperm cell (the trailing sperm cell) completely. Mitochondrial nucleoids became undetectable after the second mitosis.  相似文献   

17.
Pollen tubes of Cyrtanthus mackenii, a species with bicellular pollen, were cultured in vitro to investigate nuclear phase changes during generative cell division and male germ unit (MGU) formation, using flow cytometric analysis. Results revealed that sperm cells were formed after 12 h of culture. During sperm maturation, the nuclei of sperm cells were not associated with the vegetative nucleus (unassociated sperm cells; Sua) and became longer than those of sperm cells associated with the vegetative nucleus (Svn). These findings indicate that the pair of sperm cells in the C. mackenii MGU is dimorphic in terms of nuclear shape. Dimorphism coincides with anti-α-tubulin antibody immunofluorescence, which was higher in the Sua than in Svn. Following treatment with oryzalin, triggering microtubule depolymerization, differences between nuclear shapes in the two sperm nuclei disappeared, suggesting that microtubule accumulation between sperm cells in the MGU correlates with differences in the nuclear shape.  相似文献   

18.
The promoter sequence of sperm-expressed gene, PzIPT isolated from the Svn (sperm associated with the vegetative nucleus) of Plumbago zeylanica, was fused to a green fluorescent protein (GFP) reporter sequence and transformed into Arabidopsis thaliana to better visualize the live behavior of angiosperm sperm cells. Angiosperm sperm cells are not independently motile, migrating in a unique cell-within-a-cell configuration within the pollen tube. Sperm cells occur in association with the vegetative nucleus forming a male germ unit (MGU). In Arabidopsis, GFP was expressed equally in both sperm cells and was observed using a spinning disk confocal microscope, which allowed long duration observation of cells without bleaching or visible laser radiation damage. Pollen activation is reflected by conspicuous movement of sperm and pollen cytoplasm. Upon pollen germination, sperm cells enter the forming tube and become oriented, typically with a sperm cytoplasmic projection leading the sperm cells in the MGU, which remains intact throughout normal pollen tube elongation. Maturational changes, including vacuolization, general rounding and entry into G2, were observed during in vitro culture. When MGUs were experimentally disrupted by mild temperature elevation, sperm cells no longer tracked the growth of the tube and separated from the MGU, providing critical direct evidence that the MGU is a functional unit required for sperm transmission.  相似文献   

19.
Antibodies to arabinogalactan proteins were tested for binding to sperm cells ofBrassica campestris and to generative cells and sperm ofLilium longiflorum. Two monoclonal antibodies, JIM8 and JIM13, bound toBrassica sperm in pollen grains and pollen tubes and to isolated sperm. Sperm pairs retained within the vegetative cell inner plasma membrane fluoresced more brightly than single sperm, indicating that the vegetative cell inner plasma membrane that surrounds sperm pairs also contains arabinogalactan proteins. Isolated sperm pairs exhibited a uniform fluorescence while single sperm had patches of fluorescence. InLilium, isolated generative cells and single sperm cells bound antibodies in a patchy pattern. Antibodies to arabinogalactan proteins may be useful in describing the overall shape of sperm cells and for identifying sperm among other cell types.  相似文献   

20.
Summary The sperm cells of Rhododendron laetum and R. macgregoriae differentiate within the pollen tube about 24 h after germination in vitro. Threedimensional reconstruction shows that the sperm cells are paired together, and both have extensions that link with the tube nucleus, forming a male germ unit. Quantitative analysis shows that the sperm cells in each pair differ significantly in surface area, but not in cell volume nor in numbers of mitochondria or plastids. When isolated from pollen tubes by osmotic shock, the sperm cells became ellipsoidal and surrounded by their own plasma membrane, while a proportion remained in pairs linked by the inner tube plasma membrane. Both generative and sperm cells are visualized in pollen tube preparations by immunofluorescence with anti-tubulin and anti-actin monoclonal antibodies (MAbs) combined with H33258 fluorescence of the nuclei. Video-image processing shows the presence of an axial microtubule cage in the generative cells, and some microtubules are present in the cytoplasmic extensions that clasp the tube nucleus. Following sperm cell division, the extensive phragmoplast between the sperm nuclei is partitioned by the plasma membranes.  相似文献   

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