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1.
Developmental phases surrounding the processes of gametic delivery and fusion were examined ultrastructurally in the reduced megagametophyte of Plumbago zeylanica, which lacks synergids. Gametic delivery occurs at the end of pollen tube growth and results in deposition of two male gametes, a vegetative nucleus, and a limited amount of pollen cytoplasm between the egg and central cell. Discharge of these materials from the tube is accompanied by loss of inner and outer pollen tube plasma membranes, loss of sperm-associated cell wall components, and disruption of the formerly continuous cell wall between the egg and central cell. The dispersion of egg cell wall components directly exposes female reproductive cell membranes to the unfused male gametes and pollen tube without disrupting gametic cell plasma membranes. Presence of unfused sperms within the female gametophyte appears to be a transitory phenomenon, lasting less than 5 min at the end of over 8½ hr of pollen tube growth. At the time of gametic deposition, plasma membranes of unfused sperm cells become directly appressed to plasma membranes of both the egg and central cell. Gametic fusion is initiated by a single fusion event between membranes of participating male and female cells, which is rapidly followed by subsequent, secondary fusion events between the same two cells at different locations along their surface. Gametic fusion results in the transmission of male gamete nuclei with co-transmission of nearly the entire sperm cytoplasmic volume and organellar complement, and it is possible to identify heritable male cytoplasmic organelles within both the incipient zygote and endosperm. Paternally originating plastids may be distinguished from maternal plastids by differences in morphology and staining characteristics, whereas paternal mitochondria may be distinguished from maternal mitochondria by populational differences in mitochondrial size which are statistically significant. Such observations further indicate that transmitted paternal mitochondria seem to remain viable, as judged by their ultrastructural appearance, and are transmitted exclusively by sperm cytoplasm rather than discharged pollen cytoplasm. The presence of anucleate, membrane-bounded cytoplasmic bodies between the egg and central cell are identifiable on the basis of their enclosed organelles and indicate that fragmentation of a small amount of the sperm cytoplasm associated with the vegetative nucleus commonly occurs. The presence and identification of sperm cytoplasmic organelles and associated membranes within female reproductive cells following gametic transmission represents strong evidence in support of the cellular basis of nuclear and cytoplasmic transmission during sexual reproduction in Plumbago.  相似文献   

2.
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   

3.
Guo F  Hu SY  Yuan Z  Zee SY  Han Y 《Protoplasma》2005,225(1-2):5-14
Summary. In this paper, the stages of normal sexual reproduction between pollen tube penetration of the archegonium and early embryo formation in Pinus tabulaeformis are described, emphasizing the transmission of parental cytoplasm, especially the DNA-containing organelles – plastids and mitochondria. The pollen tube growing in the nucellus contained an irregular tube nucleus followed by a pair of sperm cells. The tube cytoplasm contained abundant organelles, including starch-containing plastids and mitochondria. The two sperm cells differed in their volume of cytoplasm. The leading sperm, with more cytoplasm, contained abundant plastids and mitochondria, while the trailing one, with a thin layer of cytoplasm, had very few organelles. The mature egg cell contained a great number of mitochondria, whereas it lacked normal plastids. At fertilization, the pollen tube penetrated into the egg cell at the micropylar end and released all of its contents, including the two sperms. One of the sperm nuclei fused with the egg nucleus, whereas the other one was retained by the receptive vacuole. Very few plastids and mitochondria of male origin were observed around the fusing sperm and egg nuclei, while the retained sperm nucleus was surrounded by a large amount of male cytoplasm. The discharged tube cytoplasm occupied a large micropylar area in the egg cell. In the free nuclear proembryo, organelles of maternal and paternal origins intermingled in the neocytoplasm around the free nuclei. Most of the mitochondria had the same features as those of the egg cell, but some appeared to be from sperm cells and tube cytoplasm. Plastids were obviously of male origin, with an appearance similar to those of the sperm or tube cells. After cellularization of the proembryo, maternal mitochondria became more abundant than the paternal ones and the plastids enlarged and began to accumulate starch. The results reveal the cytological mechanism for paternal inheritance of plastids and biparental inheritance of mitochondria in Chinese pine. Correspondence and reprints: State Key Laboratory of Plant Physiology and Biochemistry, College of Biological Science, China Agricultural University, Beijing 100094, People’s Republic of China.  相似文献   

4.
Summary We characterized the behavior of plastid (pt) and mitochondrial (mt) nucleoids during malegametogenesis inPlumbago auriculata in three dimensions. The behavior of pt-nucleoids and mt-nucleoids differed throughout male gametogenesis.Pt-nucleoids were distibuted in a characteristic manner in three stages: in the early microspore, pt-nucleoids assemble around cell nucleus: in the mid-generative cell,pt-nucleoids gather at the internal side of the pollen: in the late-generative cell, pt-nucleoids aggregation turns its pole to the external side of the pollen. We also studied organelle nucleoids in the egg and the central cell by a method in which semi-thick sections of resin-embedded anthers and ovaries were observed by confocal laser scanning microscopy. The number of pt-nucleoids in the sperm cell did not differ significantly from that the behavior of DNA-containing organelles is regulated strictly during male gametogenes inP. auriculata, and that a biparental inheritance of plastids in the Plumbago embryo is more favored than was previously thought.  相似文献   

5.
F. L. Guo  S. Y. Hu 《Protoplasma》1995,186(3-4):201-207
Summary Based on the organelle differences between egg and sperm cells inPelargonium hortorum, the zygote, proembryo, and endosperm were examined under the transmission electron microscope. Plastids and mitochondria in the egg cell are significantly different from those of the sperm cell. Egg plastids are starch-containing and less electron dense. They appear circular, elliptical irregular elongate in sections. Sperm cell plastids are relatively electrondense, mostly cup-shaped or dumbbell and devoid of starch granules. Mitochondria of the egg cell are giant and mostly cup-shaped while sperm mitochondria are smaller and usually circular in section. Double fertilization is completed by 24 h after pollination and the pollen tube can be seen in the degenerated synergid. In the zygote, plastids and mitochondria from male and female gametes can be distinguished by their characteristic differences. Moreover, paternal and maternal organelles appear to be distributed at random in the zygote. Aside from the pollen tube and its released starch granules, there is no enucleated cytoplasmic body in the degenerated synergid. Two days after pollination, the zygote undergoes one transverse division to form a 2-celled proembryo which consists of one larger vacuolated basal cell and one smaller densely cytoplasmic apical cell. Paternal and maternal organelles can be detected in both cells of the proembryo and also in the endosperm at this stage. From these results, it can be concluded that plastids and mitochondria from both male and female gametes have been transmitted into the apical cell of the proembryo and most probably to the following generation.Abbreviations TEM transmission electron microscope - DAPI 4,6-diamidino-2-phenylindole - RFLP restriction fragment length polymorphism  相似文献   

6.
 Sperm cells released from in vivo-in vitro grown pollen tubes of tobacco are associated in pairs and initially enclosed by the plasma membrane of the pollen tube. When the sperm cells are placed together, using glass microinjector needles, in an enzymatic solution, up to half undergo cellular fusion with subsequent nuclear fusion. The frequency of sperm cell fusion decreases with time during the elongation of the pollen tube, suggesting that mechanisms inhibiting self-fusion of sperm cells may develop as the pollen tube elongates through the style toward the ovule. This tendency may play an important role in inhibiting fusion of the two sperm cells inside the calcium-rich synergid where the male germ unit dissociates and sperm cells are transported to their target cells - the egg and central cell. Received: 25 August 1997 / Revision accepted 16 March 1998  相似文献   

7.
Summary Electrofusion-mediated in vitro fertilization of maize using single sperm and egg cells was performed. Sperm cells were released from pollen grains after rupture of the latter by osmotic shock in the fusion medium (0.55 M mannitol). Egg cells were isolated by enzyme treatment (pectinase, pectolyase, hemicellulase, and cellulase) followed by mechanical isolation. The conditions generally used for the electrical fusion of protoplasts of somatic cells were also applied to the protoplasts of gametic cells of maize. Electrofusion was performed with single pairs of gametes under microscopic observation. The mean fusion frequency was 79%. Isolated egg cells of maize showed protoplasmic streaming during 22 days of culture, but they did not divide. However, after fusion of the sperm with the egg cells, these fused cells did develop, with a mean division frequency of 83%, and grew to multicellular structures. Egg cells and fusion products were cultivated with a maize feeder-cell system.  相似文献   

8.
The generative cell at anthesis in the mature pollen grain of Erythrina crista-galli (Fabaceae) was examined by 4,6-diamidino-2-phenylindole(DAPI)-fluorescence microscopy using the squash method. An unequal, polarized distribution of DNA-containing organelles (plastids and/or mitochondria) within the generative cell was observed in every mature pollen grain examined. Polarization of DNA-containing organelles is obvious when generative cells are freed and assume a spherical shape soon after microspore mitosis, as revealed by fluorescence-microscopic observations of specimens embedded in Technovit 7100 resin and thin-sectioned at different developmental stages. Early establishment of polarized localization of organelles in young generative cells of E. crista-galli and maintenance of this unequal distribution until pollen maturation strongly suggests that the organelles may still be clustered at pollen mitosis. Production of a dimorphic pair of sperm cells, as has been reported in Plumbago zeylanica, was observed in some pollen tubes germinated in vitro. The differentiation of the two sperm cells is discussed in relation to possible preferential double fertilization in angiosperms. Received: 28 July 1999 / Revision accepted: 8 November 1999  相似文献   

9.
Summary When Rhododendron pollen tubes are cultured in the dark, electron-dense bodies are present that appear to be a metabolically altered form of a proplastid that is difficult to fix for electron microscopy, and whose membranes may not be intact. When similar pollen tubes are cultured in a dark/light regime, ultrastructurally well-defined proplastids are present after fixation in glutaraldehyde with PIPES buffer and tannic acid, followed by osmic acid. This fixation technique also gave the best ultrastructural images of those proplastids in pollen tubes grown in the dark. Pollen tube plastids have the potential to become chromoplasts when cultured in a dark/light regime as evidenced by the presence of branched tubules characteristic of these organelles. Light appears to be a hitherto neglected environmental factor involved in regulating pollen tube growth. This improved fixation procedure demonstrates the bilayered nature of the membranes surrounding sperm cells and the existence of cytoplasmic channels connecting sperm cell and pollen tube plasma membranes.  相似文献   

10.
Guinea pig ovarian oocytes matured in vitro were inseminated in vitro with capacitated, acrosome-reacted spermatozoa and sperm penetration through the zona pellucida and into the egg cytoplasm were examined. Sperm heads passing through the zona pellucida had already lost all their acrosomal elements except for the inner acrosomal membrane and the equatorial segment. It was often observed that the texture of the zona material around the sperm head was distorted, giving the impression that the zona pellucida was parted, at least partially, by a shearing force produced by the sperm head advancing through the zona. When eggs were freed from their zonae pellucidae and inseminated, the acrosome-reacted spermatozoa immediately bound to the egg surfaces and began to fuse with the eggs; whereas the spermatozoa with intact acrosomes failed to do so. Fusion began between the egg plasma membrane and the sperm plasma membrane at the central region of the sperm head. The anterior half of the sperm head was engulfed by the egg in a phagocytic fashion, while its posterior half was incorporated into the egg by a fussion between egg and sperm plasma membranes. Incorporation of the sperm tail into the egg was achieved by fusion between the sperm and egg plasma membranes.  相似文献   

11.
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   

12.
 Mature Jasminum officinale and J. nudiflorum pollen grains were stained with 4′,6-diamidino-2-phenylindole (DAPI) and examined by epifluorescence microscopy. The pollen grains were found to be trinucleate, and the sperm cells in both species contained a large number of epifluorescent spots that corresponded to cytoplasmic DNA aggregates (nucleoids). The nucleoids of J. nudiflorum were observed to be dimorphic under the epifluorescence microscope, indicating that the sperm cells might contain both plastid and mitochondrial DNA. The nucleoids of J. officinale presented a similar appearance when stained with DAPI, but electron microscopic examination of the sperm cells revealed that they contained both plastids and mitochondria. When analyzed by DNA immunogold electron microscopy, gold particles were detected on both plastids and mitochondria. These findings demonstrated the preservation of plastid and mitochondrial DNA in mature sperm cells and thus the potential for biparental cytoplasmic inheritance in J. officinale and J. nudiflorum. Received: 8 August 1997 / Revision accepted: 25 February 1998  相似文献   

13.
Motile sperm cells of land plants are released directly into the environment and encounter numerous constraints on their way to the egg. Sperm cell organization, shape, size, and plasticity are crucial to the processes associated with fertilization. We conducted an ultrastructural investigation to detail insemination (sperm release, swimming and movement within the archegonium) and fertilization in the model fern Ceratopteris richardii. Gametophytes were grown from spores using sterile culture techniques and flooded in water when sexually mature. Materials were examined at different stages post-flooding. During insemination in C. richardii, the sperm cytoskeleton and flagella rearrange, and the coils of the cell extend while entering the neck canal. In this nearly linear configuration, the dense ridge, a densely compacted band of filaments presumed to be actin, expands to surround the leading edge of the sperm cell. This ridge fuses with the receptive site on the female gamete and is the sperm component that initiates contact with the egg nuclear envelope. All cellular components, except plastids, enter the egg cytoplasm. Sperm mitochondria are distinguishable from those of the egg because they are encased by two or three additional membranes and are sequestered from the zygote cytoplasm. During karyogamy, the sperm components, including the microtubule cytoskeleton (spline) and flagella, maintain their spatial integrity. Microtubules play key roles not only in sperm cell structure but also in facilitating karyogamy in this fern. After karyogamy is completed, microtubule arrays of the sperm cell and the components of the locomotory apparatus are disassembled. We provide the first demonstration of the likely involvement of sperm actin in egg penetration in land plants and new insights into the fate of paternal organelles. This study points to the roles sperm cell structure and dynamics play in the intricate processes of insemination and fertilization in land plants.  相似文献   

14.
15.
Summary The egg and central cells of Plumbago zeylanica have an average volume of 543,000 m3 and 2,560,000 m3 respectively, with surface areas of 38,600 m2 and 154,000 m2. The egg contains an average of 39,900 mitochondria and 730 plastids. The majority of the plastids are perinuclear (> 60%) with less than 40% in lateral areas or near the filiform apparatus. After fertilization, the number of maternal organelles exceeds paternal organelles by a ratio of 11,000 for mitochondria and 154 for plastids. The central cell contains an average of 178,700 mitochondria and 1,840 plastids. After fertilization, these organelles far exceed the number of sperm organelles transmitted, by a ratio of approx. 14,000 for plastids and 1820 for mitochondria. Biparental inheritance of plastids in the embryo is possible, but not favored; the only comparable data in Oenothera and Impatiens reveals that biparental inheritance is possible in up to 124 ratios. Plants lacking biparental plastid inheritance do not contain plastids in the sperm, and thus the presence of even few sperm plastids may result in expression. The number of paternal mitochondria transmitted into the central cell is greater than that transmitted into the egg as the result of preferential fertilization with the mitochondrion-rich dimorphic sperm cell, although the ratio of paternal to maternal mitochondria is 11,000 in the egg and 1820 in the central cell. The similarity in these ratios suggests that there is a critical dosage of mitochondria that is permissible within the zygotic and endospermatic lineages. This may represent either: (1) a maximum permissible value to prevent expression of paternal mitochondrial genome, (2) a minimum ratio required in order to permit recombination of maternal and paternal mitochondrial genomes, or (3) a cytoplasmic genome balance number.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   

16.
Serially sectioned embryo sacs of Nicotiana tabacum were examined during fertilization events using transmission electron microscopy. After pollen tube discharge, the outer membrane of the sperm pair is removed, the two sperm cells are deposited in the degenerate synergid and the sperm cells migrate to the chalazal edge of the synergid where gametic fusion occurs. During fertilization, the male cytoplasm, including heritable organelles, is transmitted into the female reproductive cells as shown by: (1) the cytoplasmic confluence of one sperm and the central cell during cellular fusion, (2) the occurrence of sperm mitochondria (distinguished by ultrastructural differences) in the zygote cytoplasm and adjacent to the sperm nucleus, (3) the presence of darkly stained aggregates which are found exclusively in mature sperm cells within the cytoplasm of both female cells soon after cell fusion, and (4) the absence of any large enucleated cytoplasmic bodies containing recognizable organelles outside the zygote or endosperm cells. The infrequent occurrence of plastids in the sperm and the transmission of sperm cytoplasm into the egg during double fertilization provide the cytological basis for occasional biparental plastid inheritance as reported previously in tobacco. Although sperm mitochondria are transmitted into the egg/zygote, their inheritance has not been detected genetically. In one abnormal embryo sac, a pair of sperm cells was released into the cytoplasm of the presumptive zygote. Although pollen tube discharge usually removes the inner pollen-tube plasma membrane containing the two sperm cells, this did not occur in this case. When sperm cells are deposited in a degenerating synergid or outside of a cell, this outer membrane is removed, as it apparently is for fertilization.  相似文献   

17.
In an earlier report the ultrastructure and nucleoid organelles of male gamete in Pinus tabulaeformis Carr. have been described. Presently, the ultrastructure of the cytoplasm of the egg cell and pollen tube—immediately before fertilization and during cytoplasmic transmission of male gametophyte—has been described for the same species. The fate of parental plastids and mitochondria in the proembryo has also been followed. The mature egg cell contains a large amount of mitochondria, but seems to lack normal plastids. Most plastids have transformed into large inclusions. Apart from the large inclusions, there are abundant small inclusions and other organelles in the egg cell. During fertilization, pollen tube penetrates into the egg cell at the micropylar end and thereafter the contents are released. Plastid and mitochondrion of male origin are lacking near the fusing sperm-egg nuclei. The second sperm nucleus—not involved in karyogamy—remains at a site near the receptive vacuole. This nucleus is surrounded by large amount of male cytoplasm containing mixed organelles from the sperm cell, tube cell, and egg cell. At the free nuclear proembryo stage, organelles of male and female origin are visible in the perinucleus-cytoplasmic zone. Most of the mitochondria have the same morphological features as those in the egg cell. Some of the mitochondria appear to have originated from the sperm and tube cells. Plastids are most likely of male gametophyte origin because they have similar appearance as those of the sperm and tube cell. Large inclusions in the egg cell become vacuole-like. Paternal plastids have been incorporated into the neocytoplasm of the proembryo. In the cellular proembryo, maternal mitochondria are more abundant. Plastids resembling those of the sperm and tube cell are still present. These cytological results clearly show that in P. tabulaeformis , plastids are inherited paternally and mitochondria bipaternally. The cytological mechanism of plastid and mitochondrion inheritance in gymnosperm is discussed.  相似文献   

18.
用体内-体外方法分离了蓝猪耳精细胞。用酶解和解剖方法分离了其成熟卵细胞。分离的精、卵细胞用电融合介导尝试了体外诱导融合。在合适的渗透压(6%甘露醇)和合适的氯化钙(0.04%CaCl2·2H2O)溶液中,用交流电场为30~35V10-25s使精、卵细胞排队;用直流电场400~600V45-50μs65脉冲穿孔条件可诱导30%的精、卵细胞融合和70%以上的卵细胞之间的融合。尝试了人工合子的单细胞培养但未获成功。诱导蓝猪耳精、卵细胞融合的条件与玉米和水稻不同。  相似文献   

19.
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   

20.
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   

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