Cargando…

A POSSIBLE MECHANISM FOR THE MORPHOGENESIS OF LAMELLAR SYSTEMS IN PLANT CELLS

A mechanism for the formation of lamellar systems in the plant cell has been proposed as a result of electron microscope observations of young and mature cells of Nitella cristata and the plastids of Zea mays in normal plants, developing plants, and certain mutant types. The results are compatible w...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Hodge, A. J., McLean, J. D., Mercer, F. V.
Formato: Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: The Rockefeller University Press 1956
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2223997/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/13376637
_version_ 1782149467438317568
author Hodge, A. J.
McLean, J. D.
Mercer, F. V.
author_facet Hodge, A. J.
McLean, J. D.
Mercer, F. V.
author_sort Hodge, A. J.
collection PubMed
description A mechanism for the formation of lamellar systems in the plant cell has been proposed as a result of electron microscope observations of young and mature cells of Nitella cristata and the plastids of Zea mays in normal plants, developing plants, and certain mutant types. The results are compatible with the concept that lamellar structures arise by the fusion or coalescence of small vesicular elements, giving rise initially to closed double membrane Structures (cisternae). In the chloroplasts of Zea, the cisternae subsequently undergo structural transformations to give rise to a compound layer structure already described for the individual chloroplast lamellae. During normal development, the minute vesicles in the young chloroplast are aggregated into one or more dense granular bodies (prolamellar bodies) which often appear crystalline. Lamellae grow out from these bodies. In fully etiolated leaves lamellae are absent and the prolamellar bodies become quite large, presumably because of inhibition of the fusion step which appears to require chlorophyll. Lamellae develop rapidly on exposure of the plant to light, and subsequent development closely parallels that seen under normal conditions. The plastids of white and very pale green mutants of Zea similarly lack lamellae and contain only vesicular elements. A specialized peripheral zone immediately below the double limiting membrane in Zea chloroplasts appears to be responsible for the production of vesicles. These may be immediately converted to lamellae under normal conditions, but accumulate to form a prolamellar body if lamellar formation is prevented, as in the case of etiolation and chlorophyll-deficient mutation, or when the rate of lamellar formation is slower than that of the production of precursor material (as appears to be the case in the early stages of normal development).
format Text
id pubmed-2223997
institution National Center for Biotechnology Information
language English
publishDate 1956
publisher The Rockefeller University Press
record_format MEDLINE/PubMed
spelling pubmed-22239972008-05-01 A POSSIBLE MECHANISM FOR THE MORPHOGENESIS OF LAMELLAR SYSTEMS IN PLANT CELLS Hodge, A. J. McLean, J. D. Mercer, F. V. J Biophys Biochem Cytol Article A mechanism for the formation of lamellar systems in the plant cell has been proposed as a result of electron microscope observations of young and mature cells of Nitella cristata and the plastids of Zea mays in normal plants, developing plants, and certain mutant types. The results are compatible with the concept that lamellar structures arise by the fusion or coalescence of small vesicular elements, giving rise initially to closed double membrane Structures (cisternae). In the chloroplasts of Zea, the cisternae subsequently undergo structural transformations to give rise to a compound layer structure already described for the individual chloroplast lamellae. During normal development, the minute vesicles in the young chloroplast are aggregated into one or more dense granular bodies (prolamellar bodies) which often appear crystalline. Lamellae grow out from these bodies. In fully etiolated leaves lamellae are absent and the prolamellar bodies become quite large, presumably because of inhibition of the fusion step which appears to require chlorophyll. Lamellae develop rapidly on exposure of the plant to light, and subsequent development closely parallels that seen under normal conditions. The plastids of white and very pale green mutants of Zea similarly lack lamellae and contain only vesicular elements. A specialized peripheral zone immediately below the double limiting membrane in Zea chloroplasts appears to be responsible for the production of vesicles. These may be immediately converted to lamellae under normal conditions, but accumulate to form a prolamellar body if lamellar formation is prevented, as in the case of etiolation and chlorophyll-deficient mutation, or when the rate of lamellar formation is slower than that of the production of precursor material (as appears to be the case in the early stages of normal development). The Rockefeller University Press 1956-09-25 /pmc/articles/PMC2223997/ /pubmed/13376637 Text en Copyright © Copyright, 1956, by The Rockefeller Institute for Medical Research
spellingShingle Article
Hodge, A. J.
McLean, J. D.
Mercer, F. V.
A POSSIBLE MECHANISM FOR THE MORPHOGENESIS OF LAMELLAR SYSTEMS IN PLANT CELLS
title A POSSIBLE MECHANISM FOR THE MORPHOGENESIS OF LAMELLAR SYSTEMS IN PLANT CELLS
title_full A POSSIBLE MECHANISM FOR THE MORPHOGENESIS OF LAMELLAR SYSTEMS IN PLANT CELLS
title_fullStr A POSSIBLE MECHANISM FOR THE MORPHOGENESIS OF LAMELLAR SYSTEMS IN PLANT CELLS
title_full_unstemmed A POSSIBLE MECHANISM FOR THE MORPHOGENESIS OF LAMELLAR SYSTEMS IN PLANT CELLS
title_short A POSSIBLE MECHANISM FOR THE MORPHOGENESIS OF LAMELLAR SYSTEMS IN PLANT CELLS
title_sort possible mechanism for the morphogenesis of lamellar systems in plant cells
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2223997/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/13376637
work_keys_str_mv AT hodgeaj apossiblemechanismforthemorphogenesisoflamellarsystemsinplantcells
AT mcleanjd apossiblemechanismforthemorphogenesisoflamellarsystemsinplantcells
AT mercerfv apossiblemechanismforthemorphogenesisoflamellarsystemsinplantcells
AT hodgeaj possiblemechanismforthemorphogenesisoflamellarsystemsinplantcells
AT mcleanjd possiblemechanismforthemorphogenesisoflamellarsystemsinplantcells
AT mercerfv possiblemechanismforthemorphogenesisoflamellarsystemsinplantcells