Ultrastructural Study of Lipid Accumulation in Tapetal Cells of Brassica napus L. Cv. Westar during Microsporogenesis
1998
Ultrastructural features of Brassica napus tapetal cells during microsporogenesis from early microspore development through late maturation are described Emphasis is placed on the two major lipid-containing components (plastids and lipid bodies) of the tapetal cells, particularly the little-studied lipid bodies. By the early microspore stage, the walls of the tapetal cells are mostly dissolved, and a lipoid layer has been deposited on the tapetal side of the middle lamella of the outer tangential wall between the tapetal cells and the anther wall cells An electron-dense layer of presumed sporopollenin is subsequently deposited on the tapetal side of the lipoid layer, thus forming a continuous peritapetal layer, occluding the plasmodesmata, and isolating the anther locule. A prominent feature of the young tapetal cells is an abundance of ribosomes and endoplasmic reticulum (ER); the vacuoles are small; plastids are undifferentiated; and only a few, small cytoplasmic lipid droplets are present. As maturatio...
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