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Dive into the research topics where Maria Charzyńska is active.

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Featured researches published by Maria Charzyńska.


Protoplasma | 2000

Aspects of programmed cell death during leaf senescence of mono- and dicotyledonous plants

Ewa Simeonova; A. Sikora; Maria Charzyńska; Agnieszka Mostowska

SummaryLeaf senescence is a highly regulated stage in the plant life cycle, leading to cell death, recently examined as a type of the programmed cell death (PCD). One of the basic features of PCD is the condensation of nuclear chromatin which is caused by endonucleolytic degradation of nuclear DNA (nDNA). In our investigations, we applied the technique of the single-cell electrophoresis system (“comet assay”) in order to determine the type of nDNA fragmentation during leaf senescence. The comet assay, a sensitive method revealing nonrandom internucleosomal damage that is specific for PCD, is especially useful for the detection of nDNA degradation in isolated viable cells. Simultaneously, we analyzed the mesophyll cell ultrastructure and the photosynthetic-pigment concentration in the leaves of two species,Ornithogalum virens andNicotiana tabacum, representing mono- and dicotyledonous plants which differ in the pattern of leaf differentiation. These investigations demonstrated that, in both species, the comet assay revealed nDNA degradation in yellow-leaf protoplasts containing chloroplasts that showed already changed ultrastructure (swelled or completely degraded thylakoids) and cell nuclei with a significant condensation of chromatin. There was no nDNA degradation in green-leaf protoplasts containing differentiated chloroplasts with numerous grana stacks and nuclei with dispersed chromatin. The analysis of intermediate developmental stage showed that the degradation of nDNA precedes condensation of nuclear chromatin. Thus the comet assay is a very useful and sensitive method for early detection of PCD. Moreover, results of our studies indicate that leaf senescence involves PCD.


Sexual Plant Reproduction | 1991

Secretory tapetum of Brassica oleracea L.: polarity and ultrastructural features

M. Murgia; Maria Charzyńska; M. Rougier; Mauro Cresti

SummaryThe ultrastructure of the secretory, binucleate tapetum of Brassica oleracea in the micro spore mother cell (MMC) stage through to the mature pollen stage is reported. The tapetal cells differentiate as highly specialized cells whose development is involved in lipid accumulation in their final stage. They start breaking down just before anther dehiscence. Nuclei with dispersed chromatin, large nucleoli and many ribosomes in the cytoplasm characterize the tapetal cells. The wall-bearing tapetum phase ends at the tetrade stage. The dissolution of tapetal walls begins from the inner tangential wall oriented towards the loculus and proceeds gradually along the radial walls to the outer tangential one. The plasmodesmata transversing the radial walls between tapetal cells persist until the mature microspore, long after loss of the inner tangential wall. After wall dissolution, the tapetal protoplasts retain their integrity and position within the anther locule. The tapetal cell membrane is in direct contact with the exine of the microspores/pollen grains and forms tubular evaginations that increase its surface area and appear to be involved in the translocation of solutes from the tapetal cells to the microspores/ pollen grains. The tapetal cells exhibit a polarity expressed by spatial differentiation in the radial direction.


Planta | 2000

Localization of pectins in the pollen tube wall of Ornithogalum virens L. Does the pattern of pectin distribution depend on the growth rate of the pollen tube

Małgorzata Stępka; Fabricio Ciampolini; Maria Charzyńska; Mauro Cresti

Abstract. Monoclonal antibodies that recognize pectins were used for the localization of esterified (JIM7) and acidic, unesterified (JIM5) forms of pectin in pollen tube walls of Ornithogalum virens L. (x = n = 3). The results indicated that the distribution of the two forms of pectin in the pollen tube wall depended on the medium (liquid or solid) used for pollen germination. In pollen tubes grown in the liquid medium, the localization of JIM7 was limited to the very tip of the pollen tube, whereas the localization of JIM5 indicated a uniform distribution of unesterified pectins in the very tip of the tube and along the subapical parts of the tube wall. In tubes germinated on the medium stabilized with agar (1–2%) the localization of JIM7 and JIM5 indicated the presence of both forms of pectin in the tube tip and along the whole length of the pollen tube wall in a ring-like pattern. Thus, the localization of esterified pectins in the sub-apical part of the pollen tube wall, below the apex of the tube, is described for the first time. Measurements of the growth rates of pollen tubes growing on the two types of medium indicated that oscillations in tube growth rate occur but these do not coincide with the pattern of pectin distribution in the tube wall. Our results complement the previous data obtained for the localization of JIM5 and JIM7 in pollen tube walls of other plant species. (Y.-Q. Li et al. 1994, Sex Plant Reprod 7: 145–150) and provide new insight into an understanding of the construction of the pollen tube wall and the physiology of pollen grain germination.


Protoplasma | 1989

Origin of sperm cell association in the “male germ unit” ofBrassica pollen

Maria Charzyńska; M. Murgia; C. Milanesi; Mauro Cresti

SummaryThe association of the two sperm cells inBrassica napus pollen following the generative cell division was investigated. The generative cell during division is located in the center of the pollen grain, within the vegetative cell. The space present between the two cells is slightly irregular as seen following standard glutaraldehyde fixation. After completion of mitosis vesicles appear in the equatorial plane, coalescing centripetally to form a cell plate which fuses with the membrane of the generative cell, dividing it in two sperm cells. They are isolated from the vegetative cell by the space between the two cell membranes and are separated from each other by a similar space resulting from the cell plate formed during cytokinesis.


Sexual Plant Reproduction | 1988

Generative cell division and sperm cell formation in barley

Maria Charzyńska; F. Ciampolini; Mauro Cresti

SummaryShortly before and during division, the generative cell of barley (Hordeum vulgare L.) is located near the vegetative nucleus, in the peripheral layer of the highly vacuolated vegetative cell at the aperture pole. This position is also characteristic of the two resulting sperm cells. Conventional mitosis of the generative cell is followed by cytokinesis through cell plate formation. Just after division, the two sperm cells are enclosed together within a common “inner” vegetative cell plasma membrane, and they gradually separate from each other only during pollen maturation. The space between the generative or sperm cell plasma membrane and the vegetative cell plasma membrane is very thin and appears to be devoid of a cell wall. Both the generative cell and the young sperm cells contain a normal set of organelles; plastids devoid of starch are only sporadically observed. Our data indicate that in Hordeum vulgare the generative cell divides after migrating inside the pollen grain. This follows the pattern of development well established for several species with tricellular pollen.


Planta | 1996

Some events of mitosis and cytokinesis in the generative cell of Ornithogalum virens L.

Małgorzata Banaś; Uday K. Tirlapur; Maria Charzyńska; Mauro Cresti

The organization of the microtubule (Mt) cytoskeleton during mitosis and cytokinesis of the generative cell (GC) in Ornithogalum virens L. (bicellular pollen type, chromosome number, n = 3) from prophase to telophase/sperm formation was investigated by localization of α-tubulin immunofluorescence using a conventional fluorescence microscope and a confocal laser scanning microscope. Chromosomes were visualized with DNA-binding fluorochrome dyes (ethidium bromide and 4′6-diamino-2-phenyl-indole). The GC of O. virens is characterized by G2/M transition within the pollen grain and not in the pollen tube as occurs in the majority of species with bicellular pollen. It was found that prophase in the GC starts before anthesis and prometaphase takes place after 10 min of pollen germination. The prophase Mts are organized into three prominent bundles, located near the generative nucleus. The number of these Mt bundles is the same as the number of GC chromosomes, a relation which has not previously been considered in other species. The most evident feature in the prophase/ prometaphase transition of O. virens GC is a direct rapid rearrangement of Mt bundles into a network which appears to interact with kinetochores and form a typical prometaphase Mt organization. The metaphase chromosomes are arranged into a conventional equatorial plate, and not in tandem as is thought to be characteristic of GC metaphase. The metaphase spindle consists of kinetochore fibres and a few interzonal fibres which form dispersed poles. Anaphase is characterized by a significant elongation of the mitotic spindle concomitant with the extension of the distance between the opposite poles. At anaphase the diffuse poles converge. Cytokinesis is realized by cell plate formation in the equatorial plane of the GC. The phragmoplast Mts between two future sperm nuclei appear after Mts of the mitotic spindle have disappeared.


Sexual Plant Reproduction | 2004

Subcellular heterogeneity of mitochondrial membrane potential in anther tapetum

Joanna Leśniewska; Ewa Simeonova; Maria Charzyńska

Studies on animal material have revealed that changes in the mitochondrial permeability transition pore (PTP), which cause a reduction in the mitochondrial transmembrane potential (ΔΨm) followed by release of cytochrome c, belong to the earliest manifestations of some types of apoptosis. We have attempted to monitor the ΔΨm of mitochondria during programmed cell death (PCD) of the secretory tapetum using JC-1, a fluorochrome dye that detects mitochondrial membrane potential and to relate changes in this potential to mitochondrial ultrastructure. Analysis of tapetal cells isolated from Ornithogalum virens anthers revealed that the ΔΨm of mitochondria in the tapetal cells alters during development; the change, however, is not uniform in the mitochondrial population within a single tapetal cell. In young tapetal cells, at the tetrad stage, we detected only the red fluorescence of JC-1 aggregates in all tapetal mitochondria, which indicates highly negative ΔΨm. In an advanced stage of PCD at the late microspore stage, in each tapetal cell we detected both mitochondria with red (as formerly) and mitochondria with green fluorescence. The green fluorescence of JC-1 monomers indicates mitochondria with depolarised membranes. These changes in ΔΨm are related to observed changes in mitochondria ultrastructure. This is the first documentation of intracellular heterogeneity of ΔΨm during anther tapetum development. Alteration in ΔΨm suggests a relationship between mitochondrial function and PCD processes in tapetal cells.


Protoplasma | 1993

Early events in division of the generative cell ofOrnithogalum virens

Maria Charzyńska; Mauro Cresti

SummaryOrnithogalum virens is a bicellular pollen species. In mature pollen, the generative nucleus is at advanced prophase. Mitosis of the generative cell is resumed just after pollen rehydration and prometaphase occurs within 10 min of germination. Prometaphase is manifested by nuclear envelope breakdown and the appearance of spindle microtubules in the nucleoplasm region. At this stage the number of cytoplasmic microtubules located in the generative cell periphery appears to decrease. Endoplasmic reticulum-like cisternae originating from the nuclear envelope tend to be spaced around the chromosomes, outside the area of the forming mitotic spindle. Some also begin to penetrate the spindle area. The results are discussed in terms of the generative cell cycle in bicellular pollen.


Acta Societatis Botanicorum Poloniae | 2014

Application of the comet assay in studies of programmed cell death (PCD) in plants

Maria Charzyńska; Ewa Simeonova; Adam Sikora; Agnieszka Mostowska; Joanna Leśniewska


Acta Societatis Botanicorum Poloniae | 2015

Tradescantia bracteata pollen in vitro: pollen tubes development and mitosis

E. Lewandowska; Maria Charzyńska

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B. Hon

University of Warsaw

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