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1.
We have studied the mitotic reassembly of the nuclear envelope, using antibodies to nuclear marker proteins and NPA58 in F-111 rat fibroblast cells. In earlier studies we have proposed that NPA58, a 58 kDa rat nuclear protein, is involved in nuclear protein import. In this report, NPA58 is shown to be localized on the cytoplasmic face of the envelope in interphase cells, in close association with nuclear pores. In mitotic cells NPA58 is dispersed in the cytoplasm till anaphase. The targeting of NPA58 to the reforming nuclear envelope in early telophase coincides with the recruitment of a well-characterized class of nuclear pore proteins recognized by the antibody mAb 414, and occurs prior to the incorporation of lamin B1 into the envelope. Significant protein import activity is detectable only after localization of NPA58 in the newly-formed envelope. The early targeting of NPA58 is consistent with its proposed role in nuclear transport.  相似文献   

2.
Whole-mounts of Drosophila embryos were stained with the monoclonal antibody Vmp 18, raised against the peptide 199–208 of murine interleukin 1/. Immunofluorescence observations showed that the antibody cross-reacted with an antigenic determinant that changed in localization during Drosophila development. In syncytial Drosophila embryos, the antibody recognized an epitope localized on the nuclear envelope throughout mitotic division. As cellularization occurred, the fluorescence was mainly concentrated in the apical region of the blastoderm cells. Western blot analysis of whole Drosophila embryo extracts showed that the antibody recognized a 60-kDa protein in syncytial embryos and during germ band elongation. This suggests that the 60-kDa antigen undergoes dynamic redistribution during embryogenesis.This work was supported in parts by grants from the Italian MURST (40% and 60% funds) and from the Consorzio Siena Ricerche  相似文献   

3.
Masuda K  Haruyama S  Fujino K 《Planta》1999,210(1):165-167
The architecture of the nuclei of higher plants includes a structure similar to the nuclear lamina of vertebrates. Changes in this structure were monitored during mitosis in carrot (Daucus carota L.) and celery (Apium graveolens L.) cells by immunofluorescence microscopy using an antibody that recognized the nuclear-matrix protein NMCP1. This protein has been shown to be localized exclusively at the periphery of the nucleus (K. Masuda et al. 1997, Exp Cell Res 232: 173–187). Immunofluorescence was recognized throughout cells in mitotic metaphase, although it was distributed predominantly in the mitotic spindle zone. At late anaphase or telophase, the immunofluorescence was localized around each set of daughter chromosomes. Immunofluorescence in newly formed daughter nuclei was restricted to the periphery of nuclei. This behavior was very similar to that of the nuclear lamina of vertebrates, suggesting that the structure located between the nuclear envelope and the chromosomes in plants disassembles and assembles in parallel with the disintegration and re-formation of the nuclear envelope. Received: 30 April 1999 / Accepted: 26 June 1999  相似文献   

4.
Compelling evidence has been obtained in favour of the idea that the nuclear surface of higher plant cells is a microtubule-nucleating and/or organizing site (MTOC), in the absence of defined centrosomes. How these plant MTOC proteins are redistributed and function during the progression of the cell cycle remains entirely unknown. Using a monoclonal antibody (mAb 6C6) raised against isolated calf thymus centrosomes and showing apparent reaction with the plant nuclear surface, we followed the targeted antigen distribution during mitosis and meiosis of higher plants. Immunoblot analysis of protein fractions from Allium root meristematic cell extracts probed with mAb 6C6 reveals a polypeptide of an apparent Mr of 78000. In calf centrosome extracts, a polypeptide of comparable molecular mass is found in addition to a major antigen of Mr 180000 after mAb 6C6 immunoblotting. During mitotic initiation, the plant antigen is prominent on the periphery of the prophase nucleus. When the nuclear envelope breaks down, the antigen suddenly becomes associated with the centromere-kinetochores until late anaphase. In telophase, when the nuclear envelope is being reconstructed, it is no longer detected at the kinetochores but is solely associated again with the nuclear surface. This antigen displays a unique spatial and temporal distribution, which may reflect the pathway of plant protein(s) between the nuclear surface and the kinetochores under cell cycle control. So far, such processes have not been described in higher plant cells. These observations shed light on the putative activity of the plant kinetochore as a protein transporter. They also suggest that a plant centrosome-like antigen may have different cytoskeletal related functions depending on cell cycle regulated changes in its subcellular distribution.Abbreviations mAb monoclonal antibody - MSB microtubule stabilizing buffer - TBS Tris buffered saline - MTOC microtubule organizing centre  相似文献   

5.
Murine hybridomas were generated to DNA/tight binding proteins complex isolated from the residual nuclear structure following a procedure analogous to that yielding "empty" shells of nuclear envelope. A monoclonal antibody designated 2A8 was selected because of its differential immunostaining of mitotic cells of a synchronized mouse fibroblast cell culture L-929. The target antigen was rendered insoluble by a sequence of extractions of isolated nuclei of diverse cell types with detergents, urea, DNase I and alkali thus reproducing some solubility properties of proteins constituting an operationally defined residual nuclear matrix. The cognate polypeptide was localized on a subset of proteins of Mr 58-65 kDa, 70 kDa in isolated fibroblast nuclear matrices. The functional implication of the antigen in mitosis-related disassembly-assembly process of the nuclear matrix/envelope was detected. At prophase the antibody decorated the nuclear periphery and nuclear envelope fixed inward filaments. A fibrous network of cytoplasmic localization was stained in metaphase. At anaphase the antigen was dispositioned into peripheral fibrogranular clusters of polar orientation predominantly on one side of the nucleus. Proceeding to telophase a spreading fluorescence was manifested over the entire contour of the nuclear periphery to delineate the reforming nucleus. By immunogold electron microscopy of interphase cells the antigen was identified as evenly distributed in chromatin and interchromatin regions. At initiation of chromosome condensation in mitosis the label was detected predominantly in the chromosomal area.  相似文献   

6.
The general architecture of the mitotic apparatus was studied at the ultrastructural level in Drosophila cultured cells. Its two main characteristics are a very polarized spindle and a strong compartmentalization, ensured by large remnants of the nuclear envelope. Such compartmentalization has previously been reported for the rapid syncytial divisions of the early embryo; a similar finding in these cells with a long cycle strongly suggests that this organization constitutes a general mechanism for mitosis in Drosophila. We followed the modifications of these structures after a heat shock of 20, 50 or 120 min at 37°C. Contrary to interphase cells, mitotic cells appear very sensitive to hyperthermia. This stress treatment induced a disruption of the mitotic spindle, a reappearance and an extension of the Golgi apparatus, an inactivation of microtubule nucleation and a disorganization of the centrosome. This organelle seems the first to be affected by the heat shock response. The centrosome is not only inactivated, but also is structurally affected. During the recovery phase after heat stress, the mitotic cells presented a remarkable ring-shaped accumulation of electrondense material around the centrioles. We conclude that in Drosophila cells the mitotic phase, and more specifically the centrosome, are targets of the stress response.  相似文献   

7.
Nuclear pore complexes (NPCs) are multisubunit protein entities embedded into the nuclear envelope (NE). Here, we examine the in vivo dynamics of the essential Drosophila nucleoporin Nup107 and several other NE-associated proteins during NE and NPCs disassembly and reassembly that take place within each mitosis. During both the rapid mitosis of syncytial embryos and the more conventional mitosis of larval neuroblasts, Nup107 is gradually released from the NE, but it remains partially confined to the nuclear (spindle) region up to late prometaphase, in contrast to nucleoporins detected by wheat germ agglutinin and lamins. We provide evidence that in all Drosophila cells, a structure derived from the NE persists throughout metaphase and early anaphase. Finally, we examined the dynamics of the spindle checkpoint proteins Mad2 and Mad1. During mitotic exit, Mad2 and Mad1 are actively imported back from the cytoplasm into the nucleus after the NE and NPCs have reformed, but they reassociate with the NE only later in G1, concomitantly with the recruitment of the basket nucleoporin Mtor (the Drosophila orthologue of vertebrate Tpr). Surprisingly, Drosophila Nup107 shows no evidence of localization to kinetochores, despite the demonstrated importance of this association in mammalian cells.  相似文献   

8.
The formation of the nuclear envelope in the mitosis ofSpirogyra was studied with an electron microscope. The nuclear envelope was disrupted around the spindle equator in the metaphase. Many small vesicles were observed in the metaphase spindle. These vesicles surrounded the masses of chromosomes and nucleolar substance in the early anaphase, and they fused with each other to form daughter nuclear envelopes during the early anaphase. The formation of new envelopes from small vesicles at such an early mitotic anaphase is reported here for the first time. The possible origin of these vesicles is also discussed.  相似文献   

9.
Rapid membrane assembly occurs in the early, syncytial Drosophila embryo when 3500 cells are separated within a period of 90 min by the formation of plasma membranes. Acyltransferases catalyzing two of the early steps in phospholipid synthesis were studied during the course of this membrane formation. The enzymes appeared to be similar to mammalian acyltransferases in pH and substrate optima. The activity was inhibited by sulfhydryl-binding reagents and stimulated by low concentrations of magnesium, calcium, and managnese. The enzymes incorporated α-l-glycerophosphate and palmityl coenzyme A into both phospholipids and neutral lipids. The acyltransferases were also localized cytochemically under conditions shown to preserve a substantial proportion of the enzyme activity. Early in embryo development, the activity was localized in the rough endoplasmic reticulum and nuclear envelope. Reaction products were particularly frequent around mitotic nuclei. During the first phase of plasma membrane formation, the activity was localized at the furrow regions of the plasma membrane and in the apical nuclear envelope. During the second (fast) phase, the reaction products appeared mainly in the basal nuclear envelope and rough endoplasmic reticulum internal to the nuclear layer. The data were consistent with the hypothesis that phospholipids for membrane assembly can be formed in situ in several subcellular compartments.  相似文献   

10.
NuMA protein is the largest, abundant, primate-specific chromosomal protein. The protein was purified from HeLa cells and monospecific monoclonal antibodies were prepared that react exclusively with NuMA protein in immunoblot analysis. These antibodies were used to define the intracellular location and properties of NuMA protein. Using indirect immunofluorescence, NuMA protein was detected only in the nucleus of interphase cells and on the chromosomes in mitotic cells. One class of monoclonal antibody called the 2E4-type antibody, caused NuMA protein (or a complex of proteins including NuMA) to be released from its binding site on metaphase or anaphase chromosomes. The separation of NuMA protein from chromosomes was observed either with the immunofluorescence assay or in electrophoretic analyses of proteins released from isolated metaphase chromosomes after reaction with 2E4 antibody. The immunofluorescence studies also showed that after release of the NuMA protein from chromosomes of metaphase or anaphase cells, the protein bound specifically to the polar region of the mitotic spindle. It was shown that exogenously added NuMA antigen/antibody complex bound only to the mitotic spindle poles of permeabilized primate cells and not to the spindle poles of other mammalian cells, thus demonstrating the specificity of the spindle-pole interaction. The antibody mediated transfer of NuMA from chromosomes to poles was blocked when the chromosomes were treated with cross-linking fixatives. Results suggest that the NuMA protein has specific attachment sites on both metaphase chromosomes and mitotic spindle poles (the site where post-mitotic nuclear assembly occurs). A model is proposed suggesting that a protein having such dual binding sites could function during nuclear reassembly to link mitotic chromosomes into the reforming nucleus.  相似文献   

11.
Stages of mitosis of the micronuclei of Stentor coeruleus were described as seen by transmission electron microscopy. Cells in division and those regenerating new oral membranelles were studied. Microtubules were found in early prophase in the karyoplasm and interspersed between the condensing chromatin. A monaxial intranuclear spindle is formed by early metaphase, with kinetochore microtubule attachment sites on the chromosomes. The spindle elongates, separating the daughter nuclei at anaphase. A new nuclear envelope, consisting of two unit membranes, begins to form at late anaphase. Small segments of membrane found in the space between the newly forming and the old micronuclear envelopes appear to fuse to form the new nuclear envelope. No ultrastructural differences were found in the mitotic nuclei of cells in division or regeneration.  相似文献   

12.
M Kallajoki  K Weber    M Osborn 《The EMBO journal》1991,10(11):3351-3362
Six monoclonal antibodies identify a 210 kDa polypeptide which shows a cell cycle specific redistribution from the nucleus to the mitotic spindle. In interphase cells this polypeptide was localized in the nucleus and behaved during differential cell extraction as a component of the nuclear matrix. It accumulated in the centrosome region at prophase, in the pole regions of the mitotic spindle at metaphase and in crescents at the poles in anaphase, and reassociated with the nuclei as they reformed in telophase. Due to its staining pattern we call the protein the Spindle Pole-Nucleus (SPN) antigen. The localization of SPN antigen during mitosis was dependent on the integrity of the spindle since treatment of cells with nocodazole resulted in the dispersal of SPN antigen into many small foci which acted as microtubule organizing centres when the drug was removed. The SPN antigen was present in nuclei and mitotic spindles of all human and mammalian cell lines and tissues so far tested. When microinjected into the cytoplasm or nuclei of HeLa cells, one antibody caused a block in mitosis. Total cell number remained constant or decreased slightly after 24 h. At this time, about half the cells were arrested in a prometaphase-like state and revealed aberrant spindles. Many other cells were multinucleate. These results show that the SPN antigen is a protein associated with mitotic spindle microtubules which has to function correctly for the cell to complete mitosis.  相似文献   

13.
The sequence of post-metaphase mitotic events, such as anaphase movement A and B, chromosome decondensation, nuclear envelope reformation and cytokinesis, has been studied in 2,4-initrophenol (DNP)-treated HeLa cells. The effects of DNP were found to be dose dependent and at concentrations higher than 3 mM, both anaphase A and B movements were totally and nearly instantaneously arrested. It could be shown that cytokinesis did not depend on the completion of anaphase movements. This was also true for nuclear envelope reformation which could take place even around condensed chromosomes arrested in anaphase. The post-metaphase mitotic events do not follow a strict causal sequence, but they can be dissociated from each other in anaphase-arrested cells.  相似文献   

14.
We have investigated the function of p55CDC, a mammalian protein related to Cdc20 and Hct1/Cdh1 in Saccharomyces cerevisiae, and Fizzy and Fizzy-related in Drosophila. Immunofluorescence studies and expression of a p55CDC-GFP chimera demonstrate that p55CDC is concentrated at the kinetochores in M phase cells from late prophase to telophase. Some p55CDC is also associated with the spindle microtubules and spindle poles, and some is diffuse in the cytoplasm. At anaphase, the concentration of p55CDC at the kinetochores gradually diminishes, and is gone by late telophase. In extracts prepared from M phase, but not from interphase HeLa cells, p55CDC coimmunoprecipitates with three important elements of the M phase checkpoint machinery: Cdc27, Cdc16, and Mad2. p55CDC is required for binding Mad2 with the Cdc27 and Cdc16. Thus, it is likely that p55CDC mediates the association of Mad2 with the cyclosome/anaphase-promoting complex. Microinjection of anti-p55CDC antibody into mitotic mammalian cells induces arrest or delay at metaphase, and impairs progression of late mitotic events. These studies suggest that mammalian p55CDC may be part of a regulatory and targeting complex for the anaphase-promoting complex.  相似文献   

15.
Mitosis in Boergesenia forbesii (Harvey) Feldman was studied by immunofluorescence microscopy using anti-β–tubulin, anti-γ–tubulin, and anti-centrin antibodies. In the interphase nucleus, one, two, or rarely three anti-centrin staining spots were located around the nucleus, indicating the existence of centrioles. Microtubules (MTs) elongated randomly from the circumference of the nuclear envelope, but distinct microtubule organizing centers could not be observed. In prophase, MTs located around the interphase nuclei became fragmented and eventually disappeared. Instead, numerous MTs elongated along the nuclear envelope from the discrete anti-centrin staining spots. Anti-centrin staining spots duplicated and migrated to the two mitotic poles. γ–Tubulin was not detected at the centrioles during interphase but began to localize there from prophase onward. The mitotic spindle in B. forbesii was a typical closed type, the nuclear envelope remaining intact during nuclear division. From late prophase, accompanying the chromosome condensation, spindle MTs could be observed within the nuclear envelope. A bipolar mitotic spindle was formed at metaphase, when the most intense staining of γ-tubulin around the centrioles could also be seen. Both spindle MT poles were formed inside the nuclear envelope, independent of the position of the centrioles outside. In early anaphase, MTs between separating daughter chromosomes were not detected. Afterward, characteristic interzonal spindle MTs developed and separated both sets of the daughter chromosomes. From late anaphase to telophase, γ-tubulin could not be detected around the centrioles and MT radiation from the centrioles became diminished at both poles. γ-Tubulin was not detected at the ends of the interzonal spindle fibers. When MTs were depolymerized with amiprophos methyl during mitosis, γ-tubulin localization around the centrioles was clearly confirmed. Moreover, an influx of tubulin molecules into the nucleus for the mitotic spindle occurred at chromosome condensation in mitosis.  相似文献   

16.
B. Liu  B. A. Palevitz 《Protoplasma》1996,195(1-4):78-89
Summary We have obtained immunofluorescence and immunoblot evidence for the presence of kinesin-like protein (KLP) in pollen tubes of tobacco using an antibody generated against peptides encoded by theKATA gene ofArabidopsis. This antibody recognizes an Mr 140,000 polypeptide inArabidopsis seedlings, and stains the mitotic apparatus in this species as well as in tobacco suspension cells. In tobacco pollen tubes prepared for dual immunofluorescence localizations of KLP and -tubulin, the antibody binds transiently to microtubule (Mt) bundles and the nucleus in premitotic generative cells; it then stains the developing mitotic apparatus as the nuclear envelope breaks down. By metaphase, fluorescence is located over kinetochore fibers and associated Mts. Localization of KLP is concentrated in the midzone during anaphase, and by early cytokinesis, it closely brackets the cell plate. Phragmoplast fluorescence then spreads along the phragmoplast distal to the cell plate. Punctate staining is also detected along vegetative Mts. No KLP localization is seen in pollen tubes treated with antibody after it had been preadsorbed to the antigenic peptides. The antibody recognizes an Mr 110,000 polypeptide in extracts of tobacco pollen tubes, and a polypeptide of somewhat lower Mr inTradescantia pollen tubes. Our results show that KLP(s) related to KatAp are present in tobacco generative cells and may play roles in the organization and/or operation of the mitotic apparatus and phragmoplast.Abbreviations KLP kinesin-like protein - Mt microtubule - MA mitotic apparatus Dedicated to Professor Eldon H. Newcomb in recognition of his contributions to cell biology  相似文献   

17.
We previously purified a nuclear localization signal binding protein, NBP60, from rat liver (1993,J. Biochem.113, 308–313). In this study, the subcellular localization of NBP60 was examined using anti-NBP60. Most NBP60 was found to be localized in the nuclear envelope fraction of rat liver obtained on cell fractionation followed by immunoblotting. Staining of the nuclei of cultured cells by the antibody was observed on immunofluorescence microscopy. NBP60 was widely detected in rat nuclear fractions prepared from other tissues and also in nuclei of cultured cells derived from other species. It was shown by immunoelectron microscopy that most NBP60 is present in the nuclear envelope and at least some of that is present on nuclear pore complexes. Although NBP60 was localized in the nuclear envelope in interphase cells, it diffused into the cytoplasm in the mitotic phase. The purified NBP60 was highly phosphorylated by a cdc2 mitotic kinase, whereas nuclear pore proteins p144, p62, p60, and p54 were not phosphorylated by the kinase directly. NBP60 was also phosphorylated by protein kinase A, calmodulin-dependent protein kinase II, and casein kinase II. The phosphorylation of NBP60 by cdc2 kinase and/or the other kinases may be related to the change in the protein's location during the mitotic phase.  相似文献   

18.
Accurate and efficient separation of sister chromatids during anaphase is critical for faithful cell division. It has been proposed that cortical dynein–generated pulling forces on astral microtubules contribute to anaphase spindle elongation and chromosome separation. In mammalian cells, however, definitive evidence for the involvement of cortical dynein in chromosome separation is missing. It is believed that dynein is recruited and anchored at the cell cortex during mitosis by the α subunit of heterotrimeric G protein (Gα)/mammalian homologue of Drosophila Partner of Inscuteable/nuclear mitotic apparatus (NuMA) ternary complex. Here we uncover a Gα/LGN-independent lipid- and membrane-binding domain at the C-terminus of NuMA. We show that the membrane binding of NuMA is cell cycle regulated—it is inhibited during prophase and metaphase by cyclin-dependent kinase 1 (CDK1)–mediated phosphorylation and only occurs after anaphase onset when CDK1 activity is down-regulated. Further studies indicate that cell cycle–regulated membrane association of NuMA underlies anaphase-specific enhancement of cortical NuMA and dynein. By replacing endogenous NuMA with membrane-binding-deficient NuMA, we can specifically reduce the cortical accumulation of NuMA and dynein during anaphase and demonstrate that cortical NuMA and dynein contribute to efficient chromosome separation in mammalian cells.  相似文献   

19.
We have treated living, intact stamen hair cells from the spiderwort plant, Tradescantia virginiana, with 0.5 microgram/ml or 60 micrograms/ml 1,2-dioctanoylglycerol, a potent and permeant activator of protein kinase C, and have observed the rates of progression of mitosis from prophase through anaphase. We have found that in addition to the concentration used, the time of initial treatment with 1,2-dioctanoylglycerol defines the response by the cells. The cells rapidly undergo nuclear envelope breakdown when this diglyceride is added in very late prophase, 0 to approximately 8 min prior to the time of normal nuclear envelope breakdown. Anaphase onset occurs 28 min after nuclear envelope breakdown, rather than after the 33 min interval observed in untreated cells. Rapid progression through metaphase is also observed if cells are treated with 0.5 microgram/ml 1,2-dioctanoylglycerol during prometaphase, up to 15 min after nuclear envelope breakdown. The addition of 0.5 microgram/ml 1,2-dioctanoylglycerol in late metaphase, approximately 26 min after nuclear envelope breakdown, results in sister chromatid separation slightly ahead of its normal time, 33 min after nuclear envelope breakdown, and in precocious cell plate vesicle aggregation, 3-5 min earlier than that observed in untreated cells. Treatment of cells with 60 micrograms/ml of 1,2-dioctanoylglycerol at any point during the interval from 0 to approximately 5 min prior to nuclear envelope breakdown results in precocious entry into anaphase. If cells are treated with either 0.5 microgram/ml or 60 micrograms/ml 1,2-dioctanoylglycerol earlier than 20 min before nuclear envelope breakdown, they do not enter mitosis, but instead revert to interphase without dividing. When 1,2-dioctanoylglycerol is added at other times during mitosis, the rate of subsequent mitotic progression is dramatically slowed; the cells require greater than 55 min to progress from nuclear envelope breakdown to anaphase onset, though once in anaphase, the cells progress onward to cytokinesis at normal rates. Treatments o of cells with 1,3-dioctanoylglycerol at any point during prophase, prometaphase, or metaphase are without effect on the rate of subsequent mitotic progression. The shifts in response by cells treated at specific times with 1,2-dioctanoylglycerol during mid- and late metaphase may be indicative of the existence of one or more regulatory switch points (i.e., checkpoints) just prior to anaphase onset.  相似文献   

20.
The monoclonal antibody MPM-2 recognizes a family of phosphorylated proteins present in mitotic cells. In a number of organisms it stains nuclei and also cytoskeletal structures which contain or organize tubulin. In mitotic Chlamydomonas reinhardtii cells MPM-2 reacts with phosphoproteins associated with the nuclear envelope (NE). Staining of the NE region appears in preprophase, reaches a maximum intensity in metaphase/anaphase and disappears rapidly in telophase. Localized hyperphosphorylation of the anterior NE region is apparent in many cells throughout mitosis. The distribution and timing of MPM-2 labeling suggests that in Chlamydomonas MPM-2 may be interacting with lamin-like phosphoproteins.  相似文献   

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