Network


Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.

Hotspot


Dive into the research topics where A.A.M. van Lammeren is active.

Publication


Featured researches published by A.A.M. van Lammeren.


Planta | 1985

Structure and function of the microtubular cytoskeleton during pollen development in Gasteria verrucosa (Mill.) H. Duval

A.A.M. van Lammeren; C.J. Keijzer; M. T. M. Willemse; H. Kieft

In a study of pollen development in Gasteria verrucosa, the changes in the spatial organization of microtubules were related to the processes of cell division, nuclear movement and cytomorphogenesis. Sections of polyethylene-glycol-embedded anthers of G. verrucosa were processed immunocytochemically to record the structure and succession of fluorescently labeled microtubular configurations. Using microspectrophotometric measurements the relative quantity of tubulin in microtubules per unit of cytoplasm was determined. Cell dimensions and nuclear positions were measured to relate changes in cell shape and nuclear movements to microtubular configurations. Microtubules were detected in the different cells during microsporogenesis and microgametogenesis. In microspore mother cells which are approximately isodiametric at interphase, microtubules were predominantly arranged in a criss-cross pattern. The microtubules probably function as a flexible cytoskeleton which sustains the integrity of the cytoplasm. Bundles of microtubules were observed in the microspores, in the generative cells and during nuclear division, where they functioned in establishing and maintaining cell and spindle shapes. Microtubules radiating from nuclear membranes appeared to fix the nucleus in position. In prophase of meiosis and after microspore mitosis, periods a high fluorescence intensity were distinguished indicating a variation in the quantity of microtubules.


Planta | 1995

Changes in synthesis and localization of members of the 70-kDa class of heat-shock proteins accompany the induction of embryogenesis in Brassica napus L. microspores

Jan Cordewener; Gerd Hause; E. Görgen; R. Busink; B. Hause; Hans J. M. Dons; A.A.M. van Lammeren; M. M. van Lookeren Campagne; P.M. Pechan

Elevation of the culture temperature to 32°C for approximately 8 h can irreversibly change the developmental fate of isolated Brassica napus microspores from pollen development to embryogenesis. This stress treatment was accompanied by de-novo synthesis of a number of heat-shock proteins (HSPs) of the 70-kDa class: HSP68 and HSP70. A detailed biochemical and cytological analysis was performed of the HSP68 and HSP70 isoforms. Eight HSP68 isoforms, one of which was induced three fold by the stress treatment, were detected on two-dimensional immunoblots. Immunocytochemistry revealed a co-distribution of HSP68 with DNA-containing organelles, presumably mitochondria. Six HSP70 isoforms were detected, one of which was induced six fold under embryogenic culture conditions. During normal pollen development, HSP70 was localized in the nucleoplasm during the S phase of the cell cycle, and predominantly in the cytoplasm during the remainder. Induction of embryogenic development in late unicellular microspores was accompanied by an intense anti-HSP70 labeling of the nucleoplasm during an elongated S phase. In early bicellular pollen the nucleus of the vegetative cell, which normally does not divide and never expresses HSP70, showed intense labeling of the nucleoplasm with anti-HSP70 after 8 h of culture under embryogenic conditions. These results demonstrate a strong correlation between the phase of the cell cycle, the nuclear localization of HSP70 and the induction of embryogenesis. As temperature stress alone is responsible for the induction of embryogenic development, and causes an altered pattern of cell division, there might be a direct involvement of HSP70 in this process.


Protoplasma | 1988

Structure and function of the microtubular cytoskeleton during endosperm development in wheat: an immunofluorescence study.

A.A.M. van Lammeren

SummaryThe three-dimensional structure of the microtubular cytoskeleton of developing wheat endosperm was investigated immunocytochemically. Semi-thin sections were prepared from polyethylene glycol embedded ovaries. At the free-nuclear stage the endosperm cytoplasm with regularly distributed nuclei surrounded a large central vacuole and exhibited an extensive network of fluorescent labelled microtubular assemblies radiating from each nucleus. As was found in other coenocytes, this particular and nuclear-dependent cytoskeletal configuration functions in the arrangement of nuclei and in the stabilization of the nuclear positions. At the beginning of cellularization of the endosperm the formation of vacuoles altered the radiating networks. It is likely that the radiating microtubular arrays function in the formation of phragmoplasts, independent of nuclear divisions. The formation of anticlinal cell walls, giving rise to openended cell cylinders, coincides with the occurrence of phragmoplast microtubular arrays which were demonstrated during the period of cell wall elongation. The microtubular system radiating from the nuclei in these cell cylinders anchored the nuclei in stage- and locus-specific positions. During the development of aleurone and inner endosperm cells, cell morphogenesis was related to earlier demonstrated types of microtubular configurations in the cortical cytoplasm. This suggests that a general mechanism is involved.


Journal of Biotechnology | 2003

Primmorphs from seven marine sponges: formation and structure

Detmer Sipkema; R. van Wielink; A.A.M. van Lammeren; J. Tramper; Ronald Osinga; René H. Wijffels

Primmorphs were obtained from seven different marine sponges: Stylissa massa, Suberites domuncula, Pseudosuberites aff. andrewsi, Geodia cydonium, Axinella polypoides, Halichondria panicea and Haliclona oculata. The formation process and the ultra structure of primmorphs were studied. A positive correlation was found between the initial sponge-cell concentration and the size of the primmorphs. By scanning electron microscopy (SEM) it was observed that the primmorphs are very densely packed sphere-shaped aggregates with a continuous pinacoderm (skin cell layer) covered by a smooth, cuticle-like structure. In the presence of amphotericin, or a cocktail of antibiotics (kanamycin, gentamycin, tylosin and tetracyclin), no primmorphs were formed, while gentamycin or a mixture of penicillin and streptomycin did not influence the formation of primmorphs. The addition of penicillin and streptomycin was, in most cases, sufficient to prevent bacterial contamination, while fungal growth was unaffected.


Planta | 2005

Intrusive growth of flax phloem fibers is of intercalary type.

Marina Ageeva; B. Petrovska; H. Kieft; Vadim V. Salnikov; A. V. Snegireva; J.E.G. van Dam; W.L.H. van Veenendaal; A.M.C. Emons; T. A. Gorshkova; A.A.M. van Lammeren

Flax (Linum usitatissimum L.) phloem fibers elongate considerably during their development and intrude between existing cells. We questioned whether fiber elongation is caused by cell tip growth or intercalary growth. Cells with tip growth are characterized by having two specific zones of cytoplasm in the cell tip, one with vesicles and no large organelles at the very tip and one with various organelles amongst others longitudinally arranged cortical microtubules in the subapex. Such zones were not observed in elongating flax fibers. Instead, organelles moved into the very tip region, and cortical microtubules showed transversal and helical configurations as known for cells growing in intercalary way. In addition, pulse-chase experiments with Calcofluor White resulted in a spotted fluorescence in the cell wall all over the length of the fiber. Therefore, it is concluded that fiber elongation is not achieved by tip growth but by intercalary growth. The intrusively growing fiber is a coenocytic cell that has no plasmodesmata, making the fibers a symplastically isolated domain within the stem.


Planta | 1989

Organization of the actin cytoskeleton during pollen development inGasteria verrucosa (Mill.) H. Duval visualized with rhodamine-phalloidin.

A.A.M. van Lammeren; J. Bednara; M. T. M. Willemse

The three-dimensional organization of the microfilamental cytoskeleton of developingGasteria pollen was investigated by light microscopy using whole cells and fluorescently labelled phalloidin. Cells were not fixed chemically but their walls were permeabilized with dimethylsulphoxide and Nonidet P-40 at premicrospore stages or with dimethylsulphoxide, Nonidet P-40 and 4-methylmorpholinoxide-monohydrate at free-microspore and pollen stages to dissolve the intine.Four strikingly different microfilamentous configurations were distinguished. (i) Actin filaments were observed in the central cytoplasm throughout the successive stages of pollen development. The network was commonly composed of thin bundles ramifying throughout the cytoplasm at interphase stages but as thick bundles encaging the nucleus prior to the first and second meiotic division. (ii) In released microspores and pollen, F-actin filaments formed remarkably parallel arrays in the peripheral cytoplasm. (iii) In the first and second meiotic spindles there was an apparent localization of massive arrays of phalloidin-reactive material. Fluorescently labelled F-actin was present in kinetochore fibers and pole-to-pole fibers during metaphase and anaphase. (iv) At telophase, microfilaments radiated from the nuclear envelopes and after karyokinesis in the second meiotic division, F-actin was observed in phragmoplasts.We did not observe rhodamine-phalloidin-labelled filaments in the cytoplasm after cytochalasin-B treatment whereas F-actin persisted in the spindle. Incubation at 4° C did not influence the existence of cytoplasmic microfilaments whereas spindle filaments disappeared. This points to a close interdependence of spindle microfilaments and spindle tubules.Based on present data and earlier observations on the configuration of microtubules during pollen development in the same species (Van Lammeren et al., 1985, Planta165, 1-11) there appear to be apparent codistributions of F-actin and microtubules during various stages of male meiosis inGasteria verrucosa.


Protoplasma | 1983

In vitro development of embryoids from punched leaf disc of Coffea canephora

E.S. Pierson; A.A.M. van Lammeren; J.H.N. Schel; G. Staritsky

SummaryThe development of embryoids on punched leaf expiants fromCoffea canephora was studied. Both culture conditions as well as structural changes were investigated. The expiants were placed on a modified Murashige and Skoog medium with different concentrations of KNO3. It was found that an increased amount of KNO3 did not raise the rate of embryoid formation.After an initial callus phase embryoids developed on the edges of the punched leaf discs. First embryoids appeared after 37 days in culture. Microscopical examination showed that they arised from clusters of small, plasma-rich cells, situated at the periphery of the callus mass. Because of the small width of the suspensors the embryoids most likely originated from single cells which, however, may be part of a larger proembryonal cell complex.


Journal of Microscopy | 2008

Hydrodynamic flow in the cytoplasm of plant cells

A. Esseling-Ozdoba; D. Houtman; A.A.M. van Lammeren; Erika Eiser; A.M.C. Emons

Plant cells show myosin‐driven organelle movement, called cytoplasmic streaming. Soluble molecules, such as metabolites do not move with motor proteins but by diffusion. However, is all of this streaming active motor‐driven organelle transport? Our recent simulation study ( Houtman et al., 2007 ) shows that active transport of organelles gives rise to a drag in the cytosol, setting up a hydrodynamic flow, which contributes to a fast distribution of proteins and nutrients in plant cells. Here, we show experimentally that actively transported organelles produce hydrodynamic flow that significantly contributes to the movement of the molecules in the cytosol. We have used fluorescence recovery after photobleaching and show that in tobacco Bright Yellow 2 (BY‐2) suspension cells constitutively expressing cytoplasmic green fluorescent protein (GFP), free GFP molecules move faster in cells with active transport of organelles than in cells where this transport has been inhibited with the general myosin inhibitor BDM (2,3‐butanedione monoxime). Furthermore, we show that the direction of the GFP movement in the cells with active transport is the same as that of the organelle movement and that the speed of the GFP in the cytosol is proportional to the speed of the organelle movement. In large BY‐2 cells with fast cytoplasmic streaming, a GFP molecule reaches the other side of the cell approximately in the similar time frame (about 16 s) as in small BY‐2 cells that have slow cytoplasmic streaming. With this, we suggest that hydrodynamic flow is important for efficient transport of cytosolic molecules in large cells. Hydrodynamic flow might also contribute to the movement of larger structures than molecules in the cytoplasm. We show that synthetic lipid (DOPG) vesicles and ‘stealth’ vesicles with PEG phospholipids moved in the cytoplasm.


Protoplasma | 1996

Changes in the microtubular cytoskeleton precede in vitro tuber formation in potato

M. J. Sanz; A. Mingo-Castel; A.A.M. van Lammeren; Dick Vreugdenhil

SummaryAn in vitro system for tuber formation was used to study early morphological and cytological changes occurring during tuber formation in potatoes, with special emphasis on the orientation of the microtubular cytoskeleton, visualized immunocytochemically. Axillary buds from potato plants were cultured in the presence or absence of gibberellin (GA), resulting in either tuber formation (without GA) or shoot formation (GA added). Tuber formation in the absence of GA was highly synchronous in individual buds, enabling the dissection of various aspects of tuberization. Under both conditions, starch started to accumulate. In the absence of GA, starch levels rapidly increased, concomitantly with tuber formation, whereas it slightly decreased in the presence of GA. Up to 4 days, the cortical MTs in the cells were oriented perpendicular to the longitudinal axis of the developing buds. Under tuber-inducing conditions this orientation changed into a longitudinal one at day 5. This change preceded a change in the direction of cell expansion. In the presence of GA no such reorientation was observed, cells continued to grow longitudinally, and a stoloniferous shoot was formed. The cytoskeletal changes preceded the visible swelling of the buds, observed after day 5, demonstrating that the reorientation of the microtubular cytoskeleton is one of the earliest steps observed so far in tuber formation in potatoes.


Plant Cell Tissue and Organ Culture | 1997

Comparison of NAA and 2,4-D induced somatic embryogenesis in Cassava.

E. Sofiari; C.J.J.M. Raemakers; E. Kanju; K. Danso; A.A.M. van Lammeren; E. Jacobsen; Richard G. F. Visser

NAA and 2,4-D were compared for their ability to induce somatic embryogenesis in cassava (Manihot esculenta Crantz). In all seven cultivars tested, only 2,4-D had the capacity to induce primary somatic embryos from leaf explants, however, both NAA and 2,4-D were capable of inducing secondary somatic embryos. More secondary somatic embryos were formed in NAA than in 2,4-D medium. Furthermore, the maturation period for secondary somatic embryos was shorter in NAA medium than in 2,4-D medium. In some cultivars, repeated subculture of secondary somatic embryos in NAA medium resulted in a gradual shift from somatic embryogenesis to adventitious root formation. This shift could be stopped and reversed by subculture of the material in 2,4-D medium. In NAA medium the most secondary somatic embryos were formed when they were subcultured every 15 days whereas in 2,4-D a 20 day subculture interval was optimal. Subculture of secondary somatic embryos at a high inoculum density (>1.5 g jar−1) in NAA medium did not result in the formation of secondary somatic embryos, whereas in 2,4-D it lead to the formation of globular secondary somatic embryos. With 2,4-D the newly induced secondary somatic embryos were connected vertically to the explant and with NAA medium horizontally. For all cultivars tested, desiccation stimulated normal germination of NAA-induced somatic embryos. However, the desiccated, secondary somatic embryos required a medium supplemented with BA for high frequency germination. The concentration of BA needed for high frequency germination was higher when the desiccated secondary somatic embryos were cultured in light instead of dark. In only one cultivar desiccation enhanced germination of 2,4-D induced secondary somatic embryos and in three other cultivars it stimulated only root formation.

Collaboration


Dive into the A.A.M. van Lammeren's collaboration.

Top Co-Authors

Avatar

H. Kieft

Wageningen University and Research Centre

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

F.B.F. Bronsema

Wageningen University and Research Centre

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

W.J.F. van Oostveen

Wageningen University and Research Centre

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

I.R. von Recklinghausen

Wageningen University and Research Centre

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

J.H.N. Schel

Wageningen University and Research Centre

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

W.L.H. van Veenendaal

Wageningen University and Research Centre

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

P.E. Wittich

Wageningen University and Research Centre

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

A. Iwanowska

Wageningen University and Research Centre

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

S.P.C. Groot

Wageningen University and Research Centre

View shared research outputs
Researchain Logo
Decentralizing Knowledge