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 971 毫秒
1.
The distribution of S-type and P-type plastids in the sieve elements of 30 species from 13 families of theConiferophytina andCycadophytina is recorded, of which 21 species were studied for the first time with respect to their sieve-element plastids. While starch storing S-type plastids are the most commonly occurring type throughout both taxa, all thePinaceae examined (11 species of 7 genera) contain P-type plastids characterized by a peripheral, ring-shaped bundle of protein filaments, an additional protein crystalloid, and several starch grains. Starch grains of sieve-element plastids in theConiferophytina andCycadophytina are commonly club-shaped. Taxonomic implications of these ultrastructural findings on sieve-element plastids are discussed.  相似文献   

2.
The sieve-element characters of 40 species from all families making up the monocotyledon order Zingiberales have been studied by transmission electron microscopy. While phloem-proteins are a typical component of all eight families, the Zingiberaceae are characterized by nondispersive protein bodies derived from nuclear crystals. The sieve-element plastids are of the form-P2cs, i.e. contain cuneate protein crystals (as typical of all monocotyledons) and starch grains, those of the family Musaceae have protein filaments in addition (form-P2cfs). The exclusiveness of the form-P2c(f)s plastids contributed to the homogeneity of the order and its distinctness among other monocotyledon taxa. When diameters of the sieve-element plastids from leaf phloem are compared, in the “banana group” the family averages of the Strelitziaceae and the Lowiaceae have, respectively, maximum and minimum values and are clearly different from those in the Musaceae, the family in which they have been included previously. In the “ginger group”, the family averages of the Zingiberaceae, Costaceae, and Marantaceae are close to the order average, with only Cannaceae having minimum values. A comparison of species averages, however, reduces the size differences between families: the value for Ravenala (Strelitziaceae) is close to those of the five Musaceae tested, and that of Globba (Zingiberaceae) even slightly lower than the species average of Canna.  相似文献   

3.
Form-Pfs sieve-element plastids were found inTriplaris, Ruprechtia, andCoccoloba (Polygonaceae) while other genera of the family and those studied from the often associatedPlumbaginaceae contain S-type sieve-element plastids. The rareness of form-Pfs plastids among the angiosperms, their similarity to the peculiar form-P3fs plastids of theChenopodiineae, and the comparatively small plastid diameters measured for all forms present in theCaryophyllales, Polygonales, andPlumbaginales suggest close relationships between these taxa. The restriction inPolygonaceae of form-Pfs plastids to the closely allied tribesTriplareae andCoccolobeae is discussed with regard to both the intrafamilial and ordinal phylogeny, and also considering possible connections to the only magnoliidaean Pfs-taxonCanella. Dedicated to Univ.-Prof. DrF. Ehrendorfer on the occasion of his 70th birthday.  相似文献   

4.
The sieve-element characters of 34 species from the Proteaceae and Elaeagnaceae have been studied by transmission electron microscopy. While nondispersive protein bodies and dispersive P-protein are typical components of both families, specific forms and/or their distinctive origin accentuate some taxa. Within the Grevilloideae, subfamily of Proteaceae, a number of Australian species and genera contain protein crystals of nuclear origin arranged into rosette-like bodies, while in the other members studied from the same subfamily no nondispersive protein bodies were found. Several Australian and South African genera of the Proteoideae contain compound-spherical nondispersive protein bodies that reside in the cytoplasm from their very beginning. In the Elaeagnaceae three different P-protein bodies are present of which one is tubular and dispersing, another is nondispersive and of irregular-stellate form, and a third is globular (resembling a P-protein from Cucurbita). The great majority of the species studied from the Proteaceae contains form-Ss sieve-element plastids, Lomatia ilicifolia and Macadamia ternifolia are distinct in having form-Pcs plastids. The average diameter of stem sieve-element plastids in the family is 1.38 μm. The Elaeagnaceae (three species investigated) is a pure form-So family (average diameter: 0.8 μm). There are no specific sieve-element characters that would support any relationship between the Proteaceae and Elaeagnaceae. While affinities of the former to pre-Gondwanan parts of the Rosanae/Myrtanae are discussed, a reconsideration of the Elaeagnaceae as a possible member of the Violanae (identical features with Cucurbitaceae) is proposed.  相似文献   

5.
The phloem of the Myristicaceae is composed of sieve elements, parenchymatous cells, and fibers. Within the metaphloem and secondary phloem parenchymatic layers including prominent secretory elements alternate with tangential bands of fibers and layers composed of sieve elements, companion cells and phloem-parenchyma cells. among the latter the sieve elements are most abundant and easily identified by the presence of thick (nacreous) walls. The most characteristic feature of the sieve elements of Myristicaceae (and found nowhere else among the Magnoliiflorae) are nuclear crystals, which are released into the lumen during nuclear degeneration and persist in the mature cell. P-and S-type sieve-element plastids were recorded for the 18 species investigated. Both types of the plastid are characterized by large diameters and many medium-sized starch grains. The sizes and contents (small protein crystals only) of the P-type plastids of the Myristicaceae do not conform to the tiny P-type plastids (with large protein crystals) of the Annonaceae, a family to which the Myristicaceae is traditionally allied.  相似文献   

6.
P-type sieve-element plastids were found in theGunneraceae, while S-type plastids are present in theHaloragaceae andHippuridaceae. The specific characters of the sieve-element plastids (e.g., their size and the morphology of their contents) are discussed in relation to other taxa of theRosidae containing P-type plastids and to the systematic position of theGunneraceae. Contributions to the Knowledge of P-Type Sieve-Element Plastids in Dicotyledons, III. — For other parts of this series see (I.:)Behnke (1982 b) and (II.:)Behnke (1985).  相似文献   

7.
Monocotyledons are distinguishable from dicotyledons by their subtype P2 sieve-element plastids containing cuneate protein crystals, a synapomorphic character uniformly present from basal groups through Lilioids to Commelinoids. The dicotyledon generaAsarum andSaruma (Aristolochiaceae-Asaroideae) are the only other taxa with cuneate crystals, but their sieveelement plastids include an additional large polygonal crystal, as is typical of many eumagnoliids. New investigations in Melanthiaceae s.l. revealed the same pattern (polygonal plus cuneate crystals) in the sieve-element plastids ofJaponolirion osense (Japonoliriaceae/Petrosaviaceae), ofHarperocallis flava, Pleea tenuifolia, andTofleldia (all: Tofieldiaceae). InNarthecium ossifragum a large crystal, present in addition to cuneate ones, usually breaks up into several small crystals, whereas inAletris glabra andLophiola americana (Nartheciaceae) and in all of the 15 species studied and belonging to Melanthiaceae s.str. only cuneate crystals are found. Highresolution TEM pictures reveal a crystal substructure that is densely packed in both cuneate and polygonal forms, but in Tofieldiaceae the polygonal crystals stain less densely, probably as a result of the slightly wider spacing of their subunits. The small crystals ofNarthecium are “loose”; that is, much more widely spaced. Such “loose” crystals are commonly found in sieve-element plastids of Velloziaceae, present there in addition to angular crystals, and together with cuneate crystals in a few Lilioids and many taxa of Poales (Commelinoids). Ontogenetic studies of the sieve elements ofSaruma, Aristolochia, and several monocotyledons have shown that in their plastids cuneate crystals develop very early and independent from a polygonal one present in some taxa. Therefore, a conceivable particulation of polygonal into cuneate crystals is excluded. Consequently, mutations of some monocotyledons that contain a lone, large, polygonal crystal in their sieve-element plastids are explained as the result of a complex genetic block. The total result of all studies in sieve-element plastids suggests thatJaponolirion and Tofieldiaceae are the most basal monocotyledons and that Aristolochiaceae are their dicotyledon sister group.  相似文献   

8.
An analysis of rbcL sequence data for representatives of families of putative sapindalean/rutalean affinity identified a robust clade of core “sapindalean” taxa that is sister to representatives of Malvales. The constitution of this clade approximates the broad concept of Sapindales (sensu Cronquist). Five lineages within the order are recognized: a “rutaceae” clade (Rutaceae, Cneoraceae, Ptaeroxylaceae, Simaroubaceae sensu stricto, and Meliaceae); a “sapindaceae” clade (Sapindaceae, Aceraceae, and Hippocastenaceae); Anacardiaceae plus Burseraceae; Kirkiaceae; and Zygophyllaceae pro parte. Relationships among these groups were only weakly resolved, but there was no support for the recognition of the two more narrowly defined orders, Rutales and Sapindales sensu stricto. Several families that have previously been allied to Sapindales or Rutales show no affinity to the core sapindalean taxa identified with the molecular data, and are excluded from the order: viz. Akaniaceae, Bretschneideraceae, Conneraceae, Coriariaceae, Melianthaceae, Meliosmaceae, Physenaceae, Rhabdodrendraceae, Sabiaceae, Staphyleaceae, Stylobasiaceae, Surianaceae, and Zygophyllaceae sensu stricto.  相似文献   

9.
H.-D. Behnke  A. Schulz 《Planta》1980,150(5):357-365
The wound phloem bridges which have developed six days after interrupting an internodal vascular bundle contain wound sieve-elements, companion cells, and phloem parenchyma cells. An analysis of the meristematic activity responding to the wounding clearly demonstrates that three consecutive divisions are prerequisite to the formation of phloem mother-cells. Companion cells are obligatory sister cells of wound sieve-elements, connected to the latter by specific plasmatic strands and provided with a dense protoplast. Six days after wounding most of the wound sieve-elements are still at a nucleate state of development, but already have characteristic P-protein bodies and plastids containing sieve-element starch. Their cytoplasmic differentiation corresponds to the changes recorded during maturation of ordinary sieve elements. Sieve-plate pores penetrate through preexisting parenchyma cell walls, only, and develop from primary pitfield-plasmodesmata. Wound sieve-elements do not connect to preexisting bundle sieve-elements, they open a new tier of young sieve elements produced by cambial activity.  相似文献   

10.
Heinz-Dietmar Behnke 《Planta》1973,110(4):321-328
Summary Plastids have been identified in the sieve elements and/or companion cells of 14 monocotyledon species. In contrast to earlier reports, plastids are present in the sieve elements of Smilax and the companion cells of Tradescantia. The development and fine structure of the sieve-element plastids in Smilax do not differ from the type found in all of the 230 angiosperm species we have studied so far contain prominent plastids. The companion cells are easily identified by their specialized plasmatic connections with the sieve elements. The leucoplasts in the companion cells of Tradescantia are identical with those reported for many angiosperms.  相似文献   

11.
Corm tissue of Isoetes muricata Dur. was fixed in glutaraldehyde and postfixed in osmium tetroxide for electron microscopy. Very young secondary sieve elements can be distinguished from contiguous cambial cells by their distinctive plastids and by the presence of crystalline and/or fibrillar proteinaceous material in dilated cisternae of rough endoplasmic reticulum (ER). At maturity, the sieve elements are lined by the plasmalemma and a parietal, anastomosing network of smooth ER. Degenerate nuclei persist in all mature sieve elements. In addition, mature sieve elments contain plastids and mitochondria. Sieve-area pores are present in all walls. The lateral meristem of I. muricata consists of 2–3 layers of cells year-round. Judging from numerous collections made between October 1972 and July 1975, new sieve-element differentiation precedes cambial activity by about a month. Early in May, 1–2 cells immediately adjacent to already mature sieve elements differentiate directly into sieve elements without prior division. In early June, at about the time sieve-element differentiation is completed, cambial division begins. Division is sporadic, not uniform throughout the meristem. Dormancy callose accumulates in the secondary sieve elements in late October, and is removed in early May, at about the same time new sieve-element differentiation begins. Cells of the dormant cambium are characterized by the presence of numerous small vacuoles and large quantities of storage materials, including lipid droplets, starch grains, and tannin. By contrast, active cambial cells contain few large vacuoles with little or no tannin, and they have little storage material.  相似文献   

12.
Of all the ultrastructural features recognized within sieve elements their specific plastids provide the most successful characters in seed plant systematics. Sieve–element plastids are classified into subtypes and forms according to their protein and starch contents. Presently 26 different forms grouped into six subtypes within the two basic types (S– and P–) may be discerned. Plastid forms containing protein crystals, protein filaments and starch grains are proposed to be primitive, forms missing any one of these contents held to be derived (a synoptical key is given to ease the identification of the different plastid forms). Based on the quantitative distribution of over 1500 investigated species and the suggested evolution of plastid forms a cladistic diagram is prepared to demonstrate interrelationships between forms of sieve–element plastids and the evolution of seed plant taxa. Correlations exist between subtype PII and Monocotyledons, subtype PHI and Centrospermae, subtype PIV and Fabales. Genuine plastid forms characterize Buxaceae (PVIc), Erythroxylaceae and Rhizophoraceae (both PVc) and Cyrillaceae (PVcf). The Magnoliiflorae are distinct by presence in its families of a great number of forms of subtype PI. Phylogenetic correlations for some of these taxa are discussed. – Crystalline P–protein of sieve–elements provides another character to be used for the delimitation of some families (e.g. Fabaceae), while presently ER–complexes or other organelles of sieve elements do not contribute to seed plant systematics.  相似文献   

13.
Subtype PIII sieve-element plastids, anthocyanins, spinulose, perforate-tectate pollen grains and the specific seed-coat sculpturing found in twoMacarthuria species (M. australis, M. neocambrica) consolidate their placement withinMolluginaceae. The unique form of the sieve-element plastids, i.e. with cubic crystals and starch grains (PIIIc″fs), finds its closest counter-part inLimeum. The multiple intertwinement of different genera of theMolluginaceae with many other centrospermous families led to a consideration of their more central position withinCaryophyllales.  相似文献   

14.
The sieve-element plastids of 69 species of theCaryophyllales were investigated by transmission electron microscopy. All contained the specific subtype-P3 plastids characterized by a peripheral ring of protein filaments. The presence or absence of an additional central protein crystal and their shape being either polygonal or globular as well as the average sizes of the sieve-element plastids are useful features in the characterization of some families.—Barbeuia contains sieve-element plastids that confirm its placement within thePhytolaccaceae. Lyallia differs fromHectorella by including small starch grains in their sieve-element plastids, which otherwise by their globular crystals negate a closer connection to theCaryophyllaceae. The lack of a central protein crystal in its form-P3fs plastids placesMicrotea best within theChenopodiaceae. Sarcobatus, a so far uncontested member of theChenopodiaceae, contains form-P3cf plastids, i.e., including a central crystal not found elsewhere in this family.Telephium andCorrigiola, shifted back and forth betweenMolluginaceae andCaryophyllaceae, have form-P3cf(s) plastids with a polygonal crystal which favor their placement within theCaryophyllaceae.  相似文献   

15.
Summer and winter (July and January) samples of secondary phloem of Tilia americana were studied with the electron microscope. Parenchyma cells contain: nuclei, endoplasmic reticulum, ribosomes, plastids, mitochondria and occasional dictyosomes. Well-defined tonoplasts separate vacuoles from cytoplasmic ground substance. Vacuoles often contain tannins. Lipid droplets are common in cytoplasm. Endoplasmic reticulum–connected plasmodesmata are aggregated in primary pit fields. Companion cells differ from parenchyma cells in having numerous sieve-element connections, possibly slime, and in lacking plastids. Mature, enucleate sieve elements possess 1–4 extruded nucleoli. Numerous vesicles occupy a mostly parietal position in association with plasmalemma. The mature sieve element lacks endoplasmic reticulum, organelles (except for few mitochondria) and tonoplast. In OsO4– and glutaraldehyde-fixed elements, slime has a fine, fibrillar appearance. Normally, these fine fibrils are organized into coarser ones which form strands that traverse the cell and the plasmalemma-lined pores of sieve plates and lateral sieve areas.  相似文献   

16.
The sieve-element plastids of 126 species of theArales were investigated by transmission electron microscopy. With the exception ofPistia (with S-type plastids) all contained the monocotyledon specific subtype-P2 plastids characterized by cuneate protein crystals. While the species studied from bothAcoraceae andLemnaceae have form-P2c plastids (i.e., with cuneate crystals only), those of theAraceae belong to either form P2c (14 species), P2cs (the great majority) or P2cfs (Monstera deliciosa, only, with form-P2cs plastids in the otherMonstera species studied). The form-P2cs plastids of theAraceae are grouped into different categories according to the quantity and quality of their protein and starch contents. The subfamilyLasioideae is redefined to comprise all aroid P2c-taxa and those P2cs-genera that contain only one or very few starch grains. Only little starch is also recorded in the sieve-element plastids ofGymnostachys (Gymnostachydoideae), with the other plastid data denying a close relationship toAcorus. While equal amounts of starch and protein are generally present in sieve-element plastids of the subfamiliesPothoideae, Monsteroideae, Colocasioideae, Philodendroideae, andAroideae, maximum starch content and only very few protein crystals are found in form-P2cs plastids ofCalla (Calloideae),Ariopsis (Aroideae), andRemusatia (Colocasioideae?). In the latter, both morphology and size of sieve-element plastids are close to those ofPistia.—In theAraceae the diameters of the sieve-element plastids exhibit a great size range, but are consistent within a species and within a defined part of the plant body. Comparative data are mainly available for stem and petiole sieve-element plastids.—The accumulated data are used to suggest an affiliation of the species to subfamilies and to discuss the phylogeny of theArales. Forms and sizes of their plastids support a separation of bothAcoraceae andLemnaceae from theAraceae. The presence of S-type plastids inPistia does not favour direct and close relationships to the form-P2c genusLemna.—The prevailing form-P2cs plastids might support proposals that place theArales (together with also form-P2cs plastid containingDioscoreales) in the neighbourhood of basal dicotyledons. BesidesAsarum andSaruma (Aristolochiaceae), with monocotyledonous form-P2c plastids,Pistia (with dicotyledonous S-type plastids) gives another example for a link between the two angiosperm classes.  相似文献   

17.
The primary phloem in the shoot apex of the mangrove Rhizophora mangle L. is largely confined to the comparatively condensed area between the first three leaf pairs. The main extension zone, surrounded by the stipular sheath of the third leaf pair, contains vascular bundles arranged in a procambial ring and characterized by a well-developed primary phloem and a less advanced xylem. The phloem consists of a great number of sieve elements, an equal number of associated companion cells, and a few phloem-parenchyma cells. The differentiation of the sieve-element protoplast (with e.g., chromatolytic nuclear degeneration, loss of the vacuole and most organelles) proceeds largely according to a well-known pattern. Their P-type plastids, however, form their protein crystals rather late and therefore cannot be used as an early cell marker. Lateral sieve-element walls are distinct from other wall parts and walls of other cells by their heavy nacreous thickenings, the formation of which is shown to be strictly correlated with the occurrence and orderly arrangement of cortical microtubules.  相似文献   

18.
The sieve-element plastids of members of several genera in theBuxaceae (Buxus, Pachysandra andSarcococca) were found to be of the specific subtype PVI, which contains a central globular protein crystal.Simmondsia (Simmondsiaceae) andDaphniphyllum (Daphniphyllaceae), on the other hand, were found to contain S-type sieve-element plastids. The occurrence of the highly restricted PVI plastids in theBuxaceae mitigates against a close relationship between theBuxaceae andSimmondsia, Daphniphyllum andEuphorbiaceae. Exine sculpturing of theBuxaceae andSimmondsiaceae also shows no close similarities. Both of these EM characters are discussed in connection with other available data and with respect to earlier systematic treatment of these families.  相似文献   

19.
The secondary phloem of 6 species of woody dicotyledons was examined for the occurrence of callose on the sieve plates of active sieve elements. Fluorescence and bright-field staining methods were used to detect callose. Tissue from the 6 species was killed and fixed in each of 5 solutions. Some tissue of each species was submerged in the killing solutions as quickly as possible, the remainder within 15 min after removal from the tree. In each species, some active sieve elements of the quick-killed tissue gave negative callose reactions. All active sieve elements of the delay-killed tissue gave positive callose reactions. These and other results suggest that the active sieve elements in the secondary phloem of the species studied normally lack callose and that the extent of callose deposition in these cells depended primarily upon the rapidity with which the sieve-element protoplasts were killed after wounding of the phloem. In addition, bright-field observations of sieve plates of large numbers of sieve elements from a seasonal collection of Tilia americana secondary phloem suggest that the active sieve elements normally lack callose during the growing season and that the inactive sieve elements normally possess it (dormancy callose).  相似文献   

20.
Behnke  H. -D.  Schulz  A. 《Protoplasma》1983,114(1-2):125-132
Protoplasma - In experimentally-induced wound phloem, sieve-element plastids express their genetically determined type in depositing amylopectinrich sieve-tube starch (Coleus, S-type) and polygonal...  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