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1.
Time-lapse observations of filamentous fern gametophytes were used to evaluate whether the plane of cell division is referable to the plane of minimal surface area before and during the transition to two-dimensional growth. Cell dimensions of the apical cell were related to the length/width ratios associated with minimal area in the transverse plane vs. longitudinal plane, by modeling the apical cell as a hemisphere subtended by a cylinder. Our working hypothesis predicts that filamentous growth is perpetuated by an apical cell geometry that makes the transverse division plane the orientation of minimal surface area, whereas the transition to two-dimensional growth (longitudinal division of the apical cell) occurs once the longitudinal plane becomes the position of minimal surface area. The predictions of this hypothesis are fulfilled regardless of variations in light intensity and light quality, the presence of regulators of metabolism, or whether the experimental perturbation causes a corresponding selective inhibition of the transition to two-dimensional growth. Thus, the control of the plane of cell division in this system seems to depend on thermodynamic considerations of surface area. Furthermore, we favor the conclusion that the role of the genome in the transition to two-dimensional growth involves its influence on apical cell dimensions rather than the induction of specific genes for specific morphogenetic mRNAs.  相似文献   

2.
When protonemata of Adiantum capillus-veneris L. which had been grown filamentously under continuous red light were transferred to continuous white light, the apical cell divided transversely twice, but the 3rd division was longitudinal. An intervening period of darkness lasting from 0 to 90 hr either between the 1st and the 2nd cell division or between the 2nd and the 3rd one did not affect the number of protonemata in which the 3rd cell division was longitudinal. The insertion of red light instead of darkness greatly decreased the percentage of 1st longitudinal divisions occurring at the 3rd division, and increased the number of transverse divisions. Fifty percent reduction of induction of 1st longitudinal division was caused by ca. 50 hr exposure to red light between 1st and 2nd division and by ca. 20 hr between 2nd and 3rd division, and total loss was induced by an exposure of ca. 100 hr or longer to red light in the former and by ca. 40 hr longer in the latter. Thus, by using an appropriate intervening dark period or exposure to red light, the orientation and timing of cell division could be controlled in apical cell of the fern protonemata.  相似文献   

3.
Wustman  B. A.  Becker  B.  & Melkonian  M. 《Journal of phycology》2000,36(S3):71-72
Cell division occurs within the parental cell wall, yielding two progeny cells. Since Scherffelia dubia sheds all four flagella prior to cell division, the maturing progeny cells must regenerate new cell walls and flagella during and/or after cytokinesis. To better understand these processes, we have synchronized cell division in cultures of S. dubia and observed all stages of mitosis, cytokinesis, and progeny cell maturation, including flagella and cell wall formation, via DAPI staining of fixed cells, DIC microscopy of live cells embedded in agarose and standard TEM. Microscopical observations revealed the following sequence of events: 1) Golgi stacks divide during late interphase and immediately begin producing theca scales; 2) deflagellation and release of the parental cell wall from the plasma membrane occurs during early prophase; 3) synthesis of theca and flagella scales within the Golgi and/or scale reticulum continues throughout mitosis; 4) during cytokinesis, a coalescence of vesicles containing theca scales at the posterior end of the cell results in a cleavage furrow slightly diagonal to the cells' longitudinal axis (40 min); 5) post-mitotic nascent basal body formation and flagella elongation at the inherited basal bodies (and later at the mature nascent basal bodies) occurs concurrently with continued cell wall synthesis; 6) the cleavage furrow rotates into a transverse position (35 min); 7) reorientation of the nuclei results in a "head to tail" orientation of the maturing progeny cells; and 8) matured progeny cells emerge from the posterior end of the parental theca not before 8 hrs after the onset of mitosis.  相似文献   

4.
Cell division and the role of the primary wall in filament formation in the desmid Onychonema laeve Nordst. were investigated by transmission and scanning electron microscopy. In addition, sequential chemical extractions and enzyme treatments were performed, on cell walls of intact filaments. Interphase cells are deeply constricted, consisting of two semicells, each elliptical in front view and circular in side view. In addition to two short lateral spines, each semicell has two apical processes that originate on opposite sides at an angle of about 15° from the central axis and overlap the adjacent cell. Division is initiated as in other desmids by a slight separation of the semicells and development of a girdle of primary wall material at the isthmus. In O. laeve the girdle of primary wall expands to form a spherical vesicle (termed a division vesicle) between the separating semicells. Nuclear division and septum formation occur in this vesicle when it is nearly the full diameter of the filament. Morphogenesis of the apical processes begins with completion of the septum, before the secondary wall appears. At maturity each apical process is surrounded by a thick layer of both secondary and primary wall, except that its capitate tip protrudes through the shroud of primary wall. Sequential treatment with hot ammonium oxalate, 4% NaOH, 17.5% NaOH and 10% chromic acid or various enzyme solutions did not cause filament breakage. SEM and TEM views of O. laeve after these treatments show intact secondary walls and intact primary wall material covering and connecting the apical processes of adjacent cells. It is the persistence of the primary wall between cells and around the apical processes that maintains the long, unbranched filamentous morphology of Onychonema laeve.  相似文献   

5.
The two-layered, fibrillar cell wall of Mougeotia C. Agardh sp. consisted of 63.6% non-cellulosic carbohydrates and 13.4% cellulose. The orientation of cellulose microfibrils in the native cell wall agrees with the multinet growth hypothesis, which has been employed to explain the shift in microfibril orientation from transverse (inner wall) toward axial (outer wall). Monosaccharide analysis of isolated cell walls revealed the presence of ten sugars with glucose, xylose and galactose most abundant. Methylation analysis of the acid-modified, 1 N NaOH insoluble residue fraction showed that it was composed almost exclusively of 4-linked glucose, confirming the presence of cellulose. The major hemicellulosic carbohydrate was semi-purified by DEAE Sephacel (Cl?) anion-exchange chromatography of the hot 1 N NaOH soluble fraction. This hemicellulose was a xylan consisting of a 4-xylosyl backbone and 2,4-xylosyl branch points. The major hot water soluble neutral polysaccharide was identified as a 3-linked galactan. Mougeotia cell wall composition is similar to that of (Charophyceae) and has homologies with vascular plant cell walls. Our observations support transtructural evidence which suggests that members of the Charophyceae represent the phylogenetic line that gave rise to vascular plants. Therefore, the primary cell walls of vascular plants many have evolved directly from structures typical of the filamentous green algal cell walls found in the Charophyceae.  相似文献   

6.
The thecate green flagellate Scherffelia dubia (Perty) Pascher divides within the parental cell wall into two progeny cells. It sheds all four flagella before cell division, and the maturing progeny cells regenerate new walls and flagella. By synchronizing cell division, we observed mitosis, cytokinesis, cell maturation, flagella extension, and cell wall formation via differential interference contrast microscopy of live cells and serial thin‐section EM. Synthesis of thecal and flagellar scales is spatially and temporally strictly separated. Flagellar scales are collected in a pool during late interphase. Before prophase, Golgi stacks divide, flagella are shed, the parental theca separates from the plasma membrane, and flagellar scales are deposited on the plasma membrane near the flagellar bases. At prophase, Golgi bodies start to synthesize thecal scales, continuing into interphase after cytokinesis. During cytokinesis, vesicles containing thecal scales coalesce near the cell posterior, forming a cleavage furrow that is initially oriented slightly diagonal to the longitudinal cell axis but later becomes transverse. After the progeny nuclei have moved into opposite directions, resulting in a “head to tail” orientation of the progeny cells, theca biogenesis is completed and flagellar scale synthesis resumes. Progeny cells emerge through a hole near the posterior end of the parental theca with four flagella of about 8 μm long. The precise timing of flagellar and thecal scale synthesis appears to be an evolutionary adaptation in a scaly green flagellate for the thecal condition, necessary for the evolution of the phycoplast and thus multicellularity in the Chlorophyta.  相似文献   

7.
B. E. S. Gunning 《Planta》1978,143(2):181-190
Plasmodesmata were counted in the longitudinal and transverse walls in developmental sequences of merophytes in roots of Azolla pinnata R.Br. The differences between certain categories of longitudinal wall were traced to factors that govern the surface area of the cell plates, the density of plasmodesmata (number per unit area of cell plate), and the amount by which each type of plate expands. No evidence for secondary augmentation of plasmodesmatal numbers after the cell-plate stage of development was found, but plasmodesmata are lost from the walls of sieve and xylem elements during their differentiation. Losses caused by cell separation occur in other tissues. The relatively high density of plasmodesmata in transverse walls is based not so much on a high density in the cell plates as on the relatively low expansion that these walls undergo. There appears to be a compensatory mechanism that relates initial plasmodesmatal density to the future expansion of the cell plate. The root shows determinate growth, the apical cell dividing about 55 times. Beginning at about the 35th division there is a progressive failure to maintain the plasmodesmatal frequencies that were developed in earlier cell divisions in the apical cell. The divisions that occur within the later-produced merophytes also show progressive diminution of plasmodesmatal numbers. The result is that the apex of the root, and particularly the apical cell, becomes more and more isolated symplastically, a phenomenon which could account for its limited lifespan and the determinate growth pattern of the root.  相似文献   

8.
Cell walls of the fungus, Allomyces, were isolated by chemical procedures, using either potassium permanganate oxidation or glacial acetic acid-hydrogen peroxide treatment followed by dilute mineral acid. The structure of the treated walls was investigated by means of electron microscopy and electron diffraction analysis which showed that rhizoidal walls were especially suitable for observation. Chitin microfibrils exist in the extreme tips of rhizoidal walls, and tend to lie in a preferred longitudinal orientation. Older rhizoidal wall segments show a crossed fibrillar structure under a thin layer of short randomly arranged microfibrils. In the possession of systems of crossed fibrils these walls are like the cell walls of certain green algae. Walls of branch rhizoidal filaments were observed in the early stages of development, in which case the observed microfibrillar orientations are such that it is possible to envisage their origin from pre-existing fibrils that have passively reoriented. With respect to the continued growth of the filaments, however, it is difficult to explain the observed microfibrillar arrangements in terms of the "multi-net" theory. Hyphal walls usually show two layers, the outer consisting of microfibrils arranged randomly, and the inner consisting of well oriented microfibrils running parallel with the longitudinal axis of the hypha. The oriented inner layer appears to be similar in structure to the secondary wall of the Phycomyces sporangiophore.  相似文献   

9.
Tissue stresses in growing plant organs   总被引:7,自引:0,他引:7  
Rapidly growing plant organs (e.g. coleopties, hypocotyls, or internodes) are composed of tissues that differ with respect to the thickness, structure, and extensibility of their cell walls. The thick, relatively inextensible outer wall of the epidermal cells contains both transverse and longitudinally oriented cellulose-microfibrils. The orientation of microfibrils of the thin, extensible walls of the parenchyma cells seems to be predominantly transverse. In many growing organs (i.e. leafstalks), the outer epidermal wall is supported by a thickened inner epidermal wall and by thick-walled subepidermal collenchyma tissue. Owing to the turgor pressure of the cells the peripheral walls are under tension, while the extensible inner tissue is under compression. As a corollary, the longitudinal tensile stress of the rigid peripheral wall is high whereas that of the internal walls is lowered. The physical stress between the tissues has been described by Sachs in 1865 as 'tissue tension'. The term 'tissue stress'. however, seems to be more appropriate since it comprises both tension and compression. Hitherto no method has been developed to measure tissue stresses directly as force per unit cross-sectional area. One can demonstrate the existence of tissue stresses by separation of the tissues (splitting, peeling) and determining the resulting strain of the isolated organ fragments. Based on such experiments it has been shown that rapid growth is always accompanied by the existence of longitudinal tissue stresses.  相似文献   

10.
Inada  S.  Sato  S. 《Plant and Soil》2000,226(1):117-128
In actively growing cortical cells in the elongation zone of Lemna minor L. roots, both longitudinal (radial and tangential) and transverse walls expand in both length and width. The longitudinal walls of the three types of cortical cells in the root (i.e. outer, middle and inner) showed the largest expansion in the longitudinal axis. In contrast, the inner cortical cells exhibited the least expansion in width, whereas the middle cortical cells displayed the largest expansion in width. Thus, the profiles of the expansion of longitudinal walls were characteristic for the three types of cortical cells. In this study, both the orientation of cortical microtubule (MT) arrays and their dynamic reorientation, and the density of cortical MTs, were documented and correlated to the patterns of cell wall expansion. Significantly, transverse arrays of cortical MTs were most prominent in the radial walls of the inner cortical cells, and least so in those of the middle cortical cells. Toward the base of roots, beyond the elongation zone, the orientation of cortical MTs shifted continuously from transverse to oblique and then to longitudinal. In this case, the rate of shift in the orientation of cortical MTs along the root axis was appreciably faster in the middle cortical cells than in the other two types of cortical cells. Interestingly, the continuous change in cortical MT orientation was not confirmed in the transverse walls which showed much smaller two-dimensional expansion than the radial walls. Additionally, the presence of fragmented or shortened cortical MTs rapidly increased concomitantly with the decrease of transversely oriented cortical MTs. This relationship was especially prominent in the transverse walls of the inner cortical cells, which displayed the least expansion among the three types of cortical cells investigated. In the root elongation zone, the density of cortical MTs in the inner cortical cells was about three times higher than that in the other two cortical cell types. These results indicate that in the early stage of cell expansion, the orientation of cortical MTs determines a preferential direction of cell expansion and both the shifting orientation and density of cortical MTs affect the magnitude of expansion in width of the cell wall.  相似文献   

11.
Summary Two-dimensional prothallia of Adiantum capillus-veneris always expanded in a plane which was at a right angle to any given direction of irradiation with continuous white light. The expansion began with a longitudinal division of the apical cell, in the filamentous protonema, and the orientation of the mitotic cell plate of this first longitudinal division as well as the subsequent divisions was always parallel to the direction of the incident light. When three irradiations with white light, interrupted by periods of darkness, were given, two transverse and one subsequent longitudinal division were induced. When the last two irradiations were given from the same direction, the cell plate of the first longitudinal division in most protonemata was oriented parallel to the direction of light. However, when the direction of light during the third irradiation was at right angle to that during the second, the frequency of the longitudinal division greatly decreased but that of the third transverse division increased. Thus, the orientation of the first longitudinal division appeared to be controlled in some way not only by the irradiation which actually induced the third division but also by that inducing the preceding transverse division, while the direction of light for the first transverse division had little effect on the orientation of the third division.  相似文献   

12.
This paper is concerned with the relationship between cell wall orientation in dividing tissues and stress. An examination of the possible orientations of a cell-plate in a cell under axial stress reveals that only one orientation passing through the center of the cell can be completely free from shear stress, thus providing a favored plane for the positioning of an hypothetical, shear-sensitive, cell-plate precursor. From this principle of shear-free partitioning, and the three basic rules of stress behavior along free boundaries, it is possible to predict certain features of cell wall orientation along free edges and epidermal surfaces and in some simple apices. The possible significance of the widespread phenomenon of axillary induction of bud formation is discussed in terms of the generation of stresses at the base of the axillant leaf, and the general efficacy of mechanical stress as a spontaneously arising morphogenetic trigger is considered.  相似文献   

13.
Summary Placental cells in the ovarian transmitting tissue ofLilium spp. are organized as transfer cells with inbuddings facing the ovarian locule. A detailed analysis of microtubule (MT) organization during development of these polarized cells is reported here. Formation of wall projections occurs at the apical part of the cell starting on the day of anthesis, and a fully mature secretion zone is found four days after anthesis. MTs are organized into distinct cortical and central arrays. The cortical array undergoes a unique transition at anthesis. MTs in the basal half of the cell remain in longitudinal bundles while in the apical half of the cell their longitudinal orientation is replaced by a transverse alignment. One day after anthesis, these transverse bundles become a meshwork of short, randomly organized MTs, while MTs in the basal half of the cell retain their longitudinal alignment. The realignment of MTs in the apical half of the cell coincides with the deposition of the secondary cell wall. The central array is composed of short, randomly arranged strands of MTs in the cytoplasm between the nucleus and the apical and basal periclinal walls of the cell. This array first appears as solitary strands in the apical part of the cell one day before anthesis. The central array extends during development and is eventually seen in the basal half of the cell. We propose that MTs in the cortical region near the apical wall act as templates for the deposition of cellulose microfibrils in the secondary cell wall. MTs in the central array in these transfer cells may be involved in the trafficking of vesicles and/or positioning of organelles near the secretion zone.Abbreviations MT microtubule - daa day after anthesis - dba day before anthesis  相似文献   

14.
Glandular trichomes occur on both surfaces of leaves of all examined genera and species of the subtribe Pleurothallidinae (Orchidaceae). Trichome initiation is effected by one periclinal division of a protodermal cell, producing a thin-walled, globose apical cell with a relatively large nucleus and a subapical stalk cell with heavily cutinized lateral walls. In some species a second periclinal division produces a third small basal cell also having thick lateral walls but thin transverse walls. As leaf development proceeds, the trichome apparatus assumes a sunken position due to continued anticlinal divisions of protoderm. Prior to laminar expansion and guard-mother-cell division on the abaxial surface, the wall of the apical cell ruptures and is replaced by a brown opaque residue. Finally, after vascular tissue differentiation and the cessation of meristematic activity, two or more pitted foot cells develop at the base of the trichome and adjacent to the water-storing hypodermal layers. Preliminary investigations indicate that the trichome apparatus is absorptive throughout its development and similar in function to tillandsioid scales in Bromeliaceae.  相似文献   

15.
The root apical meristem of Asplenium bulbiferum Forst. f. has a prominent four-sided pyramidal cell with its base in contact with the rootcap. Derivatives (merophytes) that contribute to the main body of the root are produced from the three proximal faces of the apical cell. The rootcap has its origin from the fourth (distal) face of the apical cell. The first division in a proximal merophyte is periclinal to the root surface, separating an outer cell and an inner cell. The outer cell is the origin of the outer part of the cortex and the epidermis; the larger inner cell is the origin of the inner cortex, endodermis, pericycle, and vascular tissue. After the establishment of the basic number of cells in a unilayered merophyte, the cells undergo transverse divisions forming longitudinal files of cells. The mitotic index of the apical cell indicates that it is not a quiescent cell. Also, the first plane of division in a newly formed merophyte dictates that the apical cell is the originator of merophytes.  相似文献   

16.
This study tested several aspects of a model proposed by Williamson (1990, 1991) in which stresses in plant cell walls, detected by stress-receptive portions of inelastic cellulose microfibrils, orient microtubules via interactions with cell wall-linked transmembrane proteins. Young expanding cells of pea root tips have highly ordered transverse arrays of microtubules oriented perpendicular to the direction of cell expansion. The recovery of these ordered MT arrays after depolymerisation with oryzalin was assessed. It was shown that treating roots with disruptors of microfibril synthesis (2,6-dichlorobenzonitrile and calcofluor white) or the disruption of Arg-Gly-Asp (RGD)-mediated wall-membrane links did not affect the orientation of recovering microtubule arrays. Furthermore, cell wall stresses themselves appeared unnecessary for regeneration of transverse arrays. The relevance of these findings to Williamson's hypothesis is discussed.  相似文献   

17.
Structure of the embryo sac and development of the proembryo of Acer saccharinum L. are described from paraffin sections. The embryo sac is monosporic and identical to the 8-nucleate Polygonum type in all respects. Cell, nuclear, and nucleolar sizes are constant within a narrow range and sharply distinctive for all components of the mature sac. Polar nuclei fuse before double fertilization. The longitudinal axis of symmetry of the egg, zygote, and proembryo is variously oriented with respect to the longitudinal axis of the embryo sac and is determined by the point of attachment of the presumptive egg cell to the sac wall. Subsequent development of the young embryo is responsive to aligning factors within the embryo sac and is collateral with the longitudinal axis of the sac. The first segmentation is transverse to the longitudinal axis of the zygote; the second and third are transverse in the basal cell and longitudinal in the apical cell. Descendants of ci form a short irregular suspensor; ca and m give rise to the apical and basal halves respectively of the embryo proper. The contribution of the proembryonic tiers to the older embryo differs in embryos of different initial orientation. Distribution and orientation of mitosis in the proembryo are shown in two accumulation maps.  相似文献   

18.
Cultured roots of the common bindweed, Convolvulus arvensis L. growing at the rate of 15–30 mm/day in sterile nutrient medium were fixed for electron microscopic analysis. The ultrastructure of the quiescent center, the initials of the ground meristem, and the initials of the procambium were studied in order to determine whether sequential structural changes could be correlated with models for specifying the mechanisms by which cell differentiation and cell division might be controlled. The differentiation of cells in the root proper occurs very gradually in linear files from the site of the quiescent center proximally into the different tissue regions. Major structural changes, such as the orientation and subsequent elongation of cells along the longitudinal axis of the root and cell wall changes, indicate that the control of differentiation and perhaps cell division occurs in radial gradients outwardly from the quiescent center.  相似文献   

19.
Dawes , Clinton J., Flora M. Scott , and E. Bowler . (U. California, Los Angeles.) A light- and electron-microscopic survey of algal cell walls. I. Phaeophyta and Rhodophyta. Amer. Jour. Bot. 48(10): 925–934. Illus. 1961.—An introductory survey of the structure of the cell walls of brown, red, and green algae, as seen under light and electron microscopes, has been completed. In the present paper (Part I) the structure of the thalli of the Phaeophyta and Rhodophyta is compared, and the occurrence of intercellular spaces, pitting, and microfibrillar patterns is discussed. A detailed comparison of the cell-wall structure and growth of a brown alga, Dictyota flabellata, and of a red alga, Helminthocladia californica, is also presented. In Dictyota, typical of the brown algae, the microfibrillar pattern in the apical cells and in the adjacent cells of the thallus tip is reticulate. In mature cells, the microfibrils are dominantly parallel in orientation. Pits, which are fields of closely set pores, are distinctive. The microfibrils in the pit areas are masked by non-fibrillar material. Helminthocladia, with a cell wall characteristic of the red algae, differs from Dictyota in that the microfibrillar pattern is reticulate at all ages of the cell and throughout the thallus. In the pit areas, the microfibrils are not masked by amorphous material. Pit connections, characteristic of the Florideae, can be divided into 2 major groups. Either the pit connection is an open channel between 2 adjacent cells, or it is composed of numerous plasmodesmata traversing a continuous, loose, microfibrillar wall. The techniques of the survey are emphasized in that fragmented cell walls were studied, and, also, chemically cleared material was constantly compared with fresh material under light and electron microscopes. It is concluded that the cell wall, as a taxonomic character, is of value only in delimiting the Phaeophyta and Rhodophyta.  相似文献   

20.
A gradient of development consisting of successive zones of cell division, cell elongation and cell maturation occurs along the longitudinal axis of elongating leaf blades of tall fescue (Festuca arundinacea Schreb.), a C3 grass. An increase in specific leaf weight (SLW; dry weight per unit leaf area) in the maturation region has been hypothesized to result from deposition of secondary cell walls in structural tissues. Our objective was to measure the transverse cell wall area (CWA) associated with the increase in SLW, which occurs following the cessation of leaf blade elongation at about 25 mm distal to the ligule. Digital image analysis of transverse sections at 5, 15, 45, 75 and 105 mm distal to the ligule was used to determine cell number, cell area and protoplast area of structural tissues, namely fibre bundles, mestome sheaths and xylem vessel elements, along the developmental gradient. Cell diameter, protoplast diameter and area, and cell wall thickness and area of fibre bundle cells were calculated from these data. CWA of structural tissues increased in sections up to 75 mm distal to the ligule, confirming the role of cell wall deposition in the increase in SLW (r2 = 0.924; P < or = 0.01). However, protoplast diameter of fibre cells did not decrease significantly as CWA increased, although mean thickness of fibre cell walls increased by 95 % between 15 and 105 mm distal to the ligule. Therefore, secondary cell wall deposition in fibre bundles of tall fescue leaf blades resulted in continued radial expansion of fibre cells rather than in a decrease in protoplast diameter.  相似文献   

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