The objective of this study was to determine the effects of ozone on membrane lipids and on the electron-density patterns of cell membranes in electron micrographs. Analysis of fatty acids from tobacco leaves fumigated with ozone indicated that there was no significant difference between the ozone-treated and the control plants in the relative amounts of the fatty acids. This suggests that if the primary site of ozone action is unsaturated lipids in membranes then the amounts of affected unsaturated fatty acids are too small to be detected by gas chromatography. In support of this, characteristic electron-microscopic images of membranes are observed in cells of fumigated leaves. However, measurements of the length and width of the chloroplasts and the determination of axial ratios indicated that the ozone treatment resulted in a shrinkage of the chloroplasts. In contrast, mitochondrial changes are apparently explained in terms of ozone-induced swelling.
Trichomes on the orchid ovary are a possible site of synthesis and secretion of the floral scent. Scanning electron microscopy of these trichomes shows a bulbous cell on a two‐celled stalk. Thin sections of the tip cell revealed the morphology of an active, secretory cell with unusual coated vesicles in the extra‐cellular deposition. Abundant smooth endoplasmic reticulum (ER) aggregated beneath the plasma membrane in the apical region of the cell and the limited dictyosomes in the cell suggest direct secretion by ER. Numerous lipid droplets are present in the apical area. Plastids, found only in the basal region of this cell, are more round in profile than typical chloroplasts and contain only a few unstacked thylakoids and a limited membranous reticulum. In addition to the normal plastid envelope, a double layer of membrane (probably ER) is tightly appressed to each dense, starch‐free plastid. Highly specialized morphology and subcellular localization of organelles suggest the secretory nature of these trichomes.
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