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1.
In an earlier report the ultrastructure and nucleoid organelles of male gamete in Pinus tabulaeformis Carr. have been described. Presently, the ultrastructure of the cytoplasm of the egg cell and pollen tube—immediately before fertilization and during cytoplasmic transmission of male gametophyte—has been described for the same species. The fate of parental plastids and mitochondria in the proembryo has also been followed. The mature egg cell contains a large amount of mitochondria, but seems to lack normal plastids. Most plastids have transformed into large inclusions. Apart from the large inclusions, there are abundant small inclusions and other organelles in the egg cell. During fertilization, pollen tube penetrates into the egg cell at the micropylar end and thereafter the contents are released. Plastid and mitochondrion of male origin are lacking near the fusing sperm-egg nuclei. The second sperm nucleus—not involved in karyogamy—remains at a site near the receptive vacuole. This nucleus is surrounded by large amount of male cytoplasm containing mixed organelles from the sperm cell, tube cell, and egg cell. At the free nuclear proembryo stage, organelles of male and female origin are visible in the perinucleus-cytoplasmic zone. Most of the mitochondria have the same morphological features as those in the egg cell. Some of the mitochondria appear to have originated from the sperm and tube cells. Plastids are most likely of male gametophyte origin because they have similar appearance as those of the sperm and tube cell. Large inclusions in the egg cell become vacuole-like. Paternal plastids have been incorporated into the neocytoplasm of the proembryo. In the cellular proembryo, maternal mitochondria are more abundant. Plastids resembling those of the sperm and tube cell are still present. These cytological results clearly show that in P. tabulaeformis , plastids are inherited paternally and mitochondria bipaternally. The cytological mechanism of plastid and mitochondrion inheritance in gymnosperm is discussed.  相似文献   

2.
Three types of tobacco (Nicotiana tabacum cv. Havana 38) callus: 1) healthy stem callus, 2) TMV-infected stem callus, 3) TMV-infected leaf callus; and leaves differentiated from healthy stem callus, and from TMV-infected leaf callus were compared for fine structure. In addition, the fine structure was observed of plastids in cells of leaves differentiated from callus isolated from stem sections of TMV-infected hybrid tobacco plants (N. tabacum cv. Havana 38 ×N. glutinosa) grown under high temperature. The cytoplasmic organelles in tissue cultured cells were similar to those in cells of greenhouse-grown tobacco plants. Except for plastids, TMV infection did not noticeably affect morphologically other cellular organelles in tissue culture cells. In TMV-infected leaf callus, numerous small bodies were seen in plastid-like bodies, while vesicle-like structures were observed in the stroma of plastids in leaves differentiated from callus of hybrid tobacco inoculated with TMV. Morphological variations of mitochondria, such as swelling and vacuolization of the inner matrix, occurred frequently in TMV-infected leaf callus. Needle-like crystalline inclusions or looped inclusions composed of many fine, long filaments were considered TMV particles orientated parallel to each other. The TMV particles were detected in the cytoplasm of tissue culture cells.  相似文献   

3.
Douglas fir (Pseudotsuga menziesii [Mirb.] Franco) ovules were used to study male gamete formation, insemination of the egg, and free nuclear and cellular proembryo development. Two male nuclei form as the pollen tube either reaches the megaspore wall or as it enters the archegonial chamber. No cell wall separates them. They are contained within the body-cell cytoplasm. A narrow extension of the pollen tube separates the neck cells and penetrates the ventral canal cell. The pollen tube then releases its contents into the egg cytoplasm. The two male gametes and a cluster of paternal organelles (plastids and mitochondria) migrate within the remains of the body-cell cytoplasm toward the egg nucleus. Microtubules are associated with this complex. The leading male gamete fuses with the egg nucleus. The zygote nucleus undergoes free nuclear division, but the cluster of paternal organelles remains discrete. Free nuclei, paternal and maternal nucleoplasm, maternal perinuclear cytoplasm, and the cluster of paternal organelles migrate en masse to the chalazal end of the archegonium. There, paternal and maternal organelles intermingle to form the neocytoplasm, the nuclei divide, and a 12-cell proembryo is formed. The importance of male nuclei or cells, the perinuclear zone, and large inclusions in cytoplasmic inheritance are discussed in the Pinaceae and in other conifer families. This completes a two-part study to determine the fate of paternal and maternal plastids and mitochondria during gamete formation, fertilization, and proembryo development in Douglas fir.  相似文献   

4.
The fusion cell in Asterocolax gardneri Setch, is a large, multinucleate, irregularly-shaped cell resulting from cytoplasmic fusions of haploid and diploid cells. Subsequent enlargement takes place by incorporating adjacent gonimoblast cells. The resultant cell consists of two parts—a central portion of isolated cytoplasm, surrounded by an electron dense cytoplasmic barrier, and the main component of the fusion cell cytoplasm surrounding the isolated cytoplasm. The fusion cell contains many nuclei, large quantities of floridean starch, endoplasmic reticulum, and vesicles, but few mitochondria, plastids and dictyosomes. The endoplasmic reticulum forms vesicles that apparently secrete large quantities of extracellular mucilage which surrounds the entire carposporophyte. The isolated cytoplasm also is multinucleate but lacks starch and a plasma membrane. Few plastids, ribosomes and mitochondria are found in this cytoplasm. However, numerous endoplasmic reticulum cisternae occur near the cytoplasmic barrier and they appear to secrete material for the barrier. In mature carposporophytes, all organelles in the isolated cytoplasm have degenerated.  相似文献   

5.
Summary Amaranthus plants infected with a virus of rod-shaped particles showed under the light microscope intracytoplasmic amorphous and crystalline inclusions.The submicroscopic organization of mesophyll cells from infectedAmaranthus leaves by electron microscopy is described. Besides big crystalline inclusions, long dark inclusions correspondent to needle-like inclusions observed by light microscopy are definable in the cytoplasm. The amorphous inclusion bodies were formed by an overgrown protrusion of vacuolate cytoplasm containing virus particles, long very dark stained inclusions forming dense bands and rings, normal elements of the cytoplasm such as mitochondria, endoplasmic reticulum and ribosomes, and some spherosomes. Inclusions and virus particles were not found in chloroplasts, mitochondria or nuclei of infected cells.  相似文献   

6.
Guo F  Hu SY  Yuan Z  Zee SY  Han Y 《Protoplasma》2005,225(1-2):5-14
Summary. In this paper, the stages of normal sexual reproduction between pollen tube penetration of the archegonium and early embryo formation in Pinus tabulaeformis are described, emphasizing the transmission of parental cytoplasm, especially the DNA-containing organelles – plastids and mitochondria. The pollen tube growing in the nucellus contained an irregular tube nucleus followed by a pair of sperm cells. The tube cytoplasm contained abundant organelles, including starch-containing plastids and mitochondria. The two sperm cells differed in their volume of cytoplasm. The leading sperm, with more cytoplasm, contained abundant plastids and mitochondria, while the trailing one, with a thin layer of cytoplasm, had very few organelles. The mature egg cell contained a great number of mitochondria, whereas it lacked normal plastids. At fertilization, the pollen tube penetrated into the egg cell at the micropylar end and released all of its contents, including the two sperms. One of the sperm nuclei fused with the egg nucleus, whereas the other one was retained by the receptive vacuole. Very few plastids and mitochondria of male origin were observed around the fusing sperm and egg nuclei, while the retained sperm nucleus was surrounded by a large amount of male cytoplasm. The discharged tube cytoplasm occupied a large micropylar area in the egg cell. In the free nuclear proembryo, organelles of maternal and paternal origins intermingled in the neocytoplasm around the free nuclei. Most of the mitochondria had the same features as those of the egg cell, but some appeared to be from sperm cells and tube cytoplasm. Plastids were obviously of male origin, with an appearance similar to those of the sperm or tube cells. After cellularization of the proembryo, maternal mitochondria became more abundant than the paternal ones and the plastids enlarged and began to accumulate starch. The results reveal the cytological mechanism for paternal inheritance of plastids and biparental inheritance of mitochondria in Chinese pine. Correspondence and reprints: State Key Laboratory of Plant Physiology and Biochemistry, College of Biological Science, China Agricultural University, Beijing 100094, People’s Republic of China.  相似文献   

7.
The ultrastructure of the cells from single cell to globular embryo stage in suspension culture were investigated. The amount and morphology of the organelles, especially the plastids spherosomes and protein bodies changed obviously during the embryogenesis. In embryogenetic clump stage there occured in the vacuolated cells direct nucleus division and peripheral cytoplasmic swelling. The vaeuolated cells returned to embryonic state quickly in this way. In this paper the physiological and biological significance of the ultrastructural changes of cells in different stages of somatic embryogenesis are discussed.  相似文献   

8.
At maturity the companion cell of the phloem of the sycamore Acer pseudoplatanus has a large nucleus, simple plastids closely sheathed with rough endoplasmic reticulum, and numerous mitochondria. The cytoplasm contains numerous ribosomes, resulting in a very electron-opaque cytoplasm after permanganate fixation. Bodies similar to the spherosomes of Frey-Wyssling et al. (4) are collected in clusters and these also contain bodies of an unidentified nature similar to those found by Buttrose (1) in the aleurone cells of the wheat grain. The pores through the wall between the companion cell and sieve tube are complex and develop from a single plasmodesma. Eight to fifteen plasmodesmata on the companion cell side communicate individually with a cavity in the centre of the wall which is linked to the sieve tube by a single pore about twice the diameter of an individual plasmodesma. This pore is lined with material of an electron opacity equivalent to that of material bounding the sieve plate pores. The development of the cell organelles, the possible role played in the phloem tissue by the companion cell, and the function of the complex pores contained in its wall are discussed.  相似文献   

9.
Microsporogenesis in dwarf Phaseolus vulgaris was studied under the electron microscope. Before meiosis the microspore mother cell had a lot of organelles especially plastids and ER in its cytoplasm. There were many osmiophilic granules adhering to the membranes of the plastids and vesicular ER until meiosis began. Some cytoplasmic channels were present between adjacent microsporocytes from pachytene to telophase Ⅱ. The organelles were at early stage in the early rnlcrospore, the plastids and mitochondria of which showed regional distribution. Original vacou[es were produced by smooth ER. The organelles in the tapetum cells were mainly mitochondria, plastids and ER. The ER was concentric circles in shape in transverse section.  相似文献   

10.
Structural changes in endosperm cells of germinating castor beans were examined and complemented with a cytochemical analysis of staining with diaminobenzidine (DAB). Deposition of oxidized DAB occurred only in microbodies due to the presence of catalase, and in cell walls associated with peroxidase activity. Seedling development paralleled the disappearance of spherosomes (lipid bodies) and matrix of aleurone grains in endosperm cells. 6 to 7 days after germination, a cross-section through the endosperm contained cells in all stages of development and senescence beginning at the seed coat and progressing inward to the cotyledons. Part of this aging process involved vacuole formation by fusion of aleurone grain membranes. This coincided with an increase in microbodies (glyoxsomes), mitochondria, plastids with an elaborate tubular network, and the formation of a new protein body referred to as a dilated cisterna, which is structurally and biochemically distinct from microbodies although both apparently develop from rough endoplasmic reticulum (ER). In vacuolate cells microbodies are the most numerous organelle and are intimately associated with spherosomes and dilated cisternae. This phenomenon is discussed in relation to the biochemical activities of these organelles. Turnover of microbodies involves sequestration into autophagic vacuoles as intact organelles which still retain catalase activity. Crystalloids present in microbodies develop by condensation of matrix protein and are the principal site of catalase formerly in the matrix.  相似文献   

11.
The present study of the formation of the generative and vegetative cells in wheat has demonstrated some cytological details at the ultrastructural level. The phragmoplast formed in telophase of the first microsporic mitosis extended centrifugally until it connected with the intine of the pollen grain. A new cell wall was then formed to separate the generative and the vegetative cells. By unequal cytokinesis the former is small and the latter large. In early developmental stage of male gametophyte, the organelles in the cytoplasm of the generaVive cell and the vegetative cells are similar, including mitochondria, dictyosomes, rough endoplasmic retieulum, free and clustered ribosomes and plastids, but microtubules were observed only in the early cytokinesis stage. In the further developmental stage of the male gemetophyte, the generative cell gradually detached from the intine of pollen grain and grew inward to the cytoplasm of the vegetation cell. When the generative cell became round and free in the cytoplasm of the vegetative cell, the wall materials between plasma membranes of the cytoplasm of the generative and the vegetative cells disappeared completely, so that it was a naked cell with a double-layer membrane at this time. The heterogeneity between both cells was then very conspiceous. The organelles in the cytoplasm of the generative cell have hardly any changed besides the degeneration of plastids, but in vegetative cytoplasm the mitochondria and plastids increased dramatically both in number and size. The rapid deposition of starch in the plastids of the cytoplasm of the vegetative cell made the most conspicuous feature of the vegetative cell in mature pollen grain. The significance of the presence of a temporary cell wall in generative cell and heterogeneity between generative and vegetative cells are discussed.  相似文献   

12.
Qu LH  Sun MX 《Protoplasma》2008,233(1-2):51-59
A convenient experimental system was established to test how cells derived from higher-plant internal tissues respond to mechanical stimulation. Short-term culture of tobacco ovules in vitro led to the generation of bar-shaped cells from the parenchyma tissue of the ovule funicle. These cells are still connected to the mother tissue and are almost undifferentiated. The cells are translucent, and one end protrudes from the funicle, making them easy to manipulate and observe. Mechanical stimulation tests performed on these cells indicated that the cells are less sensitive to mechanical stimulation than epidermal hair cells but still possess the ability to respond to stimulation. Interestingly, the cells showed a cytoplasmic compartmental response to the stimulation. The nucleus, some plastids, and mitochondria were organized into a responsive unit that moved in unison to the stimulated sites, whereas most of the other organelles were not notably influenced by the stimulation. This suggests that the cytoplasm is highly organized and functionally divided in response to environmental stimulation.  相似文献   

13.
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   

14.
Y C Paliwal 《Tissue & cell》1975,7(2):217-226
Ryegrass mosaic virus particles and virus induced lamellar inclusions were found in mesophyll and epidermal cells of virus infected ryegrass leaves. The lamellar inclusions were occasionally found in phloem cells also. Virus particles occurred in cytoplasm, inside plasmodesmata and often in membrane bound sacs embedded in a matrix between plasmalemma and cell wall at or near plasmodesmata. Electron dense plugs protruding from plasmodesmata, finger-like cell wall outgrowths and cell wall deposits usually at plasmodesmata were also observed. Cytopathological changes in organelles in infected cells included dense deposits in the cisternae of endosplasmic reticulum and Golgi apparatus, mitochondria with electron-dense or opaque matrix, proliferating cristae and deteriorating unit membrane; and disintegrating chloroplasts.  相似文献   

15.
Summary Plastids and mitochondria in premeiotic cells ofEquisetum were situated at random. By early prophase I all these organelles aggregated for a short period into one group at the nuclear envelope, but subsequently the organelles became again scattered. By late prophase I they aggregated into two groups at opposite sides of the nucleus, then moved towards the equator of the cell. By interphase plastids and mitochondria aggregated into a layer which divided each dyad into two parts. After telophase II the reorganized layer divided the tetrad into four parts. The organelle layer underwent differentiation into three strata. The cell plate was formed in the middle one which was constituted of mitochondria.  相似文献   

16.
Douglas fir (Pseudotsuga menziesii (Mirb.) Franco) ovules were used to study the method of pollen tube formation and penetration of the nucellus, the movement of the body cell down the pollen tube and development of the archegonia. No pollination drop forms but nucellar tip cells produce a minute secretion that may initiate pollen tube formation. Pollen tubes penetrate the nucellus causing degeneration of nucellar cells in contact with the pollen tube tip. The body cell becomes highly lobed and the tube cytoplasm forms thin sheets between the lobes. This may be the mechanism by which the large body cell is pulled down the narrow pollen tube. Body cell plastids and mitochondria remain unaltered during pollen tube growth, whereas tube cell organelles show signs of degeneration. The pollen tube penetrates the megaspore wall and settles in the archegonial chamber. During pollen elongation and pollen tube growth the egg matured. Egg cell plastids were transformed into large inclusions which filled the periphery of the egg while mitochondria migrated to the perinuclear zone. The neck cells, ventral canal cell and archegonial jacket cells are described. The significance of the body cell and egg cell ultrastructure is discussed in light of recent restriction fragment length polymorphism studies of plastid and mitochondrial inheritance in the Pinaceae.  相似文献   

17.
To understand the relationship between the location of organelles and cellular function, we examined the dynamic state of cytoplasmic organelles and cytoskeleton in polynuclear Ehrlich ascites tumor (EAT) cells fused with hemagglutinating virus of Japan (HVJ; Sendai virus) by confocal laser scanning microscopy. Irregular fused cells gradually became spherical during culture, and nuclei and mitochondria were redistributed in the fused cell; nuclei formed a cluster surrounded by mitochondria. F-actin, vimentin, and microtubules were also reorganized with the redistribution of cell organelles. Further, when the morphological change was inhibited by L4-1, a chlorophyll-like substance derived from silkworm faeces, or pyropheophorbide-a, the arrangement of organelles and cytoskeleton remained disturbed, suggesting that the movement of the cytoskeleton is closely associated with cell shape and the distribution of cytoplasmic organelles.  相似文献   

18.
1. By means of cell separation, pectinase cell separation and routine paraffin method, we studied the cell types of leaves of wheat, Nongda 183 and several other varieties. 2. We observed in all the cell types, the presence of mitochondria, spherosomes, plastids or chloroplasts, though the morphology and distribution of these organelles vary to a certain extent they do not interfere with the recognition of these cell types. 3. The plastids and mitochondria of the long cells in the epidermis are of various forms. Most of these organelles are distributed in the portion of the cell away from the leaf surface. 4. In each one of the guard cells, there are many morphologically stable, pale-colored but shining plastids. They are peculiar to the guard cells and cannot be found in any other cell types. 5. The bulliform cells are in ball and socket connection with the mesophyll cells underneath, while the organelles of bulliform cells are concentrated at the surface of the socket. 6. The number of the chloroplasts in the mesophyll cells is not quite constant. From the external morphology and the distribution of the chloroplasts, the mesophyll cells can be divided into, at least, two morphological types. 7. The outer bundle sheath cell is divided into chloroplast-prominent and mitochondria-prominent halves. This peculiar structure of the cell reveals the function and the transitional position it occupies in the leaf. This is a good example of unity of function and structure. 8. The inner bundle sheath cells can be recognized readily by the presence of prominent pits in the walls. The protoplasmic streaming of these cells is very active. Plastids and mitochondria can be seen clearly. 9. The importance of the cell types of these specialized cells and their variously shaped and distributed organelles is discussed.  相似文献   

19.
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   

20.
Quantitative cell and organelle dynamics of the male gamete-producing lineage of Plumbago zeylanica were examined using serial transmission electron microscopic reconstruction at five stages of development from generative cell inception to sperm cell maturity. The founder population of generative cell organelles includes an average of 3.88 plastids, 54.9 mitochondria, and 3.7 vacuoles. During development the volume of the pollen grain increases from 6,200 μm3 in early microspores to 115,000 μm3 at anthesis, cell volume of the male germ lineage decreases more than 67% from 362.3 μm3 to 118.4 μm3. By the time the generative cell separates from the intine, plastid numbers increase by >600%, mitochondria by 250%, and vesicles by 43 times. A cellular projection elongates toward and establishes an association with the vegetative nucleus; this leading edge contains plastids and numerous mitochondria. When the generative cell completes its separation from the intine, organellar polarity is reversed and plastids migrate to the opposite pole of the cell. Cytoplasmic microtubules are common in association with cellular organelles. Plastids accumulate at the distal end of the cell as a linked mass, apparently adhered by lateral electron dense regions. Before division of the highly polarized generative cell, plastids decrease in number by 16%, whereas mitochondria increase by ∼90% and vacuoles increase by ∼140% from the prior stage. After mitosis, the resultant sperm cells differ in size and organelle content. The sperm cell associated with the vegetative nucleus (Svn) contains 62.7% of the cytoplasm volume, 87% of the mitochondria, 280.4 vesicles (79% of those in the generative cell), and 0.6% of the plastids. At maturity, the Svn mitochondria increase by 31% and the cell contains an average of 0.4 plastids, 158.9 vesicles, and 0.36 microbodies. The mature unassociated sperm (Sua) contains 39.8 mitochondria (up 3.3%), 24.3 plastids (down 31%), 91.1 vesicles (up 54.9%), and 3.18 microbodies. The small number of organelles initially in the generative cell, followed by their rapid multiplication in a shrinking cytoplasm suggests a highly competitive cytoplasmic environment that would tend to eliminate residual organellar heterogeneity. Cell and cytoplasmic volumes vary as a consequence of fluctuations in the number and size of large vesicles or vacuoles, as well as loss of cytoplasmic volume by (1) formation of “false cells” involving amitotic cytokinesis, (2) “pinching off” of cytoplasm, and (3) dehydration of pollen contents prior to anthesis.  相似文献   

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