Abstract

The formation and the decomposition of vacuoles in a member of Xanthophyceae,Botryococcus braunii, were examined by light and electron microscopy. Particles around the nucleus were identified as vacuoles from their stainability with neutral red. These particles disappeared during cell division. They reacted positively in an activity test for acid phosphatase. Electron microscopy revealed the presence of spherical vacuoles around the nucleus. During cell division, these vacuoles seemed to be decomposed by the ER which surrounded the vacuoles. Soon after this decomposition, many immature multivesicular bodies (MVBs) appeared to develop from the trans-Golgi network (TGN) and were pinched off from the TGN. These immature MVBs took up small vesicles in them as they grew into the mature MVBs. Mature MVBs took up and digested the surrounding cytoplasm, fused with one another, and eventually became the vacuoles.

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