Abstract

During an earlier investigation, microtubules were observed at the periphery of invasion processes in the developing syncytial tapetum ofTradescantia virginiana L. They were also associated with membranous sacs that accumulate adjacent to tetrads, with putative fusion sites where the tapetal plasmodium is initiated, and, in postmeiotic stages, with the perispore membrane that encloses the developing spore cells. Colchicine was administered to developing flower buds to investigate the roles of these microtubules. The results indicate that microtubules neither initiate nor guide the tapetal invasion of the loculus. The treatments, however, resulted in absence of cell coat from invasion processes and prevention of cell fusion. They also inhibited polarized migration of membrane sacs and removed the associated microtubules. The development of an organized secretory apparatus at the perispore membrane was disrupted, with subsequent disordered deposition of sporopollenin in the extracellular spaces of the partially-fused plasmodium. The results suggest that microtubules participate in the formation and internal spatial organization of the tapetal plasmodium, and establishment of a secretory surface that normally produces sporopollenin at the tapetum-microspore interface.

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