Plastoglobules have been isolated in pure form from petals of the pansy, Viola tricolor L. Their chemical composition has been determined up to a recovery of 96% dry weight. Triacyl glycerols (57%) as well as carotenoids and their esters (23%) are the main constituents. Polar lipids, proteins, alkanes, phytyl esters, plastid quinones, and steryl esters have been detected in smaller amounts (cf. Table 1). The mean diameter of chromoplast globules is 280±70 nm (corresponding to a volume of 11.7×10(6) nm(3)), their buoyant density 0.93 g cm(-3). The plastoglobules are devoid of a surrounding unit membrane. However, electron microscopical evidence and analytical data are consistent with a structural model envisaging the globules to consist mainly of an apolar core, covered by a 'half unit membrane' of polar constituents.
Cryptomonads are unicellular algae with chloroplasts surrounded by four membranes. Between the inner and the outer pairs of membranes is a narrow plasmatic compartment which contains a nucleus-like organelle called the nucleomorph. Using pulsed field gel electrophoresis it is shown that the nucleomorph of the cryptomonad Pyrenomonas salina contains three linear chromosomes of 195 kb, 225 kb and 240 kb all of which encode rRNAs. Thus, this vestigial nucleus has a haploid genome size of 660 kb, harboring the smallest eukaryotic genome known so far. From the cell nucleus of P. salina at least 20 chromosomes ranging from 230 kb to 3.000 kb were fractionated. Here, the rDNA was detected on a single chromosome of about 2.500 kb.
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.