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AN ULTRASTRUCTURAL STUDY OF CHLOROPLAST STRUCTURE AND DEDIFFERENTIATION IN TISSUE CULTURES OF STREPTANTHUS TORTUOSUS (CRUCIFERAE)
Author(s) -
Sjolund R. D.,
Weier T. E.
Publication year - 1971
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.1537-2197.1971.tb09960.x
Subject(s) - chloroplast , plastid , biology , vacuole , chromoplast , ultrastructure , chloroplast membrane , microbiology and biotechnology , cytoplasm , meristem , chlorophyll , botany , thylakoid , biochemistry , gene , shoot
Cells of Streptanthus tortuosus callus tissue contain chloroplasts when cultured in a liquid medium in the light. Similar cells grown in the dark contain proplastids that fail to develop prolamellar bodies but do contain a complex of loosely‐associated membranes. When green, light‐grown cultures are cut into small pieces and subcultured to a fresh culture medium, they become bleached even though maintained under the same illumination. The fine structure of the chloroplasts and the chlorophyll content of the cells indicate a dedifferentiation of the chloroplasts to a proplastid state during the early culture period. The changes in the ultrastructure of the plastids are paralleled by a dedifferentiation of the vacuolate cells to a less differentiated, meristematic state. Subsequent growth in the light results in a re‐formation of chloroplasts and an increase in the chlorophyll content of the cells. The period of chloroplast redevelopment is associated with the re‐formation of large central vacuoles in the cultured cells. Invaginations of the inner membrane of the plastid envelope occur at all stages of plastid development and are not lost during the period of grana degeneration. The proplastids formed from the dedifferentiation of the chloroplasts contain a large number of these invaginations and the redevelopment of grana is associated with a change in the electron density of the invaginating membranes. The degradation of the chlorophyll‐containing membranes of the grana occurs during a period of rapid cytoplasmic synthesis induced by the fresh supply of nutrients in the culture medium. These results suggest that the high levels of nutrients may act directly on the chloroplasts and cause their dedifferentiation or that the rapid cell growth induced by the nutrients may cause a degradation of the membrane proteins in the grana of the chloroplasts and an incorporation of the released amino acids into non‐plastid components of the cytoplasm.