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THE MEMBRANE SYSTEM OF STREPTOMYCES CINNAMONENSIS
Author(s) -
Chen Pearl Liu
Publication year - 1964
Publication title -
american journal of botany
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.218
H-Index - 151
eISSN - 1537-2197
pISSN - 0002-9122
DOI - 10.1002/j.1537-2197.1964.tb06610.x
Subject(s) - endomembrane system , membrane , biology , biophysics , cytoplasm , hypha , vesicle , microbiology and biotechnology , biochemistry
The plasma membrane bounding the cytoplasm immediately inside the hyphal wall of Streptomyces cinnamonensis may not retract from the hyphal wall. When it does retract from the wall, it appears as a single dark line in some sections and as 2 dark lines separated by a light zone in others. The membrane system consists of mesosomes and endomembrane structures. The mesosomes are those membrane structures whose derivatives appear to be the plasma membrane. The endomembrane structures, in the present report, are those that appear to have been derived from either the cytoplasm or the limiting membranes of the pre‐existing membrane structures. All membranes seem capable of proliferation, a mechanism obviously responsible for the growth of the individual membrane structures and for the origin of many new ones. The mesosomes, according to their limits, are of 2 distinct types, the open mesosomes and the closed mesosomes. The open mesosomes are partially enclosed by limiting membranes, leaving the unenclosed sides limited by the wall. These mesosomes, when old, usually in aerial hyphae, may become attached to the wall and somewhat deleted from their limiting membranes. The individual membranes in their interior may appear disfigured. The closed mesosomes are completely surrounded by the limiting membranes. These mesosomes, as well as endomembrane structures, retain their original positions in the cytoplasm even in the older aerial hyphae, and the membranes in their interior usually remain practically as distinct in the aerial hyphae as they are in the substratal hyphae. New mesosomes and endomembrane structures are being formed continuously as the mycelium develops. The mesosomes, as a rule, occupy more or less the peripheral regions of the cytoplasm, while the endomembrane structures distribute themselves widely in the cytoplasm and also in the nucleoids. The appearance of the unit membranes, being double‐layered (2 dark lines separated by a light line), is not consistent. The membranes as a whole are more resistant to degeneration than the cytoplasm and the nucleoids.