Sporogenesis in bryophytes: patterns and diversity in meiosis

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Date: June 2013
From: The Botanical Review(Vol. 79, Issue 2)
Publisher: New York Botanical Garden
Document Type: Report
Length: 11,242 words
Lexile Measure: 1420L

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Abstract :

Meiosis in bryophytes retains unusual features that provide clues to the innovation of sporogenesis in early land plants. Sporocytes are typically quadrilobed before nuclear division and the meiotic spindle is quadripolar with poles in the four future spore domains. Whereas seed plants consistently have anastral spindles arising from [gamma]-tubulin in the perinuclear area, bryophytes have spindles organized at POs, plastids, or nuclear envelope. All of these MTOCs are significantly different from centrosomes of the algal ancestors. Mosses and hornworts have quadrilobed sporocytes with meiotic spindles organized at plastids. Meiosis in liverworts is extremely varied. Sporocytes of Jungermanniopsida are deeply quadrilobed and have microtubule bands marking division planes prior to cytoplasmic shaping. Spindles are organized at POs or nuclear envelope. Sporocytes of Marchantiopsida are quadrilobed to apolar with spindles organized at plastids, POs, or nuclear envelope. Premeiotic bands have been reported in only one marchantiod, the early divergent Blasia. An atlas of cytological data on 13 liverworts, 3 mosses and 2 homworts is presented and analyzed. Keywords Cell division * Meiosis * Microtubules * MTOC * Mitosis * QMS. Quadripolarity
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Gale Document Number: GALE|A334040624