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Journal of Cell Science, Vol 93, 179-184, Copyright © 1989 by Company of Biologists

Submitted on September 1, 1988
Accepted on January 31, 1989

Morphometric analysis of isolated Zea mays sperm

VINCENT T. WAGNER 1, CHRISTIAN DUMAS 2, and H. LLOYD MOGENSEN 3

1 Reconnaissance Cellulaire et Amelioration des Plantes, Universite Claude Bernard, Lyon 1/LA INRA, 43 Bd. du 11 Novembre 1918, 69622 Villeurbanne Cedex, France; Department of Plant Cytology and Morphology, Agricultural University, Arboretumlaan 4, 6703 BD Wageningen, The Netherlands
2 Reconnaissance Cellulaire et Amelioration des Plantes, Universite Claude Bernard, Lyon 1/LA INRA, 43 Bd. du 11 Novembre 1918, 69622 Villeurbanne Cedex, France
3 Department of Biological Sciences Box 5640, Northern Arizona University, Flagstaff, AZS6011 USA

Author for correspondence and reprints

Recently developed techniques for the isolation of sex cells of flowering plants represent an important first step toward eventual detailed cytological and biochemical analyses and experimental manipulations of higher plant gametes that was not previously possible. In the present investigation we have analysed a population of isolated viable male gametes from the standpoint of qualitative and quantitative ultrastructure in order to elucidate the process of double fertilization in angiosperms. The vast majority of the Zea mays sperm cells were found to be structurally intact spherical cells. Morphometric analysis of 400 isolated sperm cells indicates that the average cell is 7.66 µm in diameter, has volume and surface areas of 235.3µm3 and 184.3µm2, respectively, and contains a variously shaped, often curved nucleus, which occupies 38.5% of the cell volume. Other cell constituents and their relative volumes (expressed as percentages of the protoplasm) included in the analysis are: vacuoles, 9.3%; endoplasmic lamellae, 5.9%; mitochondria, 3.5%; osmiophilic bodies, 1.2%; Golgi complex, 0.6%; and hyaloplasm (back-ground cytoplasm), 41.1%. No plastids or microtubules were observed in the hybrid line used.

Two types of nuclei were found, i.e. heterochromatic and non-heterochromatic. Although statistical analysis of cell components shows some significant differences between cells of the two nuclear types, we do not believe that they represent the two sperms of a pair within pollen grains, since they do not occur in a 1:1 ratio. It is more likely that the variability within the sperm population is the result of slightly different developmental states at the time of anther dehiscence.

Key words: preferential fertilization, sperm cell isolation, organelle inheritance, sperm dimorphism

Submitted on September 1, 1988
Accepted on January 31, 1989







© The Company of Biologists Ltd 1989