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1.
An important aspect of the evolution of carpel closure, or angiospermy, is the relationship between pollen tube growth patterns and internalization of the pollen‐tube pathway. True carpel closure, involving postgenital fusion of inner carpel margins, is inferred to have arisen once within the ancient order Nymphaeales, in the common ancestor of Nymphaeaceae. We studied pollen tube development, from pollination to fertilization, in a natural population of Nymphaea odorata, using hand pollinations and timed flower collections. Pollen germinates in stigmatic secretions within 15 min and pollen tubes enter subdermal transmitting tissue within an hour, following wide intercellular spaces towards the zone of postgenital fusion. At the zone of fusion they turn downwards to grow in narrow spaces between interlocked cells and then wander freely to ovules within ovarian secretions. The pollen‐tube pathway is 2–6 mm long and upper ovules are first penetrated 2.5 h after pollination. Pollen tubes grow at rates of approximately 1 mm/h whether in stigmatic fluid, transmitting tissues or ovarian secretions. Pollen‐tube pathways are structurally diverse across Nymphaeales, yet their pollen tubes have similar morphologies and rapid growth rates. This pattern suggests pollen tube growth innovations preceded and were essential for the evolution of complete carpel closure. © 2010 The Linnean Society of London, Botanical Journal of the Linnean Society, 2010, 162 , 581–593.  相似文献   

2.
The detailed ontogeny of postgenital fusions within the gynoecium of Catharanthus roseus was investigated. The basal margins of the young carpel primordia infold and fuse together to seal shut the loculi. Independently, the opposing distal tips of the two carpels also unite, with the fusion region subsequently developing into the stigma, style, and a small distal region of the compound ovary. The basal ovary regions of the two opposing carpels remain unfused, thus leaving the tip fusion spatially restricted. In the region of contact, cells with distinctively epidermal features progressively lose their epidermal character after their participation in the fusion. In the fused stigma these former epidermal cells redifferentiate into transmitting and secretory tissues; in the fused style these cells undergo a tremendous expansion in length while forming stylar transmitting tissue; but in the compound ovary region corresponding cells experience little expansion or redifferentiation. It is concluded that the loss of epidermal features or the occurrence of periclinal cell divisions in the epidermis is a definitive indication that cells have fused postgenitally. However, studies with the transmission electron microscope are necessary to detect the first indications of a postgenital fusion. The compound ovary region within the gynoecium of C. roseus is a tissue appropriate for a high resolution ultrastructural study of the cytological events accompanying postgential tissue fusion because the fusion occurs quickly and little subsequent cell expansion takes place within this region.  相似文献   

3.
The fusion of carpels into a unified compound gynoecium is considered a dominant feature of angiosperm evolution and it also occurs by postgenital fusion during the gynoecium development in some apocarpous species. However, we found the reverse process, the separation of carpels from combined carpel primordia, during the development of the gynoecium in Phytolacca. Semithin sectioning and scanning electron microscopy were utilised to observe the structure and development of the gynoecia in Phytolacca acinosa and Phytolacca americana, fluorescence microscopy was utilised to observe the pollen tube growth in the gynoecia of the two species, and the topology method was applied to analyze the relationship between the gynoecium structure and pollen tube pathway. Although the gynoecia of P. acinosa and P. americana are both syncarpous, the degree of carpel fusion in the mature gynoecia of the two syncarpous species is different as a result of variant developmental processes. However, change in the degree of carpel fusion during the development of gynoecia in Phytolacca does not affect pollen tube growth because of the existence of the extragynoecial pollen-tube pathway. Thus, the change in the degree of carpel fusion in Phytolacca is primarily the result of diversification of developmental processes related to selection pressure.  相似文献   

4.
In the evolutionarily advanced angiosperm flower, postgenital fusion is often involved in the formation of the female reproductive organ, the gynoecium. In the present study, we report on the early establishment of a cytoplasmic cell-to-cell communication pathway between the two fusing carpel primordia in Catharanthus roseus L. (periwinkle). Upon carpel contact, diffusible factors move between the two carpels to initiate the rapid redifferentiation of epidermal cells into parenchymatous cells, resulting in carpel fusion. Microinjection of the lipid-impermeable molecule, Lucifer Yellow CH (LYCH), into cells on either side of the epidermal fusion plane revealed that cytoplasmic continuity was established very early in this redifferentiation process. Electron-microscopic analysis confirmed that this inter-carpel cytoplasmic coupling was established by the formation of plasmodesmata produced between the contacting epidermal cells. The evolution of and role for this inter-carpel communication pathway is discussed in terms of the coordinate development of the gynoecium and its overall effect on reproductive fitness.  相似文献   

5.
During floral ontogeny in Catharanlhus roseus, approximately 400 epidermal cells are induced to rapidly dedifferentiate during postgenital fusion, an unequivocal case of intercellular communication between somatic plant cells. Some fusing cells completely dedifferentiate within 4.3 hr of cell contact, and by 8.9 hr virtually all the cells undergo the dramatic change in cell shape and cytological features. To our knowledge, this is the fastest case of induced cell differentiation reported to date in any eukaryotic system.  相似文献   

6.
During postgenital fusion of the distal adaxial surfaces of the two originally separate carpel primordia of Catharanthus roseus (L.) G. Don, approx. 400 epidermal cells undergo rapid dedifferentiation into parenchymatous cells. To characterize the mechanism of the induction of dedifferentiation, various types of both water-permeable and water-impermeable barriers were placed between pre-fusion carpels. Barriers which did not allow the passage of water-soluble agents blocked dedifferentiation. Barriers which allowed passage of water-soluble agents did not block dedifferentiation of the contacting epidermal cells, implicating a diffusible agent or morphogen as the factor responsible for dedifferentiation. Experiments with barriers of known pore size demonstrated that the molecular weight of this morphogen was less than 1000. The two cell walls and thin cuticle present at the site of this postgenital fusion do not block the movement of some substances between the fusing carpels. Tracer studies with tritium-labeled asparagine confirmed that substances can be transported across the fusion plane.Abbreviation 2,4-D 2,4-dichlorophenoxyacetic acid I=Walker (1978b)  相似文献   

7.
 In molecular analyses Didymelaceae together with Buxaceae form a fairly well-supported clade among families near the base of eudicots. Only little is known, however, about the flowers and inflorescences of Didymelaceae. In this study, the structure of the female flowers and inflorescences of Didymeles integrifolia was studied. Flowers are unicarpellate and orientation of the carpel is slightly deflected abaxially as in Proteaceae. Otherwise, Didymelaceae share many features of the gynoecium with Buxaceae and some other basal eudicots: the carpels are ascidiate in the lower half; anthetic carpels are completely closed by postgenital fusion; stigma is double-crested and widely decurrent; stigmatic papillae are unicellular and pear-shaped; the pollen tube transmitting tract is extensive and prominently differentiated; fruits are fleshy drupes with persistent stigma and style. However, the exceedingly elongate base of the integuments of Didymelaceae is an unusual feature among basal eudicots and even angiosperms. Received October 31, 2002; accepted December 17, 2002 Published online: March 31, 2003  相似文献   

8.
The black maple (Acer saccharum Marsh, ssp. nigrum [Michx. f.] Desm.) gynoecium displays classical involute carpel development; carpels form, in mid- to late-summer, as two separate, opposite, hood-shaped primordia bearing naked megasporangia on inrolled carpel margins. Megasporogenesis, integument initiation, and carpel closure occur in spring; carpels fuse, forming a biloculate ovary with a short, hollow style and two divergent, dry, unicellular papillose stigmas. Transmitting tissues consist of developmentally and morphologically similar trichomes that form along the apparent carpel margins. The path from stigma to micropyle is open, but pollen tubes do not grow entirely ectotrophically. Germinating at the tip of a stigma papilla, a tube grows, apparently under the cuticle, to the papilla base. It then grows between stigma cells to the style, emerging to grow ectotrophically through the style to the compitum, where it passes into one of the locules. Within a locule, the tube grows over placenta and obturator to the micropyle, then between megasporangium cells to the female gametophyte, spreading over the surface near the egg. This study adds to our sparse understanding of gynoecium development and transmitting tissue in relation to pollen tube growth in naturally pollinated woody plants.  相似文献   

9.
We present new comparative morphological and developmental data on gynoecia of three genera of early-divergent monocots: Tofieldia (Tofieldiaceae, Alismatales), Petrosavia and Japonolirion (Petrosaviaceae, Petrosaviales) and one lilioid monocot: Narthecium (Nartheciaceae, Dioscoreales). Our data show significant differences between the genera examined, and are congruent with the splitting of former Nartheciaceae sensu Tamura (1998) into families Tofieldiaceae, Petrosaviaceae NB-cosistent with later and Nartheciacae (APG II 2003). Our investigation confirms the presence of at least partial carpel fusion in all taxa examined. Previous data indicating apocarpy in Japonolirion, some Petrosavia and Tofieldia could be due to late postgenital carpel fusion in these plants. Syncarpy also characterises other early-divergent monocot lineages such as Acoraceae and Araceae. It is most parsimonious to regard syncarpy as a primitive condition for monocots, but an alternative scenario suggests that apocarpy is plesiomorphic among monocots, involving multiple origins of syncarpy. The latter hypothesis is supported by significant differences between gynoecia of early-divergent monocots, including different modes of carpel fusion.  相似文献   

10.
Developmental phases surrounding the processes of gametic delivery and fusion were examined ultrastructurally in the reduced megagametophyte of Plumbago zeylanica, which lacks synergids. Gametic delivery occurs at the end of pollen tube growth and results in deposition of two male gametes, a vegetative nucleus, and a limited amount of pollen cytoplasm between the egg and central cell. Discharge of these materials from the tube is accompanied by loss of inner and outer pollen tube plasma membranes, loss of sperm-associated cell wall components, and disruption of the formerly continuous cell wall between the egg and central cell. The dispersion of egg cell wall components directly exposes female reproductive cell membranes to the unfused male gametes and pollen tube without disrupting gametic cell plasma membranes. Presence of unfused sperms within the female gametophyte appears to be a transitory phenomenon, lasting less than 5 min at the end of over 8½ hr of pollen tube growth. At the time of gametic deposition, plasma membranes of unfused sperm cells become directly appressed to plasma membranes of both the egg and central cell. Gametic fusion is initiated by a single fusion event between membranes of participating male and female cells, which is rapidly followed by subsequent, secondary fusion events between the same two cells at different locations along their surface. Gametic fusion results in the transmission of male gamete nuclei with co-transmission of nearly the entire sperm cytoplasmic volume and organellar complement, and it is possible to identify heritable male cytoplasmic organelles within both the incipient zygote and endosperm. Paternally originating plastids may be distinguished from maternal plastids by differences in morphology and staining characteristics, whereas paternal mitochondria may be distinguished from maternal mitochondria by populational differences in mitochondrial size which are statistically significant. Such observations further indicate that transmitted paternal mitochondria seem to remain viable, as judged by their ultrastructural appearance, and are transmitted exclusively by sperm cytoplasm rather than discharged pollen cytoplasm. The presence of anucleate, membrane-bounded cytoplasmic bodies between the egg and central cell are identifiable on the basis of their enclosed organelles and indicate that fragmentation of a small amount of the sperm cytoplasm associated with the vegetative nucleus commonly occurs. The presence and identification of sperm cytoplasmic organelles and associated membranes within female reproductive cells following gametic transmission represents strong evidence in support of the cellular basis of nuclear and cytoplasmic transmission during sexual reproduction in Plumbago.  相似文献   

11.
Studies were conducted on the protective action of Ca against growth inhibition and death of pollen from Crinum asiaticum and Catharanthus roseus. Ca ions not only promoted pollen germination and pollen tube growth, but also were antagonistic to pollen injuries induced by various chemical and physical treatments. Most of the chemicals used seemed to act as osmotic inhibitors. Among the chemical agents tested, DNP inhibited pollen germination more strikingly with Ca than without it, whereas pollen tube growth was enhanced. Another metabolic inhibitor, low temperature, showed a similar effect on pollen germination. Insignificant or no protective action of Ca was observed when IAA, TIBA and coumarin, were applied. Large populations of pollen when grown in cultural media witbout Ca showed a partial protective action. The protective action of Ca in pollen growth against various inhibitors required other cations such as Mg and K ions. The promoting of pollen growth by Ca also required tbese otber cations. The protective action of Ca is considered to be based on its binding in tbe pollen cell walls, particularly in the pectic regions. This gives rise to a decreased permeability and increased structural rigidity against tbe chemical and physical inhibitors.  相似文献   

12.
The organogenesis of staminate and carpellate flowers of Schisandra chinensis (Schisandraceae) was investigated with scanning electron microscopy, with observations on the development of tepals reported for the first time. The results showed that there is no interval between the initiation of the last tepal and that of the first stamen or carpel, and that the shapes of tepal, stamen, and carpel primordia are similar. The tepals and stamens of staminate flowers are initiated acropetally in a continuous spiral Fibonacci phyllotaxis, with no carpel structures observed; the filaments are not connate. The organogenesis of the carpellate flowers is similar to that of the staminate flowers, but with no evidence of stamen development. The carpels are ascidiate without postgenital fusion. Three androecial characters of Schisandra and Kadsura are discussed in a phylogenetic context. The subglobose or obovoid androecium of Schisandra propinqua and Schisandra plena may be homologous with that in sections Kadsura and Sarcocarpon. The plesiomorphic form of the androecium within the two genera is likely to be elongate with more than ten free stamens.  相似文献   

13.
Gynoecium diversity and systematics of the paleoherbs   总被引:2,自引:0,他引:2  
Gynoecium and ovule structure was compared in representatives of all families of the paleoherbs, including Nymphaeales (Cabombaceae, Nymphaeaceae), Piperales (Saururaceae, Piperaceae), Aristolochiales (Lactoridaceae, Aristolochiaceae), Rafflesiales (Hydnoraceae, Rafflesiaceae) and, in addition, Ceratophyllaceae and Nelumbonaceae, both of which were earlier included in Nymphaeales, but then segregated and with an unestablished position. In all representatives studied, the carpels are closed at anthesis. Carpel closure is attained in three different ways: (1) postgenital fusion of inner surfaces (Piperales, Aristolochiales); (2) occlusion by secretion or mutual appression of inner surfaces without postgenital fusion (Cabombaceae, Ceratophyllaceae, Nelumbonaceae (?) or (3) strong secretion combined with postgenital fusion at the periphery of the carpel (Nymphaeaceae). In Cytinus (Rafflesiaceae), after an earlier developmental stage with apparent postgenital fusion there is strong internal secretion (within the cell walls). Stigma shape tends to be double-crested in the basal taxa of each order: Cabombaceae (Brasenia), Saururaceae, and Lactoridaceae. In some Aristolochiaceae and Cytinus (Rafflesiaceae) they have two lobes in the transverse symmetry plane (i. e. at right angles to the median plane) or, if the carpels are united, the stigmatic lobes are commissural, accordingly. Stigmas are unicellular papillate and secretory in most taxa, but the papillae are uniseriate-pluricellular in some (not basal) Nymphaeaceae, Asaroideae (Aristolochiaceae) and Cytinus (Rafflesiaceae). Ceratophyllaceae have smooth stigmas. Intrusive oil cells in the carpel epidermis were found in Piperales and Aristolochiaceae. Mature ovules vary in length between 0. 2 mm and 2. 5 mm. Mature nucelli vary in breadth between 0. 03 mm and 1. 6 mm. These differences are larger than in the other major magnoliid groups. The outer integument is fully annular (not semiannular) in all taxa with orthotropous ovules (all Piperales and Barclaya of Nymphaeaceae) and also in some with anatropous ovules (some Nymphaeaceae, some Aristolochiaceae). The integuments are variously lobed or unlobed; both integuments tend to exhibit the same behaviour within a family, either both lobed or both unlobed. The results strongly support three pairs of families in sister group relationships, as suggested by studies based on other characters: Cabombaceae-Nymphaeaceae, Saururaceae-Piperaceae, and Lactoridaceae-Aristolochiaceae, and Hydnoraceae-Rafflesiaceae to some extent. Piperales and Aristolochiales are closer to each other than either is to Nymphaeales. Nelumbonaceae is isolated, as is Ceratophyllaceae, but the status of the latter is more difficult to interpret owing to apparent reduction in morphological, anatomical and histological traits.  相似文献   

14.
In angiosperms, pollen tube growth is critical for double fertilization and seed formation. Many of the factors involved in pollen tube tip growth are unknown. Here, we report the roles of pollen-specific GLYCEROPHOSPHODIESTER PHOSPHODIESTERASE-LIKE (GDPD-LIKE) genes in pollen tube tip growth. Arabidopsis thaliana GDPD-LIKE6 (AtGDPDL6) and AtGDPDL7 were specifically expressed in mature pollen grains and pollen tubes and green fluorescent protein (GFP)-AtGDPDL6 and GFP-AtGDPDL7 fusion proteins were enriched at the plasma membrane at the apex of forming pollen tubes. Atgdpdl6 Atgdpdl7 double mutants displayed severe sterility that was rescued by genetic complementation with AtGDPDL6 or AtGDPDL7. This sterility was associated with defective male gametophytic transmission. Atgdpdl6 Atgdpdl7 pollen tubes burst immediately after initiation of pollen germination in vitro and in vivo, consistent with the thin and fragile walls in their tips. Cellulose deposition was greatly reduced along the mutant pollen tube tip walls, and the localization of pollen-specific CELLULOSE SYNTHASE-LIKE D1 (CSLD1) and CSLD4 was impaired to the apex of mutant pollen tubes. A rice pollen-specific GDPD-LIKE protein also contributed to pollen tube tip growth, suggesting that members of this family have conserved functions in angiosperms. Thus, pollen-specific GDPD-LIKEs mediate pollen tube tip growth, possibly by modulating cellulose deposition in pollen tube walls.  相似文献   

15.
Ca2+-CaM signaling is involved in pollen tube development. However, the distribution and function of CaM and the downstream components of Ca2+-CaM signal in pollen tube development still need more exploration. Here we obtained the CaM–GFP fusion protein transgenic line of Nicotiana tobacum SRI, which allowed us to monitor CaM distribution pattern in vivo and provided a useful tool to observe CaM response to various exogenous stimulations and afforded solid evidences of the essential functions of CaM in pollen tube growth. CaM–GFP fusion gene was constructed under the control of Lat52-7 pollen-specific promoter and transformed into Nicotiana tobacum SRI. High level of CaM–GFP fluorescence was detected at the germinal pores and the tip-to-base gradient of fluorescence was observed in developing pollen tubes. The distribution of CaM at apical dome had close relationship with the pulsant growth mode of pollen tubes: when CaM aggregated at the apical dome, pollen tubes stepped into growth state; When CaM showed non-polarized distribution, pollen tubes stopped growing. In addition, after affording exogenous Ca2+, calmidazolium (antagonism of CaM) or Brefeldin A (an inhibitor of membrane trafficking), CaM turned to a uniform distribution at the apical dome and pollen tube growth was held back. Taken together, our results showed that CaM played a vital role in pollen tube elongation and growth rate, and the oscillation of tip-to-base gradient of CaM was required for the normal pulsant growth of pollen tube.  相似文献   

16.
Fluorescence microscopy and histological studies have been used to show that in Illicium floridanum Ellis (Illiciaceae), a primitive apocarpous angiosperm, functional syncarpy is achieved by intercarpellary growth of pollen tubes. After pollen germinates on the separate stigmatic crests of the carpellary whorl, tubes grow within the carpels obliquely down and inward toward the central floral axis which is modified as a stigmalike “apical residuum.” In a restricted shallow region around the base of the apical residuum, some pollen tubes grow out between the unfused margins of the carpels and circumferentially around the surface of the apical residuum from where they may enter neighboring carpels. Some pollen germination and tube growth also occur on the apical residuum itself. The apical residuum with its associated unfused carpel margins acts as an extragynoecial compitum for pollen tube transfer between carpels, and, as such, is believed to represent a mechanism for increasing the efficiency of seed set. The pollen tube pathway of Illicium appears to be a primitive expression of a line of evolutionary development leading to syncarpous gynoecia through stages possibly exemplified by certain members of the Trochodendraceae (lower Hamamelididae).  相似文献   

17.
The synergid cells are located in the female gametophyte and are essential for angiosperm reproduction. During the fertilization process, a pollen tube grows into one of the synergid cells, ceases growth, ruptures, and releases its two sperm cells into this cell. The synergid cells produce an attractant that guides the pollen tube to the female gametophyte and likely contain factors that control arrest of pollen tube growth, pollen tube discharge, and gamete fusion. The synergid cells contain an elaborated cell wall at their micropylar poles, the filiform apparatus that likely plays a role in pollen tube guidance and pollen tube reception. Recent genetic, molecular, and physiological studies in Arabidopsis, maize, and Torenia have provided insights into synergid cell development and the control of pollen tube growth by the synergid cell.  相似文献   

18.
Gynoecium diversity and systematics of the basal eudicots   总被引:6,自引:0,他引:6  
Gynoecium and ovule structure was compared in representatives of the basal eudicots, including Ranunculales (Berberidaceae, Circaeasteraceae, Eupteleaceae, Lardizabalaceae, Menispermaceae, Papaveraceae, Ranunculaceae), Proteales (Nelumbonaceae, Platanaceae, Proteaceae), some families of the former ‘lower’ hamamelids that have been moved to Saxifragales (Altingiaceae, Cercidiphyllaceae, Daphniphyllaceae, Hamamelidaceae), and some families of uncertain position (Gunneraceae, Myrothamnaceae, Buxaceae, Sabiaceae, Trochodendraceae). In all representatives studied, the carpels (or syncarpous gynoecia) are closed at anthesis. This closure is attained in different ways: (1) by secretion without postgenital fusion (Berberidaceae, Papaveraceae, Nelumbonaceae, probably Circaeaster); (2) by a combination of postgenital fusion and secretion; (2a) with a complete secretory canal and partly postgenitally fused periphery (Lardizabalaceae, Menispermaceae, some Ranunculaceae, Sabiaceae); (2b) with an incomplete secretory canal and completely fused periphery (Tro-chodendron); (3) by complete postgenital fusion without a secretory canal (most Ranunculaceae, Eupteleaceae, Platanaceae, Proteaceae, all families of Saxifragales and incertae sedis studied here). Stigmas are double-crested and decurrent in most of the non-ranunculalian taxa; unicellular-papillate in most taxa, but with multicellular protuberances in Daphniphyllaceae and Hamamelidaceae. Carpels predominantly have three vascular bundles, but five in Proteales (without Nelumbonaceae), Myrothamnaceae and Trochodendraceae. The latter two also share ‘oil’ cells in the carpels. Stomata on the outer carpel surface are present in the majority of Ranunculales and Proteales, but tend to be lacking in the saxifragalian families. In basal eudicots, especially in the non-ranunculalian families there is a trend to form more than one ovule per carpel but to develop only one seed, likewise there is a trend to have immature ovules at anthesis. Ovule number per carpel is predominantly one or two. Proteales (without Nelumbonales) mainly have orthotropous ovules, the other groups have anatropous (or hemitropous or campylotropous) ovules. The outer integument is annular in the groups with orthotropous or hemitropous ovules, and also in a number of saxifragalian families with anatropous ovules. In Proteales the integuments are predominantly lobed but there is no distinct pattern in this feature among the other groups. Among Ranunculales two pairs of families (Lardizabalaceae/Menispermaceae and Bcrberidaceae/Papaveraceae) due to similarities in gynoecium structure can be recognized, which are not apparent in molecular analyses. The close relationship of Platanaceae and Proteaceae is supported by gynoecium structure but gynoecial features do not support their affinity to Nelumbonaceae. The alliance of Daphniphyllaceae with Hamamelidaceae s.l. is also supported.  相似文献   

19.
Pollen tube polar growth is a key physiological activity for angiosperms to complete double fertilization, which is highly dependent on the transport of polar substances mediated by secretory vesicles. The exocyst and Sec1/Munc18 (SM) proteins are involved in the regulation of the tethering and fusion of vesicles and plasma membranes, but the molecular mechanism by which they regulate pollen tube polar growth is still unclear. In this study, we found that loss of function of SEC1A, a member of the SM protein family in Arabidopsis thaliana, resulted in reducing pollen tube growth and a significant increase in pollen tube width. SEC1A was diffusely distributed in the pollen tube cytoplasm, and was more concentrated at the tip of the pollen tube. Through co-immunoprecipitation-mass spectrometry screening, protein interaction analysis and in vivo microscopy, we found that SEC1A interacted with the exocyst subunit SEC6, and they mutually affected the distribution and secretion rate at the tip of the pollen tube. Meanwhile, the functional loss of SEC1A and SEC6 significantly affected the distribution of the SNARE (soluble N-ethylmaleimide-sensitive factor attachment protein receptor) complex member SYP125 at the tip of the pollen tube, and led to the disorder of pollen tube cell wall components. Genetic analysis revealed that the pollen tube-related phenotype of the sec1a sec6 double mutant was significantly enhanced compared with their respective single mutants. Therefore, we speculated that SEC1A and SEC6 cooperatively regulate the fusion of secretory vesicles and plasma membranes in pollen tubes, thereby affecting the length and the width of pollen tubes.  相似文献   

20.
The apocarpous gynoecia of three separate groups of higher advanced dicotyledons show postgenital fusion of their apical parts. In this fused region the pollen tube transmitting tissue of the carpels is united into a compitum, which provides advantages of a syncarpous to the apocarpous gynoecium. It is supposed that in at least some of these groups the general evolutionary trend of the angiosperms from apocarpy towards syncarpy is reversed.  相似文献   

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