scholarly journals Is Longitudinal Division in Rod-Shaped Bacteria a Matter of Swapping Axis?

2018 ◽  
Vol 9 ◽  
Author(s):  
Tanneke den Blaauwen
1956 ◽  
Vol 7 (3) ◽  
pp. 317 ◽  
Author(s):  
R Endean ◽  
W Stephenson ◽  
R Kenny

The species composition and general ecology of intertidal organisms present at Heron Island, a coral cay in the Capricorn Group, are recorded in this paper. It was found that the general zonation picture on this Great Barrier Reef island differed markedly from that found previously at localities on the Queensland mainland (Endean, Kenny, and Stephenson 1956). In particular the mainland upper barnacle (Chthamalus) zone was not represented at Heron I., and the species forming the mainland lower barnacle zone (Tetraclita squamosa (Bruguiere) ) was replaced by a different species (Tetraclita vitiata Darwin). Also the characteristic algal zone of mainland localities was replaced by a lithothamnion-zoanthid-coral zone. In order to investigate the possibility of a gradual transition from the mainland type zonation to that found on the Great Barrier Reef, as exemplified by Heron I. zonation, the species composition and general ecology of intertidal organisms inhabiting a series of continental islands lying off the Queensland coast between lat. 16� and 22� S. were investigated. The fauna of these islands was found to be closely allied to that of the mainland. There was, however, an intrusion of corals and zoanthids on the more exposed of the islands visited which lie between lat. 20� and 22�S., and also on the more northerly of the islands visited. The biogeographical implications of these findings are discussed, and it is noted that the results of the present investigation support the contention of Whitley (1932) that a longitudinal division of the Queensland marine fauna into "Solanderian" and "Banksian" elements is warranted. Accounts are also given of the major environmental factors that might affect specific composition and zonation patterns at the localities investigated. Analyses of these have given much information on the general ecology and distribution of many Queensland intertidal species. Thls information is discussed. Of particular interest was the finding that the Peronian barnacle Tetraclita rosea (Krauss) has extended its range,to the north of the biogeographical boundary situated near lat. 25� S. by colonizing the more exposed of the continental islands.


Parasitology ◽  
1909 ◽  
Vol 2 (4) ◽  
pp. 367-391 ◽  
Author(s):  
Annie Porter

(1)Herpetomonas jaculumis a parasite ofNepa cinerea, occurring in the alimentary tract of its host.(2) The life-history of the parasite may be conveniently divided into three stages, the pre-flagellate, flagellate and post-flagellate stages, which gradually merge into one another.(3) The movements of the parasite are less flexible than those ofCrithidia, as Herpetomonads have no undulating membrane. The flagellum is the most active agent in effecting motion.(4) The pre-flagellate stages of the parasite (Pl V, Figs. 1–18) are best observed in the crops of nymphs ofNepa cinerea. The parasites at first are oval (Figs. 1–6). They vary in size from about 4μ to 5μ long and from 2μ to 2·5μ broad. They show nucleus and blepharoplast, and may divide longitudinally before flagella are acquired (Figs. 2–4). The flagellum of each parasite arises from a region near to the blepharoplast but not directly from it (Figs. 5–9).(5) The flagellate stage of the organism (Pl. V, Figs. 19–36) is that best known.H. jaculumis from 13μ to 33μ long and from 1μ to 4μ broad, the size varying according to the recency or otherwise of longitudinal division. Myonemes (Figs. 20, 21, 38) are present on the body. The flagellum is at least as long again as the body. The nucleus contains a number of grains of chromatin (Figs. 28, 34), sometimes in the form of eight large grains (Figs. 34, 36), sometimes as very fine granules (Figs. 22, 31). The blepharoplast is in the anterior, pre-nuclear, region of the parasite, and is usually rod-like (Figs. 19, 20, 21). The single flagellum (Fig. 19) arises near it but not from it. A basal granule (Figs. 22, 33, 34) is present at or near the origin of the flagellum. Chromidia are present as scattered granules in the body (Figs. 28, 32, 33).(6) The post-flagellate stage is the form assumed by the parasite for life outside the body of the host. Preceding encystment, the organism divides twice longitudinally, giving rise to four daughter forms (Pl. V, Figs. 51–54) each of which ultimately loses its flagellum, rounds itself off and forms a cyst (Figs. 57–68). These cysts are from 2·5μ to 4·5μ long and from l·4μ to 2·6μ, broad. They occur in the rectum ofNepa cinereaand are voided with the faeces, being ingested later by other bugs.(7) Longitudinal division is the common method of multiplication ofH. jaculum. The flagellum may divide precociously, but usually division is initiated by constriction of the blepharoplast (Pl. V, Fig. 37) almost simultaneously with division of the flagellum and followed by that of the nucleus (Figs. 39, 40). A split occurs (Figs. 40–42) and the active movements of the two flagella aid in the divergence of the daughter organisms (Figs. 43, 44), which ultimately separate.(8) I have no evidence whatever for ascribing sex to any form ofHerpetomonas, but consider the occurrence of long and short and of thin and stout forms to be explicable as the results of growth and division. Also, I have shown experimentally that richly granular protoplasm is the result of a physiological condition and is not necessarily fixed as an attribute of the female sex.(9) One mode of infection has been proved experimentally in the laboratory and also observed at the breeding grounds of theNepa. Cysts voided in infected faeces are swallowed by otherNepain the adult and nymphal stages. The crops of such nymphs on dissection were found to contain cysts, whereas no flagellates were present in other parts of the gut, so that primary infection occurred here in the crops of the nymphs.Cannibalism ofNepa cinereawhereby otherNepaare devoured is also responsible for the spread ofH. jaculum.I have no definite evidence of hereditary infection, although I have found flagellate and post-flagellate forms (Pl. V, Figs. 46–49) in the ovaries of the host. The parasites were not found in the eggs. The occurrence of parasites in the ovaries may be regarded as a stage in the evolution of hereditary infection.(10) Various environmental effects have been studied, the most important observation being that fresh food appears to stimulate the parasites and to cause their rapid division.(11) The generic nameHerpetomonasshould be retained, as originally constituted, for parasites having but one flagellum and no undulating membrane (see pp. 383et seq.).(12) I wish to record the occurrence of a new species ofHerpetomonas, H. vespae, from the alimentary tract of the hornet,Vespa crabro.


1960 ◽  
Vol 8 (1) ◽  
pp. 11 ◽  
Author(s):  
IG Stone

An account is given of the spores, germination, and vegetative features of the prothalli of Grammitis billardieri and Ctenopteris heterophylla, and of the reproductive organs of G. billardieri. The characteristic germination is unlike that found in other ferns. The trilete green spore frequently divides in the unruptured sporangium and the first division produces two equal prothallial cells. Growth is extremely slow, the filament long and often branched, and the rhizoids which appear late may branch. The first longitudinal division occurs in a cell back from the apex, and the gametophyte at maturity is elongated and ribbon-like, with or without a slightly indented apex, brown marginal rhizoids, and discontinuous axial cushions two to three cells thick. The thallus, which is extremely slow in reaching maturity, is dark green, and the walls perpendicular to the surface are pitted. Regeneration is common. The most distinctive feature of the gametophyte of G. billardieri is the development of characteristic spine-like hairs unlike those found on fern prothalli of other families. These hairs are marginal in the anterior region and develop from wedge-shaped initial cells. They differ in form and origin from those found in members of the Polypodiaceae. The antheridia appear at an unusual stage in development, occurring after some of the archegonia have been produced and forming with them on the cushions. The archegonia have longer necks and the antheridia are slightly more complex than those found in members of the Polypodiaceae which have been investigated. It is considered that the separation of the family Grammitidaceae from the Polypodiaceae on sporophytic characters is supported by the gametophytic generation of the two Victorian grammitid ferns G. billardieri and C. heterophylla.


1995 ◽  
Vol 24 (2) ◽  
pp. 122-127 ◽  
Author(s):  
RODNEY S. BAGLEY ◽  
TIMOTHY V. BASZLER ◽  
MICHAEL L. HARRINGTON ◽  
G. ELIZABETH PLUHAR ◽  
MICHAEL P. MOORE ◽  
...  

2019 ◽  
Author(s):  
Xiansha Xiao ◽  
Joost Willemse ◽  
Patrick Voskamp ◽  
Xinmeng Li ◽  
Meindert Lamers ◽  
...  

ABSTRACTIn most bacteria, cell division begins with the polymerization of the GTPase FtsZ at the mid-cell, which recruits the division machinery to initiate cell constriction. In the filamentous bacterium Streptomyces, cell division is positively controlled by SsgB, which recruits FtsZ to the future septum sites and promotes Z-ring formation. Here we show via site-saturated mutagenesis that various amino acid substitutions in the highly conserved SsgB protein result in the production of ectopically placed septa, that sever spores diagonally or along the long axis, perpendicular to the division plane. Ectopic septa were especially prominent when cells expressed SsgB variants with substitutions in residue E120. Biochemical analysis of SsgB variant E120G revealed that its interaction with - and polymerization of - FtsZ had been maintained. The crystal structure of S. coelicolor SsgB was resolved and the position of residue E120 suggests its requirement for maintaining the proper angle of helix α3, thus providing a likely explanation for the aberrant septa formed in SsgB E120 substitution mutants. Taken together, our work presents the first example of longitudinal division in a free living bacterium, which is explained entirely by changes in the FtsZ-recruiting protein SsgB.


1923 ◽  
Vol 57 (648) ◽  
pp. 89-92
Author(s):  
A. M. Chickering

Author(s):  
M. Bellaiche ◽  
Y. Aigrain ◽  
P. Ovetchkine ◽  
N. Boige ◽  
C. Despres ◽  
...  

Cytological literature is very voluminous and is scattered in many journals of varying importance published in different languages. It may be, therefore, that the resemblance between certain stages of the early telophase of cell division in some cells and the stages in the 1st Meiotic Division, very commonly known as “synaptic,” has been recorded on several occasions. I have, however, only found one definite reference to this similarity (Blackman, 1903). If the observations recorded here and my interpretation of them are correct, this similarity should be of usual occurrence. That the daughter chromosomes of a somatic division frequently show longitudinal fission has, as I have pointed out on a previous occasion, been observed frequently. (Walker, 1925.) Flemming called it “precocious longitudinal division” as long ago as 1891.


1869 ◽  
Vol 159 ◽  
pp. 387-411 ◽  

In the accounts of the development of the heart of vertebrate animals given by various embryological writers, we find an apparently clear description of the mode in which the permanent aorta and pulmonary artery are formed by the longitudinal division of a single large vessel, the truncus arteriosus, into two vessels. The truncus arteriosus is, as is well known, the large arterial trunk that commences in the originally single ventricle of the heart, and terminates by splitting up into the branchial arteries. It conveys the whole of the blood from the ventricle to the system of the embryo, and is also known by the name of bulbus aortæ (see Plate XXXI. fig. 1). In studying the descriptions given by different authors of its division into two vessels, it appeared to me very strange that with such a clear description of the mode of division nothing at all, or only very little, should be said about the mode of development of the semilunar valves attached to the commencement of these vessels. Kölliker is the only author I have been able to find who makes any mention of their mode of development, and his account, which I shall presently quote, is very brief and unsatisfactory. Nowhere have I found any drawings of these parts in their rudimentary state. I was therefore obliged to conclude that very little was known about this point, probably in consequence of the difficulty of accurately examining such minute parts at an early period of development, and I was hence led to attempt the observations recorded in the present paper. They were made during the years 1865, 1866, and 1867, on the embryo of the common domestic fowl, artificially incubated. Though not nearly as complete as I could have wished them to be, they nevertheless demonstrate certain new and interesting facts connected with the develop­ment of the semilunar valves, and the formation of the aorta and pulmonary artery in the bird’s heart. These appear to me to be valuable, as possibly throwing light on some of the congenital malformations of this part of the heart. In working at the develop­ment of the semilunar valves, I was also obliged to examine very closely into the mode of division of the truncus arteriosus into two vessels, and found that the manner in which it becomes divided differs from that usually described to occur in some very important particulars. The development of the semilunar valves is so closely connected with the process of division of the truncus arteriosus that I have found it best to unite the description of each stage of the one with that of the corresponding stage of the other.


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