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1.
The Joenia-like lophomonad of Postelectrotermes howa is identified by light and electron microscopy as a new genus and species Pachyjoenia howa. Its flagellar area of about 1800 flagella is dome shaped. Basal bodies bear a composite root oriented counterclockwise in addition to the clockwise hook-shaped lamina present in other joeniids. There are four parallel privileged basal bodies. The main parabasal fibre is twisted around the axostyle and splits into several branches bearing Golgi bodies. The axostyle trunk is conspicuous and composed of a bundle of ∼90 small axostyles. There are sausage-shaped bacterial endosymbionts mixed with hydrogenosomes in the cytoplasm and coccoid bacterial endobionts in the nucleus. The characters of this new joeniid genus are compared with those of other joeniid genera.  相似文献   

2.
The flagellar apparatus in male gametes of the siphonaceous green alga, Bryopsis maxima Okamura, was studied and compared with that of other green biflagellate cells. The proximal portions of two basal bodies are connected by a single striated proximal band, unique among the biflagellate reproductive cells of green algae studied. Anterior to the flagellar bases is a pair of distal bands different from the single structure in other biflagellate cells. These bands which arise from the distal portion of each basal body, extend upward in the papilla and curve down toward the lower edges of the basal bodies. They seem to have no direct association with each other. Two pairs of distinct flagellar roots, one consisting of 3–5 microtubules and the other of a partially striated fiber of undetermined numbers of microtubules, diverge from the basal body region and extend towards the cell posterior. Their component microtubules are disorganized into single or smaller groups midway over the cell length. The uniqueness of the flagellar apparatus is briefly discussed.  相似文献   

3.
At the ultrastructural level, cell division in Ochromonas danica exhibits several unusual features. During interphase, the basal bodies of the 2 flagella replicate and the chloroplast divides by constriction between its 2 lobes. The rhizoplast, which is a fibrous striated root attached to the basal body of the long flagellum, extends under the Golgi body to the surface of the nucleus in interphase cells. During proprophase, the Golgi body replicates, apparently by division, and a daughter rhizoplast, appears. During prophase, the 2 pairs of flagellar basal bodies, each with their accompanying rhizoplast and Golgi body, begin to separate. Three or 4 flagella are already present at this stage. At the same time, there is a proliferation of microtubules outside the nuclear envelope. Gaps then appear in the nuclear envelope, admitting the microtubules into the nucleus, where they form a spindle. A unique feature of mitosis in O. danica is that the 2 rhizoplasts form the poles of the spindle, spindle microtubules inserting directly onto the rhizoplasts. Some of the spindle microtubules extend from pole to pole; others appear to attach to the chromosomes. Kinetochores, however, are not present. The nuclear envelope breaks down, except, in the regions adjacent, to the chloroplasts; chloroplast ER remains intact throughout mitosis. At late anaphase the chromosomes come to lie against part of the chloroplast ER. This segment of the chloroplast ER appears to be incorporated as part of the reforming nuclear envelope, thus reestablishing the characteristic nuclear envelope—chloroplast ER association of the interphase cell.  相似文献   

4.
C J O'Kelly  M A Farmer  T A Nerad 《Protist》1999,150(2):149-162
Trimastix pyriformis (Klebs 1893) Bernard et al. 1999, is a quadriflagellate, free-living, bacterivorous heterotrophic nanoflagellate from anoxic freshwaters that lacks mitochondria. Monoprotist cultures of this species contained naked trophic cells with anterior flagellar insertion and a conspicuous ventral groove. Bacteria were ingested at the posterior end of the ventral groove, but there was no persistent cytopharyngeal complex. The posterior flagellum resided in this groove, and bore two prominent vanes. A Golgi body (dictyosome) was present adjacent to the flagellar insertion. The kinetid consisted of four basal bodies, four microtubular roots, and associated fibers and bands. Duplicated kinetids, each with four basal bodies and microtubular root templates, appeared at the poles of the open mitotic spindle. Trimastix pyriformis is distinguishable from other Trimastix species on the basis of external morphology, kinetid architecture and the distribution of endomembranes. Trimastix species are most similar to jakobid flagellates, especially Malawimonas jakobiformis, and to species of the retortamonad genus Chilomastix. Retortamonads may have evolved from a Trimastix-like ancestor through loss of "canonical" (easily seen with electron microscopy) endomembrane systems and elaboration of cytoskeletal elements associated with the cytostome/cytopharynx complex.  相似文献   

5.
The biflagellate alga Chlamydomonas reinhardi was studied with the light and electron microscopes to determine the behavior of flagella in the living cell and the structure of the basal apparatus of the flagella. During normal forward swimming the flagella beat synchronously in the same plane, as in the human swimmer's breast stroke. The form of beat is like that of cilia. Occasionally cells swim backward with the flagella undulating and trailing the cell. Thus the same flagellar apparatus produces two types of motion. The central pair of fibers of both flagella appear to lie in the same plane, which coincides with the plane of beat. The two basal bodies lie in a V configuration and are joined at the top by a striated fiber and at the bottom by two smaller fibers. From the area between the basal bodies four bands of microtubules, each containing four tubules, radiate in an X-shaped pattern, diverge, and pass under the cell membrane. Details of the complex arrangement of tubules near the basal bodies are described. It seems probable that the connecting fibers and the microtubules play structural roles and thereby maintain the alignment of the flagellar apparatus. The relation of striated fibers and microtubules to cilia and flagella is reviewed, particularly in phytoflagellates and protozoa. Structures observed in the transitional region between the basal body and flagellar shaft are described and their occurrence is reviewed. Details of structure of the flagellar shaft and flagellar tip are described, and the latter is reviewed in detail.  相似文献   

6.
Summary Immunofluorescence microscopy, conventional and high voltage transmission electron microscopy were used to describe changes in the flagellar apparatus during cell division in the motile, coccolithbearing cells ofPleurochrysis carterae (Braarud and Fagerlund) Christensen. New basal bodies appear alongside the parental basal bodies before mitosis and at prophase the large microtubular (crystalline) roots disassemble as their component microtubules migrate to the future spindle poles. By prometaphase the crystalline roots have disappeared; the flagellar axonemes shorten and the two pairs of basal bodies (each consisting of one parental and one daughter basal body) separate so that each pair is distal to a spindle pole. By late prometaphase the pairs of basal bodies bear diminutive flagellar roots for the future daughter cells. The long flagellum of each daughter cell is derived from the parental basal bodies; thus, the basal body that produces a short flagellum in the parent produces a long flagellum in the daughter cell. We conclude that each basal body in these cells is inherently identical but that a first generation basal body generates a short flagellum and in succeeding generations it produces a long flagellum. At metaphase a fibrous band connecting the basal bodies appears and the roots and basal bodies reorient to their interphase configuration. By telophase the crystalline roots have begun to reform and the rootlet microtubules have assumed their interphase appearance by early cytokinesis.Abbreviations CR1, CR2 crystalline roots 1 and 2 - CT cytoplasmic tongue microtubules - DIC differential interference contrast light microscopy - H haptonema - HVEM high voltage transmission electron microscopy - IMF immunofluorescence microscopy - L left flagellum/basal body - M metaphase plate - MT microtubule - N nucleus - R right flagellum/basal body - R1, R2, R3 roots 1, 2, and 3 - TEM transmission electron microscopy  相似文献   

7.
The flagellar apparatus of Pyrobotrys has a number of features that are typical of the Chlorophyceae, but others that are unusual for this class. The two flagella are inserted at the apex, but they extend to the side of the cell toward the outside of the colony, here designated as the ventral side. Four basal bodies are present, two of which extend into flagella. Four microtubular rootlets alternate between the functional and accessory basal bodies. In each cell, the two ventral rootlets are nearly parallel, but the dorsal rootlets are more widely divergent. The rootlets alternate between two and four microtubules each. A striated distal fiber connects the two functional basal bodies in the plane of the flagella. Two additional, apparently nonstriated, fibers connect the basal bodies proximal to the distal fiber. Another striated fiber is associated with each four-membered rootlet near its insertion into the flagellar apparatus. A fine periodic component is associated with each two-membered rootlet. A rhizoplast-like structure extends into the cell from each of the functional basal bodies. The arrangement of these components does not reflect the 180° rotational symmetry that is usually present in the Chlorophyceae, but appears to be derived from a more symmetrical ancestor. It is suggested that the form of the flagellar apparatus is associated with the unusual colony structure of Pyrobotrys.  相似文献   

8.
M A Farmer  R E Triemer 《Bio Systems》1988,21(3-4):283-291
The flagellar apparatus of euglenoids consists of two functional basal bodies, three unequal microtubular roots subtending the reservoir, and a fourth band of microtubules nucleated from one of the flagellar roots and subtending the reservoir membrane. The flagellar apparatus of some euglenoids may contain additional basal bodies, striated roots ("rhizoplasts"), fibrous roots, striated connecting fibers between basal bodies, layered structures, or various electron-dense connective substances. With the possible exception of Petalomonas cantuscygni, nearly all euglenoids are biflagellate although the length of one flagellum may be highly reduced. The flagellar transition zone and number of basal bodies are highly variable among species. In recent years a cytoplasmic pocket that branches off from the reservoir has been discovered. The microtubules of the ventral flagellar root are continuous with the microtubules which line this pocket. Based on positional and structural similarities, this structure is believed to be homologous with the MTR/cytostome of bodonids. Coupled with other ultrastructural and biochemical data, the fine structure of the flagellar apparatus supports the belief that the euglenoid flagellates are descendant from bodonid ancestors.  相似文献   

9.
R. A. Andersen 《Protoplasma》1985,128(2-3):94-106
Summary Flagellated vegetative cells of the colonial golden algaSynura uvella Ehr, were examined using serial sections. The two flagella are nearly parallel as they emerge from a flagellar pit near the apex of the cell. The photoreceptor is restricted to swellings on the flagella in the region where they pass through the apical pore in the scale case and the swellings are not associated with the cell membrane or an eyespot. A unique ring-like structure surrounds the axonemes of both flagella at a level just above the transitional helix. The basal bodies are interconnected by three striated, fibrous bands. Four short (<100 nm) microtubules lie between the basal bodies at their proximal ends. Two rhizoplasts extend down from the basal bodies and separate into numerous fine striated bands which lie over the nucleus. Three- and four-membered microtubular roots arise from the rhizoplasts and extend apically together. As the roots reach the cell anterior, the three-membered root bends and curves clockwise to form a large loop around the flagella; the four-membered root bends anticlockwise and terminates under the distal end of the three-membered root as it completes the loop. There are four absolute orientations, termed Types 1–4, in which the flagellar apparatus can occur. With each orientation type the positions of the Golgi body, nucleus, rhizoplasts, chloroplasts and microtubular roots change with respect to the flagella, basal bodies and photoreceptor. Two new basal bodies appear in pre-division cells, and three short microtubules appear in a dense substance adjacent to each new basal body. Based upon the positions of new pre-division basal bodies, a hypothesis is proposed to explain why there are four orientations and how they are maintained through successive cell divisions.  相似文献   

10.
Summary We examined the zoospores produced by the unilocular sporangia ofLaminaria digitata (L.) Lamour. andNereocystis luetkeana Post. & Rupr. by serial sectioning to determine the absolute configuration of their flagellar apparatuses. The basal bodies, which are interconnected by three striated bands, lie parallel to the ventral face of the zoospore, and the posterior basal body always is found to the right of the anterior basal body when the cell is viewed from the ventral face, anterior end up. The four rootlets associated with the basal bodies include a major anterior rootlet of about seven microtubules extending from the anterior basal body along the ventral face towards the apex, a five-membered bypassing rootlet that passes ventral to the basal bodies and is connected to the posterior basal body by a posterior fibrous band, and two short rootlets having a single member each, the minor anterior and posterior rootlets. We consider the configuration observed here to be typical of most phaeophycean motile cells. The flagellar apparatus features suggest a considerable phylogenetic difference between thePhaeophyceae and other classes of chlorophyll c-containing organisms.  相似文献   

11.
ABSTRACT. Oxymonas has the characteristic structures and organization of other oxymonads including two separated pairs of basal bodies/flagella, a preaxostylar lamina, a paracrystalline axostyle, and an absence of mitochondria and Golgi. Like other Oxymonadinae genera it possesses a long proboscis, the rostellum which is terminated by the holdfast. Like the genera Pyrsonympha and Streblomastix, Oxymonas possesses a holdfast which permits it to attach to the cuticle of the termite hind-gut. This holdfast is subdivided into rhizoids and is filled with microfilaments. The rostellum is variable in length and contains two distinct microtubular bundles. One bundle is composed of convoluted microtubular ribbons which originate at the base of the holdfast and extend posteriorly along the rostellum and before penetrating into the cell body. The second bundle is composed of flexuous free microtubules which originate at different levels of the rostellum, increasing in number from top to base. They occupy the axial part of the rostellum and incorporate into the axostylar rows at the basal body/flagellar level. Microtubules of the paracrystalline axostyle are cross-linked by bridges forming parallel rows like in the contractile axostyles of other oxymonads such as Pyrsonympha and Saccinobaculus . Most of the microtubules of the axostyle originate at the flagellar/preaxostylar level but some originate from the axial flexous free microtubules of the rostellum, as indicated above. The possibility of an extension/retraction of the rostellum, suggested by other authors, is discussed.  相似文献   

12.
G. Brugerolle 《Protoplasma》1991,164(1-3):70-90
Summary The hypothesis that protists without mitochondria, the so-called Archezoa of Cavalier-Smith, are primitive has received some support from rRNA sequence studies on Microsporidia and Diplomonadida. In spite of the lack of mitochondria the archezoan groups of protists show considerable differences in their organization: mastigont and cytoskeletal system, mitosis, Golgi apparatus, hydrogenosomes. This paper examines the characters of the flagellar apparatus and its associated cytoskeleton to obtain clues used for phylogenetic consideration on the three cited groups of flagellates. Archamoebae of the Pelobiontida order comprising families such as Pelomyxidae and Mastigamoebidae share common features: a rudimentary mastigont system composed of only one basal body giving rise to a poorly motile flagellum and a basal body associated microtubular cone capping the nucleus. No Golgi apparatus has been detected.Metamonada, comprising three orders: Retortamonadida, Diplomonadida, and Oxymonadida, have been tentatively assembled on the basis of the absence of mitochondria, Golgi apparatus, and basal body arrangement. They all have four basal bodies arranged in two pairs with always one recurrent flagellum generally included in a cytostomal depression. The recurrent basal body/flagellum is in relation to recurrent microtubular fibers. However, they display marked differences in their cytoskeletal system and fiber ultrastructure indicating a distant evolutionary relationship. The presence of a corset of microtubules in retortamonads and three microtubular fibers are distinguished in diplomonads, as well as a paracrystalline preaxostyle and axostyle in oxymonads are features that lend support to these groups being highly divergent.Parabasala, comprising the orders Trichomonadida and Hypermastigida, is a monophyletic group with a set of homologous features such as the presence of the same arrangement of four basic basal bodies, the parabasal apparatus (striated fibre supporting Golgi), the microtubular pelta-axostyle complex, the external mitotic apparatus (crypto-pleuro-mitosis), the hydrogenosomes. These three phyla appear distantly related, the Parabasala being a homogeneous group, perhaps also the Pelobiontida, while the Metamonada is heterogeneous and composed of three evolutionary lineages. Additional information such as rRNA and protein sequence data could contribute to a better understanding of the phylogenetic relationships among these groups.Abbreviations EM electron microscopy - MTOC microtubule organizing centre - PF parabasal fibre  相似文献   

13.
The fine structure of the flagellar apparatus of 5 species of the green quadriflagellate alga Carteria is described. The 5 species can be morphologically separated into 2 groups on the bases of cell shape and ultrastructure of the pyrenoid and flagellar apparatus. Group I cells are spherical, possess many pyrenoid thylakoids, and retain a flagellar apparatus similar to that of Chlamydomonas reinhardi. The flagellar bases are oriented at approximately 90° to one another, have distal and proximal fibers, and are associated with 4 cruciately arranged microtubule bands. Cells of group II are ellipsoid, possess few pyrenoid thylakoids, and show a complex system of microtubule bands and sigmoid-shaped, electron dense rods which extend between opposite pairs of basal bodies. The basal bodies of group II cells are directed inward in a circular pattern rather than outward as in group I cells. Unlike Chlamydomonas, the distal fiber of the Carteria species is nonstriated. The proximal fiber is striated, and both distal and proximal fibers are composed of 60–80 Å diameter microfibrils.  相似文献   

14.
Centrin, a 20 kDa calmodulin-like protein, is located in various basal body-associated fibers in protists. We used indirect immunofluorescence of isolated cytoskeletons or methanol-fixed cells to analyze the distribution of centrin during mitosis of the biflagellate green alga Dunaliella bioculata (Butcher). The distance between the nucleus and the basal apparatus decreased in late interphase, presumably caused by the contraction of the two centrin-containing nucleus–basal body connectors (NBBCs). During prophase, centrin accumulated on the new basal bodies as shown by postembedding immunogold labeling of serial thin sections. The new basal bodies were in close contact with plaque-like structures on the nuclear envelope. In mitotic cells, basal body pairs were separated and positioned at a considerable distance from the poles of the mitotic spindle. At this stage, we observed four separated centrin dots, two associated with the pairs of basal bodies and two located at the spindle poles as shown by double immunofluorescence, including anti-tubulin staining. The latter signals corresponded to an accumulation of centrin between the plasma membrane and the nuclei, indicating that centrin could be involved in mitotic movements of the nuclei. In telophase, centrin was observed along the nuclear surface and one new NBBC developed in each cell half. Our results demonstrate that centrin is present at the acentriolar spindle poles of Dunaliella independently from its localization in the basal apparatus.  相似文献   

15.
Summary The ultrastructure of the flagellar apparatus of aPleurochrysis, a coccolithophorid was studied in detail. Three major fibrous connecting bands and several accessory fibrous bands link the basal bodies, haptonema and microtubular flagellar roots. The asymmetrical flagellar root system is composed of three different microtubular roots (referred to here as roots 1,2, and 3) and a fibrous root. Root 1, associated with one of the basal bodies, is of the compound type, constructed of two sets of microtubules,viz. a broad sheet consisting of up to twenty closely aligned microtubules, and a secondary bundle made up of 100–200 microtubules which arises at right angles to the former. A thin electron-dense plate occurs on the surface of the microtubular sheet opposite the secondary bundle. The fibrous root arises from the same basal body and passes along the plasmalemma together with the microtubular sheet of root 1. Root 2 is also of the compound type and arises from one of the major connecting bands (called a distal band) as a four-stranded microtubular root and extends in the opposite direction to the haptonema. From this stranded root a secondary bundle of microtubules arises at approximately right angle. Root 3 is a more simple type, composed of at least six microtubules which are associated with the basal body. The flagellar transition region was found to be unusual for the classPrymnesiophyceae. The phylogenetic significance of the flagellar apparatus in thePrymnesiophyceae is discussed.  相似文献   

16.
Cell division in Chlamydomonas moewusii is described. The cells become immobile with flagellar abscission prior to mitosis. The basal bodies migrate toward the nucleus and become intimately associated with the nuclear membrane which is devoid, of ribosomes where adjacent to the basal bodies. The basal bodies replicate at preprophase. The nucleolus fragments at this stage. By prophase the basal body pairs have migrated, to the nuclear poles. Spindle fibers become prominent in the nucleus. The nuclear membrane does not fragment. The nucleus assumes a crescent-form by metaphase. Polar fenestrae are absent. Kinetochores appear at anaphase. An interzonal spindle elongates as the chromosomes move to the nuclear poles. Daughter nuclei become abscised by an ingrowth of nuclear membrane, leaving behind a separated, degenerating interzonal spindle. Ribosomes reappear on the outer nuclear membrane at late telophase. Nucleoli reform early in cytokinesis. The cleavage furrow, associated microtubules, and endoplasmic reticulum comprise the phycoplast. Cytokinesis proceeds rapidly after the completion of telophase. The basal body-nucleus relationship becomes reorganized into the typical interphase condition late in cytokinesis. Specific and predictable organelle rearrangements during mitosis have been described. Cell division in C. moewusii is compared with other algae, especially C. reinhardi.  相似文献   

17.
Anti-centrin monoclonal antibodies 20H5 and 11B2 produced against Clamydomononas centrin decorated the group of basal bodies as well as very closely attached structures in all trichomonads studied and in the devescovinids Foaina and Devescovina. Moreover, these antibodies decorated the undulating membrane in Trichomonas vaginalis, Trichomitus batrachorum, and Tritrichomonas foetus, and the cresta in Foaina. Centrin was not demonstrated in the dividing spindle and paradesmosis. Immunogold labeling, both in pre- and post-embedding, confirmed that centrin is associated with the basal body cylinder and is a component of the nine anchoring arms between the terminal plate of flagellar bases and the plasma-membrane. Centrin is also associated with the hook-shaped fibers attached to basal bodies (F1, F3), the X-fiber, and along sigmoid fibers (F2) at the pelta-axostyle junction, which is the microtubule organizing center for pelta-axostyle microtubules. There was no labeling on the striated costa and parabasal fibers nor on microtubular pelta-axostyle, but the fibrous structure inside the undulating membrane was labeled in T. vaginalis. Two proteins of 22-20 kDa corresponding to the centrin molecular mass were recognized by immunoblotting using these antibodies in the three trichomonad species examined. By screening a T. vaginalis cDNA library with 20H5 antibody, two genes encoding identical protein sequences were found. The sequence comprises the 4 typical EF-hand Ca++-binding domains present in every known centrin. Trichomonad centrin is closer to the green algal cluster (70% identity) than to the yeast Cdc31 cluster (55% identity) or the Alveolata cluster (46% identity).  相似文献   

18.
Brugerolle G  Mignot JP 《Protoplasma》2003,222(1-2):13-21
Summary. An ultrastructure study of the rhizoplast in Synura petersenii, Mallomonas fastigiata, and M. insignis shows that it consists of 15–20 striated rootlets that form a claw or an incomplete cone over the nucleus. These rootlets course along one face of the nucleus between the nuclear membrane and the cis-face of the Golgi stack of cisternae. They converge and merge above the nucleus, forming a stub attached to the proximal section of the two basal bodies. These cross-striated rootlets are composed of closely packed longitudinal microfibrils. By immunofluorescence, the basal bodies and the rootlets forming the claw were decorated by the anti-centrin monoclonal antibody ICL19 raised against the Paramecium tetraurelia acidic centrin protein and by two antibodies raised against the striated parabasal and costal striated fibres of trichomonads. Only the anti-centrin monoclonal antibody 20H5 raised against Chlamydomonas reinhardtii centrin strongly labelled the 20–22 kDa protein bands from the extracted cytoskeleton of S. petersenii by immunoblotting. Electron micrographs of mitosis in S. petersenii cells revealed that the segregated pairs of basal bodies are linked by the striated rootlets of the rhizoplast to the poles of the mitotic spindle. The spindle microtubules arise perpendicularly from the striated rootlets of the basal body–nucleus connector forming the centrosome. In conclusion, in these cells there is a basal body–nucleus connector similar to that of C. reinhardtii and other chlorophytes. It contains centrin proteins, it is involved in the linkage of the basal bodies to the nucleus and is a component of the spindle pole body or centrosome in the dividing cell.Correspondence and reprints: Biologie des Protistes, Université Blaise Pascal de Clermont-Ferrand, Campus des Cézeaux, 63177 Aubière Cedex, France.Present address: Romagnat, France.Received February 7, 2003; accepted May 21, 2003; published online September 23, 2003  相似文献   

19.
The rhizoplast, a striated band elongating from the flagellar basal body to the nucleus, is conspicuous in cells of Ochromonas danica Prings. In interphase cells, it runs from the basal body of the anterior flagellum to the space between the nucleus and the Golgi body. In O. danica, the rhizoplast duplicates during mitosis and the two rhizoplasts serve as mitotic poles. In the present study, we reinvestigated mitosis of O. danica using transmission electron microscopy and immunofluorescence microscopy, especially focusing on the rhizoplast. The nuclear envelope became dispersed during metaphase, and the rhizoplasts from two sets of the flagellar basal bodies functioned as the mitotic poles. Immunofluorescence microscopy using anti‐α‐tubulin, anti‐centrin and anti‐γ‐tubulin antibodies showed that centrin molecules were localized at the flagellar basal bodies, whereas γ‐tubulin molecules were detected at the rhizoplast during the whole cell cycle.  相似文献   

20.
The first flagellum of Hibberdia magna comb. nov. bears mastigonemes that have both short and long lateral filaments attached to the tubular shaft. The second flagellum is very short (ca. 850 nm) and is directed posteriorly approximately 160° from the first flagellum. Three microtubular flagellar roots (R1, R2 and R4) and a rhizoplast (= striated root) are present. The R1 root consists of four microtubules that arise near the right surface of the first flagellum basal body; the R1 root extends to the dorsal side of the cell and then curves back along the left side of the cell. Cytoskeletal microtubules are nucleated from the R1 root including one loose cluster of cytoskeletal microtubules that extends down the left side of the cell adjacent to the contractile vacuole. The R2 root is a single microtubule that arises along the left surface of the first flagellum basal body and extends to the left side of the cell. The R4 root consists of three microtubules that arise along the left side of the second flagellum basal body. A helical band wraps around two microtubules at the proximal end of the R4 root. Two of the three R4 root microtubules extend along the left side of the second flagellum, curve around to the right side of that flagellum and terminate. No R3 root was found. The orientation of the basal bodies of Hibberdia gen. nov. is similar to that of the Xanthophyceae and Oomycetes. There are apparent homologies in the R1, R2 and R4 roots of Hibberdia and these and other protists, but only Hibberdia lacks a R3 root. Three long flagella are present in preprophase but later one is endocytosized and the axoneme extends to the posterior of the cell. During metaphase the nuclear envelope is more or less intact except at the poles; the flagellar apparatuses are at the poles and the spindle microtubules originate near the basal bodies. Two stages are known in the life history: 1) a capsoidlike state with non-swimming flagellate cells inside a colonial gel, and 2) a free-swimming single-celled monad state. Vegetative cell division occurs in both stages. The flagellar apparatus, the cell division process and the life history combined with the previously described unique light-harvesting antheraxanthin make H. magna distinct from other algae. A new genus, Hibberdia gen. nov., a new family, Hibberdiaceae fam. nov. and a new order, Hibberdiales, ord. nov. are described.  相似文献   

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