首页 | 本学科首页   官方微博 | 高级检索  
相似文献
 共查询到20条相似文献,搜索用时 15 毫秒
1.
The ultrastructure of the flagellar apparatus in pre-inversion and inversion stages of Platydorina resembles that of Chlamydomonas in having 180° rotational symmetry and clockwise absolute orientation. Basal bodies are in a “V” configuration and connected by one distal and two proximal fibers. Alternating two- and four-membered microtubular rootlets are cruciately arranged. During maturation, the basal bodies rotate and separate, and 180° rotational symmetry is lost. Simultaneously, each proximal fiber detaches from one of the functional basal bodies, and the distal fiber detaches from both. The mature apparatus has widely separated and nearly parallel basal bodies. Flagellar orientation in Platydorina is completed just after inversion and a flattening of the colony called intercalation, resulting in the pairs of flagella of neighboring cells extending from the colony in opposite directions in an alternating fashion. Flagellar orientation and separated basal bodies minimize the interference between the flagella of neighboring cells. Basal bodies and rootlets of the two intercalated halves of a colony rotate, resulting in the effective strokes of the flagella of every cell being towards the colonial posterior. The flagella of each cell beat with an effective stroke in the direction of the two inner rootlets. The flagella have an asymmetrical ciliary type beat. The rotated, separated, and parallel basal bodies, together with the nearly parallel rootlets probably are adaptations for movement of this colonial volvocalean alga. The flagellar apparatus in immature stages of Platydorina lends support to the suggestion that the alga has evolved from a Chlamydomonas-like ancestor.  相似文献   

2.
The somatic cell flagellar apparatuses of Volvox carteri f. weismannia (Powers) Iyengar and V. rousseletii G. S. West have parallel or nearly parallel basal bodies which are separated at their proximal ends. The four microtubular rootlets alternate between two and four members, and all are associated with a striated microtubular associated component (SMAC) that runs between the basal bodies. In addition, each half of the flagellar apparatus apparently rotates during development and loses the 180° rotational symmetry characteristic of most unicellular chlorophycean motile cells. All of these features appear necessary for efficient motion of a colony composed of numerous radially arranged cells. However, the structural details of the flagellar apparatuses of these two species differ. The distance between flagella is greater in V. rousseletii than in V. carteri. One distal striated fiber and two proximal striated fibers connect the basal bodies in V. carteri, but both types of fibers are absent from V. rousseletii. In the latter species, a striated fiber wraps around each of the basal bodies and attaches to the rootlets and the SMAC. No such fiber is present in V. carteri. Since the similarities in the flagellar apparatuses can be explained as a result of adaptation for efficient colonial motion in organisms with similar colonial morphology, the differences suggest a wider phylogenetic distance than previously believed.  相似文献   

3.
The flagellar apparatus of Pyrobotrys has a number of features that are typical of the Chlorophyceae, but others that are unusual for this class. The two flagella are inserted at the apex, but they extend to the side of the cell toward the outside of the colony, here designated as the ventral side. Four basal bodies are present, two of which extend into flagella. Four microtubular rootlets alternate between the functional and accessory basal bodies. In each cell, the two ventral rootlets are nearly parallel, but the dorsal rootlets are more widely divergent. The rootlets alternate between two and four microtubules each. A striated distal fiber connects the two functional basal bodies in the plane of the flagella. Two additional, apparently nonstriated, fibers connect the basal bodies proximal to the distal fiber. Another striated fiber is associated with each four-membered rootlet near its insertion into the flagellar apparatus. A fine periodic component is associated with each two-membered rootlet. A rhizoplast-like structure extends into the cell from each of the functional basal bodies. The arrangement of these components does not reflect the 180° rotational symmetry that is usually present in the Chlorophyceae, but appears to be derived from a more symmetrical ancestor. It is suggested that the form of the flagellar apparatus is associated with the unusual colony structure of Pyrobotrys.  相似文献   

4.
The fine structure of the flagellar apparatus of 5 species of the green quadriflagellate alga Carteria is described. The 5 species can be morphologically separated into 2 groups on the bases of cell shape and ultrastructure of the pyrenoid and flagellar apparatus. Group I cells are spherical, possess many pyrenoid thylakoids, and retain a flagellar apparatus similar to that of Chlamydomonas reinhardi. The flagellar bases are oriented at approximately 90° to one another, have distal and proximal fibers, and are associated with 4 cruciately arranged microtubule bands. Cells of group II are ellipsoid, possess few pyrenoid thylakoids, and show a complex system of microtubule bands and sigmoid-shaped, electron dense rods which extend between opposite pairs of basal bodies. The basal bodies of group II cells are directed inward in a circular pattern rather than outward as in group I cells. Unlike Chlamydomonas, the distal fiber of the Carteria species is nonstriated. The proximal fiber is striated, and both distal and proximal fibers are composed of 60–80 Å diameter microfibrils.  相似文献   

5.
The absolute configuration of the flagellar apparatus of biflagellate zoospores of Enteromorpha flexuosa (Wulfen ex Roth.) J. Agardh ssp. pilifera (Kütz.) Bliding was determined. Viewed from the anterior of the cell, the flagellar apparatus shows 180° rotational symmetry with a counter-clockwise absolute orientation of its components. In longitudinal sections, the posteriorly directed basal bodies form an angle of about 170°–180° to one another. A reduced striated distal fiber connects the two basal bodies. The cruciate microtubular rootlet system has a 4–2–4–2 alternation pattern. Striated microtubule-associated components (SMACs or system I-fibers) and rhizoplasts (or system II fibers) accompany the two-membered rootlets. Striated bands connect the proximal sheaths with the four-Membered rootlets. The bilobate terminal caps do not completely cover the proximal ends of the basal bodies. This is the first ultrastructural study of biflagellate zoospores in a member of the Ulvales.  相似文献   

6.
The flagellar apparatus of the biflagellate zoospores from Blastophysa rhizopus Reinke has 180° rotational symmetry of the major components and counterclockwise absolute orientation. The basal bodies are connected anteriorly by a prominent striated distal fiber and posteriorly by two proximal striated bands. The C microtubules in the basal bodies terminate proximal to the transition region. Terminal caps and well-defined proximal sheaths are absent. The four microtubular rootlets diverge at a very small angle from the basal bodies. Six to eight (usually seven) microtubules are present in the s rootlets and two microtubules in the d rootlets. Rootlet 1s is associated with the eyespot. Each d rootlet is subtended by a coarsely striated fiber. Rootlet Id also has a finely striated fiber, roughly opposite the coarsely striated fiber, associated with it. Rhizoplasts and mating structures were not observed. Ultrastructural features of B. rhizopus zoospores are essentially identical with those found in examined members of the Siphonocladales sensu lato (= Siphonocladadales/Cladophorales complex) and Dasycladales, and have relatively few features in common with motile cells of caulerpalean algae. Blastophysa rhizopus probably does not represent an intermediate between the Siphonocladadales and the Caulerpales. Its evolutionary history is different from that of other algae placed in the siphonocladalean family Chaetosiphonaceae. Whether or not Blastophysa is representative of the ancestor to the Siphonodadales and Dasycladales is unclear.  相似文献   

7.
Absolute configurational analyses of flagellar apparatus components were performed on the motile cells produced by three species of Cladophora, Cl. dalmatica Kütz., Cl. flexuosa (Dillw.) Harv., and Cl. glomerata (L.) Kütz., and by Chaetomorpha aerea (Dillw.) Kütz. There was little variation among the species. All of the flagellar apparatuses demonstrated the ulvophyceous features of 180° rotational symmetry, counterclockwise absolute orientation, and basal body overlap, as well as the alignment of the basal bodies perpendicular to the long axis of the cell. Diagnostic features included the nearly complete absence of C tubules from the basal bodies and the presence of a coarsely striated component dorsal to the two-membered rootlets in all cells, as well as, in quadriflagellate cells, a tetralobate distal fiber, the coaxial arrangement of the lowermost pair of basal bodies, and the presence of a characteristic array of basal-body-associated striated bands. The distal fiber architecture, the presence of a “wing” in the X-membered rootlets, and the “flattening” of the flagellar apparatus components suggests a close relationship of the Cladophoraceae to the Dasycladales, and indicates that these two groups may have shared a common ancestor, possibly ancient in terms of the geological time scale but relatively recent in the context of ulvophyceous evolution. A sizeable phylogenetic gap exists between the Cladophoraceae and uninucleate-celled, presumably primitive members of the Ulvophyceae.  相似文献   

8.
The colonial and multicellular members of the Volvocales can be arranged in order of increasing size and complexity as the “volvocine series.” This series is often assumed to reflect an evolutionary progression. The flagellar apparatuses of previously examined algae are not consistent with a simple lineage. The flagellar apparatuses of Astrephomene gubernaculifera Pocock, Gonium pectorale Müller, Platydorina caudata Kofoid, Volvox rousseletii G. S. West, and V. carteri f. weismannia (Powers) Iyengar differ from one another, and there is no apparent progression inflagellar apparatus features from the simple to complex colonial forms. We examined the flagellar apparatuses of Volvulina steinii Playfair, Eudorina elegans Ehr., and Pleodorina illinoisensis Kofoid and found them to be similar to one another. The basal bodies are connected by a distal fiber that is offset to the anti side of the cell. Two microtubular rootlets originate on the inside of the basal bodies and extend toward the syn side. The other two rootlets are oriented perpendicular to the first two and are anti-parallel to each other. A coarsely striated component underlies the four-membered rootlets and extends to the basal bodies. A proximal fiber complex connects the two basal bodies. This complex consists of a branched striated component on the cis side of each basal body. One part extends toward the anti side of the cell, while the other extends into a fibrous component that runs between basal bodies. An additional structure extends in the anti direction from the trans side of each basal body. A fibrous component extends past one basal body in all four species. This component goes past the trans basal body in Volvulina steinii and the cis basal body in E. elegans and P. illinoisensis. The flagellar apparatuses of these organisms are similar to those of G. pectorale and Volvox carteri but different from the other colonial volvocalean algae examined. The algae examined in this study plus G. pectorale and V. carteri probably share a common evolutionary history that postdates the transition from the unicellular to colonial habit. Such a shared evolutionary history is a requirement of the volvocine hypothesis. However, we have not observed progressive changes in the flagellar apparatus correlated with increasing cell number, differentiation, and sexual specialization. Thus, it is possible, but not certain, that G. pectorale, Volvulina steinii, E. elegans, P. illinoisensis, and Volvox carteri may form part of a volvocine lineage.  相似文献   

9.
The flagellar apparatuses of the quadriflagellate zoo-spores and biflagellate female gametes of the marine chaetophoracean alga Entocladia viridis Reinke are significantly different from those of algae belonging to Chaetophoraceae sensu stricto, but closely resemble those of ulvacean genera. These differences permit the taxonomic reassignment of certain marine chaetophoracean genera and an evaluation of the flagellar apparatus features used to characterize the class Ulvophyceae. Critical features of the zoospore include arrangement of the four basal bodies into an upper and a lower pair with the proximal ends of the upper basal bodies overlapping, terminal caps, proximal sheaths connected to one another by striated bands, and a cruciate microtubular rootlet system having a 3-2–3-2 alternation pattern and striated microtubule-associated components that accompany the two-membered rootlets. An indistinct distal fiber occurs just anterior to the basal bodies, and is closely associated with the insertion into the flagellar apparatus of the three-membered rootlets. The flagellar apparatus demonstrates 180° rotational symmetry, and its components show counterclockwise absolute orientation when viewed from above. Newly described features include the prominently bilobed structure of the terminal caps on the upper basal body pair, and the presence of both a granular zone and an additional single microtubule anterior to each of the four rootlets, an arrangement termed the “stacked rootlet configuration.” Rhizoplasts were not observed and are presumed to be absent. The gamete is identical, except for the absence of the lower basal body pair and the presence of an electron-dense membrane associated structure that resembles the mating structure found in Ulva gametes. These findings, correlated with life history data, sporangial and gametangial structure and developmental patterns, chloroplast pigment arrays, and vegetative cell ultrastructural features, compel the removal of Entocladia viridis and similar members of the marine Chaetophoraceae to a separate family, the Ulvellaceae. The latter is referred to the order Ulvales of the Ulvophyceae. The counterclockwise absolute orientation of components, and terminal caps, may be the most consistent flagellar apparatus features of ulvophycean green algae, while variations in other features previously considered diagnostic for the Ulvophyceae may serve instead to identify discrete lineages within this class.  相似文献   

10.
The ultrastructural features of the biflagellate motile cells of six different species of the Chlorophyceae, namely Dunaliella lateralis (Polyblepharidaceae, Chlamydomonadales), Chlorococcum hypnosporum, Spongiochloris spongiosa, Protosiphon botryoides (Chlorococcaceae, Chlorococcales), Tetracystis aeria and Pseudotetracystis terrestris (Tetracystidaceae, Chlorococcales), were examined with an emphasis on the flagellar apparatus (FA). They have different vegetative characteristics, such as, being motile or nonmotile, variations in chloroplast morphology, possession of one or more nuclei, and reproductive features such as formation of tetrahedral tetrads, and naked or walled zoospores. Ultrastructural differences amongst reproductive cells of the six species include variations in cell surface structure, basal body to basal body angle, beamlike extensions of the distal fiber, extensive connections of the proximal sheath between basal bodies, two-membered rootlets, striated microtubule-associated components, two-membered rootlet-nucleus and/or mitochondria connections, X-membered rootlets, connections of rootlets and basal bodies, rhizoplasts and accessory basal bodies. All six species possess pyrenoids penetrated by thylakoid membranes, and the FA typical of the Chlorophyceae (sensu Mattox and Stewart, 1984). These six species should be divided into two groups. The first includes D. lateralis, C. hypnosporum, and T. aeria, in which accessory basal bodies are present, the basal body to basal body angle is relatively fixed, and a cell wall or surface coat is present. The second group includes Ps. terrestris, S. spongiosa, and Pr. botryoides, in which accessory basal bodies are absent, the basal body to basal body angle is variable and the zoospores are naked.  相似文献   

11.
Volvocine green algae represent the “evolutionary time machine” model lineage for studying multicellularity, because they encompass the whole range of evolutionary transition of multicellularity from unicellular Chlamydomonas to >500-celled Volvox. Multicellular volvocalean species including Gonium pectorale and Volvox carteri generally have several common morphological features to survive as integrated multicellular organisms such as “rotational asymmetry of cells” so that the cells become components of the individual and “cytoplasmic bridges between protoplasts in developing embryos” to maintain the species-specific form of the multicellular individual before secretion of new extracellular matrix (ECM). However, these morphological features have not been studied in the four-celled colonial volvocine species Tetrabaena socialis that is positioned in the most basal lineage within the colonial or multicellular volvocine greens. Here we established synchronous cultures of T. socialis and carried out immunofluorescence microscopic and ultrastructural observations to elucidate these two morphological attributes. Based on immunofluorescence microscopy, four cells of the mature T. socialis colony were identical in morphology but had rotational asymmetry in arrangement of microtubular rootlets and separation of basal bodies like G. pectorale and V. carteri. Ultrastructural observations clearly confirmed the presence of cytoplasmic bridges between protoplasts in developing embryos of T. socialis even after the formation of new flagella in each daughter protoplast within the parental ECM. Therefore, these two morphological attributes might have evolved in the common four-celled ancestor of the colonial volvocine algae and contributed to the further increase in cell number and complexity of the multicellular individuals of this model lineage. T. socialis is one of the simplest integrated multicellular organisms in which four identical cells constitute the individual.  相似文献   

12.
The flagellar apparatus in male gametes of the siphonaceous green alga, Bryopsis maxima Okamura, was studied and compared with that of other green biflagellate cells. The proximal portions of two basal bodies are connected by a single striated proximal band, unique among the biflagellate reproductive cells of green algae studied. Anterior to the flagellar bases is a pair of distal bands different from the single structure in other biflagellate cells. These bands which arise from the distal portion of each basal body, extend upward in the papilla and curve down toward the lower edges of the basal bodies. They seem to have no direct association with each other. Two pairs of distinct flagellar roots, one consisting of 3–5 microtubules and the other of a partially striated fiber of undetermined numbers of microtubules, diverge from the basal body region and extend towards the cell posterior. Their component microtubules are disorganized into single or smaller groups midway over the cell length. The uniqueness of the flagellar apparatus is briefly discussed.  相似文献   

13.
The biflagellate alga Chlamydomonas reinhardi was studied with the light and electron microscopes to determine the behavior of flagella in the living cell and the structure of the basal apparatus of the flagella. During normal forward swimming the flagella beat synchronously in the same plane, as in the human swimmer's breast stroke. The form of beat is like that of cilia. Occasionally cells swim backward with the flagella undulating and trailing the cell. Thus the same flagellar apparatus produces two types of motion. The central pair of fibers of both flagella appear to lie in the same plane, which coincides with the plane of beat. The two basal bodies lie in a V configuration and are joined at the top by a striated fiber and at the bottom by two smaller fibers. From the area between the basal bodies four bands of microtubules, each containing four tubules, radiate in an X-shaped pattern, diverge, and pass under the cell membrane. Details of the complex arrangement of tubules near the basal bodies are described. It seems probable that the connecting fibers and the microtubules play structural roles and thereby maintain the alignment of the flagellar apparatus. The relation of striated fibers and microtubules to cilia and flagella is reviewed, particularly in phytoflagellates and protozoa. Structures observed in the transitional region between the basal body and flagellar shaft are described and their occurrence is reviewed. Details of structure of the flagellar shaft and flagellar tip are described, and the latter is reviewed in detail.  相似文献   

14.
The chlorococcalean algae Dictyochloris fragrans and Bracteacoccus sp. produce naked zoospores with two unequal flagella and parallel basal bodies. Ultrastructural features of the flagellar apparatus of these zoospores are basically identical and include a banded distal fiber, two proximal fibers, and four cruciately arranged microtubular rootlets with only one microtubule in each dexter rootlet. In D. fragrans, each proximal fiber is composed of two subfibers, one striated and one nonstriated, and each sinister rootlet is composed of five microtubules (4/1), decreasing to four away from the basal bodies. In Bracteacoccus sp., each proximal fiber is a single unit, the sinister rootlets are four (3/1) or rarely five (4/1) microtubules, and each basal body is associated with an unusual curved structure. The basic features of the flagellar apparatus of the zoospores of these two algae resemble those of Heterochlamydomonas rather than most other chlorococcalean algae that have equal length flagella, basal bodies in the V-shape arrangement, and clockwise absolute orientation. It is proposed that these algae with unequal flagella and parallel basal bodies have a shared common ancestry within the green algae.  相似文献   

15.
The detailed fine structure of the biflagellate motile cells of Ulvaria oxysperma (Kiitz.) Bliding is described. These cells demonstrate most of the features presently used to characterize the ulvaphycean motile cell, i.e., the capping plate, terminal cap, alternating two- and four-membered rootlets, rhizoplasts that extend posteriorly into the cell, the striated microtubule-associated component (SMAC) near the two-membered rootlets, microtubule septations in the basal bodies and flagella, and scales covering the external surface of the cell. In addition, the anterior end components have 180° rotational symmetry. The rootlets insert into the basal body complex in the anterior region just beneath the capping plate, and the rhizoplasts insert into triangularshaped proximal fibers that connect the basal bodies. The features of many other ulvaphycean algae are summarized and compared with Ulvaria oxysperma. Based on comparative ultrastructure, it is suggested that the Ulvaphyceae diverged from the Chlorophyceae after the separation of these two classes from the Charophyceae.  相似文献   

16.
Quadriflagellate zoospores ofChaetophora incrassata andPseudoschizomeris caudata have similar features including an appressed membrane between the pyrenoid matrix and the starch sheath, and identical flagellar apparatuses. Components of the flagellar apparatus include: directly opposed upper basal bodies, lower basal bodies in the clockwise absolute orientation, a grooved distal fiber, peripheral and terminal fibers between adjacent basal bodies, proximal fibers connecting the lower basal bodies to the X-membered rootlets two- and X-membered rootlets associated with electron-dense components, and at least one rhizoplast. The X-membered rootlets, are comprised of five microtubules inC. incrassata and four or five inP. caudata. These features of the flagellar apparatus suggest that the two algae are closely related, and together withStigeoclonium, Uronema, Draparnaldia andFritschiella, form a natural group, the Chaetophoraceae, Chaetophorales (sensu Mattox and Stewart).  相似文献   

17.
Gametogenesis in Atractomorpha porcata Hoffman was initiated b the synchronous mitotic division of nuclei within a multinucleate gametangium. Uninucleate gametes were subsequently produced following two series of cytokinetic divisions. The first series involved the formation of phycoplast microtubules (phycoplastic cytokinesis), whereas the second series did not (nonphycoplastic cytokinesis). Centrioles were connected by a rudimentary striated distal fiber by the time they migrated to the planes of division preceding the first series of cytokinetic division. These first divisions produced binucleate gametocytes. A well-developed flagellar apparatus lay near the cell surface in close proximity to each nucleus of the gametocyte prior to the second series of cytokinetic divisions that produced the uninucleate gametes. As seen in apical view, the paired basal bodies were directly opposed, with no lateral displacement of their longitudinal axes. In lateral view, the paired basal bodies diverged from one another at an angle of 130–180° (female) or 170–180° (male) and were connected by an arched, distal striated fiber about 670–750 nm long and 600 nm at its widest part. Four electron-opaque, pyramid-shaped lateral bodies flanked the basal bodies in close contact with their undersurfaces. The flagellar roots demonstrated a cruciate arrangement, with s = 6–9 over 1 (female gametes) or 7–10 over 1 (male gametes) microtubules and d= 2 microtubules. In male gametes, one of the multistranded roots was located close to the eyespot, and a second system of cytoskeletal microtubules was detected internally. Based on gamete ultrastructure, Atractomorpha porcata appears to be the most undifferentiated member of the genus.  相似文献   

18.
The spatial configuration of the flagellar apparatus of the biflagellate zoospores of the green algal genusMicrospora is reconstructed by serial sectioning analysis using transmission electron microscopy. Along with the unequal length of the flagella, the most remarkable characteristics of the flagellar apparatus are: (1) the subapical emergence of the flagella (especially apparent with scanning electron microscopy); (2) the parallel orientation of the two basal bodies which are interconnected by a prominent one-piece distal connecting fiber; (3) the unique ultrastructure of the distal connecting fiber composed of a central tubular region which is bordered on both sides by a striated zone; (4) the different origin of the d-rootlets from their relative basal bodies; (5) the asymmetry of the papillar region which together with the subapical position of the basal bodies apparently cause the different paths of corresponding rootlets in the zoospore anterior; (6) the presence of single-membered d-rootlets and multi-membered s-rootlets resulting in a 7-1-7-1 cruciate microtubular root system which, through the different rootlet origin, does not exhibit a strict 180° rotational symmetry. It is speculated that the different basal body origin of the d-rootlets is correlated with the subapical implant of flagella. It is further hypothesized that in the course of evolution the ancestors ofMicrospora had a flagellar papilla that has migrated from a strictly apical position towards a subapical position. Simultaneously, ancestral shift of flagella along the apical cell body periphery has taken place as can be concluded from the presence of an upper flagellum overlying a lower flagellum in the flagellar apparatus ofMicrospora. The basic features of the flagellar apparatus of theMicrospora zoospore resemble those of the coccoid green algal generaDictyochloris andBracteacoccus and also those of the flagellate green algal genusHeterochlamydomonas. This strengthens the general supposition thatMicrospora is evolutionarily closely related to taxa which were formerly classified in the traditionalChlorococcales.  相似文献   

19.
Gonium pectorale O. F. Müll. (Volvocales, Chlorophyta), a colonial 8‐ or 16‐cellular alga, is phylogenetically important as an intermediate form between isogametic unicellular Chlamydomonas and oogamous Volvox. We identified the mating‐type specific gene GpMTD1, from G. pectorale, the first homologue of Chlamydomonas reinhardtii MTD1 (CrMTD1). The GpMTD1 gene was found to be present only in the minus mating‐type locus and was expressed specifically in the gametic phase as is the case for CrMTD1, suggested to participate in development of the minus gametes. This gene is useful as a probe in analyzing the bacterial artificial chromosome (BAC) library for resolving genomic structures of the mating‐type loci in isogamous and oogamous colonial volvocaleans.  相似文献   

20.
The flagellar apparatus of Microthamnion kuet-zingianum Naegeli differs from, that of Chlamydomonas reinhardtii Dangeard in that the zoospores can autonomously orient their basal bodies for different types of swimming behavior, including forward, and backward progression with, stationary intervals. Reorientation of the basal regions of the flagella and of the basal bodies were documented by cinefilms and by stroboscopic and electron micrographs. Even when the flagella. were sheared off, the remaining stubs (containing the basal bodies) were capable of being reoriented, by the organism. Thus the mechanism of basal body reorientation cannot reside in the 9 + 2 flagellar shaft. Rather, the reorienting process involves a shortening or lengthening of the distal fiber and of the plasma membrane region overlying an anterior papilla. In their helical and spiral motions, the zoospores trace complicated, but surprisingly regular curves. Such motion might result from the inherent 3-dimensional structure and beat of the flagella. The eyespot has an invariable, highly asymmetric location within the cell in direct proximity with a specific microtubular band (MTE), but nevertheless may occur in either the anterior or posterior region of the chloroplast. Further, multiple eyespots may occur along the same side of MTE. This observation is consistent with the discovery (in Fucus sperm) that microtubules serve to align individual eyespot granules in eyespot-ontogeny. By this means the position of the eyespot within a cell could well be determined.  相似文献   

设为首页 | 免责声明 | 关于勤云 | 加入收藏

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