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1.
The microtubule preprophase bands (PPBs) participate in the sequence of events to position cell plates in most plants. However, the mechanism of PPB formation remains to be clarified. In the present study, the organization of PPBs in Arabidopsis suspension cultured cells was investigated by confocal laser scanning microscopy combined with pharmacological treatments of reagents specific for the cytoskeleton elements. Double staining of F-actin and microtubules (MTs) showed that actin filaments were arranged randomly and no colocalization with cortical MTs was observed in the interphase cells. However, cortical actin filaments showed colocalization with MTs during the formation of PPBs. A broad actin band formed with the broad MT band in the initiation of PPB and narrowed down together with the MT band to form the PPB. Nevertheless, broad MT bands were formed but failed to narrow down in cells treated with the F-actin disruptor latrunculin A. In contrast, in the presence of the F-actin stabilizer phalloidin, PPB formation did not exhibit any abnormality. Therefore, the integrity, but not the dynamics, of the actin cytoskeleton is necessary for the formation of normal PPBs. Treatment with 2, 3-butanedine monoxime, a myosin inhibitor, also resulted in the formation of broad MT bands, indicating that actomyosin may be involved in the rearrangement of MTs to form the PPBs. Double staining of MTs and myosin revealed that myosin concentrated on the PPB region during PPB formation. It is suggested that the actin cytoskeleton at the PPB site may serve as a rack to transport cortical MTs by using myosin when the broad MT band narrows down to form the PPB.  相似文献   

2.
H. Wang  A. J. Cutler  L. C. Fowke 《Protoplasma》1989,150(2-3):110-116
Summary Multinucleate cells derived from soybean protoplasts were used to investigate the effect of increased nuclear number on the development and frequency of preprophase bands (PPBs) of microtubules (MTs). The results do not support the assumption that one nucleus establishes one PPB because the majority of multinucleate cells had only one large PPB. However, nuclear number or ploidy level has some influence on PPB development since double PPBs occurred more often in multinucleate than uninucleate cells. Double (divergent) PPBs were present at early and late stages of PPB development, suggesting that they are not a transient stage. PPBs in multinucleate cells developed in a similar fashion to those in uninucleate cells. In multinucleate cells, each dividing nucleus had its own spindle and phragmoplast. Subsequent phragmoplast development was frequently uncoupled from PPB distribution. Most multinucleates contained a single large PPB but at telophase, multiple phragmoplasts oriented in different planes.Abbreviations MT microtubule - MtSB microtubule stabilizing buffer - PBS phosphate buffered saline - PNF perinuclear fluorescence - PPB preprophase band  相似文献   

3.
Summary To date it has been accepted that preprophase bands of microtubules (PPBs) either do not precede cell division or do so inconsistently in suspension cultures, the assumption being that such cultures proliferate in an unorganized state in which placement of cell plates is not regulated by the PPB system that is widespread in organized tissues. Using indirect immunofluorescence microscopy with antitubulin, the relative frequency of occurrence of PPBs in enzymatically separated cells from root tips and suspension cultures of carrot and tobacco, was quantified by taking the ratio of the number of PPBs: phragmoplast. This ratio was termed the PPB index.One carrot suspension culture proliferated in a medium containing 2,4-Dichlorophenoxyacetic acid (2,4-D), and recognizable stages in somatic embryogenesis formed when 2,4-D was removed from the medium. Another carrot suspension culture was nonembryogenic and removal of 2,4-D resulted in a reduction of cell division and increase in cell elongation. The tobacco culture was a cytokinin habituated cell line and also required 2,4-D to maintain cell division. It ceased proliferation, and cell elongation took place if 2,4-D was removed.The PPB index in the root tips from both species, and in both types of carrot suspension culture was approximately the same but was approx. 15-fold lower in the tobacco suspension. PPBs in the tobacco suspension were atypical in structure as well as sparse in numbers. The PPB index allows quantitative comparisons between different tissues to be made. The low PPB index and the irregular PPBs in the tobacco suspension correlates with its inability to undergo organized morphogenesis and generate spatially defined cell lineages upon 2,4-D removal. In contrast, the high PPB index in the carrot suspension cultures correlates with their potential for organized embryo formation, whether or not that potential is realized by withdrawal of 2,4-D. However, their high PPB index is not obligatorily coupled to embryogenesis.  相似文献   

4.
Summary The organization of microtubules during interphase and prophase in embryogenic cultures of black spruce (Picea mariana) was investigated by indirect immunofluorescence. Somatic embryos of black spruce possessed an extensively branched and interconnecting network of fine interphase cortical microtubules. The development of pre-prophase bands (PPBs) in embryogenic black spruce cultures was compared with that in non-embryogenic cell cultures of jack pine (Pinus banksiana). PPBs in both species were initially arranged as a very broad array of microtubules, later (early to mid-prophase) becoming narrower and more intensely fluorescent. The occurrence of pre-prophase bands in relation to the number of phragmoplasts (i.e. PPB index) of black spruce somatic embryos was significantly higher (p<0.01) than that found for jack pine cells.  相似文献   

5.
Microspores of Brassica napus L. cv. Topas, undergo embryogenesis when cultured at 32.5 °C for the first 18–24 h and then at 25 °C. The first division in heat-treated microspores is a symmetric division in contrast to the asymmetric division found after the first pollen mitosis in-planta or in microspores cultured continuously at 25 °C. This asymmetric division is unique in higher plants as it results in daughter cells separated by a non-consolidated wall. The cytoskeleton has an important role in such morphological changes. We examined microtubule (MT) organization during the first 24 h of heat induction in the embryogenic B. napus cv. Topas and the non-embryogenic B. napus breeding line 0025. Preprophase bands (PPBs) of MTs appeared in cv. Topas microspores in late uninucleate microspores and in prophase figures after 4–8 h of heat treatment. However, more than 60% of the PPBs were not continuous bands. In contrast, PPBs were never observed in pollen mitosis; MT strands radiated from the surface of the nuclear envelope throughout microspore maturation to the end of prophase of pollen mitosis I, during in-planta development and in microspores cultured at 25 °C. Following 24 h of heat treatment, over 95% of the microspores appeared to have divided symmetrically as indicated by the similar size of the daughter nuclei, but only 7–16% of the microspores eventually formed embryos. Discontinuous walls were observed in more than 50% of the divisions and it is probable that the discontinuous PPBs gave rise to such wall abnormalities which may then obstruct embryo development. Preprophase bands were not formed in heat-treated microspores of the non-embryogenic line 0025 and the ensuing divisions showed discontinuous walls. It is concluded that the appearance of PPBs in heat-induced microspores marks sporophytic development and that continuous PPBs are required for cell wall consolidation and embryogenesis. It follows that induced structures with two equally condensed nuclei, do not necessarily denote symmetric divisions. Received: 22 October 1998 / Accepted: 28 November 1998  相似文献   

6.
Ambrose C  Wasteneys GO 《Protoplasma》2012,249(Z1):S69-S76
The dynamic microtubule (MT) cytoskeleton found in the cell cortex of plants drives cell expansion via cell wall modifications. In the last decade, live cell imaging studies employing green fluorescent protein have helped unravel the mechanisms behind how cells arrange cortical MTs into complex arrays and shape cell expansion. In this review, we explore the reverse scenario: how cell geometry and organelles influence and constrain the organization and behavior of cortical MTs. This newly emerging principle explains how cells perceive local nanoscale structural input from MT-organizing centers, such as the nucleus, endomembranes, and cell edges, and translate this into global cell-wide order via MT self-organization. Studies primarily using the model plant Arabidopsis thaliana and tobacco BY-2 suspension cultures have broadened our understanding of how cells form not only elegant parallel arrays but also more complex MT configurations, including the prominent MT bundles found in preprophase bands, leaf epidermal cells, and developing xylem.  相似文献   

7.
The dynamic microtubule (MT) cytoskeleton found in the cell cortex of plants drives cell expansion via cell wall modifications. In the last decade, live cell imaging studies employing green fluorescent protein have helped unravel the mechanisms behind how cells arrange cortical MTs into complex arrays and shape cell expansion. In this review, we explore the reverse scenario: how cell geometry and organelles influence and constrain the organization and behavior of cortical MTs. This newly emerging principle explains how cells perceive local nanoscale structural input from MT-organizing centers, such as the nucleus, endomembranes, and cell edges, and translate this into global cell-wide order via MT self-organization. Studies primarily using the model plant Arabidopsis thaliana and tobacco BY-2 suspension cultures have broadened our understanding of how cells form not only elegant parallel arrays but also more complex MT configurations, including the prominent MT bundles found in preprophase bands, leaf epidermal cells, and developing xylem.  相似文献   

8.
MICROTUBULE ORGANIZATION 1 (MOR1) is a plant member of the highly conserved MAP215/Dis1 family of microtubule-associated proteins. Prior studies with the temperature-sensitive mor1 mutants of Arabidopsis (Arabidopsis thaliana), which harbor single amino acid substitutions in an N-terminal HEAT repeat, proved that MOR1 regulates cortical microtubule organization and function. Here we demonstrate by use of live cell imaging and immunolabeling that the mor1-1 mutation generates specific defects in the microtubule arrays of dividing vegetative cells. Unlike the universal cortical microtubule disorganization in elongating mor1-1 cells, disruption of mitotic and cytokinetic microtubule arrays was not detected in all dividing cells. Nevertheless, quantitative analysis identified distinct defects in preprophase bands (PPBs), spindles, and phragmoplasts. In nearly one-half of dividing cells at the restrictive temperature of 30 degrees C, PPBs were not detected prior to spindle formation, and those that did form were often disrupted. mor1-1 spindles and phragmoplasts were short and abnormally organized and persisted for longer times than in wild-type cells. The reduced length of these arrays predicts that the component microtubule lengths are also reduced, suggesting that microtubule length is a critical determinant of spindle and phragmoplast structure, orientation, and function. Microtubule organizational defects led to aberrant chromosomal arrangements, misaligned or incomplete cell plates, and multinucleate cells. Antiserum raised against an N-terminal MOR1 sequence labeled the full length of microtubules in interphase arrays, PPBs, spindles, and phragmoplasts. Continued immunolabeling of the disorganized and short microtubules of mor1-1 at the restrictive temperature demonstrated that the mutant mor1-1(L174F) protein loses function without dissociating from microtubules, providing important insight into the mechanism by which MOR1 may regulate microtubule length.  相似文献   

9.
The detectability of preprophase bands (PPBs) by antibody to PSTAIR sequence, which is found in cyclin-dependent kinases and is perfectly conserved in the p34 cdc2 kinase from all known sources, was compared among root tip cells of 12 plant species and cultivars. Although more than 80% of prophase cells in all species examined had PPBs of microtubules (MTs), the detectability of PPBs by anti-PSTAIR varied from 0% to 88% depend on species examined. The detectability of PPBs by the antibody to PSTAIR was as high as that by antibody to tubulin inAllium cepa, A. fistulosum andA. tuberosum. InTriticum andPisum, the detectability varied greatly among cultivars. Only few faint PPBs could be detectable inChrysanthemum, and no PPBs were seen inHibiscus using anti-PSTAIR. The PSTAIR antibody recognized single (Hordeum, Triticum Zea) or multiple (Allium, Hibiscus, Pisum) bands around 34 kDa on protein blots of root tip exracts. PPBs of anti-PSTAIR cross reactive molecules were detectable in one fourth of the prophase cells ofPisum (cv. Snack) by the conventional method. However, the detectability of PPBs inPisum increased to 80% when the method for the PSTAIR-fluorescence was modified, suggesting that the low detectability of PPBs by anti-PSTAIR may not be due to genuine differences between species or cultivars, but may be the result of variable staining.  相似文献   

10.
T. Sawidis  H. Quader  M. Bopp  E. Schnepf 《Protoplasma》1991,163(2-3):156-161
Summary InFunaria protonemata, preprophase bands (PPBs) of microtubules do not develop when the tip cell divides, when side branches are initiated or in intercalary regeneration divisions. We report here that PPBs do, however, develop when a tmema cell is formed. In the former cases, cell division is not coupled with an expansion of the mother cell wall at the site where the cell plate will attach. In the latter case, the mother cell wall ruptures at that site and the tmema cell elongates. This observation and the findings on presence and absence of the PPB in other cell types indicate a connection between PPB occurrence and mother cell wall expansion. They support the idea that the PPB might be involved in the local secretion of cell wall material. We extend this notion, suggesting that the microtubules of the PPB control the oriented deposition of a thin layer of cellulose microfibrils at the mother cell wall which supports the firm attachment of the cell plate when the mother cell wall expands.Abbreviations FITC fluorescein isothiocyanate - IgG immunoglobulin G - MT microtubule - PPB preprophase band of microtubules - TC tmema cell  相似文献   

11.
Summary Nuclear and microtubular cycles were studied in large heterophasic multinuclear cells induced in root tips ofTriticum turgidum by caffeine treatment. Multinuclear cells and cells with polyploid nuclei exhibited various configurations of multiple and complex preprophase microtubule (Mt) bands (PPBs), including helical ones. The developmental stages of PPBs in some heterophasic cells did not comply with the cell cycle stages of the associated nuclei, a fact indicating that these events are not directly controlled by the associated nuclei. The heterophasic cells exhibited asynchronous nuclei at different stages of mitosis. In cells displaying prophase and interphase nuclei, the prophase spindle was either absent or developed around both of them or developed around the prophase nuclei earlier than around the interphase ones. During prometaphase-metaphase of the advanced nuclei the lagging interphase nuclei were induced to form prematurely condensed chromosomes (PCCs) along with spindle formation around them. These observations suggest that the mitotic transition in heterophasic cells is delayed but is ultimately achieved due to the effect of the advanced nuclei, which induces a premature mitotic entry of the lagging nuclei. Although kinetochore Mt bundles were found associated with PCCs, their metaphase and anaphase spindles were abnormal resulting in abnormal or abortive anaphases. In some heterophasic cells, metaphase-anaphase transition did not take place simultaneously in different chromosome groups, signifying that the cells do not exit from the mitotic state after anaphase initiation of the advanced nuclei. Asynchronous pace of mitosis of different chromosome groups was also observed during anaphase and telophase. Implications of these observations in understanding plant cell cycle regulation are discussed.Abbreviations cdk cyclin dependent kinase - Mt microtubule - PCC prematurely condensed chromosome - PPB preprophase band  相似文献   

12.
Nuclear DNA replication and the development of preprophase bands (PPBs) are two chronologically close processes during the higher plant cell cycle. However, it is not clear whether occurrence of PPBs is coupled with DNA replication. A soybean protoplast culture with a high frequency of PPBs was used to study the relationship between the two processes when treated with aphidicolin, a potent and specific inhibitor of eukaryotic DNA polymerase-α. When DNA replication was partially inhibited by 10 mg l-1 aphidicolin, both the percentage of cells with PPBs and the mitotic index (MI) decreased in absolute terms, but there were proportionately more PPBs than mitoses. Since PPBs change in appearance as they develop, they were divided into categories of early (interphase associated) and late (prophase associated). The increased PPB/MI ratio was associated with an increased proportion of early stage PPBs relative to late stage PPBs. When DNA replication was completely blocked by 50 mg l-1 aphidicolin, both MI and the percentage of cells with PPBs were close to zero. These results suggest that development of PPBs was to a large extent coupled DNA replication. We propose that the increased PPB/MI ratio at 10 mg l-1 aphidicolin was due to a linkage between the duration of interphase and the time period in which early stage PPBs are visible. The increased duration of early PPBs partially compensates for the reduced number of nuclei reaching the stage of PPB initiation. Furthermore, in cultures containing aphidicolin, the percentage of PPBs with simultaneous perinuclear fluorescence (PNF, accumulation of microtubules on nuclear envelope) was reduced and whenever PNF was prominent and dense on the nuclear envelope the nucleus showed chromatin condensation. These observations indicated that the transition from PPB to PNF and then to the prophase spindle is closely related to the progress of the nuclear cycle.  相似文献   

13.
Summary InZinnia suspension cultures, two general categories of tracheary element (TE) secondary wall patterns can be distinguished: bands and webs. Band patterns are found in elongated cells or regions of cells, web patterns in isodiametric cells or regions of cells. Interphase cortical microtubule arrays, organized before overt differentiation occurs, determine both the shape of the cell and whether band or web patterns will be deposited at the time of TE formation. By altering cell shape and consequently also altering the interphase microtubule array, it is possible to control the type of wall pattern which is deposited.These results provide support for the hypothesis which states that the organization of interphase cortical microtubule arrays (i.e., random or parallel), which laterally associate during tracheary element differentiation, determines the pattern in which secondary walls will be deposited.  相似文献   

14.
Summary In plant cell suspension cultures sensitive to the herbicide amiprophos-methyl (APM), 1 to 3 M APM completely depolymerized both cortical and mitotic microtubule (MT) arrays in 1 hour. In comparison, a 2 hour application of 3 mM colchicine had no effect on MT arrays. Recovery from APM treatment occurred as early as 5 minutes after removal of APM. Short, cortical MTs were visible in 3 hours and complete MT arrays were found within 22 hours after drug removal.Sensitivity to APM-induced MT depolymerization varied according to species but was increased or decreased by varying the mitotic rate in cultures. The results indicated APM sensitivity was related to lowered stability of MT arrays in rapidly cycling cells. APM treatment may help distinguish stabilized cortical MTs in elongating cells and nonstabilized cortical MTs in rapidly dividing cells.Abbreviations MT microtubule - APM amiprophos-methyl - DMSO dimethyl sulfoxide - PBS phosphate buffered saline  相似文献   

15.
We have studied the timing of preprophase band (PPB) development in the division cycle of onion (Allium cepa L.) root-tip cells by combinations of immunofluorescence microscopy of microtubules, microspectrophotometry of nuclear DNA, and autoradiography of [3H]thymidine incorporation during pulse-chase experiments. In normally grown onion root tips, every cell with a PPB had the G2 level of nuclear DNA. Some were in interphase, prior to chromatin condensation, and some had varying degrees of chromatin condensation, up to the stage of prophase at which the PPB-prophase spindle transition occurs. In addition, autoradiography showed that PPBs can be formed in cells which have just finished their S phase, and microspectrophotometry enabled us to detect a population of cells in G2 which had no PPBs, these presumably including cells which had left the division cycle. The effects of inhibitors of DNA synthesis showed that the formation of PPBs is not fully coupled to events of the nuclear cycle. Although the mitotic index decreased 6-10-fold to less than 0.5% when roots were kept in 20 g·ml-1 aphidicolin for more than 8 h, the percentage of cells containing PPBs did not decrease in proportion: the number of cells in interphase with PPBs increased while the number in prophase decreased. Almost the same phenomena were observed in the presence of 100 g·ml-1 5-aminouracil and 40 g·ml-1 hydroxyurea. In controls, all cells with PPBs were in G2 or prophase, but in the presence of aphidicolin, 5-aminouracil or hydroxyurea, some of the interphase cells with PPBs were in the S phase or even in the G1 phase. We conclude that PPB formation normally occurs in G2 (in at least some cases very early in G2) and that this timing can be experimentally uncoupled from the timing of DNA duplication in the cell-division cycle. The result accords with other evidence indicating that the cytoplasmic events of cytokinesis are controlled in parallel to the nuclear cycle, rather than in an obligatorily coupled sequence.Abbreviations APC aphidicolin - 5-AU 5-aminouracil - DAPI 4, 6-diamidino-2phenylindole - HU hydroxyurea - MI mitotic index - MT microtubule - PMSF phenylmethyl-sulfonyl fluoride - PPB preprophase band - %PPB percentage of cells with PPBs  相似文献   

16.
Protoplast cultures of Vicia hajastana have a high division frequency. However, 20–40% of the microcolonies fail to develop beyond the 20-30-cell stage. Aneuploids and polyploids were found in early divisions and persisted in older cultures. The resulting protoplast-derived suspension culture differed karyologically from the original culture. Karyokinesis and cytokinesis were studied using simultaneous staining of microtubules (MT) by immunofluorescence, DNA by Hoechst 33258 (2-[2-(4-hydroxyphenyl)-6-benzimidazoyl]-6-[1-methyl-4-piperazyl]benzimidazole) and cell walls by Calcofluor. Freshly prepared protoplasts showed mitoses and high frequencies of binucleate cells, which probably resulted mainly from failure of cytokinesis. In early divisions, many mitoses showed metaphase chromosomes with kinetochore MT but lacking polar MT. These aberrant mitoses probably accounted for an increase in hyperploid cells observed in protoplast cultures. Multipolar spindles, which gave rise to hypoploid cells, were also seen in the early divisions. Telophase abnormalities included dislocated phragmoplasts and incomplete formation of cross walls. Many divisions resulted in daughter nuclei of unequal size. Unequal segregation of chromosomes was detected by cytofluorimetric measurements of telophase nuclei stained with Hoechst. After 5 d of culture, 91% of the divisions with incomplete cross walls also contained different-size nuclei; conversely, 78% of the divisions with fully formed cross walls contained nuclei of equal size. The malfunctioning of spindles and phragmoplasts in the same cells indicates a functional interdependence of the different MT configurations in mitosis. During the first 24 h of culture, a high frequency of abnormalities was found in spindles, cross-wall formation and chromosome segregation; this was reduced substantially in the cells undergoing first division by 48 h. The data indicate that it may be possible to manipulate the frequency of abnormalities by controlling the onset of the first division in protoplast cultures.Abbreviations 2,4-D 2,4-dichlorophenoxyacetic acid - MT microtubule(s) - PB prophase band(s) - PNF perinuclear fluorescence - PPB pre-prophase band  相似文献   

17.
A detailed comparative examination of microtubule (MT) organization in interphase and dividing cells of Uronema sp., Klebsormidium flaccidum, K. subtilissimum, Stichococcus bacillaris and S. chloranthus was made using tubulin immunofluorescence and transmission electron microscopy (TEM). During interphase all the species bear a well-organized cortical MT system, consisting of parallel bundles with different orientations. In Uronema sp. the cortical MT bundles are longitudinally oriented, whereas in the other species they are in transverse orientation to the axis of the cells. Considerable differences in MT organization were also observed during stages of mitosis, mainly preprophase, as well as cytokinesis. In Uronema sp., a particular radial MT assembly is organized during preprophase-early prophase, which was not observed in the other species. In Stichococcus a fine MT ring surrounded the nucleus during preprophase and prophase. An MT ring, together with single cytoplasmic MTs, was also found associated with the developing diaphragm during cytokinesis in Stichococcus. A phycoplast participates in cytokinesis in Uronema sp., but not in the other species. In Uronema sp. the centrosome functions as a microtubule organizing center (MTOC) during mitosis, but not during interphase and cytokinesis. The phylogenetic significance of these differences is discussed in combination with SSU/ITS sequencing and other, existing molecular data.  相似文献   

18.
The effects of aluminium (Al) on dividing root-tip cells of Triticum turgidum were investigated with tubulin immunolabelling and electron microscopy. Aluminium affects the mechanisms controlling the organization of microtubule (MT) cytoskeleton, as well as tubulin polymerization, and induces the following aberrations in mitotic cells. (1) It delays the MT disassembly during mitosis, resulting in the persistence of preprophase MT bands in the late prophase cells, the presence of prophase spindles in prometaphase cells, and a disturbance in the shortening of kinetochore MT bundles in anaphase cells. (2) It interferes with the self-organization process of MTs into bipolar systems, inhibiting the formation of prophase and metaphase spindles. (3) Aluminium induces the formation of atypical MT arrays, which in the immunofluorescent specimens appear as ring-like tubulin aggregations in the cortical cytoplasm of the preprophase/prophase cells and as endoplasmic tubulin bundles in prophase and metaphase/anaphase cells; abnormal preprophase MT bands are assembled, consisting of atypical cortical and endoplasmic MT bundles, the latter clearly lining the nuclear envelope on the preprophase MT band plane. (4) It disorders the chromosome movements carried out by the mitotic spindle. In addition, after prolonged Al treatments chromatin condensation is inhibited. The outcome is greatly disturbed organization and function of the mitotic apparatus, as well as inhibition of cells from entering mitosis. This study shows that the MT cytoskeleton is a target site of Al toxicity in mitotic root-tip cells of T. turgidum . The possible mechanisms by which Al exerts its toxicity on MT organization and function are discussed.  相似文献   

19.
Summary Cortical microtubules (MTs) at indifferent zones in immatureNitella internodes were investigated by injection of fluorescently tagged sheep brain tubulin into living cells and by immunofluorescence on fixed material. Nearly identical MT patterns and numbers were detected with the two techniques, indicating that sheep brain tubulin incorporated into all cortical MTs. MTs were aligned transversely to the long axis of the cell and approximately one MT was present every micrometer of longitudinal cell distance. Treatment of internodes with propionic acid to acidify cytosolic pH caused depolymerization of MTs and an increase in the unpolymerized tubulin pool. Transfer of young, vigorously elongating cells to media inducing premature growth cessation resulted in a slight decrease in microtubule numbers but did not significantly alter microtubule orientation patterns or microtubule lifespans. MTs remained transverse for days following growth cessation before finally assuming a more random alignment characteristic of mature, non-growing internodes. No differences in MT numbers, orientation, or dynamics were detected between acid and alkaline bands in internodes incubated in a band-inducing medium. Thus, properties of cortical MT arrays were not closely coupled to growth status or to regional differences in cellular physiology associated with pH banding.Abbrevations BIM band-inducing medium - CCM Chara culture medium - CF carboxyfluorescein - FRAP fluorescence redistribution after photobleaching - MT microtubule  相似文献   

20.
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   

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