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1.
Carpospore differentiation in Faucheocolax attenuata Setch. can be separated into three developmental stages. Immediately after cleaving from the multinucleate gonimoblast cell, young carpospores are embedded within confluent mucilage produced by gonimoblast cells. These carpospores contain a large nucleus, few starch grains, concentric lamellae, as well as proplastids with a peripheral thylakoid and occasionally some internal (photosynthetic) thylakoids. Proplastids also contain concentric lamellar bodies. Mucilage with a reticulate fibrous substructure is formed within cytoplasmic concentric membranes, thus giving rise to mucilage sacs. Subsequently, these mucilage sacs release their contents, forming an initial reticulate deposition of carpospore wall material. Dictyosome vesicles with large, single dark-staining granules also contribute to wall formation and may create a separating layer between the mucilage and carpospore wall. During the latter stages of young carpospores, starch is polymerized in the perinuclear cytoplasmic area and is in close contact with endoplasmic reticulum. Intermediate-aged carpospores continue their starch polymerization. Dictyosomes deposit more wall material, in addition to forming fibrous vacuoles. Proplastids form thylakoids from concentric lamellar bodies. Mature carpospores are surrounded by a two-layered carpospore wall. Cytoplasmic constituents include large floridean starch granules, peripheral fibrous vacuoles, mature chloroplasts and curved dictyosomes that produce cored vesicles which in turn are transformed into adhesive vesicles. Pit connections remain intact between carpospores but begin to degenerate. This degeneration appears to be mediated by microtubules.  相似文献   

2.
The vacuolar apparatus of various plant cells consists of two distinct features: the large central vacuole and peripheral vacuoles which are derived from invaginations of the plasma membrane. Peripheral vacuoles are conspicuous structures in both living and fixed hair or filament cells of Tradescantia virginiana. They occur as spherical structures along the inner boundary of the peripheral cytoplasm and can be recognized as projections into the central vacuole. These structures are variable in size and number within a cell and can represent a significant proportion of the volume of the vacuole. Peripheral vacuoles most frequently are observed in motion with the streaming cytoplasm although their velocity is usually somewhat slower that that of the cytoplasmic organelles. Ultrastructural studies show two closely approximated membranes, one for each vacuole, in areas where a peripheral vacuole projects into the central vacuole. These are separated by an intermembrane zone continuous with the peripheral cytoplasm. The movement of organelles over the perimeter of the peripheral vacuole is presumed to occur along this intermembrane zone. The internal area of the peripheral vacuoles may appear empty although some contain a vesicular content of unknown origin and function.  相似文献   

3.
Invagination of the plasma membrane in plant cells forms peripheral or endocytic structures which often contain a complement of membrane-bound vesicles. These structures, or secondary vacuoles, move with the streaming cytoplasm although their velocities are somewhat slower than that for the various organelles within the cytoplasm. They glide over the nucleus or flow from the peripheral cytoplasm onto a transvacuolar strand and continue unabated along the length of a strand. These structures may detach from the plasma membrane as sacs to become positioned in the cytoplasm directly under the tonoplast and project into the primary vacuole. Some endocytic vacuoles may separate from the peripheral cytoplasm and remain free within the primary vacuole; subsequently they can re-associate with the cytoplasm. While the content and function of these vacuoles are yet to be determined, indirect evidence indicates that they are pinocytic in character since the content of an invagination is confined to the sac upon its detachment from the plasma membrane and is subsequently transported throughout the cell by cyclosis.  相似文献   

4.
Blood collected from rats infected with Plasmodium berghei was centrifuged and the pellet was fixed for 1 hour in 1 per cent buffered OsO(4) with 4.9 per cent sucrose. The material was embedded in n-butyl methacrylate and the resulting blocks sectioned for electron microscopy. The parasites were found to contain, in almost all sections, oval bodies of the same density and structure as the host cytoplasm. Continuity between these bodies and the host cytoplasm was found in a number of electron micrographs, showing that the bodies are formed by invagination of the double plasma membrane of the parasite. In this way the host cell is incorporated by phagotrophy into food vacuoles within the parasite. Hematin, the residue of hemoglobin digestion, was never observed inside the food vacuole but in small vesicles lying around it and sometimes connected with it. The vesicles are pinched off from the food vacuole proper and are the site of hemoglobin digestion. The active double limiting membrane is responsible not only for the formation of food vacuoles but also for the presence of two new structures. One is composed of two to six concentric double wavy membranes originating from the plasma membrane. Since no typical mitochondria were found in P. berghei, it is assumed that the concentric structure performs mitochondrial functions. The other structure appears as a sausage-shaped vacuole surrounded by two membranes of the same thickness, density, and spacing as the limiting membrane of the body. The cytoplasm of the parasite is rich in vesicles of endoplasmic reticulum and Palade's small particles. Its nucleus is of low density and encased in a double membrane. The host cells (reticulocytes) have mitochondria with numerous cristae mitochondriales. In many infected and intact reticulocytes ferritin was found in vacuoles, mitochondria, canaliculi, or scattered in the cytoplasm.  相似文献   

5.
Summary Following perfusion fixation of the rat kidney with glutaraldehyde the proximal tubule cells display small apical vacuoles, large apical vacuoles, and apical vacuoles in which a part of the limiting membrane is invaginated into the vacuole. These invaginated apical vacuoles occur more frequently in proximal convoluted tubules than in proximal straight tubules. One tubular cell may contain apical vacuoles of different sizes and stages of invagination, ranging from larger vacuoles with a wide lumen and a small area of invaginated membrane to smaller elements with no apparent lumen and a large area of invaginated membrane. Invaginated apical vacuoles lie either singly in the cytoplasm or close to the membranes of other apical vacuoles, but never in contact with the cell membrane or the membranes of lysosomes, endoplasmic reticulum, Golgi apparatus, mitochondria and peroxisomes.These findings suggest that the invaginated apical vacuoles are not fixation artifacts, but rather develop in living state in cells of the proximal tubule from spherical endocytotic elements.Supported by the Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft (SFB 105)  相似文献   

6.
The hyphae of Armillaria mellea Fr. invade the large ceils of Gastrodia elata BI. Through the wall pits of cortical cells. During early stage the plasmalemma of large cell invaginates and the cell wall forms papillary thickenings to restrain the hyphae from invading. When a hypha enters a large cell, it is encircled tightly by the invaginated plasmalemma which is surrounded by a large number of vesicles coated by a unit membrane. As these vesicles fusing with their membranes to the plasmalemma and discharging their contents into the space around the hypha, the space lined by the invaginated plasmalemma enlarges gradually and becomes a digestive vacuole in which a hypha is completely digested. Reaction product form acid phosphatase activities in the vesicles and digestive vacuoles testifies that the vesicles and digestive vacuoles are identical with primary and secondary lysosomes of plant lysosomal system respectively.  相似文献   

7.
Blood collected from rats infected with Plasmodium berghei was centrifuged and the pellet was fixed for 1 hour in 1 per cent buffered OsO4 with 4.9 per cent sucrose. The material was embedded in n-butyl methacrylate and the resulting blocks sectioned for electron microscopy. The parasites were found to contain, in almost all sections, oval bodies of the same density and structure as the host cytoplasm. Continuity between these bodies and the host cytoplasm was found in a number of electron micrographs, showing that the bodies are formed by invagination of the double plasma membrane of the parasite. In this way the host cell is incorporated by phagotrophy into food vacuoles within the parasite. Hematin, the residue of hemoglobin digestion, was never observed inside the food vacuole but in small vesicles lying around it and sometimes connected with it. The vesicles are pinched off from the food vacuole proper and are the site of hemoglobin digestion. The active double limiting membrane is responsible not only for the formation of food vacuoles but also for the presence of two new structures. One is composed of two to six concentric double wavy membranes originating from the plasma membrane. Since no typical mitochondria were found in P. berghei, it is assumed that the concentric structure performs mitochondrial functions. The other structure appears as a sausage-shaped vacuole surrounded by two membranes of the same thickness, density, and spacing as the limiting membrane of the body. The cytoplasm of the parasite is rich in vesicles of endoplasmic reticulum and Palade's small particles. Its nucleus is of low density and encased in a double membrane. The host cells (reticulocytes) have mitochondria with numerous cristae mitochondriales. In many infected and intact reticulocytes ferritin was found in vacuoles, mitochondria, canaliculi, or scattered in the cytoplasm.  相似文献   

8.
Summary The contractile vacuole (CV) cycle ofChlamydomonas reinhardtii has been investigated by videomicroscopy and electron microscopy. Correlation of the two kinds of observation indicates that the total cycle (15 s under the hypo-osmotic conditions used for videomicroscopy) can be divided into early, middle, and late stages. In the early stage (early diastole, about 3 s long) numerous small vesicles about 70–120 nm in diameter are present. In the middle stage (mid-diastole, about 6 s long), the vesicles appear to fuse with one another to form the contractile vacuole proper. In the late stage (late diastole, also about 6 s long), the CV increases in diameter by the continued fusion of small vesicles with the vacuole, and makes contact with the plasma membrane. The CV then rapidly decreases in size (systole, about 0.2 s). In isosmotic media, CVs do not appear to be functioning; under these conditions, the CV regions contain numerous small vesicles typical of the earliest stage of diastole. Fine structure observations have provided no evidence for a two-component CV system such as has been observed in some other cell types. Electron microscopy of cryofixed and freeze-substituted cells suggests that the irregularity of the profiles of larger vesicles and vacuoles and some other morphological details seen in conventionally fixed cells may be shrinkage artefacts. This study thus defines some of the membrane events in the normal contractile vacuole cycle ofChlamydomonas, and provides a morphological and temporal basis for the study of membrane fusion and fluid transport across membranes in a cell favorable for genetic analysis.Abbrevations CV contractile vacuole - PM plasma membrane  相似文献   

9.
V. R. Franceschi 《Protoplasma》1984,120(3):216-223
Summary Sugar beet (Beta vulgaris L.) leaf has a layer of cells extended laterally between the palisade parenchyma and spongy mesophyll that develop numerous small crystals (crystal sand) within their vacuoles. Solubility studies and histochemical staining indicate the crystals are calcium oxalate. The crystals are deposited within the vacuoles early during leaf development, and at maturity the cells are roughly spherical in shape and 2 to 3 times larger than other mesophyll cells. Crystal deposition is preceeded by formation of membrane vesicles within the vacuole. The membranes are synthesizedde novo in the vacuole and have a typical trilaminate structure as viewed with the TEM. The membranes are formed within paracrystalline aggregates of tubular particles (6–8nm outer diameter) as membrane sheets, but are later organized into chambers or vesicles. Calcium oxalate is then precipitated within the membrane chambers. The tubular particles involved in membrane synthesis are usually present in the vacuoles of mature crystal cells, but in very small amounts.  相似文献   

10.
The ultrastructure of zygotosporogenesis is described for the red alga Porphyra leucosticta Thuret. Packets of eight zygotosporangia, each packet derived from a single carpogonium are interspersed among vegetative cells. Zygotospore differentiation in Porphyra can be separated into three developmental stages. (i) Young zygotospores exhibit a nucleus and a large centrally located, lobed plastid with pyrenoid. Mucilage is produced within concentric membrane structures during their dilation, thus resulting in the formation of mucilage sacs. Subsequently, these sacs release their contents, initiating the zygotospore wall formation. Straight‐profiled dictyosomes produce vesicles that also provide wall material. During the later stages of young zygotospores, starch polymerization commences, (ii) Medium‐aged zygotospores are characterized by the presence of fibrous vacuoles. These are formed from the ‘fibrous vacuole associated organelles’. The fibrous vacuoles finally discharge their contents. (iii) Mature zygotospores are recognized by the presence of numerous cored vesicles produced by dictyosomes. Cored vesicles either discharge their contents or are incorporated into the fibrous vacuoles. There is a gradual reduction of starch granules during zygotospore differentiation. Mature zygotospores are surrounded by a fibrous wall, have a large chloroplast with pyrenoid and well‐depicted phycobilisomes but are devoid of starch granules.  相似文献   

11.
The ability of concanavalin A (conA) to disrupt food vacuole elimination at the cytoproct of Tetrahymena pyriformis, strain GL-C, was investigated using fluorescence microscopy and thin section electron microscopy. ConA was found to induce "tails" in Tetrahymena. These tails were specifically stained by fluorescent conA. Thin section observations of conA-treated cells revealed that these tails were the result of abnormal egestion of food vacuole contents at the cytoproct. Tail formation appears to result from an inhibition of endocytosis of food vacuole membrane during egestion. Instead, the food vacuole membrane appears to be cast out of the cell, along with the contents of the vacuole. The mechanism of this inhibition may be related to an apparent absence of microtubules or microfilamentous mat in the cytoproct region of conA-treated cells. Although conA is ingested into food vacuoles in large amounts, conA appears to affect endocytosis only from outside the cell; ingested conA does not appear to be effective. ConA may exert its influence by binding to the cytoproct region. The ability of conA to induce tail formation is inhibited by sugars specific to it. Numerous membranous vesicles are found in association with the oral cilia and cytoproct region of conA-treated cells. These vesicles may be the conA-binding material reported to be secreted by Tetrahymena.  相似文献   

12.
甜菊愈伤组织细胞中的液泡膜内突和液泡内囊泡   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
对生长在分化培养基上的甜菊愈伤组织分生区细胞的液泡膜内突和液泡内囊泡,进行了超微结构和酸性磷酸酶细胞化学研究。在不同液泡化时期的细胞中,都存在不同大小和形态的液泡膜内突,它们有的缺乏明显的内含物;有的含有许多小泡或复杂膜系;有的含有一个较大的具许多小泡或复杂膜系的膜束缚囊泡。在液泡内还存在一些游离的液泡内囊泡,它们通常具有两层紧贴的界膜或为多层同心膜,推测它们来自液泡膜内突。AcPase定位结果显  相似文献   

13.
Rapid discharge of secretory organelles called rhoptries is tightly coupled with host cell entry by the protozoan parasite Toxoplasma gondii. Rhoptry contents were deposited in clusters of vesicles within the host cell cytosol and within the parasitophorous vacuole. To examine the fate of these rhoptry-derived secretory vesicles, we utilized cytochalasin D to prevent invasion, leading to accumulation of protein-rich vesicles in the host cell cytosol. These vesicles lack an internal parasite and are hence termed evacuoles. Like the mature parasite-containing vacuole, evacuoles became intimately associated with host cell mitochondria and endoplasmic reticulum, while remaining completely resistant to fusion with host cell endosomes and lysosomes. In contrast, evacuoles were recruited to pre-existing, parasite-containing vacuoles and were capable of fusing and delivering their contents to these compartments. Our findings indicate that a two-step process involving direct rhoptry secretion into the host cell cytoplasm followed by incorporation into the vacuole generates the parasitophorous vacuole occupied by TOXOPLASMA: The characteristic properties of the mature vacuole are likely to be determined by this early delivery of rhoptry components.  相似文献   

14.
The ultrastructure of carposporophyte development is described for the red alga Gloiosiphonia verticillaris Farl. The auxiliary cell produces gonimoblast initials, which divide to produce two types of gonimoblast cells—the nondividing vacuolate cells and terminal generative gonimoblast cells. The generative gonimoblast cells form clusters of carpospore initials, which eventually differentiate into carpospores. After gonimoblast filaments are formed, the auxiliary cell undergoes autolysis, causing degeneration of septal plugs between the auxiliary cell and adjacent cells, thus forming a fusion cell. Since this cell lacks starch and appears degenerate throughout carposporophyte development, a nutritive function cannot be ascribed to the fusion cell. Carpospore differentiation is simple and proceeds through three developmental stages. Young carpospores structurally resemble gonimoblast cells, because they contain undeveloped plastids, large quantities of floridean starch, and are surrounded by extensive mucilage instead of a distinct wall. In addition, dictyosomes form and begin to produce vesicles with fibrous contents representing carpospore wall material. During the intermediate stage, dictyosomes continue to produce vesicles that contribute additional carpospore wall material, thereby compressing the mucilage and creating a darker-staining layer outside the carpospore wall. Plastids form internal thylakoids by invaginations of the inner membrane of the peripheral thylakoid. The endoplasmic reticulum forms large granular vacuoles that appear to be degraded during subsequent stages of development. Mature carpospores form cored vesicles. They also contain mature chloroplasts, large amounts of floridean starch, and occasionally granular vacuoles. During this stage, interconnecting carpospore-carpospore and carpospore-gonimoblast cell septal plugs begin to undergo degeneration. This process may be mediated by tubular structures.  相似文献   

15.
ABSTRACT Netzelia tuberculata secretes a test composed of siliceous particles cemented together by organic plaques forming a single-layered spheroidal shell. The siliceous particles are produced within cytoplasmic vacuoles by three mechanisms: 1) synthesis de novo by deposition of the silica on a matrix; 2) deposition of silica on particles remaining in digestive vacuoles, including starch grains and undigested walls of yeast cells; and 3) secretion of silica as a hollow sphere at the periphery of vacuoles enclosed by the silicasecreting membrane. The silicalemma (silica-secreting membrane) originates as fibril-containing vesicles (GFV) secreted by the Golgi body. Fusion of these vesicles with membranes surrounding digestive vacuoles or with membranes surrounding specialized vacuoles containing a silica-binding matrix apparently converts the vacuole into a silica-depositing organelle. Small spherules of silica occur on the vacuolar side of the membrane surrounding the developing test granules, marking the presence of silicalemma activity. These colloidal spherules become aggregated into larger spherules that condense to form the siliceous surface of the developing test particle. Other Golgi vesicles, designated Golgi plaque vesicles (GPV), produce the organic plaques that are deposited among the siliceous particles at the periphery of the cell during new test construction during cell division. The fine structure of the GFV and GPV and their role in test wall deposition are discussed in relation to other silica-biomineralizing protozoa, including radiolaria.  相似文献   

16.
Climacostomum virens uses oral membranelles to drive suspended food particles into its buccal cavity. The cavity leads to a buccal tube which extends into the cell by as much as half a cell length. The inner end of this tube is delimited by a haplokinety (two rows of basal bodies). Internal to this zone is the cytostome and cytopharynx where food vacuoles form. The buccal tube is encircled by a ring of fibrous material, the cytostomal cord, in the region of the cytostome immediately below the haplokinety. Ribbons of postciliary microtubules extend from the kinetosomes of the haplokinety, attach to the cytopharyngeal membrane, and pass under the cytostomal cord. They become broader and expand into the cytoplasm. Cytopharyngeal vesicles pass between the microtubular ribbons and fuse with the cytopharyngeal membrane to generate membrane for forming food vacuoles. The cytopharyngeal vesicles contain a material which is secreted into the forming food vacuoles. Ciliates continue to feed after incubation in a medium containing cycloheximide, indicating that they draw on a pre-existing pool of membrane when forming the food vacuole.  相似文献   

17.
Clathrin-coated vesicles play an established role in endocytosis from the plasma membrane, but they are also found on internal organelles. We examined the composition of clathrin-coated vesicles on an internal organelle responsible for osmoregulation, the Dictyostelium discoideum contractile vacuole. Clathrin puncta on contractile vacuoles contained multiple accessory proteins typical of plasma membrane–coated pits, including AP2, AP180, and epsin, but not Hip1r. To examine how these clathrin accessory proteins influenced the contractile vacuole, we generated cell lines that carried single and double gene knockouts in the same genetic background. Single or double mutants that lacked AP180 or AP2 exhibited abnormally large contractile vacuoles. The enlarged contractile vacuoles in AP180-null mutants formed because of excessive homotypic fusion among contractile vacuoles. The SNARE protein Vamp7B was mislocalized and enriched on the contractile vacuoles of AP180-null mutants. In vitro assays revealed that AP180 interacted with the cytoplasmic domain of Vamp7B. We propose that AP180 directs Vamp7B into clathrin-coated vesicles on contractile vacuoles, creating an efficient mechanism for regulating the internal distribution of fusion-competent SNARE proteins and limiting homotypic fusions among contractile vacuoles. Dictyostelium contractile vacuoles offer a valuable system to study clathrin-coated vesicles on internal organelles within eukaryotic cells.  相似文献   

18.
Summary The ultrastructure of zoospores of several zoosporic fungi was examined using a modified cryofixation technique. An atomizer was used to spray a zoospore suspension into the cold propane reservoir of a conventional plunge freeze-substitution apparatus. Spray-freeze fixation and freeze-substitution of zoospores porvided better fixation of vacuolar structures, membranes and the extracellular coat than that obtained with chemical fixation. The overall shape of cryofixed spores was closer to that seen in living zoospores. Two types of vacuoles were seen in cryofixed zoospores ofMonoblepharella andChytridium. One type of vacuole contained electron-opaque material within the lumen while the other type had no visible internal material in the lumen and appeared to be part of the water expulsion vacuole complex. Coated pits and coated vesicles were observed associated with both the water expulsion vacuoles and the plasma membrane inMonoblepharella andPhytophthora, suggesting that endocytosis of the plasma membrane and expulsion vacuoles is part of membrane recycling during osmoregulatory events. An extracellular coat was seen on the outer surface of cryofixed zoospores ofMonoblepharella sp.,Chytridium confervae andPhytophthora palmivora without the use of carbohydrate-specific stains. The spray-freeze method gave good and reproducible fixation of the wall-less spores in quantities greater than those obtained in previously described zoospore cryofixation studies. The technique is potentially useful for cell suspensions in that freeze damage from excess water is limited.Abbreviations ddH2O deionized distilled water - PME Pipes/MgCl2/EGTA buffer - WEV water expulsion vacuole  相似文献   

19.
The ammoniacal silver reaction (ASR) for cationic proteins was used as a cytochemical marker for the primary or A granules in the cytoplasm of developing heterophils of chick bone marrow. The presence of the electron-dense particulate reaction product of silver, which is localized in the fully formed rod-shaped A granules, provides a marker by which the A granules could be distinguished from the B granules of similar size and by which the formation and maturation of both granule types could be followed through the developmental stages. Progressive developmental stages were ascertained on the basis of decreasing cell size, increasing condensation and margination of the chromatin, and the number and morphology of the granules; the stages were divided into promyelocyte, myelocyte, metamyelocyte and heterophil. During the promyelocyte stage, the first appearance of the electron-dense, membrane-bound, spherical granules (0.3--1.0 micrometer in diameter) is observed in the vicinity of an extensive Golgi complex. They occur in a cytoplasm containing rough-surfaced endoplasmic reticulum, ribosomal clusters, centrioles, mitochondria, microtubules, as well as the membranes, saccules, vesicles and vacuoles of the Golgi complex. These granules are considered as primary but their presence as the only granule type appears very brief. The ASR reaction product is first detected on the surface of these primary granules in late promyelocytes or myelocytes. The secondary or B granule, devoid of reaction for cationic protein at all stages, appears as a condensing vacuole in promyelocytes, but after some A granules are already present. The vacuole contents condense to form the B granules which are 0.1--0.6 micrometer in diameter, often oval-shaped, and contain a loose filamentous material surrounded by a membrane. Tertiary C granules or lysosomes appear during the myelocyte stage as dense core vesicles (0.1--0.2 micrometer in diameter) negative for cationic protein.  相似文献   

20.
The plasma membrane of cultured cells of several plant species was observed to possess invaginations, or secondary vacuoles, of variable size in the adjacent cytoplasm. These structures, which occurred in cells at different phases in vacuolation, were very numerous in thin sections of some cells but fewer in others. In vacuolated cells enlarged secondary vacuoles protrude into the primary vacuole but are delimited from the tonoplast by an intermembrane zone of variable width. The plasma membrane at the orifice of an invagination may fuse and detach the secondary vacuole from the membrane to form in the cytoplasm a structure bounded by a single membrane. Complex accumulations of membranes consisting of spherical, tubular, and laminar structures, possibly containing cytoplasm, may develop within secondary vacuoles. Contents of many of these vacuoles arise from folds along its limiting membrane which pinch off into the interior of the secondary vacuole. A fibrous substance, possibly derived from the wall, is present in some secondary vacuoles. Observed folding of the plasma membrane and measurements of membrane width of various organelles and cytomembranes support an interpretation that endocytosis occurs in cultured cells.  相似文献   

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