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  2. Sporogenesis - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sporogenesis

    The term sporogenesis can also refer to endospore formation in bacteria, which allows the cells to survive unfavorable conditions. Endospores are not reproductive structures and their formation does not require cell fusion or division. Instead, they form through the production of an encapsulating spore coat within the spore-forming cell.

  3. Endospore - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Endospore

    [1] [2] The name "endospore" is suggestive of a spore or seed-like form (endo means 'within'), but it is not a true spore (i.e., not an offspring). It is a stripped-down, dormant form to which the bacterium can reduce itself. Endospore formation is usually triggered by a lack of nutrients, and usually occurs in gram-positive bacteria.

  4. Sporulation in Bacillus subtilis - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sporulation_in_Bacillus...

    The wrong decision can be catastrophic: a vegetative cell will die if the conditions are too harsh, while bacteria forming spores in an environment which is conducive to vegetative growth will be out competed. [3] In short, initiation of sporulation is a very tightly regulated network with numerous checkpoints for efficient control. [citation ...

  5. Spore - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Spore

    Spores are usually haploid and grow into mature haploid individuals through mitotic division of cells (Urediniospores and Teliospores among rusts are dikaryotic). Dikaryotic cells result from the fusion of two haploid gamete cells. Among sporogenic dikaryotic cells, karyogamy (the fusion of the two haploid nuclei) occurs to produce a diploid cell.

  6. Sporangium - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sporangium

    It can be composed of a single cell or can be multicellular. Virtually all plants , fungi , and many other groups form sporangia at some point in their life cycle . Sporangia can produce spores by mitosis , but in land plants and many fungi, sporangia produce genetically distinct haploid spores by meiosis .

  7. Basidiospore - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Basidiospore

    A basidiospore is a reproductive spore produced by basidiomycete fungi, a grouping that includes mushrooms, shelf fungi, rusts, and smuts. Basidiospores typically each contain one haploid nucleus that is the product of meiosis, and they are produced by specialized fungal cells called basidia.

  8. Microspore - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Microspore

    Four chambers (pollen sacs) lined with nutritive tapetal cells are visible by the time the microspores are produced. After meiosis, the haploid microspores undergo several changes: The microspore divides by mitosis producing two cells. The first of the cells (the generative cell) is small and is formed inside the second larger cell (the tube cell).

  9. Autospore - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Autospore

    Trypanochloris can form more than 128 autospores from a single cell. [6] Differential interference contrast microscopy image of Pseudokirchneriella subcapitata cells dividing in two, four, and eight-autospore formation. [7] Autospores are the daughter cells formed by the internal division of a single cell. [8]