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1.
Brugerolle G  Mignot JP 《Protoplasma》2003,222(1-2):13-21
Summary. An ultrastructure study of the rhizoplast in Synura petersenii, Mallomonas fastigiata, and M. insignis shows that it consists of 15–20 striated rootlets that form a claw or an incomplete cone over the nucleus. These rootlets course along one face of the nucleus between the nuclear membrane and the cis-face of the Golgi stack of cisternae. They converge and merge above the nucleus, forming a stub attached to the proximal section of the two basal bodies. These cross-striated rootlets are composed of closely packed longitudinal microfibrils. By immunofluorescence, the basal bodies and the rootlets forming the claw were decorated by the anti-centrin monoclonal antibody ICL19 raised against the Paramecium tetraurelia acidic centrin protein and by two antibodies raised against the striated parabasal and costal striated fibres of trichomonads. Only the anti-centrin monoclonal antibody 20H5 raised against Chlamydomonas reinhardtii centrin strongly labelled the 20–22 kDa protein bands from the extracted cytoskeleton of S. petersenii by immunoblotting. Electron micrographs of mitosis in S. petersenii cells revealed that the segregated pairs of basal bodies are linked by the striated rootlets of the rhizoplast to the poles of the mitotic spindle. The spindle microtubules arise perpendicularly from the striated rootlets of the basal body–nucleus connector forming the centrosome. In conclusion, in these cells there is a basal body–nucleus connector similar to that of C. reinhardtii and other chlorophytes. It contains centrin proteins, it is involved in the linkage of the basal bodies to the nucleus and is a component of the spindle pole body or centrosome in the dividing cell.Correspondence and reprints: Biologie des Protistes, Université Blaise Pascal de Clermont-Ferrand, Campus des Cézeaux, 63177 Aubière Cedex, France.Present address: Romagnat, France.Received February 7, 2003; accepted May 21, 2003; published online September 23, 2003  相似文献   

2.
Basal bodies from laying quail oviduct were semipurified and used as immunogen to produce monoclonal antibodies. On 38 clones obtained and among those staining the apical pole of the ciliated cell, CC-310 was chosen because it labeled the apical region with a punctuated aspect, suggesting a staining of basal bodies or of basal body-associated structures; the basal pole was also labeled. The ultrastructural localization performed by the immunogold technique showed that the labeling was mainly associated with the striated rootlets. The basal feet, the side of the basal bodies, and the basal poles of the demembranated cells were also decorated. The identification of the antigen performed by immunoblots of deciliated cortices revealed two proteins of 175,000 and 40,000, whereas immunoblots of basal bodies showed only the 175,000-mw protein. The possibility of these two proteins sharing the same epitope, located at both poles of the cell, is discussed. Immunofluorescence ascertained that CC-310 decorated the striated rootlets in ciliated epithelia from other species: mussel, frog, and human tissue. Finally, when tested on cultured cell lines, CC-310 labeled the centrosome and its associated rootlets on PtK2 during interphase. During mitosis the poles of the mitotic spindle were stained without any apparent rootlet-like structure.  相似文献   

3.
In ciliated cells of metazoa, striated rootlets associated with basal bodies anchor the ciliary apparatus to the cytoskeleton. We have used here a monoclonal antibody against a 175 kDa protein associated with the striated rootlets of quail ciliated cells, to study ciliated cells of different species. In mussel gill epithelium the antibody recognized a protein of 92 kDa which shows a periodic distribution along the striated rootlets. In frog ciliated palate epithelium, two different rootlets are associated with basal bodies, both are decorated and only one protein of 48 kDa is recognized on immunoblot. The antigen is arranged in a helix around the striated rootlets. In rabbit ciliated oviduct epithelium, we detected the presence of very small and thin rootlets which are weakly labeled. We have shown that an epitope associated with the striated rootlets is preserved through evolution although the molecular weight of the peptide varies. We have also observed the appearance of this epitope on protein associated with junctional complexes in rabbit and cytoskeleton component in quail oviduct.  相似文献   

4.
5.
Centrin, an EF hand Ca(2+) binding protein, has been cloned in Tetrahymena thermophila. It is a 167 amino acid protein of 19.4 kDa with a unique N-terminal region, coded by a single gene containing an 85-base pair intron. It has > 80% homology to other centrins and high homology to Tetrahymena EF hand proteins calmodulin, TCBP23, and TCBP25. Specific cellular localizations of the closely related Tetrahymena EF hand proteins are different from centrin. Centrin is localized to basal bodies, cortical fibers in oral apparatus and ciliary rootlets, the apical filament ring and to inner arm (14S) dynein (IAD) along the ciliary axoneme. The function of centrin in Ca(2+) control of IAD activity was explored using in vitro microtubule (MT) motility assays. Ca(2+) or the Ca(2+)-mimicking peptide CALP1, which binds EF hand proteins in the absence of Ca(2+), increased MT sliding velocity. Antibodies to centrin abrogated this increase. This is the first demonstration of a specific centrin function associated with axonemal dynein. It suggests that centrin is a key regulatory protein for Tetrahymena axonemal Ca(2+) responses, including ciliary reversal or chemotaxis.  相似文献   

6.
Spindle pole bodies, basal bodies and centrosomes are morphologically quite different structures that nevertheless perform similar microtubule-organizing functions in diverse cell types. The recent discoveries that both centrins and gamma-tubulin are common components of these structures suggest a molecular basis for their common functions. The role of centrins is just beginning to be investigated. These filament-associated proteins bind Ca2+. The filaments contract at least in certain circumstances by an ATP-independent mechanism. However, yeast centrin is clearly involved in the duplication of the spindle pole body. A common molecular mechanism may underlie these two apparently different functions.  相似文献   

7.
Centrins are a ubiquitous family of small Ca2+-binding proteins found at basal bodies that are placed into two groups based on sequence similarity to the human centrins 2 and 3. Analyses of basal body composition in different species suggest that they contain a centrin isoform from each group. We used the ciliate protist Tetrahymena thermophila to gain a better understanding of the functions of the two centrin groups and to determine their potential redundancy. We have previously shown that the Tetrahymena centrin 1 (Cen1), a human centrin 2 homologue, is required for proper basal body function. In this paper, we show that the Tetrahymena centrin 2 (Cen2), a human centrin 3 homologue, has functions similar to Cen1 in basal body orientation, maintenance, and separation. The two are, however, not redundant. A further examination of human centrin 3 homologues shows that they function in a manner distinct from human centrin 2 homologues. Our data suggest that basal bodies require a centrin from both groups in order to function correctly.  相似文献   

8.
The rhizoplast, a striated band elongating from the flagellar basal body to the nucleus, is conspicuous in cells of Ochromonas danica Prings. In interphase cells, it runs from the basal body of the anterior flagellum to the space between the nucleus and the Golgi body. In O. danica, the rhizoplast duplicates during mitosis and the two rhizoplasts serve as mitotic poles. In the present study, we reinvestigated mitosis of O. danica using transmission electron microscopy and immunofluorescence microscopy, especially focusing on the rhizoplast. The nuclear envelope became dispersed during metaphase, and the rhizoplasts from two sets of the flagellar basal bodies functioned as the mitotic poles. Immunofluorescence microscopy using anti‐α‐tubulin, anti‐centrin and anti‐γ‐tubulin antibodies showed that centrin molecules were localized at the flagellar basal bodies, whereas γ‐tubulin molecules were detected at the rhizoplast during the whole cell cycle.  相似文献   

9.
In Paramecium, the morphogenesis of the cortex at cell division, which assures reconstruction of shape and surface pattern, has been shown to involve transcellular signals which spread across the cortex like a wave, originating principally from the oral apparatus. One of the events these signals control is the reorganization of the ciliary rootlets through a cycle of regression and regrowth. The ciliary rootlets are nucleated on the ciliary basal bodies and form a scaffold extending over the entire cell surface that is important in aligning the basal bodies and the unit territories organized around them in longitudinal rows. We present evidence that the mechanism underlying their reorganization is cell-cycle-dependent phosphorylation of the structural proteins which compose the ciliary rootlets. We have isolated the rootlets and prepared a polyclonal antibody against them. In situ immunofluorescence of dividing cells with the anti rootlet antibody, and with the monoclonal antibody MPM-2 specific for phosphoproteins shows that a wave of phosphorylation of the ciliary rootlets spreads across the cell at division and just precedes their regression. Two-dimensional Western blot analysis of cytoskeleton and isolated rootlets along with alkaline phosphatase treatment demonstrates that the rootlets are composed of phosphoproteins, while experiments with interphase and dividing cells provide direct evidence that hyperphosphorylation of these proteins at division brings about disassembly of the structure.  相似文献   

10.
Centrin - higher plants - MTOCs - microtubules nucleation In most eukaryotic cells, the Ca(2+)-binding protein centrin is associated with structured microtubule-organizing centers (MTOCs) such as centrosomes. In these cells, centrin either forms centrosome-associated contractile fibers, or is involved in centrosome biogenesis. Our aim was to investigate the functions of centrin in higher plant cells which do not contain centrosome-like MTOCs. We have cloned two tobacco BY-2 centrin cDNAs and we show that higher plant centrins define a phylogenetic group of proteins distinct from centrosome-associated centrins. In addition, tobacco centrins were found primarily associated with microsomes and did not colocalize with gamma-tubulin, a known MTOC marker. While the overall level of centrin did not vary during the cell cycle, centrin was prominently detected at the cell plate during telophase. Our results suggest that in tobacco, the major portion of centrin is not MTOC-associated and could be involved in the formation of the cell plate during cytokinesis.  相似文献   

11.
Cytoskeletal elements in arthropod sensilla and mammalian photoreceptors.   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
Ciliary receptor cells, typified by cilia or modified cilia, are very common in the animal kingdom. In addition to the cytoskeleton of their ciliary processes these receptors possess other specific prominent cytoskeletal elements. Two representative systems are presented: i) scolopidia, mechanosensitive sensilla of various arthropod species; and ii) photoreceptor cells of the retina of the bovine eye. Two cytoskeletal structures are characteristic for arthropod scolopidia: a scolopale typifies the innermost auxiliary cell, and long ciliary rootlets are extending well into the sensory cells. The latter element is also characteristic for the inner segment of the photoreceptor cells in bovine. The scolopale of scolopidia is mainly composed of actin filaments. In the absence of myosin, the uniform polarity of the actin filaments and their association with tropomyosin all indicate a stabilizing role of the filament bundles within the scolopale. This function and a certain elasticity of actin filament bundles may be important during stimulation of the sensilla. The ciliary rootlets of both systems originate at the basal bodies at the ciliary base of the sensory cells and project proximally. These rootlets are composed of longitudinally oriented, fine filaments forming a characteristic regular cross-striation. An alpha-actinin immunoreactivity was detected within the ciliary rootlets of scolopidia. In addition, antibodies to centrin react with the rootlets of both types of receptors. Since centrin is largely responsible for the contraction of the flagellar rootlets in green algae, contraction may also occur in the ciliary rootlets of insect sensilla and vertebrate photoreceptors. In both systems, contraction or relaxation of the ciliary rootlets could serve in sensory transduction or adaptation.  相似文献   

12.
Summary The dynamics of the cytoskeletal proteins centrin, actin, and tubulin were followed during cell division in the unicellular phytoflagellateApedinella radians (Pedinellophyceae). Three centrin, or centrin-like, components appear to coordinate independent developmental events during cell division. The first component, basal body centrin, maintains a physical link between basal bodies and the anterior nuclear membrane. Basal body centrin divides in two at metaphase, and each portion segregates with two basal bodies at anaphase. As the positioning of basal bodies defines the anterior region of the cell, basal body centrin appears to play a role in maintaining cell polarity throughout the cell cycle. The second centrin component consists of an array of filamentous bundles arranged as a six-pointed star. During cell division, the star undergoes a conformational change resulting in two distinct centrin triangles, one distributed to each daughter cell, suggesting that centrin filamentous bundles are involved in maintaining cell (radial) symmetry. The third centrin component is transient and associates with the spindle poles, emerging prior to mitosis and remaining until late anaphase/early telophase. Spindle pole centrin establishes temporary horizontal bipolarity, thereby establishing the spindle axis. Unlike centrin filamentous bundles, actin filamentous bundles depolymerize prior to mitosis, indicating they do not influence cell symmetry during cell division. Mitosis is described for the first time in a pedinellid and features a closed spindle, the absence of rhizoplasts and a persistent spindle.  相似文献   

13.
Centrin, a 20 kDa calmodulin-like protein, is located in various basal body-associated fibers in protists. We used indirect immunofluorescence of isolated cytoskeletons or methanol-fixed cells to analyze the distribution of centrin during mitosis of the biflagellate green alga Dunaliella bioculata (Butcher). The distance between the nucleus and the basal apparatus decreased in late interphase, presumably caused by the contraction of the two centrin-containing nucleus–basal body connectors (NBBCs). During prophase, centrin accumulated on the new basal bodies as shown by postembedding immunogold labeling of serial thin sections. The new basal bodies were in close contact with plaque-like structures on the nuclear envelope. In mitotic cells, basal body pairs were separated and positioned at a considerable distance from the poles of the mitotic spindle. At this stage, we observed four separated centrin dots, two associated with the pairs of basal bodies and two located at the spindle poles as shown by double immunofluorescence, including anti-tubulin staining. The latter signals corresponded to an accumulation of centrin between the plasma membrane and the nuclei, indicating that centrin could be involved in mitotic movements of the nuclei. In telophase, centrin was observed along the nuclear surface and one new NBBC developed in each cell half. Our results demonstrate that centrin is present at the acentriolar spindle poles of Dunaliella independently from its localization in the basal apparatus.  相似文献   

14.
The ciliate Tetrahymena thermophila possesses a multitude of cytoskeletal structures whose differentiation is related to the basal bodies - the main mediators of the cortical pattern. This investigation deals with immunolocalization using light and electron microscopy of filaments labeled by the monoclonal antibody 12G9, which in other ciliates identifies filaments involved in transmission of cellular polarities and marks cell meridians with the highest morphogenetic potential. In Tetrahymena interphase cells, mAb 12G9 localizes to the sites of basal bodies and to the striated ciliary rootlets, to the apical band of filaments and to the fine fibrillar oral crescent. We followed the sequence of development of these structures during divisional morphogenesis. The labeling of the maternal oral crescent disappears in pre-metaphase cells and reappears during anaphase, concomitantly with differentiation of the new structure in the posterior daughter cell. In the posterior daughter cell, the new apical band originates as small clusters of filaments located at the base of the anterior basal bodies of the apical basal body couplets during early anaphase. The differentiation of the band is completed in the final stages of cytokinesis and in the young post-dividing cell. The maternal band is reorganized earlier, simultaneously with the oral structure. The mAb 12G9 identifies two transient structures present only in dividing cells. One is a medial structure demarcating the two daughter cells during metaphase and anaphase, and defining the new anterior border of the posterior daughter cell. The other is a post-oral meridional filament marking the stomatogenic meridian in postmetaphase cells. Comparative analysis of immunolocalization of transient filaments labeled with mAb12G9 in Tetrahymena and other ciliates indicates that this antibody identifies a protein bound to filamentous structures, which might play a role in relying polarities of cortical domains and could be a part of a mechanism which governs the positioning of cortical organelles in ciliates.  相似文献   

15.
The flagellar apparatus of Pyrobotrys has a number of features that are typical of the Chlorophyceae, but others that are unusual for this class. The two flagella are inserted at the apex, but they extend to the side of the cell toward the outside of the colony, here designated as the ventral side. Four basal bodies are present, two of which extend into flagella. Four microtubular rootlets alternate between the functional and accessory basal bodies. In each cell, the two ventral rootlets are nearly parallel, but the dorsal rootlets are more widely divergent. The rootlets alternate between two and four microtubules each. A striated distal fiber connects the two functional basal bodies in the plane of the flagella. Two additional, apparently nonstriated, fibers connect the basal bodies proximal to the distal fiber. Another striated fiber is associated with each four-membered rootlet near its insertion into the flagellar apparatus. A fine periodic component is associated with each two-membered rootlet. A rhizoplast-like structure extends into the cell from each of the functional basal bodies. The arrangement of these components does not reflect the 180° rotational symmetry that is usually present in the Chlorophyceae, but appears to be derived from a more symmetrical ancestor. It is suggested that the form of the flagellar apparatus is associated with the unusual colony structure of Pyrobotrys.  相似文献   

16.
The flagellar apparatus of the zoospores of Tetraedron bitridens Beck-Mannagetta and Chlorotetraedron polymorphum MacEntee, Bold et Archibald includes directly opposed basal bodies, a distal fiber that is elaborated into a ribbed structure to which the continuous striated microtubule-associated component (SMAC) is connected, and partial caps over the proximal end of each basal body. The angle between basal bodies ranges from approximately 25° to 150°. Basal bodies at wider angles are interconnected via their cores. A septum is present in the B-tubule of one basal body triplet in C. polymorphum. Both organisms have four microtubular rootlets arranged in a cruciate pattern. The two X-membered rootlets in a single cell have dissimilar numbers of microtubules. In C. polymorphum there are 5 and 6 microtubules in a 4/1 and 5/1 arrangement. 3/1 and 4/1 rootlets are present in T. bitridens. Zoospores of T. bitridens have a fuzzy coat whereas those of C. polymorphum are naked. Pyrenoids in both species are covered by a continuous starch sheath. Vegetative, interphase cells of C. polymorphum have two centrioles connected by a fiber that are located in depressions in the nuclear envelope. We propose that these two genera may be closely related to Neochloris, and that the coenobial genera Hydrodictyon, Pediastrum and Sorastrum are derived from a Tetraedron-like alga.  相似文献   

17.
Centrins, small calcium binding EF-hand proteins, function in the duplication of a variety of microtubule organizing centers. These include centrioles in humans, basal bodies in green algae, and spindle pole bodies in yeast. The ciliate Tetrahymena thermophila contains at least four centrin genes as determined by sequence homology, and these have distinct localization and expression patterns. CEN1's role at the basal body was examined more closely. The Cen1 protein localizes primarily to two locations: one is the site at the base of the basal body where duplication is initiated. The other is the transition zone between the basal body and axoneme. CEN1 is an essential gene, the deletion of which results in the loss of basal bodies, which is likely due to defects in both basal body duplication and basal body maintenance. Analysis of the three other centrins indicates that two of them function at microtubule-rich structures unique to ciliates, whereas the fourth is not expressed under conditions examined in this study, although when artificially expressed it localizes to basal bodies. This study provides evidence that in addition to its previously known function in the duplication of basal bodies, centrin is also important for the integrity of these organelles.  相似文献   

18.
Anti-centrin monoclonal antibodies 20H5 and 11B2 produced against Clamydomononas centrin decorated the group of basal bodies as well as very closely attached structures in all trichomonads studied and in the devescovinids Foaina and Devescovina. Moreover, these antibodies decorated the undulating membrane in Trichomonas vaginalis, Trichomitus batrachorum, and Tritrichomonas foetus, and the cresta in Foaina. Centrin was not demonstrated in the dividing spindle and paradesmosis. Immunogold labeling, both in pre- and post-embedding, confirmed that centrin is associated with the basal body cylinder and is a component of the nine anchoring arms between the terminal plate of flagellar bases and the plasma-membrane. Centrin is also associated with the hook-shaped fibers attached to basal bodies (F1, F3), the X-fiber, and along sigmoid fibers (F2) at the pelta-axostyle junction, which is the microtubule organizing center for pelta-axostyle microtubules. There was no labeling on the striated costa and parabasal fibers nor on microtubular pelta-axostyle, but the fibrous structure inside the undulating membrane was labeled in T. vaginalis. Two proteins of 22-20 kDa corresponding to the centrin molecular mass were recognized by immunoblotting using these antibodies in the three trichomonad species examined. By screening a T. vaginalis cDNA library with 20H5 antibody, two genes encoding identical protein sequences were found. The sequence comprises the 4 typical EF-hand Ca++-binding domains present in every known centrin. Trichomonad centrin is closer to the green algal cluster (70% identity) than to the yeast Cdc31 cluster (55% identity) or the Alveolata cluster (46% identity).  相似文献   

19.
Summary— In parabasalid flagellates, trichomonads and hypermastigids, the stack of cisternae of the Golgi apparatus are supported by striated roots attached to the basal bodies of flagella forming the so-called parabasal apparatus. Monoclonal antibodies raised for several trichomonad species, Monocercomonas, Trichomonas and Tetratrichomonas, label the parabasal fibre in immunofluorescence or immunogold staining and protein bands in immunoblotting. Several antibodies cross-react between trichomonad species, and one of them labels the homologous parabasal fibre in the hypermastigids: Trichonympha, Joenia, Pseudotrichonympha and Holomastigotoides. Considering the molecular mass range of the labelled proteins (100–135 kDa) and the lack of antibody cross-reactivity with the striated root proteins (centrin, assemblin, kinetodesmal protein, ciliary root proteins of epithelial ciliated cells) of other organisms, these proteins recognized by these antibodies seem to represent a new class of protein forming striated roots. The occurrence and significance of parabasal organization in eukaryogenesis is discussed.  相似文献   

20.
The ciliate Tetrahymena thermophila possesses a multitude of cytoskeletal structures whose differentiation is related to the basal bodies the main mediators of the cortical pattern. This investigation deals with immunolocalization using light and electron microscopy of filaments labeled by the monoclonal antibody 12G9, which in other ciliates identifies filaments involved in transmission of cellular polarities and marks cell meridians with the highest morphogenetic potential. In Tetrahymena interphase cells, mAb 12G9 localizes to the sites of basal bodies and to the striated ciliary rootlets, to the apical band of filaments and to the fine fibrillar oral crescent. We followed the sequence of development of these structures during divisional morphogenesis. The labeling of the maternal oral crescent disappears in pre-metaphase cells and reappears during anaphase, concomitantly with differentiation of the new structure in the posterior daughter cell. In the posterior daughter cell, the new apical band originates as small clusters of filaments located at the base of the anterior basal bodies of the apical basal body couplets during early anaphase. The differentiation of the band is completed in the final stages of cytokinesis and in the young post-dividing cell. The maternal band is reorganized earlier, simultaneously with the oral structure.The mAb 12G9 identifies two transient structures present only in dividing cells. One is a medial structure demarcating the two daughter cells during metaphase and anaphase, and defining the new anterior border of the posterior daughter cell. The other is a post-oral meridional filament marking the stomatogenic meridian in postmetaphase cells. Comparative analysis of immunolocalization of transient filaments labeled with mAb12G9 in Tetrahymena and other ciliates indicates that this antibody identifies a protein bound to filamentous structures, which might play a role in relying polarities of cortical domains and could be a part of a mechanism which governs the positioning of cortical organelles in ciliates.  相似文献   

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