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1.
Behaviors of male and female gametes, planozygotes and their microtubular cytoskeletons of a marine green alga Bryopsis maxima Okamura were studied using field emission scanning electron microscopy, high‐speed video microscopy, and anti‐tubulin immunofluorescence microscopy. After fusion of the biflagellate male and female gametes, two sets of basal bodies lay side by side in the planozygote. Four long female microtubular roots extended from the basal bodies to the cell posterior. Four short male roots extended to nearly half the distance to the posterior end. Two flagella, one each from the male and female gametes, become a pair. Specifically, the no. 2 flagellum of the female gamete and one male flagellum point to the right side of the eyespot of the female gamete, which is located at the cell posterior and which is associated with 2s and 2d roots of the female gamete. This spatial relationship of the flagella, microtubular roots, and the eyespot in the planozygote is retained until settlement. During forward swimming, the planozygote swings the flagella backward and moves by flagellar beating. The male and female flagella in the pair usually beat synchronously. The cell withdraws the flagella and becomes round when the planozygote settles to the substratum 20 min after mixing. The axoneme and microtubular roots depolymerize, except for the proximal part and the basal bodies. Subsequently, distinct arrays of cortical microtubules develop in zygotes until 30 min after mixing. These results are discussed with respect to the functional significance of the spatial relationships of flagellar apparatus‐eyespot‐cell fusion sites in the mating gametes and planozygote of green algae.  相似文献   

2.
Behavior of the eyespots during the fertilization of Ulva arasakii Chihara was studied using field emission scanning electron microscopy (FE‐SEM). FE‐SEM enabled the visualization of the eyespot of biflagellate male and female gametes. The smaller male gamete has one protruded smaller (1.3 ± 0.15 μm× 1.0 ± 0.29 μm) eyespot and the larger female gamete has a larger (1.6 ± 0.2 μm× 1.1 ± 0.13 μm) one on a posterior position of the cell. The cell membrane over the eyespot region is relatively smooth compared to other parts of the cell body and exhibits hexagonal arranged lipid globules. Because the size of the cell and the morphology of the eyespot are different between male and female gametes, we could follow the fate of the eyespots during the fertilization. The initial cytoplasmic contact and fusion of the gametes takes place at their anterior end, slightly posterior to the flagellar base. The morphology of the fusing gametes followed two clearly distinguishable patterns. About half the gamete pairs lie side‐by‐side with their longitudinal axes nearly parallel, while the rest are oriented anti‐parallel to each other. In all cases, the larger female gamete fused along the same side as the eyespot, while the smaller male gamete fused along the side away from its eyespot. As fusion proceeds, the gamete pair is transformed into the quadriflagellate planozygote, in which the eyespots are positioned side‐by‐side on the region of cell fusion. These observations indicated that the opposite positioning of the eyespot relative to the cell fusion site in male and female gametes is important for the proper arrangement of the eyespots in the planozygote. The significance of this feature in advanced green algae is briefly discussed.  相似文献   

3.
Morphological details of asexual and sexual reproduction in Gonium Quadratum Pringsheim ex Nozaki (Goniaceae, Chlorophyta) were observed by light microscopy, based on clonal cultured materials originating from Nepal. In asexual reproduction, the alga exhibited two different patterns of cell cleavage during formation of 8-and 16-celled daughter colonies. Sexual reproduction was heterothallic and isogamous. The gametes bore a tubular mating structure (bilateral mating papilla) at the base of the flagella, and the papillae of the two gametes. The germinating zygote gave rise to four biflagellate gone cells joined in a colony (germ colony). Possible phylogenetic relationships within the Goniaceae at the species level are outlined, mainly on the basis of reproduction characteristics.  相似文献   

4.
Summary Development of the plurilocular male gametangium inCutleria hancockii Dawson is fundamentally similar to that of the female gametangium. However, the sequence of mitoses is less regular and the number of divisions is more variable in the male structure. During mitosis the nucleolus disappears and the nuclear envelope breaks down into vesicles and cisternae. No well-defined chromosomal kinetochores were observed. The spindle does not persist during telophase. At least two types of vesicles, but no microtubules, are associated with cytokinesis. After cleavages are completed, each of the cells develops an eyespot and two flagella. The flagellar rootlet system consists of 4–5 bands of 5–10 microtubules radiating posteriorly from the basal bodies. Flocculent material surrounding the gamete at maturity may be involved with liberation. Prior to release, a pore is formed in each locule when the outermost layers of the surficial wall break, and the innermost layers expand out through this weakened region. The inner wall eventually bursts, releasing the gamete and flocculent material through the pore. The liberated gamete has a long, pleuronematic anterior flagellum, and a short, acronematic posterior flagellum which has a swollen base appressed to the plasmalemma.  相似文献   

5.
The marine centric diatom Biddulphia levis produced uniflagellate fusiform male gametes completely within the parent cell frustule. These gametes lacked both a central pair of microtubules in the flagellar axoneme and chloroplasts but did contain a cone of microtubules which passed posteriorly from the base of the kinetosome along the nuclear envelope. The gametes were released through a specialized pore in the girdle band leaving behind a cytoplasmic mass which contained chloroplasts and other cytoplasmic components. Tubules which resembled the flimmer hairs on the gamete flagellum occurred in cisternae of the cytoplasmic reticulum in the residual cytoplasm and in the nuclear envelope of the gametes. Gametogenesis in B. levis is compared with similar processes in other centric diatoms.  相似文献   

6.
Summary As part of an investigation on the developmental biology ofCoelomomyces dodgei Couch (Blastocladiales, Chytridiomycetes), the ultrastructure of the male and female gametes was studied. The nucleus is central and conical in shape except for a basal spur that curves back towards the large plate-like mitochondrion. A nuclear cap of ribosomes sits on the flat anterior end of the nucleus. Approximately seven lipid globules are partially embedded in the mitochondrion and are interconnected by membrane cisternae. The lipid globules are covered by a single fenestrated microbody and a backing membrane lies between the microbody and the gamete plasma membrane. The kinetosome is at the base of the nucleus and is connected to a single, posterior, whiplash flagellum. A nonkinetosomal centriole is absent. In the peripheral cytoplasm of both mating types there is a paracrystalline body of unknown composition and function. No significant ultrastructural differences were found between the male and female gametes.  相似文献   

7.
A new study of sexual agglutination between Chlamydomonas eugametos gametes and between vis-à-vis pairs has been made using techniques that allow one to distinguish between the flagella or cell bodies of individual mating types (mt+ or mt-). It is shown that before mt+ and mt- gametes fuse in pairs, their flagella, which adhere over their whole length, are maintained in a particular conformation around the mt- cell body. In clumps of agglutinating gametes the cells are asymmetrically distributed with the mt+ gametes constituting the outer surface of the clumps with the mt- gametes on the inside. The flagella are then all directed towards the middle of the clump. This orientation of the flagella is maintained for approx. 8 min after cell fusion before the vis-à-vis pair becomes motile. At this stage, all the flagellar tips are activated. The original mt+ flagellar tips then deactivate and swimming is resumed. The original mt- flagella remain immotile and activated after cell fusion and eventually shorten by a third, but only 30 min or more after fusion. Motile vis-à-vis pairs eventually settle to the substrate when the gamete bodies fuse completely to form a zygote. Settling vis-à-vis pairs are attracted to those that have already settled, to glutaraldehyde-fixed pairs and to flagella isolated from mt- gametes. They are not chemotactically attracted, rather they are weakly agglutinated. Living vis-à-vis pairs can be shown to aggregate in rows with the cell bodies lying side by side. It is argued that the flagellar agglutination sites involved in gamete recognition are also involved in vis-à-vis pair aggregationAbbreviations mt+/- mating type plus or minus - FTA flagellar tip activation  相似文献   

8.
Using field emission scanning electron microscopy (FE‐SEM) and fluorescence microscopy, the respective relationships between the arrangement of the gamete cell‐fusion site and the inheritance pattern of chloroplast DNA (cp‐DNA) were studied for Caulerpa brachypus Harvey, C. okamurae Weber‐van Bosse, C. racemosa (Forsskål) J. Agardh var. laete‐virens (Montagne) Weber‐van Bosse, and C. serrulata (Forsskål) J. Agardh var. serrulata f. lata (Weber‐van Bosse) Tseng. The eyespot of the biflagellate gamete was visualized using FE‐SEM. The female gamete, but not the male, has one eyespot on the cell body posterior. In most mating pairs, the female gamete is fused at the anterior left side of the eyespot and the male gamete at a cell surface that is perpendicular to the plane of the flagellar beat when both gametes are mixed. Then, the inheritance pattern of cp‐DNA was observed using fluorescence microscopy after staining with 4′6‐diamidino‐2‐phenylindole. Male and female gametes have one cell nucleus and one chloroplast each. Chloroplasts of the female gamete usually contain 1–11 spherical or rod‐shaped nucleoids. In contrast, nucleoids are not usually detected in the male gamete’s chloroplast. After mixing male and female gametes, the male gamete without nucleoids and female gametes with nucleoids are always associated at the lateral side and become planozygotes. Such a correlation between the arrangement of the cell fusion site and the inheritance pattern of cp‐DNA was found in another member of Caulerpales, Bryopsis maxima Okamura. These results suggest the possibility that the arrangement of the cell fusion site in the gamete is not determined randomly regardless of sex, but is rather correlated with specific mating types. The relation of these results to those for Chlamydomonas is discussed.  相似文献   

9.
The flagellar glycoproteins exposed on Chlamydomonas eugametos gametes were labeled by means of lactoperoxidase, diiodosulfanilic acid and chloramine T, and characterised in SDS-electrophoresis gels. The medium from gamete cultures contains particles (isoagglutinins) that agglutinate gametes of the opposite mating type. When crude preparations of these particles were subjected to isopycnic centrifugation in a caesium chloride gradient, two bands of particles were found. The lighter, active band consisted of membrane vesicles. The denser, inactive band consisted of cell wall material. The active band had the same glycoprotein composition as membrane vesicles artificially made from isolated flagella. Preparations of glagella were also separated on a caesium chloride cushion into pure flagella and cell wall material. The flagella, but not the cell wall material, isoagglutinated opposite gametes. Again the glycoprotein composition of pure flagella was similar to that of pure isoagglutinin vesicles. No difference was detected between the protein and glycoprotein compositions of flagella and isoagglutinins from both mating types.Abbreviations LPO lactoperoxidase - PB phosphate buffer - DISA diazotized 125I-iodo-sulfanilic acid - SDS sodium dodecyl sulphate - CBD coomassie Brilliant Blue - PAS periodic acid Schiff  相似文献   

10.
The development and ultrastructure of the male gamete of Sphaeroplea annulina (Roth) Agardh have been investigated. Multiple mitoses each associated with phycoplast microtubules occur as a result of nitrogen deficiency in the culture medium. A regular cleavage of the cytoplasm delineated by microtubules then occurs, resulting in many young male gametes. During maturation the gametes are retained within a vacuolar envelope. Maturation entails reduction in nuclear size and chromatin condensation, loss of chloroplast thylakoids, endoplasmic reticulum and Golgi apparatus. The apical region where the two flagella are inserted consists of an apical cone and fibrous connections which lie distal to the basal bodies. The study supports the suggestion put forward in a previous paper: namely that the genus Sphaeroplea be retained in a separate order the Sphaeropleales.  相似文献   

11.
Female gametogenesis was studied in the dioecious siphonous green alga Codium fragile subsp. novae‐zelandiae (J. Agardh) P. C. Silva using light and electron microscopy. Early during gametogenesis the protoplasm was uniform; then it separated in portions, while fusiform chloroplasts and nuclei increased in numbers. Some features of the nuclear divisions were similar to those of other Bryopsidophyceae. They were acentric and semi‐open. Pairs of parallel electron‐dense lines resembling synaptonemic complexes were observed in several prophase nuclei indicating meioses. In metaphase the nuclear envelope showed polar fenestrae from which the spindle emerged. No spindle microtubule nucleating material was visible and chromosome kinetochores were evident. Mature female gametes were pyriform with a hyaline anterior end from which the two flagella emerged. Mature gametes had a spherical nucleus surrounded by a mitochondrion and numerous discoid chloroplasts. Female gametes germinated parthenogenetically in culture and also inside gametangia, involving loss of flagella, rounding and lengthening of cells, multiplication of chloroplasts with well developed thylakoid systems, vacuolization and synthesis of a fibrillar cell wall.  相似文献   

12.
A. K. Mitra 《Hydrobiologia》1950,2(3):209-216
Summary In the course of a study of Algae from Indian soils two new species of Chlamydomonas (C. Iyengari, C. indica) and a new species of Carteria (C. eugametos) were observed which are distinctive in the fact that their gametes conjugate by their posterior ends. Diagnoses of the new species are given. The gametes are provided with membranes. One of the fusing gametes receives the contents of the other, and the membrane of the active gamete, which has fused with that of the recipient gamete, forms a loose envelope around the zygote. The zygotes retain only the flagella of the recipient gamete. They are larger than the vegetative cells and may remain motile for some days. They frequently divide without a resting period, although zygospores were formed in old cultures of two of the species. Germination of these zygospores was observed.The author is indebted to Prof. F. E. Fritsch, F. R. S. for advice and guidance in the course of this investigation.  相似文献   

13.
 The reproductive strategy of a marine alga with a heteromorphic biphasic life cycle was studied by analyzing various sexual reproductive characters in light of the evolution of anisogamy. Gametophytes of Monostroma angicava were dioecious and their gametes were slightly anisogamous. Volume of gametangium, density of gametangia and area of mature gametangial parts on each gametophyte did not differ from male to female. Therefore, the reproductive biomass investment for gamete production was considered to be the same for each sex. Anisogamy in this alga appeared to be derived from the difference in the number of cell divisions during gametogenesis, because the majority of male gametangia each produced 64 (26) gametes and the female produced 32 (25) gametes. This corresponded with measurements of cell size in male and female gametes. Further, the sex ratio was 1:1 for sexually mature plants sampled at Charatsunai. Therefore, it was suggested that in the field twice as many male gametes are released as female gametes. Liberated gametes of both sexes showed positive phototaxis. The swimming velocity of freshly liberated male gametes was a little higher than that of female gametes. Male gametes had the potential to swim for ca. 72 h and female gametes for ca. 84 h. The difference in gamete motility between the two sexes seemed to be related to cell size. Planozygotes were negatively phototactic and swam more rapidly than gametes of either sex. Received: 5 March 1997 / Revision accepted: 18 July 1997  相似文献   

14.
The gametes and the process of fertilization were examined by light and electron microscopy in the lower eukaryote Allomyces macrogynus. Differences in gamete morphology included the overall larger size and the presence of a larger nuclear apparatus, along with the association of a side-body complex and many more mitochondria in the female gamete. In this species of Allomyces, fertilization was initiated by contact and fusion of specialized regions of the gamete plasma membranes resulting in a binucleate fusion cell surrounded by plasma membrane contributed by both partners. Following plasmogamy, nuclear fusion was initiated by multiple nuclear membrane contacts between adjacent outer membranes. Following inner membrane fusion, small nucleoplasmic bridges were observed which presumably fused with one another and resulted in a single bridge which widened, forming the mature diploid nucleus. After karyogamy, fusion of the nuclear caps did not always occur and zygotes with and without fused caps were observed. Coalescence of the nucleoli completed the events of fertilization, forming a zygote with a single nuclear apparatus (sometimes with two caps) and two flagella. These observations are discussed in relation to fertilization mechanisms and compared to fertilization in other organisms.  相似文献   

15.
The relative amounts of Concanavalin A (Con A) bound by gamete and vegetative flagella of both mating types (mt + and mt -) of Chlamydomonas eugametos were determined using 125I-Con A. Con A agglutinated all cell types by cross-linking their flagella in a random manner. No correlation was found between the extent of Con A-binding and Con A-mediated isoagglutination. Con A inhibited the sexual interaction between gametes at various levels. In mt + gametes it blocked sexual agglutination, whereas in mt - gametes it prevented papillar fusion. By SDS-gel electrophoresis nine Con A-binding components were found to be present in flagella. However, it was not possible to allocate a role in sexual agglutination to any of these components since they were present in all cell types, including vegetative cells which are not able to sexually agglutinate.Abbreviations Con A concanavalin A - SDS sodium dodecyl sulphate - TB Tris buffer - PBS phosphate buffered saline - HRP horse radish peroxidase - SEM scanning electron microscope - PAS periodic acid Schiff  相似文献   

16.
T. Kuroiwa  S. Kawano  M. Watanabe  T. Hori 《Protoplasma》1991,163(2-3):102-113
Summary The fate of chloroplast nuclei (cp-nuclei) and mitochondrial nuclei (mt-nuclei) was followed during gametogenesis in male and female coenocytic thalli in the anisogamous algaBryopsis maxima by epifluorescence microscopy, after staining with 4,6-diamidino-2-phenylindole (DAPI), by quantification of chloroplast DNA (cp-DNA) by fluorimetry using a video-intensified, photon-counting system (VIMPICS), and by CsCl density gradient centrifugation. The male and female coenocytic thalli, 48 h before the release of gametes, contain a large number of chloroplasts, each of which is larger in size than the cell nucleus and the mitochondria and contains about 150 cp-nuclei. The size of each chloroplast in the female and male gametangia decreases markedly during gametogenesis as a result of continuous divisions till about 10 h before the release of gametes and, eventually, the numbers of cp-nuclei per chloroplast in the male and female gametangia fall to about 20 and 5, respectively. Two hours later, as the preferential digestion of cp-DNA in the male gametangium occurs, the number of cp-nuclei in the chloroplast of each male gamete falls to zero while the number of cp-nuclei in female gamete does not change, even after release of female gametes. Several mt-nuclei are observed in all of the female gametes. By contrast, the mt-nuclei in the bulk of the male gametes disappear but those in a few gametes remain. The profiles after CsCl density gradient centrifugation of DNAs extracted from male and female plants and gametes support the cytological data. The results suggest that the preferential digestion of cp-DNA in male plants occurs about 8 h before the release of gametes and that there is differential digestion of cp-DNA and mitochondrial DNA (mt-DNA).  相似文献   

17.
Cell surfaces of biflagellate gametes and their morphological changes during fertilization of Bryopsis maxima Okamura were observed using a high‐resolution field emission scanning electron microscope. Male gametes have broad and narrow faces, which are divided into at least five morphologically distinct regions: 1) the apical plate is a plate‐like structure that is approximately 380–530 nm long and approximately 190 nm wide, in the center of the papilla and slightly protruded from the plasma membrane; 2) strips are smooth materials on ridges that originate from the basal part of the papilla and extend downward; 3) the lateral belt is a belt‐shaped structure on the center of the narrower faces; 4) the flagellar surface; and 5) the other region of the cell body has a fine‐grained appearance. In contrast, the entire female gamete surface is rough because of many granular or amorphous cell coats on the plasma membrane. When both gametes were mixed together, the initial fusion proceeded between the broader face of the male gamete and the anterior side of the female one near the basal bodies. Morphology of the male gamete's cell surface changed gradually as fusion proceeded and was covered by the granular materials; that surface closely resembled those of female gametes except for the apical plate. It was present until the planozygote attached itself to the substrate by the papilla. It finally disappeared after settlement. Therefore, these results indicate that gametes of B. maxima have sex‐specific surface structures that change their morphology during fertilization and settlement.  相似文献   

18.
Chlamydomonas reinhardi, a haploid isogamous green alga, presents a classic case of uniparental inheritance of chloroplast genes. Since the molecular basis of this phenomenon is poorly understood, an examination of the cytology of the C. reinhardi plastid DNA was made in gametes, newly formed zygotes, maturing zygotes, and at zygote germination.The single plastid per cell of Chlamydomonas contains a small number of DNA aggregates (‘nucleoids’) which can be seen after staining with DNA-binding fluorochromes. In zygotes formed by pre-stained gametes, the fluorescing nucleoids disappear from the plastid of mating type minus (male) gamete plastids but not from the plastid of mating type plus (female) gamete plastids about 1 h after zygote formation. Subsequently, nucleoids aggregate slowly to a final average of two or three in the single plastid of the mature zygote.Quantitative microspectrofluorimetry indicates that gametes of both mating types have equal amounts of plastid DNA, and that zoospores arising from zygotes have 3.5 × as much as gametes. Assuming degradation of male plastid DNA, there must be a very major synthesis of plastid DNA between zygote formation and zoospore release when zygotes produce the typical 8–16 zoospores. That synthesis appears to occur at germination, where there is a massive increase in plastid DNA and nucleoid number beginning just prior to meiosis. The results support the theory that uniparental inheritance results from degradation of plastid DNA entering the zygote via the male gamete and suggest further studies, using mutants and altered conditions, which might explain how male plastid DNA sometimes survives.  相似文献   

19.
Morphological features of sexual reproduction in the Volvocaceae are reviewed, focusing particularly on gametic union and zygote gemination. Both of the two conjugating gametes of the isogamous generaPandorina, Volvulina andYamagishiella bear a tubular mating structure (mating papilla), and plasmogamy is initiated by union of the papillae tips. On zygote germination, a single biflagellate gone cell is released from the zygote wall. Although all the anisogamous and oogamous genera of the Volvocaceae produce “sperm packets” during gametogenesis and a single gone cell at zygote germination, some difference can be recognized in the male gametes. The male gametes ofEudorina bear a tubular cytoplasmic protuberance (putative mating papllla) near the base of the flagella, whereas such a structure recognized at the light microscopic level is not evident inPleodorina andVolvox. Evolution of the sexual reproduction characteristics of volvocacean algae is discussed on the basis of recent cladistic analysis of morphological data as well as of the ribosomal (r) RNA phylogeny and large subunit of the ribulose-1, 5-biphosphate carboxylase/oxygenase(rbcL) gene trees. Dedicated to Emeritus Prof. Hideo Kasaki (Tokyo Metropolitan University) on the occasion of his 77th birthday. Recipient of the Botanical Society Award for Young Scientists, 1994.  相似文献   

20.
Atractomorpha porcata sp. nov. is described from culture isolates derived in 1981 from zygotes present in a 28 year old, dried soil sample collected from near Lemon-cove, Tulare County, California. Vegetative individuals are coenocytic, spindle-shaped unicells with long, thin-pointed apices. Asexual reproduction is by means of large, biflagellate zoospores or, frequently, by aplanospores. Sexual reproduction is usually monoecious, with a single spindle-shaped gametangial cell producing small, biflagellate male gametes at either end, and larger female gametes in the midportion. Female gametes are often biflagellate, but more commonly they lack flagella and are liberated by squeezing through slit-like openings in the gametangial wall. Sexual reproduction may thus be considered as either oogamous or anisogamous, depending on whether or not a particular female gamete has flagella; most often it is oogamous. Atractomorpha porcata is readily distinguished from A. echinata, the only other known member of the genus, by (1) its greater tendency toward oogamy (versus anisogamy), (2) its bisexual gametangia, (3) its frequent production of aplanospores in asexual reproduction, (4) its unusual primary membranes that frequently bear long, delicate bristles, and (5) its distinctive zygote wall ornamentation.  相似文献   

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