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 15 毫秒
1.
Summary The absolute configuration of the flagellar apparatus inPyramimonas gelidicola McFadden et al. has been determined and shows identity withP. obovata, indicating that they are closely related. Comparison with the flagellar apparatus of quadriflagellate zoospores from the more advancedChlorophyceae suggest thatPyramimonas may be a primitive ancestral form. The microtubular cytoskeleton has been examined in detail and is shown to be unusual in that it does not attach to the flagellar apparatus. Cytoskeletal microtubules are nucleated individually, and this is interpreted as an adaptation to the methods of mitosis and scale deployment. In view of the primitive nature of these processes, it is proposed that this type of cytoskeletal organization may represent a less advanced condition than that of the flagellar root MTOCs (microtubule organizing centers) observed in theChlorophyceae.  相似文献   

2.
The ultrastructure of the flagellar apparatus ofMesostigma viride Lauterborn (Prasinophyceae) has been studied in detail with particular reference to absolute configurations, numbering of basal bodies, basal body triplets and flagellar roots. The two basal bodies are interconnected by three connecting fibers (one distal fiber = synistosome, and two proximal fibers). The flagellar apparatus shows 180° rotational symmetry; four microtubular flagellar roots and two system II fibers are present. The microtubular roots represent a 4-6-4-6-system. The left roots (1s, 2s) consist of 4 microtubules, each with the usual 3 over 1 root tubule pattern. Each right root (1d, 2d) is proximally associated with a small, but typical multi-layered structure (MLS). The latter displays several layers corresponding to the S1 (the spline microtubules: 5–7), and presumably the S2—S4 (the lamellate layers) of the MLS of theCharophyceae. At its proximal origin (near the basal bodies) each right root originates with only two microtubules, the other spline microtubules being added more distally. The structural and positional information obtained in this study strongly suggest that one of the right roots (1d) ofMesostigma is homologous to the MLS-root of theCharophyceae and sperm cells of archegoniate land plants. Thus the typical cruciate flagellar root system of the green algae and the unilateral flagellar root system of theCharophyceae and archegoniates share a common ancestry. Some functional and phylogenetic aspects of MLS-roots are discussed.Dedicated to Prof. DrLothar Geitler on the occasion of his 90th birthday.  相似文献   

3.
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   

4.
Summary The influence of the microtubule disorganizing substances amiprophos-methyl (APM) and colchicine on secondary wall formation inMicrasterias denticulata was investigated by the freezeetch technique. The results reveal that neither microtubule inhibitor changes the pattern of microfibril deposition. The application of APM or colchicine also does not cause any structural alterations of the microfibrils or of the protoplasmic (Pf) and the exoplasmic (Ef) fracture face of the plasma membrane, thus indicating that microtubules are not involved in secondary wall formation inM. denticulata. However, since areas of the plasma membrane which collapsed upon freeze-etching are restricted to the Pf-face of cells treated with microtubule inhibitors, cortical microtubules may function as mechanical support during secondary wall formation. In the cortical cytoplasm filamentous structures are found in close spatial relationship and an almost parallel alignment to rosettes of the plasma membrane.  相似文献   

5.
The flagellar root system of zoospores in two species ofChlorosarcinopsis (C. minuta andC. spec.) has been studied in detail. The biflagellate zoospores show a cruciate root system, two of the four microtubular roots containing two microtubules, the other two four microtubules. The flagellar apparatus is otherwise identical with that ofChlamydomonas reinhardi as described byRingo (1967). Evidence is presented that the genusChlamydomonas is characterized by a bilateral symmetric root system (4-2-4-2) rather than a system with four equally numbered roots (i.e. 4-4-4-4). It is suggested that a root system with four identical cruciate roots is not present in any biflagellate algal cell. The taxonomic significance of cruciate root systems in green algae is discussed refering to the identical root systems ofChlorosarcinopsis andChlamydomonas.  相似文献   

6.
M. Melkonian 《Protoplasma》1981,108(3-4):341-355
Summary The flagellar apparatus of the quadriflagellate scaly green algaPyramimonas obovata has been studied in detail and the absolute configuration of the flagellar apparatus has been determined. The flagellar root system is cruciate (4-2-4-2-system). 18 major basal body associated fibrous structures connect the four basal bodies with each other. Each basal body is linked to an adjacent basal body by a unique set of connecting fibres, i.e., the flagellar apparatus does not exhibit 180° rotational symmetry. The flagellar apparatus ofPyramimonas obovata is compared with that of quadriflagellate motile cells of theChlorophyceae sensu Stewart andMattox and the phylogenetic relationships are discussed.  相似文献   

7.
Summary The ultrastructure of the flagellar apparatus of aPleurochrysis, a coccolithophorid was studied in detail. Three major fibrous connecting bands and several accessory fibrous bands link the basal bodies, haptonema and microtubular flagellar roots. The asymmetrical flagellar root system is composed of three different microtubular roots (referred to here as roots 1,2, and 3) and a fibrous root. Root 1, associated with one of the basal bodies, is of the compound type, constructed of two sets of microtubules,viz. a broad sheet consisting of up to twenty closely aligned microtubules, and a secondary bundle made up of 100–200 microtubules which arises at right angles to the former. A thin electron-dense plate occurs on the surface of the microtubular sheet opposite the secondary bundle. The fibrous root arises from the same basal body and passes along the plasmalemma together with the microtubular sheet of root 1. Root 2 is also of the compound type and arises from one of the major connecting bands (called a distal band) as a four-stranded microtubular root and extends in the opposite direction to the haptonema. From this stranded root a secondary bundle of microtubules arises at approximately right angle. Root 3 is a more simple type, composed of at least six microtubules which are associated with the basal body. The flagellar transition region was found to be unusual for the classPrymnesiophyceae. The phylogenetic significance of the flagellar apparatus in thePrymnesiophyceae is discussed.  相似文献   

8.
The fine structure ofGloeomonas simulans Fott (1957) was studied electron microscopically to ascertain whether it belongs to the genusChlamydomonas rather than toGloeomonas. Most cytoplasmic elements and the cell wall do not differ from otherChlamydomonadaceae but its flagellar rootlet system is unique: Each of the two flagella has an accessory basal body; its basis is accompanied by two inner and two outer bands which are connected distally (one inner and one outer band on each side) resp. proximally (the two outer bands); the latter form a long (up to 3–5 µm) connecting band between the two flagellar bases. The nucleus contains fibrillar bundels.—The unique flagellar rootlet system seems to provide a better basis for the generic classification ofGloeomonas than the position of the contractile vacuoles or the size of the apical papilla, and strongly suggests the exclusion ofG. simulans fromChlamydomonas.
Zweiter Beitrag einer vonEttl (1965a) begonnenen Publikationsreihe.  相似文献   

9.
Summary Rosettes of six particles have been visualized by freeze-fracture in the protoplasmic fracture (PF) faces of: a) the plasma membrane, b) Golgi cisternae, and c) Golgi-derived vesicles in mesophyll cells ofZinnia elegans that had been induced to differentiate synchronously into tracheary elements in suspension culture. These rosettes have been observed previously in the PF face of the plasma membranes of a variety of cellulose-synthesizing cells and are thought to be important in cellulose synthesis. InZinnia tracheary elements, the rosettes are localized in the membrane over regions of secondary wall thickening and are absent between thickenings. The observation of rosettes in the Golgi cisternae and vesicles suggests that the Golgi apparatus is responsible for the selective transport and exocytosis of rosettes in higher plants, as has been previously indicated in the algaMicrasterias (Giddings et al. 1980). The data presented indicate that the Golgi apparatus has a critical role in the control of cell wall deposition because it is involved not only in the synthesis and export of matrix components but also in the export of an important component of the cellulose synthesizing apparatus. The rosettes are present in the plasma membrane and Golgi vesicles throughout the enlargement of the secondary thickening, suggesting that new rosettes must be continually inserted into the membrane to achieve complete cell wall thickening.Abbreviations EF Golgi vesicles, exoplasmic fracture; the plasma membrane, extracellular fracture - PF protoplasmic fracture  相似文献   

10.
Summary The euglenoids and kinetoplastids form a diverse assemblage of organisms which show no obvious phylogenetic relationship with other flagellates. An ultrastructural examination and comparison of the flagellar apparatus, the feeding apparatus, and mitotic nucleus indicate a number of shared morphological features which support a common ancestry for the two groups. Of particular interest is the euglenoid,Petalomonas cantuscygni, which shares many of the ultrastructural features common to both groups. Based on the data presented, we hypothesize that a euglenoid with features similar to those now present inP. cantuscygni was ancestral to both the euglenoid and kinetoplastid lines.Abbrevation MTR complex of reinforcing microtubules  相似文献   

11.
Summary Immunofluorescence microscopy, conventional and high voltage transmission electron microscopy were used to describe changes in the flagellar apparatus during cell division in the motile, coccolithbearing cells ofPleurochrysis carterae (Braarud and Fagerlund) Christensen. New basal bodies appear alongside the parental basal bodies before mitosis and at prophase the large microtubular (crystalline) roots disassemble as their component microtubules migrate to the future spindle poles. By prometaphase the crystalline roots have disappeared; the flagellar axonemes shorten and the two pairs of basal bodies (each consisting of one parental and one daughter basal body) separate so that each pair is distal to a spindle pole. By late prometaphase the pairs of basal bodies bear diminutive flagellar roots for the future daughter cells. The long flagellum of each daughter cell is derived from the parental basal bodies; thus, the basal body that produces a short flagellum in the parent produces a long flagellum in the daughter cell. We conclude that each basal body in these cells is inherently identical but that a first generation basal body generates a short flagellum and in succeeding generations it produces a long flagellum. At metaphase a fibrous band connecting the basal bodies appears and the roots and basal bodies reorient to their interphase configuration. By telophase the crystalline roots have begun to reform and the rootlet microtubules have assumed their interphase appearance by early cytokinesis.Abbreviations CR1, CR2 crystalline roots 1 and 2 - CT cytoplasmic tongue microtubules - DIC differential interference contrast light microscopy - H haptonema - HVEM high voltage transmission electron microscopy - IMF immunofluorescence microscopy - L left flagellum/basal body - M metaphase plate - MT microtubule - N nucleus - R right flagellum/basal body - R1, R2, R3 roots 1, 2, and 3 - TEM transmission electron microscopy  相似文献   

12.
F. W. Spiegel 《Protoplasma》1982,113(3):165-177
Summary The protostelidPlanoprotostelium aurantium Olive andStoianovitch has trophic cells which are either amoebae or flagellates. The general morphology and ultrastructure are consistent with what has been reported for otherEumycetozoa (protostelids, myxomycetes, and dictyostelids). The flagellar apparatus structure has the same basic pattern as that of other flagellate eumycetozoans. It shares with all these an anteriorly directed flagellum and centriole and microtubule arrays (MTA) 2–4. Unlike more primitive species which have two centrioles per flagellar apparatus,P. aurantium has only one. Also, the flagellar apparatus is independent of the nucleus inP. aurantium, not linked to it as in the primitive species. These features are useful in explaining the differences in swimming behavior betweenP. aurantium and biflagellate species. Evidence is presented to show thatP. aurantium is closely related to the non-flagellateProtostelium mycophaga Olive andStoianovitch.This research represents part of a Ph.D. dissertation presented to the University of North Carolina.  相似文献   

13.
Summary A short cylindrical pocket arises as an infolding from the ventral surface of the reservoir near the canal in several species ofEuglena (E. mutabilis, E. gracilis strain T,E. spec.). The structure is linked to a band of microtubules which is shown to be identical to the ventral flagellar root of the euglenoid flagellar root system. An absolute configuration analysis of the flagellar root system inE. mutabilis and a comparison with the flagellar apparatus of colourlessEuglenophyceae and the bodonids (Kinetoplastida) reveals structural and positional homology between the reservoir pocket ofEuglena and the cytostome of these organisms and strongly supports the phylogenetic derivation of theEuglenophyceae from theKinetoplastida and the evolution of greenEuglenophyceae from phagotrophic colourless taxa. The functional significance of the cryptic cytostome ofEuglena is discussed in relation to the occurrence of intracellular endosymbiotic bacteria.  相似文献   

14.
Summary The stephanokont flagellar apparatus of the zoospores ofDerbesia tenuissima (De Not.) Crouan is examined and compared to the flagellar apparatuses of other green algae. The flagella ofDerbesia are attached to two of three bands which lie at the junction of the body and papilla. Serial longitudinal and cross sections reveal that the basal bodies are attached to the bands along their sides and at their proximal ends. The bands are not striated in any plane. The lack of striation in the bands and the partial covering of the proximal end of the basal bodies by one of the bands closely resemble the type of flagellar connection system described as the Bryopsis-type byMelkonian (1980). Zoospores of ulvalean green algae also possess these features, suggesting that green siphons are phylogenetically related to theUlvales. It is proposed that green siphons be tentatively classified in theUlvaphyceae rather than in theChlorophyceae orCharophyceae.This work supported by NSF Grant DEB 78-03554.  相似文献   

15.
The ultrastructure of the type species of the genusDunaliella, D. salina, has been reinvestigated in an attempt to clarify the relationships betweenDunaliella andSpermatozopsis. Dunaliella salina differs in the following ultrastructural characters fromSpermatozopsis (as exemplified byS. similis Preisig etMelkonian): presence of a distinctive surface coat covering the plasmalemma; presence of a prominent pyrenoid (with pairs of thylakoids partially entering the pyrenoid matrix); dictyosomes parabasal; endoplasmic reticulum closely underlying the plasmalemma around most of the cell; contractile vacuoles absent; cell form ovoid to elongated and not spirally twisted; mitochondrial profiles near the flagellar apparatus. Differences in the ultrastructure of the flagellar apparatus: basal body angle more or less fixed; distal connecting fibre cross-striated; system II fibre (rhizoplast) present, associated with mitochondrial profile; system I fibre underlying two-stranded microtubular root; mating structure present. These ultrastructural differences justify distinction between the two taxa at generic level. The problematical status of freshwater species ofDunaliella is briefly discussed.  相似文献   

16.
L. W. Olson 《Protoplasma》1980,105(1-2):87-106
Summary InAllomyces neo-moniliformis meiosis takes place during resting sporangium germination. The meiospores are characteristically binucleate and biflagellate as described byEmerson (1938) andTeter (1944). A variation in the number of nuclei and flagella per meiospore from two is correlated with germination of the resting sporangia under reduced oxygen tension. The meiospores are extremely poor swimmers and are typically amoeboid. At encystment the gamma bodies of the cell are mobilized and appear involved in cyst wall synthesis. A single mitotic division of each nucleus gives rise to four nuclei. Gamete cleavage is as described for spore cleavage inBlastocladiella (Lessie andLovett 1968). The assembly of the nuclear cap and side body complex of the spore are extremely late processes in gametogenesis. The gametes are released when the single papilla dissolves. The gametes fuse in pairs and after zygote formation the cell is uninucleate with two flagella. The biflagellate zygote is an active swimming cell. The presence of homothallism or hetero-thallism inA. neo-moniliformis is discussed.  相似文献   

17.
The flagellar apparatus in male gametes of the siphonaceous green alga, Bryopsis maxima Okamura, was studied and compared with that of other green biflagellate cells. The proximal portions of two basal bodies are connected by a single striated proximal band, unique among the biflagellate reproductive cells of green algae studied. Anterior to the flagellar bases is a pair of distal bands different from the single structure in other biflagellate cells. These bands which arise from the distal portion of each basal body, extend upward in the papilla and curve down toward the lower edges of the basal bodies. They seem to have no direct association with each other. Two pairs of distinct flagellar roots, one consisting of 3–5 microtubules and the other of a partially striated fiber of undetermined numbers of microtubules, diverge from the basal body region and extend towards the cell posterior. Their component microtubules are disorganized into single or smaller groups midway over the cell length. The uniqueness of the flagellar apparatus is briefly discussed.  相似文献   

18.
The biflagellate zoospores ofProtoderma sarcinoidea and the quadriflagellate zoospores ofChamaetrichon capsulatum are each covered by an amorphous, mucous material and a single layer of square scales, and the pyrenoid matrix is traversed by one or more thylakoid membranes. In the flagellar apparatus the basal bodies ofP. sarcinoidea and the upper basal bodies ofC. capsulatum are displaced in the counterclockwise absolute orientation, while the lower basal bodies ofC. capsulatum are directly opposed. Other components of the flagellar apparatus observed in each alga include: cruciately arranged d and s rootlets, each associated with an electron-dense component; simple terminal caps comprised of large and small subunits; a terminal electron-dense mass located near the proximal end of each basal body inP. sarcinoidea and near the upper basal bodies inC. capsulatum; and two rhizoplasts. Components specific to one or the other species include a single accessory basal body inP. sarcinoidea and a fibrous, electron-opaque band that links the upper and the lower basal bodies inC. capsulatum. The flagellar apparatus architecture ofP. sarcinoidea resemblesGayralia oxysperma, while that ofC. capsulatum is similar toTrichosarcina polymorphum andUlothrix species, all of which are included in theUlothrix-group,Ulotrichales, Ulvophyceae.  相似文献   

19.
Yubuki N  Leander BS 《Protoplasma》2012,249(4):859-869
We introduce a hypothetical model that explains how surface microtubules in euglenids are generated, integrated and inherited with the flagellar apparatus from generation to generation. The Euglenida is a very diverse group of single-celled eukaryotes unified by a complex cell surface called the "pellicle", consisting of proteinaceous strips that run along the longitudinal axis of the cell and articulate with one another along their lateral margins. The strips are positioned beneath the plasma membrane and are reinforced with subtending microtubules. Euglenids reproduce asexually, and the two daughter cells inherit pellicle strips and associate microtubules from the parent cell in a semi-conservative pattern. In preparation for cell division, nascent pellicle strips develop from the anterior end of the cell and elongate toward the posterior end between two parent (mature) strips, so that the total number of pellicle strips and underlying microtubules is doubled in the predivisional cell. Each daughter cell inherits an alternating pattern of strips consisting of half of the nascent strips and half of the parent (mature) strips. This observation combined with the fact that the microtubules underlying the strips are linked to the flagellar apparatus created a cytoskeletal riddle: how do microtubules associated with an alternating pattern of nascent strips and mature strips maintain their physical relationship to the flagellar apparatus when the parent cell divides? The model of microtubular inheritance articulated here incorporates known patterns of cytoskeletal semi-conservatism and two new inferences: (1) a multigenerational "pellicle microtubule organizing center" (pMTOC) extends from the dorsal root of the flagellar apparatus, encircles the flagellar pocket, and underpins the microtubules of the pellicle; and (2) prior to cytokinesis, nascent pellicle microtubules fall within one of two "left/right" constellations that are linked to one of the two new dorsal basal bodies.  相似文献   

20.
Quadriflagellate zoospores ofChaetophora incrassata andPseudoschizomeris caudata have similar features including an appressed membrane between the pyrenoid matrix and the starch sheath, and identical flagellar apparatuses. Components of the flagellar apparatus include: directly opposed upper basal bodies, lower basal bodies in the clockwise absolute orientation, a grooved distal fiber, peripheral and terminal fibers between adjacent basal bodies, proximal fibers connecting the lower basal bodies to the X-membered rootlets two- and X-membered rootlets associated with electron-dense components, and at least one rhizoplast. The X-membered rootlets, are comprised of five microtubules inC. incrassata and four or five inP. caudata. These features of the flagellar apparatus suggest that the two algae are closely related, and together withStigeoclonium, Uronema, Draparnaldia andFritschiella, form a natural group, the Chaetophoraceae, Chaetophorales (sensu Mattox and Stewart).  相似文献   

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