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PHRAGMOPLASTS IN CYTOKINESIS OF CEPHALEUROS PARASITICUS (CHLOROPHYTA) VEGETATIVE GELLS 1
Authors:Russell L. Chapman  Margaret C. Henk
Abstract:Cytokinesis in apical cells of actively growing cultures of Cephaleuros parasiticus Karsten sporangiate thalli was examined with transmission electron microscopy. A massive, interzonal cytokinetic microtubule spindle is anchored at its poles to the medial surfaces of the daughter nuclei at telophase. Later, the daughter nuclei are widely separated and no longer associated with the interzonal spindle; however, the spindle retains its shape and becomes a distinct phragmoplast with an array of vesicles, presumably derived from dictyosomes, aligned in the division plane. Fusion of the vesicles gives rise to a thin cell plate. Some bundles of microtubules in the spindle appear to mark the sites of plasmodesmata formation, but no endoptasmic reticulum is directly involved in plasmodesmata formation. No infurrowing or phycoplast array of microtubules is involved in the cytokinesis. The relationship, if any. between the metaphase-anaphase mitotic microtubule system and the interzonal cytokinetic spindle has not been determined. Cephaleuros parasiticus isone of only four green algae now known to contain a higher plant-like phragmoplast and cytokinetic process. The observations reported can be interpreted as very strong evidence for a phylogenetic affinity between the Trentepohliaceae and the Charophyceae, but consideration of ulvophycean features of the Trentepohliaceae such as motile cell ultrastructure and life histories precludes unequivocal assignment of the family to either the Charophyceae or Ulvophyceae.
Keywords:Cephaleuros parasiticus  cytokinesis  interzonal spindle: phragmoplast  Trentepohliaceae  ultrastructure
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