Ligule development and fine structure in two heterophyllous species of Selaginella

1975 ◽  
Vol 53 (2) ◽  
pp. 127-143 ◽  
Author(s):  
Harry T. Horner Jr. ◽  
Carolyn K. Beltz ◽  
Richard Jagels ◽  
R. E. Boudreau

Ligules of Selaginella pilifera and S. uncinata were studied by light and electron microscopy. These ligules can be anatomically divided into tip, neck, and basal regions. The upper part of the ligule base is composed of very dense polygonal cells containing many ribosomes, endoplasmic reticulum (ER), and Golgi bodies. In S. pilifera, callose-like walls are secreted around these cells. The lower part of the base consists of wedge-shaped glossopodial cells and the adjacent two layers of sheath cells. Transfer-cell-like walls separate the glossopodium and upper sheath layer, whereas walls containing prominent plasmodesmata separate the two sheath layers. A continuous cuticle covers the entire ligule. During early ontogeny, all ligule cells are highly RNA positive, whereas later only the polygonal base cells stain densely. The anatomy and development of the ligule suggest that it is an active structure. The results of this study are compared with previous studies, especially in relation to ligular function.

1972 ◽  
Vol 25 (1) ◽  
pp. 9 ◽  
Author(s):  
JG Swift ◽  
TP O'brien

The structure of the cells of the scutellar epithelium and parenchyma is described and illustrated by light and electron microscopy of air-dry grains and compared with that seen in grains soaked for 3 hr. In the air-dry state, nuclear chromatin is strongly aggregated, mitochondria and plastids appear to be intact, endoplasmic reticulum is present but not abundant, and dictyosomes cannot be readily identified. The ground substance contains an abundance of free ribosomes which appear to coat protein bodies, lipid droplets, and mitochondria. In material soaked only for 3 hr, endoplasmic reticulum and dictyosomes are apparent, the nuclear chromatin has dispersed, and some mobilization of storage protein appears to have begun in the scutellar epithelium. No differences in fine structure of other organelles or in the cell walls could be detected.


1975 ◽  
Vol 18 (1) ◽  
pp. 1-17
Author(s):  
A. Pleshkewych ◽  
L. Levine

A prominent cytoplasmic inclusion present in living mouse primary spermatocytes has been observed by both light and electron microscopy. It began to form at prometaphase and continued to increase in thickness and length as the cells developed. By metaphase it was a distinct sausage-shaped boundary that enclosed a portion of the cytoplasm between the spindle and the cell membrane. At the end of metaphase, the inclusion reached its maximum length. At telophase, it was divided between the daughter secondaries. The inclusion persisted as a circular contour in the interphase secondary spermatocyte. Electron microscopy of the same cultured cells that were previously observed with light microscopy revealed that the inclusion was a distinctive formation of membranes. It consisted of agranular cisternae and vesicles, and was therefore a membranous complex. Many of the smaller vesicles in the membranous complex resembled those found in the spindle. The cisternae in the membranous complex were identical to the cisternal endoplasmic reticulum of interphase primary spermatocytes. Nevertheless, the organization of vesicles and cisternae into the membranous complex was unique for the primaries in division stages, since such an organization was not present in their interphase stages.


1982 ◽  
Vol 54 (1) ◽  
pp. 341-355
Author(s):  
M. SEDGLEY

The structure of the watermelon stigma before and after pollination was studied using light and electron microscopy, freeze-fracture and autoradiography. The wall thickenings of the papilla transfer cells contained callose and their presence prior to pollination was confirmed using EM-autoradiography, freeze-fracture and fixation. No further callose thickenings were produced following pollination. Pollination resulted in a rapid increase in aqueous stigma secretion and localized disruption of the cuticle, which appeared to remain on the surface of the secretion. Autolysis of the papilla cells, which had commenced prior to pollination, was accelerated and appeared to take place via cup-shaped vacuoles developed from distended endoplasmic reticulum. The reaction was localized to the papilla cells adjacent to the pollen tube only. Both pollen-grain wall and stigma secretion contained proteins, carbohydrates, acidic polysaccharides, lipids and phenolics.


1981 ◽  
Vol 59 (5) ◽  
pp. 908-928 ◽  
Author(s):  
Martha J. Powell ◽  
Charles E. Bracker ◽  
David J. Sternshein

The cytological events involved in the transformation of vegetative hyphae of the zygomycete Gilbertella persicaria (Eddy) Hesseltine into chlamydospores were studied with light and electron microscopy. Thirty hours after sporangiospores were inoculated into YPG broth, swellings appeared along the aseptate hyphae. Later, septa, traversed by plasmodesmata, delimited each end of the hyphal swellings and compartmentalized these hyphal regions as they differentiated into chlamydospores. Nonswollen regions adjacent to chlamydospores remained as isthmuses. Two additional wall layers appeared within the vegetative wall of the developing chlamydospores. An alveolate, electron-dense wall formed first, and then an electron-transparent layer containing concentrically oriented fibers formed between this layer and the plasma membrane. Rather than a mere condensation of cytoplasm, development and maturation of the multinucleate chlamydospores involved extensive cytoplasmic changes such as an increase in reserve products, lipid and glycogen, an increase and then disappearance of vacuoles, and the breakdown of many mitochondria. Underlying the plasma membrane during chlamydospore wall formation were endoplasmic reticulum, multivesicular bodies, vesicles with fibrillar contents, vesicles with electron-transparent contents, and cisternal rings containing the Golgi apparatus marker enzyme, thiamine pyrophosphatase. Acid phosphatase activity was localized cytochemically in a cisterna which enclosed mitochondria and in vacuoles which contained membrane fragments. Tightly packed membrane whorls and single membrane bounded sacs with finely granular matrices surrounding vacuoles were unique during chlamydospore development. Microbodies were rare in the mature chlamydospore, but endoplasmic reticulum was closely associated with lipid globules. As chlamydospores developed, the cytoplasm in the isthmus became highly vacuolated, lipid globules were closely associated with vacuoles, mitochondria were broken down in vacuoles, unusual membrane configurations appeared, and eventually the membranes degenerated. Unlike chlamydospores, walls of the isthmus did not thicken, but irregularly shaped appositions containing numerous channels formed at intervals on the inside of these walls. The pattern of cytoplasmic transformations during chlamydospore development is similar to events leading to the formation of zygospores and sporangiospores.


1974 ◽  
Vol 31 (2) ◽  
pp. 147-153 ◽  
Author(s):  
M. D. B. Burt ◽  
I. M. Sandeman

Light and electron microscopy were used to describe the functional morphology of Bothrimonus sturionis in detail. In particular, the musculature, nervous system, osmoregulatory system, and tegument are dealt with, and the findings compared with those of other workers. The musculature of the scolex consists of several interrelated systems, the structure of each being discussed in relation to its function. Associated with the regular nervous system, considered typical of cestodes, is an extensive system of giant nerve fibers. The osmoregulatory system is unusual in that there are lateral "excretory" pores in many proglottides which open directly to the exterior of the worm. The microtriches of the tegument are long, like those of other primitive cestodes, and are covered by a noncellular sheath while the worm is in its gammarid host. The sheath is lost when the worm becomes established in its fish host; the nature and function of the sheath are discussed.


1967 ◽  
Vol 2 (3) ◽  
pp. 349-358
Author(s):  
R. M. EAKIN ◽  
JANE A. WESTFALL ◽  
M. J. DENNIS

The eye of a nudibranch, Hermissenda crassicornis, was studied by light and electron microscopy. Three kinds of cells were observed: large sensory cells, each bearing at one end an array of microvilli (rhabdomere) and at the other end an axon which leaves the eye by the optic nerve; large pigmented supporting cells; and small epithelial cells, mostly corneal. There are five sensory cells, and the same number of nerve fibres in the optic nerve. The receptor cells contain an abundance of small vesicles, 600-800 Å in diameter. The lens is a spheroidal mass of osmiophilic, finely granular material. A basal lamina and a capsule of connective tissue enclose the eye. In some animals the eye is ‘infected’ with very small bodies, 4-5 µ in diameter, thought to be symbionts.


Weed Science ◽  
1983 ◽  
Vol 31 (1) ◽  
pp. 131-136 ◽  
Author(s):  
C. Dennis Elmore ◽  
Rex N. Paul

Spotted spurge (Euphorbia maculataL.) and prostrate spurge (E. supinaRaf.), both in subgenusChamesyce,were examined by light and electron microscopy using a caffeine - fixation technique to sequester the phenolic pools intercellularly. Both species have typical dicotyledon-type Kranz anatomy. Sequestered phenolic pools were located in vacuoles in epidermal and mesophyll cells. Only in spotted spurge, however, were additional phenolic pools formed in bundle - sheath cells. This study was undertaken because allelopathy has been demonstrated in prostrate spurge and because phenolic compounds have been implicated in allelopathy. These results would indicate that spotted spurge should also be allelopathic.


1969 ◽  
Vol 17 (7) ◽  
pp. 454-466 ◽  
Author(s):  
EDWARD ESSNER

The peroxidase activity of microbodies in fetal mouse liver was studied by light and electron microscopy. Two types of microbodies were present; a small population of bodies that lacked a nucleoid, predominant on the 16th day of gestation, and a larger population of nucleoid-bearing microbodies, predominant on the 19th day, in association with the rough endoplasmic reticulum from which they probably originate. Both types of bodies were visualized when incubated for peroxidase activity but were negative (19th day) for acid phosphatase activity. The findings suggest that the anucleoid- and nucleoid-bearing organelles together constitute the microbody population of the fetal liver.


Parasitology ◽  
1969 ◽  
Vol 59 (2) ◽  
pp. 449-459 ◽  
Author(s):  
R. E. Howells

The nephridial system of M. expansa has been studied using light and electron microscopy, and a number of histochemical techniques have been used on sections of the worm. The organization of the nephridial system and the fine structure of the flame cells and the nephridial ducts are described. Pores, which connect the nephridial lumen to the intercellular space of the connective tissue, exist at the junction of a flame cell and a nephridial duct. These pores may be considered nephrostomes and the system therefore is not protonephridial as defined by Hyman (1951).The epithelium lining the nephridial ducts has a structure which suggests that it is metabolically active. It is postulated that the beating of the cilia of the flame cells draws fluid into the ducts via the nephrostomes, with absorption and/or secretion of solutes being carried out by the epithelial cells of the duct walls. The function of the nephridial system is discussed.I am grateful to Professor James Brough for the provision of research facilities at the Department of Zoology, University College, Cardiff, andtoDrD. A. Erasmus for much helpful advice during the course of the work. I wish to thank Professors W. Peters and T. Wilson for critically reading the manuscript and Miss M. Williams and Mr T. Davies for expert technical assistance.I also wish to thank the Veterinary Inspector and his staff at the Roath Abattoir, Cardiff, for their kind co-operation and assistance in obtaining material.The work was carried out under the tenure of an S.R.C. research scholarship.


1973 ◽  
Vol 51 (12) ◽  
pp. 2307-2314 ◽  
Author(s):  
Saeed R. Khan ◽  
Henry C. Aldrich

Termitaria snyderi Thaxter forms small discoid lesions on the exoskeleton of different species of termites. Its conidiogenesis has been studied by light and electron microscopy. The phialides are oriented parallel in a closely packed sporodochium. The conidia are produced endogenously in basipetal succession from a fixed conidiogenous locus and are liberated when the tip is broken off the phialide as a result of the force applied by the formation of new conidia. The area of the phialide beyond the locus forms a tubular collarette. The conidium initial buds out at the locus and after it has received its organelles and reached a certain size it is delimited by a centripetally growing transverse septum. The region of the growing septum has many vesicles which may be involved in cross wall synthesis. Conidia are cylindrical, uninucleate, and double-walled. They have mitochondria, endoplasmic reticulum (ER), conspicuous lipid droplets, and vacuoles. Each conidiophore has long mitochondria, elongate nuclei, and much endoplasmic reticulum. The plasmalemma of the conidiophore is highly convoluted.


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