Main Content

The World of Protozoa, Rotifera, Nematoda and Oligochaeta

Ref ID : 4399

Detlef.D. Leipe and Klaus Hausmann; The Nuclear Apparatus of the Ditransversal Ciliate Homalozoon vermiculare (Ciliophora, Rhabdophora) during Interphase and Division. I. The Macronucleus. J.Protozool. 39(1):27-39, 1992

Reprint

In File

Notes

The nuclear apparatus of Homalozoon vermiculare consists of a single moniliform macronucleus and about 25 micronuclei. The number of macronuclear segments depends (i) on the number of divisions of individual segments during the interphase and (ii) on the number of segments that arise prior to cytokinesis from the (temporary) filiform macronucleus. Precytokinetic changes of the macronucleus involve the fusion of individual segments followed by contraction and subsequent elongation of the entire macronucleus. The chromatin bodies uncoil into fine fibrils during macronuclear contraction. At the time when the division furrow appears, the macronucleus starts to renodulate. The interphase segment contains a more or less reticulated chromatin body partly attached to the nuclear envelope and about 30 polymorphous nucleoli. The latter consist of the pars granulosa, the pars fibrosa, and an additional fibrillar component. The nucleoli undergo drastic changes prior to division and the granular component disappears completely during macronuclear condensation. On the average, the macronucleus contains a 3,400-fold amount of DNA compared with a haploid micronucleus, but the intraspecific differences in the DNA content of the entire macronucleus are extremely large. In contrast, DNA content and size of an individual segment of the macronucleus are precisely regulated during interphase.