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1.
γ-Tubulin is an essential component of the microtubule organizing center (MTOC) responsible for nucleating microtubules in both plants and animals. Whereas γ-tubulin is tightly associated with centrosomes that are inheritable organelles in cells of animals and most algae, it appears at different times and places to organize the myriad specialized microtubule systems that characterize plant cells. We have traced the distribution of γ-tubulin through the cell cycle in representative land plants (embryophytes) and herein present data that have led to a concept of the pleiomorphic and migratory MTOC. The many forms of the plant MTOC at spindle organization constitute pleiomorphism, and stage-specific “migration” is suggested by the consistent pattern of redistribution of γ-tubulin during mitosis. Mitotic spindles may be organized at centriolar centrosomes (only in final divisions of spermatogenesis), polar organizers (POs), plastid MTOCs, or nuclear envelope MTOCs (NE-MTOCs). In all cases, with the possible exception of centrosomes in spermatogenesis, the γ-tubulin migrates to broad polar regions and along the spindle fibers, even when it is initially a discrete polar entity. At anaphase it moves poleward, and subsequently migrates from polar regions (distal nuclear surfaces) into the interzone (proximal nuclear surfaces) where interzonal microtubule arrays and phragmoplasts are organized. Following cytokinesis, γ-tubulin becomes associated with nuclear envelopes and organizes radial microtubule systems (RMSs). These may exist only briefly, before establishment of hoop-like cortical arrays in vegetative tissues, or they may be characteristic of interphase in syncytial systems where they serve to organize the common cytoplasm into nuclear cytoplasmic domains (NCDs).  相似文献   

2.
Recognition of homologous chromosomes during meiotic prophase is associated in most cases with the formation of the synaptonemal complex along the length of the chromosome. Telomeres, located at the nuclear periphery, are preferential initiation sites for the assembly of the synaptonemal complex. In most eukaryotic cells, telomeres cluster in a restricted area, leading to the bouquet configuration in leptotene-zygotene, while this typical organization progressively disappears in late zygotene-pachytene. We wondered whether such striking changes in the intranuclear ordering and pairing of meiotic chromosomes during the progression of prophase I could be correlated with activity of the centrosome and/or microtubule-organizing center (MTOC). Plant cells may be used as a model of special interest for this study as the whole nuclear surface acts as an MTOC, unlike other cell types where MTOCs are restricted to centrosomes or spindle pole bodies. Using a monoclonal antibody (mAb 6C6) raised against isolated calf centrosomes we found that the 6C6 antigen is present over the entire surface of the plant meiotic nucleus, in early prophase I, before chromosomal pairing. At zygotene, short fragments of chromosomes become stained near the nuclear envelope and within the nucleus. At pachytene, after complete synapsis, the labeling specifically concentrates within the synaptonemal complexes, although the nuclear surface is no longer reactive. Ultrastructural localization using immunogold labeling indicates that the 6C6 antigen is colocalized with the synaptonemal complex structures. Later in metaphase I, the antigen is found at the kinetochores. Our data favor the idea that the 6C6 antigen may function as a particular chromosomal passenger-like protein. These observations shed new light on the molecular organization of the plant synaptonemal complex and on the redistribution of cytoskeleton-related antigens during initiation of meiosis. They suggest that antigens of MTOCs are relocated to chromosomes during the synapsis process starting at telomeres and contribute to the spatial arrangement of meiotic chromosomes. Such cytoskeleton-related antigens may acquire different functions depending on their localization, which is cell-cycle regulated.  相似文献   

3.
Although seed plants have gamma-tubulin, a ubiquitous component of centrosomes associated with microtubule nucleation in algal and animal cells, they do not have discrete microtubule organizing centers (MTOCs) comparable to animal centrosomes, and the organization of microtubule arrays in plants has remained enigmatic. Spindle development in basal land plants has revealed a surprising variety of MTOCs that may represent milestones in the evolution of the typical diffuse acentrosomal plant spindle. We have isolated and characterized the gamma-tubulin gene from a liverwort, one of the extant basal land plants. Sequence similarity to the gamma-tubulin gene of higher plants suggests that the gamma-tubulin gene is highly conserved in land plants. The G9 antibody to fission yeast gamma-tubulin recognized a single band of 55 kD in immunoblots from bryophytes. Immunohistochemistry with the G9 antibody clearly documented the association of gamma-tubulin with various MTOC sites in basal land plants (e.g., discrete centrosomes with and without centrioles and the plastid surface in monoplastidic meiosis of bryophytes). Changes in the distribution of gamma-tubulin occur in a cell cycle-specific manner during monoplastidic meiosis in the liverwort Dumortiera hirsuta. gamma-Tubulin changes its localization from the plastid surface in prophase I to the spindle, from the spindle to phragmoplasts and the nuclear envelope in telophase I, and back to the plastid surfaces in prophase II. In vitro experiments show that gamma-tubulin is detectable on the surface of isolated plastids and nuclei of D. hirsuta, and microtubules can be repolymerized from the isolated plastids. gamma-Tubulin localization patterns on plastid and nuclear surfaces are not affected by the destruction of microtubules by oryzalin. We conclude that gamma-tubulin is a highly conserved protein associated with microtubule nucleation in basal land plants and that it has a cell cycle-dependent distribution essential for the orderly succession of microtubule arrays.  相似文献   

4.
Salt-extracted proteins of taxol-stabilized microtubules from Chinese hamster ovary cells arrested at mitosis were used to immunize mice for hybridoma production. From a group of related monoclonal antibodies (MAbs), one, C9, recognized an epitope on antigens localized by immunofluorescence microscopy to interphase centrosomes and nuclei. The availability of the nuclear antigen was cell cycle-dependent; however, permeabilization of cells before fixation revealed that the antigen was present throughout the cell cycle. The nuclear antigen was exposed during prophase and was released from the nucleus upon nuclear envelope breakdown filling the cytoplasm of the mitotic cell. Antigenic material re-accumulated at daughter nuclei and was concealed during G1 phase. Detergent extraction of the cytoplasmic antigen from mitotic cells enabled localization of antigens to centrosomes, kinetochores, and the furrowing region/midbody. Immunoblot analysis of cells of a variety of species of origin identified an approximate 250 kD polypeptide as corresponding to the nuclear antigen, whereas polypeptides of 107/117 kD as well as approximately 250 kD accounted for the mitotic cytoplasmic antigens. No polypeptides could be associated with antigens at centrosomes, kinetochores, or midbodies. This MAb joins the antibody preparations previously reported that describe nuclear antigens, or epitopes on antigens, enhanced at mitosis.  相似文献   

5.
Schuh M  Ellenberg J 《Cell》2007,130(3):484-498
Chromosome segregation in mammalian oocytes is driven by a microtubule spindle lacking centrosomes. Here, we analyze centrosome-independent spindle assembly by quantitative high-resolution confocal imaging in live maturing mouse oocytes. We show that spindle assembly proceeds by the self-organization of over 80 microtubule organizing centers (MTOCs) that form de novo from a cytoplasmic microtubule network in prophase and that functionally replace centrosomes. Initially distributed throughout the ooplasm, MTOCs congress at the center of the oocyte, where they contribute to a massive, Ran-dependent increase of the number of microtubules after nuclear envelope breakdown and to the individualization of clustered chromosomes. Through progressive MTOC clustering and activation of kinesin-5, the multipolar MTOC aggregate self-organizes into a bipolar intermediate, which then elongates and thereby establishes chromosome biorientation. Finally, a stable barrel-shaped acentrosomal metaphase spindle with oscillating chromosomes and astral-like microtubules forms that surprisingly exhibits key properties of a centrosomal spindle.  相似文献   

6.
S. Hasezawa  T. Nagata 《Protoplasma》1993,176(1-2):64-74
Summary A 49 kDa protein in tobacco BY-2 cells has been found to be cross-reactive with antibodies raised against a 51 kDa protein that was isolated from sea urchin centrosomes and identified as a microtubule-organizing center (MTOC) in animal cells. Tracing the fate of the 49 kDa protein during progression of the cell cycle in highly synchronized tobacco BY-2 cells revealed that this protein was colocalized with plant microtubules (MTs): the location of the 49 kDa protein coincided with preprophase bands (PPBs), mitotic spindles and phragmoplasts. Furthermore, between the M and G1 phases, the 49 kDa protein was observed in the perinuclear regions, in which the initials of MTs are organizing to form cortical MTs. At the G1 phase the location of the 49 kDa protein in the cell cortex coincided with that of the cortical MTs. It appeared that the 49 kDa protein in the cell cortex was transported as granules from the perinuclear regions. Thus, it is highly probable that the 49 kDa protein, which reacts with antibodies against the 51 kDa protein in sea urchin centrosomes, plays the role of an MTOC in plant cells. Thus, the mechanisms for organizing MTs in higher organisms appear to share a common protein, even though the organization of MTs is superficially very different in plant and animal cells.Abbreviations DAPI 4,6-diamidino-2-phenyl indole - MT microtubule - MTOC microtubule-organizing center - PAGE polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis - PBS phosphate-buffered saline - PPB preprophase band - SDS sodium dodecylsulfate  相似文献   

7.
During fertilization the sperm brings two centrosomes into the egg. One centrosome contains a centriole of normal length originally seen as the basal body of the sperm flagellum. Characteristically, the proximal half is enwrapped in osmiophilic material. This centrosome is attached to the centrosomal fossa, a bowl-shaped depression of the nuclear envelope of the male pronucleus. Microtubules radiate out from the osmiophilic half characterizing this structure as a centrosome and microtubule organizing center (MTOC). The second centrosome which also acts as an MTOC is attached to the mitochondrion of the sperm. At the beginning it appears as an unstructured accumulation of osmiophilic material out of which later on centriolar microtubules grow. Though this centrosome is marked by an immature centriole it is capable of organizing microtubules and of reproducing itself. This centrosome becomes loosely associated with the female pronucleus by means of microtubules. Then it separates from the mitochondrion which finally is lost. When the two pronuclei fuse, the centrosome derived from the basal body remains firmly attached to the centrosomal fossa, which has persisted in the envelope of the zygote nucleus after pronuclear fusion. Using the fossa as a marker of the position of this centrosome on the nuclear surface, we conclude that it is a stationary centrosome in the process of bipolarization for the first mitosis.  相似文献   

8.
Cortical microtubules are considered to regulate the direction of cellulose microfibril deposition. Despite their significant role in determining cell morphology, cortical microtubules completely disappear from the cell cortex during M phase and become reorganized at G1 phase. The mechanism by which these microtubules become properly formed again is, however, still unclear. We have proposed that the origin of cortical microtubules is on the daughter nuclear surface, but further cortical microtubule reorganization occurs at the cell cortex. Hence it is probable that the locations of microtubule organizing centers (MTOCs) are actively changing. However, the actual MTOC sites of cortical microtubules were not clearly determined. In this paper, we have examined the distribution of gamma-tubulin, one of the key molecules of MTOCs in various organisms, during cortical microtubule reorganization using both immunofluorescence and a GFP reporter system. Using a monoclonal antibody (clone G9) that recognizes highly conserved residues in y-tubulin, y-tubulin was found to be constitutively expressed and to be clearly localized to microtubule structures, such as the preprophase bands, spindles, and phragmoplasts, specific to each cell cycle stage. This distribution pattern was confirmed by the GFP reporter system. During cortical microtubule reorganization at the M to G1 transition phase, gamma-tubulin first accumulated at the daughter nuclear surfaces, and then seemed to spread onto the cell cortex along with microtubules elongating from the daughter nuclei. Based on the results, it was confirmed that daughter nuclear surfaces acted as origins of cortical microtubules, and that further reorganization occurred on the cell cortex.  相似文献   

9.
Pavla Binarova  P. Rennie  L. Fowke 《Protoplasma》1994,180(3-4):106-117
Summary The localization in higher plant cells of phosphorylated proteins recognized by the monoclonal antibody MPM-2 was investigated, with particular attention to putative microtubule organizing centres (MTOCs). Immunofluorescence and immunogold electron microscopy showed that MPM-2 did not localize with most putative MTOCs in cells and protoplasts of the gymnospermPicea glauca and in cells of the angiospermVicia faba. The distribution of phosphoproteins detected by MPM-2 was similar during mitosis in both species. At late interphase and early prophase MPM-2 preferentially labelled nucleoli and the region around the condensing chromosomes but not the cytoplasm. General labelling of the cytoplasm followed dissolution of the nuclear envelope and by prometaphase centromeres stained strongly. At metaphase and very early anaphase kinetochores stained strongly by immunofluorescence but only weakly using immunogold; spindle microtubules (MTs) showed little staining. Kinetochore staining disappeared during anaphase and by telophase centromeres and loose regions of chromatin in reforming nuclei were labelled. Treatment with the anti-microtubular drug amiprophosmethyl (APM) showed that the phosphorylation/dephosphorylation cycle detected by MPM-2 proceeded independently of the mitotic spindle. Staining of centromeres/kinetochores with MPM-2 suggests that phosphorylation and dephosphorylation of this region of mitotic chromosomes may be involved in chromosome organization, chromatid separation and MT nucleation and/or attachment.Abbreviations APM amiprophos-methyl - DAPI 4,6-diamidino-2-phenylindole - EGTA ethylene glycol-bis(-aminoethyl ether) - FITC fluorescein isothiocyanate - MT microtubule - MTOC microtubule organizing centre - MtSB microtubule stabilizing buffer - PBS phosphate buffered saline - PBSB phosphate buffered saline with bovine serum albumin - PIPES piperazine-N,N-bis (2-ethanesulfonic acid) - PPB preprophase band - SPB spindle pole body - TRITC tetramethylrhodamine isothiocyanate  相似文献   

10.
Chlamydiae traffic along microtubules to the microtubule organizing center (MTOC) to establish an intracellular niche within the host cell. Trafficking to the MTOC is dynein dependent although the activating and cargo-linking function of the dynactin complex is supplanted by unknown chlamydial protein(s). We demonstrate that once localized to the MTOC, the chlamydial inclusion maintains a tight association with cellular centrosomes. This association is sustained through mitosis and leads to a significant increase in supernumerary centrosomes, abnormal spindle poles, and chromosomal segregation defects. Chlamydial infection thus can lead to chromosome instability in cells that recover from infection.  相似文献   

11.
The interaction between centrosomes and kinetochores was studied in multinucleate cells induced by Colcemid treatment or by random cell fusion. Except for prematurely condensed chromosomes (PCC) of the G2-phase, PCCs do not develop their own spindle area. Perhaps the maturation promoting factor (MPF) fails to activate these centrosomes. In such PCCs, the kinetochore-centrosome interaction was found to be non-specific: sometimes only a few chromosomes of a group could establish connections with centrosomes, sometimes chromosomes from the same PCC group developed microtubule (MT) attachment with different centrosomes (not the pair), and sometimes kinetochores of PCC groups failed to interact with MTs. These findings explain the abnormal mitotic behaviour of PCCs as seen in the light microscope. These PCCs develop micronuclei or normal nuclei by nuclear re-formation in telophase. All the different PCC groups revealed kinetochores with kinetochore plates. It was shown that transformation of presumptive kinetochores to a trilaminar kinetochore does not depend on nuclear envelope breakdown or on the degree of chromosome condensation. This may be induced by the MPF which may initiate different events like chromosome condensation, nuclear envelope breakdown and kinetochore transformation by secondary factors. Other observations like establishment of connections by different chromosome groups to a common centrosome, kinetochore attachment of PCCs to different centrosomes, interaction of one kinetochore with two centrosomes, kinetochores being stretched and bent to receive microtubules and finally the failure of some kinetochores to develop MT attachment, all strongly suggest that the kinetochores serve as the point of termination rather than the nucleation sites of kinetochore MTs.  相似文献   

12.
We report here the isolation of a monoclonal antibody, J17, that reacts with a conserved vertebrate protein antigen that is present in the spindle apparatus during mitosis but found within the nucleus during interphase. Immunofluorescence microscopy demonstrates that the J17 antigen is found in numerous punctate regions that are distinct from nucleoli. Furthermore, this antigen is not directly associated with kinetochores, the nuclear envelope, or with metaphase chromosomes. — Antibody J17 immunoprecipitates a single polypeptide of very high molecular weight (over 250000) from K562 human erythroleukemia cells pulse-labeled with 14C-leucine. This polypeptide is converted quantitatively to a stable 220-kilodalton product within one cellular generation. We discuss the possible relevance of this processing event for transport into the nucleus. The J17 antigen is synthesized throughout the cell cycle in Chinese hamster ovary cells.  相似文献   

13.
Foot-and-mouth disease virus (FMDV), a member of the Picornaviridae, is a pathogen of cloven-hoofed animals and causes a disease of major economic importance. Picornavirus-infected cells show changes in cell morphology and rearrangement of cytoplasmic membranes, which are a consequence of virus replication. We show here, by confocal immunofluorescence and electron microscopy, that the changes in morphology of FMDV-infected cells involve changes in the distribution of microtubule and intermediate filament components during infection. Despite the continued presence of centrosomes in infected cells, there is a loss of tethering of microtubules to the microtubule organizing center (MTOC) region. Loss of labeling for gamma-tubulin, but not pericentrin, from the MTOC suggests a targeting of gamma-tubulin (or associated proteins) rather than a total breakdown in MTOC structure. The identity of the FMDV protein(s) responsible was determined by the expression of individual viral nonstructural proteins and their precursors in uninfected cells. We report that the only viral nonstructural protein able to reproduce the loss of gamma-tubulin from the MTOC and the loss of integrity of the microtubule system is FMDV 3C(pro). In contrast, infection of cells with another picornavirus, bovine enterovirus, did not affect gamma-tubulin distribution, and the microtubule network remained relatively unaffected.  相似文献   

14.
In vertebrate somatic cells, the centrosome functions as the major microtubule-organizing center (MTOC), which splits and separates to form the poles of the mitotic spindle. However, the role of the centriole-containing centrosome in the formation of bipolar mitotic spindles continues to be controversial. Cells normally containing centrosomes are still able to build bipolar spindles after their centrioles have been removed or ablated. In naturally occurring cellular systems that lack centrioles, such as plant cells and many oocytes, bipolar spindles form in the complete absence of canonical centrosomes. These observations have led to the notion that centrosomes play no role during mitosis. However, recent work has re-examined spindle assembly in the absence of centrosomes, both in cells that naturally lack them and those that have had them experimentally removed. The results of these studies suggest that an appreciation of microtubule network organization, both before and after nuclear envelope breakdown (NEB), is the key to understanding the mechanisms that regulate spindle assembly and the generation of bipolarity.Key words: centrosome, centriole, mitosis, spindle, cell cycle, meiosis, plant cell, microsurgery  相似文献   

15.
The mitotic cyclins promote cell division by binding and activating cyclin-dependent kinases (CDKs). Each cyclin has a unique pattern of subcellular localization that plays a vital role in regulating cell division. During mitosis, cyclin B1 is known to localize to centrosomes, microtubules, and chromatin. To determine the mechanisms of cyclin B1 localization in M phase, we imaged full-length and mutant versions of human cyclin B1-enhanced green fluorescent protein in live cells by using spinning disk confocal microscopy. In addition to centrosome, microtubule, and chromatin localization, we found that cyclin B1 also localizes to unattached kinetochores after nuclear envelope breakdown. Kinetochore recruitment of cyclin B1 required the kinetochore proteins Hec1 and Mad2, and it was stimulated by microtubule destabilization. Mutagenesis studies revealed that cyclin B1 is recruited to kinetochores through both CDK1-dependent and -independent mechanisms. In contrast, localization of cyclin B1 to chromatin and centrosomes is independent of CDK1 binding. The N-terminal domain of cyclin B1 is necessary and sufficient for chromatin association, whereas centrosome recruitment relies on sequences within the cyclin box. Our data support a role for cyclin B1 function at unattached kinetochores, and they demonstrate that separable and distinct sequence elements target cyclin B1 to kinetochores, chromatin, and centrosomes during mitosis.  相似文献   

16.
Mitosis-specific monoclonal antibodies block cleavage in amphibian embryos   总被引:3,自引:0,他引:3  
By microinjecting monoclonal antibodies that bind specifically to mitotic and meiotic cells of a variety of species, we studied the biological activity of antigens recognized by these antibodies. The antibodies recognize a family of phosphoprotein antigens that are found throughout the cytoplasm of mitotic cells and particularly at microtubule organizing centers, including centrosomes and kinetochores. Their binding is dependent on phosphorylation of the polypeptides. Immunoglobulins were introduced into Xenopus laevis and Rana pipiens oocytes or cleaving embryos using glass micropipettes. The ability of the antibody-injected oocytes to undergo mitosis or meiosis was compared with those injected with control mouse immunoglobulins. The antibodies failed to block chromosome condensation and germinal vesicle breakdown in progesterone-treated oocytes. However, functional mitotic spindles were not assembled in cleavage stage frog embryos injected with antibodies. In vitro, the binding of the antibodies to the antigens inhibited the dephosphorylation of the antigens by alkaline phosphatase. The antibody binding to the activated microtubule organizing centers (MTOC) seems to block not only the nucleation of microtubules and the organization of the mitotic spindle, but also the dephosphorylation of proteins associated with the MTOC that normally occurs at the mitosis-G1 transition.  相似文献   

17.
Lamin A/C is a major constituent of the nuclear lamina, a thin filamentous protein layer that lies beneath the nuclear envelope. Here we show that lamin A/C deficiency in mouse embryonic fibroblasts (Lmna(-/-) MEFs) diminishes the ability of these cells to polarize at the edge of a wound and significantly reduces cell migration speed into the wound. Moreover, lamin A/C deficiency induces significant separation of the microtubule organizing center (MTOC) from the nuclear envelope. Investigations using ballistic intracellular nanorheology reveal that lamin A/C deficiency also dramatically affects the micromechanical properties of the cytoplasm. Both the elasticity (stretchiness) and the viscosity (propensity of a material to flow) of the cytoplasm in Lmna(-/-) MEFs are significantly reduced. Disassembly of either the actin filament or microtubule networks in Lmna(+/+) MEFs results in decrease of cytoplasmic elasticity and viscosity down to levels found in Lmna(-/-) MEFs. Together these results show that both the mechanical properties of the cytoskeleton and cytoskeleton-based processes, including cell motility, coupled MTOC and nucleus dynamics, and cell polarization, depend critically on the integrity of the nuclear lamina, which suggest the existence of a functional mechanical connection between the nucleus and the cytoskeleton. These results also suggest that cell polarization during cell migration requires tight mechanical coupling between MTOC and nucleus, which is mediated by lamin A/C.  相似文献   

18.
We have used anti-tubulin antibodies and immunofluorescence microscopy to determine the overall distribution of microtubules during interphase and mitosis in both the myxamoebae and plasmodia of the slime mold Physarum polycephalum. We have paralleled these observations with electron microscopy of the same stages. The myxamoebae possess a network of cytoplasmic microtubules whilst the coenocytic plasmodium does not possess any cytoplasmic microtubules--at either interphase or mitosis. In plasmodia microtubules are, however, elaborated by an intranuclear microtubule organizing centre (MTOC) during prophase of mitosis and these microtubules proceed to form part of the mitotic spindle. There is little difference in the overall distribution and arrangement of microtubules during division of either the myxamoebal or plasmodial nuclei. These findings are discussed in relation to the synthesis of tubulin during the plasmodial cell cycle and the rearrangements of the nuclear envelope during mitosis.  相似文献   

19.
Aurora kinase A (AURKA), which is a centrosome-localized serine/threonine kinase crucial for cell cycle control, is critically involved in centrosome maturation and spindle assembly in somatic cells. Active T288 phosphorylated AURKA localizes to the centrosome in the late G2 and also spreads to the minus ends of mitotic spindle microtubules. AURKA activates centrosomal CDC25B and recruits cyclin B1 to centrosomes. We report here functions for AURKA in meiotic maturation of mouse oocytes, which is a model system to study the G2 to M transition. Whereas AURKA is present throughout the entire GV-stage oocyte with a clear accumulation on microtubule organizing centers (MTOC), active AURKA becomes entirely localized to MTOCs shortly before germinal vesicle breakdown. In contrast to somatic cells in which active AURKA is present at the centrosomes and minus ends of microtubules, active AURKA is mainly located on MTOCs at metaphase I (MI) in oocytes. Inhibitor studies using Roscovitine (CDK1 inhibitor), LY-294002 (PI3K inhibitor) and SH-6 (PKB inhibitor) reveal that activation of AURKA localized on MTOCs is independent on PI3K-PKB and CDK1 signaling pathways and MOTC amplification is observed in roscovitine- and SH-6- treated oocytes that fail to undergo nuclear envelope breakdown. Moreover, microinjection of Aurka mRNA into GV-stage oocytes cultured in 3-isobutyl-1-methyl xanthine (IBMX)-containing medium to prevent maturation also results in MOTC amplification in the absence of CDK1 activation. Over-expression of AURKA also leads to formation of an abnormal MI spindle, whereas RNAi-mediated reduction of AURKA interferes with resumption of meiosis and spindle assembly. Results of these experiments indicate that AURKA is a critical MTOC-associated component involved in resumption of meiosis, MTOC multiplication, proper spindle formation and the metaphase I-metaphase II transition.  相似文献   

20.
Summary Changes in the pattern of microtubules during the cell cycle of the hepaticReboulia hemisphaerica (Bryophyta) were studied by indirect immunofluorescence using conventional and confocal laser scanning microscopy (CLSM). The first indication that a cell is preparing for division is fusiform shaping of the nucleus accompanied by the appearance of well-defined polar organizers (POs) at the future spindle poles. Microtubules emanating from the POs ensheath the nucleus and eventually develop into the half-spindles of mitosis. Some of the microtubules from each PO pass tangential to the nucleus and interact in the region of the future mitotic equator. A preprophase band (PPB) forms in this region later in prophase and coexists with the prophase spindle. Thus, the plane of division appears to be determined by interaction of opposing arrays of microtubules emanating from POs. Prometaphase is marked by disappearance of the POs, loss of astral microtubules, and conversion of the fusiform spindle of prophase to a truncated, barrel-shaped spindle more typical of higher plants. Restoration of cortical microtubules in daughter cell occurs on the cell side distal to the new cell plate, but nucleation of microtubules is associated with the nuclear envelope and not with organized POs. At the next division POs appear at opposite poles of preprophase nuclei with no evidence of division and migration that is characteristic of cells with centriolar centrosomes. These data lend additional support for the view that mitosis in hepatics is transitional between green algae and higher plants.Abbreviations AMS axial microtubule system - CLSM confocal laser scanning microscopy - MTOC microtubule organizing center - PO polar organizer - PPB preprophase band of microtubules - QMS quadripolar microtubule system - TEM transmission electron microscopy  相似文献   

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