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1.
The structure of centric, intranuclear mitosis and of organelles associated with nuclei are described in developing zoosporangia of the chytrid Rhizophydium spherotheca. Frequently dictyosomes partially encompass the sides of diplosomes (paired centrioles). A single, incomplete layer of endoplasmic reticulum with tubular connections to the nuclear envelope is found around dividing nuclei. The nuclear envelope remains intact during mitosis except for polar fenestrae which appear during spindle incursion. During prophase, when diplosomes first define the nuclear poles, secondary centrioles occur adjacent and at right angles to the sides of primary centrioles. By late metaphase the centrioles in a diplosome are positioned at a 40° angle to each other and are joined by an electron-dense band; by telophase the centrioles lie almost parallel to each other. Astral microtubules radiate into the cytoplasm from centrioles during interphase, but by metaphase few cytoplasmic microtubules are found. Cytoplasmic microtubules increase during late anaphase and telophase as spindle microtubules gradually disappear. The mitotic spindle, which contains chromosomal and interzonal microtubules, converges at the base of the primary centriole. Throughout mitosis the semipersistent nucleolus is adjacent to the nuclear envelope and remains in the interzonal region of the nucleus as chromosomes separate and the nucleus elongates. During telophase the nuclear envelope constricts around the chromosomal mass, and the daughter nuclei separate from each end of the interzonal region of the nucleus. The envelope of the interzonal region is relatively intact and encircles the nucleolus, but later the membranes of the interzonal region scatter and the nucleolus disperses. The structure of the mitotic apparatus is similar to that of the chytrid Phlyctochytrium irregulare.  相似文献   

2.
In plant cells Golgi apparatus organization, maintenance and distribution differ from that in mammalian cells and the mechanisms for this are not clearly understood. Here we investigate the role of microtubules in the positioning and arrangement of Golgi apparatus in the root cells of Triticum aestivum L. by using dual immunofluorescent labeling and laser confocal microscopy to localize both throughout the cell cycle. We observed that Golgi stacks (i) in interphase cells predominantly occupied the perinuclear region, (ii) during mitosis they redistributed to the spindle periphery and/or areas above spindle poles, and (iii) in telophase accumulated around the phragmoplast and the chromosomes/nuclei of daughter cells. Inhibition of microtubule assembly by colchicine resulted in aggregation of Golgi in the cortical cytoplasm of interphase cells and accumulation around the chromosomes in C-mitotic cells, in stark contrast with the distribution in untreated cells. Electron microscopy revealed that in colchicine treated cells many Golgi units became disorganized, yet others were abnormally enlarged. Overall, our results indicate that in plant cells microtubules play a key role in restricting the position and maintaining the arrangement and structural integrity of the Golgi apparatus.  相似文献   

3.
Some details of interphase cell structure are given. At prophase the nuclear envelope breaks down and the nucleolus disperses; very small doubled chromosomes generally form a precisely aligned, metaphase plate with normal spindle microtubules present; 2 plates of chromatids separate during anaphase, the spindle becoming invaded, by (mucilage) vesicles. Telophase nuclei arc initially very hard to discern, until they increase in volume. Microtubules collect at each pole, becoming increasingly focused on one small region containing fine granular malarial, the microtubule center (MC). The septum, an annular ingrowth, begins forming at prophase and partitions the cell by telophase. At no stage were microtubules involved in this initial cross-wall formation. At telophase the spindle collapses and as the nuclei move back to the septum, increasing numbers of microtubules appear near this cross wall, all transversely aligned. An annular split deepens down the middle of the wall material in the septum, and the daughter cells begin to expand, stretching the new wall; the microtubules appearing near the septum now are transformed steadily into typical hooplike wall, microtubules, but strictly confined to the expanding wall (there are none near interphase cell walls). Meanwhile, the MC, has moved, to the side of the cell and begins migrating along one of the grooves in the chloroplast; a large number of parallel microtubules extends back to the nucleus, which becomes increasingly deformed as it begins to extend a long thin protrusion along these, microtubules. The MC keeps moving along the cell until it lodges in the cleavage developing in the chloroplast. Some microtubules extend still further up the cell, others appear in the chloroplast cleavage, but most en-sheathe the nucleus which by now is moving along the cell as a cylindrical structure tightly fitting in the chloroplast groove. The nuclear membrane is then drawn up into the deepening chloroplast constriction, and when the chloroplast is finally cut in 2, the nucleus lakes up its interphase position between the 2 halves. While all this is occurring, the whole cytoplasm is expanding into the new semicell being created by growth of the wall originally derived from the septum. Thus the interphase cell symmetry is reestablished after mitosis. These results are discussed in terms of more general phenomena of cell division and morphogenesis.  相似文献   

4.
This work focuses on the assembly and transformation of the spindle during the progression through the meiotic cell cycle. For this purpose, immunofluorescent confocal microscopy was used in comparative studies to determine the spatial distribution of alpha- and gamma-tubulin and nuclear mitotic apparatus protein (NuMA) from late G2 to the end of M phase in both meiosis and mitosis. In pig endothelial cells, consistent with previous reports, gamma-tubulin was localized at the centrosomes in both interphase and M phase, and NuMA was localized in the interphase nucleus and at mitotic spindle poles. During meiotic progression in pig oocytes, gamma-tubulin and NuMA were initially detected in a uniform distribution across the nucleus. In early diakinesis and just before germinal vesicle breakdown, microtubules were first detected around the periphery of the germinal vesicle and cell cortex. At late diakinesis, a mass of multi-arrayed microtubules was formed around chromosomes. In parallel, NuMA localization changed from an amorphous to a highly aggregated form in the vicinity of the chromosomes, but gamma-tubulin localization remained in an amorphous form surrounding the chromosomes. Then the NuMA foci moved away from the condensed chromosomes and aligned at both poles of a barrel-shaped metaphase I spindle while gamma-tubulin was localized along the spindle microtubules, suggesting that pig meiotic spindle poles are formed by the bundling of microtubules at the minus ends by NuMA. Interestingly, in mouse oocytes, the meiotic spindle pole was composed of several gamma-tubulin foci rather than NuMA. Further, nocodazole, an inhibitor of microtubule polymerization, induced disappearance of the pole staining of NuMA in pig metaphase II oocytes, whereas the mouse meiotic spindle pole has been reported to be resistant to the treatment. These results suggest that the nature of the meiotic spindle differs between species. The axis of the pig meiotic spindle rotated from a perpendicular to a parallel position relative to the cell surface during telophase I. Further, in contrast to the stable localization of NuMA and gamma-tubulin at the spindle poles in mitosis, NuMA and gamma-tubulin became relocalized to the spindle midzone during anaphase I and telophase I in pig oocytes. We postulate that in the centrosome-free meiotic spindle, NuMA aggregates the spindle microtubules at the midzone during anaphase and telophase and that the polarity of meiotic spindle microtubules might become inverted during spindle elongation.  相似文献   

5.
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   

6.
应用间接免疫荧光标记技术和激光共聚焦扫描显微镜成像技术观察洋葱小孢子母细胞减数分裂过程中微管分布变化。减数分裂之前,小孢子母细胞中的微管较短,呈辐射状,由细胞核表面向四周扩散。减数分裂开始后,细胞质中的一部分微管蛋白聚集成纺锤体微管,控制染色体的分布。进入减数分裂I后期,纺锤体微管变为牵引染色体移向两极的着丝粒微管和连接纺锤体两极的极丝微管。之后,所有微管集中在两个核之间,构成成膜体。然后,微管解聚成微管蛋白弥散在细胞质中。减数分裂I完成后,二分体2个子细胞中的微管蛋白又聚集成2个纺锤体微管,开始减数分裂II过程。经过减数分裂II中期,2个二分体细胞中的微管再次集中在2个细胞核之间形成成膜体,隔离2个细胞核。此后,微管蛋白解聚,弥散分布在小孢子细胞质中。  相似文献   

7.
Amebae of D. discoideum on coverslips were fixed in situ with glutaraldehyde and permeabilized with Triton X-100. Of six antibodies tested, only a monoclonal antibody to yeast tubulin consistently gave bright fluorescence. Counterstaining with DAPI facilitated the identification of interphase and mitotic stages. Most microtubules (MTs) in interphase amebae emanated from a nucleus-associated centre that had a non-fluorescent core. Amebae in early stages of mitosis lacked cytoplasmic MTs almost entirely. The nascent spindle in prophase appeared as a brightly fluorescent dot, whereas the prometaphase spindle was a short rod. Spindles in metaphase and anaphase nuclei were more elongate, some consisting of several fluorescent lines. Astral MTs were prominent on spindles in anaphase and telophase. Asters are obviously converted to the interphase complex of MTs in post-mitotic cells, while the shaft-like remnant of the central spindle disappears. The cyclical changes in the MT system related to cell division resemble those observed in higher eukaryotes and probably reflect changes in the locomotory behavior of the amebae rather than changes in cell shape.  相似文献   

8.
Genetic evidence has shown the presence of a common spindle pole organiser in Physarum amoebae and plasmodia. But the typical centrosome and mitosis observed in amoebae are replaced in plasmodia by an intranuclear mitosis devoid of any structurally defined organelle. The fate of gamma-tubulin and of another component (TPH17) of the centrosome of Physarum amoebae was investigated in the nuclei of synchronous plasmodia. These two amoebal centrosomal elements were present in the nuclear compartment during the entire cell cycle and exhibited similar relocalisation from metaphase to telophase. Three preparation methods showed that gamma-tubulin containing material was dispersed in the nucleoplasm during interphase. It constituted an intranuclear thread-like structure. In contrast, the TPH17 epitope exhibited a localisation close to the nucleolus. In late G2-phase, the gamma-tubulin containing elements condensed in a single organelle which further divided. Intranuclear microtubules appeared before the condensation of the gamma-tubulin material and treatment with microtubule poisons suggested that microtubules were required in this process. The TPH17 epitope relocalised in the intranuclear spindle later than the gamma-tubulin containing material suggesting a maturation process of the mitotic poles. The decondensation of the gamma-tubulin material and of the material containing the TPH17 epitope occurred immediately after telophase. Hence in the absence of a structurally defined centrosome homologue, the microtubule nucleating material undergoes a cycle of condensation and decondensation during the cell cycle.  相似文献   

9.
K. Mizuno 《Protoplasma》1995,186(1-2):99-112
Summary Filamentous structures of 7–10 nm in diameter were regenerated in vitro from a soluble 50 kDa protein (p50) that had been isolated from mung bean seedlings and from cultured tobacco cells. The polymerization of p50 in vitro was dependent on the presence of guanosine nucleotides, in particular, guanosine monophosphate (GMP). Unlike tubulin, p50 is a stable basic protein with the ability to polymerize even after heat treatment for 1 min at 70 °C. Furthermore, the freeze-dried powder of p50 retained the ability to regenerate filamentous structures after it had been dissolved in polymerization buffer to which GMP was then added. Two monoclonal antibodies against p50 were obtained. These antibodies stained the filamentous structures that extended from the surface of the nucleus to the cell periphery in interphase tobacco cells. They stained spindles and phragmoplasts as did tubulin-specific antibodies. They also stained fibrillar structures that were present around the spindle poles and the telophase daughter nuclei in which no microtubules were present. These results suggest that a part of the cell's complement of p50 may be associated with microtubules in dividing cells while the rest may itself form unique fibrillar structures. The antibodies against p50 did not stain cortical microtubules or the pre-prophase band of microtubules. The antibody against p50 also stained intermediate filament-like structures in cultured animal cells. The formation of microtubules in vitro was markedly stimulated and the assembled microtubules were greatly stabilized by p50. Further investigation of p50 is indispensable for the understanding of properties and function of intermediate-sized filaments in higher plant cells.Abbreviations EPC Sepharose ethyl N-phenyl-carbamate conjugated Sepharose - p50 50 kDa protein  相似文献   

10.
Aspects of the ultrastructure of mitotic nuclei of the fungus Uromyces phaseoli var. vignae are described from both intercellular hyphae in the cowpea host and infection structures induced to differentiate in vitro. The interphase nucleus-associated organelle (NAO) consists of two trilamellar acircular disks connceted by an osmiophilic bar. The intranuclear spindle develops between these disks when they separate. The spindle contains pole to pole, interdigitating, chromosomal, and fragmentary microtubules arranged to form a central bundle along the surface of which lie the metaphase chromosomes. No metaphase plate is found. There are up to three microtubules per kinetochore and approximately 14 chromosomes on the haploid spindle. Telophase elongation appears to involve extension of pole to pole microtubules with no evidence for the remaining presence of interdigitating microtubules. Concomitantly, numerous cytoplasmic microtubules develop from each NAO disk where few or none are present in other phases. Reformation of the interphase NAO involves the formation of a sausage- shaped intermediate at late telophase. The nuclear envelope remains intact and the nucleolus persists throughtout division. Various aspects of the spindle and NAOs appear to be evolutionary intermediates between Ascomycetes and higher Basidiomycetes, thus supporting the theory of Basidiomycete evolution from the former group and demonstrating an encouraging correlation between mitotic characteristics and other phylogenetic markers.  相似文献   

11.
The organization of microtubules within the surface caps of Drosophila embryos is described for the mitotic cycles of the syncytial blastoderm stage (particularly cycle 10), and for the subsequent cellularization process. Tubulin was labelled with the well characterized monoclonal antibody YL 1/2 (Kilmartin et al., J cell biol 93 (1982) 576). Each surface cap was found to contain an array of microtubules running around the nucleus. The microtubules originated at prominent centrosomes located close to the apical surface of each cap nucleus. During mitosis the spindle microtubules stained strongly for tubulin. A novel finding was that the spindle microtubules of the interzone region appeared to reduce their connections with the centrosomes at the end of anaphase. The spindle remnant remained in position during telophase but then became smaller in size, disappearing by interphase. At this phase of the cell cycle duplication of the aster centrosomes occurred. The cellular blastoderm stage was marked by a change in the main axis of microtubule orientation. The centrosomes of each cap separated somewhat and formed initiation centres for the development of a well developed basket of microtubules around each nucleus, but now perpendicular to the surface. The microtubule baskets were seen to extend in parallel with nuclear elongation, but not in concert with growth of the cell membranes, which extended some way beneath the bases of the nuclei.  相似文献   

12.
KLP61F in Drosophila is a member of the BimC family of kinesins and, as for other family members [1], is required for spindle assembly [2] [3]. KLP61F is a bipolar homotetramer that cross-links spindle microtubules [4]. It is not known, however, whether the function of KLP61F is dedicated to mitosis or whether KLP61F interacts exclusively with microtubules. Previous work suggested that KLP61F functions during interphase in proliferating germ cells [3]. Cytokinesis is incomplete in germ cells and a branched cortical structure known as a fusome extrudes through intercellular bridges called ring canals. Here I show that, in germ cells, KLP61F cycles between spindles during mitosis and fusomes during interphase. Inspection of fusome-deficient hu-li tai shao (hts) mutants indicated that KLP61F gains fusome-dependent interactions near telophase that mediate its incorporation into these structures. KLP61F proved to be maintained in fusomes by microtubule-independent, detergent-resistant interactions. Inspection of KLP61F mutants indicated that KLP61F is required to recruit fusome material to spindle midbodies near telophase and for normal fusome organization. These observations suggest that KLP61F is bifunctional in germ cells, with microtubule-dependent functions in spindle assembly and microtubule-independent functions in fusome organization. Cytological analyses with antibodies against phosphorylated Eg5 peptide [4] suggest that cycling of KLP61F might reflect phosphorylation.  相似文献   

13.
ULTRASTRUCTURE AND TIME COURSE OF MITOSIS IN THE FUNGUS FUSARIUM OXYSPORUM   总被引:12,自引:8,他引:4  
Mitosis in Fusarium oxysporum Schlect. was studied by light and electron microscopy. The average times required for the stages of mitosis, as determined from measurements made on living nuclei, were as follows: prophase, 70 sec; metaphase, 120 sec; anaphase, 13 sec; and telophase, 125 sec, for a total of 5.5 min. New postfixation procedures were developed specifically to preserve the fine-structure of the mitotic apparatus. Electron microscopy of mitotic nuclei revealed a fibrillo-granular, extranuclear Spindle Pole Body (SPB) at each pole of the intranuclear, microtubular spindles. Metaphase chromosomes were attached to spindle microtubules via kinetochores, which were found near the spindle poles at telophase. The still-intact, original nuclear envelope constricted around the incipient daughter nuclei during telophase.  相似文献   

14.
We have designed experiments that distinguish centrosomal , nuclear, and cytoplasmic contributions to the assembly of the mitotic spindle. Mammalian centrosomes acting as microtubule-organizing centers were assayed by injection into Xenopus eggs either in a metaphase or an interphase state. Injection of partially purified centrosomes into interphase eggs induced the formation of extensive asters. Although centrosomes injected into unactivated eggs (metaphase) did not form asters, inhibition of centrosomes is not irreversible in metaphase cytoplasm: subsequent activation caused aster formation. When cytoskeletons containing nuclei and centrosomes were injected into the metaphase cytoplasm, they produced spindle-like structures with clearly defined poles. Electron microscopy revealed centrioles with nucleated microtubules. However, injection of nuclei prepared from karyoplasts that were devoid of centrosomes produced anastral microtubule arrays around condensing chromatin. Co-injection of karyoplast nuclei with centrosomes reconstituted the formation of spindle-like structures with well-defined poles. We conclude from these experiments that in mitosis, the centrosome acts as a microtubule-organizing center only in the proximity of the nucleus or chromatin, whereas in interphase it functions independently. The general implications of these results for the interconversion of metaphase and interphase microtubule arrays in all cells are discussed.  相似文献   

15.
Current models for cleavage plane determination propose that metaphase spindles are positioned and oriented by interactions of their astral microtubules with the cellular cortex, followed by cleavage in the plane of the metaphase plate [1, 2]. We show that in early frog and fish embryos, where cells are unusually large, astral microtubules in metaphase are too short to position and orient the spindle. Rather, the preceding interphase aster centers and orients a pair of centrosomes prior to nuclear envelope breakdown, and the spindle assembles between these prepositioned centrosomes. Interphase asters center and orient centrosomes with dynein-mediated pulling forces. These forces act before astral microtubules contact the cortex; thus, dynein must pull from sites in the cytoplasm, not the cell cortex as is usually proposed for smaller cells. Aster shape is determined by interactions of the expanding periphery with the cell cortex or with an interaction zone that forms between sister-asters in telophase. We propose a model to explain cleavage plane geometry in which the length of astral microtubules is limited by interaction with these boundaries, causing length asymmetries. Dynein anchored in the cytoplasm then generates length-dependent pulling forces, which move and orient centrosomes.  相似文献   

16.
Chondrocytes were isolated enzymatically from guinea-pig epiphyses and grown in vitro. The fate of the Golgi complex during mitosis in relation to changes in the cytoplasmic microtubules was then studied by transmission electron microscopy. Interphase cells were observed to be polarized, with the Golgi complex occupying a well-defined juxtanuclear area of the cell's cytoplasmic pole. During prophase the cytoplasmic microtubules were largely lost, the nucleus moved to the center of the cell and the Golgi complex dissolved into single dictyosomes spread diffusely throughout the cytoplasm. The distribution of other organelles also changed to a more random pattern. In telophase, i.e. after the completion of nuclear division, the mitotic spindle decomposed and cytoplasmic microtubules reappeared. Furthermore, the organization of the Golgi complex and other organelles returned to that characteristic of interphase cells. Previous studies on cells treated with colchicine have indicated that the polarized distribution of cell organelles is dependent on the presence of intact cytoplasmic micro-tubules. It is suggested that the disappearance of such tubules observed here to be coupled with the disorganization of cell interphase structure fulfills the double function of providing free tubulin units from which to build the mitotic spindle and ensuring an approximately equal distribution of dictyosomes and other organelles to the daughter cells during cytokinesis.  相似文献   

17.
Indirect immunofluorescence microscopy was used to survey the three-dimensional distribution of microtubules throughout the cell cycle in the green alga Mougeotia. The network of microtubules present in the cortex of the cells at interphase gradually disappeared before mitosis. A band of cortical microtubules reminiscent of the preprophase band of higher plants surrounded the nuclei of some preprophase cells undergoing cortical microtubule disassembly. Longitudinally oriented bundles of microtubules appeared at the future spindle poles on either side of the nuclei in prophase. These bundles disappeared gradually as the spindle microtubule arrays formed. New spindles had broad poles but these became quite pointed before anaphase. Interzonal microtubules appearing at anaphase persisted until the end of nuclear migration, by which time they were concentrated into narrow bundles on either side of the centripetally forming crosswalls. During decondensation of the chromosomes and early nuclear migration, the spindle poles persisted as sites of microtubule concentration. New arrays of microtubules radiated from these microtubule centers into the cytoplasm ahead of the migrating nuclei. After cytokinesis, reinstatement of cortical microtubules was best observed in regions of the cells remote from the nuclei and associated microtubules. In contrast to higher plants, the first detectable cortical microtubules were short and already oriented transverse to the long axes of the cells.  相似文献   

18.
Summary Mitosis and cytokinesis have been studied in the green algaZygnema C. A. Agardh using interference-contrast light and transmission electron microscopy. At prophase, the nucleolus disintegrates and numerous extranuclear microtubules near the nuclear periphery penetrate into the nucleoplasm. When aligned in the equatorial plane of the open metaphase spindle the chromosomes are coated with persistent nucleolar fragments. At anaphase, vacuoles intrude into the interzonal spindle region and seemingly contribute to the anaphase movement of the chromosomes. At telophase, the spindle is persistent and the reforming nuclei are separated by cytoplasmic strands containing microtubules, interspersed with vacuoles. Extensive bundles of microtubules, dictyosomes and parallel, slightly inflated ER-profiles extend from the poles of the telophase nucleus along the longitudinal side of the chloroplast. Conceivably, these microtubules guide the nucleus during its post-mitotic migration towards its central interphase position between the two halves of the dividing chloroplast. Throughout the mitotic cycle, ubiquitous dictyosomes, positioned near the chloroplast core, seem very active. Arrays of microtubules run towards these dictyosomes and may conduct the dictyosome-vesicles to the cleavage plane. At metaphase, septum growth becomes visible as an annular ingrowth of the plasmalemma. At late telophase or at entering interphase, an extensive clump of vesicles, associated with longitudinal bundles of microtubules, appears between the leading edges of the advanced furrow. Apparent fusion of these vesicles with the head of the centripetally-growing furrow results in its completion. The pattern of mitosis and cytokinesis inZygnema is compared with that of closely related green algae.  相似文献   

19.
The anaphase-telophase spindle usually elongates, and it has been assumed that the spindle pushes the incipient daughter nuclei apart. To test this assumption, we used a laser microbeam to sever the central spindle of the fungus, Fusarium solani, and measured the rate of separation of incipient daughter nuclei. When the microbeam was aimed beside the spindle separation occurred at a rate (8.6 micrometer/min) that did not differ significantly from the rate (7.6 micrometer/m) in unirradiated cells. But when the spindle was irradiated, it broke, and the separation was much faster (22.4 micrometer/min). Irradiation of cytoplasm lateral to one spindle pole resulted in a 1.5 micrometer/min reduction in the rate (6.1 micrometer/min) of separation. From these and other data, we infer that extranuclear forces, presumably involving astral microtubules, pull on the incipient daughter nuclei and that the central spindle limits the separation rate. Astral microtubules are associated with the plasma membrane or, sometimes, with the rough endoplasmic reticulum. Most of the spindle microtubules that are present at metaphase are depolymerized during anaphase and early telophase.  相似文献   

20.
The behavior of microtubules was studied in hybrids formed between mouse oocytes arrested in metaphase II or activated parthenogenetically and mouse embryo interphase blastomeres. In all cases the interphase blastomere's network of microtubules disassembles rapidly after fusion with oocytes. Introduction of interphase cytoplasm and nuclei to metaphase oocytes during fusion induces the polymerization of new microtubules in the cytoplasm and in the meiotic spindle. The degree and the duration of this facilitated polymerization of microtubules was positively correlated with the volume of blastomeres used for fusion. The blastomere nuclei induce the formation of microtubular frames, which become more evident when the chromatin undergoes premature condensation. Finally, spindle-like structures are formed around the prematurely condensed chromosomes. In hybrids activated around the time of fusion, the blastomere nuclei undergo pronuclear-like transformation. These hybrids develop an interphase network of microtubules typical for activated oocytes. These results are discussed with regards to the cell cycle control of microtubule behavior.  相似文献   

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