What's the difference between sporangium and sporogenesis?

Sporangium


Definition:

  • (n.) A spore case in the cryptogamous plants, as in ferns, etc.

Example Sentences:

  • (1) This "belt," usually first observed toward the center of the sporangium, developed without changing thickness or appearance over the surface of the forespore.
  • (2) It is proposed that simple, eucarpic, monocentric chytrids which discharge zoospores following dissolution of the sporangium wall evolved into multipapilliate species of Rhizophydium and 2 lines of evolution from these species are documented with examples.
  • (3) The cytoplasmic sporangium cleavage is brought about by the fusion of flagellar sheaths and cleavage vesicles.
  • (4) The mature resting sporangium (RS) wall of Coelomomyces dodgei (Chytridiomycetes; Blastocladiales) consists of three principal layers: (I) an outer pigmented layer (1.8-2.2 microns) that contains polysaccharide, (II) a middle electron translucent layer (1.3-1.6 microns) comparatively free of polysaccharide, and (III) an inner layer (125 nm) rich in polysaccharide that surrounds the meiospores.
  • (5) By inference, the sporulation division septum locus is distal to the ultimate normal cell division septum, i.e., proximal to the "old" pole of the B. megaterium sporangium.
  • (6) With the progress of spore encapsulation, the tyrocidine production migrated from the soluble fraction into the forespore, terminating with the separation of forespores from the sporangium membrane.
  • (7) Similarity of these bodies to sporangium-like structures is suggested.
  • (8) Using a transcriptional fusion of the spoIVC gene to the lacZ gene of Escherichia coli, we found that spoIVC expression was turned on at the third to fourth hour of sporulation (at about the developmental stage [IV] that its products are required in spore formation) and that this transcription was largely restricted to the mother cell chamber of the sporangium.
  • (9) However, a decrease in bacterial toxicity occurred with sporangium lysis.
  • (10) The transcriptional activity of the two genomes of the sporangium during spore formation was determined by pulse-labeling bacteria with 3H-uracil at different times of sporulation and preparing them for high resolution autoradiography.
  • (11) It was placed into group 3 of the genus Bacillus on the basis of its cellular morphology, the morphology of the sporangium, and the location of the spore within the cell.
  • (12) This suggests that the selective incorporation into the sporangium of either the "older" or "younger" chromosome of a vegetative cell does not occur in the course of spore formation.
  • (13) To investigate whether expression of spoIIM is required in the forespore compartment of the sporangium, we have constructed a new integrational vector, pKSV7, which contains temperature-sensitive replication functions derived from pE194ts.
  • (14) The electronmicroscopic examination of the colony revealed sporangium containing spores and characteristic dense body and plastids in the spores.
  • (15) The ability of Achlya to incorporate [1-14C]acetate into lipid was maximal at the time of sporangium formation, and glycerides were the principal component of total lipid to become 14C-labelled at all stages of the life cycle.
  • (16) The transcellular electric current apparently plays no role in sporangium formation or in spore cleavage.
  • (17) The peritumoural region of a squamous cell carcinoma of the tongue when examined with light and electron microscope showed nodular bodies in the submucosa with all the distinctive features of 'sporangium and 'spores' of rhinosporidiosis.
  • (18) A septum within each sporangium divides the forespore from the basal or parasporal portion of the cell.
  • (19) Sporulation in Bacillus subtilis is a simple developmental system in which a single cell undergoes differentiation to two 'sister' cells, namely the prespore and the sporangium.
  • (20) Subsequently, the young cell elongates, becomes somewhat deformed, and then emerges through a narrow aperture in the inflexible coats of the spore, finally rupturing the sporangium.

Sporogenesis


Definition:

  • (n.) reproduction by spores.

Example Sentences:

  • (1) beta-Phenethyl alcohol, fluoroacetic acid, and 2-picolinic acid inhibited anaerobic sporogenesis almost completely, butyrate biosynthesis by >87%, and acetate accumulation by 50 to 62%, showing a direct relationship between butyric type of fermentation and anaerobic sporulation.
  • (2) Spores of Bacillus megaterium QM B1551 germinated, elongated, and resporulated (microcycle sporogenesis) in simple chemically defined media which permitted no cell division.
  • (3) Wall ultrastructure and sporogenesis were studied in plasmodia of Henneguya adiposa Minchew which infects the channel catfish, Ictalurus punctatus (Rafinesque).
  • (4) The resulting transformants appear normal for cytokinesis, and also are fully competent for sporogenesis, confirming that reintroduction of the myosin gene is sufficient to restore these properties.
  • (5) These data, accounting for 70 to 75% of the initial radioactivity, confirmed the hypothesis that the major role of acetate, and subsequently of poly-beta-hydroxybutyrate, in sporulation of B. cereus T is to provide carbon precursors and energy for sporogenesis.
  • (6) Microcycle sporogenesis induced in Bacillus cereus T by phosphate limitation occurs over a narrow range of phosphate to spore inoculum ratios.
  • (7) The study of the antibiotic effect on bacterial sporogenesis showed negative results which are discussed in the paper along two directions: (1) the antibiotics did not probably participate in regulation of the bacteria cell differentiation, (2) the antibiotics regulated the bacterial sporogenesis though their effect was not as yet detected because of methodical difficulties.
  • (8) Most of the information about the ultrastructural changes accompanying the sporogenesis refer to the first stage of the process, but nothing has been published about the evolution of the sporulation septum during maturation.
  • (9) Differences in the effect of the same sugars on the formation of spores by these microorganisms and clearly expressed sporogenesis-inhibiting effect of glucose (and also of lactose in clostridia) have been demonstrated.
  • (10) Sporogenesis is initiated by the envelopment of one vegetative cell by another.
  • (11) Although under some conditions the sporogenesis and the synthesis of S-variant toxin began two hours earlier than these processes in R-variant cells which were observed, respectively, after 10 or 12 hours from the beginning of the experiment, the intensities of sporogenesis and toxin production as well as the exit of spores and toxin excretion from cells were similar after 24 hours.
  • (12) According to this hypothesis, either the lysS1 enzyme is altered during sporogenesis or some physiological or structural aspect of this developmental phase can stabilize the mutant phenotype and thereby rescue cells from thermal death.
  • (13) At periods in spore outgrowth and sporogenesis these cells become refractory to thermal death.
  • (14) Acetate and a small amount of a tricarboxylic acid cycle intermediate were the minimal organic metabolic requirements for microcycle sporogenesis.
  • (15) Two anther cDNA libraries were constructed, one from anthers of 1.2-1.8 mm long buds (sporogenesis library) and one from anthers of 1.8-4.0 mm long buds (microspore development library).
  • (16) Sporogenesis by the biphasic system was more rapid, convenient, and economical, and yielded as many or more heat-resistant (80 C, 10 min) spores per milliliter as by the conventional technique.
  • (17) Ultrathin sections were prepared from cultures of Bacillus megaterium QM B1551 undergoing microcycle sporogenesis (initial spore to primary cell to second-stage spore without intervening cell division) on a chemically defined medium.
  • (18) Sporogenesis was asynchronous with simple unicellular stages adjacent to more complex forms with developing polar capsules and valves.
  • (19) It was suggested that bacitracin and the serine proteases were not specific regulators of sporogenesis in B. licheniformis and their biological function under the natural conditions included, respectively, the antibiotic action and hydrolysis of proteins and peptides of the environment and cells.
  • (20) The onset of sporogenesis was always accompanied by a new accumulation of glycogen in sporulating hyphae.

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