Abstract

Following fertilization, zygotes of the green alga Coleochaete orbicularis, which are retained on the haploid thallus, first enlarge, then become covered with a layer of vegetative cells. Light microscopy and high-voltage electron microscopy revealed the presence of localized wall ingrowths in vegetative cells adjacent to zygotes. These covering cells resemble the gametophytic placental transfer cells of embryophytes in their morphology, location, and time of development. If Coleochaete cells with wall protuberances function as do placental transfer cells of embryophytes, their presence is evidence that photosynthates may be transported between haploid thallus cells and zygotes. Thus, a nutritional relationship between different phases of the life cycle, similar to that which occurs in embryophytes, may also have evolved in green algae. This first report of putative placental transfer cells in a green alga supports Bower's (1908) ideas concerning the origin of land plant sporophytes and alternation of generations. The presence or absence of cells with wall ingrowths in several species of Coleochaete was correlated with estimates of zygote-plant area ratios.

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