SOME FINE STRUCTURAL OBSERVATIONS ON DEVELOPING AND MATURE SIEVE ELEMENTS IN THE BROWN ALGA LAMINARIA SACCHARINA |
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Authors: | Eric J Sideman Daniel C Scheirer |
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Institution: | Department of Biology, Northeastern University, Boston, Massachusetts, 02115 |
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Abstract: | The differentiation of sieve elements from inner cortical cells of the stipe of Laminaria saccharina (L.) Lamour. involves the development of a well-structured protoplast and an end wall possessing evenly spaced pores which are visualized by electron microscopy. The protoplast consists of organelles which are commonly found in brown algal cells, including nuclei, cup- or horseshoe-shaped chloroplasts, dictyosomes, mitochondria, and ER. Mitochondria and clusters of small vacuoles, presumably redistributed by the surging effect which occurs in sieve elements, were routinely observed in the vicinity of the end wall. Chloroplasts were seen in progressively degenerated states in older sieve elements, yet nuclei were determined to be non-necrotic. Numerous pores along the end walls interconnect adjacent sieve elements. Each pore is traversed by a strand of cytoplasm and surrounded by plasmalemma. The pores are open and possess no callose. In this paper the sieve element ultrastructures of L. saccharina are compared to those in L. groenlandica, Alaria marginata, Nereocystis lutkeana and Macrocystis pyrifera, and a possible phylogenetic specialization of sieve elements is presented in table form and discussed. |
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