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1.
At prophase in Pleurastrum, extranuclear spindle microtubules develop from the region of centrioles, which lie lateral to the nucleus midway between the future sites of the metaphase spindle poles. The microtubules then move laterally to overarch the nucleus and finally become incorporated into the spindle. The centrioles do not migrate and therefore lie in the same plane as the chromosomes at metaphase. At telophase, 2, more different systems of microtubules develop from the vicinity of the centrioles—a phycoplast and extensive arrays of microtubules that ensheath the daughter nuclei. Cell division in the filamentous Pleurastrum is compared to that in the green flagellate, Platymonas. The similarities between cell division in the 2 algae are interpreted as evidence: (i) that rhizoplasts (which in Platymonas resemble myofibrils) are somehow homologous to microtubules; and, (ii) that cell division in Pleurastrum differs from cell division in other examined filamentous chlorophycean genera because Pleurastrum has an independent evolutionary origin from a monad with Platymonas-like characteristics.  相似文献   

2.
Cell division is described in the octaflagellate prasinophyte Pyramimonas amylifera Conrad and is compared in related genera. Basal bodies replicate at preprophase and move toward the poles. Cells remain motile throughout division. The nuclear envelope disperses and chromosomes begin to condense at prophase. Pairs of multilayered kinetochores are evident on the chromosomes of the metaphase plate. Spindle microtubules extending from the region of the basal bodies and rhizoplasts attach to the kinetochores or extend from pole to pole. Numerous vesicles and ribosomes have entered the nuclear region and the incipient cleavage furrow invaginates. The chromosomes move toward the poles at anaphase leaving a broad interzonal spindle between the two chromosomal plates. The nuclear envelope reforms first around the chromatin on the side adjacent to the spindle poles and later on the interzonal side. The cleavage furrow progresses into the interzonal spindle at telophase. By late telophase the nucleoli have reformed and the chromosomes have decondensed. The interzonal spindle has not been observed late in telophase. As the cleavage furrow nears completion the cells begin to twist and contort, ultimately separating the two cells.  相似文献   

3.
H. angulata is a scale-covered, asymmetrical green unicell with two laterally attached, anisokont flagella. In recent years it has been classified in the Prasinophyceae. The flagellar apparatus replicates, and the cell begins to cleave at the side opposite the flagella before the nucleus can be perceived to be in prophase. The flagellar apparatuses separate, and the extra-nuclear development of the spindle occurs from the regions occupied by rhizoplasts. Rhizoplasts or partial rhizoplasts lie at the flat metaphase spindle poles. By metaphase, the cell has already elongated to the extent that it is nearly twice as long as at interphase. The spindle and the cell itself elongate greatly during anaphase with a concomitant further separation of the flagellar pairs. Although the interzonal spindle persists during cytokinesis as in charophycean algae, H. angulata is similar in flagellar scale morphology and other characteristics to the chlorophycean Platymonas, which has a collapsing interzonal spindle at telophase, a phycoplast, and a wall-like theca, which develops by the fusion of small stellate scales. It is hypothesized that the collapsing telophase spindle and phycoplast evolved in green flagellates similar to Platymonas, in which cell and spindle elongation became restricted by a cell wall that evolved from stellate scales similar to those in Heteromastix. Such walled flagellates are then visualized as having eventually given rise to Chlamydomonas and to the entire range of chlorophycean algae with phycoplasts. It is pointed out that the hypothesis has a number of implications by which its validity could be judged when sufficient information becomes available.  相似文献   

4.
Summary The dynamics of the cytoskeletal proteins centrin, actin, and tubulin were followed during cell division in the unicellular phytoflagellateApedinella radians (Pedinellophyceae). Three centrin, or centrin-like, components appear to coordinate independent developmental events during cell division. The first component, basal body centrin, maintains a physical link between basal bodies and the anterior nuclear membrane. Basal body centrin divides in two at metaphase, and each portion segregates with two basal bodies at anaphase. As the positioning of basal bodies defines the anterior region of the cell, basal body centrin appears to play a role in maintaining cell polarity throughout the cell cycle. The second centrin component consists of an array of filamentous bundles arranged as a six-pointed star. During cell division, the star undergoes a conformational change resulting in two distinct centrin triangles, one distributed to each daughter cell, suggesting that centrin filamentous bundles are involved in maintaining cell (radial) symmetry. The third centrin component is transient and associates with the spindle poles, emerging prior to mitosis and remaining until late anaphase/early telophase. Spindle pole centrin establishes temporary horizontal bipolarity, thereby establishing the spindle axis. Unlike centrin filamentous bundles, actin filamentous bundles depolymerize prior to mitosis, indicating they do not influence cell symmetry during cell division. Mitosis is described for the first time in a pedinellid and features a closed spindle, the absence of rhizoplasts and a persistent spindle.  相似文献   

5.
At the ultrastructural level, cell division in Ochromonas danica exhibits several unusual features. During interphase, the basal bodies of the 2 flagella replicate and the chloroplast divides by constriction between its 2 lobes. The rhizoplast, which is a fibrous striated root attached to the basal body of the long flagellum, extends under the Golgi body to the surface of the nucleus in interphase cells. During proprophase, the Golgi body replicates, apparently by division, and a daughter rhizoplast, appears. During prophase, the 2 pairs of flagellar basal bodies, each with their accompanying rhizoplast and Golgi body, begin to separate. Three or 4 flagella are already present at this stage. At the same time, there is a proliferation of microtubules outside the nuclear envelope. Gaps then appear in the nuclear envelope, admitting the microtubules into the nucleus, where they form a spindle. A unique feature of mitosis in O. danica is that the 2 rhizoplasts form the poles of the spindle, spindle microtubules inserting directly onto the rhizoplasts. Some of the spindle microtubules extend from pole to pole; others appear to attach to the chromosomes. Kinetochores, however, are not present. The nuclear envelope breaks down, except, in the regions adjacent, to the chloroplasts; chloroplast ER remains intact throughout mitosis. At late anaphase the chromosomes come to lie against part of the chloroplast ER. This segment of the chloroplast ER appears to be incorporated as part of the reforming nuclear envelope, thus reestablishing the characteristic nuclear envelope—chloroplast ER association of the interphase cell.  相似文献   

6.
R. A. Andersen 《Protoplasma》1985,128(2-3):94-106
Summary Flagellated vegetative cells of the colonial golden algaSynura uvella Ehr, were examined using serial sections. The two flagella are nearly parallel as they emerge from a flagellar pit near the apex of the cell. The photoreceptor is restricted to swellings on the flagella in the region where they pass through the apical pore in the scale case and the swellings are not associated with the cell membrane or an eyespot. A unique ring-like structure surrounds the axonemes of both flagella at a level just above the transitional helix. The basal bodies are interconnected by three striated, fibrous bands. Four short (<100 nm) microtubules lie between the basal bodies at their proximal ends. Two rhizoplasts extend down from the basal bodies and separate into numerous fine striated bands which lie over the nucleus. Three- and four-membered microtubular roots arise from the rhizoplasts and extend apically together. As the roots reach the cell anterior, the three-membered root bends and curves clockwise to form a large loop around the flagella; the four-membered root bends anticlockwise and terminates under the distal end of the three-membered root as it completes the loop. There are four absolute orientations, termed Types 1–4, in which the flagellar apparatus can occur. With each orientation type the positions of the Golgi body, nucleus, rhizoplasts, chloroplasts and microtubular roots change with respect to the flagella, basal bodies and photoreceptor. Two new basal bodies appear in pre-division cells, and three short microtubules appear in a dense substance adjacent to each new basal body. Based upon the positions of new pre-division basal bodies, a hypothesis is proposed to explain why there are four orientations and how they are maintained through successive cell divisions.  相似文献   

7.
Mitosis and cell division have been examined ultrastructurally in the vegetative cells of Hydrurus foetidus (Vill) Trev. and found to resemble that of Ochromonas in two important aspects. First, the rhizoplast acts as the spindle organizing body and second, the spindle elongates considerably during anaphase. It differs from Ochromonas in that there is no movement of the basal bodies and flagella towards the poles. Moreover, the nuclear envelope remains relatively intact throughout early stages of mitosis, with gaps developing at the poles during prophase to permit entry of spindle microtubules. Disruption of the nuclear envelope does not occur in the equatorial plane until late anaphase. The spindle persists into telophase and is bent towards the posterior of the cell by the ingrowing edge of the cleavage furrow. Persistence of the spindle and lack of Ochromoms-type cell elongation may be related to the constricting presence of the sheath during cell division—a completely different strategy to that adopted by the green algae under conditions of similar constraint.  相似文献   

8.
L. L. Ehler  J. A. Holmes    S. K. Dutcher 《Genetics》1995,141(3):945-960
The bld2-1 mutation in the green alga Chlamydomonas reinhardtii is the only known mutation that results in the loss of centrioles/basal bodies and the loss of coordination between spindle position and cleavage furrow position during cell division. Based on several different assays, bld2-1 cells lack basal bodies in >99% of cells. The stereotypical cytoskeletal morphology and precise positioning of the cleavage furrow observed in wild-type cells is disrupted in bld2-1 cells. The positions of the mitotic spindle and of the cleavage furrow are not correlated with respect to each other or with a specific cellular landmark during cell division in bld2-1 cells. Actin has a variable distribution during mitosis in bld2-1 cells, but this aberrant distribution is not correlated with the spindle positioning defect. In both wild-type and bld2-1 cells, the position of the cleavage furrow is coincident with a specialized set of microtubules found in green algae known as the rootlet microtubules. We propose that the rootlet microtubules perform the functions of astral microtubules and that functional centrioles are necessary for the organization of the cytoskeletal superstructure critical for correct spindle and cleavage furrow placement in Chlamydomonas.  相似文献   

9.
Cell division in Chlamydomonas moewusii is described. The cells become immobile with flagellar abscission prior to mitosis. The basal bodies migrate toward the nucleus and become intimately associated with the nuclear membrane which is devoid, of ribosomes where adjacent to the basal bodies. The basal bodies replicate at preprophase. The nucleolus fragments at this stage. By prophase the basal body pairs have migrated, to the nuclear poles. Spindle fibers become prominent in the nucleus. The nuclear membrane does not fragment. The nucleus assumes a crescent-form by metaphase. Polar fenestrae are absent. Kinetochores appear at anaphase. An interzonal spindle elongates as the chromosomes move to the nuclear poles. Daughter nuclei become abscised by an ingrowth of nuclear membrane, leaving behind a separated, degenerating interzonal spindle. Ribosomes reappear on the outer nuclear membrane at late telophase. Nucleoli reform early in cytokinesis. The cleavage furrow, associated microtubules, and endoplasmic reticulum comprise the phycoplast. Cytokinesis proceeds rapidly after the completion of telophase. The basal body-nucleus relationship becomes reorganized into the typical interphase condition late in cytokinesis. Specific and predictable organelle rearrangements during mitosis have been described. Cell division in C. moewusii is compared with other algae, especially C. reinhardi.  相似文献   

10.
Asteromonas gracilis Artari remains motile throughout cell division. Basal bodies separate and replicate at prophase. They are located lateral to the poles of the closed metaphase spindle. Kinetochores appear at late metaphase. Chromosomes move to the poles and extensions of the nuclear envelope develop into the pyrenoid at anaphase. The interzonal spindle disintegrates at telophase and a diffuse phycoplast is present. Cytokinesis proceeds rapidly from the anterior region of the cell. Newly formed daughter cells have four narrow-banded rootlets and both distal and proximal fibers connect the basal bodies. Features of cell division in Asteromonas are compared to those in other algae, particularly Dunaliella and Chlamydomonas.  相似文献   

11.
The flagellar apparatus of Urospora penicilliformis (Roth) Aresch. is unique, or at least very unusual among green algae. The flagellar axonemes are rigid, and contain wing-like projections. There are no central microtubules in the most proximal part of the axoneme. The transition region contains a series of electron dense transverse lamellae rather than a single septum, and lacks a stellate pattern. There is no cartwheel pattern in the proximal part of the basal bodies. The latter are associated with four different types of fibrous elements: ascending striated fibers that attach to an electron dense plate in the papillar center, lateral striated fibers that parallel microtubular roots, fibrous elements that link adjacent basal bodies, and finally two massive striated fibers that descend into the cell, passing closely along the nucleus (system II fibers, or rhizoplasts). Each of the four microtubular flagellar roots is sandwiched between two system I striated structures. The roots are probably equal; they contain proximally four, and distally up to eight microtubules. Based on the zoospore flagellar apparatus, it is concluded that the multinucleate U. penicilliformis is related to the Ulvaphyceae. Finally, a possible explanation in functional terms is given for the peculiar external morphology and behavior of the zoospore.  相似文献   

12.
PICKETT-HEAPS  J. D. 《Annals of botany》1973,37(5):1017-1026
Cell division in Tetraspora sp. is described. The cell becomesimmotile some while before mitosis and the basal bodies withdrawfrom the cell surface. The preprophase nucleus migrates to thebasal body complex, around which increasing numbers of microtubulesgather. The spindle is closed with open polar fenestrae; a basalbody complex is always closely associated with at least onepole. No spindles were observed to have basal bodies at bothpoles, and the spindle may possibly be unicentric. During anaphase,spindle microtubules penetrate through the fenestrae. Aftertelophase, the nuclei come together as a phycoplast forms betweenthem; cytokinesis is effected by furrowing. Forming basal bodiesare frequently encountered in late telophase and cleaving cells;no evidence was obtained that the basal bodies replicated beforemitosis. The protoplast rotates inside the cell wall duringcleavage. Cell division is compared with that of other greenalgae, and in particular, Chlamydomonas.  相似文献   

13.
ABSTRACT. Mitosis and cytokinesis in Katablepharis ovalis , a colorless flagellate, was investigated. Two new flagella are produced prior to prophase, resulting in a motile quadriflagellate cell during mitosis. the inner array of microtubules of the feeding apparatus disappears before prophase begins. the nuclear envelope disperses during prophase, apparently being converted into rough endoplasmic reticulum. the chromatin condenses and the nucleolus disperses with spindle microtubules appearing oriented perpendicular to the longitudinal axis of the cell. At metaphase, the chromatin is condensed as a single disc-shaped mass and rough endoplasmic reticulum flanks the chromatin mass on each side. Groups of spindle microtubules pass through tunnels in the rough endoplasmic reticulum and through electron-translucent areas of the chromatin. the spindle microtubules end at a number of minipoles in the cytoplasm. Vesicles, ribosomes, mitochondria and endoplasmic reticulum migrate among the spindle microtubules. There is no polar body or any electrondense area associated with the spindle poles. the basal bodies of the flagella remain attached to the axonemes and do not participate in mitosis. In anaphase, the chromatin separates and migrates to the poles. During telophase, the nuclear envelope reforms from the rough endoplasmic reticulum and the nucleoli reappear. the spindle microtubules are persistent during telophase. Cytokinesis occurs by longitudinal fission, starting at the anterior end and progressing posteriorly. Cytokinesis may be driven by elongation of the spindle microtubules since there is no visible structure associated with the furrowing.  相似文献   

14.
The flagellar apparatus in male gametes of the siphonaceous green alga, Bryopsis maxima Okamura, was studied and compared with that of other green biflagellate cells. The proximal portions of two basal bodies are connected by a single striated proximal band, unique among the biflagellate reproductive cells of green algae studied. Anterior to the flagellar bases is a pair of distal bands different from the single structure in other biflagellate cells. These bands which arise from the distal portion of each basal body, extend upward in the papilla and curve down toward the lower edges of the basal bodies. They seem to have no direct association with each other. Two pairs of distinct flagellar roots, one consisting of 3–5 microtubules and the other of a partially striated fiber of undetermined numbers of microtubules, diverge from the basal body region and extend towards the cell posterior. Their component microtubules are disorganized into single or smaller groups midway over the cell length. The uniqueness of the flagellar apparatus is briefly discussed.  相似文献   

15.
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   

16.
Summary Immunofluorescence microscopy, conventional and high voltage transmission electron microscopy were used to describe changes in the flagellar apparatus during cell division in the motile, coccolithbearing cells ofPleurochrysis carterae (Braarud and Fagerlund) Christensen. New basal bodies appear alongside the parental basal bodies before mitosis and at prophase the large microtubular (crystalline) roots disassemble as their component microtubules migrate to the future spindle poles. By prometaphase the crystalline roots have disappeared; the flagellar axonemes shorten and the two pairs of basal bodies (each consisting of one parental and one daughter basal body) separate so that each pair is distal to a spindle pole. By late prometaphase the pairs of basal bodies bear diminutive flagellar roots for the future daughter cells. The long flagellum of each daughter cell is derived from the parental basal bodies; thus, the basal body that produces a short flagellum in the parent produces a long flagellum in the daughter cell. We conclude that each basal body in these cells is inherently identical but that a first generation basal body generates a short flagellum and in succeeding generations it produces a long flagellum. At metaphase a fibrous band connecting the basal bodies appears and the roots and basal bodies reorient to their interphase configuration. By telophase the crystalline roots have begun to reform and the rootlet microtubules have assumed their interphase appearance by early cytokinesis.Abbreviations CR1, CR2 crystalline roots 1 and 2 - CT cytoplasmic tongue microtubules - DIC differential interference contrast light microscopy - H haptonema - HVEM high voltage transmission electron microscopy - IMF immunofluorescence microscopy - L left flagellum/basal body - M metaphase plate - MT microtubule - N nucleus - R right flagellum/basal body - R1, R2, R3 roots 1, 2, and 3 - TEM transmission electron microscopy  相似文献   

17.
The detailed fine structure of the biflagellate motile cells of Ulvaria oxysperma (Kiitz.) Bliding is described. These cells demonstrate most of the features presently used to characterize the ulvaphycean motile cell, i.e., the capping plate, terminal cap, alternating two- and four-membered rootlets, rhizoplasts that extend posteriorly into the cell, the striated microtubule-associated component (SMAC) near the two-membered rootlets, microtubule septations in the basal bodies and flagella, and scales covering the external surface of the cell. In addition, the anterior end components have 180° rotational symmetry. The rootlets insert into the basal body complex in the anterior region just beneath the capping plate, and the rhizoplasts insert into triangularshaped proximal fibers that connect the basal bodies. The features of many other ulvaphycean algae are summarized and compared with Ulvaria oxysperma. Based on comparative ultrastructure, it is suggested that the Ulvaphyceae diverged from the Chlorophyceae after the separation of these two classes from the Charophyceae.  相似文献   

18.
On the mechanism of anaphase spindle elongation in Diatoma vulgare   总被引:19,自引:19,他引:0       下载免费PDF全文
Central spindles from five dividing cells (one metaphase, three anaphase, and one telophase) of Diatoma vulgare were reconstructed from serial sections. Each spindle is made up of two half-spindles that are composed almost entirely of polar microtubules. A small percentage of continuous microtubules and free microtubules were present in every stage except telophase. The half-spindles interdigitate at the midregion of the central spindle, forming a zone of overlap where the microtubules from one pole intermingle with those of the other. At metaphase the overlap zone is fairly extensive, but as elongation proceeds, the spindle poles move apart and the length of the overlap decreases because fewer microtubules are sufficiently long to reach from the pole to the zone of interdigitation. At telophase, only a few tubules are long enough to overlap at the midregion. Concurrent with the decrease in the length of the overlap zone is an increase in the staining density of the intermicrotubule matrix at the same region. These changes in morphology can most easily be explained by assuming zone mechanochemical interaction between microtubules in the overlap zone which results in a sliding apart of the two half-spindles.  相似文献   

19.
ABSTRACT. The ultrastructure of two species of Holomastigotoides is presented. The basic unit of organization of these large cells is the flagellar band. Each flagellar band consists of a row of flagellar basal bodies linked by three fiber systems. The number of flagellar bands is species dependent. The flagellar bands originate at the cell apex and are arranged in parallel spirals of increasing gyre, thus defining the conical shape of the cell. In the cell apex a striated root called a parabasal fiber is juxtaposed with the basal bodies of each flagellar band. Linear extensions of two parabasal fibers function as the spindle poles for the persistent extra-nuclear spindle. The nucleus is in close contact with the spindle poles and spindle microtubules. Parallel sheets of microtubules which constitute axostyles are nucleated along the underside of the parabasal fibers. The axostyles extend away from the cell apex, with many reaching the basal region of the cell. Some of the axostyles follow the spiral pattern of the flagellar bands. Numerous Golgi bodies are spaced regularly along the flagellar bands. Together the parabasal fiber, axostyles and Golgi bodies associated with a flagellar band are termed a parabasal complex.  相似文献   

20.
Mitotic spindle orientation in polarized cells determines whether they divide symmetrically or asymmetrically. Moreover, regulated spindle orientation may be important for embryonic development, stem cell biology, and tumor growth. Drosophila neuroblasts align their spindle along an apical/basal cortical polarity axis to self-renew an apical neuroblast and generate a basal differentiating cell. It is unknown whether spindle alignment requires both apical and basal cues, nor have molecular motors been identified that regulate spindle movement. Using live imaging of neuroblasts within intact larval brains, we detect independent movement of both apical and basal spindle poles, suggesting that forces act on both poles. We show that reducing astral microtubules decreases the frequency of spindle movement, but not its maximum velocity, suggesting that one or few microtubules can move the spindle. Mutants in the Lis1/dynactin complex strongly decrease maximum and average spindle velocity, consistent with this motor complex mediating spindle/cortex forces. Loss of either astral microtubules or Lis1/dynactin leads to spindle/cortical polarity alignment defects at metaphase, but these are rescued by telophase. We propose that an early Lis1/dynactin-dependent pathway and a late Lis1/dynactin-independent pathway regulate neuroblast spindle orientation.  相似文献   

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