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Summary Based on precise information about the orientations of cellulose microfibrils (CMFs) in the secondary cell wall of theEquisetum hyemale root hair, a geometrical model was recently put forward to account for the deposition orientation of CMFs. The model supposes that synthases spin out the CMFs and that geometrical laws dictate their movement. Taking space-limiting conditions into account, CMF orientation is dependent on cell morphology, the amount of other wall molecules adhering to the CMFs, and the number and distribution pattern of synthases. In the present paper this geometrical model for CMF deposition is further applied to nontip-growing angular cells with varying diameters, cells with tapering morphology, various distribution patterns of synthases, various matrix/fibril ratios, and intercalarily elongating cells. The model can accurately predict the actual wall textures in a great variety of cell walls. In the proposed model for CMF orientation, microtubules are not required as cellular guiding structures for the CMFs, not even in elongating walls. They are supposed to be involved in cell elongation, possibly by delivering wall material including CMF synthases.Abbreviation CMF cellulose microfibril  相似文献   

3.
Summary The wall ofPinus sylvestris pollen and pollen tubes was studied by electron microscopy after both rapid-freeze fixation and freeze-substitution (RF-FS) and chemical fixation. Fluorescent probes and antibodies (JIM7 and JIM5) were used to study the distribution of esterified pectin, acidic pectin and callose. The wall texture was studied on shadow-casted whole mounts of pollen tubes after extraction of the wall matrix. The results were compared to current data of angiosperms. TheP. sylvestris pollen wall consists of a sculptured and a nonsculptured exine. The intine consists of a striated outer layer, that stretches partly over the pollen tube wall at the germination side, and a striated inner layer, which is continuous with the pollen tube wall and is likely to be partly deposited after germination. Variable amounts of callose are present in the entire intine. No esterified pectin is detected in the intine and acidic pectin is present in the outer intine layer only. The wall of the antheridial cell contains callose, but no pectin is detectable. The wall between antheridial and tube cell contains numerous plasmodesmata and is bordered by coated pits, indicating intensive communication with the tube cell. Callose and esterified pectin are present in the tip and the younger parts of the pollen tubes, but both ultimately disappear from the tube. Sometimes traces in the form of bands remain present. No acidic pectin is detected in either tip or tube. The wall of the pollen tube tip has a homogenous appearance, but gradually attains a fibrillar character at aging, perhaps because of the disappearance of callose and pectin. No secondary wall formation or callose lining can be seen wilh the electron microscope. The densily of the cellulose microfibrils (CMF) is much lower in the tip than in the tube. Both show CMF in all but axial and nontransverse orientations. In conclusion,P. sylvestris and angiosperm pollen tubes share the presence of esterified pectin in the tip, the oblique orientations of the CMF, and the gradual differentiation of the pollen tube wall, indicating a possible relation to tip growth. The presence of acidic pectin and the deposition of a secondary-wall or callose layer in angiosperms but not inP. sylvestris indicales that these characteristics are not related to tip growth, but probably represent adaptations to the fast and intrastylar growth of angiosperms.Abbreviations CMF cellulose microfibrils - II inner intine - NE nonsculptured exine - OI outer intine - RF-FS rapid-freeze fixation freeze-substitution - SE sculptured exine - SER smooth endoplasmic reliculum - SV secretory vesicles  相似文献   

4.
BACKGROUND: Morphogenesis on a cellular level includes processes in which cytoskeleton and cell wall expansion are strongly involved. In brown algal zygotes, microtubules (MTs) and actin filaments (AFs) participate in polarity axis fixation, cell division and tip growth. Brown algal vegetative cells lack a cortical MT cytoskeleton, and are characterized by centriole-bearing centrosomes, which function as microtubule organizing centres. SCOPE: Extensive electron microscope and immunofluorescence studies of MT organization in different types of brown algal cells have shown that MTs constitute a major cytoskeletal component, indispensable for cell morphogenesis. Apart from participating in mitosis and cytokinesis, they are also involved in the expression and maintenance of polarity of particular cell types. Disruption of MTs after Nocodazole treatment inhibits cell growth, causing bulging and/or bending of apical cells, thickening of the tip cell wall, and affecting the nuclear positioning. Staining of F-actin using Rhodamine-Phalloidin, revealed a rich network consisting of perinuclear, endoplasmic and cortical AFs. AFs participate in mitosis by the organization of an F-actin spindle and in cytokinesis by an F-actin disc. They are also involved in the maintenance of polarity of apical cells, as well as in lateral branch initiation. The cortical system of AFs was found related to the orientation of cellulose microfibrils (MFs), and therefore to cell wall morphogenesis. This is expressed by the coincidence in the orientation between cortical AFs and the depositing MFs. Treatment with cytochalasin B inhibits mitosis and cytokinesis, as well as tip growth of apical cells, and causes abnormal deposition of MFs. CONCLUSIONS: Both the cytoskeletal elements studied so far, i.e. MTs and AFs are implicated in brown algal cell morphogenesis, expressed in their relationship with cell wall morphogenesis, polarization, spindle organization and cytokinetic mechanism. The novelty is the role of AFs and their possible co-operation with MTs.  相似文献   

5.
Cell patterning, the percentage of spores and stalk cells, was measured in branched and unbranched asexual fruiting bodies of Polysphondylium pallidum. Unlike D. discoideum, where small and large fruiting bodies are more stalky than average-sized fruiting bodies, the overall cell patterning was the same in branched and unbranched fruiting bodies of all sizes in P. pallidum. Light greatly increased the numbers of fruiting bodies in P. pallidum per unit area (or decreased aggregation territory size) so that most fruiting bodies formed in the light were small and unbranched. By contrast, light had little effect on the cell patterning of P. pallidum, although there was a slight increase in the percentage of stalk cells in the light compared to the dark. This indicates that the mechanisms governing light sensitivity of aggregation territory size and cell patterning have different components in P. pallidum. The accuracy of cell patterning of individual branches of branched fruiting bodies was so imprecise as to leave doubt that patterning is occurring at the branch level. Individual whorls of branched fruiting bodies had a greater percentage spores (90%) than whole fruiting bodies (78%) and the cell patterning was relatively imprecise. Only in whole fruiting bodies was the spore:stalk ratio highly correlated. These findings are consistent with cell pattern determination operating at the whole aggregate level, rather than at the individual whorl or branch level in P. pallidum.  相似文献   

6.
Excised stem sections of deepwater rice (Oryza sativa L.) containing the highest internode were used to study the induction of rapid internodal elongation by gibberellin (GA). It has been shown before that this growth response is based on enhanced cell division in the intercalary meristem and on increased cell elongation. In both GA-treated and control stem sections, the basal 5-mm region of the highest internode grows at the fastest rate. During 24 h of GA treatment, the internodal elongation zone expands from 15 to 35 mm. Gibberellin does not promote elongation of internodes from which the intercalary meristem has been excised. The orientation of cellulose microfibrils (CMFs) is a determining factor in cell growth. Elongation is favored when CMFs are oriented transversely to the direction of growth while elongation is limited when CMFs are oriented in the oblique or longitudinal direction. The orientation of CMFs in parenchymal cells of GA-treated and control internodes is transverse throughout the internode, indicating that CMFs do not restrict elongation of these cells. Changes in CMF orientation were observed in epidermal cells, however. In the basal 5-mm zone of the internode, which includes the intercalary meristem, CMFs of the epidermal cell walls are transversely oriented in both GA-treated and control stem sections. In slowly growing control internodes, CMF orientation changes to the oblique as cells are displaced from this basal 5-mm zone to the region above it. In GA-treated rapidly growing internodes, the reorientation of CMFs from the transverse to the oblique is more gradual and extends over the 35-mm length of the elongation zone. The CMFs of older epidermal cells are obliquely oriented in control and GA-treated internodes. The orientation of the CMFs parallels that of the cortical microtubules. This is consistent with the hypothesis that cortical microtubules determine the direction of CMF deposition. We conclude that GA acts on cells that have transversely oriented CMFs but does not promote growth of cells whose CMFs are already obliquely oriented at the start of GA treatment.  相似文献   

7.
At the peak of its activity, the cambial zone comprises several layers of undifferentiated, apparently identical cells. In order to find criteria indicating the commitment of cambial cells either to phloem or xylem, early changes in primary wall structure and composition were looked for, using sycamore branches as experimental material. Several chemicals were employed to extract cell wall polysaccharides. Treated specimens were studied by electron microscopy after selective staining. Extracted matrix components were analysed through HPLC. Comparison of ultrastructural and biochemical results indicated that in contrast to phloem derivatives cellulose biosynthesis in xylem derivatives was delayed. Among xylem-committed cells, the very young vessels were characterized by a nearly complete lack of a cellulose skeleton and a high amount of xylose-rich hemicelluloses in their primary walls. This organization would cause the wall plasticity necessary for the cell extensive growth in diameter.  相似文献   

8.
In this study, a basic model is introduced to describe the biomechanical properties of the wood from the viewpoint of the composite structure of its cell wall. First, the mechanical interaction between the cellulose microfibril (CMF) as a bundle framework and the lignin-hemicellulose as a matrix (MT) skeleton in the secondary wall is formulated based on "the two phase approximation." Thereafter, the origins of (1) tree growth stress, (2) shrinkage or swelling anisotropy of the wood, and (3) moisture dependency of the Young's modulus of wood along the grain were simulated using the newly introduced model. Through the model formulation; (1) the behavior of the cellulose microfibril (CMF) and the matrix substance (MT) during cell wall maturation was estimated; (2) the moisture reactivity of each cell wall constituent was investigated; and (3) a realistic model of the fine composite structure of the matured cell wall was proposed. Thus, it is expected that the fine structure and internal property of each cell wall constituent can be estimated through the analyses of the macroscopic behaviors of wood based on the two phase approximation.  相似文献   

9.
Thallus organization is examined inAspicilia californicaRosentreter, a fruticose lichen known from several localities in central and southern California. The sprawling, terete thallus branches possess a dense central medulla of thick-walled, longitudinally oriented fungal cells. This central tissue emerges at branch apices to form a darkly pigmented fungal tip. Thallus development involves the apical extension of the tip to produce a fungal tissue over which a cylindrical algal layer and cortex will eventually be formed. Apical branches are initiated by furcation entirely within the fungal tip. Lateral branches, emerging from the lichenized thallus, arise as a divergent bundle of elongate fungal cells originating in the medulla. The photobiont appears to play no direct role in initiation of apical or lateral branches. It is concluded that thallus development inA. californicaoccurs with a relatively low degree of synchrony between mycobiont and photobiont growth, similar to the pattern observed in crustose lichens with prothallic growth. A rather similar type of thallus organization is observed inA. hispida, although in that species mycobiont growth and branch initiation appear to be somewhat more closely associated with algal cell proliferation. A squamuloseAspiciliafrom central Spain produces rhizomorphs that may sometimes become invested with an algal layer and cortex, resembling the thallus axes ofA. californica.  相似文献   

10.
In this paper, a geometrical model is put forward to account for the deposition orientation of plant cell wall microfibrils (CMFs). The model presupposes the insertion in the plasma membrane of CMF initiation complexes, which, once inserted, are moved through the fluid plane of the plasma membrane by the kinetic force of CMF synthesis, leaving CMFs in their wake. Deposition occurs in a limited space and the CMFs are linked to wall matrix molecules. CMF orientation is governed by the laws of geometry and, taking space-limiting conditions into account, therefore depends on (1) cell geometry, (2) the other wall molecules linked to the CMFs, and (3) the number of CMF initiation complexes inserted into the plasma membrane. The model does not exclude the idea that cortical microtubules may determine initial CMF orientation after cell division by determining the cell elongation direction.  相似文献   

11.
Wilson BF  Archer RR 《Plant physiology》1981,68(6):1285-1288
Two-year-old branches on control trees (Pinus strobus L.) were compared through a season with branches on trees stem-girdled just above, or below, the branch whorl. All branches first sagged down for 20 days and then moved up for 40 days. Then, control branches reversed and moved back down while branches in both girdle treatments continued to move up. Movement reversal correlated with cessation of both elongation and diameter growth in control branches. Diameter growth continued in branches of girdled trees. Control branches continued to stiffen even after diameter growth stopped. Differences in movements due to girdling are from compression wood formed after cessation of branch elongation. Apical control stops cambial activity and compression wood formation in branches after branch elongation ceases, allowing photosynthate produced in the branch to move to the stem. Control branches bend down from increasing self-weight after cambial activity ceases.  相似文献   

12.
Plants use the orientation of cellulose microfibrils to create cell walls with anisotropic properties related to specific functions. This enables organisms to control the shape and size of cells during growth, to adjust the mechanical performance of tissues, and to perform bending movements of organs. We review the key function of cellulose orientation in defining structural-functional relationships in cell walls from a biomechanics perspective, and illustrate this by examples mainly from our own work. First, primary cell-wall expansion largely depends on the organization of cellulose microfibrils in newly deposited tissue and model calculations allow an estimate of how their passive re-orientation may influence the growth of cells. Moreover, mechanical properties of secondary cell walls depend to a large extent on the orientation of cellulose fibrils and we discuss strategies whereby plants utilize this interrelationship for adaptation. Lastly, we address the question of how plants regulate complex organ movements by designing appropriate supramolecular architectures at the level of the cell wall. Several examples, from trees to grasses, show that the cellulose architecture in the cell wall may be used to direct the swelling or shrinking of cell walls and thereby generate internal growth stress or movement of organs.  相似文献   

13.
Cellulose is an important component of cell wall, yet its location and function in pollen tubes remain speculative. In this paper, we studied the role of cellulose synthesis in pollen tube elongation in Pinus bungeana Zucc. by using the specific inhibitor, 2, 6-dichlorobenzonitrile (DCB). In the presence of DCB, the growth rate and morphology of pollen tubes were distinctly changed. The organization of cytoskeleton and vesicle trafficking were also disturbed. Ultrastructure of pollen tubes treated with DCB was characterized by the loose tube wall and damaged organelles. DCB treatment induced distinct changes in tube wall components. Fluorescence labeling results showed that callose, and acidic pectin accumulated in the tip regions, whereas there was less cellulose when treated with DCB. These results were confirmed by FTIR microspectroscopic analysis. In summary, our findings showed that inhibition of cellulose synthesis by DCB affected the organization of cytoskeleton and vesicle trafficking in pollen tubes, and induced changes in the tube wall chemical composition in a dose-dependent manner. These results confirm that cellulose is involved in the establishment of growth direction of pollen tubes, and plays important role in the cell wall construction during pollen tube development despite its lower quantity.  相似文献   

14.
The tubular network of the tracheal system in the Drosophila embryo is created from a set of epithelial placodes by cell migration, rearrangements, fusions and shape changes. A designated number of cells is initially allocated to each branch of the system. We show here that the final cell number in the dorsal branches is not only determined by early patterning events and subsequent cell rearrangements but also by elimination of cells from the developing branch. Extruded cells die and are engulfed by macrophages. Our results suggest that the pattern of cell extrusion and death is not hard-wired, but is determined by environmental cues.  相似文献   

15.
Cellulose forms the major load-bearing network of the plant cell wall, which simultaneously protects the cell and directs its growth. Although the process of cellulose synthesis has been observed, little is known about the behavior of cellulose in the wall after synthesis. Using Pontamine Fast Scarlet 4B, a dye that fluoresces preferentially in the presence of cellulose and has excitation and emission wavelengths suitable for confocal microscopy, we imaged the architecture and dynamics of cellulose in the cell walls of expanding root cells. We found that cellulose exists in Arabidopsis (Arabidopsis thaliana) cell walls in large fibrillar bundles that vary in orientation. During anisotropic wall expansion in wild-type plants, we observed that these cellulose bundles rotate in a transverse to longitudinal direction. We also found that cellulose organization is significantly altered in mutants lacking either a cellulose synthase subunit or two xyloglucan xylosyltransferase isoforms. Our results support a model in which cellulose is deposited transversely to accommodate longitudinal cell expansion and reoriented during expansion to generate a cell wall that is fortified against strain from any direction.The walls of growing plant cells must fulfill two simultaneous and seemingly contradictory requirements. First, they must expand to accommodate cell growth, which is anisotropic in many tissues and determines organ morphology. Second, they must maintain their structural integrity, both to constrain the turgor pressure that drives cell growth and to provide structural rigidity to the plant. These requirements are met by constructing primary cell walls that can expand along with growing cells, whereas secondary cell walls are deposited after cell growth has ceased and serve the latter function.One of the major constituents of both types of cell walls is cellulose, which exists as microfibrils composed of parallel β-1,4-linked glucan chains that are held together laterally by hydrogen bonds (Somerville, 2006). Microfibrils are 2 to 5 nm in diameter, can extend to several micrometers in length, and exhibit high tensile strength that allows cell walls to withstand turgor pressures of up to 1 MPa (Franks, 2003). In vascular plants, cellulose is synthesized by a multimeric cellulose synthase (CESA) complex composed of at least three types of glycosyl transferases arranged into a hexameric rosette (Somerville, 2006). After delivery to the plasma membrane, CESA initially moves in alignment with cortical microtubules (Paredez et al., 2006), but its trajectory can be maintained independently of microtubule orientation. For example, in older epidermal cells of the root elongation zone in Arabidopsis (Arabidopsis thaliana), cellulose microfibrils at the inner wall face are oriented transversely despite the fact that microtubules reorient from transverse to longitudinal along the elongation zone (Sugimoto et al., 2000), suggesting that microtubule orientation and cellulose deposition are independent in at least some cases.Depending on species, cell type, and developmental stage, cellulose microfibrils may be surrounded by additional networks of polymers, including hemicelluloses, pectins, lignin, and arabinogalactan proteins (Somerville et al., 2004). Hemicelluloses are composed of β-1,4-linked carbohydrate backbones with side branches and include xyloglucans, mannans, and arabinoxylans. Xyloglucan is thought to interact with the surface of cellulose and form cross-links between adjacent microfibrils (Vissenberg et al., 2005). In some cell types, pectin or lignin may also participate in cross-linking or entrapment of other cell wall polymers. It is unclear how the associations between networks of different cell wall components are relaxed to allow for cell wall expansion during growth.Several models have been proposed for the behavior of cell wall components during wall expansion. The passive reorientation hypothesis (also called the multinet growth hypothesis; Preston, 1982) postulates that in longitudinally expanding cells, cellulose microfibrils are synthesized in a transverse pattern and are then reoriented toward the longitudinal axis due to the strain generated by turgor pressure (Green, 1960). This phenomenon has been observed in the multicellular alga Nitella (Taiz, 1984). In higher plants, there is less direct evidence for passive reorientation, and another hypothesis holds that wall expansion involves active, local, and controlled remodeling of cellulose microfibrils along a diversity of orientations (Baskin, 2005). Such remodeling could be achieved by proteins such as xyloglucan endotransglycosylases (XETs), which break and rejoin xyloglucan chains, and expansins, which loosen cell walls in vitro in a pH-dependent manner (Cosgrove, 2005). Marga et al. measured cellulose microfibril orientation at the innermost layer of the cell wall before and after in vitro extension and did not observe reorientation (Marga et al., 2005). This suggests that processes other than microfibril reorientation might be involved in wall expansion, at least under certain circumstances or in some wall layers. Thus, the degree to which cellulose microfibrils are reoriented after their synthesis during wall expansion has remained unclear.One difficulty in resolving this problem has been the inability to directly image cellulose microfibrils in the growing cell wall. Existing methods to assess cellulose structure and orientation in plant cell walls are limited by the low contrast of cellulose in transmission electron microscopy, the ability to image only the surface of the wall using field emission scanning electron microscopy, and the use of polarized light microscopy in combination with dyes such as Congo red to measure only the bulk orientation of cellulose microfibrils (Baskin et al., 1999; Sugimoto et al., 2000; Verbelen and Kerstens, 2000; MacKinnon et al., 2006). In addition, the sample manipulation required for the former two methods has the potential to introduce artifacts (Marga et al., 2005). Although cellulose microfibril orientation differs at the inner and outer surfaces of the cell wall (Sugimoto et al., 2000) and presumably changes over time, the dynamics of cellulose reorientation during cell wall expansion have not been observed to date.In this study, we tested fluorescent dyes for their potential to allow imaging of cellulose distribution in the walls of Arabidopsis seedlings by confocal microscopy. We used one of these dyes to characterize the distribution of cellulose in wild-type root cells and in mutants with reduced cellulose or xyloglucan. By directly observing the fine structure of cellulose over time in growing wild-type root cells, we concluded that cellulose microfibrils in these cells reorient in a transverse to longitudinal direction as predicted by the passive reorientation hypothesis.  相似文献   

16.
Apical control is the inhibition of a lateral branch growth by shoots above it (distal shoots). If the distal shoots are cut off to remove apical control, the lateral branch can grow larger and may bend upwards. Apical control starts when new lateral buds grow after passing through a period of dormancy. Buds initially break and produce leaves, then apical control is exerted and the lower (proximal) laterals stop growing. Apical control also inhibits growth of large, old branches. Gravimorphism and restricted water and nutrient transport can inhibit branch growth, but they are not primary mechanisms of apical control. Apical control may reduce branch photosynthesis. Under apical control allocation of branch-produced assimilate to the stem is relatively high, so low assimilates in the branch may limit branch growth even though hormone levels are adequate for growth. Hormones appear to be involved in apical control, but it is not known how. One role of hormones may be to maintain the strength of the stem sink for branch-produced assimilate. Upward bending of a woody branch after release from apical control requires both new wood production and production of wood cells that can generate an upward bending moment. Apical control inhibits radial growth of branches and, in some species, may regulate the production of wood with an upward bending moment.  相似文献   

17.
In response to gravitational stresses, angiosperm trees form tension wood in the upper sides of branches and leaning stems in which cellulose content is higher, microfibrils are typically aligned closely with the fibre axis and the fibres often have a thick inner gelatinous cell wall layer (G-layer). Gene expression was studied in Eucalyptus nitens branches oriented at 45 degrees using microarrays containing 4900 xylem cDNAs, and wood fibre characteristics revealed by X-ray diffraction, chemical and histochemical methods. Xylem fibres in tension wood (upper branch) had a low microfibril angle, contained few fibres with G-layers and had higher cellulose and decreased Klason lignin compared with lower branch wood. Expression of two closely related fasciclin-like arabinogalactan proteins and a beta-tubulin was inversely correlated with microfibril angle in upper and lower xylem from branches. Structural and chemical modifications throughout the secondary cell walls of fibres sufficient to resist tension forces in branches can occur in the absence of G-layer enriched fibres and some important genes involved in responses to gravitational stress in eucalypt xylem are identified.  相似文献   

18.
In situ rates of linear growth (branch extension) were measured for Acropora formosa (Dana) at depths of 5, 10, and 15 m. Estimates of radial branch growth and internal accretion were made at the shallowest and deepest sites. In addition, reciprocal transplant experiments between these two sites were conducted using branches of different lengths. The in situ results showed that individual branches at the deep site extended twice as fast, and deposited more calcium carbonate than branches at the shallow site. Branch initiation, however, was more rapid at the shallow site. Thus, if the extension of new lateral branches were included to obtain a measure of overall growth, rates were highest at the shallow site. The initial length of the transplanted branches significantly affected growth rates. Longer branches showed greater overall growth within all treatments. Branch extension rates, however, increased with initial branch length at the deep site, while tending to remain constant at the shallow site. This result is interpreted as evidence that the extension of each branch tip at the deep site was supported by translocated metabolites derived from a greater volume of zooxanthellae-bearing tissue than at the shallow site. A. formosa exhibits different growth patterns at different depths. At the deep site, extension is favoured over branch initiation. Consequently, translocation from a greater volume of tissue is presumably available to sustain the higher extension rate at each tip. At the shallow site, where extension is less rapid but branch initiation is more rapid, each tip probably receives translocate from a smaller volume of tissue. These mechanisms result in different growth forms at the two sites and are apparently adaptations to different environmental conditions. Light or water motion, or a combination of the two are proposed as probable controlling factors.  相似文献   

19.
Microtubules have long been known to play a key role in plant cell morphogenesis, but just how they fulfill this function is unclear. Transverse microtubules have been thought to constrain the movement of cellulose synthase complexes in order to generate transverse microfibrils that are essential for elongation growth. Surprisingly, some recent studies demonstrate that organized cortical microtubules are not essential for maintaining or re-establishing transversely oriented cellulose microfibrils in expanding cells. At the same time, however, there is strong evidence that microtubules are intimately associated with cellulose synthesis activity, especially during secondary wall deposition. These apparently conflicting results provide important clues as to what microtubules do at the interface between the cell and its wall. I hypothesize that cellulose microfibril length is an important parameter of wall mechanics and suggest ways in which microtubule organization may influence microfibril length. This concept is in line with current evidence that links cellulose synthesis levels and microfibril orientation. Furthermore, in light of new evidence showing that a wide variety of proteins bind to microtubules, I raise the broader question of whether a major function of plant microtubules is in modulating signaling pathways as plants respond to sensory inputs from the environment.  相似文献   

20.
Many moths use sex pheromones to find their mates in the dark. Their antennae are well developed with lateral branches to receive the pheromone efficiently. However, how these structures have evolved remains elusive, because the mechanism of development of these antennae has not been studied at a molecular level. To elucidate the developmental mechanism of this type of antenna, we observed morphogenesis, cell proliferation, cell death and antennal patterning gene expression in the branched antenna of the silk moth, Bombyx mori. Region-specific cell proliferation and almost ubiquitous apoptosis occur during early pupal stages and appear to shape the lateral branch cooperatively. Antennal patterning genes are expressed in a pattern largely conserved among insects with branchless antennae until the late 5th larval instar but most of them change their expression dramatically to a pattern prefiguring the lateral branch during metamorphosis. These findings imply that although antennal primordium is patterned by conserved mechanisms before metamorphosis, most of the antennal patterning genes are reused to form the lateral branch during metamorphosis. We propose that the acquisition of a new regulatory circuit of antennal patterning genes may have been an important event during evolution of the sensory antenna with lateral branches in the Lepidoptera.  相似文献   

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