Abstract

The tapetal layer becomes distinct from the other layers of parietal cells about three days prior to the meiosis in the microspore mother cells. Differentiation of the tapetal cells includes an increased relative volume for dictyosomes, mitochondria and plas–tids, the appearance of autophagic vacuoles in the cytoplasm, and periplasmic spaces between the plasma membrane and the cell wall. About one day before the meiosis the basophilia in tapetal cells is elevated; there are numerous nonaggregated ribo–somes, nuclei are intensely stainable, and the rough ER is dilated. There is also a partial digestion of the cell walls around microspore mother cells and tapetal cells including the adaxial wall of the adjacent parietal cell layer. A wedge–shaped portion of the wall system between this parietal cell layer and tapetal cells is not lysed. A lamellation in the middle lamellar position is also spared. That lamellation remains prominent as the extratapetal lamellation. By the initiation of meiosis the surfaces of both tapetal and microspore mother cells are entirely free of cell walls. During that period the intense basophilia of tapetal cells recedes and there are many polyribosomes, an extensive system of rough ER, dictyosomes with vesicles containing fibrils, multivesicular bodies, and autophagic vacuoles. Microtubules occur close to the plasma membrane. The plasma membrane–glycocalyx differs in portions of the surface facing the extratapetal lamellation from the Iocular facing surface. We presume that the abaxial portion of tapetal cells with cavations containing glycocalyx–like filaments is a region of uptake and that the adaxial surface with detached glycocalyx is secretory.

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