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1.
Some taxa of brown algae have a so‐called ‘stellate’ chloroplast arrangement composed of multiple chloroplasts arranged in a stellate configuration, or else a single chloroplast with radiating lobes. The fine structures of chloroplasts and pyrenoids have been studied, but the details of their membrane configurations as well as pyrenoid ontogeny have not been well understood. The ultrastructure of the single stellate chloroplast in Splachnidium rugosum and Scytothamnus australis were re‐examined in the present study, as well as the stellate arrangement of chloroplasts in Asteronema ferruginea and Asterocladon interjectum, using freeze‐substitution fixation. It was confirmed that the chloroplast envelope invaginated into the pyrenoid in Splachnidium rugosum, Scytothamnus australis and Asteronema ferruginea, but chloroplast endoplasmic reticulum (CER) remained on the surface of the chloroplast. The space between the invaginated chloroplast envelope and CER was filled with electron‐dense material. In Asteronema ferruginea, CER surrounding each pyrenoid was closely appressed to the neighboring CER over the pyrenoids, so that the chloroplasts formed a stellate configuration; however, in the apical cells chloroplasts formed two or more loose groups, or were completely dispersed. The pyrenoids of Asterocladon interjectum did not have any invagination of the chloroplast envelope, but a unique membranous sac surrounded the pyrenoid complex and occasionally other organelles (e.g. mitochondria). Immunolocalization of β‐1,3‐glucans showed that the membranous sac in Asterocladon interjectum did not contain photosynthetic products such as chrysolaminaran. Observations in the dividing cells of Splachnidium rugosum and Scytothamnus australis indicated that the pyrenoid in the center of the chloroplast enlarged and divided into two before or during chloroplast division.  相似文献   

2.
The process of chloroplast division during mitosis in Chlamydomonas reinhardi is followed with the electron microscope. The pyrenoid and the chloroplast reproduce by fission. The dividing chloroplast contains regions of dense material that superficially resemble pyrenoids, but it is concluded that the formation of the dense material is not related to pyrenoid formation in C. reinhardi. The dense material appears to be localized over regions of chloroplast DNA.  相似文献   

3.
The fine structure of the pyrenoid in the mature vegetative cell of Tetracystis excentrica Brown and Bold is described. During zoosporogenesis, the pyrenoid undergoes regression, and the ultrastructure of this process is described in detail. The ground substance undergoes dissolution, and reticulate fibrillar structures appear as well as intruding chloroplast thylakoids. Pyrenoid-associated starch plates diminish, and quantities of starch not associated with the pyrenoid are produced. New pyrenoids appear late in the division cycle after all other major organelles associated with the motile cell have been formed. Zoospore pyrenoids develop in thylakoid-free spaces of the chloroplast which are similar to the DNA-containing regions. The new pyrenoid ground substance, which is loosely fibrillar, arises in close proximity to starch grains which may be formed in the stroma. Then the zoospore pyrenoid produces 2 hemispherical starch plates identical to those in the mature vegetative cell. Zoospore pyrenoids lack the 2 convoluted thylakoids between the starch plates and the ground substance characteristic of those in the mature vegetative cell. Instead, the thylakoids are identical to those of the chloroplast at first, and then develop into a convoluted state in the vegetative cell. Cytochemical tests for DNA, RNA, and protein were made for the cytoplasm, nucleus, nucleolus, and pyrenoid. Conclusive evidence is presented for the presence of RNA in the cytoplasm and nucleolus, DNA in the nucleus, and protein in the pyrenoid. The tests did not conclusively demonstrate the presence or absence of DNA and RNA in the pyrenoid; however, they suggested that small amounts of both DNA and RNA may be present.  相似文献   

4.
The appearances of pyrenoids in the vegetative cells of Volvulina steinii Playfair and V. pringsheimii Starr were observed in detail by light and electron microscopy in relation to the culture age to clarify the taxonomic relationship between the two species. In V. pringsheimii, the pyrenoids were always present in the bottom of the cupshaped chloroplasts and their gross morphology did not vary in relation to the culture age, while those of V. steinii appeared de novo and developed as the culture aged. In 24-h cultures of V. steinii, pyrenoids were not observed in the chloroplasts. In 48-h cultures, a pyrenoid matrix developed apparently de novo in the brim of the cupshaped chloroplast. Subsequently, starch grains appeared around the pyrenoid matrix in 72-h cultures. The volume of the matrix and the associated starch grains increased and tubular channels entered into the pyrenoid matrix in 96-h cultures. In addition, the pyrenoid in the parental chloroplast of V. pringsheimii divided and was distributed to each daughter cell during cell divisions in daughter colony formation, while the parental pyrenoid of V. steinii did not divide and went to one of the daughter cells. Therefore, these two species can be clearly distinguished by the differences in the position of pyrenoids in the cupshaped chloroplasts and stability of pyrenoid appearance in relation to the culture age, as well as in the fate of parental pyrenoids during daughter colony formation.  相似文献   

5.
The pyrenoid structure of Trebouxia, a photobiont of two lichen species, Umbilicaria cinereorufescens (Schaer.) Frey and Parmelia sulcata Taylor, was investigated. In both lichen species, the pyrenoid of the photobiont exhibited straight, unbranched, long or short tubules. In the first lichen species, multiple pyrenoids were observed occasionally, while in the second one, homogeneous masses, called protein bodies, appeared between the thylakoids. These protein bodies were previously observed in some other species of the family Umbilicariaceae. Serial sections from single pyrenoids showed that tubules of the Impressa-type pyrenoid were closely associated with pyrenoglobuli. The three-dimensional reconstruction of a complete chloroplast of a P. sulcata algal cell showed that the protein bodies were spatially separate structures. Immunolocalization techniques to detect the presence of ribulose-bisphosphate carboxylase (Rubisco) in the chloroplast showed that this enzyme was present primarily in the pyrenoid matrix. When protein bodies were present in the chloroplast, Rubisco appeared to be localized in these structures. The presence of pyrenoid satellites and protein bodies with reactivity to anti-Rubisco may be related to the nutritional conditions of the thalli.  相似文献   

6.
Summary Chloroplasts of many species of hornworts (Anthocerotae) have a structure that resembles the pyrenoid of green algae but whether these two structures are homologous has not been determined. We utilized immunogold labelling on thin sections to determine the distribution of ribulose 1,5-bisphosphate carboxylase/oxygenase (RuBisCO), the major protein of algal pyrenoids, in sixteen hornwort species with and without pyrenoids. Several species (Phaeoceros laevis, Anthoceros punctatus, A. formosae, A. laminiferus, Folioceros fuciformis, Folioceros sp.,Dendroceros tubercularis, D. japonicus, D. validus, Notothylas orbicularis, N. temperata, andSpaerosporoceros adscendens) have uniplastidic (or primarily uniplastidic) cells with large prominent multiple pyrenoids. In all of these species, the labelling is found exclusively in the pyrenoid and, with the exception of theFolioceros, Dendroceros, andNotothylas species, the labelling is randomly distributed throughout the pyrenoid. In the exceptional species, the pyrenoids have prominent pyrenoglobuli or other inclusions that are unlabelled. InMegaceros flagellaris andM. longispirus, the cells are multiplastidic (with the exception of the apical cell and some epidermal cells) and the chloroplasts lack pyrenoids.Anthoceros fusiformis andPhaeoceros coriaceus have primarily uniplastidic cells but the chloroplasts lack pyrenoids; only an area of stroma in the center of the plastid devoid of starch, reminiscent of a pyrenoid, is found. In all of the species lacking pyrenoids, RuBisCo is found throughout the stroma, including the stromal spaces made by the so-called channel thylakoids. No preferential accumulation of RuBisCo is found in the pyrenoid-like region inA. fusiformis andP. coriaceus. These data indicate that 1) the hornwort pyrenoid is homologous to algal pyrenoids in the presence of RuBisCo; 2) that at least some of the RuBisCo in the pyrenoid must represent an active form of the enzyme; and 3) that, in the absence of pyrenoids, the RuBisCo is distributed throughout the stroma, as in higher plants.Abbreviations RuBisCo ribulose 1,5-bisphosphate carboxylase/oxygenase  相似文献   

7.
8.
Chloroplast inclusions have been studied in zoospores of Oedocladium carolinianum and their ultrastructure compared with the same inclusions previously described in the related genera Oedogonium and Bulbochaete. Structure of the mature pyrenoids is consistent in all 3 genera; the pyrenoid matrix is penetrated by branched cytoplasmic channels delimited by a double membrane system continuous with the chloroplast envelope. Pyrenoids typically arise de novo in zoospores of O. carolinianum. No evidence for the bipartition of a parent pyrenoid has been observed. The incipient pyrenoids of Oedocladium are similar to those found in zoospores of Oedogonium and Bulbochaete, but they frequently demonstrated a crystalline matrix. However, a crystalline matrix was never observed in any mature pyrenoid, even those immediately adjacent to incipient pyrenoids with crystalline structure. Other chloroplast inclusions typical of Oedogonium and Bulbochaete zoospores are the eyespot and striated microtubules. Although the zoospores of O. carolinianum possess striated microtubules, the presence of an eyespot has not been observed.  相似文献   

9.
The Scytosiphon lomentaria (Lyngbye) Link cell characteristically has only one chloroplast with a prominent protruding pyrenoid. We observed the appearance of a new pyrenoid in each chloroplast during first mitosis in zygotes of S. lomentaria, using the freeze substitution technique. At first, a pyrenoid matrix appeared within the outermost stroma, in which thylakoid triplets and ribosomes were absent. At this time, the surface of this part remained smooth. The old pyrenoid was covered with a pyrenoid cap on the cytoplasmic side, whereas there was no pyrenoid cap on the new pyrenoid before protrusion. Irregularly shaped membranous sacs containing fine granular materials associated with the cytoplasmic side of the new pyrenoid. The sacs fused with each other and changed conformation and finally transformed into the pyrenoid cap. The new pyrenoid gradually protruded toward the cytoplasm, and the new pyrenoid cap became curved along the surface of pyrenoid. Cytokinesis occurred, and each chloroplast had two prominent protruding pyrenoids in two‐celled zygotes. We examined immunolocalization of β‐1,3‐glucans within the pyrenoid cap with a monoclonal antibody, using EM. Gold particles indicating localization of β‐1,3‐glucans were detected in vacuoles but never in the pyrenoid cap. This observation suggests that the pyrenoid cap in brown algae contains no photosynthetic products such as polysaccharide.  相似文献   

10.
Employing immunogold electron microscopy, the subcellular location of the Calvin cycle enzyme phosphoribulokinase (PRK) was determined for two diverse species of microalgae. In both the red alga Porphyridium cruentum and the green alga Chlamydomonas reinhardtii, PRK was distributed throughout the thylakoid-containing chloroplast stroma. In contrast, the next enzyme in the pathway, ribulose 1,5-bisphosphate carboxylase/oxygenase, was predominantly pyrenoid-localized in both species. In Porphyridium, the chloroplast stroma abuts the pyrenoid but in Chlamydomonas and other green algae, the pyrenoid appears encased in a starch sheath. Unique inclusions found in the pyrenoid of Chlamydomonas were immunolabelled by anti-PRK and thus identified as regions of chloroplast stroma. It is postulated that such PRK-containing stromal inclusions in the pyrenoids of Chlamydomonas and perhaps other green algae provide a means for exchange of Calvin cycle metabolites between pyrenoid and stroma.  相似文献   

11.
The single, basal pyrenoids of Gonium quadratum Pringsheim ex Nozaki and G. pectorale Müller (Goniaceae, Chlorophyta) differed in appearance when vegetative colonies were cultured photoheterotrophically in medium containing sodium acetate. Chloroplasts of G. quadratum had distinct pyrenoids when grown in medium without major carbon compounds. However, the pyrenoids degenerated and were markedly reduced in size when such cells were inoculated into a medium containing 400 mg·L?1 of sodium acetate. No pyrenoids were visible under the light microscope; however, with electron microscopy small pyrenoids and electron-dense bodies were visible within the degenerating chloroplasts, which had only single layers of thylakoid lamellae at the periphery. The chloroplasts subsequently developed distinct pyrenoids and several layers of thylakoid lamellae as the culture aged. In contrast, vegetative cells of G. pectorale always showed distinct pyrenoids when cells were inoculated into medium containing sodium acetate, sodium pyruvic acid, sodium lactate, and/or yeast extract. Therefore, we propose two terms, “unstable pyrenoids” and “stable pyrenoids,” for pyrenoids of G. quadratum and G. pectorale, respectively. Chloroplasts of the colonial green flagellates should thus be examined under various culture conditions in order to determine whether their pyrenoids are unstable or stable when pyrenoids are used as taxonomic indicators. Immunogold electron microscopy showed that the ratios of gold particle density of ribulose-1,5-biphosphate carboxylase/oxygenase (RuBisCO) between pyrenoid matrix and chloroplast stroma in G. quadratum grown in medium with or without sodium acetate were lower than those of G. pectorale. Heavy labeling by anti-RuBisCO was observed in both the electron-dense bodies and pyrenoid matrix of G. quadratum. This is the first electron microscopic demonstration of degeneration and development of both pyrenoids and thylakoid lamellae in the chloroplast as a function of culture condition in green algae.  相似文献   

12.
Ultrastructural studies of the chloroplasts of zoospores and developing zoospores of Oedogonium carcliacum have disclosed the occurrence of numerous incipient pyrenoids. A single developing zoospore may possess several score of these structures which appear to arise de novo in the chloroplast stroma and seem to lack any direct association with mature pyrenoids which are also present in the cells. The incipient pyrenoids lack the associated starch grains and the membrane-limited channels characteristic of mature pyrenoids, but they are readily recognized in the chloroplasts since they demonstrate a greater granularity and electron density than the surrounding chloroplast stroma. The granularity and electron density of the incipient pyrenoids match the ultra-structural appearance of the matrix of mature pyrenoids. The smallest of the incipient pyrenoids examined from serial sections had a maximum diameter of less than 0.3 μ. This may be compared with the size of mature pyrenoids, many with a maximum diameter of over 5.0 μ. In all the zoospores and developing zoospores examined, only one mature pyrenoid was observed in an apparent stage of division.  相似文献   

13.
几种藻类蛋白核的超微结构研究   总被引:4,自引:1,他引:3  
应用电镜及免疫电镜技术对莱茵藻、小球藻、条浒苔和紫菜等藻类的叶绿体蛋白核的超微结构及主要组成成分进行了观察和研究。结果显示:不同藻类的蛋白核结构不同,显示了藻类蛋白核的多样性。蛋白核为球形或椭圆形,由蛋白质组成。莱茵藻、小球藻和条浒苔的蛋白核外围被淀粉鞘所包围,而紫菜的蛋白核外围无淀粉鞘而直接被叶绿体的类囊体所包围。淀粉鞘由淀粉组成,淀粉鞘的厚薄与藻体藻龄及增养状态有关系。在蛋白核中央,一般都具有由类囊体形成的孔道,使蛋白核与外界联系,小球藻和条浒苔蛋白核具有1条纵向孔道,而莱茵藻和紫菜为多条孔道。金相免疫技术检测结果显示Rubisco和Rubisco活化酶均在蛋白核及淀粉鞘区域中定位,表明蛋白核具有光合作用功能.  相似文献   

14.
Vegetative cells of the brown alga Scytosiphon lomentaria (Lyngbye) Link characteristically have only one chloroplast with a prominent protruding pyrenoid, whereas zygotes have both paternal and maternal chloroplasts. In zygotes, before cell and chloroplast division, each chloroplast has an old and a new pyrenoid. In this study, we raised a polyclonal antibody to RUBISCO and examined the distribution of RUBISCO by immunofluorescence microscopy, focusing on new pyrenoid formation in vegetative cells of gametophytes and zygotes in Scytosiphon. In interphase, only one old pyrenoid was positively indicated by anti‐RUBISCO antibody in vegetative cells of gametophytes. From mid‐S phase, small fluorescence aggregates reflecting RUBISCO localization started to appear at stroma positions other than adjacent to the old protruding pyrenoid. The fluorescent spots eventually coalesced into a protrusion into the adjacent cytoplasm. We also used inhibitors to clarify the relationship between the cell cycle and new pyrenoid formation, using zygotes after fertilization. When DNA replication was blocked by aphidicolin, new pyrenoid formation was also inhibited. Washing out aphidicolin permitted new pyrenoid formation with the progression of the cell cycle. When mitosis was prolonged by nocodazole, which disrupted the spindle microtubules, the fluorescent masses indicating RUBISCO localization continued to increase when compared with pyrenoid formation in untreated zygotes. During treatment with chloramphenicol, mitosis and cytokinesis were completed. However, there was no occurrence of new RUBISCO localization within the chloroplast stroma beyond the old pyrenoid. From these observations, it seems clear that new pyrenoid formation in the brown alga Scytosiphon depends on the cell cycle.  相似文献   

15.
Gloeomonas is a peculiar unicellular volvocalean genus because it lacks pyrenoids in the chloroplasts under the light microscope and has two flagellar bases that are remote from each other. However, ultrastructural features of chloroplasts are very limited, and no molecular phylogenetic analyses have been carried out in Gloeomonas. In this study, we observed ultrastructural features of chloroplasts of three species of Gloeomonas and Chloromonas rubrifilum (Korshikov ex Pascher) Pröschold, B. Marin, U. Schlösser et Melkonian SAG 3.85, and phylogenetic analyses were carried out based on the combined data set from 18S rRNA, ATP synthase beta‐subunit, and P700 chl a–apoprotein A2 gene sequences to deduce the natural phylogenetic positions of the genus Gloeomonas. The present EM demonstrated that the chloroplasts of the three Gloeomonas species and C. rubrifilum SAG 3.85 did not have typical pyrenoids with associated starch grains, but they possessed pyrenoid matrices that protruded interiorly within the stroma regions of the chloroplast. The pyrenoid matrices were large and broad in C. rubrifilum, whereas those of the three Gloeomonas species were recognized in only the small protruded regions of the chloroplast lobes. The present multigene phylogenetic analyses resolved that the three species of Gloeomonas belong to the Chloromonas lineage or Chloromonadinia of the Volvocales, and Chloromonas insignis (Anakhin) Gerloff et H. Ettl NIES‐447 and C. rubrifilum SAG 3.85, both of which have pyrenoids without associated starch grains, were positioned basally to the clade composed of the three species of Gloeomonas. Therefore, Gloeomonas might have evolved from such a Chloromonas species through reduction in pyrenoid matrix size within the chloroplast and by separating their two flagellar bases.  相似文献   

16.
17.
SYNOPSIS. Observations were made on the fine structure of Paramecium bursaria and its intracellular Chlorella symbionts. Emphasis was placed on the structure of the algae and structural aspects of the relationship between the organisms. The algae are surrounded by a prominent cell wall and contain a cup-shaped chloroplast which lies just beneath the plasma membrane. Within the cavity formed by the chloroplast are a large nucleus, a mitochondrion, one or more dictyosomes, and numerous ribosomes. The chloroplast itself is made up of a series of lamellar stacks each containing 2–6 or more thylakoids with a granular stroma and starch grains intercalated between the stacks. The thylakoid stacks of mature algae are frequently more compact than those of recently divided algae. A large pyrenoid is located within the base of the chloroplast. It is made up of a granular or fibrillar matrix surrounded by a shell of starch. The matrix is bisected by a stack of 2 thylakoids. Prior to the division of the chloroplast the pyrenoid regresses; pyrenoids subsequently form in the daughter chloroplasts thru condensation of the matrix material and the reappearance of a starch shell. This shell appears to be formed by the hollowing-out of starch grains already present in the chloroplast stroma. Accordingly, in this case, starch moves from the stroma to the pyrenoid. The algae are located thruout the peripheral cytoplasm of the Paramecium. Each alga is located in an individual vacuole except immediately following division of the algae when the daughter cells are temporarily located in the vacuole which harbored the parental cell. Shortly thereafter the vacuole membrane invaginates, thereby isolating the daughter algae into individual vacuoles. Degenerating symbiotic algae are seen; because these are frequently found in vacuoles with bacteria, they are presumed to be undergoing digestion. Due to the conditions of culture these algae could have been either of intracellular or extracellular origin.  相似文献   

18.
Traditionally the genus Microglena Ehrenberg has been used to contain species that belong to the Chrysophyceae; however, the type species of Microglena, M. monadina, represents a green alga, which was later transferred to the genus Chlamydomonas. The taxonomic status of the genus has therefore remained unclear. We investigated 15 strains previously assigned to C. monadina and two marine species (C. reginae and C. uva-maris) using an integrative approach. Phylogenetic analyses of SSU and ITS rDNA sequences revealed that all strains form a monophyletic lineage within the Chlorophyceae containing species from different habitats. The strains studied showed similar morphology with respect to cell shape and size, but showed differences in chloroplast and pyrenoid structures. Some representatives of this group have the same type of sexual reproduction (homothallic advanced anisogamy). Three different morphotypes could be recognized. Strains belonging to type I have a cup-shaped chloroplast with a massive basal part, in which a large, single, ellipsoidal pyrenoid is located. The members of type II also have a cup-shaped chloroplast, which is partly lobed and has a thinner basal part than type I; here the pyrenoid is half-ring or horseshoe-shaped and occupies different positions in the chloroplast depending on the strain. The strains of type III have multiple pyrenoids, which appear to have developed from the subdivision of a single ring-shaped pyrenoid into several parts. We compared the results of our morphological investigations with the literature and found that 15 strains could be identified with existing species. Two strains did not fit with any described species. As a result of our study, we transfer all strains to the genus Microglena, propose 11 new combinations, and describe two new species. Comparison of the ITS-1 and ITS-2 secondary structures confirmed the species delineations. All species have characteristic compensatory base changes in their ITS secondary structures and are supported by ITS-2 DNA barcodes.  相似文献   

19.
A strain of Chloromonas pseudoplatyrhyncha (Pascher) P. C. Silva, which has not been studied previously using cultured material, was established from a soil sample collected in Japan and examined by light microscopy, transmission electron microscopy, and molecular phylogenetic analyses. The chloroplasts of this species showed no pyrenoids under light microscopy. However, transmission electron microscopy and the staining methods with carmine after fixation in an acidified hypochlorite solution revealed that Chloromonas pseudoplatyrhyncha actually had multiple, atypical pyrenoids (pyrenoid matrices without associated starch grains) that were angular in shape and distributed in the interior regions of the lobes of the chloroplasts. Although some other species of Chloromonas have atypical pyrenoids in the chloroplast, such angular pyrenoids have not previously been reported within the Volvocales. The present molecular phylogenetic analysis, based on 18S ribosomal RNA, adenosine triphosphate synthase β‐subunit, and P700 chlorophyll a‐apoprotein A2 gene sequences, demonstrated that Chloromonas pseudoplatyrhyncha belonged to the Chloromonas lineage or Chloromonadinia, in which it occupied a basal position outside a robust, large monophyletic group consisting of 13 species of Chloromonas and Gloeomonas.  相似文献   

20.
Five species of cultured Trebouxia—T. anticipata, T. decolorans, T. erici, T. gelatinosa, and T. impressa—were examined with the electron microscope. A comparative examination of their pyrenoids revealed pyrenoglobuli associated with single pyrenoid thylakoids. The pyrenoids of T. decolorans, T. erici, and T. gelatinosa possess single thylakoids that cross or deeply penetrate the pyrenoid matrix and are often disposed in parallel arrays. T. anticipata possesses both single and double pyrenoid thylakoids within the matrix. T. impressa possesses vesiculate invaginations of thylakoid membranes into the pyrenoid matrix. The phycobiont. T. erici was examined in detail at the light and electron microscopic levels for pyrenoid alterations associated, with varied environmental regimes and with cell division. A greater amount of starch is present in cells grown in organic culture at 215 lux light intensity than in cells of similar size grown at 1075 or 3600 lux. Pyrenoglobuli are present throughout the life cycle and occur both in aplanospores and in zoospores.  相似文献   

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