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The male germ unit of Rhododendron : quantitative cytology, three-dimensional reconstruction, isolation and detection using fluorescent probes

journal contribution
posted on 1989-11-01, 00:00 authored by Philip Taylor, J Kenrick, Y Li, V Kaul, B Gunning, R Knox
The sperm cells of Rhododendron laetum and R. macgregoriae differentiate within the pollen tube about 24 h after germination in vitro. Threedimensional reconstruction shows that the sperm cells are paired together, and both have extensions that link with the tube nucleus, forming a male germ unit. Quantitative analysis shows that the sperm cells in each pair differ significantly in surface area, but not in cell volume nor in numbers of mitochondria or plastids. When isolated from pollen tubes by osmotic shock, the sperm cells became ellipsoidal and surrounded by their own plasma membrane, while a proportion remained in pairs linked by the inner tube plasma membrane. Both generative and sperm cells are visualized in pollen tube preparations by immunofluorescence with anti-tubulin and anti-actin monoclonal antibodies (MAbs) combined with H33258 fluorescence of the nuclei. Video-image processing shows the presence of an axial microtubule cage in the generative cells, and some microtubules are present in the cytoplasmic extensions that clasp the tube nucleus. Following sperm cell division, the extensive phragmoplast between the sperm nuclei is partitioned by the plasma membranes.

History

Journal

Sexual plant reproduction

Volume

2

Issue

4

Pagination

254 - 264

Publisher

Springer

Location

Heidelberg , Germany

ISSN

0934-0882

eISSN

1432-2145

Language

eng

Publication classification

C1.1 Refereed article in a scholarly journal

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