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51.
The gun cells which develop from germinating cysts in Haptoglossa produce a specialized infection apparatus, the injection tube. Upon eversion this tube fires a missile-like projectile which penetrates the host cuticle and then forms an infective sporidium within the body cavity of the nematode host. The temporal assembly of this complex cell organelle has been determined by serial-section reconstructions of maturing gun cells in a previously undescribed Haptoglossa species. The differentiation of the partially walled inverted injection tube is an unusual example of internal tube growth, in which membrane and wall assembly are temporally separated. There is no evidence that the shape of this inverted tube, which coils around the nucleus until it doubles back on itself, is dictated by the disposition of cytoplasmic microtubules. However, actin-like material was associated with the delimiting membrane of the differentiating tube, particularly in the regions of extension. From these studies it seems likely that the "head and buttress" structures previously depicted as the barbed tip of the "harpoon-like" penetration missile are part of a separate, structurally complex system which we suggest locks the "missile" into position in the invaginated injection tube. From this detailed account of cell architecture, models for the likely mechanism of infection cell firing are discussed, and unresolved questions relating to the cell biology and biochemistry of these complex organelles are highlighted. Copyright 1998 Academic Press. 相似文献