Structure and Function of Transfer Cells in the Sporophyte Haustorium ofFunaria hygrometricaHedw
- 1 December 1979
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Oxford University Press (OUP) in Journal of Experimental Botany
- Vol. 30 (6) , 1233-1246
- https://doi.org/10.1093/jxb/30.6.1233
Abstract
The development of the sporophyte-gametophyte interface in the moss, Funaria hygrometrica Hedw., is described with the aid of light- and electron-microscopy. The outer walls of the cells that abut the haustorial cavity in both generations develop labyrinths typical of transfer cells. This feature is more apparent in the epidermal cells of the sporophyte foot (haustorium), where development can be split into three main stages. The primary growth stage, which is complete at about the time the calyptra detaches from the ripened archegonium, involves the formation of transfer cells. The secondary stage is characterized by the deposition of amorphous inclusions in the wall labyrinth of the transfer cells. The tertiary stage, which commences as the sporophyte capsule ripens, entails de-differentiation of the transfer cell wall labyrinth to form a thick, heavily encrusted, outer cell wall. The pattern of development of these cells is correlated with changes in gametophyte- sporophyte translocation capabilities.This publication has 5 references indexed in Scilit:
- Structure and Function of Transfer Cells in the Sporophyte Haustorium ofFunaria hygrometricaHedwJournal of Experimental Botany, 1979
- Structure and Function of Transfer Cells in the Sporophyte Haustorium ofFunaria hygrometricaHedwJournal of Experimental Botany, 1979
- An ultrastructural and cytochemical study of the wall-membrane apparatus of transfer cells using freeze-substitutionProtoplasma, 1977
- Differentiation and redifferentiation of a transfer cell: Development of septal nectaries ofAloe andGasteriaProtoplasma, 1976
- Wandlabyrinthe im Sporophyten von PolytrichumPlanta, 1967