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1.
Development of the ascospores of Sporopachydermia lactativora and S. cereana was studied in ultrathin sections. The spores have a very thick wall consisting of a thin dark outer layer and a double light inner layer the outer part of which is very wide and often irregular. During germination, this part disappears, the outer dark layer breaks up and the inner part of the light layer remains around the protoplast during development to a vegetative cell.This investigation was supported by the Netherlands Organization for the Advancement of Pure Research (Z.W.O.).  相似文献   

2.
Ultrastructure of the ascospores of some species of the Torulaspora group   总被引:1,自引:1,他引:0  
Development and germination of the ascospores in species of the Torulaspora group of yeasts have been described. Most species had warty spores which, in sections, showed a dark outer layer consisting of the outer unit membrane of the prospore wall and a layer underneath formed at an early stage of development of the spores. In mature spores the light inner layer of the wall was delimited at the outside by a thin dark layer. The warts often contained dark material. The ascospores of two Pichia and three Debaryomyces species were studied for comparison; they differed in sections from the Torulaspora spores. The taxonomic implications of the ultrastructural observations have been discussed.  相似文献   

3.
The wall of mature ascospores ofSaccharomyces cerevisiae showed in sections under the electron microscope a dark outer layer and a lighter inner layer. The latter was composed of a greyish inner part and a light outer part. During germination, the spore grew out at one side and the dark outer layer was broken. Of the light inner layer, the inner greyish part became the wall of the vegetative cell, but the extented part of the cell had a new wall.  相似文献   

4.
Cells of the yeast Saccharomycopsis capsularis fused in pairs after dissolving of part of the cross wall between them near the lateral wall. After nuclear migrations through the opening, the cross wall was closed again and the cells at both sides became asci. The wall of the ascospores developed from a prospore wall. Between the two unit membranes a very thin dark layer broadened to the dark layer of the wall and after that, the light inner layer developed. Immature spores in the strain studied had a ledge which disappeared during maturation.  相似文献   

5.
Sporulation inSchwanniomyces alluvius appeared to be preceded by fusion of a mother and a daughter cell. Meiosis probably occurred in the mother cell and one or two spores were formed in the latter. A study of thin sections showed that the spore wall developed from a prospore wall. The mature spore wall consisted of a broad light inner layer and a thinner dark outer layer including warts. An equatorial ledge was present. During germination in the ascus, a new light inner layer was formed and the old layers of the spore wall partly broke up. Ascospores in a strain ofS. persoonii had a different wall structure in that the dark layer had changed into light areas separated by dark material which formed bulges at the surface.  相似文献   

6.
Cells of the yeast Saccharomycopsis capsularis fused in pairs after disolving of part of the cross wall between them near the lateral wall. After nuclear migrations through the opening, the cross wall was closed again and the cells at both sides became asci. The wall of the ascospores developed from a prospore wall. Between the two unit membranes a very thin dark layer broadened to the dark layer of the wall and after that, the light inner layer developed. Immature spores in the strain studied had a ledge which disappeared during maturation.  相似文献   

7.
Abstract: The spore Rhabdosporites (Triletes) langii (Eisenack) Richardson, 1960 is abundant and well preserved in Middle Devonian (Eifelian) ‘Middle Old Red Sandstone’ deposits from the Orcadian Basin, Scotland. Here it occurs as dispersed individual spores and in situ in isolated sporangia. This paper reports on a detailed light microscope (LM), scanning electron microscope (SEM) and transmission electron microscope (TEM) analysis of both dispersed and in situ spores. The dispersed spores are pseudosaccate with a thick walled inner body enclosed within an outer layer that was originally attached only over the proximal face. The inner body has lamellate/laminate ultrastructure consisting of fine lamellae that are continuous around the spore and parallel stacked. Towards the outer part of the inner body these group to form thicker laminate structures that are also continuous and parallel stacked. The outer layer has spongy ultrastructure. In situ spores preserved in the isolated sporangia are identical to the dispersed forms in terms of morphology, gross structure and wall ultrastructure. The sporangium wall is two‐layered. A thick coalified outer layer is cellular and represents the main sporangium wall. This layer is readily lost if oxidation is applied during processing. A thin inner layer is interpreted as a peritapetal membrane. This layer survives oxidation as a tightly adherent membranous covering of the spore mass. Ultrastructurally it consists of three layers, with the innermost layer composed of material similar to that comprising the outer layer of the spores. Based on the new LM, SEM and TEM information, consideration is given to spore wall formation. The inner body of the spores is interpreted as developing by centripetal accumulation of lamellae at the plasma membrane. The outer layer is interpreted as forming by accretion of sporopollenin units derived from a tapetum. The inner layer of the sporangium wall is considered to represent a peritapetal membrane formed from the remnants of this tapetum. The spore R. langii derives from aneurophytalean progymnosperms. In light of the new evidence on spore/sporangium characters, and hypotheses of spore wall development based on interpretation of these, the evolutionary relationships of the progymnosperms are considered in terms of their origins and relationship to the seed plants. It is concluded that there is a smooth evolutionary transition between Apiculiretusispora‐type spores of certain basal euphyllophytes, Rhabdosporites‐type spores of aneurophytalean progymnosperms and Geminospora‐/Contagisporites‐type spores of heterosporous archaeopteridalean progymnosperms. Prepollen of basal seed plants (hydrasperman, medullosan and callistophytalean pteridosperms) are easily derived from the spores of either homosporous or heterosporous progymnosperms. The proposed evolutionary transition was sequential with increasing complexity of the spore/pollen wall probably reflecting increasing sophistication of reproductive strategy. The pollen wall of crown group seed plants appears to incorporate a completely new developmental mechanism: tectum and infratectum initiation within a glycocalyx‐like Microspore Surface Coat. It is unclear when this feature evolved, but it appears likely that it was not present in the most basal stem group seed plants.  相似文献   

8.
The zygomycete Geosiphon pyriforme is the only known endocyanosis of a fungus. The Nostoc spp. filaments are included in photosynthetically active and nitrogen fixing, multinucleated bladders, which grow on the soil surface. The spores of the fungus are white or slightly brownish. They are about 250 μm in diameter and develop singly on hyphal ends or, less frequently, intercalarly. The wall of the spores consists of a thin innermost layer, a laminated inner layer with a thickness of about 10–13 μm, and an evanescent outer layer. The laminated layer is composed of helicoidally arranged microfibrils, and is separated from the evanescent outer layer by a thin electron-dense sublayer. Polarisation microscopy indicates the occurrence of chitin. Shape and wall ultrastructure of the Geosiphon spores and their cytoplasm resemble that of Glomus spores, but are different from that of other genera of the Glomales and Endogonales. Germination occurs by a single thick hyphal outgrowth directly through the spore wall. Like various AM forming fungi, Geosiphon pyriforme contains endocytic bacteria-like organisms, which are not surrounded by a host membrane. Our observations indicate that Geosiphon is a potential AM fungus.  相似文献   

9.
The family Hymenophyllaceae is represented in the study area by six species in two genera, Hymenophyllum J. E. Smith and Trichomanes L. The study was based on herbarium material and spores were studied under light microscope (LM), scanning electron microscope (SEM) and transmission electron microscope (TEM). Both genera have trilete spores, 23 to 45 μm in equatorial diameter, with an ornamentation of echinulae and cones in Hymenophyllum and of verrucae, gemmae and granules in Trichomanes. Mature spores have a sporoderm composed of a perispore, an exospore and a fibrillar endospore; the exospore is 0.5 to 2.5 μm thick, compact and with an irregular margin. In some cases radial channels and other channels associated with the middle and inner parts of the laesurae were evident. A series of cavities filled with an opaque content line the inner margin of the exospore. The perispore is 20 to 400 nm thick and unevenly differentiated along the surface of a same spore. Under TEM, two main differentially contrasted portions could be distinguished: a dark massive portion with structural components could not be distinguished, and a light portion with several plates arranged in piles. The inner surface of the perispore exhibit short scales. Globules are immersed within the perispore at some depth from the perispore surface and others connected to it by structural threads. The spore characters observed including shape, ornamentation, laesurae length and wall structure are useful in distinguishing the two genera studied, but less useful in differentiation at the species level.  相似文献   

10.
Three types of structure of the ascospore wall were found among the haploid Saccharomyces species examined: a warty wall (S. rouxii), a smooth wall with a single electron-light inner layer (S. bailii) and a smooth wall with a double light inner layer (S. montanus, S. florentinus). The latter type also occurred in Kluyveromyces thermotolerans and K. waltii. In K. fragilis spores the wall had a single light inner layer. The taxonomic implications of these findings were discussed.  相似文献   

11.
The aim of the present study is to describe the morphology and internal wall structure of Zingiber pollen. The pollen of 18 species of Zingiber was examined by light, scanning and transmission electron microscopy. In the sections Zingiber and Dymczewiczia (Horan.) Benth. the pollen grains are spherical with cerebroid sculpturing while in the section Cryptanthium Horan. the pollen is ellipsoid with spira-striate sculpturing. All species have a thin coherent exine and an intine consisting of a thick, radially channeled outer layer and a thin, finely granular inner layer. On the basis of pollen morphology it is proposed that the section Dymczeniczia is included in the section Zingiber. The structure of the pollen wall in Zingiber resembles that of Canna and Strelitzia in having a pollen wall offering an infinite number of germination sites.  相似文献   

12.
The ultrastructural detail of spore development in Scutellospora heterogama is described. Although the main ontogenetic events are similar to those described from light microscopy, the complexity of wall layering is greater when examined at an ultrastructural level. The basic concept of a rigid spore wall enclosing two inner, flexible walls still holds true, but there are additional zones within these three walls distinguishable using electron microscopy, including an inner layer that is involved in the formation of the germination shield. The spore wall has three layers rather than the two reported previously. An outer, thin ornamented layer and an inner, thicker layer are both derived from the hyphal wall and present at all stages of development. These layers differentiate into the outer spore layer visible at the light microscope level. A third inner layer unique to the spore develops during spore swelling and rapidly expands before contracting back to form the second wall layer visible by light microscopy. The two inner flexible walls also are more complex than light microscopy suggests. The close association with the inner flexible walls with germination shield formation consolidates the preferred use of the term ‘germinal walls’ for these structures. A thin electron-dense layer separates the two germinal walls and is the region in which the germination shield forms. The inner germinal wall develops at least two sub-layers, one of which has an appearance similar to that of the expanding layer of the outer spore wall. An electron-dense layer is formed on the inner surface of the inner germinal wall as the germination shield develops, and this forms the wall surrounding the germination shield as well as the germination tube. At maturity, the outer germinal wall develops a thin, striate layer within its substructure.  相似文献   

13.
采用光镜、透射电镜和细胞化学技术,对紫萁孢子囊发育过程中孢壁的超微结构和孢子囊内多糖和脂滴的分布及其动态变化进行研究,以探讨紫萁孢子囊发育过程中多糖和脂滴的代谢特征,为蕨类孢子发生的研究提供基础资料。结果表明:(1)紫萁孢子囊由1层囊壁细胞、2层绒毡层和产孢组织构成。(2)紫萁孢子壁由发达而分2层的外壁(外壁内层和外壁外层)和薄的不连续的周壁构成,由外壁形成棒状纹饰的轮廓;孢子外壁内层由多糖类物质构成,外壁外层和周壁均含有脂类物质。(3)在紫萁孢原细胞中观察到少量脂滴;随着紫萁孢壁的形成,囊壁细胞中淀粉粒的大小逐渐变小、数目先增加后减少,它们转运到内层绒毡层原生质团并转化为孢粉素前体物质,再穿过原生质团内膜表面进入囊腔,成为孢粉素团块或以小球形式填加到孢子表面形成孢壁。(4)紫萁孢子囊将多糖类营养物质转化为脂类,以脂滴的形式储藏在孢子中。  相似文献   

14.
The distribution and localization of structural polymers in the cell wall of Neurospora crassa has been studied by selective removal and light and electron microscope examination. Observations with the light microscope indicated that each polymer by itself can provide structural integrity to the cell wall. Examination by electron microscopy showed that the cell wall consists of an outer layer of thick fibrils, identified chemically as a glucan-peptide-galactosamine complex, and an inner layer made up of β-1,3 glucan and thin fibrils of chitin.  相似文献   

15.
LYSHEDE  OLE B. 《Annals of botany》1992,69(4):365-371
The seeds of Cuscuta pedicellata have been investigated by transmissionand scanning electron microscopy. Additional observations havebeen made on seeds of C. campestris by SEM only. The seed coatconsists of an outer single epidermis, two different palisadelayers, and an inner multiparenchyma layer. The outer epidermalwall in C. pedicellata has a thick cuticle and zones rich inpectic substances. The thicker ‘U-shaped’ cell wallsin the outer palisade layer are strengthened by a wall layerof hemicellulose. The inner palisade layer has thick walledcells with a ‘light line’. The inner cell wall ofthe compressed multiparenchyma layer has a thin cuticle. A fairlythick cuticle is positioned directly on the endosperm surface.The aleurone cell walls are different from the remaining endospermwalls. The latter are thick and believed to be of galactomannans.There is a ‘clear’ zone between the plasmalemmaand the cell wall in the aleurone cells. The embryo cells arepacked with lipids and proteins. In Cuscuta campestris mostendosperm has been absorbed during the seed development. Theembryo apex has two minute leaf primordia. The features of theCuscuta seeds are discussed in relation to functional and environmentalconditions. Cuscuta pedicellata, Cuscuta campestris, seed, seed coat, cuticle, cell walls, endosperm, aleurone cells, galactomannan, embryo, TEM, SEM  相似文献   

16.
Dawes , Clinton J., and Edwin Bowler . (U. of California, Los Angeles.) Light and electron microscope studies of the cell wall structure of the root hairs of Raphanus sativus. Amer. Jour. Bot. 46(8): 561–565. Illus. 1959.—The structure and development of the cell wall of the root hair of Raphanus sativus were studied under the light and electron microscopes. The outer layer of the root hair consists of mucilage which covers the entire hair and forms a thick cap at the tip. Beneath the mucilage a thin cuticle covers the inner layers of the cell wall. These layers consist of cellulose microfibrils, varying in pattern, in a granular matrix, presumably pectic in nature. The microfibrils of the outer layer, apparently laid down at the tip, are reticulate in arrangement. In mature regions of the root hair, the wall is thickened by an inner layer of parallel and longitudinally orientated microfibrils. Pores in the cellulose wall are evident and increase in number and size near the base of the hair.  相似文献   

17.
SYNOPSIS. Oocysts of Eimeria nieschulzi from the laboratory rat, Rattus, norvegicus , were studied by scanning and transmission electron microscopy. Oocysts had a rough outer wall with apparent random depressions. The oocyst wall is composed of 2 layers: an osmiophilic outer layer consisting of a rough external and smooth internal surface, and a relatively thick, electron-lucent inner layer. The outer layer is composed of a dense, coarsely granular matrix. The inner layer consists of homogeneous fine granular material interspersed with coarse osmiophilic granules and contains one closely applied membrane on the outermost surface. Several raised lenticular areas are seen on the coarse outer surface of the inner layer. These layers are 102 (75–128) and 176 (135–204) nm thick, respectively.
The sporocyst wall is thin, consisting of 3 to 4 unit membranes, and measures 27 (18–34) nm thick.  相似文献   

18.
A further study of Physoderma hydrocotylidis from California on its host Hydrocotyle ranunculoides gives further details on its structure and development. EM micrographs reveal that the notably thin wall of the resting spore consists of an outer, an intermediate, and an inner layer. The complete wall thickness from measurements of these EM preparations is only 0.5 μm, the thinnest of any known Physoderma resting spore. Such resting spores germinate readily in 2–5 h by the dehiscence of a broad cap and formation of a protruding endosporganium. Zoospores from the latter infect epidermal host cells and produce either the endobiotic, polycentric rhizoidal system with tenuous filaments, turbinate cells and eventually resting spores, or a hitherto unknown epibiotic, monocentric, rhizidiaceous sporangial stage. Zoospores from the latter may all bear colorless lipid globules or all faintly orange-colored ones.  相似文献   

19.
Spore wall morphogenesis of Equisetum arvense was observed by transmission electron microscopy. The spore wall of E. arvense consists of four layers: intine, exine, middle layer, and elater. The exine is formed after meiosis and consists of two distinct layers. The inner portion of the exine is formed in advance of the outer layer of the exine. The middle layer is deposited after the exine. The elater can be subdivided into two distinct layers. The inner layer comprises longitudinal microfibrils that surround the spore in spiral fashion. The elater appears as thin beltlike structures at the beginning of development. Numerous microtubules were observed on the inner surface of the plasmodial plasma membrane opposite the inner layer of the elater, suggesting that these microtubules are involved with the synthesis of inner elater microfibrils. The matrix of the outer elater is formed by discharge of granules from the plasmodial cytoplasm. The intine is the last component of the sporoderm to be formed.  相似文献   

20.
This study evaluates osmolality of a submerged conidia-producing medium in relation to the following spore characteristics: yield, morphology (dimensions and cell wall structure), chemical properties of cell wall surfaces (charge, hydrophobicity, and lectin binding), cytoplasmic polyols and trehalose, and performance (drying stability and pathogenicity). Spore production was increased by the addition of up to 150 g l?1 polyethylene glycol 200 (PEG). Spores from high osmolality medium (HOM spores) containing 100 g l?1 PEG had thin cell walls and dimensions more similar to blastospores than submerged conidia or aerial conidia. However, a faint electron-dense layer separating primary and secondary HOM spores’ cell walls was discernable by transmission electron microscopy as found in aerial and submerged conidia but not found in blastospores. HOM spores also appeared to have an outer rodlet layer, unlike blastospores, although it was thinner than those observed in submerged conidia. HOM spores’ surfaces possessed hydrophobic microsites, which was further evidence of the presence of a rodlet layer. In addition, HOM spores had concentrations of exposed N-acetyl-β-d-glucosaminyl residues intermediate between blastospores and submerged conidia potentially indicating a masking of underlying cell wall by a rodlet layer. All spore types had exposed α-d-mannosyl and/or α-d-glucosyl residues, but lacked oligosaccharides. Similar to blastospores, HOM spores were less anionic than submerged conida. Although HOM spores had thin cell walls, they were more stable to drying than blastospores and submerged conidia. Relative drying stability did not appear to be the result of differences in polyol or trehalose concentrations, since trehalose concentrations were lower in HOM spores than submerged conidia and polyol concentrations were similar between the two spore types. HOM spores had faster germination rates than submerged conidia, similar to blastospores, and they were more pathogenic to Schistocerca americana than submerged conidia and aerial conidia.  相似文献   

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