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Morphogenetic plastid migration and microtubule arrays in mitosis and cytokinesis in the green alga Coleochaete orbicularis
Authors:Roy C Brown  Betty E Lemmon  Linda E Graham
Institution:1. Department of Biology, University of Southwestern Louisiana, Lafayette, Louisiana, 70504-2451;2. Department of Botany, University of Wisconsin, Madison, Wisconsin, 53706
Abstract:This study provides data on cell division in Coleochaete orbicularis, an important taxon in evolutionary theories deriving land plants from green algae. Vegetative growth in discoid species of Coleochaete results from marginal cell division in two planes—radial and circumferential. Like many algae and certain of the simple land plants, Coleochaete is monoplastidic. Prior to mitosis, the single plastid migrates to a position where it will divide and be distributed into the daughter cells. Unlike monoplastidic cell division in hornworts, mosses, and lycopsids; microtubule nucleation is not intimately associated with the plastids. Instead, microtubule organization is associated with centriolar centrosomes throughout the cell cycle, as is common in algae. The cytokinetic apparatus lacks preprophase bands of microtubules, but includes typical phragmoplasts consisting of brushlike arrays of microtubules on either side of a dark zone. However, the origin and role of phragmoplasts is unusual. Phragmoplasts appear to develop among microtubules that emanate from the polar centrosomes rather than from nuclear envelopes and/or plastids. The function of phragmoplasts in Coleochaete is unclear, as the process of cytokinesis is not strictly centrifugal. Some infurrowing occurs in radial division, and cytokinesis appears to be entirely centripetal by infurrowing in circumferential division. The cortical arrays of microtubules differ from those typical of land plants in that they develop as a network in association with centrosomes after mitosis.
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