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1.
In germinating spores of Onoclea sensibilis, the nucleus migrates to one end prior to an asymmetric cell division that partitions each spore into two daughter cells of unequal size. The larger cell develops into a protonema, whereas the smaller cell immediately differentiates into a rhizoid. When spores were germinated in the presence of methanol, nuclear migration was inhibited and most nuclei moved only to the raphe on the proximal side of the spores. Subsequent cell division partitioned each spore into daughter cells of equal size of which both developed into a protonema and neither into a rhizoid. Spores became sensitive to methanol at a time just prior to or coincident with nuclear migration and the effects of the alcohol were rapidly reversible as long as the spores were removed from methanol prior to the completion of cell division. Exposure to methanol prior to, but not during, nuclear migration or after mitosis had no effect upon rhizoid differentiation. The alcohol disrupted the formation of crosswalls after mitosis and they were often convoluted and irregularly branched. These results are consistent with the interpretation that methanol may disrupt a membrane site that plays an essential role in nuclear movement and rhizoid differentiation.  相似文献   

2.
A method of preparation for electron microscopy of fern spores in early stages of germination is presented. The cytochemistry and fine structure of Onoclea spores during the early stages of germination are described. The cytoplasm of the hydrated spore is filled with lipid droplets, protein granules and chloroplasts. During the early stages of development ribosomes and mitochondria increase in the area surrounding the central nucleus, and a new peripheral wall forms around the protoplast. Microtubules and large, branching mitochondria are associated with the nucleus during migration from its original central position in the spore to the proximal face and then to one end of the spore. There is no morphological polarization of cytoplasmic organelles of the spore before migration of the nucleus.  相似文献   

3.
Early events during the germination of spores of the fern Onoclea sensibilis were studied to determine the time during germination when ethylene had its greatest inhibiting effect. Water imbibition by dry spores was rapid and did not appear to be inhibited by ethylene. During normal germination DNA synthesis occurred about four hours before the nucleus moved from a central position to the spore periphery. Following nuclear movement, mitosis and cell division occurred, partitioning the spore into a small rhizoid cell and a large protonemal cell. Cell division was complete approximately six hours after nuclear movement. Ethylene treatment of the spores blocked DNA synthesis, nuclear movement, and cell division. The earliest DNA replication in uninhibited spores was observed after 14 hours of germination, and the maximal rate of spore labeling with 3H-thymidine was between 16 and 20 hours. Spores were most sensitive to ethylene, however, during the stages of germination prior to DNA synthesis, and it was concluded that ethylene did not directly inhibit DNA replication but blocked germination at some earlier fundamental step. The effects of ethylene were reversible. since complete recovery from inhibition of germination was possible if ethylene was released and the spores were kept in light. Recovery was much slower in darkness. It was hypothesized that light acted photosynthetically to overcome the ethylene inhibition of germination. Consistent with this, it was shown that spores exhibit net photosynthesis after only two hours of germination.  相似文献   

4.
The population dynamics and the sequences of statospore development and germination of Dinobryon divergens from a shallow subarctic lake were examined. D. divergens showed a sharp increase in the vegetative cell population between June 19 and July 3, 1973, followed by a rapid formation of statospores from June 26 to July 3. Shortly after spore production, this species decreased sharply to an insignificant level in the phytoplankton. Statospore formation to as initialed by migration of the monad cell to the lorica mouth and proceeded by rounding up of the cytoplasm. There was then an unequal cleavage, silica wall formation around the larger portion of the cytoplasm including the nucleus and disintegration of the extracystic cytoplasm after development of the plug. The statospore was uninucleate throughout its development, and it was concluded that spore formation occurred asexually. Germination of statospores was observed in periphyton samples at depths of 20 and 80 cm on July 20–21, 1973 and in the sediments earlier the following year. During germination a cellulose chamber was produced from the pore of the statospore, followed, by cleavage of the cytoplasm within the spore and migration of approximately 4 daughter protoplasts into the cellulose chamber from which they eventually escaped. The present study proposes that chrysophycean statospores arising asexually and endogenously should be recognized as separate entities from those formed isogamously and autogamously but not necessarily endogenously. The latter statospores resulting from the sexual process have been given the term zygospore.  相似文献   

5.
The distribution and synthesis of nucleic acids and proteins during gibberellic acid-induced germination of spores of Anemia phyllitidis were studied in order to relate biochemical activity with morphogenetic aspects of germination. Germination is accompanied by the hydrolysis of storage protein granules and the localized appearance of cytoplasmic RNA, protein, and insoluble carbohydrates in a small area adjoining the spore wall and surrounding the nucleus. The protoplast of the spore enlarges in this region, the spore wall breaks and a protonemal cell is formed which contains many chloroplasts. A second division in the spore at right angles to the first yields a rhizoid cell. Autoradiography of 3H-thymidine incorporation has shown that DNA is synthesized both in the nucleus and in the immediately surrounding cytoplasm of the germinating spore until some time after the first division, although a strictly nuclear DNA synthesis is observed later. Synthesis of RNA and proteins is limited to the presumptive regions of the germinating spore which become the protonema and rhizoid, shifting to specific sites in these cells as germination proceeds. The nucleus of the spore continues to be biosynthetically active long after it ceases to divide.  相似文献   

6.
Light is required for the germination of spores of Matteuccia struthiopteris. Histochemical studies show that dormant spores contain no starch, but have an abundance of storage protein granules. Starch accumulates in the numerous chloroplasts of the spore on exposure to light and becomes gradually more extensive. Protein granules disappear as germination progresses. Following this, the centrally located nucleus migrates toward the proximal spore face. Concomitant with the nuclear migration, an increase of cytoplasmic RNA surrounding the nucleus occurs. An equal nuclear division and unequal cell division give rise to a 2-celled gametophyte consisting of a large prothallial cell and smaller rhizoidal cell. A new peripheral wall forms around the entire protoplast at the time of nuclear migration, while a transverse wall forms after nuclear division. The rhizoid emerges through the split raphe along the proximal spore face; it is rich in cytoplasmic RNA but contains very few chloroplasts and little starch. Electron microscopy of the 2-celled stage revealed a greater concentration of mitochondria, Golgi bodies, and a more extensive endoplasmic reticulum in the rhizoid than was found in the prothallial cell, which, however, was far richer in chloroplasts and lipid bodies. As the rhizoid elongates and becomes more vacuolated, cytoplasmic RNA decreases as cytoplasmic protein increases. The rhizoid undergoes no cell divisions, while the prothallial cell retains the potential for further cell division. The possible significance of the distribution of storage products, cell organelles, and other cell components were considered in relation to the non-equational cell division and differentiation of the 2 cells.  相似文献   

7.
Ultrastructural and histochemical changes during intracapsular cell differentiation in the premeiotic sporophyte of the liverwort Sphaerocarpos donnellii Austin were studied. From an initially undifferentiated meristematic tissue, spore mother cells and nutritive cells become differentiated. The first indications of ultrastructural differentiation into two cell types are the accumulation of lipid within spherosomes and the occurrence of plastid tubules in the presumptive spore mother cells. Once differentiated the two cell types are clearly distinguishable on the basis of cytoplasmic vacuolation, stored food reserve, and cell and nuclear size. The mature spore mother cell contains many spherosomes, small vacuoles, starch-containing plastids, and a large central nucleus. The mature nutritive cell, on the other hand, is extremely vacuolate and contains large, starch-filled plastids, a few spherosomes, and a small nucleus. A previously undescribed type of cell was observed in developing sporophyte capsules. This cell is located peripherally in the capsule and degenerates during differentiation of spore mother cells and nutritive cells.  相似文献   

8.
A. Kadota  M. Wada 《Protoplasma》1995,188(3-4):170-179
Summary In the tip-growing protonemal cell, the nucleus migrates with the tip as it grows, keeping a constant distance between them. Cytoskeletal control of this nuclear migration was analyzed inAdiantum capillus-veneris. Using rhodamine-phalloidin (Rh-Phal), tubulin antibodies and confocal laser scanning microscopy, we found the presence of microtubule (MT) and microfilament (MF) strands connecting the cell nucleus to the cortex of the growing apex. The strands come from the apical end of the spindle-shaped nucleus and run through the endoplasm, arriving at the apical cortex, where a circular arrangement of MTs and MFs is present. Strands of MFs and MTs were also found to emanate from the proximal end of the nucleus and extend towards the cortex of the basal part of the cell. Double staining of MTs and MFs revealed a co-localization of these cytoskeletal elements. When MF strands were disrupted by cytochalasin B (CB), tip-growth ceased and nuclear movement stopped. After the application of colchicine, MT structures disappeared, tip-growth was largely inhibited, and the nucleus moved towards the basal part of the cell. When both CB and colchicine were applied to the cell, no basipetal migration of cell nucleus was observed. These results suggest that the MT strands between the apex and the nucleus may have a role in the anchorage of the cell nucleus to the tip during tip-growth, and that the MF strands may be important for basipetal movement of the nucleus. When the nucleus was dislocated basipetally by centrifugation, cytoskeletal strands between the cell apex and the nucleus were still observed, and by acropetal movement the nucleus resumed its previous position. The acropetal movement of the nucleus was inhibited by the application of both CB and colchicine but not by CB alone nor by colchicine alone, indicating that both cytoskeletal elements are involved in the forward movement of cell nucleus.Abbreviations CB cytochalasin B - DAPI4 6-diamino-2-phenylin-dole - DMSO dimethylsulfoxide - PIPES piperazine-N,N-bis(2-ethane-sulfonic acid) - EGTA ethyleneglycol-bis-(-aminoethyl-ether)-N,N,N,N-tetraacetic acid - MBS m-maleimidobenzoic acid N-hydroxysuccinimide ester - MF microfilament - MT microtubule - PMSF phenylmethylsulfonyl fluoride - PSM polyoxyethylene sorbitan monolaurate - Rh-Phal rhodamine-labeled phalloidin  相似文献   

9.
Summary When the red-light grown protonema ofAdiantum capillus-veneris was transferred to the dark, the nucleus ceased its migration ca. 5 hours before cell plate formation (Mineyuki andFuruya 1980). To see whether the nucleus was held by some cytoplasmic structure during nuclear positioning, protonemata were treated with various centrifugal forces at different stages of the cell cycle. Nuclei of G1 phase were easily displaced by centrifugation at 360×g for 15 minutes, but those of G2 or M phase were not displaced by it, suggesting that the nuclei were held by some cytoplasmic elements in G2 or M phase. This nuclear anchoring was not detectable in protonemata that were treated with 5mM colchicine. With this treatment, the nucleus did not stop its migration at late G2 and moved even in prophase. And the retardation of organelle movement which was observed in cytoplasm on the lateral side of the nucleus after the cessation of premitotic nuclear migration (Mineyuki andFuruya 1984) was not observed in the presence of colchicine. Thus the nuclei appear to be held by colchicine-sensitive structure in cytoplasm between the lateral surface of the nucleus and cell wall during the premitotic nuclear positioning. Electron micrographs showing cytoplasmic microtubules were consistent with the idea.Abbreviations PPN Premitotic positioning of the nucleus - L region Cytoplasm between the lateral surface of the nucleus and cell wall (seeMineyuki et al. 1984)  相似文献   

10.
Ultrastructure of spore maturation in the myxomycete Didymium iridis was investigated using morphometric analytical techniques. Changes in actual volume (μm3) and relative volume (Vv) of nuclei, autophagic vacuoles, mitochondria, microbodies, lipid droplets, and spore wall were described for spores in three stages of development. Stage I spores were newly formed, surrounded only by the cell membrane. Stage II spores were approximately 1 hr older than Stage I spores and possessed surface spines, but little if any additional wall material. Stage III spores were 24 hr old and possessed a fully formed, multilayered wall. The results of this study indicate that spore maturation in D. iridis is a multistep process involving a decrease in spore volume and coordinated changes in specific organelle compartments. From Stage I to Stage III, mean spore volume decreased by more than 50%. Percent volume data (Vv) showed that Stage I spores allocated volume equally to all measured organelles except microbodies and the spore wall, the latter of which had not yet begun to develop. By Stage II, only the nucleus and spore wall showed significant changes in Vv values, both increasing. In terms of actual volume, the nucleus, autophagic vacuole and spore wall increased by Stage II. Between Stages II and III the cell wall was the only component to increase in volume, all others decreased in volume. Our data indicate a close relationship between a decrease in organelle volume and an increase in cell wall volume in the Stage III spore. The autophagic vacuole and the cell wall dominated the volume of the Stage III spore while the remaining volume was allocated unequally to the other components.  相似文献   

11.
Meiotic division in Fomes annosus is similar to that reported for other higher fungi. Nuclei in dikaryotic cells prior to fusion in the basidia are long, thin, and double-stranded with paired heterochromatic areas. Various stages of prophase are similar to those in higher plants. At metaphase I and II seven pairs of chromosomes are aligned in a circle and the chromatids migrate to opposite poles established by two centrioles. The centrioles function in the movement of the nuclei in the basidium, nuclear alignment prior to fusion, establishment of poles for division, and the migration of the nuclei into the basidiospore. After nuclei migrate into the basidiospore, they soon divide, producing a binucleate spore.  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.
Spore wall morphogenesis of Lycopodium clavatum was observed by transmission electron microscopy. The spore plasma membrane indicates the reticulate spore sculpture shortly after meiosis. The mature spore wall of this species consists of two layers, inner endospore and outer exospore. There is no perispore in the sporoderm of this species. The exospore formation begins during the tetrad stage; and this layer is divided into two distinct sublayers, an outer lamellar layer and an inner granular layer. The lamellar layer is formed on the sculptured spore plasma membrane. Additional lamellae attach to this layer in a centripetal direction. For that reason, this layer may be derived from spore cytoplasm. The granular layer is formed only in the proximal region following lamellar layer formation, and it also may be derived from spore cytoplasm. The endospore is formed lastly and seems to be derived from spore cytoplasm as well. Accordingly, the spore sculpture of this species may be under the genetic control of the spore nucleus.  相似文献   

14.
Postmitotic nuclear migration in Euastrum oblongnum Ralfs ex Ralfs starts about 80 min after septum formation with the nucleus leaving its central position in the isthmus and moving into the growing semicell. Nuclear migration is influenced by the chloroplast, which expands into the growing half-cell and pushes the nucleus toward one side of the cell. The nucleus occupies its farthest position from the isthmus when located in the middle of the growing semicell directly under the central depression of the cell surface. It remains in this position during the subsequent stages of cell development and moves back toward the isthmus within a chloroplast groove about 12 h after completion of cell shape formation. Bundles of microtubules (MTs) emanating from a microtubule center surround the nucleus during its motion. They reach far into the growing half-cell as long as the nucleus is moving but vanish when the nucleus stays in the growing semicell. MT-disrupting agents inhibit the backward movement of the nucleus toward the isthmus indicating that MTs are involved in this motion too. Because both MT inhibitors and cytochalasin B influence nuclear motion in Euastrum, an interaction of MTs and microfilaments is thought to function as the motive force for nuclear migration.  相似文献   

15.
Sexual fusion of haploid Chlamydomonas gametes produces a diploid zygote which undergoes sporulation (maturation). We have used a combination of genetic and cellular approaches to evaluate the role(s) of gametic cell and nuclear fusion in the progression of sporulation. A fusion-arrested strain, zym-26–3. was obtained following ultraviolet irradiation of vegetative haploid cells of the homothallic species Chlamydomonas monoica Strehlow. Using the DNA-specific fluorochrome, DAPI, we determined that diploidy was rarely achieved although nuclear migration to the base of the cytoplasmic bridge connecting the gametes and attempted transit through the tubule could be easily documented. Unusual cytoplasmic‘buds’which developed adjacent to the cytoplasmic bridge in sporulating haploids were usually found to contain a migrant nucleus. Using transmission electron microscopy, we determined that ultrastructural changes typically associated with sporulation of a diploid zygote (e.g. spore wall formation; plastid dedifferentiation and associated lipid accumulation; nuclear migration and heterochromatization) could occur following arrested cell fusion despite the absence of nuclear fusion. Genetic analysis of the zym-263 strain revealed two unlinked mutations: cf-1 responsible for the failure to complete cell fusion; and ger-8, a mutant allele not affecting cell fusion, but interfering with late stages of spore maturation and germination.‘Cytoplasmic budding’was observed in strains carrying each of these mutations singly and may be a common secondary consequence of disturbances in the relative timing of interrelated processes required for spare wall assembly.  相似文献   

16.
We have investigated the effects of centrifugation on sporepolarity, asymmetric cell division, and rhizoid differentiationin the sensitive fern Onoclea sensibilis L. Centrifugation at10000 g for 30 min produces a random orientation of spores withstratification of the cell contents. After centrifugation atmost early stages of development, the nucleus retains its normalpattern of migration from the centre of the ellipsoidal sporeto the proximal face and then to an end of the spore, withoutregard to the orientation of stratification. This indicatesthat the polarity of the spore is stable to centrifugation.As long as the nucleus migrates to an end of the spore and asymmetriccell division occurs, the small cell differentiates into a rhizoid.The arrangement of large cytoplasmic organelles appears to haveno influence on nuclear migration, asymmetric cell division,or rhizoid differentiation. The only period during developmentwhen centrifugation blocks asymmetric cell division is immediatelypreceding and during mitosis and cytokinesis. Spores centrifugedat this stage do not complete nuclear migration, and symmetriccell division results, with neither cell differentiating intoa rhizoid. The source of the stable polarity of the spore isdiscussed. cell polarity, rhizoid differentiation, centrifugation, Onoclea sensibilis L., sensitive fern, fern spores  相似文献   

17.
Lipids and proteins in substantial quantities are present as storage products in spores of Onoclea sensibilis. They fill the sparce spore cytoplasm and ultrastructurally are indistinguishable from reserve materials observed in storage tissue of higher plants. Hydrolysis of both products is correlated with early stages in spore germination.  相似文献   

18.
The Bangia phase of Bangia fuscopurpurea was grown in laboratory culture in a variety of photoperiod and temperature regimes. Plants of the Bangia phase grown from 2 types of asexual spores, monospores and conchospores, exhibited growth differences under similar growing conditions. Plants derived from monospores grew more rapidly and matured earlier than those derived from carpospores. Day length and temperature were found to significantly influence growth rule, maturation, and plant size. Long day lengths resulted in more rapid growth in filament length and diameter and earlier spore formation and spore release. Maximum filament length was observed in a 12/12 hr light-dark cycle at 15 C. Spore formation and release were delayed by decreasing day length or temperature. Temperature and photoperiod were also found to influence the type of spores produced by the Bangia phase. When grown at 22 C, the Bangia phase produced only monospores, which reproduced the Bangia phase. At 9 C, with photoperiods of 11 hr or more of light, the Bangia phase produced carpospores which gave rise to the alternating Conchocelis phase. The conditions under which sporogenesis occurred determined the spore type differentiated.  相似文献   

19.
20.
Summary Germinating spores of the sensitive fern,Onoclea sensibilis L., undergo premitotic nuclear migration before a highly asymmetric cell division partitions each spore into a large protonemal cell and a small rhizoid initial. Nuclear movement and subsequent rhizoid formation were inhibited by the microtubule (MT) inhibitors, colchicine, isopropyl-N-3-chlorophenyl carbamate (CIPC) and griseofulvin. Colchicine prevented polar nuclear movement and cell division so that spores developed into enlarged, uninucleate single cells. CIPC and griseofulvin prevented nuclear migration, but not cell division, so that spores divided into daughter cells of approximately equal size. In colchicine-treated spores, MT were not observed at any time during germination. CIPC prevented MT formation at a time coincident with nuclear movement in the control and caused a disorientation of the spindle MT. Both colchicine and CIPC appeared to act at a time prior to the onset of normal nuclear movement. The effects of colchicine were reversible but those of CIPC were not. Cytochalasin b had no effect upon nuclear movement or rhizoid differentiation. These results suggests that MT mediate nuclear movement and that a highly asymmetric cell division is essential for rhizoid differentiation.  相似文献   

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