Abstract

Nearly a century ago, Rosenvinge published a now‐classic paper reporting nuclear transfer between cells of Polysiphonia during secondary pit connection (SPC) formation. While reinvestigating this phenomenon, we discovered that the uninucleate apical cell, which is the progenitor of all cells in the plant, has many times (ca. 64–128 ×) the level of nuclear DNA characteristic of nuclei of gametes or mature pericentral cells. Via a regular sequence of cell divisions, the polyploid apical cell gives rise to tiers of cells, each composed of a number of pericentral cells which surround a single central cell. A large proportion of the nuclear divisions are not accompanied by DNA replication. Thus, as the number of nuclei within elongating pericentral cells increases, the DNA level of nuclei in these cells “cascades” down to the DNA level expected for the particular life history generation (i.e., gametophyte or tetrasporophyte). In mature pericentral cells, the number of nuclei is proportional to the volume of the cell. The pattern of nuclear division, reduction in ploidy level and the timing of intercellular nuclear transfer via SPC formation is regular and characteristic of a species. Nuclei transferred from one cell to an adjacent cell participate in the further nuclear divisions of the recipient cell. The degree of polyploidy in apical cells may determine the number of cells in a “determinant” branch or even the number of cells in “indeterminant” axes. In addition, the highly polyploid state of the germinating spore and its pattern of development may provide for the rapid initial growth so characteristic of this taxon.

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