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1.
Pollen wall development in Sorghum bicolor is morphologically and temporally paralleled by the formation of a prominent orbicular wall on the inner tangential surface of the tapetum. In the late tetrad stage, a thin, nearly uniform primexine forms around each microspore (except at the pore site) beneath the intact callose; concurrently, small spherical bodies (pro-orbicules) appear between the undulate tapetal plasmalemma and the disappearing tapetal primary wall. Within the primexine, differentially staining loci appear, which only develop into young bacula as the callose disappears. Thus, microspore walls are devoid of a visible exine pattern when released from tetrads. Afterwards, sporopollenin accumulates simultaneously on the primexine and bacula, forming the exine, and on the pro-orbicules, forming orbicules. Channels develop in the tectum and nexine, and both layers thicken to complete the microspore exine. Channeled sporopollenin also accumulates on the orbicules. A prominent sporopollenin reticulum interconnects the individual orbicules to produce an orbicular wall; this wall persists even after the tapetal protoplasts degenerate and after anthesis. While the pollen grains become engorged with reserves, a thick intine, containing conspicuous cytoplasmic channels, forms beneath the exine. Fibrous material collects beneath the orbicular wall. The parallel development and morphological similarities between the tapetal and pollen walls are discussed.  相似文献   

2.
Tapeinochilos pollen, like that of most angiosperms, is spared by the standard acetolysis treatment because the sporoderm is impregnated with sporopollenin. This genus and its allies in the Costaceae are the only taxa in the eight families of Zingiberales that have acetolysis-resistant pollen. The sporoderm in most of the order is characterized by exine reduced to a wispy coating or layer with delicately anchored spinules and a highly elaborated intine. Ultrastructural studies on the pollen of Tapeinochilos reveal a pattern of wall development that is significantly different from the generalized angiosperm type; namely, there are no columellae, nor is there any significant accretion of sporopollenin following the dissolution of callose and release of microspores. The primexine is composed of rodlets which build up solidly between apertures and become packed into layers to form a thick, stratified exinous covering. No secondary exine develops during the free spore period and the juvenile primexine persists as the protective coat on the mature pollen grain. This pattern of pollen development is viewed as an example of neoteny in which a juvenile or immature character is retained in adulthood.  相似文献   

3.
Pollen development in Hibiscus syriacus L. (Malvaceae) was studied with light (LM), scanning (SEM) and transmission (TEM) electron microscopes, with special attention to the formation of extremely long spines of the pollen grains. At the early tetrad stage, probacules are initiated directly on the plasma membrane and grow in coincidence with the height of primexine matrix within a callosic wall. Subsequently, a pretectum appears at the top of the probacules and then a foot layer is formed by accumulation of white line centered lamellations. Before dissolution of the callosic wall, a reticulate patterned pretectum is established around the microspores. There is not, however, any morphological indication on the initiation of the spines during the tetrad period within a callosic wall. It is after dissolution of the callosic wall that the spines of exine begin to form by the apposition of lamellated sheets. The lamellated sheets show a concentric configuration around the developing supratectal spines. The mature pollen grain is spheroidal, polycolporate, 160–170 μm in diameter, with supratectal spines 20–25 μm long. The supratectal spines of Hibiscus pollen are not homologous with the other exinous protrusions which are determined within the callosic wall during tetrad stage.  相似文献   

4.
Formation of pollen wall exine is preceded by the development of several transient layers of extracellular materials deposited on the surface of developing pollen grains. One such layer is primexine (PE), a thin, ephemeral structure that is present only for a short period of time and is difficult to visualize and study. Recent genetic studies suggested that PE is a key factor in the formation of exine, making it critical to understand its composition and the dynamics of its formation. In this study, we used high-pressure frozen/freeze-substituted samples of developing Arabidopsis (Arabidopsis thaliana) pollen for a detailed transmission electron microscopy analysis of the PE ultrastructure throughout the tetrad stage of pollen development. We also analyzed anthers from wild-type Arabidopsis and three mutants defective in PE formation by immunofluorescence, carefully tracing several carbohydrate epitopes in PE and nearby anther tissues during the tetrad and the early free-microspore stages. Our analyses revealed likely sites where these carbohydrates are produced and showed that the distribution of these carbohydrates in PE changes significantly during the tetrad stage. We also identified tools for staging tetrads and demonstrate that components of PE undergo changes resembling phase separation. Our results indicate that PE behaves like a much more dynamic structure than has been previously appreciated and clearly show that Arabidopsis PE creates a scaffolding pattern for formation of reticulate exine.

Transmission electron microscopy and immunofluorescence analyses of Arabidopsis primexine reveal dynamic changes in its structure and composition throughout the tetrad stage of pollen development.  相似文献   

5.
Nexine and intine development in Silene alba (Caryophyllaceae) was investigated by electron microscopy and enzyme cytochemistry. Nexine-2 forms by deposition of sporopollenin along unit membrane lamellae closely associated with the microspore plasma membrane in the late tetrad stage. After the callose wall dissolves, electron density increases along the tangentially oriented fibers of the proximal primexine, forming nexine-1. When the exine is essentially complete, the intine begins to develop. In the nearly mature microspore, acid phosphatase activity appears in the peripheral cytoplasm just prior to its extrusion into the intine of the mature pollen grain.  相似文献   

6.
The development of the one and-inline of the pollen wall aredescribed for Gibasis karwinsk yana and G. venustula. Duringthe tetrad stage the appearance of electron-opaque depositionsor tri-partite plates at discrete sites between the plasma membraneof the spore and the inward surface of the callose special wallare the first indications of exine development. The sulcus rapidlydifferentiates being composed of discrete exine granules ona thin foot layer. Probacula in non-apertural areas developin an electron-opaque granular layer situated between the plasmamembrane, which is highly convoluted, and the callose specialwall. A foot layer is formed from electron-opaque lamellae atthe plasma membrane. Exine pattern is clearly established withinthe tetrad. After release of the spores from the tetrad an intimate associationis rapidly developed between the plasma membrane of the periplasmodialtapetum and the newly-formed exine. Compacted electron-opaquematerial is found at the interface between membrane and theexine and vesicular material is added from the tapetum. Theincrease in volume that occurs in both spore and anther is accompaniedby considerable vacuolation. Intine development begins just prior to pollen grain mitosisand continues rapidly at the aperture. The thin foot layer becomesdiscontinuous. Further intine deposition takes place after mitosisand a bilayer is apparent in mature grains. The matrix of thislayer contains conspicuous electron-opaque platelets. The exineof the mature spore stains less intensely than in the youngspore and the interbacula spaces are filled with material fromthe degenerate tapetum. Gibasis karwinskyana, Gibasis venustula, Commelinaceae, exine, intine, tapetum, pollen wall, ultrastructure  相似文献   

7.
In the present study, microsporogenesis, microgametogenesis and pollen wall ontogeny in Campsis radicans (L.) Seem. were studied from sporogenous cell stage to mature pollen using transmission electron microscopy. To observe the ultrastructural changes that occur in sporogenous cells, microspores and pollen through progressive developmental stages, anthers at different stages of development were fixed and embedded in Araldite. Microspore and pollen development in C. radicans follows the basic scheme in angiosperms. Microsporocytes secrete callose wall before meiotic division. Meiocytes undergo meiosis and simultaneous cytokinesis which result in the formation of tetrads mostly with a tetrahedral arrangement. After the development of free and vacuolated microspores, respectively, first mitotic division occurs and two-celled pollen grain is produced. Pollen grains are shed from the anther at two-celled stage. Pollen wall formation in C. radicans starts at tetrad stage by the formation of exine template called primexine. By the accumulation of electron dense material, produced by microspore, in the special places of the primexine, first of all protectum then columellae of exine elements are formed on the reticulate-patterned plasma membrane. After free microspore stage, exine development is completed by the addition of sporopollenin from tapetum. Formation of intine layer of pollen wall starts at the late vacuolated stage of pollen development and continue through the bicellular pollen stage.  相似文献   

8.
Ultrastructural changes during omniaperturate pollen development in Trillium kamtschaticum Pall, was examined using transmission electron microscopy. The pollen mother cells are not enveloped within a thick callosic wall. The microspores resulting from successive meiosis are divided by scanty deposition of callosic wall in the tetrad. A primexine/exine template is not recognizable within the tetrad during formation of exinous components. Preexinous globules, originating from vesicles in the callosic wall, accumulate electron-dense materials and develop into exinous globules. The preexinous globules have ca 10 nm wide contacts with tilted and invaginated plasma membrane of the microspore within the callosic wall. After dissolution of the callosic wall, the microspores separate and mitosis subsequently leads to the formation of a generative cell and vegetative cell encased in a loose aggregation of developing exinous globules. When the generative cell is at the pollen grain surface, the channeled zone is initiated at the opposite side of the microspore on the surface of the vegetative cell. Just before pollen maturity, a new layer develops under the channeled zone. Thus, development of the omniaperturate pollen grains of T. kamtschaticum involves some processes that are distinct from those of Canna and Heliconia and some that are similar.  相似文献   

9.
Using light, transmission and scanning electron microscopy, the development of the pollinium of Goodyera procera (Ker-Gawler) Hooker. was investigated. At the early stage, sporogenous cells inside the microsporangium were seen grouping together into small aggregates each containing few cells. After the aggregates have formed the sporogenous cells inside the aggregates (which could now be called massulae) divide to form numerous pollen mother cells. Later, the pollen mother cells undergo meiosis to form tetrads. The pattern of formation of the exine of tetrads varies according to the location of the tetrads inside the micro- sporangium. Those tetrads that are situated near the outer region of the massulae can form: exine with well developed tectum, bacula and foot layer; and the sequence of events leading to the formation of this type of well developed exine is as follows the original wall and the cyto- plasmic channels associated with the wall become surrounded by a thick layer of callose thus isolating the wall from the plasmalemma. Near the plasmalemma a layer of primexine containing callose and cellulose begins to form. Later, the primexine develops into exine and between the exine and plasmalemma a layer of intine is laid down. Similar type of exine with well developed tectum, bacula and foot layer, is also present in tetrads facing the tapetum. But in this case the original wall of the tedtrad is not retained but undergoes dissolution and in its place a new exine formed. The pattern of formation of exine in the region between tetrads is even more different. Here the original wall also undergoes dissolution but instead of forming a proper exine it only forms a thin foot layer with bulges at places. The pattern of formation of the exine in the cells inside the tetrad is even more different. Here the original wall of the cells only undergoes partial dissolution. The loose fibrils of the partially dissolved wall then become mixed with the callose layer surrounding the cell. Inside this wall-fibril/callose mixture thin sheets of exine appear, but these thin sheets of exine do not develop further into tectum or bacula. In Goodyera a quite substantial amount of callose is retained in the regions between massulae and tetrads, and we believe that it is this callose which is holding the massulae and tetrads together to form pollinium.  相似文献   

10.
Prior to meiosis tapetal cells become binucleate, and callose deposition separates spore mother cells from each other. No cytomictic channels are present during meiosis. Cytokinesis is simultaneous, by furrowing. The primexine and a rudimentary exine are laid down while the microspores are still in tetrads. After callose dissolution the released microspores gradually become vacuolate and the exine becomes more complex and massive. During the tetrad stage tapetal walls are gradually lost and orbicules are deposited outside the plasmalemma. This continues after microspore release. Later, at the vacuolate microspore stage, the tapetal cells become amoeboid and intrude among the microspores. Tapetal dissolution occurs just prior to the appearance of large amounts of starch and lipids in the microspores.  相似文献   

11.
The Nelumbonaceae are a small family of aquatic angiosperms comprising Nelumbo nucifera and Nelumbo lutea. Historically, the genus has been considered to be closely related to Nymphaeales, however new systematic work has allied Nelumbo with lower eudicots, particularly Platanus. In recent years, studies of pollen development have contributed greatly to the understanding of phylogenetic relationships, but little has been known about these events in Nelumbo. In this paper, pollen and anther development are morphologically described for the first time in N. lutea. A comprehensive ontogenetic sequence is documented, including the sporogenous tissue, microspore mother cell, tetrad, free spore, and mature pollen grain stages. The deposition of a microspore mother cell coat and callose wall, the co-occurrence of both tetrahedral and tetragonal tetrads, the formation of a primexine in tetrads, and primexine persistence into the late free spore stage are shown. The majority of exine development occurs during the free spore stage with the deposition of a tectate-columellate ectexine, a lamellate endexine, and an unusual granular layer below and intermixed with the endexine lamellae. A two-layered intine forms rapidly during the earliest mature pollen stage. Major events of anther development documented include the degradation of a secretory-type tapetum during the free spore stage and the rapid formation of U-shaped endothecial thickenings in the mature pollen grain stage. The majority of mature pollen grains are tricolpate, however less common monosulcate and diaperturate grains also develop. Co-occurring aperture types in Nelumbo have been suggested to be an important transition in angiosperm aperture number. However, aperture variability in Nelumbo may be correlated with the lateness of aperture ontogeny in the genus, which occurs in the early free spore stage. This character, as well as other details of pollen and anther ontogeny in Nelumbo, are compared to those of Nymphaeales and Platanus in an effort to provide additional insight into systematic and phylogenetic relationships. Although Nelumbo is similar to both groups in several characters, the ontogenetic sequence of the genus is different in many ways.  相似文献   

12.
Sterigmal initiation in Boletus rubinellus resembled hyphal tip growth. Four stages in early basidiospore development have been delineated based on gross morphology, and changes in wall layers and cytoplasm. Changes in wall layers and cytoplasm during spore development were stage-specific. During Stage 1 the spore wall consisted of two layers identical to those of the sterigmal wall with occasional pellicle remnants on the outer surface. The onset of wall differentiation began in Stage 2, and during Stage 3 wall layers characteristic of the mature spore developed. At Stage 4 there was a pronounced gradient in wall thickness from the apex to the base of the spore. Small vesicles (30–60 nm diam) were uniformly distributed in the cytoplasm of spherically enlarging spores (Stage 2), but during spore elongation (Stages 3 and 4) numerous larger vesicles as well as small vesicles aggregated at the spore apex. A variety of cytoplasmic organelles entered the spore during Stage 3; however, migration of storage materials and the nucleus to the spore did not occur until late basidiospore development. The hilar appendix body developed in the earliest spore primordium and persisted until Stage 3. Development of wall layers and their differential thickening, distribution of vesicles, and probable function of the hilar appendix body are discussed with reference to the control of spore shape. Systematic implications of the data are considered.  相似文献   

13.
Wall development of tricolpate pollen of sunflower was studied by light and by scanning and transmission electron microscopy. The wall and colpi are initiated during the tetrad stage, producing a young, spinulate, two-layered exine (ektexine and endexine) separated by a “spacer layer.” After release from the tetrads, the individual microspores round up and enlarge. The exine layers increase in thickness and complexity from sporopollenin contributed by the tapetum and microspores. During the mid-vacuolate microspore stage, the tapetum becomes plasmodial and surrounds the developing microspores. At the vacuolate pollen stage, after the wall and colpi are completely formed, the plasmodial tapetum breaks down and releases its contents into the locule. Some of the contents are presumably utilized by the pollen to make storage reserves while other components, such as lipids and proteins, fill the spaces within the pollen wall exine. Pollen wall ontogeny provides a scheme of terms for mature composite walls in general. The various events associated with microsporogenesis in sunflower are compared with those reported in other pertinent studies.  相似文献   

14.
Light and electron microscope observations characterized the layers that comprise Vigna vexillata L. pollen walls, and identified the timing of their development. Exine sculpturings form an unusually coarse ektexinous reticulum. The structure of the ektexine is granular; this differs from the columellate/tectate type of structure typical of most angiosperm pollen. The ektexine overlies a homogeneous-to-lamellar, electron-dense endexine, which in turn surrounds a thick, microfibrillar intine. Pollen grains are triporate and operculate, with Zwischenkörper and thickened intine underlying the apertures. The ektexine forms during the tetrad period of microspore development, the endexine and Zwischenkörper during the free microspore stage, and the intine during the bicelled (pollen) stage. Coarsely reticulate exine sculpturings and the granular structure of the patterned exine wall of the pollen grains are features that make this species suitable for detailed studies of pollen wall pattern formation.  相似文献   

15.
The spore wall of Andreaea rothii (Andreaeopsida) is unique among mosses studied by transmission electron microscopy. The exine of other mosses is typically initiated on trilaminar structures of near unit membrane dimensions just outside the plasma membrane. The exine of Andreaea is initiated in the absence of such structures as discrete globules within the coarsely fibrillar network of the sporocyte wall. The sequence of wall layer development, nevertheless, is essentially like that of other mosses. The intine is deposited within the exine and the perine accumulates on the surface of the exine during the latter stages of spore maturation. The mature spore is weakly trilete and inaperturate. The wall consists of three layers, the inner intine, the spongy exine consisting of loosely compacted irregular globules of sporopollenin, and an outer layer of perine. The perine differs ultrastructurally from the exine only in its greater degree of electron opacity. This ultrastructural evidence of departure from the fundamental pattern of exine development in mosses supports the taxonomic isolation of Andreaea from mosses of the Sphagnopsida and Bryopsida.  相似文献   

16.
The pollen wall of tetrads located in different positions of a mature pollinium of Cymbidium goeringii was examined with the electron microscope, and the compositions of wall materials were also tested with different histochemical methods. In all tetrads of a pollinium, the pollen wall can be distingished into an exine and an intine, but the exine may be varied greatly according to the tetrad position in a pollenium. The part of the pollen wall (the outer wall) of the external tetrads, lying close, to the tapetum, is composed of two layers, i.e. the exine, and the intine. Theexine consists of tectum, granulate ectexine and endexine, without foot layer. The intine is cellulose in nature. In the outer wall between different groups of: tetrads and in the inner wall within an individual tetrad, the structure of ectexine becomes simple and the deposition of sporopollenin is roduced The degree of reduction of ectexine nicreases from the outer to inner tetrads in several external layers of a pollinium, and even the internal tetrads have a reduced ectexine or lack of it. The present study also demonstrates that the mechanism of pollen aggregation into a pollinium is built on a combined effect of the following features: (1) connected bridges formed' by intine between two pollens within a tetrad, (2) formation of cytoplasmic channels between two pollens within a tetrad, (3) incomplete cell wall formation within a tetrad, (4) little size of tetrads and compact arrangement of mature tetrads and (5) a sticky viscin material surrounded on the outside of a pollinium.  相似文献   

17.
In the microspore tetrad period the exine begins as rods that originate from the plasma membrane. These rods are exine units that on further development become columellae as well as part of the tectum, foot layer and “transitory endexine”. The primexine matrix is very thin in the future sites of the pores. At these sites the plasma membrane and its surface coating (glycocalyx) are without exine units and adjacent to the callose envelope. The exine around the aperture margin is characterized by units of reduced height. After the exine units and primexine matrix have become ca 0.2 μm in height a fibrillar zone forms under the aperture margin. It is the exine units around the aperture that are templates for exine processes on apertures of mature pollen. Oblique sections of the early exine show that the tectum consists of the distal portions of close-packed exine units. The exine enlarges in the free microspore period but initially its substructure (tectum, columellae, foot layer and transitory endexine) is not homogeneous and unit structures are visible until after the vacuolate microspore period. There are indications of a commissural line/plane (junction plane) which separates the foot layer from the endexine during early development. Our observations of development in Echinodorus pollen extend a growing number of reports of “transitory endexines” in monocot pollen. The exine unit-structures become 0.2 μm or more in diameter and many columellae are composed of only one exine unit. Spinules become exceptionally tall, many protruding ca 0.7 μm above the level of the tectum as units only ca 0.1 μm in diameter. The outer portion of the tectum fills in around spinules and by maturity they are microechinate with their bases spread out to ca 1 μm or more. Unit structures can be seen with SEM in mature pollen following oxidation by plasma ashing and in the tapetum these units are arranged both radially, as in spinules, and parallel with the tapetal surfaces. There are clear indications of such an arrangement of units in untreated fresh pollen. Units comprising the basal part of the exine are not completely fused by sporopollenin accumulated during development. This would seem to be a characteristic feature, based on published work, of the alismacean pollen. Our use of a tracer shows, however, that there is considerable space within or between exine structure of mature Echinodorus pollen. Based upon the ca 0.1 μm size of exine-units formed early in development and exine components seen after oxidative treatment it seems that the early (primary) accumulated sporopollenin has greater resistance to oxidation than sporopollenin added, secondarily, around and between units later in development. Both primarily and secondarily accumulated sporopollenin are resistant to acetolysis but published work indicates that acetolysis alters exine material. At the microspore tetrad time and until the vacuolate stages tapetal cells are arranged as in secretory tapetums. During early microspore stages there are orbicules at the inner surface of tapetal cells. At free microspore period tapetal cells greatly elongate into the loculus and surround the microspores. By the end of the microspore vacuolate period tapetal cells release their cellular contents and microspores are for a time enveloped by tapetal organelles and translocation material.  相似文献   

18.
Development of the echinate pollen grains inFarfugium (Compositae: Senecioneae) has been studied by a combination of transmission electron microscopy and field emission scanning electron microscopy with a freeze fractured method. The inner surface of the callose wall surrounding each microspore does not possess an echinate pattern before primexine deposition begins. The primexine formation coincides with the initiation of spines. The freeze fractured primexine shows probacula which form transverse rods. The developing exine has an inner spongy substructure. The endexine is formed by the accumulation of the electron dense lamellae with white lines after the dissolution of the callose wall. In the present study, it is confirmed that the developmental process of pollen formation revealed in the field emission scanning electron microscope is consistent with the results obtained using the transmission electron microscope.  相似文献   

19.
Transmission and scanning electron microscopy of exine development in Bougainvillea spectabilis (Nyctaginaceae) confirmed that the exine pattern is initiated by invagination of the microspore plasma membrane at the early tetrad stage. Invaginated plasma membranes take the form of a reticulate pattern that corresponds to the mature exine tectum. Protectum is the first exine layer to be deposited on the reticulate-patterned plasma membrane. Subsequently, probacules elongate basally on protruding sites of the plasma membrane under the protectum and in the lumina. These sites retreat as the probacules elongate. After the dissolution of the callose wall, a foot layer forms through the accumulation of lamellated structures. Clearly, the plasma membrane serves a determinative role in the initial pattern formation of exine.  相似文献   

20.
The highly variable and species-specific pollen surface patterns are formed by sporopollenin accumulation. The template for sporopollenin deposition and polymerization is the primexine that appears on the tetrad surface, but the mechanism(s) by which primexine guides exine patterning remain elusive. Here, we report that the Poaceae-specific EXINE PATTERN DESIGNER 1 (EPAD1), which encodes a nonspecific lipid transfer protein, is required for primexine integrity and pollen exine patterning in rice (Oryza sativa). Disruption of EPAD1 leads to abnormal exine pattern and complete male sterility, although sporopollenin biosynthesis is unaffected. EPAD1 is specifically expressed in male meiocytes, indicating that reproductive cells exert genetic control over exine patterning. EPAD1 possesses an N-terminal signal peptide and three redundant glycosylphosphatidylinositol (GPI)-anchor sites at its C terminus, segments required for its function and localization to the microspore plasma membrane. In vitro assays indicate that EPAD1 can bind phospholipids. We propose that plasma membrane lipids bound by EPAD1 may be involved in recruiting and arranging regulatory proteins in the primexine to drive correct exine deposition. Our results demonstrate that EPAD1 is a meiocyte-derived determinant that controls primexine patterning in rice, and its orthologs may play a conserved role in the formation of grass-specific exine pattern elements.  相似文献   

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