Abstract

The structure of the mitotic apparatus during the microspore division ofTradescantia paludosa, which has a distinctively unequal division of large vegetative and small generative cells, was studied using α-tubulin immunofluorescence methods and confocal laser scanning microscopy. Mitotic apparatuses began to develop asynchronously during early prophase at the vegetative pole (VP) and during prometaphase at the generative pole (GP). Both, however, reached completion together at the same time during metaphase. At the VP from prophase to prometaphase, microtubules (MTs) did not converge on the pole, and there was a circular area containing only a few MTs. The prophase spindles on the VP side were in the form of domes or cones that lacked the top. In the metaphase, however, the MTs concentrated at the pole to form a representative cone-shaped half-spindle. At the GP from prometaphase to metaphase, the MTs did not concentrate, and a circular area existed that lacked MTs. The half-spindles formed truncated cones. When the phragmoplast developed and curved around the generative nucleus during the telophase. it first grew toward the long axis of the ellipsoidal-shaped microspore; and after it arrived at the inner membrane of the microspore, it again curved past the generative nucleus toward the short axis. In conclusion, it was found that the mitotic apparatus ofT. paludosa microspores with its asynchronous growth and asymmetrical spindle structure and with its three dimensional growth of phragmoplasts had a peculiar developmental manner related to unequal division.

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