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1.
Protoplasma ; 258(3): 529-546, 2021 May.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33188606

This article describes the development of female gametophyte in Sedum rupestre L. New embryological information about the processes of megasporogenesis and megagametogenesis provided in this paper expand the current knowledge about the embryology of the studied species. S. rupestre is characterized by monosporic megasporogenesis and the formation of Polygonum-type embryo sac. The process of megasporogenesis is initiated by one megaspore mother cell, resulting in the formation of a triad of cells after meiosis and cytokinesis. The functional megaspore, which is located chalazally, is a mononuclear cell present next to the megaspore in the centre of the triad. Only one of the two non-functional cells of the triad is binucleate, which occur at the micropylar pole. In this paper, we explain the functional ultrastructure of the female gametophytic cells in S. rupestre. Initially, the cytoplasm of the gametophytic cells does not differ from each other; however, during differentiation, the cells reveal different morphologies. The antipodals and the synergids gradually become organelle-rich and metabolically active. The antipodal cells participate in the absorption and transport of nutrients from the nucellar cells towards the megagametophyte. Their ultrastructure shows the presence of plasmodesmata with electron-dense material, which is characteristic of Crassulaceae, and wall ingrowths in the outer walls. The ultrastructure of synergid cells is characterized by the presence of filiform apparatus and cytoplasm with active dictyosomes, abundant profiles of endoplasmic reticulum and numerous vesicles, which agrees with their main function-the secretion of pollen tube attractants. Reported data can be used to resolve the current taxonomic problems within the genus Sedum ser. Rupestria.


Germ Cells, Plant/ultrastructure , Histocytochemistry/methods
2.
J Plant Res ; 133(6): 911-924, 2020 Nov.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33106966

To further knowledge on cell wall composition in early land plants, we localized cell wall constituents in placental cells of the liverwort Marchantia polymorpha L. using monoclonal antibodies (MAbs) in the transmission electron microscope and histochemical staining. The placenta of M. polymorpha is similar to the majority of bryophytes in that both generations contain transfer cells with extensive wall ingrowths. Although the four major cell wall polymers, i.e., cellulose, pectins, hemicelluloses, and arabinogalactan proteins, are present, there are variations in the richness and specificity across generations. An abundance of homogalacturonan pectins in all placental cell walls is consistent with maintaining cell wall permeability and an acidic apoplastic pH necessary for solute transport. Although similar in ultrastructure, transfer cell walls on the sporophyte side in M. polymorpha are enriched with xyloglucans and diverse AGPs not detected on the gametophyte side of the placenta. Gametophyte wall ingrowths are more uniform in polymer composition. Lastly, extensins and callose are not components of transfer cell walls of M. polymorpha, which deviates from studies on transfer cells in other plants. The difference in polymer localizations in transfer cell walls between generations is consistent with directional movement from gametophyte to sporophyte in this liverwort.


Cell Wall/chemistry , Germ Cells, Plant/chemistry , Marchantia/chemistry , Cell Wall/ultrastructure , Germ Cells, Plant/ultrastructure , Microscopy, Electron, Transmission , Polymers
3.
Int J Mol Sci ; 21(1)2019 Dec 18.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31861391

The endothelium is an additional cell layer, differentiating from the inner epidermis of the ovule integument. In tomato (Solanum lycopersicum L.), after fertilization, the endothelium separates from integument and becomes an independent tissue developing next to the growing embryo sac. In the absence of fertilization, the endothelium may proliferate and form pseudo-embryo. However, the course of the reorganization of endothelium into pseudo-embryo in tomato ovules is poorly understood. We aimed to investigate specific features of endothelium differentiation and the role of the endothelium in the development of fertilized and unfertilized tomato ovules. The ovules of tomato plants ("YaLF" line), produced by vegetative growth plants of transgenic tomato line expressing the ac gene, encoding chitin-binding protein from Amaranthus caudatus L., were investigated using light and transmission electron microscopy. We showed that in the fertilized ovule of normally developing fruit and in the unfertilized ovule of parthenocarpic fruit, separation of the endothelium from integument occurs via programmed death of cells of the integumental parenchyma, adjacent to the endothelium. Endothelial cells in normally developing ovules change their structural and functional specialization from meristematic to secretory and back to meristematic, and proliferate until seeds fully mature. The secretory activity of the endothelium is necessary for the lysis of dying cells of the integument and provides the space for the growth of the new sporophyte. However, in ovules of parthenocarpic fruits, pseudo-embryo cells do not change their structural and functional organization and remain meristematic, no zone of lysis is formed, and pseudo-embryo cells undergo programmed cell death. Our data shows the key role of the endothelium as a protective and secretory tissue, needed for the normal development of ovules.


Endothelium/embryology , Endothelium/metabolism , Germ Cells, Plant/cytology , Germ Cells, Plant/metabolism , Plant Development , Solanum lycopersicum/physiology , Cell Differentiation , Endothelium/cytology , Fertilization , Flowers , Gene Expression Regulation, Plant , Germ Cells, Plant/ultrastructure , Solanum lycopersicum/ultrastructure , Plants, Genetically Modified
4.
Nat Plants ; 5(8): 795-800, 2019 08.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31332313

Chromatin conformation capture (3C)1 and high-throughput 3C (Hi-C)2 assays allow the study of three-dimensional (3D) genome structures in cell populations or tissues, based on average proximities of folded DNA. However, differences between cells can be observed only by single-cell measurements that avoid ensemble averaging3-5. To study 3D chromatin organization and dynamics before and after fertilization in flowering plants, we analysed the 3D genomes of rice eggs, sperm cells, unicellular zygotes and shoot mesophyll cells. We show that chromatin architectures of rice eggs and sperm cells are comparable to those of mesophyll cells and are reorganized after fertilization. The rice single-cell 3D genomes display specific features of chromosome compartments and telomere/centromere configuration compared to those in mammalian single cells. Active and silent chromatin domains combine to form multiple foci in the nuclear space. Notably, the 3D genomes of the eggs and unicellular zygotes contain a compact silent centre (CSC) that is absent in sperm cells. CSC appears to be reorganized after fertilization, and may be involved in the regulation of zygotic genome activation (ZGA). Our results reveal specific 3D genome features of plant gametes and the unicellular zygote, and provide a spatial chromatin basis for ZGA and epigenetic regulation in plants.


Chromatin/chemistry , Genome, Plant , Germ Cells, Plant/ultrastructure , Oryza/genetics , Nucleic Acid Conformation , Zygote
5.
Micron ; 124: 102700, 2019 09.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31185368

Macrothelypteris torresiana is a terrestrial fern belongs to the family Thelypteridaceae. It is very imperative to know the germination and growth pattern of this fern to make strategy for ex- situ conservation. In the present study germination of spore, developmental pattern of prothallium with particular emphasis on emergence of antheridia as well as archegonia, their fertilization and development of sporophytes were studied. The spores were spheroidal or reniform with broadly winged fimbriate perispore having average size of 48 ± 3.6 × 39 ± 4.2 µm. The spores started germinating just after 6 days of plating and percentage of germination was 94%. The germination pattern of spore was Vittaria type and development of gametophyte was Aspidium type. After 27 days of plating, a very distinct cordate-shaped adult gametophyte with deep apical notch and unicellular papillate hairs throughout the gametophyte was developed. The rhizoids appeared away from the apical notch of the gametophyte. The gametophyte first developed archegonia on 32nd day, whereas antheridia were developed on 42nd day. In isolate culture the gametophytes did not develop any sporophyte whereas in composite culture juvenile sporophytes were emerged on 77th day. This suggests the plant has ability to reproduce only through inter-gametophytic selfing and crossing, hence decreasing the plant's capacity for colonization in a particular locality.


Ferns/physiology , Germ Cells, Plant/growth & development , Germ Cells, Plant/ultrastructure , Spores/ultrastructure , Microscopy, Electron, Scanning , Reproduction
6.
Ann Bot ; 121(7): 1275-1286, 2018 06 08.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29444206

Background and Aims: Widespread and diverse in modern ecosystems, mosses are rare in the fossil record, especially in pre-Cenozoic rocks. Furthermore, most pre-Cenozoic mosses are known from compression fossils, which lack detailed anatomical information. When preserved, anatomy significantly improves resolution in the systematic placement of fossils. Lower Cretaceous (Valanginian) deposits on Vancouver Island (British Columbia, Canada) contain a diverse anatomically preserved flora including numerous bryophytes, many of which have yet to be characterized. Among them is the grimmiaceous moss described here. Methods: One fossil moss gametophyte preserved in a carbonate concretion was studied in serial sections prepared using the cellulose acetate peel technique. Key Results: Tricarinella crassiphylla gen. et sp. nov. is a moss with tristichous phyllotaxis and strongly keeled leaves. The combination of an acrocarpous condition (inferred based on a series of morphological features), a central conducting strand, a homogeneous leaf costa and a lamina with bistratose portions and sinuous cells, and multicellular gemmae, supports placement of Tricarinella in family Grimmiaceae. Tricarinella is similar to Grimmia, a genus that exhibits broad morphological variability. However, tristichous phyllotaxis and especially the lamina, bistratose at the base but not in distal portions of the leaf, set Tricarinella apart as a distinct genus. Conclusions: Tricarinella crassiphylla marks the oldest record for both family Grimmiaceae and sub-class Dicranidae, providing a hard minimum age (136 million years) for these groups. The fact that this fossil could be placed in an extant family, despite a diminutive size, emphasizes the considerable resolving power of anatomically preserved bryophyte fossils, even when recovered from allochthonous assemblages of marine sediments, such as the Apple Bay flora. Discovery of Tricarinella re-emphasizes the importance of paleobotanical studies as the only approach allowing access to a significant segment of biodiversity, the extinct biodiversity, which is unattainable by other means of investigation.


Bryophyta , Fossils , British Columbia , Bryophyta/anatomy & histology , Bryophyta/classification , Bryophyta/ultrastructure , Fossils/anatomy & histology , Fossils/ultrastructure , Germ Cells, Plant/ultrastructure , History, Ancient , Plant Leaves/anatomy & histology , Plant Leaves/ultrastructure
7.
Protoplasma ; 255(1): 247-261, 2018 Jan.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28840347

Until now, development of the female gametophyte has been investigated only in some species of Crassulaceae using a light microscope. To the best of our knowledge, this is the first report that describes the process of megasporogenesis and megagametogenesis in Crassulaceae in detail. To achieve this, we performed embryological studies on Sedum hispanicum L. (Crassulaceae). Cytochemical analysis detected the presence of proteins, lipids, and insoluble polysaccharides in individual cells of the gametophyte. The development of the embryo sac conforms to the monosporic or Polygonum-type in anatropous, crassinucellate, and bitegmic ovules. One megaspore mother cell initiates the process of megasporogenesis. Prior to the first meiotic division, the nucleus is centrally located within the meiocyte. Other organelles seem to be distributed evenly over the micropylar and chalazal parts during the development. Most storage reserves detected during megasporogenesis were observed in the megaspore mother cell. Three mitotic divisions within the chalazal functional megaspore resulted in the enlargement of the eight-nucleated embryo sac. In the seven-celled gametophyte, three chalazally located antipodes degenerated. A mature embryo sac was formed by the egg apparatus and central cell. When the antipodes degenerated, both synergids became organelle-rich and more active. The concentration of lipid droplets, starch grains, and proteins increased during megagametogenesis in the growing gametophyte. In the cellular embryo sac, the central cell can be distinguished by its largest accumulation. Our data confirm the hypothesis that plasmodesmata with electron-dense dome are formed during development of the female gametophyte in S. hispanicum and not just during the stages of embryogenesis. We observed these structures in megaspores and coenocytic embryo sac walls. Functions of observed plasmodesmata are discussed.


Sedum/growth & development , Sedum/ultrastructure , Flowers/growth & development , Gametogenesis, Plant , Germ Cells, Plant/growth & development , Germ Cells, Plant/ultrastructure , Plasmodesmata/ultrastructure
8.
Planta ; 247(2): 393-404, 2018 Feb.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29027584

MAIN CONCLUSION: Unlike most plant cell walls, the five consecutive walls laid down during spermatogenesis in the model fern Ceratopteris contain sparse cellulose, lack pectin and are enriched with callose and hemicelluloses. Seed-free plants like bryophytes and pteridophytes produce swimming male gametes for sexual reproduction. During spermatogenesis, unique walls are formed that are essential to the appropriate development and maturation of the motile gametes. Other than the detection of callose and general wall polysaccharides in scattered groups, little is known about the sequence of wall formation and the composition of these walls during sperm cell differentiation in plants that produce swimming sperm. Using histochemistry and immunogold localizations, we examined the distribution of callose, cellulose, mannan and xylan-containing hemicelluloses, and homogalacturonan (HG) pectins in the special walls deposited during spermatogenesis in Ceratopteris. Five walls are produced in sequence and each has a unique fate. The first wall (W1) contains callose and sparse xylan-containing hemicelluloses. Wall two (W2) is thin and composed of cellulose crosslinked by xylan-containing hemicelluloses. The third wall (W3) is thick and composed entirely of callose, and the fourth wall (W4) is built of cellulose heavily crosslinked by galactoxyloglucan hemicelluloses. Wall five (W5) is an arabinogalactan protein (AGP)-rich matrix in which the gamete changes shape and multiple flagella elongate. We detected no esterified or unesterified HG pectins in any of the walls laid down during spermatogenesis. To consider evolutionary modifications in cell walls associated with motile gametes, comparisons are presented with male gametophyte and spermatogenous cell walls across plant groups.


Ferns/chemistry , Glucans/metabolism , Polysaccharides/metabolism , Cell Wall/metabolism , Cell Wall/ultrastructure , Ferns/metabolism , Ferns/ultrastructure , Germ Cells, Plant/chemistry , Germ Cells, Plant/metabolism , Germ Cells, Plant/ultrastructure , Pectins/metabolism
9.
Plant Cell Physiol ; 59(1): 179-189, 2018 Jan 01.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29145642

The plant hormone auxin plays critical roles in plant growth and development. Auxin response factors (ARFs) are a class of transcription factors which regulate auxin-mediated gene expression. While the functions of ARFs in sporophytic development have been well characterized, their functions specific to gametophytic development have not been studied extensively. In this study, Arabidopsis ARF genes were selectively down-regulated in gametophytes by misexpression of targeted microRNAs (amiRARF234, amiRARFMP and MIR167a) to silence AtARF2-AtAEF4, AtARF5, AtARF6 and AtARF8. Embryo sacs in amiRARF234- and amiRARFMP-expressing plants exhibited identity defects in cells at the micropylar pole, such as formation of two cells with egg cell-like morphology, concomitant with loss of synergid marker expression and seed abortion. The pollen grains of the transgenic plants were morphologically aberrant and unviable, and the inclusions and nuclei were lost in the abnormal pollen grains. However, plants misexpressing MIR167a showed no obvious abnormal phenotypes in the embryo sacs and pollen grains. Overall, these results provide evidence that AtARF2-AtARF4 and AtARF5 play significant roles in regulating both female and male gametophyte development in Arabidopsis.


Arabidopsis Proteins/genetics , Arabidopsis/genetics , DNA-Binding Proteins/genetics , Gametogenesis, Plant/genetics , Nuclear Proteins/genetics , Repressor Proteins/genetics , Transcription Factors/genetics , Arabidopsis/growth & development , Base Sequence , Down-Regulation , Gene Expression Regulation, Developmental , Gene Expression Regulation, Plant , Germ Cells, Plant/growth & development , Germ Cells, Plant/metabolism , Germ Cells, Plant/ultrastructure , Microscopy, Electron, Transmission , Plants, Genetically Modified , Seeds/genetics , Seeds/growth & development , Sequence Homology, Nucleic Acid
10.
Am J Bot ; 104(4): 584-597, 2017 Apr.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28424206

PREMISE OF THE STUDY: Diverse in modern ecosystems, mosses are dramatically underrepresented in the fossil record. Furthermore, most pre-Cenozoic mosses are known only from compression fossils, lacking detailed anatomical information. When preserved, anatomy vastly improves resolution in the systematic placement of fossils. Lower Cretaceous deposits at Apple Bay (Vancouver Island, British Columbia, Canada) contain a diverse anatomically preserved flora that includes numerous bryophytes, many of which have yet to be characterized. Among them is a polytrichaceous moss that is described here. METHODS: Fossil moss gametophytes preserved in four carbonate concretions were studied in serial sections prepared using the cellulose acetate peel technique. KEY RESULTS: We describe Meantoinea alophosioides gen. et sp. nov., a polytrichaceous moss with terminal gemma cups containing stalked, lenticular gemmae. Leaves with characteristic costal anatomy, differentiated into sheathing base and free lamina and bearing photosynthetic lamellae, along with a conducting strand in the stem, place Meantoinea in family Polytrichaceae. The bistratose leaf lamina with an adaxial layer of mamillose cells, short photosynthetic lamellae restricted to the costa, and presence of gemma cups indicate affinities with basal members of the Polytrichaceae, such as Lyellia, Bartramiopsis, and Alophosia. CONCLUSIONS: Meantoinea alophosioides enriches the documented moss diversity of an already-diverse Early Cretaceous plant fossil assemblage. This is the third moss described from the Apple Bay plant fossil assemblage and represents the first occurrence of gemma cups in a fossil moss. It is also the oldest unequivocal record of Polytrichaceae, providing a hard minimum age for the group of 136 million years.


Bryophyta/anatomy & histology , Fossils/anatomy & histology , Germ Cells, Plant/ultrastructure , British Columbia
11.
New Phytol ; 214(3): 1198-1212, 2017 May.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28134991

Fruit set is an essential process to ensure successful sexual plant reproduction. The development of the flower into a fruit is actively repressed in the absence of pollination. However, some cultivars from a few species are able to develop seedless fruits overcoming the standard restriction of unpollinated ovaries to growth. We report here the identification of the tomato hydra mutant that produces seedless (parthenocarpic) fruits. Seedless fruit production in hydra plants is linked to the absence of both male and female sporocyte development. The HYDRA gene is therefore essential for the initiation of sporogenesis in tomato. Using positional cloning, virus-induced gene silencing and expression analysis experiments, we identified the HYDRA gene and demonstrated that it encodes the tomato orthologue of SPOROCYTELESS/NOZZLE (SPL/NZZ) of Arabidopsis. We found that the precocious growth of the ovary is associated with changes in the expression of genes involved in gibberellin (GA) metabolism. Our results support the conservation of the function of SPL-like genes in the control of sporogenesis in plants. Moreover, this study uncovers a new function for the tomato SlSPL/HYDRA gene in the control of fruit initiation.


Fruit/growth & development , Fruit/genetics , Genes, Plant , Mutation/genetics , Plant Proteins/genetics , Solanum lycopersicum/genetics , Arabidopsis/genetics , DNA, Plant/genetics , Gene Expression Regulation, Plant , Gene Silencing , Germ Cells, Plant/growth & development , Germ Cells, Plant/metabolism , Germ Cells, Plant/ultrastructure , Solanum lycopersicum/growth & development , Solanum lycopersicum/ultrastructure , Phenotype , Plant Growth Regulators/metabolism , Plant Infertility/genetics , Plant Proteins/metabolism , Plants, Genetically Modified , Transcription, Genetic
12.
Planta ; 244(1): 275-84, 2016 Jul.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-27100110

MAIN CONCLUSIONS: Deletion of the ancestral gene of the land plant multigene family of receptor like kinase CR4 in Physcomitrella patens demonstrates involvement in developmental control of gametophytic and sporophytic organs. The CRINKLY4 (CR4) family of receptor kinases in angiosperms consists of three clades, one including CR4, the CR4-related CCR1 and CCR2, a second including CCR3 and CCR4 family members, and a third and more distant clade. In addition to crinkly leaves in maize, which gave rise to the mutant gene name, CR4 is implicated in ovule, embryo, flower and root development in Arabidopsis thaliana. In root tips of the same species the module including a CLAVATA3/ESR-related protein, an Arabidopsis CR4, a CLAVATA1 and a WUSCHEL-related homeobox 5 (CLE40-ACR4-CLV1-WOX5) is implicated in meristem cell regulation. In embryos and shoots, CR4 acts together with A. thaliana MERISTEM LAYER 1 and PROTODERMAL FACTOR 2 to promote A. thaliana epidermis differentiation. Phylogenetic analysis has demonstrated that early land plants, e.g. mosses carry a single ancestral CR4 gene, together with genes encoding the other members of the CLE40-ACR4-CLV1-WOX5 signaling module. Here we show that CR4 serves as a broad regulator of morphogenesis both in gametophyte phyllids, archegonia and in sporophyte epidermis of the moss Physcomitrella patens. The phenotype of the CR4 deletion mutant in moss provides insight into the role of the ancestral CR4 gene as a regulator of development in early land plants.


Bryopsida/genetics , Gene Deletion , Gene Expression Regulation, Developmental , Gene Expression Regulation, Plant , Plant Proteins/genetics , Bryopsida/growth & development , Bryopsida/ultrastructure , Germ Cells, Plant/growth & development , Germ Cells, Plant/metabolism , Germ Cells, Plant/ultrastructure , Microscopy, Confocal , Microscopy, Electron , Morphogenesis/genetics , Multigene Family , Phenotype , Plant Epidermis/genetics , Plant Epidermis/growth & development , Plant Epidermis/ultrastructure , Protein Kinases/genetics , Reverse Transcriptase Polymerase Chain Reaction , Seeds/genetics , Seeds/growth & development , Seeds/ultrastructure
13.
Methods ; 98: 66-73, 2016 Apr 01.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-26521978

First evidence on gene function and regulation is provided by the cellular expression pattern in complex tissues. However, to understand the activity of a specific gene, it is essential to analyze the regulatory network, which controls the spatio-temporal translation pattern during the entire life span of the transcribed mRNA. To explore mechanisms which control mRNA abundance and localization in space and time, it is necessary to visualize mRNAs quantitatively with a subcellular resolution, without sectioning the tissues. We have adapted and optimized a protocol for colorimetric whole-mount RNA in situ hybridization (WISH) using egg cell-specific digoxigenin (DIG) labeled probes (Hejátko et al., 2006) [1] on ovules and early seeds of Arabidopsis. Furthermore, we established a fluorescent whole-mount RNA in situ hybridization (F-WISH) protocol, which allows mRNA visualization on a subcellular level. The polar localized mRNA of SBT4.13, encoding a subtilase, was identified using this protocol. Both methods are described and discussed in detail. Additionally a (F)-WISH flow-chart is provided along with a troubleshooting table.


Arabidopsis/ultrastructure , Germ Cells, Plant/ultrastructure , In Situ Hybridization, Fluorescence/methods , Ovule/ultrastructure , RNA, Messenger/chemistry , Arabidopsis/genetics , Arabidopsis/growth & development , Arabidopsis/metabolism , Digoxigenin/chemistry , Fluorescent Dyes/chemistry , Gene Expression Regulation, Developmental , Gene Expression Regulation, Plant , Germ Cells, Plant/growth & development , Germ Cells, Plant/metabolism , Ovule/metabolism , RNA, Messenger/genetics , RNA, Messenger/metabolism , Signal-To-Noise Ratio , Subtilisins/chemistry , Tissue Fixation/methods , Transcription, Genetic , Tyramine/chemistry
14.
Am J Bot ; 102(7): 1061-72, 2015 Jul.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-26199364

UNLABELLED: • PREMISE OF THE STUDY: Spatiotemporal features of microsporogenesis may provide important clues about the evolution of microsporogenesis in seed plants. One cellular feature that attracts special attention is advance cell wall ingrowths (ACWIs) at future cytokinetic sites in microsporocytes since they have been found only in species of an ancient lineage of angiosperms, Magnolia, and in much less detail, of an ancient lineage of gymnosperms, cycads. Further investigation into microsporogenesis in a cycad species may yield knowledge critical to understanding the establishment of ACWIs as an important feature for comparative studies of microsporogenesis in seed plants.• METHODS: Bright-field and epifluorescence microscopy, confocal laser scanning microscopy, and transmission electron microscopy were used to investigate the microsporogenic process in Macrozamia communis, a species in the Zamiaceae family of cycads.• KEY RESULTS: In prophase-II microsporocytes in M. communis, ACWIs form as a callose ring between the newly formed nuclei and are not accompanied by cytokinetic apparatuses such as mini-phragmoplasts, wide tubules, or wide tubular networks. Shortly after the second nuclear division, new ACWIs, albeit thinner than the previous ACWIs, form between the newly formed nuclei. Subsequent cell plate formation in the planes of the ACWIs typically results in tetragonal tetrads.• CONCLUSIONS: Cytokinesis at the cell periphery is initiated earlier than cell plate formation in the cell interior in microsporogenesis in M. communis. The cellular features uncovered in M. communis may serve as useful reference features for comparative studies of microsporogenesis in plants.


Cytokinesis , Gametogenesis, Plant , Seeds/physiology , Zamiaceae/physiology , Biological Evolution , Cell Wall/metabolism , Cell Wall/ultrastructure , Germ Cells, Plant/physiology , Germ Cells, Plant/ultrastructure , Glucans/metabolism , Seeds/ultrastructure , Spatio-Temporal Analysis , Zamiaceae/ultrastructure
15.
J Plant Res ; 128(4): 633-42, 2015 Jul.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-25982738

Phyllonoma, the sole genus of Phyllonomaceae (Aquifoliales) consisting of four Central American species, has not been well-characterized morphologically. Following a previous study of flower and inflorescence morphology, I here report the embryology of the genus based on P. tenuidens and compare its characteristics with those of other aquifolialean families, namely, Aquifoliaceae, Cardiopteridaceae, Helwingiaceae, and Stemonuraceae. Comparisons indicate that although Phyllonoma resembles all the other families embryologically, it more closely resembles Aquifoliaceae and Helwingiaceae in lacking a vascular bundle in its integument and bearing ab initio Cellular endosperm. The genus especially resembles Helwingiaceae by possessing a tenuinucellate ovule. This result corroborates molecular and floral morphological evidence, supporting the distinctness of Phyllonoma as a family and its sister-group relationship to East‒Asian Helwingiaceae. However, Phyllonoma is clearly distinguished from Helwingiaceae by seed coat structure. In Phyllonoma, the seeds (dispersed in berries) have a thick seed coat composed of irregularly enlarged, thick-walled exotestal cells, whereas the seeds (dispersed in drupes) have a thin membranous seed coat in Helwingiaceae. Taken together with earlier information on pollination (entomophily in Phyllonoma versus ambophily in Helwingiaceae), embryological evidence shows that distinct evolution has occurred in reproductive characters relating to pollination and seed dispersal in Phyllonoma.


Germ Cells, Plant/ultrastructure , Magnoliopsida/embryology , Germ Cells, Plant/physiology , Magnoliopsida/classification , Seeds
16.
Protoplasma ; 252(5): 1347-59, 2015 Sep.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-25666304

By evaluating carotenoid content, photosynthetic pigments and changes in cellular morphology, growth rates, and photosynthetic performance, this study aimed to determine the effect of cadmium (Cd) on the development of young gametophytes of Gelidium floridanum. Plants were exposed to 7.5 and 15 µM of Cd for 7 days. Control plants showed increased formation of new filamentous thallus, increased growth rates, presence of starch grains in the cortical and subcortical cells, protein content distributed regularly throughout the cell periphery, and intense autofluorescence of chloroplasts. On the other hand, plants treated with Cd at concentrations of 7.5 and 15 µM showed few formations of new thallus with totally depigmented regions, resulting in decreased growth rates. Plants exposed to 7.5 µM Cd demonstrated alterations in the cell wall and an increase in starch grains in the cortical and subcortical cells, while plants exposed to 15 µM Cd showed changes in medullary cells with no organized distribution of protein content. The autofluorescence and structure of chloroplasts decreased, forming a thin layer on the periphery of cells. Cadmium also affected plant metabolism, as visualized by a decrease in photosynthetic pigments, in particular, phycoerythrin and phycocyanin contents, and an increase in carotenoids. This result agrees with decreased photosynthetic performance and chronic photoinhibition observed after treatment with Cd, as measured by the decrease in electron transport rate. Based on these results, it was concluded that exposure to Cd affects cell metabolism and results in significant toxicity to young gametophytes of G. floridanum.


Cadmium/toxicity , Germ Cells, Plant/drug effects , Rhodophyta/drug effects , Water Pollutants, Chemical/toxicity , Carotenoids/metabolism , Chlorophyll/metabolism , Chloroplasts/metabolism , Electron Transport , Germ Cells, Plant/physiology , Germ Cells, Plant/ultrastructure , Photosynthesis , Rhodophyta/cytology , Rhodophyta/physiology
17.
Plant Cell Physiol ; 55(11): 1884-91, 2014 Nov.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-25189342

Lunularia cruciata occupies a very basal position in the phylogenetic tree of liverworts, which in turn have been recognized as a very early clade of land plants. It would therefore seem appropriate to take L. cruciata as the startingpoint for investigating character evolution in plants' metal(loid) response. One of the strongest evolutionary pressures for land colonization by plants has come from potential access to much greater amounts of nutritive ions from surface rocks, compared to water. This might have resulted in the need to precisely regulate trace element homeostasis and to minimize the risk of exposure to toxic concentrations of certain metals, prompting the evolution of a number of response mechanisms, such as synthesis of phytochelatins, metal(loid)-binding thiol-peptides. Accordingly, if the ability to synthesize phytochelatins and the occurrence of an active phytochelatin synthase are traits present in a basal liverwort species, and have been even reinforced in 'modern' tracheophytes, e.g. Arabidopsis thaliana, then such traits would presumably have played an essential role in plant fitness over time. Hence, we demonstrated here that: (i) L. cruciata compartmentalizes cadmium in the vacuoles of the phototosynthetic parenchyma by means of a phytochelatin-mediated detoxification strategy, and possesses a phytochelatin synthase that is activated by cadmium and homeostatic concentrations of iron(II) and zinc; and (ii) A. thaliana phytochelatin synthase displays a higher and broader response to several metal(loid)s [namely: cadmium, iron(II), zinc, copper, mercury, lead, arsenic(III)] than L. cruciata phytochelatin synthase.


Aminoacyltransferases/metabolism , Cadmium/metabolism , Hepatophyta/metabolism , Hepatophyta/ultrastructure , Iron/metabolism , Zinc/metabolism , Arabidopsis Proteins/metabolism , Electron Probe Microanalysis , Embryophyta/metabolism , Germ Cells, Plant/metabolism , Germ Cells, Plant/ultrastructure , Hepatophyta/drug effects , Inactivation, Metabolic , Metals/analysis , Metals/metabolism , Metals/pharmacology , Microscopy, Electron, Scanning , Phytochelatins/metabolism , Plant Proteins/metabolism , Vacuoles/metabolism
18.
Protoplasma ; 251(1): 211-7, 2014 Jan.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-23974526

An evolutionary trend to reduce "unnecessary costs" associated with the sexual reproduction of their amphimictic ancestors, which may result in greater reproductive success, has been observed among the obligatory apomicts. However, in the case of the female gametophyte, knowledge about this trend in apomicts is not sufficient because most of the ultrastructural studies of the female gametophyte have dealt with amphimictic angiosperms. In this paper, we tested the hypothesis that, in contrast to amphimictic plants, synergids in apomictic embryo sacs do not form a filiform apparatus. We compared the synergid structure in two dandelions from sect. Palustria: the amphimictic diploid Taraxacum tenuifolium and the apomictic tetraploid, male-sterile Taraxacum brandenburgicum. Synergids in both species possessed a filiform apparatus. In T. brandenburgicum, both synergids persisted for a long time without any degeneration, in spite of the presence of an embryo and endosperm. We propose that the persistent synergids in apomicts may play a role in the transport of nutrients to the embryo.


Apomixis , Germ Cells, Plant/ultrastructure , Taraxacum/ultrastructure
19.
Ann Bot ; 112(6): 1083-8, 2013 Oct.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-23979904

BACKGROUND AND AIMS: Long-lived underground populations of mycoheterotrophic gametophytes and attached sporophytes at various developmental stages occur in lycophytes. Young underground sporophytes obtain carbon solely from the gametophyte and establish nutritional independence only after reaching the soil surface, which may take several years. This prolonged period of matrotrophy exceeds that of bryophytes. The foot is massive and provides the lifeline for sporophyte establishment, yet the fine structure of the placental region is unexplored in lycophytes with underground gametophytes. METHODS: Gametophytes with attached embryos/young sporophytes of Lycopodium obscurum were collected in nature, processed and examined by light and transmission electron microscopy. KEY RESULTS: Three ultrastructurally distinct regions were identified within a single foot of a sporophyte emerging from the soil. Young foot regions actively divide, and have direct contact with and show little differentiation from gametophyte cells. In unlobed foot areas, cells in both generations exhibit polarity in content and indicate unidirectional transport of carbon reserves into the foot toward the developing shoot and root. The foot has inconspicuous wall ingrowths. Highly lobed foot regions contain peripheral transfer cells with prominent wall ingrowths that absorb nutrients from degenerating gametophyte cells. CONCLUSIONS: Variability within a single placenta is consistent with an invasive and long-lived foot. The late appearance of wall ingrowths in transfer cells reflects this dynamic ever-growing embryo. Placental features in lycophytes are related to the unique reorientation of all embryonic regions during development. Small placentas with wall ingrowths in both generations characterize ephemeral embryos in green gametophytes, while short-lived and repositioning embryos of heterosporous taxa are devoid of transfer cells. Transfer cell evolution across embryophytes is riddled with homoplasy and reflects diverse patterns of embryology. Scrutiny of placental evolution must include consideration of nutritional status and life history strategies of the gametophyte and young sporophyte.


Germ Cells, Plant/ultrastructure , Lycopodium/ultrastructure , Carbon/metabolism , Cell Differentiation , Germ Cells, Plant/growth & development , Germ Cells, Plant/physiology , Lycopodium/genetics , Lycopodium/growth & development , Lycopodium/physiology , Microscopy, Electron, Transmission , Phylogeny , Seeds/growth & development , Soil
20.
Ann Bot ; 111(5): 781-9, 2013 May.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-23471009

BACKGROUND AND AIMS: In bryophytes the sporophyte offspring are in contact with, nourished from, and partially surrounded by the maternal gametophyte throughout their lifespan. During early development, the moss sporophyte is covered by the calyptra, a cap of maternal gametophyte tissue that has a multilayered cuticle. In this study the effects on sporophyte offspring fitness of removing the maternal calyptra cuticle, in combination with dehydration stress, is experimentally determined. METHODS: Using the moss Funaria hygrometrica, calyptra cuticle waxes were removed by chemical extraction and individuals were exposed to a short-term dehydration event. Sporophytes were returned to high humidity to complete development and then aspects of sporophyte survival, development, functional morphology, and reproductive output were measured. KEY RESULTS: It was found that removal of calyptra cuticle under low humidity results in significant negative impacts to moss sporophyte fitness, resulting in decreased survival, increased tissue damage, incomplete sporophyte development, more peristome malformations, and decreased reproductive output. CONCLUSIONS: This study represents the strongest evidence to date that the structure of the calyptra cuticle functions in dehydration protection of the immature moss sporophyte. The investment in a maternal calyptra with a multilayered cuticle increases offspring fitness and provides a functional explanation for calyptra retention across mosses. The moss calyptra may represent the earliest occurance of maternal protection via structural provisioning of a cuticle in green plants.


Bryopsida/physiology , Plant Epidermis/physiology , Bryopsida/growth & development , Bryopsida/ultrastructure , Dehydration , Germ Cells, Plant/cytology , Germ Cells, Plant/growth & development , Germ Cells, Plant/ultrastructure , Plant Epidermis/cytology , Reproduction
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