Author:
Marchant HJ,Pickett-Heaps JD
Abstract
Uninucleate, biflagellate, net-forming zoo ids arise by cleavage of the multi-nucleate cytoplasm of polyhedra. These zoo ids appeared to be indistinguishable from net-forming zooids produced by cylindrical coenocytes. Whereas zoo ids derived from cylindrical cells aggregated within their parental cell wall to form cylindrical nets, zooids produced by polyhedra swarmed within a spheroidal vesicle, probably derived from the inner layer of polyhedral wall, and aggregated usually as a flat net, similar to nets of other species of Hydrodictyon and vegetative colonies of Pediastrum. Bands of peripheral microtubules underlaid the initial sites of contact of aggregating zooids; the role of these microtubules, which were generally oriented in the plane of the developing net, and other aspects of patterned cellular aggregation are discussed.
Subject
Developmental Biology,Endocrinology,Genetics,General Materials Science,Molecular Biology,Animal Science and Zoology,Reproductive Medicine,General Medicine,Biotechnology
Cited by
25 articles.
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