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Wall architecture with high porosity is established at the tip and maintained in growing pollen tubes of Nicotiana tabacum
Author(s) -
Derksen Jan,
Janssen GeertJan,
WoltersArts Mieke,
Lichtscheidl Irene,
Adlassnig Wolfram,
Ovecka Miroslav,
Doris Fiona,
Steer Martin
Publication year - 2011
Publication title -
the plant journal
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 3.058
H-Index - 269
eISSN - 1365-313X
pISSN - 0960-7412
DOI - 10.1111/j.1365-313x.2011.04703.x
Subject(s) - porosity , pollen tube , callose , materials science , rod , composite material , cell wall , crystallography , pollen , botany , chemistry , biology , medicine , alternative medicine , pathology , pollination
Summary A major question in pollen tube growth in planta remains: do the pollen tube walls form a barrier to interaction with the environment? Using cryo‐FESEM, we directly assessed the 3D construction and porosity of tobacco pollen tube walls. Fractured mature primary walls showed a 40–50 nm spaced lattice of continuous fibers interconnected by short rods in the primary wall. These observations agree with TEM observations of sectioned walls. In the secondary callose wall, for which no structure is visible using TEM, cryo‐FESEM also revealed a 50 nm lattice consisting of longer fibers, approximately 10–15 nm wide, with rod‐like, thinner interconnections at angles of approximately 90° with the longer fibers. Such architecture may reflect functional needs with respect to porosity and mechanical strength. The wall does not form a mechanical barrier to interaction with the environment and is gained at low cost. Cryo‐FESEM additionally revealed another special feature of the wall: the tubes were tiled with scales or rings that were highly conspicuous after pectin extraction with EDTA. These rings cause the typical banding patterns of pectin that are commonly seen in pollen tubes during oscillatory growth, as confirmed by staining with toluidine blue as well as by DIC microscopy. Growth analysis by VEC‐LM showed that the ring‐ or scale‐like structures of the primary wall consist of material deposited prior to the growth pulses. The alternating band pattern seen in the callose wall is probably imposed by constrictions resulting from the rings of the primary wall.