Aperture development in spores of the moss,Trematodon longicollis Mx. |
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Authors: | R. C. Brown B. E. Lemmon |
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Affiliation: | (1) Department of Biology, The University of Southwestern Louisiana, 70504 Lafayette, LA, USA |
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Abstract: | Summary Young spores of the mossTrematodon longicollis Mx. are highly polar. Immediately after meiotic cytokinesis an extensive system of microtubules associated with the single plastid develops under the entire distal face. Following exine initiation on the distal surface a microtubule system is elaborated at the site of aperture development on the proximal surface. Both plastid and nucleus move from distal to proximal pole and are attached to microtubules of the proximal system. Microtubules underlie the plasma membrane as it withdraws from the exine in the initiation of both the surrounding annulus and central aperture pore. The central pore enlarges to form a bowl-shaped concavity in which a fibrillar plug develops basipetally. The annulus expands into a fibrillar-filled protrusion surrounding the central pore. The mature aperture consists of a central pore plug covered by a thin roof of exine and separated from the surrounding annulus by exine lamellae. The aperture of the mature spore is obscured by development of the ornate exine and is not a prominent feature of the mature spore surface. |
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Keywords: | Microtubules Polarity Spore development Trematodon |
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