TL;DR: The 58 strains of Koji-molds investigated are divided into two groups; one group consists of inconstant strains which are very liable to produce natural variants, and the other consists of strains which remain constant through successive single spore culture.
Abstract: 1.The causes of the difference in variability among strains of Koji-molds have been studied cytologically by examination of conidial size, number of nuclei in conidia and nuclear migration.2. The constant strains of Koji-molds have conidia with comparatively uniform sizes (4-6μ). The inconstant strains, on the other hand, produce conidia in a variety of sizes including some with extraordinarily large diameters (6-10μ or more).3. Feulgen-positive spherical structures are found at all growth stages in strains of Koji-molds. Mitotic-like pictures are frequently observed in germ-tubes, hyphal tips, or spore-producing tubes.4. The conidia of the constant strains have been found to contain 1-4 nuclei; the majority contained two nuclei. The conidia of the inconstant strains, however, are multinucleate (8-20 or more). It is recognized that there is a close relationship between conidial size and the number of nuclei.5. In the constant strains, one nucleus moves into conidium from apex of the sterigma at the beginning of the conidium formation, and is divided at once into 2-4 through what is probably mitotic division. In the inconstant strains, more than two nuclei migrate from sterigma into the newly formed conidium. The conidia become further multinucleate (8-20 or more) as a result of prompt independent nuclear divisions.6. As concerns the migration of the nucleus from the vesicle into the sterigma, the authors have recognized that in the constant strains only one nucleus migrates into the sterigma, while in the inconstant strains at least 2-4 migrate simultaneously.7. From the facts shown above it might be assumed that the variability of the inconstant strains of Koji-molds depends chiefly upon the multinucleate character of the conidia.
TL;DR: The nucleus migrated into the spore at metaphase–anaphase with one of the ellipsoidal SPBs and its associated astral microtubules at the leading end of the nucleus.
Abstract: Basidia of Auricularia fuscosuccinea were examined with the transmission electron microscope. The spindle pole body (SPB) at meiotic prophase I, interphase II, and prophase of postmeiotic mitosis consisted of two globular elements connected by a middle piece and was associated with a two-layered, intranuclear structure, the intranuclear element (IE). The SPB was laterally positioned on the nuclear envelope before the nucleus migrated into the well-developed sterigma. It was laterally or subapically positioned during this migration and the globular elements had greatly enlarged since interphase II. Microtubules were not clearly associated with the SPB at interphase II or early in migration to the sterigma. A mitotic division was initiated toward the apical end of the sterigma on which basidiospore development had apparently begun. The nucleus migrated into the spore at metaphase–anaphase with one of the ellipsoidal SPBs and its associated astral microtubules at the leading end of the nucleus. The nucleus c...
TL;DR: A mature teliospore of Gymnosporangium clavipes is two celled with a long pedicel, and Cytoplasmic vesicles are prominent in the tip of the developing sterigma and in the basidiospore initial.
Abstract: A mature teliospore of Gymnosporangium clavipes is two celled with a long pedicel. The spore wall appears multilayered and a germ pore region is present in the wall at each end of the teliospore. The cytoplasm of the spore is dense and packed with lipid droplets. A single, dense, prophase nucleus is present in each cell. Synaptonemal complexes were observed in younger spores but not in mature, germinable spores. The cytoplasm of a germinating spore appears less dense than that of a nongerminating spore. During germination a germ tube emerges from the germ pore region of each cell. Cytoplasmic vesicles are numerous in the tip of the rapidly elongating promycelium. The nucleus enters the promycelium and divides meiotically. Centripetally developing septa divide the promycelium into four uninucleate cells each of which gives rise to a sterigma at the tip of which a basidiospore initial develops. Cytoplasmic vesicles are prominent in the tip of the developing sterigma and in the basidiospore initial. Once the...
TL;DR: In basidia of Coprinus cinereus and Boletus rubinellus at early interphase II of meiosis numerous microtubules are oriented longitudinally in the sterigmata, and the role of microtubule and microbodies is discussed.
Abstract: In basidia of Coprinus cinereus and Boletus rubinellus at early interphase II of meiosis numerous microtubules are oriented longitudinally in the sterigmata. Their orientation in the rest of the ce...
TL;DR: Olive's demonstration that a bubble bursting at the basidiospore apiculus breaks the connection between spore and sterigma convincingly explains the mechanism of severance; but it does not explain spore discharge, because the bursting force is not applied in the appropriate direction.
Abstract: Olive's demonstration that a bubble bursting at the basidiospore apiculus breaks the connection between spore and sterigma convincingly explains the mechanism of severance; but it does not explain spore discharge, because the bursting force is not applied in the appropriate direction. The form of the developing spore and sterigma shows that the spore is forcibly abstricted while the membrane is still fluid. If the abstricting force persists until the fracture of the sterigma, it provides a mechanism whereby the spore is reliably discharged.