Abstract

Despite the huge amount of works devoted to the study of mitotic division, there is still a lot of unclear in its mechanisms. For example, insufficient attention has been paid to the processes of cell division in plant forms of different ploidy levels. The literature contains only fragmentary data on haploids in lower plants. This does not allow making any generalizations regarding mitosis in haploids of higher plants. This article presents the results of a cytological study of mitotically dividing cells of haploid maize plants. The article demonstrates the effectiveness of the well-known Chase method, based on the use of genetic markers and the ig mutation (indeterminate gametophyte) for obtaining and detecting haploids. An effective modification of a simple method of acetocarmine staining of cytological preparations is described. An essential result obtained is, in our opinion, the detection of a very brief moment in the state of chromosomes in a dividing cell of a haploid maize plant. This moment is characterized by the fact that the chromatids have already separated and turned into independent chromosomes, but have not yet begun their movement under the action of kinetochore microtubules. It is this feature that made it possible to designate this state as late prophase – early prometaphase of mitosis. An equally important feature of the detected moment is the unusual ordered arrangement of chromosomes, which lie parallel to each other close to each other along their entire length with the centromeres located on one line, which can be considered the equator of the fission spindle. The revealed fact allows us to assume that an essential role in the formation of such an arrangement of chromosomes is played by the bond of chromosomes with the equator of the nuclear membrane and their subsequent connection with the equator of the fission spindle.

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