Ultrastructural aspects of conidiogenesis in the entomogenous hyphomycete Nomuraea rileyi

1982 ◽  
Vol 60 (1) ◽  
pp. 26-33 ◽  
Author(s):  
J. C. Pendland ◽  
D. G. Boucias

Conidia in Nomuraea rileyi are produced basipetally from a phialide apex. Production of primary and all successive conidia appears to be enteroblastic, and only the inner, newly formed wall layer of the phialide surrounds developing conidia. Conidium formation ceases as layers of inner wall material accumulate at the phialide apex. In some cases, a pluglike structure resembling a Woronin body may cause cessation of conidiogenesis. Conidia are delimited by formation of a double septum. Since one half of the septum forms the base of the "older" conidium and the other half forms the apex of the next conidium, separation of successive conidia is schizolytic. Plasmalemmasomes, lomasomes, and smooth endoplasmic reticulum are often seen in association with septa and walls of conidiogenous cells. Transverse fibrils may be observed in some walls. Extensive vacuolization is common in older cells. Glycogen is present in conidiogenous cells and in conidia, which become very electron dense as they mature. An extranuclear plaque, an ascomycetous characteristic, may be observed on the nuclear envelope.

Author(s):  
R. N. Tomas

Peridinium balticum appears to be unusual among the dinoflagellates in that it possesses two DNA-containing structures as determined by histochemical techniques. Ultrastructurally, the two dissimilar nuclei are contained within different protoplasts; one of the nuclei is characteristically dinophycean in nature, while the other is characteristically eucaryotic. The chloroplasts observed within P. balticum are intrinsic to an eucaryotic photosynthetic endosymbiont and not to the dinoflagellate. These organelles are surrounded by outpocketings of endoplasmic reticulum which are continuous with the eucaryotic nuclear envelope and are characterized by thylakoids composed of three apposed lamellae. Girdle lamellae and membranebounded interlamellar pyrenoids are also present. Only the plasmalemma of the endosymbiont segregates its protoplast from that of the dinophycean cytoplasm. The exact nature of this symbiotic relationship is at present not known.


The male gamete of Equisetum is the largest and structurally most complex of those so far known in living pteridophytes. The ultrastructure of the mature gametes, is described with particular reference to the influence of the multilayered structure (MLS) on its form. In Equisetum this organelle comprises a band of over 300 microtubules, underlain along its anterior edge by a lamellar strip, 15-20 µm in length, and forming a sinistral spiral of 2 1/2 gyres. The tubules extend from the strip, at an angle of about 40°, to form a broad sheath around the twisted pyriform nucleus located in the posterior half of the cell. From the anterior tip of the lamellar strip to the posterior end of the nucleus the gamete completes a helix of 3 1/2 gyres, traversed throughout by the microtubular band. As a result of growth of this band during spermatid metamorphosis, and the 40° angle between the elates of the lamellar strip and the microtubules, the strip is displaced anteriorly and laterally relative to the nucleus. In the mature gamete, although the strip and the nucleus remain interconnected by the microtubular band, only the posterior half of the strip lies directly above the anterior third of the nucleus. The precise interrelationship between nucleus and MLS is illustrated by reconstructions which display the spermatozoids as they would appear if uncoiled. The 80-120 flagella are inserted outside that part of the micro tubular band lying anterior to the nucleus. Their basal bodies retain the proximal cartwheel and stellate transition regions found already in spermatids, but in the mature gametes they are invested with collars of osmiophilic material. The axonemes depart at 10° tangentially from the helix and extend backwards parallel with the tubules of the microtubular band. In consequence of the overlapping gyres of the helix the flagella lie in a spiral groove, similar to that found in cycad spermatozoids. From this groove the plasma membrane closely follows the external surface of the microtubular band. Contrasting with other archegoniates, maximal structural differentiation of the MLS is found in the mature spermatozoid. Flat-bottomed keels are present on the microtubules overlying the lamellar strip in which three distinct strata can be recognized. The two outer, consisting of alternating plates of electron-opaque and electron- transparent material, are separated by a continuous electron-opaque sheet. The innermost stratum comprises a continuous layer of finely granular material. Overlying the external anterior rim of the microtubular band is an osmiophilic crest. This retains the regularly banded substructure found in spermatids, but in mature spermatozoids is far more prominent than at any other time during spermatogenesis. It contains an electron-transparent lumen and is continuous with both the anterior ends of the microtubules and the anteriormost lamellar plates. Between the inner gyres of the MLS the crest is confluent with extensive sheets of smooth endoplasmic reticulum. Underlying the lamellar strip is a spiral mitochondrion with prominent dilated cristae. The central cytoplasm contains at least 100 pleomorphic mitochondria, together with from 15 to 25 amyloplasts and a few microbodies. In the nucleus, in addition to condensed chromatin, are several spherical electron-opaque bodies and aggregations of membrane-bound vesicles. Structures identical in appearance with the former also occur in the cytoplasm, and it is suggested that they may be nuclear in origin, as are similar bodies in animal spermatogenesis. The vesicles may represent portions of redundant nuclear envelope whose extrusion into the cytoplasm was prevented by the ensheathing microtubular band. Pores are still present in the nuclear envelope, where this is not invested by the band. The mature spermatozoids are liberated from antheridia within mucilaginous sacs bounded by fibrillar cell wall material, thought to contain lipid droplets promoting their dispersal when in contact with water. On escaping from the sacs the spermatozoids elongate slightly, and profiles of disrupted flagella are frequently encountered. Occasionally the microtubular band ensheathing the posterior part of the nucleus also becomes disorganized. There is no evidence of the utilization of amyloplast starch as an energy source during motility, and, in contrast to ferns and bryophytes, there is no sequestration of the central cytoplasm by the swimming spermatozoids.


1989 ◽  
Vol 259 (3) ◽  
pp. 659-663 ◽  
Author(s):  
F Vanstapel ◽  
L Hammaker ◽  
K Pua ◽  
N Blanckaert

We examined regulatory properties of bilirubin UDP-glucuronyltransferase in sealed RER (rough endoplasmic reticulum)- and SER (smooth endoplasmic reticulum)-enriched microsomes (microsomal fractions), as well as in nuclear envelope from rat liver. Purity of membrane fractions was verified by electron microscopy and marker studies. Intactness of RER and SER vesicles was ascertained by a high degree of latency of the lumenal marker mannose-6-phosphatase. No major differences in the stimulation of UDP-glucuronyltransferase by detergent or by the presumed physiological activator, UDPGlcNAc, were observed between total microsomes and RER- or SER-enriched microsomes. Isolated nuclear envelopes were present as a partially disrupted membrane system, with approx. 50% loss of mannose-6-phosphatase latency. The nuclear transferase had lost its latency to a similar extent, and the enzyme failed to respond to UDPGlcNAc. Our results underscore the necessity to include data on the integrity of the membrane permeability barrier when reporting regulatory properties of UDP-glucuronyltransferase in different membrane preparations.


1973 ◽  
Vol 51 (12) ◽  
pp. 2413-2422 ◽  
Author(s):  
Garry T. Cole

Freeze-etching has revealed changes in the orientation of rodlet fascicles on the surface of the outer wall layer of conidia and conidiogenous cells at successive stages of development. Specific patterns of rodlet fascicles reflect the progressive increase in cell volume and change in shape characteristic of 'blastic' conidium development in Gonatobotryum apiculatum. Rodlet patterns over most of the wall surface of conidia of Oidiodendron truncatum and Geotrichum candidum, on the other hand, are not significantly different from the patterns of rodlet fascicles on the wall of the determinate, fertile hyphae from which the conidia arose. This latter structural–developmental relationship is suggested to be characteristic of the 'arthric' mode of conidiogenesis. It is demonstrated, however, that conidium formation in Oidiodendron truncatum does involve some meristematic activity in addition to conversion and disarticulation of pre-existing hyphal elements. A diagrammatic interpretation of these changes in rodlet patterns during conidiogenesis is presented.


1966 ◽  
Vol 31 (1) ◽  
pp. 135-158 ◽  
Author(s):  
J. M. Bassot

Luminous cells of polynoid worm elytra have been examined by methods of electron microscopy, with special attention focused on the fine structure of photogenic grains. These cells send apical prolongations into the mid-part of the elytra. The plasma membrane is very sinuous, and a special kind of desmosome links two portions of the same membrane. In addition to all the organelles which can be found in nonluminescent epithelial cells of the elytra, numerous photogenic grains are contained in their cytoplasm. These grains are composed of undulating microtubules measuring 200 A in diameter; their disposition in the grain is highly regular, and the grains appear as paracrystals. At the borders of the grains, the walls of the microtubules are often in continuity with those of the endoplasmic reticulum and with the external membrane of the nuclear envelope. Because of this fact, the microtubules of the grains may be considered a cytoplasmic organelle, representing a specialized form of the endoplasmic reticulum. The microtubules permit the repartition, inside and outside their walls, of two different products, one being forty-three times more abundant than the other; thus, the contact surface, in comparison to the volume, is greatly increased. The induction of the luminous reaction by change in the permeability of the microtubule walls, allowing contact between the two substances, is suggested as a working hypothesis. There is an evolution of the grains along the axis of the photocytes. The grains are often surrounded by progressively increasing amounts of glycogen. Their paracrystalline disposition is altered at the apex of the luminous cells.


1985 ◽  
Vol 101 (5) ◽  
pp. 1724-1732 ◽  
Author(s):  
R Brands ◽  
M D Snider ◽  
Y Hino ◽  
S S Park ◽  
H V Gelboin ◽  
...  

We have used a monoclonal antibody specific for a hydrocarbon-induced cytochrome P450 to localize, by electron microscopy, the epitope-specific cytochrome P450. The cytochrome was found in the rough and smooth endoplasmic reticulum (ER) and the nuclear envelope of hepatocytes. Significant quantities of cytochrome P450 were not found in Golgi stacks. We also could not find any evidence of Golgi-associated processing of the Asn-linked oligosaccharide chains of two well-characterized ER membrane glycoprotein enzymes (glucosidase II and hexose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase), or of the oligosaccharides attached to the bulk of the glycoproteins of the ER membrane. We conclude that these ER membrane proteins are efficiently retained during a process of highly selective export from this organelle.


1972 ◽  
Vol 55 (3) ◽  
pp. 533-541 ◽  
Author(s):  
Bela J. Gulyas

The formation of the blastomere nucleus was examined in the rabbit zygote with the electron microscope. In late anaphase the chromosomes are bare and vesicles of the smooth endoplasmic reticulum are numerous in the vicinity of the chromosomes. In early telophase individual chromosomes attain their own nuclear envelope and they are called karyomeres. The envelope of the karyomeres contains small gaps within it at several places where the chromatin is exposed to the cytoplasm. Nuclear pores are also observed. In the cytoplasm short annulate lamellae appear adjacent to the karyomeres, and clusters of punctate substance are also present. From early telophase onward the karyomeres extend pseudopod-like structures, called karyopods, which extend toward other karyomeres or karyopods, and consequently fuse together and serve as chromosomal bridges. Eventually all of the karyomeres fuse into a dense nucleus and decondensation of the chromosomes occurs.


1975 ◽  
Vol 191 (1103) ◽  
pp. 271-283 ◽  

The ultrastructural localization of acetylcholinesterase and non-specific cholinesterase activity has been studied in sections of ox adrenal medulla by cytochemical methods. Non-specific cholinesterase activity, identified by using butyrylthiocholine as substrate and ethopropazine as inhibitor, occurs intracellularly in some adrenaline-containing chromaffin cells: the reaction end-product is deposited within the cisternae of the endoplasmic reticulum and in the nuclear envelope. Reaction end-product of non-specific cholinesterase also occurs in the endoplasmic reticulum of pericytes, around sinusoids and capillaries and within smooth muscle cells. Acetylcholinesterase activity, identified by using acetylthiocholine as substrate and BW 284C51 as inhibitor, occurs in both the splanchnic nerve and in chromaffin cells. Reaction end-product is found at the following sites (i) around myelinated and unmyelinated non-terminal axons of splanchnic nerve, between the axolemma and the Schwann cell membrane; (ii) within the cisternae of axonal smooth endoplasmic reticulum; sometimes these cisternae appear to be connected to the axolemma; (iii) between the axolemmas of preterminal axons and the plasma membranes of chromaffin cells; (iv) between the axolemmas of nerve terminals and the plasma membranes of chromaffin cells, including the synaptic cleft; (v) within cisternae of rough and smooth endoplasmic reticulum, and also within the nuclear envelope, of both adrenaline- and noradrenaline-containing chromaffin cells; (vi) between the plasma membranes of adjacent chromaffin cells, but only when one or both of these cells contain reaction product within the cisternae of its endoplasmic reticulum; these cisternae sometimes appear to be connected to the plasma membrane. These observations raise the question whether the acetylcholinesterase activity released from the perfused adrenal gland might originate from the cisternae of the endoplasmic reticula of splanchnic nerve and/or chromaffin cell.


1982 ◽  
Vol 93 (3) ◽  
pp. 839-848 ◽  
Author(s):  
B Walz

Two ultrastructural approaches were used in photoreceptor cells of the leech, Hirudo medicinalis, to (a) investigate the intracellular topography of the smooth endoplasmic reticulum (SER) and (b) identify among the various subregions of the SER those which might function as Ca-sequestering sites. When the cells are prefixed with CaCl2-containing glutaraldehyde and postfixed with osmium tetroxide-ferricyanide (OsFeCN), only a part of the total SER is specifically stained. The stained SER cisternae include the submicrovillar cisternae (SMC), subsurface cisternae (SSC), the nuclear envelope, Golgi-associated SER, paracrystalline SER, and SER associated with glycogen areas. An extensive tubular SER cisternal system always remains unstained. When the cells are permeabilized by saponin and subsequently incubated with Ca2+, MgATP, and oxalate, the SMC (Walz, 1979, Eur. J. Cell Biol. 20:83-91), the SSC and the nuclear envelope contain electron-opaque Ca-oxalate precipitates indicating their ability to function as an effective Ca2+ sink. The results show that the very elaborate SER in this photoreceptor cell includes many functionally heterogeneous subregions. Of special physiological significance are those components (SMC and SSC) which are effective in Ca2+-buffering in the immediate vicinity of the plasma membrane.


1963 ◽  
Vol 18 (2) ◽  
pp. 441-457 ◽  
Author(s):  
G. Benjamin Bouck

Living excised roots of pea were centrifuged at 20,000 g for 24 hours, and the behavior of organelles was followed by electron microscopy at various intervals after centrifugation. With these forces, organelles are not perceptibly or irreversibly damaged, nor is the viability of the whole root destroyed. Organelles stratify generally in the order of lipid (centripetal pole), vacuoles, smooth endoplasmic reticulum and dictyosomes, proplastids (without starch), mitochondria, rough endoplasmic reticulum, proplastids with starch. The nucleus distends from the vacuolar region to the extreme centrifugal pole of the cell, while the chromatin and nucleolus seek the centrifugal pole of the nucleus. During the redistribution of organelles the rough endoplasmic reticulum is among the first to reorient, and possible explanations for this are discussed. Mitochondria can be stretched elastically many times their original length, but proplastids seem fairly rigid. Small vacuoles, forced together during centrifugation, apparently may fuse to form a large unit. Lipid droplets, on the other hand, tend to remain separate. Dictyosomes and smooth endoplasmic reticulum layer in the same region of the centrifuged cell, indicating a density similarity between these two organelles.


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