Abstract

ABSTRACTThe intracellular structural relationships between the flagella and haptonema in Chrysochromulina acantha Leadbeater & Manton (Prymnesiophyceae) were studied in detail and a reconstruction is presented. Three micro‐tubular roots are associated with the flagellar apparatus. The largest, consisting of a sheet of approximately 20 microtubules, has its origins at the base of the left basal body. The main body of microtubules passes over the surface of a mitochondrion toward the left chloroplast and apparently terminates at a pair of microtubules oriented perpendicularly to it. Four microtubules diverge from the sheet and pass behind the left basal body. Two other roots–one consisting of a 2 + 2 + 1 arrangement of microtubules, the other of a single microtubule only—are associated with the right basal body. The two basal bodies are connected by distal and proximal fibers, and they are linked also to the base of the haptonema, three fibers extending from the haptonemal base to the right basal body, one only to the left. An additional fiber extending from the right basal body passes between the left basal body and the base of the haptonema, terminating at the largest microtubular root. Lateral extensions link this fiber to both the left basal body and the haptonematal base. Negative staining of isolated root systems of C. simplex Estep et al. shows that the arrangement of microtubules and fibrous connections is similar to that in C. acantha. The root system of C. acantha is compared to those of other members of the Prymnesiophyceae.

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