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MORPHOGENESIS OF THE LABIATE PROCESS IN THE ARAPHID PENNATE DIATOM DIATOM A VULGARE 1
Author(s) -
PickettHeaps Jeremy
Publication year - 1989
Publication title -
journal of phycology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.85
H-Index - 127
eISSN - 1529-8817
pISSN - 0022-3646
DOI - 10.1111/j.0022-3646.1989.00079.x
Subject(s) - diatom , frustule , biology , morphogenesis , anatomy , process (computing) , microbiology and biotechnology , microtubule , cytoskeleton , botany , cell , genetics , computer science , gene , operating system
Each valve of the araphid pennate diatom Diatoma has a labiate process (LP) at one end; in a frustule, the LPs are at diagonally opposite ends. After mitosis is over, an elongated dense body detaches from the spindle pole and migrates to one end of the daughter cell, always diagonally opposite the LP of the parental valve. This dense body trails a cone‐shaped array of microtubules (MTs). Meanwhile, the new valve has begun to form within the Silica Deposition Vesicle (SDV). Having reached the end of the cell, this dense body moves back slightly and then settles onto the SDV, developing a layered substructure as it does so. Immediately beneath it, the LP of the new daughter valve differentiates. This dense object is clearly the homologue of the fibrous Labiate Process Apparatus (LPA) involved in the differentiation of the LP in several centric diatoms. In a few cases, these LPAs also hair been shown to originate from some component of the spindle pole. Thus, the homologue of the LPA of centric diatoms has now been found in an araphid pennate diatom; in each case, the LPA apparently comes from the pole of the spindle and presumably uses a cytoskeleton of MTs to locate the LP in its correct position. These observations support the possibility that the raphe evolved from the LP.

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