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Reproduction in seagrasses: pollen wall morphogenesis in Amphibolis antarctica and wall structure in filiform grains
Authors:J M Pettitt  C A McConchie  S C Ducker  R B Knox
Institution:Dept of Botany, British Museum (Natural History), Cromwell Rd, London. SW75BD, England.;Cell Biology Research Centre, School of Botany, Univ. of Melbourne, Parkville, Victoria 3052, Australia.
Abstract:The pre–meiotic anther of the marine angiosperm Amphibolis antarctica contains microsporocytes and sterile cells. The microsporocytes divide conventionally to produce tetrads, but the sterile cells degenerate and contribute to the future pe–riplasmodium. Each tetrad of young microspores is contained within a vesicle defined by a membrane. After release from the tetrad, the microspores increase in length and rapidly become filiform. The microspore nucleus soon divides and partitioning of the cytoplasm delimits the generative cell from the vegetative cell of the binucleate pollen grain. The division and the early pollen growth occurs while the grains are segregated within vesicles in the periplasmodium. These compartments, established at microspore release, remain structurally intact throughout the vacuolate period of pollen development, when pollen wall assembly begins. This process is initiated as particles migrate from the inner face of the vesicle membrane into the lumen of the vesicle and microfibrillar elements form between adjacent particles. The particles and microfibrils form a loose, three–dimensional network. The vesicle membrane then disappears and the binuclate grains become immersed in the tapetal residuum. Additional wall components are now deposited upon the primary fibrillar stratum. Short lamellae, resembling fragments of membrane, frequently associated with electron–opaque globuli, are found intermixed with the surface microfibrils. Apparently, granular material originating in the degenerating periplasmodium may be the precursor of the globuli, and contact with the lamellae brings about an alteration in state. At this stage the pollen wall is resolved as two distinct fibrillar strata and the lamellae and globuli are incorporated as inclusions into the superficial zone of the outer stratum. The mature pollen wall exhibits faint stratification and the presence of the subsurface inclusions is readily demonstrated in germinating grains by section staining with phosphotungstic acid. The pollen wall in A. antarctica is compared with that in filiform grains of other seagrasses.
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