Abstract

The reticulate pattern in the wall of Pediastrum boryanum emerges rapidly during wall formation following aggregation of the swarming zoospores to form the coenobium. Electron micrographs during colony formation show that microtubules, present during the motile phase and aggregation, are gone prior to wall formation and probably do not participate in wall pattern regulation. A single dictyosome lies adjacent to the nucleus and from blebs of the nuclear membrane receives vesicles at its forming face. Vesicles formed at the maturing face have not been observed to contribute to the cell wall. Electron‐lucent patches occur in the plasma membrane prior to wall formation. The first indication of a reticulate pattern in wall development is the deposition on the plasma membrane of interconnected plaques of outer wall material at the corners of hexagons. The sites of the plaques may correspond to clusters of ribosomes on endoplasmic reticulum underlying the plasmalemma. Following completion of the outer wall the thicker inner wall layer is deposited and within it the reticulate pattern of ridges is soon evident in tangential sections as strips of greater electron density. It is suggested that the pattern of the wall is templated by the plasma membrane.

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