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  • Mitochondria  (1)
  • Mouse (NMRI)  (1)
  • Strobili  (1)
  • 1
    ISSN: 1432-2048
    Keywords: Dormancy (strobili) ; Microsporangiate strobili ; Pinus ; RNase ; Strobili
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Abstract Terminal buds of Pinus silvestris L. containing microsporangiate strobilus primordia were collected once a month throughout the winter. The electron microscopic studies indicated that in October and December, the cells of the strobili contained a large number of vacuoles, a portion of which was supposedly autophagic, and stacked rough endoplasmic reticulum. By February, the amount of these had decreased, and instead, a large population of dense bodies was visible. Additional phenomena, characteristic at this state, were the occurrences of highly uneven contours of the plasmalemma and of inclusions of various kinds between the plasmalemma and the cell wall. In March, autolysis was visible in a portion of cells outside the sporangia. In the sporangia the ground cytoplasm was thin but the number of organelles was increasing. In the April collections, cell divisions were visible. The amount of protein per dry weight increased during the winter reaching a peak in February. The activity of RNases, having optima of pH 5.0 and pH 7.5, was measured in two successive years. Both series showed a period of high activity during the middle of the winter. The exact timing of this period depended on the year in question. On the basis of these observations, the dormant period of the microsporangiate strobili of the Seotch pine is divided into three sub-periods. It is also suggested that the definition of dormancy of these structures should include a mentioning of alterations in the metabolical machinery of the cells.
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  • 2
    ISSN: 1432-0878
    Keywords: Liver ; Autophagy ; Lysosomes ; Intramembrane particles ; Filipin ; Mouse (NMRI)
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology , Medicine
    Notes: Summary Morphologically detectable protein (intramembrane particles) and cholesterol (filipin labelling) in the membranes of autophagic vacuoles and lysosomes were studied in mouse hepatocytes using thin-section and freeze-fracture electron microscopy. Both isolated autophagic vacuoles and lysosomes, and intact tissue blocks were used due to the facts (i) that lysosomes are difficult to recognize in freeze-fracture replicas of intact hepatocytes, and (i) that filipin penetration into the tissue blocks is unsatisfactory. Intramembrane particle density was low in the membranes of early autophagic vacuoles (defined as round-shaped vacuoles in which an inner membrane parallel with the outer limiting membrane was clearly visible). The lysosomal membranes contained considerably more intramembrane particles. Particle-rich lysosomes or other vesicles were observed to fuse with the early autophagic vacuoles. The membranes of nascent autophagic vacuoles with morphologically intact contents were usually not labelled by filipin, whereas the membranes of all other autophagic vacuoles and lysosomes were heavily labelled. The increased cholesterol in the membranes of slightly older autophagic vacuoles is presumably derived from cholesterol-rich lysosomes or other vesicles fusing with the vacuoles and from the degrading organelles inside the autophagic vacuoles.
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  • 3
    ISSN: 1615-6102
    Keywords: Diapensia lapponica ; Mitochondria ; Morphometry ; Seasonal variation ; Ultrastructure
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Summary Seasonal changes in the mitochondrial ultrastructure were examined in palisade parenchyma cells of a tuft-formingDiapensia lapponica L. collected at monthly intervals in Northern Finland. Quantitative analyses to measure volume and surface densities were conducted during different periods of growth (stages of growth, acclimation, winter period and deacclimation) in the annual cycle. The volume density was highest in the summer and lowest in the spring; the difference was significant with both fixatives used GA and GA/FA. The largest membrane area (the mitochondrial outer membrane and the cristal membranes together) was observed in the summer and autumn, and was significantly less in the winter and spring. This correlated with fewer mitochondria in the spring and a smaller number of cristae in the winter and spring. In the material fixed in GA/FA the distribution of length/width ratios of mitochondria was relatively uniform in all seasons. However, the mitochondrial ultrastructure had the most varied appearance during the winter. Hypertonie GA/FA solution did not cause significant differences either in the ultrastructure or the volume and surface densities of the mitochondria.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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