首页 | 本学科首页   官方微博 | 高级检索  
相似文献
 共查询到20条相似文献,搜索用时 31 毫秒
1.
The subcellular organization of zoospores released from sessile, parasitic sporangia of Caulochytrium protostelioides was studied with light and electron microscopy. A single flagellum is posteriorly directed but laterally inserted into the cylindrical motile zoospore. A striated rhizoplast attaches the proximal end of the kinetosome to a specialized region of the nuclear envelope. A system of rough endoplasmic reticulum, smooth endoplasmic reticulum, dictyosomes and bristle-coated vesicles are associated with the one to several pulsating vacuoles typically located near the flagellar apparatus. The microbody-lipid globule complex (MLC) comprises one to many lipid globules. An extensive microbody branches around each lipid globule and encloses a portion of the rhizoplast. A reticulum of smooth surfaced cisternae interdigitates among the branches of the complex microbody, and cisternae are opposed to the surface of lipid globules opposite the microbodies. Mitochondria with predominantly circular profiles are scattered throughout the zoospore body, but several are always adjacent to the microbody, and hence, are also part of the MLC. Ribosomes are uniformly distributed throughout the zoospore, and one to several cisternae of rough endoplasmic reticulum are adjacent to the nuclear envelope. Zoospores of C. protostelioides are similar to several other chytrid zoospores, which also have the same type of microbody-lipid globule complex, but yet are structurally distinct from any other chytrid zoospore.  相似文献   

2.
Summary Determining how the orientation and association among organelles are maintained within zoospores of theChytridiales is important to understanding the control of zoospore motility. Zoospores of the aquatic fungi,Chytriomyces aureus andC. hyalinus, contain microbody-lipid globule complexes with an elongate microbody adjacent to the portion of a lipid globule facing the cell's interior and a fenestrated cisterna (the rumposome) opposed to the surface of the lipid globule toward the plasma membrane. Mitochondria are intimately associated with the microbody. Electron microscopy of the microbody-lipid globule complex fixed in glutaraldehyde and osmium tetroxide, with or without tannic acid, reveals cross-linking bridges connecting the rumposome to the plasma membrane, to the microbody, and to microtubules of the rootlet extending from the kinetosome. It is concluded that these bridges are responsible, at least in part, for the consistent location of the microbody-lipid globule complex in the zoospore body. The possible role of the rumposome as a receptor organelle is discussed.  相似文献   

3.
M J Powell 《Bio Systems》1978,10(1-2):167-180
Chytridiomycetous fungal zoospores contain a unique and intricate association of organelles, the 'microbody-lipid globule complex' (MLC). The spatial arrangement of organelles in the MLC appears important in the utilization of lipid globules for energy, but in addition, the structural association of organelles in the MLC reveals phylogenetic trends within this diverse group of organisms. Variations in the structure of the MLC correlate well with current phylogenetic concepts of aquatic fungi, yet suggest new relationships among these posteriorly uniflagellate zoospores. Based upon the organization of organelles in the MLC, 4 basic patterns of MLCs can be recognized, and these correspond to the 4 orders of Chytridiomycetes. The MLC in its simplest form consists of a microbody appressed to the edge of a lipid globule. In more highly organized MLCs, mitochondria subtend the microbody and a cisterna surmounts one side of the lipid globule. The organization and structure is still more complex in other MLCs where ER is elaborated into a tubular network of membranes or where small microbodies or mitochondria fuse into 'giant' organelles. The structural organization of the MLC provides an additional criterion by which the phylogeny of awuatic fungi can be evaluated.  相似文献   

4.
Zoospores, prosporangia, and asexual sporangia were studied with electron microscopy to determine the ultrastructural identification of “chromidia,” granular masses surrounding nuclei that classical mycologists believed to be extruded chromatin used for lipid synthesis. In the zoospore the nucleus was enclosed by an aggregation of ribosomes. In other developmental stages the behavior of microbodies was identical to that described for “chromidia.” A microbody network with interspersed ER surrounded nuclei in young prosporangia. As the prosporangium matured, lipid globules became associated with the microbodies. When the single, large nucleus migrated into the elongate asexual sporangium, microbodies still surrounded the nucleus; but after the nucleus divided and a multinucleate sporangium formed, microbodies were scattered throughout the cytoplasm. When incubated in the diaminobenzidine medium for the cytochemical detection of catalase, reaction product was found in these microbodylike structures, confirming that “chromidia” described in prosporangia and asexual sporangia by classical mycologists are really microbodies. Rather than giving rise to lipid, these microbodies are probably involved in the metabolism of the lipid globules with which they are associated. The “chromidia” in zoospores are not extruded chromatin as suggested earlier, but correspond in their location around the nucleus to an aggregation of ribosomes.  相似文献   

5.
本文描述了寄生在大麦根部的禾谷多粘菌Polymyxa graminis Led.的次生游动孢子的超微结构,包括核、内质网、高尔基体、线粒体、脂质粒、排泄泡、小囊、具膜小囊、核糖体以及鞭毛基体(Kinetosome)和鞭毛杆等细胞器。游动孢子中未见微体。同时也在电镜下观察了游动孢子接触和穿透根细胞时所形成的管腔(Rohr)和棘杆(Stachel)以及游动孢子穿透细胞壁的详细过程。  相似文献   

6.
Ultrastructural localization of peroxidatic activity was investigated in the chytrid Entophlyctis variabilis with the 3,3-diaminobenzidine (DAB) cytochemical prodedure. The subcellular distribution of reaction product varied with changes in pH of the DAB medium and with the developmental stage of the fungus. Incubations in the DAB reaction medium at pH 9.2 produced an electron dense reaction product within single membrane bounded organelles which resembled microbodies but which varied in shapes from elongate to oval. At this pH the cell wall also stained darkly. When the pH of the DAB medium was lowered to pH 8.2 or 7.0, DAB oxidation product was localized within mitochondrial cristae as well as in microbodies and zoosporangial walls. As soon as zoospores were completely cleaved out of the zoosporangial cytoplasm, endoplasmic reticulum (ER) also stained. When the wall appeared around the encysted zoospore, ER staining was no longer found. The influence of the catalase inhibitor, aminotriazole, and the inhibitors of heme enzymes, sodium azide and sodium cyanide, on the staining patterns within cells incubated in the DAB media indicates that microbody staining is due to both catalase and peroxidase, mitochondrial staining is due to cytochrome c, and ER staining is due to peroxidase.Abbreviations DAB 3,3-diaminobenzidine-HCl - ER endoplasmic reticulum  相似文献   

7.
In previous work, we have demonstrated that oleate induces a massive proliferation of microbodies (peroxisomes) in Aspergillus nidulans. Although at a lower level, proliferation of peroxisomes also occurrs in cells growing under conditions that induce penicillin biosynthesis. Here, microbodies in oleate-grown A. nidulans cells were characterized by using several antibodies that recognize peroxisomal enzymes and peroxins in a broad spectrum of eukaryotic organisms such as yeast, and plant, and mammalian cells. Peroxisomes were immunolabeled by anti-SKL and anti-thiolase antibodies, which suggests that A. nidulans conserves both PTS1 and PTS2 import mechanisms. Isocitrate lyase and malate synthase, the two key enzymes of the glyoxylate cycle, were also localized in these organelles. In contrast to reports of Neurospora crassa, our results demonstrate that A. nidulans contains only one type of microbody (peroxisomes) that carry out the glyoxylate cycle and contain 3-ketoacyl-CoA thiolase and proteins with the C-terminal SKL tripeptide. Received: 4 March 1998 / Accepted: 2 July 1998  相似文献   

8.
Microbodies in the cotyledons of cucumber seedlings perform two successive metabolic functions during early postgerminative development. During the first 4 or 5 d, glyoxylate cycle enzymes accumulate in microbodies called glyoxysomes. Beginning at about day 3, light-induced activities of enzymes involved in photorespiratory glycolate metabolism accumulate rapidly in microbodies. As the cotyledonary microbodies undergo a functional transition from glyoxysomal to peroxisomal metabolism, both sets of enzymes are present at the same time, either within two distinct populations of microbodies with different functions or within a single population of microbodies with a dual function. We have used protein A-gold immunoelectron microscopy to detect two glyoxylate cycle enzymes, isocitrate lyase (ICL) and malate synthase, and two glycolate pathway enzymes, serine:glyoxylate aminotransferase (SGAT) and hydroxypyruvate reductase, in microbodies of transition-stage (day 4) cotyledons. Double-label immunoelectron microscopy was used to demonstrate directly the co-existence of ICL and SGAT within individual microbodies, thereby discrediting the two-population hypothesis. Quantitation of protein A- gold labeling density confirmed that labeling was specific for microbodies. Quantitation of immunolabeling for ICL or SGAT in microbodies adjacent to lipid bodies, to chloroplasts, or to both organelles revealed very similar labeling densities in these three categories, suggesting that concentrations of glyoxysomal and peroxisomal enzymes in transition-stage microbodies probably cannot be predicted based on the apparent associations of microbodies with other organelles.  相似文献   

9.
The zoospore of Pseudosporonospora cubensis is typical of the secondary zoospore of the Peronosporales. The reniform zoospore contains a central nucleus with a prominent beak-like extension to the kinetosomes on the lateral side of the spore in the groove region. "Fuzzy" vesicles derived from dictyosomes surround and fuse with the contractile vacuole. Mitochondria and microbodies are located in the peripheral cytoplasm of the zoospore but the latter are confined to the groove region of the spore. The microbodies usually contain a laminate inclusion and the microbodies are not in a fixed position in relation to the peripheral cisternae. Neither a microbody-lipid body complex nor a "U-body" were observed.
The kinetosomes of the spore are almost perpendicular to each other at the distal end of the beak-like extension of the nucleus. A complex system of cytoplasmic microtu-bules flare out from the kinetosomes to surround the nucleus and bundles of cytoplasmic microtubules extend under the plasmalemma of the spore. The zoospore contain numerous vesicles with osmiophilic inclusions which are finely striated; these are the so-called finger-print vesicles.  相似文献   

10.
The ultrastructure of the secondary zoospores of Aphanomyces astaci and A. laevis was compared. The general appearance of the organelles and their compartmental–ization is the same, but some subtle differences were found. A. laevis has a less distinct distribution of fuzzy vesicles around the border of the water expulsion apparatus than A. astaci. The content of the U–body of the A. astaci zoospore is paracrystalline but the A. laevis U–body has a tubular content. In the peripheral cytoplasm of both species are seen vesicles with a granular content. Flattened cisternae are found in a narrow zone just below the plasmalemma. These two structures are confined to the zoospore stage of the fungi. The lipid–microbody complex of A. laevis cysts is not present in the zoospore. The ultrastructural organization of uniflagellate and bi–flagellate zoospores is compared.  相似文献   

11.
Martha J. Powell 《Protoplasma》1994,181(1-4):123-141
Summary In development of the primitive fungi, chytridiomycetes, unwalled zoospores bearing single, posterior flagella are transformed into walled, round-cells which elaborate the thallus. Production, structural modification, or release of extracellular material are involved with each transition of developmental stage. This article reviews the variety and developmental changes of extracellular materials found at the cell surface of chytridiomycetes. A cell coat, produced from Golgi-derived vesicles during zoosporogenesis, is visible around free swimming zoospores of some chytridiomycetes. How the zoospore surface receives and transduces signals is not widely explored, but it is known that fenestrated cisternae and simple cisternae, which are integrated into the microbody-lipid globule complex, are spatially and structurally associated with the plasma membrane and flagellar apparatus. This spatial association, as well as the cytochemical localization of calcium in fenestrated cisternae, suggest a mechanism for signal transduction and for regulation of zoospore motility. Zoospores become encased in a new layer of extracellular material as the zoospore encysts. Among some chytrids the source of this material is preexisting vesicles which fuse with the plasma membrane. Among other zoospores, a readily identifiable population of encystment vesicles is not apparent, demonstrating that there is no single pattern or mechanism for zoospore encystment in chytridiomycetes. Encysted zoospores developing into thalli, typically produce cell walls with a microfibrillar substructure. Ultrastructural analysis of walls reveals distinctive architecture and remarkable sculpturing which have been used in systematics of some members of chytridiomycetes. Nothing is known as to underlying controls of cytoskeletal elements and plasma membrane enzyme complexes in wall biogenesis. Many changes in cell surface structures accompany thallus maturation. Septa, many traversed with plasmodesmata, are produced in most chytrid thallus types. As sporangia and resting spores prepare for the production and release of zoospores, additional extracellular layers of material are frequently produced. Polarized deposits of extracellular material become discharge plugs, discharge vesicles, or endoopercula. Interstitial material is also released into cleavage furrows. Circumscissile or localized digestion of walls produce operculate or inoperculate exit ports for zoospore release. Cryofixation preserves more extensive extracellular material than does conventional chemical fixation, and broader application of cryofixation may radically alter our current view of cell surface structure. Thus chytridiomycetes exhibit a range in patterns for the occurrence and subsequent modifications of extracellular materials, even for members within the same order. The most universally recognized role for these extracellular materials is protection. Although there is a reasonable view of the types of extracellular material involved in chytridiomycete development, we have only limited understandings of their biogenesis or roles in regulation and communication, areas awaiting more investigations.Abbreviations DIC Nomarski-differential contrast optics - TEM transmission electron microscopy  相似文献   

12.
Summary Lagenidium giganteum (Oomycetes: Lagenidiales), a facultative parasite of mosquito larvae, infects the larval stage of most species of mosquitoes and a very limited number of alternate hosts. Host infection by this and other members of Oomycetes is initiated by motile, laterally biflagellate zoospores. Chemical bases for the various degrees of host specificity exhibited by these parasites is not known, but presumably involves receptors on the zoospore surface recognizing compounds either secreted by or on the surface of their hosts. Surface topography had no detectable effect onL. giganteum encystment or appressorium formation. Scanning electron microscopy documented the detachment of flagella during zoospore encystment. Bulbous knobs at the basal end of the detached flagellum were interpreted as encysting zoospores dropping the axoneme and/or the basal body and associated structures to which flagella are attached. Multiple signals appear to be involved in the initial steps ofL. giganteum host invasion. Zoospores of this parasite did not encyst on powdered preparations of chitin or chitosan (deacetylated chitin). Upon dissolution of chitosan in dilute acid followed by drying these solutions to form thin, transparent films, zoospores readily encysted. The degree of reacetylation of these films and the spacing of acetylated and deacetylated residues had no significant effect on zoospore encystment. Zoospores of a strain ofLagenidium myophilum isolated from marine shrimp, that also infects mosquito larvae, encysted on chitosan films. No encystment of spores of the plant parasitePhytophthora capsici was observed on chitin or chitosan films. Simulation of cuticle sclerotization by incubating chitosan films with different catecholamines and tyrosinase significantly reduced zoospore encystment. Zoospores that encysted on chitosan films did not germinate in distilled water. Germination could be induced by adding microgram quantities of bovine serum albumin or proteins secreted by motile zoospores into the water, and to a lesser degree by some amino acids, but not by various cations. Zoospores encysted and germinated on the pupal stage of some mosquito species. Appressoria were occasionally formed, but most subsequently sent out another mycelial branch, apparently without attempting to pierce the pupal cuticle. Methylation of pupal exuviae with ethereal diazomethane or methanol/HCl significantly increased zoospore encystment. Modification of chitin by catecholamines, lipids and protein on the epicuticular larval surface all affected host invasion.Abbreviations BSA bovine serum albumin - CID collision-induced dissociation - DOPA 3,4-dihydroxyphenylalanine - ESI-MS electrospray mass spectrometry - ESI-MS/MS tandem electrospray mass spectrometry - SDS-PAGE sodium dodecyl sulphate polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis - WGA wheat germ agglutinin - ZAP zoospore aggregation pheromone  相似文献   

13.
The nature of the surface saccharides of zoospores, "partially encysted zoospores" and cysts of the root-rotting fungus Phytophthora cinnamomi, has been examined by quantitative lectin binding studies. Zoospores bound concanavalin A (Con A), but did not bind any of a variety of other lectins tested. In contrast, both cysts and "partially encysted zoospores" bound soybean agglutinin (SBA) as well as Con A. This indicates that accessible alpha-D-glucosyl/alpha-D-mannosyl-containing glycoconjugates predominate at the zoospore surface, whereas both alpha-D-glucosyl/alpha-D-mannosyl and galactosyl and/or N-acetyl-D-galactosaminosyl residues are accessible at the surface of cysts and "partially encysted zoospores." Neither Ulex europeus lectin nor wheat germ agglutinin (WGA) bound to any of the three cell preparations, indicating the absence of accessible alpha-L-fucosyl and N-acetyl-D-glucosaminosyl residues.  相似文献   

14.
Summary Microbodies are ubiquitous organelles in fungal cells, occurring in both vegetative hyphae and spores. They are bounded by a single membrane and may contain a crystalloid inclusion with subunits spaced at regular intervals. Typically, they contain catalase which reacts with the cytochemical stain 3,3-diaminobenzidine to yield an electron-opaque product, urate oxidase,l--hydroxy acid oxidase andd-amino acid oxidase. Their fragility and the necessity to disrupt the tough fungal cell wall before isolating them make them difficult to isolate. Analysis of enzymes in purified or partially purified microbodies from fungi indicates that they participate in fatty acid degradation, the glyoxylate cycle, purine metabolism, methanol oxidation, assimilation of nitrogenous compounds, amine metabolism and oxalate synthesis. In organisms where microbodies are known to contain enzymes of the glyoxylate cycle, they are known as glyoxysomes; where they are known to contain peroxidatic activity, they are known as peroxisomes. In some cases microbodies contain enzymes for only a portion of a pathway or cycle. Thus, they must be involved in metabolic cooperation with other organelles, particularly mitochondria. The number, size and shape of microbodies in cells, their buoyant density and their enzyme contents may vary with the composition of the medium; their proliferation in cells is regulated by the growth environment. The isolation from the same organism of microbodies with different buoyant densities and different enzymes suggests strongly that more than one type of microbody can be formed by fungi.  相似文献   

15.
R. Molowitz  M. Bahn  B. Hock 《Planta》1976,132(2):143-148
Summary The distribution of glyoxylate-cycle enzymes between microbodies and mitochondria was examined in ethanol-grown Aspergillus tamarii Kita. Particulate activities of catalase and the two glyoxylate by-pass enzymes, malate synthase and isocitrate lyase, were localized in the microbodies. The microbodies had a buoyant density of about 1.23 g cm-3 after isopycnic centrifugation in linear sucrose gradients. Particulate activities of the other two glyoxycitrate synthase, together with that of succinate dehydrogenase were restricted to the mitochondria, which had a buoyant density of about 1.20 g cm-3. Catalase also appeared to be localized in a second particle, perhaps the microbody inclusions or the Woronin bodies, having a buoyant density of about 1.26 g cm-3.  相似文献   

16.
SYNOPSIS. We demonstrated previously microbodies in Euglena gracilis grown in the dark on 2-carbon substrates. We have now established in Euglena the particulate nature of enzymes known in other organisms to be localized in microbodies (glyoxysomes and leaf peroxisomes). On a linear sucrose gradient the glyoxylate cycle enzymes band together at a nigner equilibrium density (1.20 g/cm3) than mitochondrial marker enzymes (1.17 g/cm3), establishing the existence in Euglena of glyoxysomes similar to those of higher plants. Glyoxylate (hydroxypyruvate) reductase and, under certain conditions, also glycolate dehydrogenase co-band with the glyoxylate cycle enzymes, suggesting that Euglena glyoxysomes, like those of higher plants, may contain peroxisomal-type enzymes. Catalase, an enzyme characteristic of microbodies from a variety of sources, was not detected in Euglena.  相似文献   

17.
Thalassochytrium gracilariopsidis gen. et sp. nov. is an endosymbiotic, polycentric, zoosporic fungus that infected cultures of the red alga Gracilariopsis sp. Based on the posteriorly uniflagellate zoospore and the platelike cristae of the mitochondria, the fungus is placed in the Chytridiomycota. Ultrastructurally, the fungal zoospore is distinguished by the anterior position of the kinetosome, a unique microbody-lipid globule complex, an electron-opaque helix associated with the kinetosome and lipid globules, and a beaked nucleus. Zoospores are positively phototactic, and the unusual helix might constitute part of the photosensory apparatus. Zoospores lack certain taxonomically important structures, such as a rumposome, props, a nonflagellated kinetosome, and flagellar roots. The organism does not fit into any described genus, and the features of its zoospore differ from those of any described order. The fungal thallus is polycentric with multinucleate, septate hyphae. Haustoria form within the algal cells. The fungus does not appear to cause major harm to its host and seems to be host specific. However, during intense sporulation of the fungus, degradation of host chloroplasts was observed in medullary cells.  相似文献   

18.
The changes in activities of glyoxysomal and peroxisomal enzymes have been correlated with the fine structure of microbodies in cotyledons of the cucumber (Cucumis sativus L.) during the transition from fat degradation to photosynthesis in light-grown plants, and in plants grown in the dark and then exposed to light. During early periods of development in the light (days 2 through 4), the microbodies (glyoxysomes) are interspersed among lipid bodies and contain relatively high activities of glyoxylate cycle enzymes involved in lipid degradation. Thereafter, these activities decrease rapidly as the cotyledons expand and become photosynthetic, and the activity of glycolate oxidase rises to a peak (day 7); concomitantly the microbodies (peroxisomes) become preferentially associated with chloroplasts.  相似文献   

19.
The female gonad of Prorhynchus is heterocellular (neoophoran organization) and consists of an unpaired, elongate germovitellarium enveloped by a finely granular extracellular lamina. It is composed of a posterior germinative area where early oocytes are randomly associated with differentiating vitellocytes and a growth area with follicular organization. In each follicle a single oocyte is surrounded by a layer of vitellocytes. By electron microscopy, the oocytes showed features typical of non-vitellogenic germ cells; they had chromatoid bodies, annulate lamellae, lipid droplets and R.E.R. and Golgi complexes producing small granules with a multilamellar pattern. Vitellocytes showed features typical of secretory cells with the R.E.R. and Golgi complex developed to a great extent and involved in the production of type A and type B globules, respectively. We speculate that type A globules are shell-globules and type B globules are yolk. The structure, composition and role of vitellocyte globules of Prorhynchus are compared with those of homologous inclusions from other Platyhelminthes.Abbreviations A type A globule - B type B globule - ECL extracellular lamina - GC Golgi complex - L lipid - RER rough endoplasmic reticulum - O oocyte - V vitellocyte  相似文献   

20.
设为首页 | 免责声明 | 关于勤云 | 加入收藏

Copyright©北京勤云科技发展有限公司  京ICP备09084417号