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1.
Taxol, a microtubule stabilizing agent, has been used to study changes in spindle microtubule organization during mitosis. PtK1 cells have been treated with 5 μg/ml taxol for brief periods to determine its effect on spindle architecture. During prophase taxol induces microtubules to aggregate, particularly evident in the region between the nucleus and cell periphery. Taxol induces astral microtubule formation in prometaphase and metaphase cells concomitant with a reduction in spindle length. At anaphase taxol induces an increase in length in astral microtubules and reduces microtubule length in the interzone. Taxol-treated telophase cells show a reduction in the rate of furrowing and astral microtubules lack a discrete focus and are arranged more diffusely on the surface of the nuclear envelope. In summary, taxol treatment of cells prior to anaphase produces an increase in astral microtubules, a reduction in kinetochore microtubules and a decrease in spindle length. Brief taxol treatments during anaphase through early G1 promotes stabilization of microtubules, an increase in the length of astral microtubules and a delayed rate of cytokinesis.  相似文献   

2.
EB1 is an evolutionarily conserved protein that localizes to the plus ends of growing microtubules. In yeast, the EB1 homologue (BIM1) has been shown to modulate microtubule dynamics and link microtubules to the cortex, but the functions of metazoan EB1 proteins remain unknown. Using a novel preparation of the Drosophila S2 cell line that promotes cell attachment and spreading, we visualized dynamics of single microtubules in real time and found that depletion of EB1 by RNA-mediated inhibition (RNAi) in interphase cells causes a dramatic increase in nondynamic microtubules (neither growing nor shrinking), but does not alter overall microtubule organization. In contrast, several defects in microtubule organization are observed in RNAi-treated mitotic cells, including a drastic reduction in astral microtubules, malformed mitotic spindles, defocused spindle poles, and mispositioning of spindles away from the cell center. Similar phenotypes were observed in mitotic spindles of Drosophila embryos that were microinjected with anti-EB1 antibodies. In addition, live cell imaging of mitosis in Drosophila embryos reveals defective spindle elongation and chromosomal segregation during anaphase after antibody injection. Our results reveal crucial roles for EB1 in mitosis, which we postulate involves its ability to promote the growth and interactions of microtubules within the central spindle and at the cell cortex.  相似文献   

3.
EB1 targets to kinetochores with attached,polymerizing microtubules   总被引:6,自引:0,他引:6       下载免费PDF全文
Microtubule polymerization dynamics at kinetochores is coupled to chromosome movements, but its regulation there is poorly understood. The plus end tracking protein EB1 is required both for regulating microtubule dynamics and for maintaining a euploid genome. To address the role of EB1 in aneuploidy, we visualized its targeting in mitotic PtK1 cells. Fluorescent EB1, which localized to polymerizing ends of astral and spindle microtubules, was used to track their polymerization. EB1 also associated with a subset of attached kinetochores in late prometaphase and metaphase, and rarely in anaphase. Localization occurred in a narrow crescent, concave toward the centromere, consistent with targeting to the microtubule plus end-kinetochore interface. EB1 did not localize to kinetochores lacking attached kinetochore microtubules in prophase or early prometaphase, or upon nocodazole treatment. By time lapse, EB1 specifically targeted to kinetochores moving antipoleward, coupled to microtubule plus end polymerization, and not during plus end depolymerization. It localized independently of spindle bipolarity, the spindle checkpoint, and dynein/dynactin function. EB1 is the first protein whose targeting reflects kinetochore directionality, unlike other plus end tracking proteins that show enhanced kinetochore binding in the absence of microtubules. Our results suggest EB1 may modulate kinetochore microtubule polymerization and/or attachment.  相似文献   

4.
Alignment of the mitotic spindle along a preformed axis of polarity is crucial for generating cell diversity in many organisms, yet little is known about the role of the endomembrane system in this process. RAB-11 is a small GTPase enriched in recycling endosomes. When we depleted RAB-11 by RNAi in Caenorhabditis elegans, the spindle of the one-cell embryo failed to align along the axis of polarity in metaphase and underwent violent movements in anaphase. The distance between astral microtubules ends and the anterior cortex was significantly increased in rab-11(RNAi) embryos specifically during metaphase, possibly accounting for the observed spindle alignment defects. Additionally, we found that normal ER morphology requires functional RAB-11, particularly during metaphase. We hypothesize that RAB-11, in conjunction with the ER, acts to regulate cell cycle-specific changes in astral microtubule length to ensure proper spindle alignment in Caenorhabditis elegans early embryos.  相似文献   

5.
In animal cells, microtubules (MTs) of the mitotic apparatus (MA) communicate with the cell cortex to stimulate cytokinesis; however, the molecular nature of this stimulus remains elusive . A signal for cytokinesis likely involves the MT plus end binding family of proteins, which includes EB1, p150glued, APC, LIS1, and CLIP-170. These proteins modulate MT dynamics and facilitate interactions between growing MTs and their intracellular targets, including kinetochores, organelles, and the cell cortex . The dynein-dynactin complex mediates many of these microtubule capture events . We report that EB1 and p150glued interactions are required for stimulation of cytokinesis in dividing sea urchin eggs. Injected antibodies against EB1 or p150glued suppressed furrow ingression but did not prevent elongation of anaphase astral MTs toward the cortex, suggesting that EB1 and dynactin are both required for communication between the MA and the cortex. Targeted disruption of the interaction between EB1 and p150glued suppressed anaphase astral MT elongation and resulted in a delay of cytokinesis that could not be overcome by manipulation of the asters toward the cortex. We conclude that EB1 and dynactin participate in stimulation of the cleavage furrow, and their interaction promotes elongation of astral MTs at anaphase onset.  相似文献   

6.
Fidgetin is a member of the AAA protein superfamily with important roles in mammalian development. Here we show that human Fidgetin is a potent microtubule severing and depolymerizing the enzyme used to regulate mitotic spindle architecture, dynamics and anaphase A. In vitro, recombinant human Fidgetin severs taxol-stabilized microtubules along their length and promotes depolymerization, primarily from their minus-ends. In cells, human Fidgetin targets to centrosomes, and its depletion with siRNA significantly reduces the velocity of poleward tubulin flux and anaphase A chromatid-to-pole motion. In addition, the loss of Fidgetin induces a microtubule-dependent enlargement of mitotic centrosomes and an increase in the number and length of astral microtubules. Based on these data, we propose that human Fidgetin actively suppresses microtubule growth from and attachment to centrosomes.  相似文献   

7.
Fidgetin is a member of the AAA protein superfamily with important roles in mammalian development. Here we show that human Fidgetin is a potent microtubule severing and depolymerizing the enzyme used to regulate mitotic spindle architecture, dynamics and anaphase A. In vitro, recombinant human Fidgetin severs taxol-stabilized microtubules along their length and promotes depolymerization, primarily from their minus-ends. In cells, human Fidgetin targets to centrosomes, and its depletion with siRNA significantly reduces the velocity of poleward tubulin flux and anaphase A chromatid-to-pole motion. In addition, the loss of Fidgetin induces a microtubule-dependent enlargement of mitotic centrosomes and an increase in the number and length of astral microtubules. Based on these data, we propose that human Fidgetin actively suppresses microtubule growth from and attachment to centrosomes.  相似文献   

8.
How kinetochores correct improper microtubule attachments and regulate the spindle checkpoint signal is unclear. In budding yeast, kinetochores harboring mutations in the mitotic kinase Ipl1 fail to bind chromosomes in a bipolar fashion. In C. elegans and Drosophila, inhibition of the Ipl1 homolog, Aurora B kinase, induces aberrant anaphase and cytokinesis. To study Aurora B kinase in vertebrates, we microinjected mitotic XTC cells with inhibitory antibody and found several related effects. After injection of the antibody, some chromosomes failed to congress to the metaphase plate, consistent with a conserved role for Aurora B in bipolar attachment of chromosomes. Injected cells exited mitosis with no evidence of anaphase or cytokinesis. Injection of anti-Xaurora B antibody also altered the microtubule network in mitotic cells with an extension of the astral microtubules and a reduction of kinetochore microtubules. Finally, inhibition of Aurora B in cultured cells and in cycling Xenopus egg extracts caused escape from the spindle checkpoint arrest induced by microtubule drugs. Our findings implicate Aurora B as a critical coordinator relating changes in microtubule dynamics in mitosis, chromosome movement in prometaphase and anaphase, signaling of the spindle checkpoint, and cytokinesis.  相似文献   

9.
PtK1 metaphase cells were treated with varying concentrations of nocodazole to reduce spindle microtubule number and spindle length. The range of concentrations employed reduced spindle length from approximately 47% to 82% of the original pole-pole distance. Electron microscopy of cells treated with the lowest concentration of nocodazole employed (0.01 microgram/ml) showed a small decrease in the number of non-kinetochore microtubules (nkMTs), particularly evident in the astral region, with no significant effect on kinetochore microtubule number. Metaphase cells treated with 1 microgram/ml nocodazole for 2 min demonstrated a reduction in spindle length and loss of most non-kinetochore microtubules with little effect on the number and arrangement of the kinetochore class of microtubules. Following nocodazole treatment, the cells were perfused with 0.5 M sucrose dissolved in tissue culture medium, a treatment which has previously been shown to induce spindle elongation in metaphase cells. In cells where nocodazole effected a large decrease in non-kinetochore microtubule number with a concomitant decrease in spindle length, sucrose treatment had a reduced effect in inducing spindle elongation. In cells treated with lower concentrations of nocodazole, where numerous non-kinetochore microtubules remained, sucrose had a greater effect in inducing spindle elongation. These data suggest that the non-kinetochore population of microtubules is responsible for the extent of sucrose-induced spindle elongation. An explanation of these data is provided which suggests that the role of non-kinetochore microtubules is to trap energy in the developing spindle, such that it can be used to separate spindle poles during anaphase B.  相似文献   

10.
Quinacrine, an acridine derivative which competitively binds to ATP binding sites, has been used to study the role of ATP requiring molecules in microtubule organization in mitotic PtK1 cells. Brief treatments of metaphase cells with concentrations of quinacrine ranging from 2 to 10 microM decreased spindle length and birefringence in a concentration-dependent manner. With either increasing quinacrine concentrations or duration of treatment, metaphase cells demonstrated a specific reorganization of spindle microtubules. Both polarization and electron microscopy showed a substantial loss of non-kinetochore spindle microtubules with an increase in astral microtubules: this was particularly evident in the region adjacent to the spindle domain. Addition of millimolar concentrations of dinitrophenol to quinacrine-containing medium did not potentiate the response of metaphase cells to quinacrine treatment. Time-lapse video analysis demonstrated that the astral microtubules are the result of reorganization of spindle microtubules. These data suggest that functional ATP binding sites are required to maintain stable interactions between microtubules and that these interactions are responsible for maintaining the bowed configuration of non-kinetochore spindle microtubules which are under compression at metaphase.  相似文献   

11.
Cell cleavage is spatially and temporally coordinated with karyokinesis. In astral division, as occurs in sea urchin eggs, coordination is accomplished by the mitotic asters. We have explored the following hypotheses:
1. 1. That microtubules of the two asters cross at the cell's equator.
2. 2. That because they cross, or by some other configuration, more microtubules interact with the equatorial cortex than with the polar cortex.
3. 3. That the microtubule component of astral rays differentially stimulates the equatorial cortex for cleavage contraction.
Using a fixation procedure which enhances visibility of microtubules, we have determined that aster microtubules do not cross at the equatorial cortex at any stage of mitosis relevant to cleavage stimulation, contrary to the first hypothesis. Aster microtubules extend progressively farther during anaphase, but the two arrays occupy mutually exclusive hemispheres in the egg. Using another fixation procedure which results in more conventional microtubule morphology, we have systematically counted microtubules penetrating the cortex at both the equator and the poles in sections cut parallel and perpendicular to the axis of the mitotic apparatus, respectively, at all stages of mitosis. We did not observe any microtubules in the cortex of the equator during prometaphase, metaphase, early anaphase or mid-anaphase. In comparison, small numbers of microtubules were observed in the polar cortex during this time. By late anaphase there are some microtubules in the equatorial cortex but many more are observed in the polar cortex. These findings are contrary to the second hypothesis and therefore do not establish the morphological basis for the third hypothesis. We conclude that there is no positive correlation between microtubule numbers at the egg equator and the timing of cleavage stimulation. Therefore, coordination between karyokinesis and cell cleavage is achieved by some process other than the simple numerical increase of microtubules at the equatorial cortex.  相似文献   

12.
Microtubule assembly in Saccharomyces cerevisiae is initiated from sites within spindle pole bodies (SPBs) in the nuclear envelope. Microtubule plus ends are thought to be organized distal to the SPBs, while minus ends are proximal. Several hypotheses for the function of microtubule motor proteins in force generation and regulation of microtubule assembly propose that assembly and disassembly occur at minus ends as well as at plus ends. Here we analyse microtubule assembly relative to the SPBs in haploid yeast cells expressing green fluorescent protein fused to alpha-tubulin, a microtubule subunit. Throughout the cell cycle, analysis of fluorescent speckle marks on cytoplasmic astral microtubules reveals that there is no detectable assembly or disassembly at minus ends. After laser-photobleaching, metaphase spindles recover about 63% of the bleached fluorescence, with a half-life of about 1 minute. After anaphase onset, photobleached marks in the interpolar spindle are persistent and do not move relative to the SPBs. In late anaphase, the elongated spindles disassemble at the microtubule plus ends. These results show for astral and anaphase interpolar spindle microtubules, and possibly for metaphase spindle microtubules, that microtubule assembly and disassembly occur at plus, and not minus, ends.  相似文献   

13.
We generated a strain of Saccharomyces cerevisiae in which the sole source of alpha-tubulin protein has a cys-to-ser mutation at cys-377, and then we examined microtubule morphology and nuclear positioning through the cell cycle. During G1 of the cell cycle, microtubules in the C377S alpha-tubulin (C377S tub1) mutant were indistinguishable from those in the control (TUB1) strain. However, mitotic C377S tub1 cells displayed astral microtubules that often appeared excessive in number, abnormally long, and/or misoriented compared with TUB1 cells. Although mitotic spindles were always correctly aligned along the mother-bud axis, translocation of spindles through the bud neck was affected. In late anaphase, spindles were often not laterally centered but instead appeared to rest along the sides of cells. When the doubling time was increased by growing cells at a lower temperature (15 degrees C), we often found abnormally long mitotic spindles. No increase in the number of anucleate or multinucleate C377S mutant cells was found at any temperature, suggesting that, despite the microtubule abnormalities, mitosis proceeded normally. Because cys-377 is a presumptive site of palmitoylation in alpha-tubulin in S. cerevisiae, we next compared in vivo palmitoylation of wild-type and C377S mutant forms of the protein. We detected palmitoylated alpha-tubulin in TUB1 cells, but the cys-377 mutation resulted in approximately a 60% decrease in the level of palmitoylated alpha-tubulin in C377S tub1 cells. Our results suggest that cys-377 of alpha-tubulin, and possibly palmitoylation of this amino acid, plays a role in a subset of astral microtubule functions during nuclear migration in M phase of the cell cycle.  相似文献   

14.
Microtubule plus ends are dynamic ends that interact with other cellular structures. Microtubule plus end tracking proteins are considered to play important roles in the regulation of microtubule plus ends. Recent studies revealed that EB1 is the central regulator for microtubule plus end tracking proteins by recruiting them to microtubule plus ends through direct interaction. Here we report the identification of a novel Drosophila protein, which we call Kebab (kinetochore and EB1 associated basic protein), through in vitro expression screening for EB1-interacting proteins. Kebab fused to GFP shows a novel pattern of dynamic localisation in mitosis. It localises to kinetochores weakly in metaphase and accumulates progressively during anaphase. In telophase, it associates with microtubules in central-spindle and centrosomal regions. The localisation to kinetochores depends on microtubules. The protein has a domain most similar to the atypical CH domain of Ndc80, and a coiled-coil domain. The interaction with EB1 is mediated by two SxIP motifs but is not required for the localisation. Depletion of Kebab in cultured cells by RNA interference did not show obvious defects in mitotic progression or microtubule organisation. Generation of mutants lacking the kebab gene indicated that Kebab is dispensable for viability and fertility.  相似文献   

15.
Microtubules of the mitotic spindle are believed to provide positional cues for the assembly of the actin-based contractile ring and the formation of the subsequent cleavage furrow during cytokinesis. In Caenorhabditis elegans, astral microtubules have been thought to inhibit cortical contraction outside the cleavage furrow. Here, we demonstrate by live imaging and RNA interference (RNAi) that astral microtubules play two distinct roles in initiating cleavage furrow formation. In early anaphase, microtubules are required for contractile ring assembly; in late anaphase, microtubules show different cortical behavior and seem to suppress cortical contraction at the poles, as suggested in previous studies. These two distinct phases of microtubule behavior depend on distinct regulatory pathways, one involving the gamma-tubulin complex and the other requiring aurora-A kinase. We propose that temporal and spatial regulation of two distinct phases of astral microtubule behavior is crucial in specifying the position and timing of furrowing.  相似文献   

16.
Fluorescently labeled tubulin was quickly incorporated into the mitotic apparatus when injected into a live sand dollar egg. After a rectangular area (1.6 X 16 microns) of the mitotic spindle was photobleached at metaphase or anaphase by the irradiation of a laser microbeam, redistribution of fluorescence was almost complete within 30 sec. The photobleached area did not change in shape during the redistribution. During the period of redistribution, the bleached area moved slightly toward the near pole at metaphase and anaphase (means: 1.6 and 1.8 micron/min, respectively). These results indicate that redistribution was not due to the exchange of tubulin subunits only at the ends of microtubules but to their rapid exchange at sites along the microtubules in the bleached region. Furthermore, treadmilling of tubulin molecules along with the spindle microtubules possibly occurred at the rate of 1.6 micron/min at metaphase. Birefringence of the mitotic apparatus increased with a large increase in both the number and length of astral rays shortly after taxol was injected. However, the microtubules did not all seem to elongate at the same rate but appeared to become equalized in length. Chromosome movement stopped within 60 sec after the injection. Centrospheres became large and the labeled tubulin already incorporated into the centrospheres was excluded from the enlarged centrospheres. Shortly after the labeled tubulin was injected following the injection of taxol, it accumulated in the peripheral region of the centrospheres, suggesting that microtubules first assembled at this region. Fluorescently labeled tubulin in the mitotic apparatus in the egg after injection of taxol was redistributed much more slowly after photobleaching than in uninjected eggs.  相似文献   

17.
Microtubule dynamics are thought to play an important role in regulating microtubule interactions with cortical force generating motor proteins that position the spindle during asymmetric cell division. CLASPs are microtubule-associated proteins that have a conserved role in regulating microtubule dynamics in diverse cell types. Caenorhabditis elegans has three CLASP homologs in its genome. CLS-2 is known to localize to kinetochores and is needed for chromosome segregation at meiosis and mitosis; however CLS-1 and CLS-3 have not been reported to have any role in embryonic development. Here, we show that depletion of CLS-2 in combination with either CLS-1 or CLS-3 results in defects in nuclear rotation, maintenance of spindle length, and spindle displacement in the one-cell embryo. Polarity is normal in these embryos, but reduced numbers of astral microtubules reach all regions of the cortex at the time of spindle positioning. Analysis of the microtubule plus-end tracker EB1 also revealed a reduced number of growing microtubules reaching the cortex in CLASP depleted embryos, but the polymerization rate of astral microtubules was not slower than in wild type. These results indicate that C. elegans CLASPs act partially redundantly to regulate astral microtubules and position the spindle during asymmetric cell division. Further, we show that these spindle pole-positioning roles are independent of the CLS-2 binding proteins HCP-1 and HCP-2.  相似文献   

18.
The tinA gene of Aspergillus nidulans encodes a protein that interacts with the NIMA mitotic protein kinase in a cell cycle-specific manner. Highly similar proteins are encoded in Neurospora crassa and Aspergillus fumigatus. TINA and NIMA preferentially interact in interphase and larger forms of TINA are generated during mitosis. Localization studies indicate that TINA is specifically localized to the spindle pole bodies only during mitosis in a microtubule-dependent manner. Deletion of tinA alone is not lethal but displays synthetic lethality in combination with the anaphase-promoting complex/cyclosome mutation bimE7. At the bimE7 metaphase arrest point, lack of TINA enhanced the nucleation of bundles of cytoplasmic microtubules from the spindle pole bodies. These microtubules interacted to form spindles joined in series via astral microtubules as revealed by live cell imaging. Because TINA is modified and localizes to the spindle pole bodies at mitosis, and lack of TINA causes enhanced production of cytoplasmic microtubules at metaphase arrest, we suggest TINA is involved in negative regulation of the astral microtubule organizing capacity of the spindle pole bodies during metaphase.  相似文献   

19.
The ultrastructure of the metaphase mitotic apparatus has been studied in the KEPV cells during 6 hours after the removal of 2-mercaptoethanol (0.001 M). Starting from the analysis of chromosome disposition, the structures of the kinetochore regions and of the mitotic spindle poles, and the degree of integrity of the mitotic spindle microtubules, six types of metaphase cells were revealed. A comparison of the results of the present paper with those of the earlier studies enabled us to present the dynamics of the metaphase mitotic apparatus reconstruction. Four basic stages are revealed in this process. At the first stage, the K-metaphase centrioles form diplosomes again, the number and extent of kinetochore microtubules increase too. At the second stage, the metaphase plate forms, but interpolar and astral microtubules are absent. At the third stage, the structure of the kinetochore regions becomes normal. Thus, the metaphase plate may have formed before the orientation of kinetochores to the poles took place. At the fourth stage, the interpolar and astral microtubules appear; the mitotic spindle reestablishes completely. It is supposed that the formation and functioning of the mitotic apparatus is not confined to the interaction of microtubules of different types.  相似文献   

20.
Microtubule dynamics have key roles in mitotic spindle assembly and chromosome movement [1]. Fast turnover of spindle microtubules at metaphase and polewards flux of microtubules (polewards movement of the microtubule lattice with depolymerization at the poles) at both metaphase and anaphase have been observed in mammalian cells [2]. Imaging spindle dynamics in genetically tractable yeasts is now possible using green fluorescent protein (GFP)-tagging of tubulin and sites on chromosomes [3] [4] [5] [6] [7] [8]. We used photobleaching of GFP-labeled tubulin to observe microtubule dynamics in the fission yeast Schizosaccharomyces pombe. Photobleaching did not perturb progress through mitosis. Bleached marks made on the spindle during metaphase recovered their fluorescence rapidly, indicating fast microtubule turnover. Recovery was spatially non-uniform, but we found no evidence for polewards flux. Marks made during anaphase B did not recover fluorescence, and were observed to slide away from each other at the same rate as spindle elongation. Fast microtubule turnover at metaphase and a switch to stable microtubules at anaphase suggest the existence of a cell-cycle-regulated molecular switch that controls microtubule dynamics and that may be conserved in evolution. Unlike the situation for vertebrate spindles, microtubule depolymerization at poles and polewards flux may not occur in S. pombe mitosis. We conclude that GFP-tubulin photobleaching in conjunction with mutant cells should aid research on molecular mechanisms causing and regulating dynamics.  相似文献   

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