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CYTOLOGICAL DIFFERENCES BETWEEN A CYTOPLASMIC MALE STERILE TOBACCO CYBRID AND ITS FERTILE COUNTERPART DURING EARLY ANTHER DEVELOPMENT
Author(s) -
Pollak Peggy E.
Publication year - 1992
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.1537-2197.1992.tb13677.x
Subject(s) - primordium , biology , plastid , cytoplasmic male sterility , stamen , cytoplasm , ultrastructure , nicotiana tabacum , vacuole , botany , protoplast , microbiology and biotechnology , chloroplast , genetics , gene , pollen
Ultrastructural differences were detected between a cytoplasmic male sterile tobacco cybrid ( Nicotiana sp.) formed by protoplast fusion and normal, fertile tobacco. Cell structure was compared between anther primordia from normal, fertile tobacco and anther primordia from the cybrid using stereological methods. Particular emphasis was placed on the ultrastructure of mitochondria because of their known relationship to cytoplasmic male sterility in this cybrid and other plants. The volume density of mitochondria in cybrid anther primordia (6.3%) was significantly lower than in normal, fertile anther primordia (10.1%), although mitochondria from both plants contained similar amounts of cristae and profiles were of similar relative area. Dictyosomes and vacuoles also differed in volume density but not at a statistically significant level. Although the volume density of plastids did not differ, a larger amount of starch was stored within plastids in cybrid anther primordia than in normal, fertile anther primordia. These results are compatible with the hypothesis that an abnormally low rate of mitchondrial replication, and the resultant limit on adenosine triphosphate production, could contribute to cytoplasmic male sterility in the cybrid.

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