Abstract

The toxic effect of pentachlorophenol (PCP) on the growth and ultrastructure of tobacco pollen tubes was tested using a semivivo technique of tube culture. In this technique the pollen tubes were allowed to grow in the pistilin situ for 24 hr before they protruded from the cut end of the style and came into contact with the medium containing PCP. The inhibitory effect of different PCP concentrations was determined by measuring the length of tube bundles. The intracellular action of PCP was analysed by electron microscopy. This biocide caused four obvious alterations in the pollen tube ultrastructure: (1) swelling of the mitochondrial saccules; (2) enlargement of the dictyosomes by the increase of the cisternal diameter and the number of cisternae per stack; (3) formation of cup-shaped Golgi apparatus-endoplasmic reticulum hybrid structures (GER hybrids) showing continuities of ER and Golgi cisternae; (4) formation of stacked and/or concentric arrangements of rough ER cisternae. It is suggested that swelling of saccules was directly due to the uncoupling of oxidative phosphorylation whereas the changes of the endomembrane system were caused by energy depletion due to the inhibition of ATP synthesis. These changes are consistant with dynamic concepts of dictyosome and ER function when membrane formation exceeds membrane use in the production of secretory and transition vesicles. Thus, the enlargement of the dictyosomes and the formation of GER hybrids are thought to result from inhibition of budding of vesicles from the Golgi apparatus or from both the ER and the Golgi apparatus, respectively.

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