ABSTRACT In the present study, the changes in the arrangement of microtubules (MTs) were identified in the pistil cells of female, gall and male flowers exposed to programmed cell death… Click to show full abstract
ABSTRACT In the present study, the changes in the arrangement of microtubules (MTs) were identified in the pistil cells of female, gall and male flowers exposed to programmed cell death (PCD) in Ficus carica, by using fluorescence and confocal microscopy. The microtubule organization was analyzed by labeling the pistil cells with FITC (fluorescein-isothiocyanate) and we noticed that they essentially show similarity in three morphs of the flowers prior to and during PCD. The MTs in small vacuolated cells homogenously oriented in the cytoplasm but intensively around the nucleus and within the cell cortex. MTs lie continuously parallel to the cortex and they circumferentially lie around the nucleus. MTs in large vacuolated cells radiate from the nucleus to the cortex and they appear as lightly thick bundles between cortex and vacuoles. The few small microtubule aggregations are present among the thick bundles. The organization of the MTs changes with the start of the PCD in the pistil cells. Vacuolization is one of the factors affecting MT organization in the cells showing PCD. Consequently, our data suggest that PCD affects the organization of MTs in the pistil cells and they gradually lose regular and parallel arrangement, coordinately with the degree of PCD.
               
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