Intra- and intertissular cytomictic interactions in the microsporogenesis of mono- and dicotyledonous plants

2016 
Comparative cytological analysis of intra- and intertissular cytomictic interactions in the microsporogenesis of mono- and dicotyledonous plants has been performed for two cellular systems: the microsporocytes and the tapetum. Cytomixis was shown to be more common for intratissular interactions, and cytomixis in the tapetum exhibited taxon-specific features, both structural and temporal. Nuclear migration in the microsporocytes mostly occurred during the zygotene–pachytene and exhibited certain synchrony with cytomixis in the tapetum. Intertissular cytomictic interactions (between the tapetum and the microsporocytes) were detected only in monocotyledonous plant anthers. Intertissular interactions may reflect more intense competition for space between the tapetum and the microsporocytes during the differentiation of anther tissues. The polyploid nuclei of the tapetum and the syncytia are powerful acceptors that can compete with the microsporocytes and attract the chromatin during translocation of the latter. The absence of intertissular interactions in dicotyledonous plants may be indicative of a better balance between the processes of differentiation of somatic and generative tissues of the microsporangium as compared to monocotyledonous plants.
    • Correction
    • Source
    • Cite
    • Save
    • Machine Reading By IdeaReader
    46
    References
    7
    Citations
    NaN
    KQI
    []