The growth of the pollen tube wall in Oenothera organensis
HG Dickinson, J Lawson - Journal of cell science, 1975 - journals.biologists.com
HG Dickinson, J Lawson
Journal of cell science, 1975•journals.biologists.comThe growth of the pollen tube wall of Oenothera is effected by the expulsion of fibrillar
material from the cytoplasm into the developing wall. This material may also be seen in the
cytoplasm, contained in membrane-bound vesicles. It is not clear how the content of the
vesicles is discharged, but it appears not to involve the participation of microtubules. The
source of the cytoplasmic fibrillar bodies depends upon the stage of development of the
pollen tube. The earliest growth is derived from the inclusion into the wall of vesicles …
material from the cytoplasm into the developing wall. This material may also be seen in the
cytoplasm, contained in membrane-bound vesicles. It is not clear how the content of the
vesicles is discharged, but it appears not to involve the participation of microtubules. The
source of the cytoplasmic fibrillar bodies depends upon the stage of development of the
pollen tube. The earliest growth is derived from the inclusion into the wall of vesicles …
Abstract
The growth of the pollen tube wall of Oenothera is effected by the expulsion of fibrillar material from the cytoplasm into the developing wall. This material may also be seen in the cytoplasm, contained in membrane-bound vesicles. It is not clear how the content of the vesicles is discharged, but it appears not to involve the participation of microtubules.
The source of the cytoplasmic fibrillar bodies depends upon the stage of development of the pollen tube. The earliest growth is derived from the inclusion into the wall of vesicles containing pre-formed materials present in the grain on pollination. During the next stage of growth the wall is derived from the content of double-membraned inclusions also present in the pollen. The content of the former vesicles is not so similar to the wall as the latter, but intermediates between the 2 types of vesicle may be seen in the cytoplasm, indicating that the former are formed from the latter. Most of the tube wall is derived from the products of dictyosomes in the pollen grain or tube. These dictyosomes are few in number and they must be exceedingly active. This, and the observation that dictyosome vesicles are frequently associated with banked complexes of mitochondria, indicates that some steps in the metabolism of the vesicular content, perhaps phosphorylation, take place distant from the dictyosomes.
These different sources of fibrillar material presumably permit the rapid starting of tube growth, without any attendant metabolism. However, it would be impossible to include enough pre-formed wall material in the grain to enable the full growth of the tube, so once started, it seems that the tube then relies on the elaboration of simple reserves for the construction of its wall. These reserves are likely to be held in the pollen, and may be the large numbers of starch grains characteristic of the pollen cytoplasm.
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