Abstract

Sperm of Plumbago zeylanica are dimorphic with regard to numbers of mitochondria and plastids. In most cases examined, the plastid-rich sperm fused with the egg while the sperm with fewer plastids fused with the central cell. However, plastids cannot be directly responsible for fusion because fusion occurs between the plasma membranes of egg and sperm. The question is whether sperm cell membranes are distinctive and possibly dimorphic. Sperm in whole pollen grains and isolated sperm were freeze-fractured. In pollen, freeze-fractured sperm appeared only in cross fractures. No extended membrane fracture faces of sperm were found. Among isolated sperm, two sizes of sperm with different organelles were observed. Isolated sperm were assigned to two categories based on cell diameter and on size and density of organelles. Membrane particles on most sperm were arranged without distinctive pattern. Some hexagonal arrays were observed. In sperm that had been maintained at 4°C, particle-free areas, a probable consequence of lipid phase separations, appeared on plasma membrane fracture faces. No unique fracture patterns and no patterns of dimorphism were detected on freeze-fractured plasma membranes of Plumbago sperm.

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