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1.
Staining of Drosophila egg chambers with rhodaminyl-lysine-phallotoxin (RLP), a specific stain for F-actin, has demonstrated the presence of dense F-actin rings associated with the inner surfaces of the ring canals. They were first observed in the distal part of the germarium where rings of four different size classes were found, differing in diameter by up to twofold. The ring sizes are considered to correspond to the ring canals formed at each of four successive incomplete cleavages. During the growth of the egg chamber the actin rings were found to increase in diameter from less than 1 micron to approx. 10 micron. Concomitantly a secondary outer ring of more diffuse material is built up in association with the cell membranes. A well developed array of microfilament bundles was also associated with the nurse cell plasmalemma. In stages where the transfer of the bulk of the nurse cell cytoplasm into the oocyte was occurring the rings came closer together in a central area. In late stage chambers the F-actin rings and the microfilament bundles appeared to be incorporated into large irregular masses of actin, which subsequently disappeared as the mature oocyte formed. The F-actin rings are suggested to act as mechanical strengthening elements for the canal plasmalemma, whilst cytoplasmic transport occurs through the ring canals.  相似文献   

2.
The interstitial deletion D14 affecting the importin-alpha 2 gene of Drosophila, or imp-alpha 2(D14), causes recessive female sterility characterized by a block of nurse cell-oocyte transport during oogenesis. In wild-type egg chambers, the Imp-alpha 2 protein is uniformly distributed in the nurse cell cytoplasm with a moderate accumulation along the oocyte cortex. Cytochalasin D treatment of wild-type egg chambers disrupts the in vivo association of Imp-alpha 2 with F-actin and results in its release from the oocyte cortex and its transfer into nurse cell nuclei. Binding assay shows that the interaction of Imp-alpha 2 with F-actin, albeit not monomeric actin, requires the occurrence of NLS peptides. Phenotypic analysis of imp-alpha 2(D14) ovaries reveals that the block of nurse cell-oocyte transport results from the occlusion of the ring canals that constitute cytoplasmic bridges between the nurse cells and the oocyte. Immunohistochemistry shows that, although the Imp-alpha2 protein cannot be detected on the ring canals, the Kelch protein, a known ring canal component, fails to bind to ring canals in imp-alpha 2(D14) egg chambers. Since loss-of-function mutations of kelch results in a similar dumpless phenotype, we propose that the Imp-alpha 2 protein plays a critical role in Kelch function by regulating its deposition on ring canals during their assembly.  相似文献   

3.
The structure of nurse cells as well as the distribution of cytoskeletal elements (actin filaments, microtubules) in three representatives of phthirapterans: the pig louse, Haematopinus suis (Anoplura) and bird lice, Eomenacanthus stramineus, Columbicola columbae (Mallophaga) were investigated. All three species have polytrophic-meroistic ovaries which means that each oocyte remains connected with a group of nurse cells via specialized cytoplasmic canals-intercellular bridges (ring canals). Throughout vitellogenesis, various macromolecules as well as organelles (mitochondria, endoplasmic reticulum vesicles, ribosomes) are transferred from the nurse cells to the oocyte. During this flow, the nurse cell nuclei do not enter the oocyte and are retained in the cell centers. In holometabolous insects (e.g. Drosophila, hymenopterans), the central position of nurse cell nuclei is maintained by cytoskeletal elements (actin filaments or microtubules). In the investigated species, the nurse cells are equipped with large, highly extended (irregularly lobed) nuclei. The inner nuclear membrane is lined with a relatively thick layer of nuclear lamina. Ultrastructural analysis and staining with rhodamine-labeled phalloidin revealed that the nurse cell cytoskeleton is poorly developed and represented only by: (1) single microtubules in the perinuclear cytoplasm; and (2) the F-actin layer in the cortical cytoplasm. In the light of this, we postulate that in phthirapterans the position of nurse cell nuclei during the cytoplasm transfer is maintained not by the cytoskeletal elements, but by a largely extended shape of the nuclei (i.e. their elongated extensions).  相似文献   

4.
Germline cysts are conserved structures in which cells initiating meiosis are interconnected by ring canals. In many species, the cyst phase is of limited duration, but the chordate, Oikopleura, maintains it throughout prophase I as a unique cell, the coenocyst. We show that despite sharing one common cytoplasm with meiotic and nurse nuclei evenly distributed in a 1:1 ratio, both entry into meiosis and subsequent endocycles of nurse nuclei were asynchronous. Coenocyst cytoskeletal elements played central roles as oogenesis progressed from a syncytial state of indistinguishable germ nuclei, to a final arrangement where the common cytoplasm had been equally partitioned into resolved, mature oocytes. During chromosomal bouquet formation in zygotene, nuclear pore complexes clustered and anchored meiotic nuclei to the coenocyst F-actin network opposite ring canals, polarizing oocytes early in prophase I. F-actin synthesis was required for oocyte growth but movement of cytoplasmic organelles into oocytes did not require cargo transport along colchicine-sensitive microtubules. Instead, microtubules maintained nurse nuclei on the F-actin scaffold and prevented their entry into growing oocytes. Finally, it was possible to both decouple meiotic progression from cellular mechanisms governing oocyte growth, and to advance the timing of oocyte growth in response to external cues.  相似文献   

5.
Drosophila singed mutants were named for their gnarled bristle phenotype but severe alleles are also female sterile. Recently, singed protein was shown to have 35% peptide identity with echinoderm fascin. Fascin is found in actin filament bundles in microvilli of sea urchin eggs and in filopodial extensions in coelomocytes. We show that Drosophila singed is required for actin filament bundle formation in the cytoplasm of nurse cells during oogenesis; in severe mutants, the absence of cytoplasmic actin filament bundles allows nurse cell nuclei to lodge in ring canals and block nurse cell cytoplasm transport. Singed is also required for organized actin filament bundle formation in the cellular extension that forms a bristle; in severe mutants, the small disorganized actin filament bundles lack structural integrity and allow bristles to bend and branch during extension. Singed protein is also expressed in migratory cells of the developing egg chamber and in the socket cell of the developing bristle, but no defect is observed in these cells in singed mutants. Purified, bacterially expressed singed protein bundles actin filaments in vitro with the same stoichiometry reported for purified sea urchin fascin. Singed-saturated actin bundles have a molar ratio of singed/actin of approximately 1:4.3 and a transverse cross-banding pattern of 12 nm seen using electron microscopy. Our results suggest that singed protein is required for actin filament bundle formation and is a Drosophila homolog of echinoderm fascin.  相似文献   

6.
The spatial distribution of F-actin microfilaments in the ovaries of previtellogenic and vitellogenic female black blowflies, Phormia regina (Diptera : Calliphoridae), as the females shift from a sugar to a liver diet, is determined using rhodamine-labelled phalloidin (rh-phalloidin). During the pre-vitellogenic stages of ovarian development (i.e. corresponding to a sugar diet) a single bright fluorescent layer marks the interface between follicle cells and the oocyte. Fluorescence is also most evident at the inner surface of the ring canals of the nurse cells. This is observed in the nurse cells both in the distal part of the germarium, and in the vitellogenic growing oocyte. However, when liver-fed (i.e. necessary for vitellogenesis), 2 bright fluorescent layers are observed at the follicle cell-oocyte interface. In addition, the cytoplasm of the nurse cells during vitellogenesis appears full of fluorescent microfilaments and the actin rings are found to increase in size and thickness. The changing organization of the F-actin microfilaments in the follicles during the process of both egg chamber and oocyte formation is discussed and possible functions considered.  相似文献   

7.
In the present study, we demonstrate the actin cytoskeleton reorganization during nurse cells apoptosis of the olive fruit fly Dacus oleae. At the developmental stage 9A of oogenesis, the actin microfilaments are assembled in numerous ring canals and subcortically support all the nurse cells, as is shown by phalloidin-FITC staining. During the following stages, 9B and 10A, this structural pattern remains the same. The developmental stage 10B is characterized by actin microfilament rearrangement and formation of actin cables that are symmetrically organized around the nurse cell nuclei. At stage 11, when the dumping process begins, these actin cables seem to retain each nurse cell nucleus in the cell center, away from blocking the ring canals. The early stage 12 is characterized by an asynchronous nurse cell nuclear chromatin condensation, while at late stage 12 the actin cables become very thick, as adjacent ones overlap one another and traverse the disorganized apoptotic nurse cell nuclei that already have fragmented DNA, as is demonstrated by acridine orange staining and TUNEL assay. Finally, during stage 13, the apoptotic nuclear remnants are phagocytosed by the neighboring follicle cells. The data presented herein compared to previous reported results in Drosophila [Nezis et al., 2000: Eur J Cell Biol 79:610-620], demonstrate that actin cytoskeleton reorganization during nurse cell apoptosis is a developmentally regulated physiological mechanism, phylogenetically conserved in higher Dipteran.  相似文献   

8.
During late stages of Drosophila oogenesis, the cytoplasm of nurse cells in the egg chamber is rapidly transferred ("dumped") to oocytes, while the nurse cell nuclei are anchored by a mechanism that involves the actin cytoskeleton. The factors that mediate this interaction between nuclei and actin cytoskeleton are unknown. MSP-300 is the likely Drosophila ortholog of the mammalian Syne-1 and -2 and C. elegans ANC-1 proteins, contained both actin-binding and nuclear envelope localization domains. By using an antibody against C-terminus of MSP-300, we find that MSP-300 is distributed throughout the cytoplasm and accumulates at the nuclear envelope of nurse cells and the oocyte. A GFP fusion protein containing the C-terminal region of MSP-300 is also sufficient to localize protein on the nuclear envelope in oocytes. To eliminate the maternal gene activity during oogenesis, we generated homozygous germ-line clones of a loss-of-function mutation in msp-300 in otherwise heterozygous mothers. In the mutant egg chambers that develop from such clones, cytoplasmic dumping of nurse cells is severely disturbed. The nuclei of nurse cells and the oocyte are mislocalized and the usually well-organized actin structures are severely disrupted. These results indicate that maternal MSP-300 plays an important role in actin-dependent nuclear anchorage during cytoplasmic transport.  相似文献   

9.
Elimination of maternal expression of the Drosophila RNA-binding protein Lark results in female sterility. Here we show that this is due to a requirement during oogenesis. Developing oocytes from lark(1) germline clones (GLCs) are often smaller than normal due to defects in nurse cell cytoplasmic "dumping." Late-stage egg chambers from lark(1) GLCs contain low levels of cortical and ring canal associated actin and completely lack nurse cell cytoplasmic F-actin bundles, suggesting the "dumping" phenotype is due to a defect in the actin cytoskeleton. Localization of Hu-li tai shao (Hts) protein, a component of ring canals, is also disrupted in these mutants. In addition to the dumpless phenotype, we observed a buildup of late-stage egg chambers, a phenotype that correlates with the decrease in egg-laying observed in the mutants. We postulate that this phenotype is due to defects in the cytoskeletal integrity of eggs since retained and oviposited eggs are fragile and often deflated. These mutant phenotypes are likely due to disruption of an RNA-binding function of Lark as similar phenotypes were observed in flies carrying specific RNA-binding domain mutations. We propose that Lark functions during oogenesis as an RNA-binding protein, regulating mRNAs required for nurse cell transport or apoptosis.  相似文献   

10.
Extensive programmed structural and functional changes of insect follicular epithelium during oogenesis provide a model to study modulation of cytoskeletal organization during morphogenesis in a non-dividing cell population. Rhodamine-phalloidin staining of whole mounted and cryosectioned oogenic follicles reveal changing F-actin filament organization from pre- to post-vitellogenic stages consistent with the presumptive dorsal-ventral orientation of the future embryo. Filaments are not abundant in pre-vitellogenic follicle cells up to day 2. Differences between dorsal and ventral follicle cells appear first on day 3. Obviously patent follicle cells are seen only on the ventral follicle surface which exhibits stronger F-actin fluorescence than the dorsal non-patent epithelium. On the presumptive ventral side of midvitellogenic follicles morphologically distinct bundles of actin filaments orient peripherally into projections connecting adjacent follicle cells and from the center of follicle cells apically into macrovillar projections extending toward the oocyte surface. The mid-vitellogenic dorsal follicle cell layer also possesses macrovillar extensions containing F-actin which reach and appear to penetrate the oolema. During chorion deposition major reorganization of actin of follicle cells takes place. After chorion deposition all F-actin filaments within a given follicle cell are arranged into large parallel bundles with semi-regular cross-striations which exclude fluorescent label. The parallel orientation of actin striated filament bundles within each follicle cell appears to be random with respect to the orientation of bundles in neighboring follicle cells over much of the mid-latitude of the follicle epithelium. At anterior and posterior follicle poles a more axial orientation of striated bundles is evident. This muscle-like tissue arrangement is appropriate for cooperation in ovulating the chorionated oocyte from the follicle into the oviduct.  相似文献   

11.
Mutations in supernova, previously shown to uncouple chromosome replication from segregation during cleavage in Drosophila embryos, also sanctions extra divisions of cystoblasts and spermatoblasts. This leads either to the formation of egg chambers which contain more than fifteen nurse cells or testes which have an excess of spermatocytes. In maturing egg chambers two potential oocytes may be specified in which case they are often ectopically located and connected with surrounding nurse cells by four ring canals. However, a typical oocyte nucleus is not always present and these chambers usually become necrotic and degenerate. The nurse cells are of variable size, but are still interconnected by a system of ring canals. They all possess a polyploid nucleus. Sequestering of maternal mRNA's from the nurse cells into the potential oocyte(s) takes place but there is no localization of this maternal information within the oocyte probably because of defective microtubule assembly. Many spermatocytes fail to complete meiosis so that bundles of spermatids are reduced in size and the males have reduced fertility. It is proposed that this gene is indirectly involved in regulating the timing of mitotic divisions in both cystoblasts and spermatoblasts through its interference with microtubule assembly which is consistent with its role during embryogenesis.  相似文献   

12.
Growing the intracellular bridges that connect nurse cells with each o ther and to the developing oocyte is vital for egg development. These ring canals increase from 0.5 microns in diameter at stage 2 to 10 microns in diameter at stage 11. Thin sections cut horizontally as you would cut a bagel, show that there is a layer of circumferentially oriented actin filaments attached to the plasma membrane at the periphery of each canal. By decoration with subfragment 1 of myosin we find actin filaments of mixed polarities in the ring such as found in the "contractile ring" formed during cytokinesis. In vertical sections through the canal the actin filaments appear as dense dots. At stage 2 there are 82 actin filaments in the ring, by stage 6 there are 717 and by stage 10 there are 726. Taking into account the diameter, this indicates that there is 170 microns of actin filaments/canal at stage 2 (pi x 0.5 microns x 82), 14,000 microns at stage 9 and approximately 23,000 microns at stage 11 or one inch of actin filament! The density of actin filaments remains unchanged throughout development. What is particularly striking is that by stages 4-5, the ring of actin filaments has achieved its maximum thickness, even though the diameter has not yet increased significantly. Thereafter, the diameter increases. Throughout development, stages 2-11, the canal length also increases. Although the density (number of actin filaments/micron2) through a canal remains constant from stage 5 on, the actin filaments appear as a net of interconnected bundles. Further information on this net of bundles comes from studying mutant animals that lack kelch, a protein located in the ring canal that has homology to the actin binding protein, scruin. In this mutant, the actin filaments form normally but individual bundles that comprise the fibers of the net are not bound tightly together. Some bundles enter into the ring canal lumen but do not completely occlude the lumen. all these observations lay the groundwork for our understanding of how a noncontractile ring increases in thickness, diameter, and length during development.  相似文献   

13.
The Arp2/3 complex has been shown to dramatically increase the slow spontaneous rate of actin filament nucleation in vitro, and it is known to be important for remodeling the actin cytoskeleton in vivo. We isolated and characterized loss of function mutations in genes encoding two subunits of the Drosophila Arp2/3 complex: Arpc1, which encodes the homologue of the p40 subunit, and Arp3, encoding one of the two actin-related proteins. We used these mutations to study how the Arp2/3 complex contributes to well-characterized actin structures in the ovary and the pupal epithelium. We found that the Arp2/3 complex is required for ring canal expansion during oogenesis but not for the formation of parallel actin bundles in nurse cell cytoplasm and bristle shaft cells. The requirement for Arp2/3 in ring canals indicates that the polymerization of actin filaments at the ring canal plasma membrane is important for driving ring canal growth.  相似文献   

14.
《The Journal of cell biology》1989,109(6):3005-3013
We have used murine splenic erythrolasts infected with the anemia- inducing strain of Friend virus (FVA cells), as an in vitro model to study cytoskeletal elements during erythroid maturation and enucleation. FVA cells are capable of enucleating in suspension culture in vitro, indicating that associations with an extracellular matrix or accessory cells are not required for enucleation to occur. The morphology of FVA cells undergoing enucleation is nearly identical to erythroblasts enucleating in vivo. The nucleus is segregated to one side of the cell and then appears to be pinched off resulting in an extruded nucleus and reticulocyte. The extruded nucleus is surrounded by an intact plasma membrane and has little cytoplasm associated with it. Newly formed reticulocytes have an irregular shape, are vacuolated and contain all cytoplasmic organelles. The spatial distribution of several cytoskeletal proteins was examined during the maturation process. Spectrin was found associated with the plasma membrane of FVA cells at all stages of maturation but was segregated entirely to the incipient reticulocyte during enucleation. Microtubules formed cages around nuclei in immature FVA cells and were found primarily in the incipient reticulocyte in cells undergoing enucleation. Reticulocytes occasionally contained microtubules, but a generalized diffuse distribution of tubulin was more common. Vimentin could not be detected at any time in FVA cell maturation. Filamentous actin (F-actin) had a patchy distribution at the cell surface in the most immature erythroblasts, but F-actin bundles could be detected as the cells matured. F-actin was found concentrated between the extruding nucleus and incipient reticulocyte in enucleating erythroblasts. Newly formed reticulocytes exhibited punctate actin fluorescence whereas extruded nuclei lacked F-actin. Addition of colchicine, vinblastine, or taxol to cultures of FVA cells did not affect enucleation. In contrast, cytochalasin D caused a complete inhibition of enucleation that could be reversed by washing out the cytochalasin D. These results demonstrate that F-actin plays a role in enucleation while the complete absence of microtubules or excessive numbers of polymerized microtubules do not affect enucleation.  相似文献   

15.
In Drosophila oogenesis, the development of a mature oocyte depends on having properly developed ring canals that allow cytoplasm transport from the nurse cells to the oocyte. Ring canal assembly is a step-wise process that transforms an arrested cleavage furrow into a stable intercellular bridge by the addition of several proteins. Here we describe a new gene we named cheerio that provides a critical function for ring canal assembly. Mutants in cheerio fail to localize ring canal inner rim proteins including filamentous actin, the ring canal-associated products from the hu-li tai shao (hts) gene, and kelch. Since hts and kelch are present but unlocalized in cheerio mutant cells, cheerio is likely to function upstream from each of them. Examination of mutants in cheerio places it in the pathway of ring canal assembly between cleavage furrow arrest and localization of hts and actin filaments. Furthermore, this mutant reveals that the inner rim cytoskeleton is required for expansion of the ring canal opening and for plasma membrane stabilization.  相似文献   

16.
L Cooley  E Verheyen  K Ayers 《Cell》1992,69(1):173-184
The entire cytoplasmic contents of 15 highly polyploid nurse cells are transported rapidly to the oocyte near the end of Drosophila oogenesis. chickadee is one of a small group of genes whose mutant phenotype includes a disruption of this nurse cell cytoplasm transport. We have cloned the chickadee gene and found that cDNA clones encode a protein 40% identical to yeast and Acanthamoeba profilin. The nurse cells from chickadee egg chambers that lack ovary-specific profilin fail to synthesize cytoplasmic actin networks correctly. In addition, the nurse cell nuclei in chickadee egg chambers become displaced and often partially stretched through the channels leading into the oocyte, blocking the flow of cytoplasm. We suggest that the newly synthesized cytoplasmic actin networks are responsible for maintaining nuclear position in the nurse cells.  相似文献   

17.
Summary Oogenesis is known to be important for embryonic pattern formation. For this reason we have studied the early differentiation of the honeybee ovariole histologically, ultrastructurally, and by staining F-actin with rhodaminyl-phalloidin. At the anterior tip of the ovariole, stem cells are lined up in a single file; they are organelle-poor but contain characteristic electrondense bodies with lysosomal properties. The presence of these bodies in cystocytes as well as prefollicle cells indicates that both cell types may be derived from the apical stem cells. During later stages of oogenesis, the follicle cells differentiate cytologically in different regions of the follicle. The organization of the intercellular bridges between cystocytes derived from a single cystoblast has been studied in detail. The polyfusomes in the intercellular bridges of cystocyte clusters stain with rhodaminyl-phalloidin and hence contain F-actin. Later, when the polyfusomes begin to desintegrate, F-actin rings form which line the rims of the intercellular bridges. Actin might be recruited from conspicuous F-actin stores which were detected in the germ-line cells. The F-actin rings are dissembled some time before the onset of vitellogenesis when the nurse chamber has grown to a length of about 200 m. At the basal side of the follicle cells (close to the basement membrane facing the haemocdele) parallel microfilament bundles encircle the ovariole. The microfilament bundles which are oriented mostly perpendicular to the long axis of the ovariole were first observed around the zone where the cystocyte divisions occur; after this phase the micro-filament bundles become organized differently in the follicle cells associated with the nurse cells and in the follicular epithelium of the oocyte. Correspondence to: H.O. Gutzeit  相似文献   

18.
19.
20.
In the present study, we describe the features of programmed cell death of the ovarian nurse cells occurring during vitellogenesis of the silkmoth Bombyx mori. At developmental stage 5, the nurse cells occupy one-half of the follicular volume and obtain a rather spherical shape, while the nurse cell nuclei appear large and elongated, forming impressive projections. At the following stage, stage 6, the nurse cells decrease in size and their shape becomes elliptic. The nuclei remain elongated, being also characterized by large lobes. The lobes of the ramified nurse cell nuclei seem to retain the nucleus in the center of the cell during the dumping of the nurse cell cytoplasm into the growing oocyte. At stage 7, membrane enclosed vacuoles can be easily detected into the nurse cells cytoplasm. Ultrastructural analysis and fluorescent microscopy using mono-dansyl-cadaverine staining of these vacuoles also reveal that they represent autolysosomes. Caspase activity is detected during stage 7, as it is demonstrated by using the Red-VAD-FMK staining reagent. At developmental stages 8 and 9, the nurse cells exhibit chromatin condensation, DNA fragmentation and caspase activity. Finally, during the following stage 10, the nuclear remnants are assembled into apoptotic vesicles, which, after being phagocytosed, are observed in the cytoplasm of adjacent follicle cells. We propose that apoptosis and autophagy operate synergistically during vitellogenesis of B. mori, in order to achieve an efficient and rapid clearance of the degenerated nurse cell cluster.  相似文献   

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