Abstract

We characterized the behavior of plastid (pt) and mitochondrial (mt) nucleoids during male gametogenesis in Plumbago auriculata in three dimensions. The behavior of pt-nucleoids and mt-nucleoids differed throughout male gametogenesis. Pt-nucleoids were distributed in a characteristic manner in three stages: in the early microspore, pt-nucleoids assemble around cell nucleus; in the mid-generative cell, pt-nucleoids gather at the internal side of the pollen; in the late-generative cell, pt-nucleoids aggregation turns its pole to the external side of the pollen. We also studied organelle nucleoids in the egg and the central cell by a method in which semi-thick sections of resin-embedded anthers and ovaries were observed by confocal laser scanning microscopy. The number of pt-nucleoids in the sperm cell did not differ significantly from that in the egg. These results suggest that the behavior of DNA-containing organelles is regulated strictly during male gametogenesis in P. auriculata, and that a biparental inheritance of plastids in the Plumbago embryo is more favored than was previously thought.

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