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1.
The early prometaphase and initial stages of meiotic spindle formation in higher plant PMCs were studied by means of a new approach worked out by the authors: a morphological dissection that consists in the analysis of various abnormalities of the process under study. Wide cereal hybrids F1 were used as a source of such abnormalities: phenotypes with C-, S-shaped and combined spindle, with spindles surrounded by microtubule (MT) ring and phenotypes with chaotic circular MT system in M1. Three stages of early prometaphase not described before (disintegration of perinuclear MT band, straightening of its bundles, and their translocation throughout the cytoplasm) were revealed.  相似文献   

2.
Three mechanisms of fused spindle formation in meiosis of Solanacea have been described: 1) approach of daughter nuclei at prophase II; 2) fusion of perinuclear cytoskeleton systems at prophase II; 3) approach and fusion of prometaphase chaotic figures at prometaphase II. The process of fusion spindle formation appears to be complex and including several steps.  相似文献   

3.
The paper describes the phenomenon of disorganization of completely formed subcellular structures: division spindle, phragmoplast and chromosome telophase groups. These structures disintegrate into their elements (cytoskeletal fibers, chromosomes) that transform into chaotic system. Chaotization of cytoskeleton structures such as prophase spindle in mitosis or perinuclear ring in meiosis is a normal step of wild type plant cell division. Disintegration of division spindle and phragmoplast presumably indicate the abnormality of temporal regulation of cytoskeleton cycle during meiosis. Disintegration of telophase chromosome groups and the migration of the chromosomes backward to the equatorial area might mean the abnormal start of some prometaphase mechanisms, in particular, chromokinesins activation.  相似文献   

4.
Summary Immunofluorescence studies on microtubule arrangement during the transition from prophase to metaphase in onion root cells are presented. The prophase spindle observed at late preprophase and prophase is composed of microtubules converged at two poles near the nuclear envelope; thin bundles of microtubules are tracable along the nuclear envelope. Prior to nuclear envelope breakdown diffuse tubulin staining occurs within the prophase nuclei. During nuclear envelope breakdown the prophase spindle is no longer identifiable and prominent tubulin staining occurs among the prometaphase chromosomes. Patches of condensed tubulin staining are observed in the vicinity of kinetochores. At advanced prometaphase kinetochore bundles of microtubules are present in some kinetochore regions. At metaphase the mitotic spindle is mainly composed of kinetochore bundles of microtubules; pole-to-pole bundles are scarce. Our observations suggest that the prophase spindle is decomposed at the time of nuclear envelope breakdown and that the metaphase spindle is assembled at prometaphase, with the help of kinetochore nucleating action.  相似文献   

5.
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   

6.
Analyses of correspondent meiotic abnormalities is a good tool for studying cytoskeletal rearrangements during plant cell division. The paper reports on the wheat x wheatgrass F1 hybrids, showing various abnormalities during organization of the prophase perinuclear band of microtubules (PNB) in male meiosis. Based on these data, it may be concluded that the perinuclear system of microtubules (MT) in higher plant meiosis is formed from fibrils of the radial system as a result of their translocation in the cell cytoplasm space. According to our data, at this stage the radial MT arrays pass through the following consequence of events: separating from the nuclear envelope, 2) approaching, 3) tangential orientation to the nuclear surface, 4) bending, 5) co-orientation, lateral interaction. As a result, a flat ring of well organized concentric bent MT bundles encircling the nucleus meridionally is organized.  相似文献   

7.
When mammalian somatic cells enter mitosis, a fundamental reorganization of the Mt cytoskeleton occurs that is characterized by the loss of the extensive interphase Mt array and the formation of a bipolar mitotic spindle. Microtubules in cells stably expressing GFP-alpha-tubulin were directly observed from prophase to just after nuclear envelope breakdown (NEBD) in early prometaphase. Our results demonstrate a transient stimulation of individual Mt dynamic turnover and the formation and inward motion of microtubule bundles in these cells. Motion of microtubule bundles was inhibited after antibody-mediated inhibition of cytoplasmic dynein/dynactin, but was not inhibited after inhibition of the kinesin-related motor Eg5 or myosin II. In metaphase cells, assembly of small foci of Mts was detected at sites distant from the spindle; these Mts were also moved inward. We propose that cytoplasmic dynein-dependent inward motion of Mts functions to remove Mts from the cytoplasm at prophase and from the peripheral cytoplasm through metaphase. The data demonstrate that dynamic astral Mts search the cytoplasm for other Mts, as well as chromosomes, in mitotic cells.  相似文献   

8.
By means of morphological analyses of meiotic abnormalities in pollen mother cells of cereal distant hybrids, processes of cytoskeleton cycle at the middle prometaphase (chaotic stage) were studied. It was shown that elements of the bipolar spindle (central and opposite kinetochore fibres) are formed at the chaotic stage of meiotic prometaphase.  相似文献   

9.
Summary Microtubule (MT) distribution during the cell cycle, especially spindle organization, has been investigated using immunofluorescence light microscopy in cultured cells of two higher plant species, soybean (angiosperm) and black spruce (gymnosperm). In soybean, the prophase and metaphase spindles were different in morphology and structure. The prophase spindle covering the nucleus was barrel-shaped and MTs extended between poles. The metaphase spindle consisted mainly of short MT bundles on either side of the chromosome mass. During prometaphase, the polarity and shape of the prophase spindle disappeared, suggesting that the metaphase spindle is newly formed in prometaphase and not derived from the prophase spindle. A striking feature of MT organization in black spruce was sharply defined poles during prometaphase and anaphase. They were located close to the cell edge, suggesting that a structure in the cytoplasm or associated with the plasma membrane is responsible for their formation. In black spruce the metaphase spindle was long with pointed poles and MT fir tree structures. In contrast, the metaphase spindle of soybean was short with very broad poles and lacked MT fir trees. These results suggest that MT fir tree structure may not be necessary for a functional spindle.  相似文献   

10.
Ambrose JC  Cyr R 《The Plant cell》2007,19(1):226-236
During cell division, the mitotic spindle partitions chromosomes into daughter nuclei. In higher plants, the molecular mechanisms governing spindle assembly and function remain largely unexplored. Here, live cell imaging of mitosis in Arabidopsis thaliana plants lacking a kinesin-14 (ATK5) reveals defects during early spindle formation. Beginning during prophase and lasting until late prometaphase, spindles of atk5-1 plants become abnormally elongated, are frequently bent, and have splayed poles by prometaphase. The period of spindle elongation during prophase and prometaphase is prolonged in atk5-1 cells. Time-lapse imaging of yellow fluorescent protein:ATK5 reveals colocalization with perinuclear microtubules before nuclear envelope breakdown, after which it congresses inward from the poles to the midzone, where it becomes progressively enriched at regions of overlap between antiparallel microtubules. In vitro microtubule motility assays demonstrate that in the presence of ATK5, two microtubules encountering one another at an angle can interact and coalign, forming a linear bundle. These data indicate that ATK5 participates in the search and capture of antiparallel interpolar microtubules, where it aids in generating force to coalign microtubules, thereby affecting spindle length, width, and integrity.  相似文献   

11.
By means of morphological analyses of meiotic abnormalities in pollen mother cells (PMCs) of cereal wide hybrids, haploids and meiotic mutants, the processes involved in cytoskeleton cycle at late prometaphase (a sub-stage of transition from chaotic figure to bipolar spindle) were studied. A significance of the four processes of late prometaphase--axial orientation, lateral association, consolidation and convergance of spindle fibers--is discussed.  相似文献   

12.
Rat kangaroo (PtK2) cells were fixed and embedded in situ. Cells in mitosis were studied with the light microscope and thin sections examined with the electron microscope. Pericentriolar, osmiophilic material, rather than the centrioles, is probably involved in the formation of astral microtubules during prophase. Centriole migration occurs during prophase and early prometaphase. The nuclear envelope ruptures first in the vicinity of the asters. Nuclear pore complexes disintegrate as envelope fragments are dispersed to the periphery of the mitotic spindle. Microtubules invade the nucleus through gaps of the fragmented envelope. The number of microtubules and the degree of spindle organization increase during prometaphase and are maximal at metaphase. At this stage, chromosomes are aligned on the spindle equator, sister kinetochores facing opposite poles. Cytoplasmic organelles are excluded from the spindle. Prominent bundles of kinetochore microtubules converge towards the poles. Spindles in cold-treated cells consist almost exclusively of kinetochore tubules. Separating daughter chromosomes in early anaphase are connected by chromatin strands, possibly reflecting the rupturing of fibrous connections occasionally observed between sister chromatids in prometaphase. Breakdown of the spindle progresses from late anaphase to telophase, except for the stem bodies. Chromosomes decondense to form two masses. Nuclear envelope reconstruction, probably involving endoplasmic reticulum, begins on the lateral faces. Nuclear pores reappear on membrane segments in contact with chromatin. Microtubules are absent from reconstructed daughter nuclei.This report is to a large part based on a dissertation submitted by the author to the Graduate Council of the University of Florida in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy.  相似文献   

13.
The acentrosomal plant mitotic spindle is uniquely structured in that it lacks opposing centrosomes at its poles and is equipped with a connective preprophase band that regulates the spatial framework for spindle orientation and mobility. These features are supported by specialized microtubule-associated proteins and motors. Here, we show that Arabidopsis thaliana MAP65-4, a non-motor microtubule associated protein (MAP) that belongs to the evolutionarily conserved MAP65 family, specifically associates with the forming mitotic spindle during prophase and with the kinetochore fibers from prometaphase to the end of anaphase. In vitro, MAP65-4 induces microtubule (MT) bundling through the formation of cross-bridges between adjacent MTs both in polar and antipolar orientations. The association of MAP65-4 with an MT bundle is concomitant with its elongation. Furthermore, MAP65-4 modulates the MT dynamic instability parameters of individual MTs within a bundle, mainly by decreasing the frequency of catastrophes and increasing the frequency of rescue events, and thereby supports the progressive lengthening of MT bundles over time. These properties are in line with its role of initiating kinetochore fibers during prospindle formation.  相似文献   

14.
The kinesin-like calmodulin (CaM) binding protein (KCBP), a minus end-directed microtubule motor protein unique to plants, has been implicated in cell division. KCBP is negatively regulated by Ca(2)+ and CaM, and antibodies raised against the CaM binding region inhibit CaM binding to KCBP in vitro; therefore, these antibodies can be used to activate KCBP constitutively. Injection of these antibodies into Tradescantia virginiana stamen hair cells during late prophase induces breakdown of the nuclear envelope within 2 to 10 min and leads the cell into prometaphase. However, mitosis is arrested, and the cell does not progress into anaphase. Injection of antibodies later during cell division has no effect on anaphase transition but causes aberrant phragmoplast formation and delays the completion of cytokinesis by approximately 15 min. These effects are achieved without any apparent degradation of the microtubule cytoskeleton. We propose that during nuclear envelope breakdown and anaphase, activated KCBP promotes the formation of a converging bipolar spindle by sliding and bundling microtubules. During metaphase and telophase, we suggest that its activity is downregulated.  相似文献   

15.
Shamina NV 《Protoplasma》2012,249(1):43-51
According to our data, the arrest of univalents in bouquet arrangement is a widespread meiotic feature in cereal haploids and allohaploids (wide hybrids F1). We have analyzed 83 different genotypes of cereal haploids and allohaploids with visualization of the cytoskeleton and found a bouquet arrest in 45 of them (in 30% to 100% pollen mother cells (PMCs)). The meiotic plant cell division in 26 various genotypes with a zygotene bouquet arrest was analyzed in detail. In three of them in PMCs, a very specific monopolar conic-shaped figure at early prometaphase is formed. This monopolar figure consists of mono-oriented univalents and their kinetochore fibers converging in pointed pole. Such figures are never observed at wild-type prometaphase or in asynaptic meiosis in the variants without a bouquet arrest. Later at prometaphase, the bipolar central spindle fibers join in this monopolar figure, and a bipolar spindle with all univalents connected to one pole is formed. As a result of monopolar chromosome segregation at anaphase and normal cytokinesis at telophase, a dyad with one member carrying a restitution nucleus and the other enucleated is formed. However, such phenotype has only three genotypes among 26 analyzed with a bouquet arrest. In the remaining 23 haploids and allohaploids, the course of prometaphase was altered after the conic monopolar figure formation. In these variants, the completely formed conic monopolar figure was disintegrated into a chaotic network of spindle fibers and univalents acquired a random orientation. This arrangement looks like a mid-prometaphase in the wild-type meiosis. At late prometaphase, a bipolar spindle is formed with the univalents distributed more or less equally between two poles, similar to the phenotypes without a bouquet arrest. The product of cell division is a dyad with aneuploid members. Thus, the spindle abnormality—monopolar chromosome orientation—is corrected. In some cells the correction of the prometaphase monopolus occurs by means of its splitting into two half-spindles and their rotation along the future division axis.  相似文献   

16.
Abstract: The cytoskeleton, which mainly consists of microtubules (MTs) and actin microfilaments (MFs), plays various significant roles that are indispensable for eukaryotic viability, including determination of cell shape, cell movement, nuclear division, and cytokinesis. In animal cells, MFs appear to be of more importance than MTs, except for spindle formation in nuclear division. In contrast, higher plants have a rigid cell wall around their cells, and have thus evolved elegant systems of MTs to control the direction of cellulose microfibrils (CMFs) deposited in the cell wall, and to divide centrifugally in a physically limited space. Dynamic changes in MTs during cell cycle progression in higher plant cells have been observed over several decades, including cortical MTs (CMTs) during interphase, preprophase bands (PPBs) from late G2 phase to prophase, spindles from prometaphase to anaphase, and phragmoplasts at telophase. The MFs also show some changes not as obvious as MT dynamics. However, questions regarding the process of formation of these arrays, and the precise mechanisms by which they fulfill their roles, remain unsolved. In this article, we present an outline of the changes in the cytoskeleton based on our studies with highly-synchronized tobacco BY-2 cells. Some candidate molecules that could play roles in cytoskeletal dynamics are discussed. We also hope to draw attention to recent attempts at visualization of cytoskeletons with molecular techniques, and to some examples of genetic approaches in this field.  相似文献   

17.
The spindle of the colonial diatom Fragilaria contains two distinct sets of spindle microtubules (MTs): (a) MTs comprising the central spindle, which is composed of two half-spindles interdigitated to form a region of "overlap"; (b) MTs which radiate laterally from the poles. The central spindles from 28 cells are reconstructed by tracking each MT of the central spindle through consecutive serial sections. Because the colonies of Fragilaria are flat ribbons of contiguous cells (clones), it is possible, by using single ribbons of cells, to compare reconstructed spindles at different mitotic stages with minimal intercellular variability. From these reconstructions we have determined: (a) the changes in distribution of MTs along the spindle during mitosis; (b) the change in the total number of MTs during mitosis; (c) the length of each MT (measured by the number of sections each traverses) at different mitotic stages; (d) the frequency of different classes of MTs (i.e., free, continuous, etc.); (e) the spatial arrangement of MTs from opposite poles in the overlap; (f) the approximate number of MTs, separate from the central spindle, which radiate from each spindle pole. From longitudinal sections of the central spindle, the lengths of the whole spindle, half-spindle, and overlap were measured from 80 cells at different mitotic stages. Numerous sources of error may create inaccuracies in these measurements; these problems are discussed. The central spindle at prophase consists predominantly of continuous MTs (pole to pole). Between late prophase and prometaphase, spindle length increases, and the spindle is transformed into two half-spindles (mainly polar MTs) interdigitated to form the overlap. At late anaphase-telophase, the overlap decreases concurrent with spindle elongation. Our interpretation is that the MTs of the central spindle slide past one another at both late prophase and late anaphase. These changes in MT distribution have the effect of elongating the spindle and are not involved in the poleward movement of the chromosomes. Some aspects of tracking spindle MTs, the interaction of MTs in the overlap, formation of the prophase spindle, and our interpretation of rearrangements of MTs, are discussed.  相似文献   

18.
Shamina NV 《Tsitologiia》2003,45(7):650-654
A planar meridional perinuclear band of microtubules was observed at the late meiotic prophase I in a range of higher plant species. A distinct high-organized structure and a long time of existence allow to consider it as a new class of MTs dependent on the cell cycle in plant meiosis. MTs of the perinuclear band convert into meiotic spindle through a complex process of spatial rearrangements.  相似文献   

19.
Microsporogenesis in Zea mays, the meiotic reduction of diploid sporocytes to haploid microspores, proceeds through a well-defined developmental sequence. The ability to generate mutants that affect the process makes this an ideal system for elucidating the role of the cytoskeleton during plant development. We have used immunofluorescence microscopy to compare microtubule distribution in wild-type and mutant microsporocytes. During normal meiosis the distribution of microtubules follows a specific temporal and spatial pattern that reflects the polar nature of microspore formation. Perinuclear microtubule staining increases and the nucleus elongates in the future spindle axis during late prophase I. Metaphase I spindles with highly focused poles align along the long axis of the anther locule. Cytokinesis occurs perpendicular to the spindle axis. The second division axis shifts 90 degrees with respect to the first division plane, thereby yielding an isobilateral tetrad of microspores. Microtubule distribution patterns during meiosis suggest that a nuclear envelope-associated microtubule organizing center (MTOC) controls the organization of cytoplasmic microtubules and contributes to spindle formation. The meiotic mutant dv is defective in the transition from a prophase microtubule array to a metaphase spindle. Instead of converging to form focused poles, the metaphase spindle poles remain diffuse as in prometaphase. This defect correlates with several abnormalities in subsequent developmental events including the formation of multinucleate daughter cells, multiple microspindles during meiosis II, multiple phragmoplasts, polyads of microspores, and cytoplasmic microtubule foci. These results suggest that dv is a mutation that affects MTOC organization.  相似文献   

20.
The ultrastructure of spindle formation during the first meiotic division in oocytes of the Strepsipteran insect Xenos peckii Kirby (Acroschismus wheeleri Pierce) was examined in serial thick (0.25- micron) and thin sections. During late prophase the nuclear envelope became extremely convoluted and fenestrated. At this time vesicular and tubular membrane elements permeated the nucleoplasm and formed a thin fusiform sheath, 5-7 micron in length, around each of the randomly oriented and condensing tetrads. These membrane elements appeared to arise from the nuclear envelope and/or in association with annulate lamellae in the nuclear region. All of the individual tetrads and their associated fusiform sheaths became aligned within the nucleus subsequent to the breakdown of the nuclear envelope. Microtubules (MTs) were found associated with membranes of the meiotic apparatus only after the nuclear envelope had broken down. Kinetochores, with associated MTs, were first recognizable as electron-opaque patches on the chromosomes at this time. The fully formed metaphase arrested Xenos oocyte meiotic apparatus contained an abundance of membranes and had diffuse poles that lacked distinct polar MT organizing centers. From these observations we conclude that the apparent individual chromosomal spindles--seen in the light microscope to form around each Xenos tetrad during "intranuclear prometaphase" (Hughes-Schrader, S., 1924, J. Morphol. 39:157-197)--actually form during late prophase, lack MTs, and are therefore not complete miniature bipolar spindles, as had been commonly assumed. Thus, the unique mode of spindle formation in Xenos oocytes cannot be used to support the hypothesis that chromosomes (kinetochores) induce the polymerization of their associated MTs. Our observation that MTs appeared in association with and parallel to tubular membrane components of the Xenos meiotic apparatus after these membranes became oriented with respect to the tetrads, is consistent with the notion that membranes associated with the spindle determine the orientation of spindle MTs and also play a part in regulating their formation.  相似文献   

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