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Ultrastructural aspects of the cytoplasmic origin and accumulation of oil in olive fruit (<i>Olea europaea</i>)
33
Citations
16
References
1997
Year
Oil BodiesBotanyRipeningCytoplasmic OriginCellular PhysiologyOil DropletMatrix BiologyCell DivisionOlive FruitFood MicrostructureMorphogenesisOrganogenesisCell BiologyCell WallBiologyDevelopmental BiologyNatural SciencesFruit MaturationCellular StructureMedicineSeed ProcessingPlant PhysiologyUltrastructural Aspects
The development of oil bodies and oil droplets in fruits of olive was examined at the ultrastructural level. Both oil bodies that form in young fruits and oil droplets that develop with fruit maturation are cytoplasmic bodies. The formation of the small oil bodies occurs in localized regions of the cytoplasm. These bodies are closely associated and fuse together, forming a small oil droplet that protruded against and indented the vacuolar membrane. As the fruit matures, new oil bodies appear to form and fuse with the oil droplet, resulting in the formation of a single large oil droplet of about 30 μm in diameter in most mature mesocarp cells. The cytoplasmic region where the oil bodies formed had a granulate, ultrastructural appearance, and cytoplasmic components such as membranes and ribosomes were noticeably absent in these regions. The granulate material coated the oil bodies and oil droplets, and appeared as a thin, compressed band between the round inner surface of the droplets and the indented tonoplast. We suggest that this granulate material is involved in the synthesis of the oil and, with enlargement of the oil bodies, this coat becomes thinner in regions where they are closely associated, resulting in zones where confluence of the oil occurs.
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