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1.
Centrosomes are undetectable in unfertilized sea urchin eggs, and normally the sperm introduces the cell's microtubule-organizing center (MTOC) at fertilization. However, artificial activation or parthenogenesis triggers microtubule assembly in the unfertilized egg, and this study explores the reappearance and behavior of the maternal centrosome. During activation with A23187 or ammonia, microtubules appear first at the cortex; centrosomal antigen is detected diffusely throughout the entire cytoplasm. Later, the centrosome becomes more distinct and organizes a radial microtubule shell, and eventually a compact centrosome at the egg center organizes a monaster. In these activated eggs, centrosomes undergo cycles of compaction and decompaction in synchrony with the chromatin, which also undergoes cycles of condensation and decondensation. Parthenogenetic activation with heavy water (50% D2O) or the microtubule-stabilizing drug taxol (10 microM) induces numerous centrosomal foci in the unfertilized sea urchin egg. Within 15 min after incubation in D2O, numerous fine centrosomal foci are detected, and they organize a connected network of numerous asters which fill the entire egg. Taxol induces over 100 centrosomal foci by 15 min after treatment, which organize a corresponding number of asters. The centrosomal material in either D2O- or taxol-treated eggs aggregates with time to form fewer but denser foci, resulting in fewer and larger asters. Fertilization of eggs pretreated with either D2O or taxol shows that the paternal centrosome is dominant over the maternal centrosome. The centrosomal material gradually becomes associated with the enlarged sperm aster. These experiments demonstrate that maternal centrosomal material is present in the unfertilized egg, likely as dispersed undetectable material, which can be activated without paternal contributions. At fertilization, paternal centrosomes become dominant over the maternal centrosomal material.  相似文献   

2.
Anti-tubulin antibodies and confocal immunofluorescence microscopy were used to examine the organization and regulation of cytoplasmic and cortical microtubules during the first cell cycle of fertilized Xenopus eggs. Appearance of microtubules in the egg cortex temporally coincided with the outgrowth of the sperm aster. Microtubules of the sperm aster first reached the animal cortex at 0.25, (times normalized to first cleavage), forming a radially organized array of cortical microtubules. A disordered network of microtubules was apparent in the vegetal cortex as early as 0.35. Cortical microtubule networks of both animal and vegetal hemispheres were reorganized at times corresponding to the cortical rotation responsible for specification of the dorsal-ventral (D-V) axis. Optical sections suggest that the cortical microtubules are continuous with the microtubules of the sperm aster in fertilized eggs, or an extensive activation aster in activated eggs. Neither assembly and organization, nor disassembly of the cortical microtubules coincided with MPF activation during mitosis. However, cycloheximide or 6-dimethylaminopurine, which arrest fertilized eggs at interphase, blocked cortical microtubule disassembly. Injection of p13, a protein that specifically inhibits MPF activation, delayed or inhibited cortical microtubule breakdown. In contrast, eggs injected with cyc delta 90, a truncated cyclin that arrest eggs in M-phase, showed normal microtubule disassembly. Finally, injection of partially purified MPF into cycloheximide-arrested eggs induced cortical microtubule breakdown. These results suggest that, despite a lack of temporal coincidence, breakdown of the cortical microtubules is dependent on the activation of MPF.  相似文献   

3.
We have assayed various materials for their ability to induce aster formation by microinjection into unfertilized eggs of Xenopus laevis. We have found that purified basal bodies from Chlamydomonas reinhardtii and Tetrahymena pyriformis induce the formation of asters and irregular cleavage furrows within 1 h after injection. Other microtubule structures such as flagella, flagellar axonemes, cilia, and brain microtubules are completely ineffective at inducing asters or cleavage furrows in unfertilized eggs. When known amounts of sonicated Tetrahymena and Chlamydomonas preparations are injected into unfertilized eggs, 50% of the injected eggs show a furrowing response at approximately 3 cell equvalents for Chlamydomonas and 0.1 cell equivalent for Tetrahymena. These results are close to those expected if basal bodies were the effective astral-inducing agent in these cells. Other materials effective at inducing asters in unfertilized eggs, such as crude brain nuclei, sperm, and a particulate fraction from brain known to induce parthenogenesis in eggs of Rana pipiens, probably contain centrioles as the effective agent. Our experiments provide the first functional assay to indicate that centrioles play an active role in aster initiation. None of the injected materials effective in unfertilized eggs produced any observable response in fully grown oocytes. Oocytes and eggs were found to have equal tubulin pools as judged by colchicine-binding activity. Therefore, the inability of oocytes to form asters cannot be due to a lack of an organizing center or to a lack of tubulin. Experiments in which D2O was found to stimulate aster-like fibrous areas in eggs but not oocytes suggest that the inability of oocytes to form asters may be due to an inability of tubulin in oocytes to assemble.  相似文献   

4.
Cleavage cycles commence and chromosome and centrosome cycles proceed in harmony following fertilization of Drosophila eggs and completion of the meiotic divisions. The sperm-introduced centrioles replicate, separate, and while recruit pericentriolar material centrosomes (CS) form. The CS nucleate asters of microtubules (MT). Spindles form following interaction of some astral MT with kinetochores. In unfertilized eggs, chromosomes do not replicate, and CS and MT asters never form, although their components are present in the egg cytoplasm; unknown mechanisms prevent chromosome replication and CS and MT assembly. In unfertilized Laborc(D) eggs, rudimentary CS assemble spontaneously and instantaneously and nucleate small MT asters. In fertilized Laborc(D) eggs, normal CS form and organize normal asters. However, the CS replicate prior to accomplishment of the first mitosis, and spindles with multiple CS develop. In fertilized Laborc(D) eggs, while the chromosome cycles cease, CS cycles proceed as in wild type. Knowing that Laborc(D) is a dominant-negative mutation and encodes the formation of mutant cytoplasmic dynein heavy chain molecules, we show here that cytoplasmic dynein is involved in prevention of CS assembly in unfertilized eggs and establishing harmony between the chromosome and the CS cycles.  相似文献   

5.
Multiple asters can be artificially induced in sea urchin fertilized eggs by the microinjection of the centriolar fraction of sperm homogenate. Investigation was continued by the electron microscopy to determine whether the multi-aster formation was due to the centrioles or the contaminants in the injected sperm fraction. Thirty three asters in 3 operated eggs were thoroughly examined, and we confirmed that the presence of centrioles in the central region of 26 asters. We considered that the rest of them might contained the centrioles in the sections lost during the preparation procedures. Fragmented axoneme, the plug of electron dense material, and the centriolar fossa, which were usually accompanied with the isolated centrioles, disappeared from the centrioles in these multiple asters. However, electron dense, amorphous materials were formed associating with the triplet blades and distributed around the centrioles. Many astral microtubules were terminated in these pericentriolar materials. Results obtained suggest that, although the pericentriolar material is acting as the microtubule organizing center, all multiple asters, except those derived from fertilization (2 asters per egg), are most likely induced by the injected centrioles and not by the contaminants.  相似文献   

6.
Tram U  Sullivan W 《Current biology : CB》2000,10(22):1413-1419
Background: In the majority of animals, the centrosome-the microtubule-organizing center of the cell-is assembled from components of both the sperm and the egg. How the males of the insect order Hymenoptera acquire centrosomes is a mystery, as they originate from virgin birth.Results: To address this issue, we observed centrosome, spindle and nuclear behavior in real time during early development in the parthenogenetic hymenopteran Nasonia vitripennis. Female meiosis was identical in unfertilized eggs. Centrosomes were assembled before the first mitotic division but were inherited differently in unfertilized and fertilized eggs. In both, large numbers of asters appeared at the cortex of the egg after completion of meiosis. In unfertilized eggs, the asters migrated inwards and two of them became stably associated with the female pronucleus and the remaining cytoplasmic asters rapidly disappeared. In fertilized eggs, the Nasonia sperm brought in paternally derived centrosomes, similar to Drosophila melanogaster. At pronuclear fusion, the diploid zygotic nucleus was associated only with paternally derived centrosomes. None of the cytoplasmic asters associated with the zygotic nucleus and, as in unfertilized eggs, they rapidly degenerated.Conclusions: Selection and migration of the female pronucleus is independent of the sperm and its aster. Unfertilized male eggs inherit maternal centrosomes whereas fertilized female eggs inherit paternal centrosomes. This is the first system described in which centrosomes are reciprocally inherited. The results suggest the existence of a previously undescribed mechanism for regulating centrosome number in the early embryo.  相似文献   

7.
To determine the responsible components of isolated sperm centrioles for the aster induction in sea urchin eggs, the sperm centriolar fraction was treated with various enzymes and was injected into the unfertilized eggs, then the aster formation in first division was observed after fertilization.
Treatment with 1 μg/ml or higher concentration of trypsin inhibited the centriolar activity for aster induction, whereas the treatment with 50 μg/ml of DNase 1, 80 μg/ml of RNase A, 40 μg/ml of RNase T1, or 0.1 μg/ml of trypsin had no inhibitory effect to induce asters. Injection of 0.5 μg/ml of RNase A or 1 mUg/ml of RNase T1 into the egg caused the detention of mitosis at the streak stage. To examine the temperature effect for aster induction, the centriolar fraction was pre-treated with boiling temperature, and it was found that the fraction became incapable to induce any aster.
Results obtained suggest that the effective components of the sperm centriolar fraction to induce asters in the fertilized sea urchin eggs are the proteins but not the nucleic acids. The aster inducing activity is destroyed by heat treatment.  相似文献   

8.
Microinjected Polystyrene Beads Move Along Astral Rays in Sand Dollar Eggs   总被引:2,自引:2,他引:0  
Movements of polystyrene beads along astral rays of the sperm aster and the mitotic aster were investigated in eggs of the sand dollars, Clypeaster japonicus and Scaphechinus mirabilis . Polystyrene beads injected into the unfertilized egg were at a standstill in the protoplasm. After fertilization, these beads exhibited movements toward the center of the sperm aster along the rays, and finally gathered around the astral center. They were distributed in blastomeres together with the mitotic centers during successive cleavages. When injected into eggs during mitosis, beads moved to the centers of the mitotic asters along astral rays. The injected beads did not move when the aster was disorganized by treatment with Colcemid, and moved when it formed after UV-irradiation. These results indicate that microtubules of astral rays are essential to the movement of polystyrene beads. The movement of small polystyrene beads (0.2–0.3 μm in diameter) resembled the saltatory movement of endogenous cytoplasmic granules, and the movement of large beads (ca. 1 μm in diameter) resembled the female pronuclear migration. All of these movements observed in fertilized eggs were demonstrated to be microtubule-dependent, perhaps sharing the same basic mechanisms.  相似文献   

9.
Microtubules in ascidian eggs during meiosis, fertilization, and mitosis   总被引:14,自引:0,他引:14  
The sequential changes in the distribution of microtubules during germinal vesicle breakdown (GVBD), fertilization, and mitosis were investigated with antitubulin indirect immunofluorescence microscopy in several species of ascidian eggs (Molgula occidentalis, Ciona savignyi, and Halocynthia roretzi). These alterations in microtubule patterns were also correlated with observed cytoplasmic movements. A cytoplasmic latticework of microtubules was observed throughout meiosis. The unfertilized egg of M. occidentalis had a small meiotic spindle with wide poles; the poles became focused after egg activation. The other two species had more typical meiotic spindles before fertilization. At fertilization, a sperm aster first appeared near the cortex close to the vegetal pole. It enlarged into an unusual asymmetric aster associated with the egg cortex. The sperm aster rapidly grew after the formation of the second polar body, and it was displaced as far as the equatorial region, corresponding to the site of the myoplasmic crescent, the posterior half of the egg. The female pronucleus migrated to the male pronucleus at the center of the sperm aster. The microtubule latticework and the sperm aster disappeared towards the end of first interphase with only a small bipolar structure remaining until first mitosis. At mitosis the asters enlarged tremendously, while the mitotic spindle remained remarkably small. The two daughter nuclei remained near the site of cleavage even after division was complete. These results document the changes in microtubule patterns during maturation in Ascidian oocytes, demonstrate that the sperm contributes the active centrosome at fertilization, and reveal the presence of a mitotic apparatus at first division which has an unusually small spindle and huge asters.  相似文献   

10.
The single axis (oral-aboral) and two planes of symmetry of the ctenophore Beroe ovata become established with respect to the position of zygote nucleus formation and the orientation of first cleavage. Bisection of Beroe eggs at different times revealed that differences in egg organisation are established in relation to the presumptive oral-aboral axis before first cleavage. Lateral fragments produced after but not before the time of first mitosis developed into larvae lacking comb-plates on one side. Time-lapse video demonstrated that waves of cytoplasmic reorganisation spread through the layer of peripheral cytoplasm (ectoplasm) of the egg during the 80 minute period between pronuclear fusion and first cleavage, along the future oral-aboral axis. These waves are manifest as the progressive displacement and dispersal of plaques of accumulated organelles around supernumerary sperm nuclei, and a series of surface movements. Their timing and direction of propagation suggest they may be involved in establishing cytoplasmic differences with respect to the embryonic axis.Inhibitor experiments suggested that the observed cytoplasmic reorganisation involves microtubules. Nocodazole and taxol, which prevent microtubule turnover,blocked plaque dispersal and reduced surface movements.The microfilament-disrupting drug cytochalasin B did not prevent plaque dispersal but induced abnormal surface contractions. We examined changes in microtubule organisation using immunofluorescence on eggs fixed at different times and in live eggs following injection of rhodamine-tubulin. Giant microtubule asters become associated with each male pronucleus after the end of meiosis. Following pronuclear fusion they disappear successively, those nearest the zygote nucleus shrinking first, to establish gradients of aster size within single eggs. Regional differences in microtubule behaviour around the time of mitosis were revealed by brief taxol treatment, which induced the formation of small microtubule asters in the region of the nucleus or spindle during both first and second cell cycles. The observed wave of change may thus reflect the local appearance and spreading of mitotic activity as the zygote nucleus approaches mitosis.  相似文献   

11.
The regulation of the microtubule-mediated motions within eggs during fertilization was investigated in relation to the shift in intracellular pH (pHi) that occurs during the ionic sequence of egg activation in the sea urchins Lytechinus variegatus and Arbacia punctulata. Microtubule assembly during formation of the sperm aster and mitotic apparatus was detected by anti-tubulin immunofluorescence microscopy, and the microtubule-mediated migrations of the sperm and egg nuclei were studied with time-lapse video differential interference contrast microscopy. Manipulations of intracellular pH were verified by fluorimetric analyses of cytoplasmic fluorescein incorporated as fluorescein diacetate. The ionic sequence of egg activation was manipulated i) to block the pHi shift at fertilization or reduce the pHi of fertilized eggs to unfertilized values, ii) to elevate artificially the pHi of unfertilized eggs to fertilized values, and iii) to elevate artificially or permit the normal pHi shift in fertilized eggs in which the pHi shift at fertilization was previously prevented. Fertilized eggs in which the pHi shift was suppressed did not assemble microtubules or undergo the normal microtubule-mediated motions. In fertilized eggs in which the pHi was reduced to unfertilized levels after the assembly of the sperm aster, no motions were detected. If the intracellular pH was later permitted to rise, normal motile events leading to division and development occurred, delayed by the time during which the pH elevation was blocked. Microtubule-mediated events occurred in eggs in which the intracellular pH was elevated, even in unfertilized eggs in which the pH was artificially increased. These results indicate that the formation and normal functioning of the egg microtubules is initiated, either directly or indirectly, by the shift in intracellular pH that occurs during fertilization.  相似文献   

12.
The Drosophila egg contains all the components required to properly execute the early mitotic divisions but is unable to assemble a functional centrosome without a sperm-provided basal body. We show that 65% of unfertilized eggs obtained from a laboratory strain of Drosophila mercatorum can spontaneously assemble a number of cytoplasmic asters after activation, most of them duplicating in a cell cycle-dependent manner. Such asters are formed by a polarized array of microtubules that have their Asp-associated minus-ends converging at a main focus, where centrioles and typical centrosomal antigens are found. Aster assembly is spatially restricted to the anterior region of the oocyte. When fertilized, the parthenogenetic egg forms the poles of the gonomeric spindle by using the sperm-provided basal body, despite the presence within the same cytoplasm of maternal centrosomes. Thirty-five percent of parthenogenetic eggs and all unfertilized and fertilized eggs from the sibling bisexually reproducing D. mercatorum strain do not contain cytoplasmic asters. Thus, the Drosophila eggs have the potential for de novo formation of functional centrosomes independent of preexisting centrioles, but some control mechanisms preventing their spontaneous assembly must exist. We speculate that the release of the block preventing centrosome self-assembly could be a landmark for ensuring parthenogenetic reproduction.  相似文献   

13.
The unfertilized egg of the newt, Cynops pyrrhogaster, has a second meiotic spindle at the animal pole and numerous cortical cytasters. After physiologically polyspermic fertilization, all sperm nuclei incorporated into the egg develop sperm asters, and the cortical cytasters change into bundles of cortical microtubules. The size of the sperm asters in the animal hemisphere is ∼5.6-fold larger than that in the vegetal hemisphere. Only one sperm nucleus moves toward the center of the animal hemisphere to form a zygote nucleus with the egg nucleus. This movement is inhibited by nocodazole, but not by cytochalasin B. The centrosome in the zygote nucleus divides into two parts to form a bipolar spindle for the first cleavage synchronously with the nuclear cycle, but centrosomes of accessory sperm nuclei in the vegetal hemisphere remained to form monopolar interphase asters and subsequently degenerate around the first cleavage stage. The size of sperm asters in monospermically fertilized Xenopus eggs was ∼37-fold larger than those in Cynops eggs. Since sperm asters that formed in polyspermically fertilized Xenopus eggs exclude each other, the formation of a zygote nucleus is inhibited. Cynops sperm nuclei form larger asters in Xenopus eggs, whereas Xenopus sperm nuclei form smaller asters in Cynops eggs compared with those in homologous eggs. Since there was no significant difference in the concentration of monomeric tubulin between those eggs, the size of sperm asters is probably regulated by a component(s) in egg cytoplasm. Smaller asters in physiologically polyspermic newt eggs might be useful for selecting only one sperm nucleus to move toward the egg nucleus. Mol. Reprod. Dev. 47:210–221, 1997. © 1997 Wiley-Liss, Inc.  相似文献   

14.
"Spiral asters" composed of swirls of subcortical microtubules were recently described in fertilized eggs of the sea urchin Strongylocentrotus purpuratus. In our study, these structures did not occur at culture temperatures below 16 degrees C. When the culture temperature was elevated, however, "spiral asters" routinely appeared during a susceptible period before mitotic prophase when the sperm aster-diaster normally exists. A massive and protracted rotation of the cytoplasm (excluding an immobile cortex and perinuclear region) began within 1 min of exposure to elevated temperature. Fibrils of the "spiral aster" could be seen within this rotating mass even by bright-field microscopy. The identity of microtubules in these structures was confirmed by indirect immunofluorescence microscopy. A mechanistic association between "spiral aster" formation and cytoplasmic rotation was indicated by the simultaneous inhibitory effects of microtubule and dynein poisons. Inhibitors of microfilaments, however, had no effect. We infer that elevated temperature induces unique changes in the microtubules of the pre-prophase sperm aster-diaster, resulting in cytoplasmic rotation and the spiral configuration of microtubules. Comparative cytological evidence supports the idea that "spiral asters" do not normally occur in fertilized sea urchin eggs. Biogeographic evidence for S. purpuratus indicates that fertilization and development naturally occur below 15 degrees C, hence "spiral asters" in eggs of this species should be regarded as abnormalities induced in the laboratory by unnaturally elevated temperatures.  相似文献   

15.
Centrioles organize microtubules in two ways: either microtubules elongate from the centriole cylinder itself, forming a flagellum or a cilium ("template elongation"), or pericentriolar material assembles and nucleates a microtubule aster ("astral nucleation"). During spermatogenesis in most species, a motile flagellum elongates from one of the sperm centrioles, whereas after fertilization a large aster of microtubules forms around the sperm centrioles in the egg cytoplasm. Using Xenopus egg extracts we have developed an in vitro system to study this change in microtubule-organizing activity. An aster of microtubules forms around the centrioles of permeabilized frog sperm in egg extracts, but not in pure tubulin. However, when the sperm heads are incubated in the egg extract in the presence of nocodazole, they are able to nucleate a microtubule aster after isolation and incubation with pure calf brain tubulin. This provides a two-step assay that distinguishes between centrosome assembly and subsequent microtubule nucleation. We have studied several centrosomal antigens during centrosome assembly. The CTR2611 antigen is present in the sperm head in the peri-centriolar region. gamma-tubulin and certain phosphorylated epitopes appear in the centrosome only after incubation in the egg extract. gamma-tubulin is recruited from the egg extract and associated with electron-dense patches dispersed in a wide area around the centrioles. Immunodepletion of gamma-tubulin and associated molecules from the egg extract before sperm head incubation prevents the change in microtubule-organizing activity of the sperm heads. This suggests that gamma-tubulin and/or associated molecules play a key role in centrosome formation and activity.  相似文献   

16.
We have designed experiments that distinguish centrosomal , nuclear, and cytoplasmic contributions to the assembly of the mitotic spindle. Mammalian centrosomes acting as microtubule-organizing centers were assayed by injection into Xenopus eggs either in a metaphase or an interphase state. Injection of partially purified centrosomes into interphase eggs induced the formation of extensive asters. Although centrosomes injected into unactivated eggs (metaphase) did not form asters, inhibition of centrosomes is not irreversible in metaphase cytoplasm: subsequent activation caused aster formation. When cytoskeletons containing nuclei and centrosomes were injected into the metaphase cytoplasm, they produced spindle-like structures with clearly defined poles. Electron microscopy revealed centrioles with nucleated microtubules. However, injection of nuclei prepared from karyoplasts that were devoid of centrosomes produced anastral microtubule arrays around condensing chromatin. Co-injection of karyoplast nuclei with centrosomes reconstituted the formation of spindle-like structures with well-defined poles. We conclude from these experiments that in mitosis, the centrosome acts as a microtubule-organizing center only in the proximity of the nucleus or chromatin, whereas in interphase it functions independently. The general implications of these results for the interconversion of metaphase and interphase microtubule arrays in all cells are discussed.  相似文献   

17.
Porcine brain tubulin labeled with fluorescein isothiocyanate (FITC) was able to polymerize by itself and co-polymerize with tubulin purified from starfish sperm flagella. When we injected the FITC-labeled tubulin into unfertilized eggs of the sand dollar, Clypeaster japonicus, and the eggs were then fertilized, the labeled tubulin was incorporated into the sperm aster. When injected into fertilized eggs at streak stage, the tubulin was quickly incorporated into each central region of growing asters. It was clearly visualized that the labeled tubulin, upon reaching metaphase, accumulated in the mitotic apparatus and later disappeared over the cytoplasm during interphase. The accumulation of the fluorescence in the mitotic apparatus was observed repeatedly at successive cleavage. After lysis of the fertilized eggs with a microtubule-stabilizing solution, fluorescent fibrous structures around the nucleus and those of the sperm aster and the mitotic apparatus were preserved and coincided with the fibrous structures observed by polarization and differential interference microscopy. We found the FITC-labeled tubulin to be incorporated into the entire mitotic apparatus within 20-30 s when injected into the eggs at metaphase or anaphase. This rapid incorporation of the labeled tubulin into the mitotic apparatus suggests that the equilibrium between mitotic microtubules and tubulin is attained very rapidly in the living eggs. Axonemal tubulin purified from starfish sperm flagella and labeled with FITC was also incorporated into microtubular structures in the same fashion as the FITC-labeled brain tubulin. These results suggest that even FITC-labeled heterogeneous tubulins undergo spatial and stage-specific regulation of assembly-disassembly in the same manner as does sand dollar egg tubulin.  相似文献   

18.
Studies examining cytoplasmic and sperm nuclear transformations in sea urchin (Arbacia punctulata) eggs inseminated at different periods after ammonia activation have been caried out at the light- and electron-microscopic levels of observation. Arbaca eggs treated with ammonia-seawater demonstrated chromosome condensation after DNA synthesis and underwent a chromosome cycle similar to that described for Lytechinus [Mazia, 1947]. Cortical granule reaction, fertilization cone formation, and sperm aster development in eggs fertilized at 20 (interphase), 50 (prometaphase), and 180 (interphase) min after ammonia activation were structurally simialr to processes in untreated zygotes. Cyclical changes in the formation of fertilization cones and sperm asters, as reported for eggs fertilized after activation by agents that induce a cortical granule reaction, were not observed. Although sperm nuclear transformations were prolonged (14 vs 18 min), male pronuclei that developed in eggs fertilized 20 min after ammonia activation were morphologically similar to those observed in fertilized, untreated ova and incorporated 3H-thymidine. Sperm incorporated into eggs at 50 min after ammonia activation underwent nuclear envelope breakdown and chromatin despersion; however, 3H-thymidine incorporation was not observed, and male pronuclei rarely developed (less than 5% of all specimens examined). Subsequent to dispersion, the paternal chromatin condensed into chromosomes which were associated with an aster. These results demonstrate that although ammonia-activated eggs inseminated at interphase or prometaphase undergo similar cytoplasmic alterations, sperm nuclear transformations vary with the chromosome cycle of the egg.  相似文献   

19.
Following fertilization, the Xenopus egg cortex rotates relative to the cytoplasm by 30 degrees about a horizontal axis. The direction of rotation, and as a result the orientation of the embryonic body axes, is normally specified by the position of sperm entry. The mechanism of rotation appears to involve an array of aligned microtubules in the vegetal cortex (Elinson and Rowning, 1988, Devl Biol. 128, 185-197). We performed anti-tubulin immunofluorescence on sections to follow the formation of this array. Microtubules disappear rapidly from the egg following fertilization, and reappear first in the sperm aster. Surprisingly, astral microtubules then extend radially through both the animal and vegetal cytoplasm. The cortical array arises as they reach the vegetal cell surface. The eccentric position of the sperm aster gives asymmetry to the formation of the array and may explain its alignment since microtubules reaching the cortex tend to bend away from the sperm entry side. The radial polymerization of cytoplasmic microtubules is not dependent on the sperm aster or on the female pronucleus: similar but more symmetric patterns arise in artificially activated and enucleate eggs, slightly later than in fertilized eggs. These observations suggest that the cortical microtubule array forms as a result of asymmetric microtubule growth outward from cytoplasm to cortex and, since cortical and cytoplasmic microtubules remain connected throughout the period of the rotation, that the microtubules of the array rotate with the cytoplasm.  相似文献   

20.
Taxol, a microtubule stabilizing drug, induces the formation of numerous microtubule asters in the cytoplasm of mitotic cells (De Brabander, M., G. Geuens, R. Nuydens, R. Willebrords, J. DeMey. 1981. Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. USA. 78:5608-5612). The center of these asters share with spindle poles some characteristics such as the presence of centrosomal material and calmodulin. We have recently reproduced the assembly of taxol asters in a cell-free system (Buendia, B., C. Antony, F. Verde, M. Bornens, and E. Karsenti. 1990. J. Cell Sci. 97:259-271) using extracts of Xenopus eggs. In this paper, we show that taxol aster assembly requires phosphorylation, and that they do not grow from preformed centers, but rather by a reorganization of microtubules first crosslinked into bundles. This process seems to involve sliding of microtubules along each other and we show that cytoplasmic dynein is required for taxol aster assembly. This result provides a possible functional basis to the recent findings, that dynein is present in the spindle and enriched near spindle poles (Pfarr, C. M., M. Cove, P. M. Grissom, T. S. Hays, M. E. Porter, and J. R. McIntosh. 1990. Nature (Lond.). 345:263-265; Steuer, E. R., L. Wordeman, T. A. Schroer, and M. P. Sheetz. 1990. Nature (Lond.). 345:266-268).  相似文献   

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