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  • 1
    Electronic Resource
    Electronic Resource
    Springer
    Protoplasma 211 (2000), S. 94-102 
    ISSN: 1615-6102
    Keywords: Androgenesis ; Embryogenesis ; Microspore culture ; Pollen ; Ultrastructure ; Wheat
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Summary We have made a detailed cytological examination of the development of wheat embryoids, monitoring their initial divisions from two to ten cells by both light and electron microscopy. According to our observations the first embryogenic division is symmetrical. After the androgenesis induction treatment, there is a decrease in ribosome population with cells that have inactive nucleoli made up almost exclusively of a dense fibrillar component. This population is restored after initial embryogenic divisions. During the initial divisions the embryogenic pollen grains do not appear to change in size and the pollen wall remains intact. The exine undergoes no modification but the intine thickens, and we have observed that the thickness of the intine can be used as a cytological marker of androgenesis. The walls separating the cells obtained after embryogenic division contained numerous plasmodesmata. The beginnings of embryo polarization and cell differentiation could be made out in the very early pollen embryoids.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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  • 2
    Electronic Resource
    Electronic Resource
    Springer
    Protoplasma 202 (1998), S. 115-121 
    ISSN: 1615-6102
    Keywords: Androgenesis ; Atavism ; Embryogenesis ; Plant totipotency ; Pollen
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Summary The origins of pollen embryogenesis are still in doubt. Totipotency of plant cells has traditionally been put forward as an explanation for this phenomenon but we have found this interpretation to involve some shortcomings. The pollen grain is a highly differentiated structure which should have a very reduced capability of regenerating a whole plant, whereas in some species the induction of androgenesis appears to occur with greater facility than somatic embryogenesis. Furthermore, some microspores seem to have a tendency to morphogenesis and organogenesis; spontaneous androgenesis occurs naturally in various species and many examples also occur of pollen dimorphism. Totipotency would seem to be insufficient to explain androgenesis and we propose that its origin might be found in the phenomenon of atavism. According to studies published on ancestral precursors of pollen, these structures appear to have had high proliferation capacity. The ability to form a multicellular structure from a single haploid cell is shared by the meiocytes of ancestral algae, of the first land plants, and of present-day ferns, which are evolutionarily related to pollen. Atavism is only expressed under certain circumstances, as indeed is androgenesis, normally as a consequence of an environmental stress. Our conclusion is that there is evidence enough to suggest that androgenesis may well be the expression of archaic genes of meiocytes with morphogenic capacity which were naturally expressed in the ancestors of flowering plants.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
    Library Location Call Number Volume/Issue/Year Availability
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