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Australian Journal of Biological Sciences Australian Journal of Biological Sciences Society
Biological Sciences
RESEARCH ARTICLE

Protoplast Formation from Submerged Mycelium and from Spore Germinants of Streptomyces coelicolor

I Stevenson

Australian Journal of Biological Sciences 38(1) 175 - 182
Published: 1985

Abstract

Stages in the formation of protoplasts from S. coelicolor strain A3(2) have been studied by transmission electron microscopy. Protoplasts liberated from submerged mycelial growth were variable in size and were released when digestion of the cell wall by lysozyme had completely or almost completely taken place. Protoplasts did not fully adopt the typical rounded shape until after release. A single region of cytoplasm gave rise to more than one protoplast unit. Protoplasts released from spore germinants escaped from the tip of the germ tube, which was the region of the cell wall most susceptible to digestion. Protoplasts derived from spore germinants were more consistent in size and rounded up more rapidly. If a cross-wall had formed in a germinant then it gave rise to separate protoplasts from each cellular. compartment. Protoplasts of either type contained a single DNA region. These studies give an indication of the cellular organization of a streptomycete colony, which can be visualized as a multinucleated assemblage of cellular units in a common cytoplasm. The assembly of units separates into a number of protoplasts on digestion of the cell wall.

https://doi.org/10.1071/BI9850175

© CSIRO 1985

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