Post-meiotic cytokinesis and pollen aperture pattern ontogeny: Comparison of development in four species differing in aperture pattern

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Abstract

Pollen aperture patterns vary widely in angiosperms. An increasing number of studies indicate that aperture pattern ontogeny is correlated with the way in which cytokinesis that follows male meiosis is completed. The formation of the intersporal callose walls that isolate the microspores after meiosis was studied in four species with different aperture patterns (two monocots, Phormium tenax and Asphodelus albus, and two eudicots, Helleborus foetidus and Protea lepidocarpodendron). The way in which post-meiotic cytokinesis is performed differs between all four species, and variation in callose deposition appears to be linked to aperture pattern definition.

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Ressayre, A., Dreyer, L., Triki-Teurtroy, S., Forchioni, A., & Nadot, S. (2005). Post-meiotic cytokinesis and pollen aperture pattern ontogeny: Comparison of development in four species differing in aperture pattern. American Journal of Botany, 92(4), 576–583. https://doi.org/10.3732/ajb.92.4.576

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