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1.
Monolayers of endothelial cells respond to physical denudation with a characteristic sequence of lamellipodia extrusion, cell migration, and cell proliferation. Basic fibroblast growth factor (bFGF) has been implicated as a necessary component of this process: addition of exogenous bFGF enhances monolayer regeneration both in vitro and in vivo, and monolayer regeneration can be inhibited in vitro by treatment with neutralizing antibodies raised against bFGF. Centrosome reorientation from a random location to one preferentially situated between the nucleus and the denudation edge has been postulated as a mechanism essential for cell polarization and subsequent migration. This present study examined the effects of a polyclonal antibody to bFGF and suramin on monolayer regeneration, actin microfilament staining, and centrosome orientation at the wound edge of partially denuded bovine large vessel endothelial monolayers. Treatment with anti-bFGF or suramin abolished monolayer repair in these cultures. Cells at the denudation edge showed altered actin staining patterns and reduced lamellipodia extrusion, and there was complete inhibition of centrosome reorientation in treated cultures. Monolayer repair and centrosome reorientation could be restored by addition of exogenous bFGF in antibody but not suramin treated cultures. Recent evidence suggests that preferential centrosome location in migrating cells may be a consequence of lamellipodia protrusion and cell spreading, rather than an indication of cell polarization. However, these results indicate that agents which interfere with bFGF availability prevent endothelial monolayer regeneration via mechanisms involving cell spreading and/or centrosome reorientation.  相似文献   

2.
The yeast cell contains a nucleus whose rigid centrosome carries a band of Feulgen-positive chromatin (centrochromatin) on its surface. The first step in budding is the formation of the bud by an extension of the centrosome over which the cell wall persists. Next the nuclear vacuole extends a process into the bud which contains the chromosomes. Finally the centrochromatin divides directly and the cells separate; a plug either of centrosome or cytoplasm sealing the bud pore. The cytoplasm, the centrosome, the centrochromatin and the nuclear wall are autonomous non genic organelles which never originate de novo.Copulation is the reverse of budding. The centrosomes fuse first; the cytoplasms mix; the nuclear vacuoles fuse by processes which travel along the fused centrosomes; and finally the centrochromatins fuse to form a single band.Figures 1–12. Drawings of budding yeast cells fixed in Schaudinn's fluid and stained with iron alum hemotoxylin, mounted in balsam. The cell wall is not visible due to the clearing action of the balsam. Except for Figure 5, the chromosomes and the nucleolus in the nuclear vacuole have been completely destained. The bud scar described by Barton is shown clearly at the end of the cell distal from the centrosome. The nuclear vacuole is usually forced into the extrusion formed by the bud scar. Since the cell wall is not visible, the plug of material connecting bud and mother cell as shown in Figure 12, fits into the cell wall and probably corresponds to the plug in the bud scar described by Barton. The details of the budding process are described in the text.Figures 13–18. Copulating yeast cells stained with Barrett's hemotoxylin and aceto-orcein and mounted in the stain. Chromosomes are visible in the nuclear vacuoles. The centrosome is usually visible and often appears to have a core which stains differentially. Except in Figure 16, the centrochromatin is visible as darkly stained material; in some cases surrounded by a clear zone. The “thick waisted” form of the cells identifies them as derived from recent copulations and distinguishes them from budding cells. The process of copulation is discussed in the text.  相似文献   

3.
Microtubules (MTs) are necessary components of all eukaryotic cells. They fulfill various functions being involved in cell division, ciliar and flagellar beating, cell shape maintaining, organelle distribution in the cell, organization of other cytoskeletal elements. Dynamic features of MTs have been commonly studied in vitro or on undiffirentiated cultured cells by means of molecular and ultrastructural methods. It is generally accepted that the phenomenon of dynamic instability is the major mechanism of MT turnover in the cell. MTs radiate from the centrosome and take part in the distribution of cell organelles. In addition, epithelial, nerve, and skeletal muscle cells contain non-centrosomal MTs. A few hypothesis of their origin have been so far put forward. According to the capture-release hypothesis, MTs are first nucleated on the a centrosome, then release to be driven in various parts of the cell by molecular motors. Some alternative mechanisms of non-centrosomal MT formation are also proposed in literature. For example, the nucleation sites were reported not only in centrosomes but also in other parts of cells, such as the apical membranes of epithelial cells, the nuclear membrane of muscle cells, pigment granule aggregates of melanophores. On studying frog urinary bladder and large intestine epithelial cells the authors observed in these cells numerous non-centrosomal MTs. This makes epithelial cells, good models for analysing structural and dynamic features of non-centrosomal MTs in differentiated cells. For the urinary bladder the pool of specific granules may serve as MT organizing centers. Non-cenrosomal MTs of these cells have big diameters (35-38 nm) and form bundles oriented in the apical-basal axis of the cell. In addition, non-centrosomal MTs of these cells may participate in the transport of specific granules and giant vacuoles that appear under stimulated water flows through the cell.  相似文献   

4.
As the primary microtubule organizing center of most eukaryotic cells, centrosomes play a fundamental role in proper formation of the mitotic spindle and subsequent chromosome separation. Normally, the single centrosome of a G1 cell duplicates precisely once prior to mitosis in a process that is intimately linked to the cell division cycle via cyclin-dependent kinase (cdk) 2 activity that couples centrosome duplication to the onset of DNA replication at the G1/S transition. Accurate control of centrosome duplication is critical for symmetric mitotic spindle formation and thereby contributes to the maintenance of genome integrity. Numerical and structural centrosome abnormalities are hallmarks of almost all solid tumors and have been implicated in the generation of multipolar mitoses and chromosomal instability. In addition to solid neoplasias, centrosome aberrations have recently been described in several different hematological malignancies like acute myeloid leukemias, myelodysplastic syndromes, Hodgkin's as well as non-Hodgkin's lymphomas, chronic lymphocytic leukemias and multiple myelomas. In analogy to many solid tumors a correlation between centrosome abnormalities on the one hand and karyotype aberrations as well as clinical aggressiveness on the other hand seems to exist in myeloid malignancies, chronic lymphocytic leukemias and at least some types of non-Hodgkin's lymphomas. Molecular mechanisms responsible for the development of centrosome aberrations are just beginning to be unraveled. In general, two models with distinct functional consequences can be envisioned. First, centrosome aberrations can arise as a consequence of abortive mitotic events and impaired cytokinesis. Second, evidence has been provided that centrosome amplification can also precede genomic instability and arise in normal, diploid cells. Accordingly, this review will focus on recent advances in the understanding of both, causes and consequences of centrosome aberrations in hematological malignancies.  相似文献   

5.
Centrosomes are the main microtubule‐organizing centers of animal cells. Although centrosome aberrations are common in tumors, their consequences remain subject to debate. Here, we studied the impact of structural centrosome aberrations, induced by deregulated expression of ninein‐like protein (NLP), on epithelial spheres grown in Matrigel matrices. We demonstrate that NLP‐induced structural centrosome aberrations trigger the escape (“budding”) of living cells from epithelia. Remarkably, all cells disseminating into the matrix were undergoing mitosis. This invasive behavior reflects a novel mechanism that depends on the acquisition of two distinct properties. First, NLP‐induced centrosome aberrations trigger a re‐organization of the cytoskeleton, which stabilizes microtubules and weakens E‐cadherin junctions during mitosis. Second, atomic force microscopy reveals that cells harboring these centrosome aberrations display increased stiffness. As a consequence, mitotic cells are pushed out of mosaic epithelia, particularly if they lack centrosome aberrations. We conclude that centrosome aberrations can trigger cell dissemination through a novel, non‐cell‐autonomous mechanism, raising the prospect that centrosome aberrations contribute to the dissemination of metastatic cells harboring normal centrosomes.  相似文献   

6.
Shortly after the onset of implantation, polar mouse trophoblast cells proliferate and give rise to the ectoplacental cone, constituted by two distinct cell populations: undifferentiated, diploid cells and giant cells. Giant cells characteristically exhibit exaggerated dimensions and polyploid nuclei. In this study, we employ ectoplacental cones as a dynamic source of trophoblast giant cells to analyze cell proliferation, cell death, and ploidy under in vitro conditions. Our results show that DNA synthesis and the increase in the cell number are relevant only during the first 24 h of culture. Subsequently, DNA synthesis still occurs, mainly in the giant cell compartment, while the number of cells gradually decreases. Cell death by injury and apoptosis was also observed in the non-giant cell compartment of the ectoplacental cone. These findings suggest that the first 24 h of culture are crucial to the mitotic activity of the ectoplacental cone cells that gradually ceases, favoring the endoreduplication process. The DNA synthesis index during the subsequent experimental intervals emphasizes accumulation of DNA for the polyploidization. There was clear correlation between DNA content and nuclear dimension. The ploidy values for the trophoblast giant cells varied from 2C up to 368C in the giant cells, but were not as expressive as those known from in vivo conditions, probably due to the absence of regulatory factors specific to the embryonic-maternal interface. In situ hybridization and histochemistry for the nucleolus-organizing region showed that trophoblast nuclei have only two marker signals, indicative of a typical polytenic process. This present study elucidates important aspects of trophoblast behavior and provides new information on trophoblast physiology in vivo and in vitro.  相似文献   

7.
Centrosome duplication and separation are of central importance for cell division. Here we provide a detailed account of this dynamic process in Dictyostelium. Centrosome behavior was monitored in living cells using a γ-tubulin–green fluorescent protein construct and correlated with morphological changes at the ultrastructural level. All aspects of the duplication and separation process of this centrosome are unusual when compared with, e.g., vertebrate cells. In interphase the Dictyostelium centrosome is a box-shaped structure comprised of three major layers, surrounded by an amorphous corona from which microtubules emerge. Structural duplication takes place during prophase, as opposed to G1/S in vertebrate cells. The three layers of the box-shaped core structure increase in size. The surrounding corona is lost, an event accompanied by a decrease in signal intensity of γ-tubulin–green fluorescent protein at the centrosome and the breakdown of the interphase microtubule system. At the prophase/prometaphase transition the separation into two mitotic centrosomes takes place via an intriguing lengthwise splitting process where the two outer layers of the prophase centrosome peel away from each other and become the mitotic centrosomes. Spindle microtubules are now nucleated from surfaces that previously were buried inside the interphase centrosome. Finally, at the end of telophase, the mitotic centrosomes fold in such a way that the microtubule-nucleating surface remains on the outside of the organelle. Thus in each cell cycle the centrosome undergoes an apparent inside-out/outside-in reversal of its layered structure.  相似文献   

8.
T cell antigen receptor–proximal signaling components, Rho-family GTPases, and formin proteins DIA1 and FMNL1 have been implicated in centrosome reorientation to the immunological synapse of T lymphocytes. However, the role of these molecules in the reorientation process is not yet defined. Here we find that a subset of microtubules became rapidly stabilized and that their α-tubulin subunit posttranslationally detyrosinated after engagement of the T cell receptor. Formation of stabilized, detyrosinated microtubules required the formin INF2, which was also found to be essential for centrosome reorientation, but it occurred independently of T cell receptor–induced massive tyrosine phosphorylation. The FH2 domain, which was mapped as the INF2 region involved in centrosome repositioning, was able to mediate the formation of stable, detyrosinated microtubules and to restore centrosome translocation in DIA1-, FMNL1-, Rac1-, and Cdc42-deficient cells. Further experiments indicated that microtubule stabilization was required for centrosome polarization. Our work identifies INF2 and stable, detyrosinated microtubules as central players in centrosome reorientation in T cells.  相似文献   

9.
Chromosome loss or gain is associated with a large number of solid cancers, providing genomic plasticity and thus adaptability to cancer cells. Numerical centrosome abnormalities arising from centrosome over-duplication or failed cytokinesis are a recognized cause of aneuploidy. In higher eukaryotic cells, the centrosome duplicates only once per cell cycle to ensure the formation of a bipolar mitotic spindle that orchestrates the balanced distribution of the sister chromatids to the respective daughter cells. Here we delineate the events that allow abnormal centrosome duplication, resulting in mitotic errors and incorrect chromosome segregation in cells with sustained cyclin-dependent kinase (CDK) activity. We have identified NPM1 as a substrate for CDK6 activated by the Kaposi's sarcoma herpesvirus (KSHV) D-type cyclin and shown that p53-driven apoptosis occurs downstream of NPM1 phosphorylation as a checkpoint mechanism that prevents accumulation of cells with supernumerary centrosomes. Our findings provide evidence that abnormal chromosome segregation in KSHV-infected cells is a direct consequence of NPM1 phosphorylation and predict that genomic instability is an inevitable consequence of latent KSHV infection.  相似文献   

10.
Aberrations in centrosome numbers have long been implicated in aneuploidy and tumorigenesis, but their origins are unknown. Here we have examined how overexpression of Aurora-A kinase causes centrosome amplification in cultured cells. We show that excess Aurora-A does not deregulate centrosome duplication but gives rise to extra centrosomes through defects in cell division and consequent tetraploidization. Over expression of other mitotic kinases (Polo-like kinase 1 and Aurora-B) also causes multinucleation and concomitant increases in centrosome numbers. Absence of a p53 checkpoint exacerbates this phenotype, providing a plausible explanation for the centrosome amplification typical of p53-/- cells. We propose that errors during cell division, combined with the inability to detect the resulting hyperploidy, constitute a major cause for numerical centrosome aberrations in tumors.  相似文献   

11.
Polyploid giant cells are produced as part of the response of p53 mutant Burkitt's lymphoma cell lines to high doses of irradiation. Polyploid giant cells arise by endo-reduplication in the first week after a single 10 Gray dose of irradiation. Within the giant cells a sub-nuclear structure is apparent and within this, sub-nuclear autonomy is evident, as displayed by independent nuclear structure and DNA replication in different parts of the nucleus. The majority of these cells soon die as apoptotic polykaryons. However, approximately 10-20% of giant cells remain viable into the second week after irradiation and begin vigorous extrusion of large degraded chromatin masses. During the second week, the giant cells begin to reconstruct their nuclei into polyploid 'bouquets', where chromosome double-loops are formed. Subsequently, the bouquets return to an interphase state and separate into several secondary nuclei. The individual sub-nuclei then resume DNA synthesis with mitotic divisions and sequester cytoplasmic territories around themselves, giving rise to the secondary cells, which continue mitotic propagation. This process of giant cell formation, reorganization and breakdown appears to provide an additional mechanism for repairing double-strand DNA breaks within tumour cells.  相似文献   

12.
The formation of the bipolar mitotic apparatus depends on accurate centrosome organization which is crucial for the separation of the genome during cell division. While it has been shown that mutations and overexpression of centrosome proteins (Brinkley and Goepfert, 1998; Pihan et al., 1998) can cause abnormal spindle pole formation, here we report that damages to centrosome structure caused by the chaotropic agent formamide will cause multipolar mitoses upon recovery from the effect when applied at first cell division in sea urchin eggs. Formamide was used as a chemical tool to manipulate centrosome structure and to investigate the effects on microtubule organization. When 1-1.5 m formamide was administered for 30 min at prometaphase of first cell division, microtubules were disassembled and centrosomes compacted into dense spheres around highly condensed chromatin. Upon recovery from formamide, centrosomes decompacted and attempted to form various mitotic organizations. Normal recovery (and attempts of recovery) to bipolarity was possible in five percent of cells treated with 1-1.5 m formamide for 30 min, but abnormal patterns of spindle formation were observed in all other cells, which included mono- (20%), tri (45%), and multipolar (30%) formations organized by mono-, tri-, and multipolar centrosome clusters. When cells were treated with 1.5 m formamide for 90 min, centrosomes became pulverized and fragmented and only monopolar mitotic formations were observed upon recovery. These results are highly reproducible and reveal that abnormalities in centrosome structure can lead to abnormal mitosis which is not caused by mutation or overexpression of centrosome proteins.  相似文献   

13.
Centrosome duplication must remain coordinated with cell cycle progression to ensure the formation of a strictly bipolar mitotic spindle, but the mechanisms that regulate this coordination are poorly understood. Previous work has shown that prolonged S-phase is permissive for centrosome duplication, but prolonging either G2 or M-phase cannot support duplication. To examine whether G1 is permissive for centrosome duplication, we release serum-starved G0 cells into mimosine, which delays the cell cycle in G1. We find that in mimosine, centrosome duplication does occur, albeit slowly compared with cells that progress into S-phase; centrosome duplication in mimosine-treated cells also proceeds in the absence of a rise in Cdk2 kinase activity normally associated with the G1/S transition. CHO cells arrested with mimosine can also assemble more than four centrioles (termed "centrosome amplification"), but the extent of centrosome amplification during prolonged G1 is decreased compared to cells that enter S-phase and activate the Cdk2-cyclin complex. Together, our results suggest a model, which predicts that entry into S-phase and the rise in Cdk2 activity associated with this transition are not absolutely required to initiate centrosome duplication, but rather, serve to entrain the centrosome reproduction cycle with cell cycle progression.  相似文献   

14.
Long distance migration of differentiating granule cells from the cerebellar upper rhombic lip has been reported in many vertebrates. However, the knowledge about the subcellular dynamics and molecular mechanisms regulating directional neuronal migration in vivo is just beginning to emerge. Here we show by time-lapse imaging in live zebrafish (Danio rerio) embryos that cerebellar granule cells migrate in chain-like structures in a homotypic glia-independent manner. Temporal rescue of zebrafish Cadherin-2 mutants reveals a direct role for this adhesion molecule in mediating chain formation and coherent migratory behavior of granule cells. In addition, Cadherin-2 maintains the orientation of cell polarization in direction of migration, whereas in Cadherin-2 mutant granule cells the site of leading edge formation and centrosome positioning is randomized. Thus, the lack of adhesion leads to impaired directional migration with a mispositioning of Cadherin-2 deficient granule cells as a consequence. Furthermore, these cells fail to differentiate properly into mature granule neurons. In vivo imaging of Cadherin-2 localization revealed the dynamics of this adhesion molecule during cell locomotion. Cadherin-2 concentrates transiently at the front of granule cells during the initiation of individual migratory steps by intramembraneous transport. The presence of Cadherin-2 in the leading edge corresponds to the observed centrosome orientation in direction of migration. Our results indicate that Cadherin-2 plays a key role during zebrafish granule cell migration by continuously coordinating cell-cell contacts and cell polarity through the remodeling of adherens junctions. As Cadherin-containing adherens junctions have been shown to be connected via microtubule fibers with the centrosome, our results offer an explanation for the mechanism of leading edge and centrosome positioning during nucleokinetic migration of many vertebrate neuronal populations.  相似文献   

15.
In response to DNA damage, cells need robust repair mechanisms to complete the cell cycle successfully. Severe forms of DNA damage are repaired by homologous recombination (HR), in which the XRCC2 protein plays a vital role. Cells deficient in XRCC2 also show disruption of the centrosome, a key component of the mitotic apparatus. We find that this centrosome disruption is dynamic and when it occurs during mitosis it is linked directly to the onset of mitotic catastrophe in a significant fraction of the XRCC2-deficient cells. However, we also show for the first time that XRCC2 and other HR proteins, including the key recombinase RAD51, co-localize with the centrosome. Co-localization is maintained throughout the cell cycle, except when cells are finishing mitosis when RAD51 accumulates in the midbody between the separating cells. Taken together, these data suggest a tight functional linkage between the centrosome and HR proteins, potentially to coordinate the deployment of a DNA damage response at vulnerable phases of the cell cycle.  相似文献   

16.
17.
We tested whether cleavage failure as a transient event establishes an incidence of centrosome amplification in cell populations. Five rounds of ~30% cytochalasin-induced cleavage failure in untransformed human cell cultures did not establish centrosome amplification in the short or long terms. The progeny of binucleate cells progressively dropped out of the cell cycle and expressed p53/p21, and none divided a fourth time. We also tested whether cleavage failure established centrosome amplification in transformed cell populations. Tetraploid HCT116 p53(-/-) cells eventually all failed cleavage repeatedly and ceased proliferating. HeLa cells all died or arrested within four cell cycles. Chinese hamster ovary cells proliferated after cleavage failure, but five rounds of induced cleavage failure produced a modest increase in the incidence of centrosome amplification in the short term, which did not rise with more cycles of cleavage failure. This incidence dropped to close to control values in the long term despite a 2-6% rate of spontaneous cleavage failure in the progeny of tetraploid cells.  相似文献   

18.
Centrosome-independent mitotic spindle formation in vertebrates   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
BACKGROUND: In cells lacking centrosomes, the microtubule-organizing activity of the centrosome is substituted for by the combined action of chromatin and molecular motors. The question of whether a centrosome-independent pathway for spindle formation exists in vertebrate somatic cells, which always contain centrosomes, remains unanswered, however. By a combination of labeling with green fluorescent protein (GFP) and laser microsurgery we have been able to selectively destroy centrosomes in living mammalian cells as they enter mitosis. RESULTS: We have established a mammalian cell line in which the boundaries of the centrosome are defined by the constitutive expression of gamma-tubulin-GFP. This feature allows us to use laser microsurgery to selectively destroy the centrosomes in living cells. Here we show that this method can be used to reproducibly ablate the centrosome as a functional entity, and that after destruction the microtubules associated with the ablated centrosome disassemble. Depolymerization-repolymerization experiments reveal that microtubules form in acentrosomal cells randomly within the cytoplasm. When both centrosomes are destroyed during prophase these cells form a functional bipolar spindle. Surprisingly, when just one centrosome is destroyed, bipolar spindles are also formed that contain one centrosomal and one acentrosomal pole. Both the polar regions in these spindles are well focused and contain the nuclear structural protein NuMA. The acentrosomal pole lacks pericentrin, gamma-tubulin, and centrioles, however. CONCLUSIONS: These results reveal, for the first time, that somatic cells can use a centrosome-independent pathway for spindle formation that is normally masked by the presence of the centrosome. Furthermore, this mechanism is strong enough to drive bipolar spindle assembly even in the presence of a single functional centrosome.  相似文献   

19.
Centrosomes contain a pair of centrioles that duplicate once during the cell cycle togive rise to two mitotic spindle poles, each containing one old and one newcentriole. Centrosome duplication initiates at the G1/S transition in mammaliancells, and is completed during S and G2 phase. The localization of a number ofprotein kinases to the centrosome has revealed the importance of proteinphosphorylation in controlling the centrosome duplication cycle. Recent studieshave shown that polo-like kinase-2 is required for centriole duplication inmammalian cells. In this article I discuss the implication of these findings to ourcurrent understanding of centrosome duplication.  相似文献   

20.
Takashi Shimizu 《Hydrobiologia》1996,334(1-3):269-276
We have investigated factors which determine inequality of the first two cleavages in Tubifex hattai. A mitotic spindle for the first cleavage, which is located at the center of the egg, possesses an aster at one pole, but not at the other pole. Inequality of the first cleavage is determined by the asymmetric organization of the spindle poles, rather than by the spindle position in the egg. A centrosome which appears as a dot stained with an anti--tubulin antibody is found at one pole (at the center of the aster) of the spindle, but not at the other pole. This centrosome appears to be maternal in origin. In contrast to the first cleavage, the poles of the second cleavage spindle are not different from each other either in their ability to form asters or in -tubulin distribution. As a result of an interaction of one of the spindle poles with the cell cortex, however, an asymmetric spindle is formed in the cell CD, giving rise to unequal division in this cell. Thus, factors generating asymmetry in spindle organization are intrinsic to the mitotic spindle in the first cleavage, but not in the second cleavage.  相似文献   

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