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1.
Using a comprehensive approach, we have identified a tissue-specific β-galactosidase from flax (Linum usitatissimum L.) phloem fibers forming a gelatinous cell wall. It was found that when fibers started to develop gelatinous cell wall, β-galactosidase gene expression was enhanced.. Using the antibodies against β-galactosidase, we showed that the enzyme was located in flax phloem fibers where it was detected together with tissue-specific galactan in secreted Golgi vesicles and in gelatinous secondary cell wall. Similar β-galactosidase present in gelatinous cell wall of fibers was found in plants belonging to various taxa and produced by different meristems; these data presume the identical mechanisms of gelatinous cell wall formation and an important role of β-galactosidase. The role of this enzyme in developing the supramolecular structure of gelatinous cell wall is discussed.  相似文献   

2.
Secondary cell-wall assembly in flax phloem fibres: role of galactans   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
Gorshkova T  Morvan C 《Planta》2006,223(2):149-158
Non-lignified fibre cells (named gelatinous fibres) are present in tension wood and the stems of fibre crops (such as flax and hemp). These cells develop a very thick S2 layer within the secondary cell wall, which is characterised by (1) cellulose microfibrils largely parallel to the longitudinal axis of the cell, and (2) a high proportion of galactose-containing polymers among the non-cellulosic polysaccharides. In this review, we focus on the role of these polymers in the assembly of gelatinous fibres of flax. At the different stages of fibre development, we analyse in detail data based on sugar composition, linkages of pectic polymers, and immunolocalisation of the β-(1→4)-galactans. These data indicate that high molecular-mass gelatinous galactans accumulate in specialised Golgi-derived vesicles during fibre cell-wall thickening. They consist of RG-I-like polymers with side chains of β-(1→4)-linked galactose. Most of them are short, but there are also long chains containing up to 28 galactosyl residues. At fibre maturity, two types of cross-linked galactans are identified, a C–L structure that resembles the part of soluble galactan with long side chains and a C–S structure with short chains. Different possibilities for soluble galactan to give rise to C–L and C–S are analysed. In addition, we discuss the prospect for the soluble galactan in preventing the newly formed cellulose chains from completing immediate crystallisation. This leads to a hypothesis that firstly the secretion of soluble galactans plays a role in the axial orientation of cellulose microfibrils, and secondly the remodelling and cross-linking of pectic galactans are linked to the dehydration and the assembly of S2 layer.  相似文献   

3.
Variability in the composition of tissue-specific galactan from flax fibers   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
Tissue-specific galactan of sclerenchyma fibers, with cell walls of the gelatinous type, was examined in flax plants (Linum usitatissimum L.) of 23 various genotypes. The content and average degree of polymerization of side chains of galactan were estimated before its deposition into the cell wall. The variability of the analyzed parameters of tissue-specific galactan from flax fibers was high; within the same genotype, the scope of paratypic variability between replicates and years of research was comparable to variability between different genotypes. The average length of side chains in the studied samples ranged from 5 to 41 galactose residues. The average degrees of polymerization of galactan side chains in flax fibers was found to be discrete, which could be explained by block assemblage of the polymer in the Golgi apparatus.  相似文献   

4.
Part of matrix polymers of flax bast fibre cell wall is tightly bound to cellulose and can not be extracted by conventional methods. To analyze these polymers, the residue, remaining after cell wall treatment with chelators and alkali, was dissolved in solution of lithium chloride in N,N-dimethylacetamide. Cellulose was precipitated by water and completely degraded by cellulase, giving the possibility to separate matrix polysaccharides, which remained in polymeric form. The obtained polymers were fractionated by gel permeation chromatography and characterized by monosaccharide analysis, staining with LM5 antibody and Yariv reagent, 1H and 13C NMR. The total yield of the polysaccharides that are tightly bound to cellulose in flax fibre, was 4.6%. The major fractions (molecular mass 100–400 kDa) were composed of galactose, accompanied by two other significant monomers, GalA and Rha, with the ratio 1.1–1.4. Composition and structure of the cellulose bound galactan permit to consider it as fragment of the high-molecular mass (2000 kDa) galactan, synthesized by the developing fibres, while forming the secondary cell wall of gelatinous type.  相似文献   

5.
The review sums data indicating that, in many plant fibers, the secondary cell wall contains so-called gelatinous layers of peculiar structure along with those of common (xylan) structure. Sometimes these gelatinous layers comprise the main bulk of the cell wall. Key characteristics of gelatinous cell wall are presented and compared with those of classic xylan-type cell wall. The process of gelatinous cell wall formation is considered in detail for flax phloem fibers; several characteristic features of this process were revealed: intense rearrangement of already deposited cell-wall layers, unusual dynamics of Golgi vesicles, the occurrence of the stage-specific polysaccharide with specific properties, high activity of β-galactosidase, and the presence of substantial amount of free galactose. Similarity and differences in the gelatinous cell wall formation in the fibers of various plant species are discussed.  相似文献   

6.
The structure of arabinan and galactan domains in association with cellulose microfibrils was investigated using enzymatic and alkali degradation procedures. Sugar beet and potato cell wall residues (called 'natural' composites), rich in pectic neutral sugar side chains and cellulose, as well as 'artificial' composites, created by in vitro adsorption of arabinan and galactan side chains onto primary cell wall cellulose, were studied. These composites were sequentially treated with enzymes specific for pectic side chains and hot alkali. The degradation approach used showed that most of the arabinan and galactan side chains are in strong interaction with cellulose and are not hydrolysed by pectic side chain-degrading enzymes. It seems unlikely that isolated arabinan and galactan chains are able to tether adjacent microfibrils. However, cellulose microfibrils may be tethered by different pectic side chains belonging to the same pectic macromolecule.  相似文献   

7.
The cell wall of the marine chrysophycean alga Pleurochrysis scherfellii is composed of distinct wall fragments embedded in a gelatinous mass. The latter is a polysaccharide of pectic character which is rich in galactose and ribose. These wall fragments are identified as scales. They have been isolated and purified from the vegetative mother cell walls after zoospore formation. Their ultrastructure is described in an electron microscope study combining sectioning, freeze-etch, and negative staining techniques. The scales consist of a layer of concentrically arranged microfibrils (ribbons with cross-sections of 12 to 25 x 25 to 40 A) and underlying radial fibrils of similar dimensions. Such a network-plate is densely coated with particles which are assumed to be identical to the pectic component. The microfibrils are resistant to strong alkaline treatment and have been identified as cellulose by different methods, including sugar analysis after total hydrolysis, proton resonance spectroscopical examination (NMR spectroscopy) of the benzoylated product, and diverse histochemical tests. The formation and secretion of the scales can be followed along the maturing Golgi cisternae starting from a pronounced dilated "polymerization center" as a completely intracisternal process which ends in the exocytotic extrusion of the scales. The scales reveal the very same ultrastructure within the Golgi cisternae as they do in the cell wall. The present finding represents the first evidence on cellulose formation by the Golgi apparatus and is discussed in relation to a basic scheme for cellulose synthesis in plant cells in general.  相似文献   

8.
9.
The effects of soil drought on various stages of phloem fiber development during the period of flax (Linum usitatissimum L.) rapid growth were assessed. The formation of the secondary cell wall was shown to be most retarded. The content of a tissue-specific galactan was reduced especially sharply, and its side chains were changed. Under conditions of pronounced stress-induced plant growth retardation, fiber intrusive growth was suppressed relatively softly: their number on the stem transverse sections was reduced only by 16%. However, this determined irreversible diversity in the fiber length in various stem regions. Such insignificant suppression of intrusive growth under osmotic stress (simultaneously with substantial retardation of plant growth and metabolism inhibition) indicates the functioning of special mechanisms of its regulation.  相似文献   

10.
对含笑花药发育中的超微结构变化进行观察,结果显示:(1)花粉发育中有三次液泡变化过程——第一次是小孢子母细胞在形成时内部出现了液泡,这可能与胼胝质壁的形成有关;第二次是在小孢子母细胞减数分裂之前,细胞内壁纤维素降解区域形成液泡,它的功能可能是消化原有的纤维素细胞壁;第三次是在小孢子液泡化时期,形成的大液泡将细胞核挤到边缘,产生极性。(2)含笑花粉在小孢子早期形成花粉外壁外层,花粉外壁内层在小孢子晚期形成,而花粉内壁是在二胞花粉早期形成;花粉成熟时,表面上沉积了绒毡层细胞的降解物而形成了花粉覆盖物。研究认为,含笑花粉原外壁的形成可能与母细胞胼胝质壁有关,而由绒毡层细胞提供的孢粉素物质按一定结构建成了花粉覆盖物。  相似文献   

11.
Summary The columnar cells in regions 3 and 4 of the ductus epididymidis in rabbits display ultrastructural features characteristic of absorbing cells. The stereocilia show basal anastomoses and often a fibrillar core continuous with a fibrillar web in the apical cytoplasm. Numerous invaginations of the slightly downy apical cell membrane and many thick-walled apical vesicles and vacuoles contain an opaque substance similar to that seen in the lumen. The vacuoles often contain small vesicles or bodies, probably formed from the vacuolar wall by budding. Numerous bodies or vacuoles with moderately dense contents are seen in the Golgi area and in the supranuclear and intranuclear cytoplasm in region 3. In region 4 they are denser and mainly seen above the nucleus. A high acid phosphatase activity was demonstrated in most dense and some light bodies. India ink introduced by way of the rete testis was taken up from the lumen into apical invaginations, vesicles and vacuoles and slowly transferred to denser bodies below the Golgi apparatus.These observations are interpreted as evidence for a resorption of substances from the lumen by a pinocytotic process, and for their storage and perhaps digestion in the dense bodies, which appear to have a lysosomal character. The Golgi apparatus is large with many vesicles of two types and empty cisternae but few typical Golgi vacuoles. The partly granular endoplasmic reticulum is very well developed and has opaque contents. Microtubules run from the terminal bar region into the Golgi area. Thick-walled vesicles occur throughout the cytoplasm, sometimes in continuity with the cell membrane. The basal parts of the cell borders often interdigitate.Supported by a grant from the Swedish State Medical Research Council.  相似文献   

12.
Dr. E. G. Jordan 《Protoplasma》1970,69(3-4):405-416
Summary Filaments ofSpirogyra were fixed in 2% osmium tetroxide dehydrated in alcohol and embedded in Araldite. The fine structure of cells with regard to wall synthesis was studied. The cell wall was shown to have four layers. The inner one contains microfibrils and is considered to be the cell wall proper. The outer three layers are components of the slime layer. The innermost of these, the second layer of the wall, was shown to be between 1m to 3m and the third 0.3m to 1m. The fourth layer appears as no more than a dark black line measuring 10 nm across. In the cytoplasm two types of vesicles were seen. The largest of these has contents similar in appearance to the slime layer of the wall. This same material was also seen in the large vesicles attached to the Golgi bodies. It is suggested that the smaller vesicles are derived from the larger vesicles and later fuse with the cell membrane. The Golgi bodies were found to be fairly large measuring up to 5m across. Small electron opaque blobs and flecks on the outside of the plasmalemma and in between the microfibrils of the cell wall proper are considered to be mucilage droplets travelling to the slime layer. It cannot be excluded that some of the material of the large vesicles is released directly into the cytoplasm and is transferred without vesicles through the plasma membrane. The negative contrast appearance of the microfibrils seen in the cell wall is thought to be due to the spaces between them being filled with this electron opaque mucilage.Intercisternal rodlets measuring 2.5 nm across were seen in the Golgi bodies.Transverse microtubules were found to occur near the plasmalemma having the same orientation as some of the microfibrils.Lomasome-like structures sometimes with many 5 nm fibrils in their vicinity were seen.  相似文献   

13.
Several different stages of the development of unilocular zoidocysts of small brown algae—Elachista fucicola, Hecatonema streblonematoides, Pylaiella littoralis—are observed by electron microscopy. 1. A slow growing phase is seen, during which nuclei and pheoplasts become associated by pairs and divide together, vacuoles and physodes are excreted through the plasmalemma, and Golgi bodies liberate vesicles with fibrillar material identical to the growing cell wall fibers. Mitochondria and Golgi bodies are concentrated under the very sinuous plasmalemma. 2. A very short spatial reorganization phase follows, during which organelles disperse between the nuclei-pheoplast pairs, cleavage vesicles appear, and flagella start developing. New pyrenoids form de novo. 3. The latter phase is followed by a longer maturation phase. Cleavage vesicles fuse and separate zoids grow as flagella. Mastigonemes formed in the endoplasmic reticulum are finally found in vesicles of a special Golgi body at the base of the anterior flagellum. They are liberated in parallel rows at the base of the already developed flagella by these Golgi's vesicles, and attach, on the flagella by an unknown process. Excretion of a mucilaginous substance takes place as the stigmas form de novo. 4. The ripe, swollen zoidocysts burst open, liberating the whole gelatinous mass. Naked zoids swim and settle on a substrate, retracting their flagella before excreting a new cell wall.  相似文献   

14.
Pectins of varying structures were tested for their ability to interact with cellulose in comparison to the well-known adsorption of xyloglucan. Our results reveal that sugar beet (Beta vulgaris) and potato (Solanum tuberosum) pectins, which are rich in neutral sugar side chains, can bind in vitro to cellulose. The extent of binding varies with respect to the nature and structure of the side chains. Additionally, branched arabinans (Br-Arabinans) or debranched arabinans (Deb-Arabinans; isolated from sugar beet) and galactans (isolated from potato) were shown bind to cellulose microfibrils. The adsorption of Br-Arabinan and galactan was lower than that of Deb-Arabinan. The maximum adsorption affinity of Deb-Arabinan to cellulose was comparable to that of xyloglucan. The study of sugar beet and potato alkali-treated cell walls supports the hypothesis of pectin-cellulose interaction. Natural composites enriched in arabinans or galactans and cellulose were recovered. The binding of pectins to cellulose microfibrils may be of considerable significance in the modeling of primary cell walls of plants as well as in the process of cell wall assembly.  相似文献   

15.
Summary Young stems ofCitrus plants were infected with the fungusPhytophthora citrophthora. The effect of the infection on gum duct development was studied. The following sequence of structural changes was observed in the cambial zone: 1. The middle lamellae between layers of xylem mother cells dissolve forming duct cavities. 2. The cells around the duct cavities differentiate into epithelial cells rich in cytoplasm. 3. The amount of Golgi bodies and associated vesicles increases. The vesicles and small vacuoles, some of which seem to originate from the fusion of Golgi vesicles, contain fibrillar material that stains for polysaccharides. Vesicles and vacuoles appear to fuse with the plasmalemma. Material staining positively for polysaccharides accumulates between the plasmalemma and cell wall, and penetrates the latter. 4. The protoplast shrinks and the space below the cell wall, which contains polysaccharides, increases in volume. 5. After a period of 10 days or more the gum ducts become embedded in the xylem, and the activity of the epithelial cells ceases. The cell walls of many of them break, and the gum still present in the cells is released.  相似文献   

16.
Contractile cell walls are found in various plant organs and tissues such as tendrils, contractile roots, and tension wood. The tension-generating mechanism is not known but is thought to involve special cell wall architecture. We previously postulated that tension could result from the entrapment of certain matrix polymers within cellulose microfibrils. As reported here, this hypothesis was corroborated by sequential extraction and analysis of cell wall polymers that are retained by cellulose microfibrils in tension wood and normal wood of hybrid aspen (Populus tremula × Populus tremuloides). β-(1→4)-Galactan and type II arabinogalactan were the main large matrix polymers retained by cellulose microfibrils that were specifically found in tension wood. Xyloglucan was detected mostly in oligomeric form in the alkali-labile fraction and was enriched in tension wood. β-(1→4)-Galactan and rhamnogalacturonan I backbone epitopes were localized in the gelatinous cell wall layer. Type II arabinogalactans retained by cellulose microfibrils had a higher content of (methyl)glucuronic acid and galactose in tension wood than in normal wood. Thus, β-(1→4)-galactan and a specialized form of type II arabinogalactan are trapped by cellulose microfibrils specifically in tension wood and, thus, are the main candidate polymers for the generation of tensional stresses by the entrapment mechanism. We also found high β-galactosidase activity accompanying tension wood differentiation and propose a testable hypothesis that such activity might regulate galactan entrapment and, thus, mechanical properties of cell walls in tension wood.Contractile cell walls found in plant organs and tissues such as tendrils, contractile roots, and tension wood (TW) have remarkable functions and properties. Their traits have been most intensely studied in TW of hardwoods, where they provide negative gravitropic response capacities to stems with secondary growth, as recently reviewed by Mellerowicz and Gorshkova (2012). These properties are conferred by TW fibers, which in many species contain a so-called gelatinous cell wall layer (G-layer; Norberg and Meier, 1966; Clair et al., 2008). G-layers are formed following the deposition of xylan-type secondary cell wall layer(s) and, thus, can be considered tertiary layers (Wardrop and Dadswell, 1948). They are almost or completely devoid of xylan and lignin and have very high cellulose contents (up to 85%). However, several other polymers appear to be present in TW G-layers, according to recent chemical analyses of isolated G-layers (Nishikubo et al., 2007; Kaku et al., 2009) and immunohistochemical labeling of TW sections (Arend, 2008; Bowling and Vaughn, 2008). Notably, xyloglucan (XG) has been found in G-layers of poplar (Populus spp.) TW (Nishikubo et al., 2007) and at the boundary between secondary cell wall layers (S-layers) and G-layers (Baba et al., 2009; Sandquist et al., 2010). It is also important for tension creation (Baba et al., 2009). However, it is not detectable in mature G-layers by monoclonal antibodies or XG-binding modules (Nishikubo et al., 2007; Baba et al., 2009; Sandquist et al., 2010).Structurally similar G-layers have been also identified in phloem fibers in many fibrous crops, such as flax (Linum usitatissimum), hemp (Cannabis sativa), and ramie (Boehmeria nivea; Gorshkova et al., 2012). These fibers occur in bundles that can be isolated for biochemical analysis. G-layers in fibers from diverse sources have a very similar structure, being largely composed of cellulose (with axial microfibril orientation, high degrees of crystallinity, and large crystallite sizes) lacking xylan and lignin (Mellerowicz et al., 2001; Pilate et al., 2004; Gorshkova et al., 2010, 2012) and having high water contents (Schreiber et al., 2010). In phloem fibers, the G-layers become very prominent, reaching thicknesses up to 15 µm and occupying over 90% of the cell wall’s total cross-sectional areas (Crônier et al., 2005). Pectic β-(1→4)-galactan with complex structures has been shown to be the major matrix polysaccharide of isolated phloem fibers in flax (Gorshkova et al., 2004; Gorshkova and Morvan, 2006; Gurjanov et al., 2007). Some of it is so strongly retained within cellulose that it cannot be extracted by concentrated alkali and can only be obtained after cellulose dissolution (Gurjanov et al., 2008). Such galactan, therefore, is a prime candidate for a polymer entrapped by cellulose microfibrils during crystallization that could substantially contribute to the contractile properties of cellulose in G-layers, according to recently formulated models (Mellerowicz et al., 2008; Mellerowicz and Gorshkova 2012). Furthermore, Roach et al. (2011) have shown that trimming of β-(1→4)-galactan by β-galactosidase is important for final cellulose crystallization, the formation of G-layer structure, and, hence, the stem’s mechanical properties.There is also immunocytochemical evidence for the presence of β-(1→4)-galactan and type II arabinogalactan (AG-II) in G-layers of TW fibers (Arend, 2008; Bowling and Vaughn, 2008). In addition, high-Mr branched galactans have been isolated from TW of Fagus sylvestris (Meier, 1962) and Fagus grandifolia (Kuo and Timell, 1969), with estimated degrees of polymerization (DP) of approximately 300 and complex structure, probably including both β-(1→4) and β-(1→6) linkages, although their exact nature remains unknown. Furthermore, Gal has been identified as one of the major sugars after Glc and Xyl in hydrolysates of isolated Populus spp. G-layers (Furuya et al., 1970; Nishikubo et al., 2007), and the Gal content of cell walls is a proposed indicator of the extent of TW development in beech (Fagus spp.; Ruel and Barnoud, 1978). However, subsequent linkage analyses identified only 2- and 3,6-linked Gal in poplar TW G-layers (Nishikubo et al., 2007), while in flax fibers, 4-linked Gal is the main component (Gorshkova et al., 1996, 2004; Gurjanov et al., 2007, 2008). Thus, the type(s) of galactans present in poplar TW remains unclear, and the galactans have not been shown previously either to have a rhamnogalacturonan-I (RG-I) backbone or to be strongly retained by cellulose microfibrils, as demonstrated for flax gelatinous fibers.To improve our understanding of cell wall properties in TW and their contraction mechanism, in the study presented here, we tested aspects of the recently proposed entrapment model (Mellerowicz et al., 2008; Mellerowicz and Gorshkova, 2012). According to this model, contraction is driven by the formation of larger cellulose structures, sometimes called macrofibrils, via interactions of cellulose microfibrils in the G-layer with each other and forming inclusions containing matrix polymers. This would induce tension within cellulose through the stretching of microfibrils required to surround the inclusions. The model is compatible with available data on the structure and action of gelatinous walls, but the main assumption, that polymers are trapped inside crystalline cellulose, such as that found in flax, has not been tested previously. Therefore, we compared matrix polymers retained by cellulose microfibrils in normal wood (NW) and TW of the model hardwood species hybrid aspen (Populus tremula × Populus tremuloides) that forms TW with gelatinous fibers. For this purpose, we used a combination of sequential cell wall extractions, similar to those used previously to characterize flax gelatinous fibers (Gurjanov et al., 2008), followed by fractionation of polymers by size-exclusion chromatography, immunological analyses, and oligosaccharide profiling by polysaccharide analysis using carbohydrate gel electrophoresis (PACE). The results reveal the main polymers of cellulose-retained fractions and key differences between NW and TW. Comparison of our results and previous findings also indicates that there are both similarities and differences in the constitution of gelatinous fibers in aspen and flax. An updated model of the contractile G-layer of TW fibers based on the data is presented.  相似文献   

17.
Vegetative myxamoebae of Acytostelium leptosomum, a cellular slime mold, have the appearance of typical eucaryotic cells. The presence of dictyosomes has been established. Elongation of the cells during aggregation and culmination appears to be mediated by dense bundles of microfibrils traversing the cells longitudinally. Microtubules are present; however, they are randomly oriented and no correlation can be made with cell elongation or with the direction of the cellulose microfibrils within the stalk. A variety of vesicles, multivesicular bodies, and lysosome-like vacuoles seems to be involved in producing and transporting stalk material to the vicinity of the stalk. However, only rarely do the vesicles empty their contents directly to the outside of the cells. It seems rather that the fibrillar material of the stalk is assembled near or directly at the plasmalemma, and can then be seen to stream away and become an integral part of the stalk. An unusual structure, the H-body, is formed in great abundance during culmination indicating its possible involvement in stalk synthesis. The H-bodies are removed from the cells prior to spore formation together with other portions of the cytoplasm at least partly by a process involving autophagic vacuoles. These vacuoles, which are also present in the spores, appear to be part of a rather complex and extensive vacuolar apparatus including the food vacuoles, contractile vacuoles, lysosome-like structures, and possibly the H-bodies. The spore coat consists of a heavy outer wall with a fibrillar substructure and two thin, dense bands lining the inside of the plasmalemma. The fibrillar nature of both the outer spore wall and the stalk was accentuated by using barium permanganate to stain sectioned material.  相似文献   

18.
Gabara  Barbara 《Protoplasma》1975,86(1-3):159-168
Summary It was shown that Golgi structures abundantly appearing in tapetal cells ofDelphinium Ajacis L. developing anthers, prior to meiocytes meiosis, show a fine fibrous material within their vesicles. At the time of the formation of tapetal cell wall this fibrous component, released by an exocytotic process, is incorporated into the cell wall. The membrane of dictyosomes derived vesicles participates in the development of plasma membrane. Fibrous material appears to be morphologically similar to the fibrils of tapetal cell wall; this cell wall gives a positive reaction for cellulose and pectins, as visible in the light microscope. Moreover, the fibrous and pectinase resistant compound of dictyosomes derived vesicles and the fibrils of cell wall disappear partly after cellulase digestion which proves their cellulosic character. On the other hand pectinase treatment as well as ruthenium red staining suggest associated with cellulose pectins within Golgi vesicles.  相似文献   

19.
Summary Two different types of Golgi vesicles involved in wall formation can be visualized during lobe growth inMicrasterias when using high-pressure freeze fixation followed by freeze substitution. One type that corresponds to the dark vesicles (DV) described in literature seems to arise by a developmental process occurring at the Golgi bodies with the single vesicles being forwarded from one cisterna to the next. The other vesicle type appears to be produced at thetrans Golgi network without any visible precursors at the Golgi cisternae. A third type of vesicle, produced by median andtrans cisternae, contains slime; these are considerably larger than those previously mentioned and they do not participate in wall formation. The distribution of the two types of cell wall vesicles at the cell periphery and their fusion with the plasma membrane are shown for the first time, since chemical fixation is too slow to preserve a sufficient number of vesicles in the cortical cytoplasm. The results indicate that fusions of both types of vesicles with the plasma membrane are possible all over the entire surface of the growing half cell. However, the DVs are much more concentrated at the growing lobes, where they form queues several vesicles deep behind zones on the plasma membrane thought to be specific fusion sites. The structural observations reveal that the regions of enhanced vesicle fusion correspond in general to the sites of calcium accumulation determined in earlier studies. By virtue of the absence of the DVs in the region of cell wall indentations the second type of wall forming vesicle appears prominent; they too fuse with the plasma membrane and discharge their contents to the wall.  相似文献   

20.
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   

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