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Pelomyxa palustris Greefe. II. Its ultrastructure.
35
Citations
15
References
1966
Year
EngineeringNuclear StructureCytoskeletonAnatomyUnicellular OrganismCell OrganellesPelomyxa Palustris GreefeNuclear EnvelopePelomyxa Palustris AmoebaeBiophysicsProtistMinute VesiclesMorphologyMorphogenesisCrystallographyUltrastructureBiologySlime MouldMicrobiologyCellular StructureSymbiosisMedicine
The Pelomyxa palustris amoebae used in this study were multinucleate, herbivorous protozoans. All nuclei within a single organism were similar, but several types of nuclei were seen in different amoeba. These nuclei might represent various stages of mitosis although metaphase and anaphase stages were never seen. Rod-shaped bacteria within vesicles characteristically surrounded the nuclei. Bacterial rods of this as well as another type also occurred within vesicles in the cytoplasm. The nuclear envelope contained annuli and it was covered externally by minute vesicles. Nucleoli and micronucleoli were most frequently located along the inner surface of the nuclear envelope. Clusters of electron-opaque spheroids were found within the nucleoli; sometimes, they existed free in the nucleoplasm. Intranuclear globules of lipidlike material were often seen.
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