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1.
Polarity of spindle microtubules in Haemanthus endosperm   总被引:12,自引:7,他引:5       下载免费PDF全文
Structural polarities of mitotic spindle microtubules in the plant Haemanthus katherinae have been studied by lysing endosperm cells in solutions of neurotubulin under conditions that will decorate cellular microtubules with curved sheets of tubulin protofilaments. Microtubule polarity was observed at several positions in each cell by cutting serial thin sections perpendicular to the spindle axis. The majority of the microtubules present in a metaphase or anaphase half-spindle are oriented with their fast-growing or "plus" ends distal to the polar area. Near the polar ends of the spindle and up to about halfway between the kinetichores and the poles, the number of microtubules with opposite polarity is low: 8-20% in metaphase and 2-15% in anaphase cells. Direct examination of 10 kinetochore fibers shows that the majority of these microtubules, too, are oriented with their plus ends distal to the poles, as had been previously shown in animal cells. Sections from the region near the spindle equator reveal an increased fraction of microtubules with opposite polarity. Graphs of polarity vs. position along the spindle axis display a smooth transition from microtubules of one orientation near the first pole, through a region containing equal numbers of the two orientations, to a zone near the second pole where the opposite polarity predominates. We conclude that the spindle of endosperm cells is constructed from two sets of microtubules with opposite polarity that interdigitate near the spindle equator. The length of the zone of interdigitation shortens from metaphase through telophase, consistent with a model that states that during anaphase spindle elongation in Haemanthus, the interdigitating sets of microtubules are moved apart. We found no major changes in the distribution of microtubule polarity in the spindle interzone from anaphase to telophase when cells are engaged in phragmoplast formation. Therefore, the initiation and organization of new microtubules, thought to take place during phragmoplast assembly, must occur without significant alteration of the microtubule polarity distribution.  相似文献   

2.
35-10-9.pdf     
The microtubule organizational changes in the isolated generative cells of Allemanda schottii were followed using immunofluorescence and confocal laser scanning microscopy. Due to the improved resolution and the lack of out-of-focus flares, the microtubule cytoskeleton of the generative cells could be visualized more clearly than using conventional epifluorescence systems. Immediately after isolation the microtubule cytoskeleton of the generative cells was cage-like composed of longitudinally oriented microtubule bundles. Later, some bundles began to depolymerize and at the same time some smaller bundles appearred. The smaller bundles unlike the longitudinal bundles crisscrossed throughout the cell. Later still, the cells became spherical. Both the longitudinal and the smaller bundles disappearred. At the same time some of the microtubules began to aggregate around the nucleus. These perinuclear microtubules were apparently not very stable, because soon afterwards,they started to disintegrate. By the time the cells became completely spherical,the cytoplasm became filled with diffuse fluorescence indicating that the tubulin was no longer existing in a polymerized form but in a monomeric form inside the cell. After the fuberlin had completely depolymerized the microtubules started to reform. The sequence of events leading to the reformation of the microtubule cytoskeleton in the spherical cells was as follow: A few nucleating centres began to form first. Then the nucleating centres gave rise to microtubule bundles. The bundles extended and aggregated to form a reticulate network. This cytoskeletal network appearred stable and well organized. It also had a lot of microtubule-bundle junctions. The network persisted after Triton X-l00 extraction.  相似文献   

3.
The reorganization of the microtubular meshwork was studied in intact Haemanthus endosperm cells and cell fragments (cytoplasts). This higher plant tissue is devoid of a known microtubule organizating organelle. Observations on living cells were correlated with microtubule arrangements visualized with the immunogold method. In small fragments, reorganization did not proceed. In medium and large sized fragments, microtubular converging centers formed first. Then these converging centers reorganized into either closed bushy microtubular spiral or chromosome-free cytoplasmic spindles/phragmoplasts. Therefore, the final shape of organized microtubular structures, including spindle shaped, was determined by the initial size of the cell fragments and could be achieved without chromosomes or centrioles. Converging centers elongate due to the formation of additional structures resembling microtubular fir trees. These structures were observed at the pole of the microtubular converging center in anucleate fragments, accessory phragmoplasts in nucleated cells, and in the polar region of the mitotic spindle during anaphase. Therefore, during anaphase pronounced assembly of new microtubules occurs at the polar region of acentriolar spindles. Moreover, statistical analysis demonstrated that during the first two-thirds of anaphase, when chromosomes move with an approximately constant speed, kinetochore fibers shorten, while the length of the kinetochore fiber complex remains constant due to the simultaneous elongation of their integral parts (microtubular fir trees). The half-spindle shortens only during the last one-third of anaphase. These data contradict the presently prevailing view that chromosome-to-pole movements in acentriolar spindles of higher plants are concurrent with the shortening of the half-spindle, the self-reorganizing property of higher plant microtubules (tubulin) in vivo. It may be specific for cells without centrosomes and may be superimposed also on other microtubule-related processes.  相似文献   

4.
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   

5.
We describe a new component of the kinetochore region of Chinese hamster ovary cells, which was characterised using a monoclonal antibody (mAb). This antigen was localised on the kinetochore regions of purified metaphase chromosomes, but in anaphase it was instead located on the polar microtubules in the midbody region, where they terminate in the stembody. It was not detectable in prophase or interphase cells by immunofluorescence, but was present in the interphase nucleus as shown by immunoblotting after SDS-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis. The mAb recognised two polypeptides of Mr 140 000 and 155 000. The localisation of this antigen in metaphase on the kinetochore region, where the plus ends of the kinetochore microtubules are temporarily stabilised when they attach, and later in the stembody and midbody where the plus ends of the polar microtubules are stabilised in anaphase and telophase, suggests that it could play a role in stabilising the plus ends of microtubules and thus in the control of microtubule dynamics during mitosis.  相似文献   

6.
Individual living cells in metaphase were exposed to a steep temperature gradient by placing a microheater near one spindle pole. The cells were then fixed and the spindle was examined by electron microscopy. The structure of the warmer half-spindle differed from the cooler half-spindle in several ways. Kinetochore microtubules were nearly parallel in the warmer half-spindle but were divergent in the cooler. The total length of microtubules in the warmer half-spindle was 52 per cent greater and the number of kinetochore microtubules per kinetochore averaged 16 per cent higher than in the cooler half-spindle. The warmer half-spindle was longer than the cooler. These observations clearly demonstrate a locally enhanced assembly of microtubules in the warmer half-spindle. The electron microscope study makes still clearer the unusual character of chromosome movement in the differentially heated cells: the structure of the warmer half-spindle is hard to distinguish from that in normal cells, yet chromosome movement there is far slower than normal (Nicklas, 1979).  相似文献   

7.
Merotelic kinetochore attachment is a major source of aneuploidy in mammalian tissue cells in culture. Mammalian kinetochores typically have binding sites for about 20-25 kinetochore microtubules. In prometaphase, kinetochores become merotelic if they attach to microtubules from opposite poles rather than to just one pole as normally occurs. Merotelic attachments support chromosome bi-orientation and alignment near the metaphase plate and they are not detected by the mitotic spindle checkpoint. At anaphase onset, sister chromatids separate, but a chromatid with a merotelic kinetochore may not be segregated correctly, and may lag near the spindle equator because of pulling forces toward opposite poles, or move in the direction of the wrong pole. Correction mechanisms are important for preventing segregation errors. There are probably more than 100 times as many PtK1 tissue cells with merotelic kinetochores in early mitosis, and about 16 times as many entering anaphase as the 1% of cells with lagging chromosomes seen in late anaphase. The role of spindle mechanics and potential functions of the Ndc80/Nuf2 protein complex at the kinetochore/microtubule interface is discussed for two correction mechanisms: one that functions before anaphase to reduce the number of kinetochore microtubules to the wrong pole, and one that functions after anaphase onset to move merotelic kinetochores based on the ratio of kinetochore microtubules to the correct versus incorrect pole.  相似文献   

8.
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   

9.
Spindle dynamics and arrangement of microtubules   总被引:2,自引:1,他引:1  
Changes in microtubule (MT) arrangement were studied in endosperm of Haemanthus katherinae. Individual cells were selected in the light microscope and sectioned perpendicular or parallel to the long axis of the spindle. The following data and conclusions were drawn: During anaphase kinetochore fibers (bundles of kinetochore MTs) always intermingle with non-kinetochore (continuous) fibers (bundles of non-kinetochore MTs). The latter often branch and some free ends are present. Often one non-kinetochore fiber is connected with more than one kinetochore fiber, explaining why chromosomes may lose their ability for independent movement. During anaphase kinetochore fibers move to the poles, the number of kinetochore MTs decreases by one-half and the MTs tend to become more splayed out. At the same time the number of MTs between trailing chromosome arms increases, probably representing segments of kinetochore MTs which break during anaphase. The number of non-kinetochore MTs in the equatorial region at anaphase is twice the number of non-kinetochore MTs in metaphase. The above data agree perfectly with those in polarized light and indicate that a simple sliding system does not exist in the spindle of Haemanthus.  相似文献   

10.
The polarity of kinetochore microtubules (MTs) has been studied in lysed PtK1 cells by polymerizing hook-shaped sheets of neurotubulin onto walls of preexisting cellular MTs in a fashion that reveals their structural polarity. Three different approaches are presented here: (a) we have screened the polarity of all MTs in a given spindle cross section taken from the region between the kinetochores and the poles, (b) we have determined the polarity of kinetochore MTs are more stable to cold-treated spindles; this approach takes advantage of the fact that kinetochore MTs are more stable to cold treatment than other spindle MTs; and (c) we have tracked bundles of kinetochore MTs from the vicinity of the pole to the outer layer of the kinetochore in cold- treated cells. In an anaphase cell, 90-95% of all MTs in an area between the kinetochores and the poles are of uniform polarity with their plus ends (i.e., fast growing ends) distal to the pole. In cold- treated cells, all bundles of kinetochore MTs show the same polarity; the plus ends of the MTs are located at the kinetochores. We therefore conclude that kinetochore MTs in both metaphase and anaphase cells have the same polarity as the aster MTs in each half-spindle. These results can be interpreted in two ways: (a) virtually all MTs are initiated at the spindle poles and some of the are "captured" by matured kinetochores using an as yet unknown mechanism to bind the plus ends of existing MTs; (b) the growth of kinetochore MTs is initiated at the kinetochore in such a way that the fast growing MT end is proximal to the kinetochore. Our data are inconsistent with previous kinetochore MT polarity determinations based on growth rate measurements in vitro. These studies used drug-treated cells from which chromosomes were isolated to serve as seeds for initiation of neurotubule polymerization. It is possible that under these conditions kinetochores will initiate MTs with a polarity opposite to the one described here.  相似文献   

11.
Chromosome segregation in most animal cells is brought about through two events: the movement of the chromosomes to the poles (anaphase A) and the movement of the poles away from each other (anaphase B). Essential to an understanding of the mechanism of mitosis is information on the relative movements of components of the spindle and identification of sites of subunit loss from shortening microtubules. Through use of tubulin derivatized with X-rhodamine, photobleaching, and digital imaging microscopy of living cells, we directly determined the relative movements of poles, chromosomes, and a marked domain on kinetochore fibers during anaphase. During chromosome movement and pole-pole separation, the marked domain did not move significantly with respect to the near pole. Therefore, the kinetochore microtubules were shortened by the loss of subunits at the kinetochore, although a small amount of subunit loss elsewhere was not excluded. In anaphase A, chromosomes moved on kinetochore microtubules that remained stationary with respect to the near pole. In anaphase B, the kinetochore fiber microtubules accompanied the near pole in its movement away from the opposite pole. These results eliminate models of anaphase in which microtubules are thought to be traction elements that are drawn to and depolymerized at the pole. Our results are compatible with models of anaphase in which the kinetochore fiber microtubules remain anchored at the pole and in which microtubule dynamics are centered at the kinetochore.  相似文献   

12.
In the present work we report the phosphorylation pattern of histone H3 and the development of microtubular structures using immunostaining techniques, in mitosis of Rhynchospora tenuis (2n = 4), a Cyperaceae with holocentric chromosomes. The main features of the holocentric chromosomes of R. tenuis coincide with those of other species namely: the absence of primary constriction in prometaphase and metaphase, and the parallel separation of sister chromatids at anaphase. Additionaly, we observed a highly conserved chromosome positioning at anaphase and early telophase sister nuclei. Four microtubule arrangements were distinguished during the root tip cell cycle. Interphase cells showed a cortical microtubule arrangement that progressively forms the characteristic pre-prophase band. At prometaphase the microtubules were homogeneously distributed around the nuclear envelope. Metaphase cells displayed the spindle arrangement with kinetochore microtubules attached throughout the entire chromosome extension. At anaphase kinetochoric microtubules become progressively shorter, whereas bundles of interzonal microtubules became increasingly broader and denser. At late telophase the microtubules were observed equatorially extended beyond the sister nuclei and reaching the cell wall. Immunolabelling with an antibody against phosphorylated histone H3 revealed the four chromosomes labelled throughout their entire extension at metaphase and anaphase. Apparently, the holocentric chromosomes of R. tenuis function as an extended centromeric region both in terms of cohesion and H3 phosphorylation.  相似文献   

13.
During prometaphase and metaphase of mitosis, tubulin subunit incorporation into kinetochore microtubules occurs proximal to the kinetochore, at the plus-ends of kinetochore microtubules. During anaphase, subunit loss from kinetochore fiber microtubules is also thought to occur mainly from microtubule plus-ends, proximal to the kinetochore. Thus, the kinetochore can mediate both subunit addition and loss while maintaining an attachment to kinetochore microtubules. To examine the relationship between chromosome motion and tubulin subunit assembly in anaphase, we have injected anaphase cells with biotin-labeled tubulin subunits. The pattern of biotin-tubulin incorporation was revealed using immunoelectron and confocal fluorescence microscopy of cells fixed after injection; chromosome motion was analyzed using video records of living injected cells. When anaphase cells are examined approximately 30 s after injection with biotin-tubulin, bright "tufts" of fluorescence are detected proximal to the kinetochores. Electron microscopic immunocytochemistry further reveals that these tufts of biotin-tubulin-containing microtubules are continuous with unlabeled kinetochore fiber microtubules. Biotin-tubulin incorporation proximal to the kinetochore in anaphase cells is detected after injection of 3-30 mg/ml biotin-tubulin, but not in cells injected with 0.3 mg/ml biotin-tubulin. At intermediate concentrations of biotin-tubulin (3-5 mg/ml), incorporation at the kinetochore can be detected within 15 s after injection; by approximately 1 min after injection discrete tufts of fluorescence are no longer detected, although some incorporation throughout the kinetochore fiber and into nonkinetochore microtubules is observed. At higher concentrations of injected biotin-tubulin (13 mg/ml), incorporation at the kinetochore is more extensive and occurs for longer periods of time than at intermediate concentrations. Incorporation of biotin-tubulin proximal to the kinetochore can be detected in cells injected during anaphase A, but not during anaphase B. Analysis of video records of microinjection experiments reveals that kinetochore proximal incorporation of biotin-tubulin is accompanied by a transient reversal of chromosome-to-pole motion. Chromosome motion is not altered after injection of 0.3 mg/ml biotin-tubulin or 5 mg/ml BSA. These results demonstrate that kinetochore microtubules in anaphase cells can elongate in response to the elevation of the tubulin concentration and that kinetochores retain the ability to mediate plus-end-dependent assembly of KMTs and plus-end-directed chromosome motion after anaphase onset.  相似文献   

14.
Fourteen prometaphase kinetochore microtubule bundles have been examined in electron micrographs of serial sections. The majority (54%) of the microtubules extended from the polar region towards the kinetochore but do not end in the kinetochore proper. Rather, they stop short of the kinetochore (21%), graze the kinetochore (19%), or pass through the kinetochore (9%), displaying a free end distal to the pole. Other microtubules that make up the kinetochore bundle include: kinetochore-to-pole microtubules (24%), chromosome-to-pole microtubules (5%), pieces with two free ends (14%), and those microtubules with one end in the kinetochore and a free end distal to the kinetochore (9%). We conclude that the majority of the microtubules in the kinetochore bundle are most likely of polar origin rather than having been nucleated at the kinetochore. Prometaphase-I kinetochores can display any one of four patterns of microtubule connections with the poles, but the pattern of microtubule connections is not always correlated with kinetochore position. For instance, a kinetochore directly facing one pole may have microtubule connections with both poles while a kinetochore positioned 90 degrees to the spindle axis may have microtubules running towards one pole only.  相似文献   

15.
B. A. Palevitz 《Protoplasma》1990,157(1-3):120-127
Summary Previous observations indicate that division of the generative cell inTradescantia virginiana is characterized by several unusual features, including persistence of surrounding microtubule (Mt) bundles during karyokinesis, lack of a distinct metaphase plate and direct contribution by mitotic Mts to the cytoskeleton of young sperm. We have further probed karyokinesis in these cells using additional antitubulin and chromosome staining, as well as kinetochore visualizations with CREST serum. The CREST antibodies reveal kinetochores as paired and single fluorescent dots similar to those seen in other species stained with this preparation. Double localizations show that the dots are located at the ends of Mt bundles previously identified as kinetochore fibers (Palevitz and Cresti 1989). Before anaphase, paired kinetochores are distributed along the length of the cell. They also tend to be located at the cell periphery or are directly connected to peripheral Mt bundles by their kinetochore (K)-fibers. Twelve pairs of dots can be counted per cell, equal to the expected number of chromosomes. During anaphase, kinetochore separation starts at various positions along the length of the cell, producing single, relatively uniformly distributed kinetochores in the crotches of forks formed by K-fiber trunks and elongating Mt branches attached to the base of the trunks. Eventually, K-fibers with attached kinetochores aggregate in stepwise fashion on thick Mt bundles at both ends of the cell. This pattern is reflected in the cytoskeleton of young sperm. These results further document the unusual distribution of chromosomes and kinetochores inTradescantia generative cells and the origin of the Mt cytoskeleton in sperm cells.Abbreviations CREST Calcinosis, Raynaud's phenomenon, Esophageal dysmotility, Sclerodactyly, Telangiectasia - K-fiber kinetochore fiber - Mt microtubule Dedicated to the memory of Professor Oswald Kiermayer  相似文献   

16.
D. B. Gromov 《Protoplasma》1985,126(1-2):130-139
Summary The fine structure ofAmoeba proteus nuclei has been studied during interphase and mitosis. The interphase nucleus is discoidal, the nuclear envelope is provided with a honeycomb layer on the inside. There are numerous nucleoli at the periphery and many chromatin filaments and nuclear helices in the central part of nucleus.In prophase the nucleus becomes spherical, the numerous chromosomes are condensed, and the number of nucleoli decreases. The mitotic apparatus forms inside the nucleus in form of an acentric spindle. In metaphase the nuclear envelope loses its pore complexes and transforms into a system of rough endoplasmic reticulum cisternae (ERC) which separates the mitotic apparatus from the surrounding cytoplasm; the nucleoli and the honeycomb layer disappear completely. In anaphase the half-spindles become conical, and the system of ERC around the mitotic spindle persists. Electron dense material (possibly microtubule organizing centers—MTOCs) appears at the spindle pole regions during this stage. The spindle includes kinetochore microtubules attached to the chromosomes, and non-kinetochore ones which pierce the anaphase plate. In telophase the spindle disappears, the chromosomes decondense, and the nuclear envelope becomes reconstructed from the ERC. At this stage, nucleoli can already be revealed with the light microscope by silver staining; they are visible in ultrathin sections as numerous electron dense bodies at the periphery of the nucleus.The mitotic chromosomes consist of 10 nm fibers and have threelayered kinetochores. Single nuclear helices still occur at early stages of mitosis in the spindle region.  相似文献   

17.
Summary The interphase nucleus in theFunaria caulonema tip cells is associated with many non-cortical microtubules (Mts). In prophase, the cortical Mts disappear in the nuclear region; in contrast to moss leaflets, a preprophase band of Mts is not formed in the caulonema. The Mts of the early spindle are associated with the fragments of the nuclear envelope. Remnants of the nucleolus remain in the form of granular bodies till interphase. The metaphase chromosomes have distinct kinetochores; the kinetochore Mts are intermingled with non-kinetochore Mts running closely along the chromatin. Each kinetochore is associated with an ER cisterna. ER cisternae also accompany the spindle fibers in metaphase and anaphase. In telophase, Golgi vesicles accumulate in the periphery of the developing cell plate where no Mts are found. The reorientation of the cell plate into an oblique position can be inhibited by colchicine. It is concluded that the ER participates in controlling the Mt system, perhaps via calcium ions (membrane-bound calcium ions have been visualized by staining with chlorotetracycline) but that, on the other hand, the Mt system also influences the distribution of the ER. The occurrence and function of the preprophase band of Mts is discussed.  相似文献   

18.
Mitosis and microtubule organizational changes in rice root-tip cells   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
The pattern of change of the microtubule cytoskeleton of the root-tip cells of rice during mitosis was studied using immunofluorescence technic and confocal laser scanning microscopy. All the major stages of ceil division including preprophase, prophase, metaphase, anaphase and telophase were observed. The most significant finding was that in the preprophase cells microtubules radiating from the nuclear surface to the cortex were frequently seen. During development these microtubules became closely associated with the preprophase band and prophase spindie indicating that the microtubules radiating from the nuclear surface, the preprophase band and the prophazc spindle were structurally and functionally closely related to each other. Granule-like anchorage sites for the radiating microtubules at the muclear surface were often seen and the possibility that these gramle-like anchorage sites might represent the microtubule organizing centres was discussed.  相似文献   

19.
I have tested two contending views of chromosome-to-pole movement in anaphase. Chromosomes might be pulled poleward by a traction fiber consisting of the kinetochore microtubules and associated motors, or they might propel themselves by a motor in the kinetochore. I cut through the spindle of demembranated grasshopper spermatocytes between the chromosomes and one pole and swept the polar region away, removing a portion of the would-be traction fiber. Chromosome movement continued, and in the best examples, chromosomes moved to within 1 micron of the cut edge. There is nothing beyond the edge to support movement, and a push from the rear is unlikely because cuts in the interzone behind the separating chromosomes did not stop movement. Therefore, I conclude that the motor must be in the kinetochore or within 1 micron of it. Less conclusive evidence points to the kinetochore itself as the motor. The alternative is an external motor pulling on the kinetochore microtubules or directly on the kinetochore. A pulling motor would move kinetochore microtubules along with the chromosome, so that in a cut half-spindle, the microtubules should protrude from the cut edge as chromosomes move toward it. No protrusion was seen; however, the possibility that microtubules depolymerize as they are extruded, though unlikely, is not ruled out. What is certain is that the motor for poleward chromosome movement in anaphase must be in the kinetochore or very close to it.  相似文献   

20.
Summary New arrays of microtubules in the fission yeastSchizosaccharomyces pombe, which distribute in the cell in a cell cycle-dependent manner, were characterized using conventional and confocal laser scanning immunofluorescence microscopy. During the interphase and prophase, we observed abundant cytoplasmic microtubules between cell poles, a peripheral network of randomly and helically distributed cortical microtubules, and perinuclear microtubules surrounding the nucleus. At the anaphase and telophase, an equatorial ring containing tubulin was visualized. This ring colocalized with an actin contractile ring, suggesting that they may control the plane of cell division cooperatively.Abbreviations MT(s) microtubule(s) - cMT(s) cytoplasmic microtubule(s) - CLSM confocal laser scanning microscopy - DAPI 4,6-diamidino-2-phenylindole  相似文献   

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