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1.
Our recent study of tetrad pollen formation in Annona (Annonaceae) revealed that after meiosis the callose-cellulose envelope forms a special conjugation with individual microspores and the forthcoming callose digestion is incomplete. The undigested part forms a central binder holding the four microspores of the tetrad together. This process causes the microspores to rotate 180 degrees. In this paper we describe pollen formation in another annonaceous genus, Cymbopetalum, in which the pollen is shed in octads, through use of light microscopy, epifluorescence microscopy, and TEM. In Cymbopetalum, two meiocytes, connected by abundant cytomictic channels, are produced in each sporangium. Octad pollen formation in Cymbopetalum is shown to be comparable to the synchronized formation of two connected Annona tetrads, which then integrate into a single octad. Unique features of Annona polyad formation, e.g. special binding between the callose-cellulose envelopes and microspores, incomplete callose digestion, and microspore rotation, also occur in Cymbopetalum. In addition, formation of the Cymbopetalum octad involves development of a cushion-like structure that binds the distal pronexine of all eight microspores, and there is the production of intine protrusions. The evolutionary origin of the callose-cellulose binding mechanism within the family is discussed.  相似文献   

2.
We show a sequence of developmental events in microspores and tapetal cells in Nymphaea colorata based upon transmission and scanning electron microscopic observations. There are parallel cytoplasmic processes and surface coatings in microspores and tapetal cells. Uptake is indicated by the passage of lanthanum as a tracer from anther locule into the microspore cytoplasm and by the condition of the cytoplasmic surface of microspores. The callose envelope is not a barrier to transfer of lanthanum. During formation of the proexine glycocalyx tiny spiral elements, components of the exine substructural units, were oriented in different directions in the surface coating of microspores and tapetum. Lipoidal globules are associated with the spiral elements. After the uniform proexine stage, three regions of different exine structure and their gradations become differentiated in the sporoderm: 1) a proximal region with thick tectum and foot layer, thin columellae and a compact layer of lamellated endexine; 2) a distal pole region with separately disposed endexine lamellae; and 3) an equatorial encircling-sulcate aperture region which consists of infratectal layer, foot layer, and endexine lamellae. Based upon the presence of structurally comparable surface coats in microspores and tapetal cells, experimental uptake of lanthanum nitrate, and the co-ordinated processes in tapetum and microspores, we conclude that there is probably a reciprocal controlling influence between the microspores and the tapetum and other sporophytic tissues.  相似文献   

3.
The developmental events in microspore envelope and cytoplasm and in tapetum from premeiosis until late tetrad stage were studied in Nymphaea capensis. The exceptional feature of microspore development in this species is that post-meiosis cytokinesis is retarded until the late tetrad stage. Thus, the entire development of the exine becomes completed during the tetrad stage. As a consequence of the retarded cytokinesis, the proximal portion of the forming exine lags behind the distal one during the major part of the tetrad period, but eventually the proximal part of the exine overtakes the distal part in development. The significance of this retardation is discussed. This sequence of events differs sharply from corresponding sporoderm development in other Nymphaea species. Another important topic is the microspore surface activities during exine development. The surface coatings-glycocalyx-are very similar in microspores and in tapetum cells, but their functions are completely different; the roots for this difference are discussed. A noteworthy feature of the developing microspores is the presence of gigantic, deeply cup-like mitochondria; this property is also characteristic of the microspore cytoplasm of N colorata and N. mexicana. A functional significance of these organelles and their adaptive role is discussed.  相似文献   

4.
Ultrastructural changes during omniaperturate pollen development in Trillium kamtschaticum Pall, was examined using transmission electron microscopy. The pollen mother cells are not enveloped within a thick callosic wall. The microspores resulting from successive meiosis are divided by scanty deposition of callosic wall in the tetrad. A primexine/exine template is not recognizable within the tetrad during formation of exinous components. Preexinous globules, originating from vesicles in the callosic wall, accumulate electron-dense materials and develop into exinous globules. The preexinous globules have ca 10 nm wide contacts with tilted and invaginated plasma membrane of the microspore within the callosic wall. After dissolution of the callosic wall, the microspores separate and mitosis subsequently leads to the formation of a generative cell and vegetative cell encased in a loose aggregation of developing exinous globules. When the generative cell is at the pollen grain surface, the channeled zone is initiated at the opposite side of the microspore on the surface of the vegetative cell. Just before pollen maturity, a new layer develops under the channeled zone. Thus, development of the omniaperturate pollen grains of T. kamtschaticum involves some processes that are distinct from those of Canna and Heliconia and some that are similar.  相似文献   

5.
The quartet (qrt) mutants of Arabidopsis thaliana produce tetrad pollen in which microspores fail to separate during pollen development. Because the amount of callose deposition between microspores is correlated with tetrad pollen formation in other species, and because pectin is implicated as playing a role in cell adhesion, these cell-wall components in wild-type and mutant anthers were visualized by immunofluorescence microscopy at different stages of microsporogenesis. In wild-type, callose was detected around the pollen mother cell at the onset of meiosis and around the microspores during the tetrad stage. Microspores were released into the anther locule at the stage where callose was no longer detected. Deposition and degradation of callose during tetrad pollen formation in qrt1 and qrt2 mutants were indistinguishable from those in wild-type. Enzymatic removal of callose from wild-type microspores at the tetrad stage did not release the microspores, suggesting that callose removal is not sufficient to disperse the microspores in wild-type. Pectic components were detected in the primary wall of the pollen mother cell. This wall surrounded the callosic wall around the pollen mother cell and the microspores during the tetrad stage. In wild-type, pectic components of this wall were no longer detectable at the time of microspore release. However, in qrt1 and qrt2 mutants, pectic components of this wall persisted after callose degradation. This result suggests that failure of pectin degradation in the pollen mother cell wall is associated with tetrad pollen formation in qrt mutants, and indicates that QRT1 and QRT2 may be required for cell type-specific pectin degradation to separate microspores.  相似文献   

6.
The histochemistry of different developmental stages of the pollen wall, aperture, and Ubisch bodies of Triticum aestivum is examined with light and transmission electron microscopy. Various parts of the callosic envelope of the tetrad spores stain differentially. At the late tetrad stage, the probacules and the coat of pro-Ubisch bodies are densely stained for acidic polysaccharides, protein, and neutral polysaccharides. The protectum and the core of pro-Ubisch bodies are moderately stained. Upon release of microspores from the callosic cell envelope, the stainability for acidic polysaccharides increases in the exine and in the wall of Ubisch bodies, becoming very intense in the wall of mature pollen grains and Ubisch bodies. The stainability for neutral polysaccharides is decreased in the mature pollen wall and in the Ubisch bodies, while the stainability for protein increases. The results also indicate the probability of the presence of unsaturated lipids and the absence of free aldehydes in the pollen wall and Ubisch bodies.  相似文献   

7.
During the tetrad period spinules form on the Canna L. plasma membrane at intervals of 1–2 μm on a microspore surface of ca. 100 μm2. The isolated spinules represent all that there is of a primexine-like nature. Immediately following loss of the callosic tetrad envelope a channeled, oncus-like zone forms on the plasma membrane over the entire microspore surface, elevating the spinules. The oncus-like zone becomes ca. 4 μm thick by microspore mitosis. Intine introduction during the pollen grain period coincides with substantial thinning of the oncus-like zone and pollen grain enlargement. In the final phases of maturation grains increase further in diameter and become packed with starch and lipoidal material. The oncus-like zone more than doubles in height necessitating a migration of the boundary of the oncus-like zone and intine. At pollen grain maturity the thin (ca. 200 nm) surface layer of the oncus-like zone appears to be compacted or filled in.  相似文献   

8.
The proexine that forms within the callosic envelope before the end of the microspore tetrad period is thick (about 1 μm) and exceptionally complex. It has components equatable with tectum, columellae, and a nexine that includes lamellar zones. All these components persist in the exine although late in development they become difficult to recognize because this exine is reduced in thickness, apparently by stretching, to a maximum of 0.2 μm. Strelitzia is an example of an exine template, with receptors for sporopollenin, that is not maintained during development. The Strelitzia microspore surface changes from an exine like that on an interaperture sector to the channeled intinelike system common for the apertures of pollen grains. The exine on sterile grains gives what may be a rare view of a stabilized immature exine. The mature exine on viable pollen grains resembles this early exine only in the most impressionistic way. Tapetal cells go through at least one cycle of hyperactivity, dedifferentiation, mitosis, and then again hyperactivity before they finally decline.  相似文献   

9.
The pre-meiotic, meiotic and tetrad stages of development in microsporangia of Alsophila setosa were studied with particular emphasis on the early establishment of patterning in the microspore wall and the subsequent development of the sporoderm. The data obtained were compared with corresponding ontogenetic stages of Psilotum nudum. Tapetal behaviour was also examined. During the tetrad period, only one layer, a thin undulating sheet, appeared alongside the plasma membrane of the tetraspores, and this was evidently formed on a pre-patterned structure – a fibrillar layer, corresponding to a kind of primexine matrix. The early free microspores had a wavy plasma membrane with a parallel, sinusoidal, thin initial sporoderm layer. The proximal apertural fold was observed to be an extended outgrowth of this initial spore envelope. Sporoderm ontogeny during the tetrad period in Alsophila and Psilotum show some common points, but also fundamental differences, mainly in the relative timing of events: in Alsophila the end of the tetrad period is the starting point for exospore development, whereas in Psilotum the exospore is already complete at this stage. Considerable differences were also observed in the tapetum of the two species.  相似文献   

10.
Exine development in pollen of Caesalpinia japonica was studied using high resolution scanning electron microscopy, with attention to the initial developmental process of protectum formation and composition. The protectum is originated on the protuberant sites of the invaginated plasma membrane during the early tetrad stage. The present study shows that the initial protectum is composed of irregularly oriented fibrous threads. The fibrous threads accumulate and form a network on the plasma membrane. Granules 10–20 nm in diameter gradually aggregate within the network of fibrous threads during the tetrad stage. Subsequently the fibrous threads are almost masked by the granules. The developing protectum has a coarse texture within the callosic tetrad envelope. At the free microspore stage the granular protectum becomes homogeneous. The present study suggests that the protectum consists of an association of fibrous threads and granules. The fibrous threads may function as receptors and/or the skeleton of the developing exine.  相似文献   

11.
. LP28, a pollen-specific LEA-like protein identified in Lilium longiflorum purportedly related to the desiccation tolerance of pollen, was localized during male gametogenesis using immuno-electron microscopy. At premeiotic interphase, LP28 label is absent from the microsporocyte. LP28 label was first detected in the cell wall of the microsporocyte at meiotic prophase I. LP28 gradually increased as the cell wall thickened. In the dyad, after the first meiotic division, LP28 label also appeared in the septum. In the tetrad, after the second meiotic division, LP28 was detected throughout the cell wall, including the septa. Immunolabeling of callose during meiosis indicated that the appearance and localization of LP28 was very similar to that of callose. After the microspores were released from the tetrad by digesting the callosic cell wall, LP28 was not found in the microspores. In bicellular pollen, just after microspore mitosis, LP28 appeared in the generative cell wall, which also consisted of callose. After pollen germination, LP28 also accumulated in the callosic layer of the elongated pollen tube wall and the callose plug. Thus, LP28 colocalized with the callosic cell wall during male gametogenesis. The possible role of LP28 with respect to wall formation during meiosis and pollen development is discussed.  相似文献   

12.
Development of the exine and viscin threads in Oenothera was studied by a combination of transmission electron microscopy and field emission scanning electron microscopy. Exine formation is initiated in the early tetrad stage by plate-like structures of preexine formed evenly around the microspore within a callosic wall. In the late tetrad stage, an endexine accumulates on white-lined lamellae underneath the preexine. After dissolution of the callosic wall, the preexine develops into beaded ektexine which is differentiated into an undulate tectum-like layer and columellae-like components. Interwoven fibrous strings connect the developing ektexine and the surface of the tapetal cells, and later develop into the viscin threads. These developmental processes imply that the columellae-like components are different in structure from the columellae of other angiosperms and that the formation of viscin threads is associated with the tapetal cells.  相似文献   

13.
Pollen development in Hibiscus syriacus L. (Malvaceae) was studied with light (LM), scanning (SEM) and transmission (TEM) electron microscopes, with special attention to the formation of extremely long spines of the pollen grains. At the early tetrad stage, probacules are initiated directly on the plasma membrane and grow in coincidence with the height of primexine matrix within a callosic wall. Subsequently, a pretectum appears at the top of the probacules and then a foot layer is formed by accumulation of white line centered lamellations. Before dissolution of the callosic wall, a reticulate patterned pretectum is established around the microspores. There is not, however, any morphological indication on the initiation of the spines during the tetrad period within a callosic wall. It is after dissolution of the callosic wall that the spines of exine begin to form by the apposition of lamellated sheets. The lamellated sheets show a concentric configuration around the developing supratectal spines. The mature pollen grain is spheroidal, polycolporate, 160–170 μm in diameter, with supratectal spines 20–25 μm long. The supratectal spines of Hibiscus pollen are not homologous with the other exinous protrusions which are determined within the callosic wall during tetrad stage.  相似文献   

14.
A male-sterile mutant of Arabidopsis thaliana was isolated by T-DNA tagging screening. Using transmission electron microscopy analysis, we revealed that the microspores of this mutant did not have normal thick primexine on the microspore at the tetrad stage. Instead, a moderately electron-dense layer formed around the microspores. Although microspores without normal primexine failed to form a proper reticulate exine pattern at later stages, sporopollenin was deposited and an exine-like hackly structure was observed on the microspores during the microspore stage. Thus, this mutant was named hackly microspore (hkm). It is speculated that the moderately electron-dense layer was primexine, which partially played its role in sporopollenin deposition onto the microspore. Cytological analysis revealed that the tapetum of the hkm mutant was significantly vacuolated, and that vacuolated tapetal cells crushed the microspores, resulting in the absence of pollen grains within the anther at anthesis. Single nucleotide polymorphism analysis demonstrated that the hkm mutation exists within the MS1 gene, which has been reportedly expressed within the tapetum. Our results suggest that the critical process of primexine formation is under sporophytic control .  相似文献   

15.
Masamichi Takahashi 《Grana》2013,52(6):309-312
The exine development in Illicium was investigated using transmission electron and field emission scanning electron microscopy. The protectum and procolumellae appear on protruding sites of the microspore cytoplasm in the early tetrad stage. The protectum takes the form of a reticulate pattern with perforations within the callosic wall. After dissolution of the callosic wall, the central part of muri rises to form tectal ridges. The developing tectum, shows an echinate appearance in sectional view and has perforations at both sides around each lumen. There are two kinds of columellae; those forming continuous rings around each lumen and others which are individual rods standing beneath the tectum. The present developmental study in Illicium showed that the initial simple reticulate pattern formed within the callosic wall develops into the complex reticulate exine pattern of the differentiating tectum during the free microspore stage. The tectum has an angular shape with perforations and is supported by the two kinds of columellae.  相似文献   

16.
Pollen ontogeny contributes significantly to the evolutionary analysis and the understanding of the reproductive biology of seed plants. Although much research on basal angiosperms is being carried out there are still many important features about which little is known in these taxa, such as the sporophytic structures related to pollen development and morphology. In this study, pollen development of Magnolia liliflora was analyzed by optical microscopy and transmission electron microscopy. The aim of this paper was to supply data that will help characterize basal angiosperms. Microsporogenesis is of the successive type, so that tetrads are decussate or isobilateral. The callosic walls form by the centripetal growth of furrows. The secretory tapetum develops orbicules, which start to form in the microspore tetrad stage. Pollen grains are shed at the bicellular stage. The exine wall has a granular infratectum. Ultrastructural changes observed in the cytoplasm of microspores and tapetal cells are related to the development of the pollen grain wall and orbicules. Centrifugal cell plates are more usual for the successive type of microsporogenesis. The presence of the successive type of microsporogenesis with callosic walls formed by the centripetal growth of furrows could reflect the fact that the successive type in Magnoliaceae is derived from the simultaneous type. The granular infratectum of the ectexine and the presence of orbicules could indicate that this species is one of the most evolved of the genus.  相似文献   

17.
Prior to meiosis tapetal cells become binucleate, and callose deposition separates spore mother cells from each other. No cytomictic channels are present during meiosis. Cytokinesis is simultaneous, by furrowing. The primexine and a rudimentary exine are laid down while the microspores are still in tetrads. After callose dissolution the released microspores gradually become vacuolate and the exine becomes more complex and massive. During the tetrad stage tapetal walls are gradually lost and orbicules are deposited outside the plasmalemma. This continues after microspore release. Later, at the vacuolate microspore stage, the tapetal cells become amoeboid and intrude among the microspores. Tapetal dissolution occurs just prior to the appearance of large amounts of starch and lipids in the microspores.  相似文献   

18.
Coverage is of microspore tetrad period from end of cytokinesis to introduction of endexine in Pinus sylvestris. The ectexine of aperture, cap zone and sacci and the endexine are initiated while microspores are in the tetrad condition and enveloped in callose. Ectexine patterning including considerable expansion of sacci develops prior to the initiation of the endexine. Alveoli, sacci and alveoli within sacci are initiated by cytoplasmic invaginations which are sites of uptake of cell surface coat (glycocalyx) along with nutrients bound to the glycocalyx. Applications of tracers show that glycocalyx elements bind to cations and transport them to the cytoplasm. From the beginning of exine formation these invaginations are largest in the regions of future sacci and very small in the aperture. As growth progresses cytoplasm surrounding invaginations partially retracts, but callose contact is retained. Thus, these invaginations become callose covered hemispheroids (alveoli) that are “open” to the cell surface proximally and covered by callose distally but only partially so at the sides of the “cup‐shaped” alveoli. Until introduction of the endexine part of the alveolar‐sides are made up of cytoplasmic protrusions which contact the callose protrusions, even across sacci expanded more than 3 μm. Glycocalyx elements become aligned on the inner surface of the callosic alveoli and are sites for sporopollenin accumulation. The template for endexine components consists of glycocalyx elements that become aligned near the plasma membrane. Our observations indicate that uptake from the loculus to the microspore cytoplasm changes after introduction of the endexine. Henceforth, uptake is assisted by the endexine, as shown by tracers. Tapetal cells undergo two periods of hyperactivity during the period covered. Hyperactivity took place at the beginning of uptake by microspores and during endexine formation. The extra tapetal lamellation and its tapetal markers begin to exhibit the intense staining, after endexine initiation.  相似文献   

19.
Developmental process of structure-less exine is studied in a hydrophilous plant,Ceratophyllum demersum L., with electron microscopy. The plant shows a characteristic feature in tetrad formation. A callose wall is not synthesized and exine initiation does not occur during the tetrad stage. After release of microspores, a trilaminar layer with two electron-dense lines is formed in the surface of each microspore. The trilaminar layer develops to a thin structure-less exine that is considered to consist of only an endexine. The unusual exine would be an adaptive feature for submersed pollination in fresh water.  相似文献   

20.
Guan YF  Huang XY  Zhu J  Gao JF  Zhang HX  Yang ZN 《Plant physiology》2008,147(2):852-863
During microsporogenesis, the microsporocyte (or microspore) plasma membrane plays multiple roles in pollen wall development, including callose secretion, primexine deposition, and exine pattern determination. However, plasma membrane proteins that participate in these processes are still not well known. Here, we report that a new gene, RUPTURED POLLEN GRAIN1 (RPG1), encodes a plasma membrane protein and is required for exine pattern formation of microspores in Arabidopsis (Arabidopsis thaliana). The rpg1 mutant exhibits severely reduced male fertility with an otherwise normal phenotype, which is largely due to the postmeiotic abortion of microspores. Scanning electron microscopy examination showed that exine pattern formation in the mutant is impaired, as sporopollenin is randomly deposited on the pollen surface. Transmission electron microscopy examination further revealed that the primexine formation of mutant microspores is aberrant at the tetrad stage, which leads to defective sporopollenin deposition on microspores and the locule wall. In addition, microspore rupture and cytoplasmic leakage were evident in the rpg1 mutant, which indicates impaired cell integrity of the mutant microspores. RPG1 encodes an MtN3/saliva family protein that is integral to the plasma membrane. In situ hybridization analysis revealed that RPG1 is strongly expressed in microsporocyte (or microspores) and tapetum during male meiosis. The possible role of RPG1 in microsporogenesis is discussed.  相似文献   

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