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1.
Miyagishima S  Kuroiwa H  Kuroiwa T 《Planta》2001,212(4):517-528
The timing and manner of disassembly of the apparatuses for chloroplast division (the plastid-dividing ring; PD ring) and mitochondrial division (the mitochondrion-dividing ring; MD ring) were investigated in the red alga Cyanidioschyzon merolae De Luca, Taddei and Varano. To do this, we synchronized cells both at the final stage of and just after chloroplast and mitochondrial division, and observed the rings in three dimensions by transmission electron microscopy. The inner (beneath the stromal face of the inner envelope) and middle (in the inter-membrane space) PD rings disassembled completely, and disappeared just before completion of chloroplast division. In contrast, the outer PD and MD rings (on the cytoplasmic face of the outer envelope) remained in the cytosol between daughter organelles after chloroplast and mitochondrial division. The outer rings started to disassemble and disappear from their surface just after organelle division, initially clinging to the outer envelopes at both edges before detaching. The results suggest that the two rings inside the chloroplast disappear just before division, and that this does not interfere with completion of division, while the outer PD and MD rings function throughout and complete chloroplast and mitochondrial division. These results, together with previous studies of C. merolae, disclose the entire cycle of change of the PD and MD rings. Received: 19 May 2000 / Accepted: 3 August 2000  相似文献   

2.
The formation of the plastid-dividing ring (PD ring) and mitochondrion-dividing ring (MD ring) was studied in a highly synchronous culture of the unicellular red alga Cyanidioschyzon merolae. The timing and the order of formation of the MD and PD rings were determined by observing organelles around the onset of their division, using transmission electron microscopy. In  C. merolae, there is one chloroplast and one mitochondrion per cell, and the shape of the chloroplast changes sequentially from acorn-like, to round, to trapezoidal, to peanut-shaped, in that order, during the early stage of chloroplast division. None of the cells with acorn-shaped or round chloroplasts contained organelles with PD rings or MD rings, while all of the cells with peanut-shaped chloroplasts contained organelles with both PD rings and MD rings. In cells with peanut-shaped chloroplasts, the PD and MD rings were double ring structures, with an outer ring located on the cytoplasmic face of the outer membrane of the organelle, and an inner ring located in the matrix beneath the inner membrane. These results suggested that the double ring structures of the PD ring and the MD ring form when chloroplasts are trapezoidal in shape. Detailed three-dimensional observation of cells with trapezoidal chloroplasts revealed the following steps in the formation of the double ring structures of the PD and MD rings: (i) the inner ring of the PD ring forms first, followed by the outer ring; (ii) then the MD ring forms and becomes visible; (iii) when the double ring structures of the two rings have formed, the microbody then moves from its remote location to the plane of division of the mitochondrion and contraction of the PD and MD rings commences. These steps were also confirmed by computer-aided three-dimensional reconstruction of the images from serial thin sections. This study reveals the order of formation of the double ring structures of the PD and MD rings, and the behavior of the microbody around the onset of division of plastids and mitochondria. The results also provide the first evidence that the inner PD ring is not a tension element formed by the contractile pressure but a definite structure, independent of the outer ring. Received: 31 March 1998 / Accepted: 14 May 1998  相似文献   

3.
The plastid division apparatus (called the plastid-dividing ring) has been detected in several plant and algal species at the constricted region of plastids by transmission electron microscopy. The apparatus is composed of two or three rings: an outer ring in the cytosol, an inner ring in the stroma, and a middle ring in the intermembrane space. The components of these rings are not clear. FtsZ, which forms the bacterial cytokinetic ring, has been proposed as a component of both the inner and outer rings. Here, we present the ultrastructure of the outer ring at high resolution. To visualize the outer ring by negative staining, we isolated dividing chloroplasts from a synchronized culture of a red alga, Cyanidioschyzon merolae, and lysed them with nonionic detergent Nonidet P-40. Nonidet P-40 extracted primarily stroma, thylakoids, and the inner and middle rings, leaving the envelope and outer ring largely intact. Negative staining revealed that the outer ring consists of a bundle of 5-nm filaments in which globular proteins are spaced 4.8 nm apart. Immunoblotting using an FtsZ-specific antibody failed to show immunoreactivity in the fraction containing the filament. Moreover, the filament structure and properties are unlike those of known cytoskeletal filaments. The bundle of filaments forms a very rigid structure and does not disassemble in 2 M urea. We also identified a dividing phase-specific 56-kD protein of chloroplasts as a candidate component of the ring. Our results suggest that the main architecture of the outer ring did not descend from cyanobacteria during the course of endosymbiosis but was added by the host cell early in plant evolution.  相似文献   

4.
Chloroplasts were originally established in eukaryotes by the endosymbiosis of a cyanobacterium; they then spread through diversification of the eukaryotic hosts and subsequent engulfment of eukaryotic algae by previously nonphotosynthetic eukaryotes. The continuity of chloroplasts is maintained by division of preexisting chloroplasts. Like their ancestors, chloroplasts use a bacterial division system based on the FtsZ ring and some associated factors, all of which are now encoded in the host nuclear genome. The majority of bacterial division factors are absent from chloroplasts and several new factors have been added by the eukaryotic host. For example, the ftsZ gene has been duplicated and modified, plastid-dividing (PD) rings were most likely added by the eukaryotic host, and a member of the dynamin family of proteins evolved to regulate chloroplast division. The identification of several additional proteins involved in the division process, along with data from diverse lineages of organisms, our current knowledge of mitochondrial division, and the mining of genomic sequence data have enabled us to begin to understand the universality and evolution of the division system. The principal features of the chloroplast division system thus far identified are conserved across several lineages, including those with secondary chloroplasts, and may reflect primeval features of mitochondrial division. Shin-ya Miyagishima is the recipient of the Botanical Society Award for Young Scientists, 2004.  相似文献   

5.
The time courses of chloroplast and mitochondrial division and the morphological changes in the plastid-dividing ring (PD ring) and mitochondrion-dividing ring (MD ring) during chloroplast and mitochondrial division were studied in Cyanidioschyzon merolae De Luca, Taddei and Varano. To accomplish this, chloroplast and cell division of living cells were continuously video-recorded under light microscopy, and the morphological changes in the PD and MD rings were analyzed quantitatively and three-dimensionally by transmission electron microscopy (TEM). Under the light microscope, the diameters of the chloroplast and the cell decreased at uniform velocities, the speed depending on the temperature. To study in detail the sequential morphological change of the mitochondrion in M phase and the contractile mechanism in the divisional planes of the chloroplast and the mitochondrion, we observed the PD and MD rings, which are believed to promote contraction, under TEM, using the diameter of the chloroplast as an index of the time. Three PD rings (an outer PD ring on the cytoplasmic face of the outer envelope, a middle PD ring in the intermembrane space, and an inner PD ring on the stromal face of the inner envelope) were clearly observed, but only the outer MD ring could be observed. The PD ring started to contract soon after it formed, while the contraction of the MD ring did not occur immediately after formation, but was delayed until the contraction of the PD ring was almost complete. Once the MD ring began to contract, the rate of decrease of its circumference was 4 times as high as that of the PD ring. As the outer PD and MD rings contracted, they grew thicker and maintained a constant volume, while the thickness of the inner PD ring did not change and its volume decreased at a constant rate with contraction. In the early stage of contraction, the widths of the three PD rings increased in order, from the outer to the inner ring. With contraction, their widths changed at different rates until they came to have much the same width. In cross-section, the MD ring was wider where it was next to the chloroplast than at the opposite side, adjacent to the nucleus in the early stage of contraction. By the late stage, the widths of the two sides became equal. In our observations, the microbody elongated along the outer MD ring and touched the outer PD ring during contraction of the PD and MD rings. These results clearly revealed differences between the mode of contraction of the outer, middle, and inner PD rings, and between the PD and the MD rings. They also revealed the coordinated widening of the three PD rings, and suggested that the microbody plays a role in the contraction of the PD and MD rings. Received: 1 July 1998 / Accepted: 1 September 1998  相似文献   

6.
A system of highly synchronized chloroplast divisions was developed in the unicellular red alga Cyanidioschyzon merolae De Luca, Taddei, & Varano. Chloroplast divisions were examined by epifluorescence microscopy following treatments with light and inhibitors. When the cells during stationary phase were transferred into a new medium under a 12:12 h LD cycle, chloroplasts, mitochondria, and cell nuclei divided synchronously in that order soon after the initiation of dark periods. More than 40% of the cells contained dividing chloroplasts. To obtain a system of highly synchronized cell division and chloroplast division, the cells synchronized by a 12:12 h LD cycle were treated with various inhibitors. Nocodazole and propyzamide did not affect cell and organelle divisions, whereas aphidicolin markedly inhibited cell-nuclear divisions and cytokinesis and induced a delay in chloroplast division. More than 80% of the cells contained dividing chloroplasts when cells synchronized by light were treated with aphidicolin for 12 h. This synchronized system will be useful for studies of the molecular and cellular mechanisms of organelle divisions .  相似文献   

7.
We examined the effects of phosphate enrichment on chloroplasts of the unicellular green alga Nannochloris bacillaris Naumann. The doubling time of cells was similar in phosphate‐limited (no β‐glycerophosphate) and phosphate‐enriched (2 mM β‐glycerophosphate) media. The lengths of cells and chloroplasts were similar, regardless of phosphate concentration. The relationship between the ring formation of the prokaryote‐derived chloroplast division protein FtsZ and phosphate concentration was examined using indirect fluorescent antibody staining. The number of FtsZ rings increased as the phosphate concentration of the medium increased. Multiple FtsZ rings were formed in cells in phosphate‐enriched medium; up to six FtsZ rings per chloroplast were observed. The number of FtsZ rings increased as the chloroplast grew. The FtsZ ring located near the center of the chloroplast had the strongest fluorescence. The FtsZ ring at the relative center of all FtsZ rings was used for division. Plastid division rings did not multiply in phosphate‐enriched culture. The chloroplast DNA content was 2.3 times greater in phosphate‐enriched than in phosphate‐limited culture and decreased in cells cultured in phosphate‐enriched medium containing 5‐fluorodeoxyuridine (FdUr). In the presence of FdUr, only one FtsZ ring formed, even under phosphate enrichment. This finding suggests that excessive chloroplast DNA replication induces multiple FtsZ ring formation in phosphate‐enriched culture. We propose a multiple FtsZ ring formation model under phosphate enrichment.  相似文献   

8.
H. Hashimoto 《Protoplasma》1986,135(2-3):166-172
Summary Ultrastructure of the constricting neck of dividing proplastids and young chloroplasts in the first leaves ofAvena sativa was examined by electron microscopy. An electron-dense, double ring structure (plastid-dividing ring doublet; PD ring doublet) with a width of 15–40 nm was revealed around the narrow neck of the constricted and dividing plastids by serial section technique. The inner and outer ring of the doublet coated the inside (stromal side) of the inner envelope membrane and the outside (cytoplasmic side) of the outer envelope membrane, respectively. However, electron-dense materials were not observed within the lumen between the outer and inner envelope membranes.Although the PD ring doublet was commonly observed in the constricted plastids with a 70–140 nm wide neck, they could be scarcely observed in the constricted plastids with a 160 or more nm wide neck. The components of the PD ring were assumed not to be concentrated enough to identify by electron microscopy in the early stage of constriction and the PD ring may be formed and recognized at the final stage.The significance of the formation of the PD ring and its role in plastokinesis (plastid kinesis) were discussed.  相似文献   

9.
The division of chloroplasts (plastids) is critical for the viability of photosynthetic eukaryotes. Previously we reported on the chloroplast division apparatus, which consists of inner and outer double or triple rings (PD rings). Chloroplasts are assumed to arise from bacterial endosymbionts, while bacterial division is instigated by a bacterial cytokinesis Z-ring protein (FtsZ). Here we present immunofluorescence and electron-microscopic evidence of chloroplast division via complex machinery involving the FtsZ and PD rings in the higher plant Pelargonium zonale Ait. Prior to invagination, the FtsZ protein was attached to a ring at the stromal division site. Following formation of the FtsZ ring, the inner stromal and outer cytosolic PD rings appeared, signifying the initiation of invagination. The FtsZ ring and the PD rings were found at the leading edge of chloroplast constriction throughout division. During chloroplast division, neither the FtsZ nor the inner rings changed width, but the volume of the outer ring gradually increased. We suggest that the FtsZ ring determines the division region, after which the inner and outer PD rings are formed as a lining for the FtsZ ring. With the outer ring providing the motivating force, the FtsZ and inner PD rings ultimately decompose to their base components.  相似文献   

10.
The Cyanidiophyceae species Cyanidium caldarium and Cyanidioschyzon merolae have played important roles in showing the division mechanisms of mitochondria and plastids. The apparatus regulating mitochondrial and plastid divisions was formerly unknown. We first identified the division apparatus of plastids, called the plastid-dividing ring (PD ring), in C. caldarium and the division apparatus of mitochondria, called the mitochondrion-dividing ring (MD ring), in C. merolae. Eukaryotic cell division is therefore controlled by at least three dividing apparati (rings)—a contractile ring, an MD ring, and a PD ring—while bacterial division is controlled by a single bacterial contractile FtsZ ring. BioEssays 20 :344-354, 1998.© 1998 John Wiley & Sons, Inc.  相似文献   

11.
The cyanelles of glaucocystophytes are probably the most primitive of known extant plastids and the closest to cyanobacteria. Their kidney shape and FtsZ arc during the early stage of division define cyanelle division. In order to deepen and expand earlier results (Planta 227:177–187, 2007), cells of Cyanophora paradoxa were fixed with two different chemical and two different freeze-fixation methods. In addition, cyanelles from C. paradoxa were isolated to observe the surface structure of dividing cyanelles using field emission scanning electron microscopy (FE-SEM). A shallow furrow started on one side of the division plane. The furrow subsequently extended, covering the entire division circle, and then invaginated deeply, becoming clearly visible. The typical FtsZ arc was 2.3–3.4 μm long. This length matches that of the cleavage furrow observed using FE-SEM. The cyanelle cleavage furrows are from one-fourth to one-half of the circumference of the division plane. The shallow furrow that appears on the cyanelle outer surface effectively changes the division plane. Using freeze-fixation methods, the electron-dense stroma and peptidoglycan could be distinguished. In addition, an electron-dense belt structure (the cyanelle ring) was observed inside the leading edge at the cyanelle division plane. The FtsZ arc is located at the division plane ahead of the cyanelle ring. Immunogold-TEM localization shows that FtsZ is located interiorly of the cyanelle ring. The lack of an outer PD ring, together with the arch-shaped furrow, suggests that the mechanical force of the initial (arch shaped) septum furrow constriction comes from inside the cyanelle.  相似文献   

12.
Consistent with their bacterial origin, chloroplasts and primitive mitochondria retain a FtsZ ring for division. However, chloroplasts and mitochondria have lost most of the proteins required for bacterial division other than FtsZ and certain homologues of the Min proteins, but they do contain plastid and mitochondrion dividing rings, which were recently shown to be distinct from the FtsZ ring. Moreover, recent studies have revealed that rings of the eukaryote-specific dynamin-related family of GTPases regulate the division of chloroplasts and mitochondria, and these proteins emerged early in eukaryotic evolution. These findings suggest that the division of chloroplasts and primitive mitochondria involve very similar systems, consisting of an amalgamation of rings from bacteria and eukaryotes.  相似文献   

13.
Mitochondria are derived from free-living alpha-proteobacteria that were engulfed by eukaryotic host cells through the process of endosymbiosis, and therefore have their own DNA which is organized using basic proteins to form organelle nuclei (nucleoids). Mitochondria divide and are split amongst the daughter cells during cell proliferation. Their division can be separated into two main events: division of the mitochondrial nuclei and division of the matrix (the so-called mitochondrial division, or mitochondriokinesis). In this review, we first focus on the cytogenetical relationships between mitochondrial nuclear division and mitochondriokinesis. Mitochondriokinesis occurs after mitochondrial nuclear division, similar to bacterial cytokinesis. We then describe the fine structure and dynamics of the mitochondrial division ring (MD ring) as a basic morphological background for mitochondriokinesis. Electron microscopy studies first identified a small electron-dense MD ring in the cytoplasm at the constriction sites of dividing mitochondria in the slime mold Physarum polycephalum, and then two large MD rings (with outer cytoplasmic and inner matrix sides) in the red alga Cyanidioschyzon merolae. Now MD rings have been found in all eukaryotes. In the third section, we describe the relationships between the MD ring and the FtsZ ring descended from ancestral bacteria. Other than the GTPase, FtsZ, mitochondria have lost most of the proteins required for bacterial cytokinesis as a consequence of endosymbiosis. The FtsZ protein forms an electron transparent ring (FtsZ or Z ring) in the matrix inside the inner MD ring. For the fourth section, we describe the dynamic association between the outer MD ring with a ring composed of the eukaryote-specific GTPase dynamin. Recent studies have revealed that eukaryote-specific GTPase dynamins form an electron transparent ring between the outer membrane and the MD ring. Thus, mitochondriokinesis is thought to be controlled by a mitochondrial division (MD) apparatus including a dynamic trio, namely the FtsZ, MD and dynamin rings, which consist of a chimera of rings from bacteria and eukaryotes in primitive organisms. Since the genes for the MD ring and dynamin rings are not found in the prokaryotic genome, the host genomes may make these rings to actively control mitochondrial division. In the fifth part, we focus on the dynamic changes in the formation and disassembly of the FtsZ, MD and dynamin rings. FtsZ rings are digested during a later period of mitochondrial division and then finally the MD and dynamin ring apparatuses pinched off the daughter mitochondria, supporting the idea that the host genomes are responsible for the ultimate control of mitochondrial division. We discuss the evolution, from the original vesicle division (VD) apparatuses to VD apparatuses including classical dynamin rings and MD apparatuses. It is likely that the MD apparatuses involving the dynamic trio evolved into the plastid division (PD) apparatus in Bikonta, while in Opisthokonta, the MD apparatus was simplified during evolution and may have branched into the mitochondrial fusion apparatus. Finally, we describe the possibility of intact isolation of large MD/PD apparatuses, the identification of all their proteins and their related genes using C. merolae genome information and TOF-MS analyses. These results will assist in elucidating the universal mechanism and evolution of MD, PD and VD apparatuses.  相似文献   

14.
Cyanelles of glaucocystophytes may be the most primitive of the known plastids based on their peptidoglycan content and the sequence phylogeny of cyanelle DNA. In this study, EM observations have been made to characterize the cyanelle division of Cyanophora paradoxa Korshikov and to gain insights into the evolution of plastid division. Constriction of cyanelles involves ingrowth of the septum at the cleavage site with the inner envelope membrane invaginating at the leading edge and the outer envelope membrane invaginating behind the septum. This means the inner and outer envelope membranes do not constrict simultaneously as they do in plastid division in other plants. The septum and the cyanelle envelope became stained after a silver‐methenamine staining was applied for in situ detection of polysaccharides. Septum formation was inhibited by β‐lactams and vancomycin, which are potent inhibitors of bacterial peptidoglycan biosynthesis. These results suggest the presence of peptidoglycan at the septum and the cyanelle envelope. In dividing cyanelles, a single electron‐dense ring (cyanelle ring) was observed on the stromal face of the inner envelope membrane at the isthmus, but no ring‐like structures were detected on the outer envelope membrane. Thus a single, stromal cyanelle ring such as this is quite unique and also distinct from FtsZ rings, which are not detectable by TEM. These features suggest that the cyanelle division of glaucocystophytes represents an intermediate stage between cyanobacterial and plastid division. If monophyly of all plastids is true, the cyanelle ring and the homologous inner plastid dividing ring might have evolved earlier than the outer plastid dividing ring.  相似文献   

15.
Sato M  Nishikawa T  Kajitani H  Kawano S 《Planta》2007,227(1):177-187
Cyanelles of the biflagellate protist Cyanophora paradoxa have retained the peptidoglycan layer, which is critical for division, as indicated by the inhibitory effects of β-lactam antibiotics. An FtsZ ring is formed at the division site during cyanelle division. We used immunofluorescence microscopy to observe the process of FtsZ ring formation, which is expected to lead cyanelle division, and demonstrated that an FtsZ arc and a split FtsZ ring emerge during the early and late stages of cyanelle division, respectively. We used an anti-FtsZ antibody to observe cyanelle FtsZ rings. We observed bright, ring-shaped fluorescence of FtsZ in cyanelles. Cyanelles were kidney-shaped shortly after division. Fluorescence indicated that FtsZ did not surround the division plane at an early stage of division, but rather formed an FtsZ arc localized at the constriction site. The constriction spread around the cyanelle, which gradually became dumbbell shaped. After the envelope’s invagination, the ring split parallel to the cyanelle division plane without disappearing. Treatment of C. paradoxa cells with ampicillin, a β-lactam antibiotic, resulted in spherical cyanelles with an FtsZ arc or ring on the division plane. Transmission electron microscopy of the ampicillin-treated cyanelle envelope membrane revealed that the surface was not smooth. Thus, the inhibition of peptidoglycan synthesis by ampicillin causes the inhibition of septum formation and a marked delay in constriction development. The formation of the FtsZ arc and FtsZ ring is the earliest sign of cyanelle division, followed by constriction and septum formation.  相似文献   

16.
The MinE protein plays an important role in plastid division. In this study, the MinE gene was isolated from the cassava (Manihot esculenta Crantz) genome. We isolated high quality and quantity protoplasts and succeed in performing the transient expression of the GFP-fused Manihot esculenta MinE (MeMinE) protein in cassava mesophyll protoplasts. The transient expression of MeMinE-GFP in cassava protoplasts showed that the MeMinE protein was located in the chloroplast. Due to the abnormal division of chloroplasts, overexpression of MeMinE proteins in cassava mesophyll protoplasts could result in fewer and smaller chloroplasts. Overexpression of MeMinE proteins also showed abnormal cell division characteristics and minicell occurrence in Escherichia coli caused by aberrant septation events in the cell poles.  相似文献   

17.
T. Kuroiwa  K. Suzuki  H. Kuroiwa 《Protoplasma》1993,175(3-4):173-177
Summary The first identification of a mitochondria-dividing ring (MD-ring), which is located in the cytoplasm near the outer envelope membrane at the constricted isthmus of dividing mitochondria in the red algaCyanidioschyzon merolae, is reported. The MD-ring is about 50 nm wide and 10 nm thick at early stage of mitochondrial constriction and is a somewhat electron-dense circular bundle. The MD-ring is believed to be essential for the division of mitochondrion (mitochondriokinesis) since the ring appears at the equatorial region of the mitochondria just before the initiation of mitochondrial division and can be observed throughout mitochondrial division. The MD-ring has features comparable to that of the plastid-dividing (PD) ring.Abbreviations MD mitochondria-dividing - PD plastid-dividing  相似文献   

18.
A method for cellular fractionation of Chlamydomonas reinhardii, SAG 11-32/b, and isolation of intact chloroplasts from synchronized cells of the alga is described. The procedure for cell fractionation comprises essentially four steps: (1) protoplast production with autolysine; (2) lysis of the protoplasts with digitonin; (3) aggregation of broken protoplasts; and (4) separation of organelles by differential centrifugations.

Replacing the differential centrifugations (step 4) by Percoll cushion centrifugations yields intact chloroplasts. Starting with 100 milliliters of an algal culture containing 3000 micrograms chlorophyll, intact chloroplasts with 100 to 200 micrograms of chlorophyll can be isolated. Envelope integrity is about 90% (ferricyanide assay). Examination of the chloroplasts by electron microscopy and marker enzyme activities indicated some mitochondrial and cytoplasmic contamination.

  相似文献   

19.
During plastid division, two structures have been detected at the division site in separate analyses. The plastid-dividing ring can be detected by transmission electron microscopy as two (or three) electron-dense rings: an outer ring on the cytosolic face of the outer envelope, occasionally a middle ring in the intermembrane space, and an inner ring on the stromal face of the inner envelope. The FtsZ ring, which plays a central role in bacterial division, also is involved in plastid division and is believed to have descended to plastids from cyanobacterial endosymbiosis. The relationship between the two structures is not known, although there is discussion regarding whether they are identical. Biochemical and immunocytochemical investigations, using synchronized chloroplasts of the red alga Cyanidioschyzon merolae, showed that the plastid FtsZ ring is distinct and separable from the plastid-dividing ring. The FtsZ ring localizes in stroma and faces the inner plastid-dividing ring at the far side from the inner envelope. The FtsZ ring and the inner and outer plastid-dividing rings form in that order before plastid division. The FtsZ ring disappears at the late stage of constriction before dissociation of the plastid-dividing ring, when the constriction is still in progress. Our results suggest that the FtsZ ring;-based system, which originated from a plastid ancestor, cyanobacteria, and the plastid-dividing ring;-based system, which probably originated from host eukaryotic cells, form a complex and are involved in plastid division by distinct modes.  相似文献   

20.
Summary It is generally accepted that mitochondria proliferate by division. However, since the apparatus for mitochondrial division was discovered only recently, the basic mechanism of mitochondrial division remains poorly understood. The unicellular red algaCyanidioschyzon merolae is the only organism in which the existence of the apparatus for mitochondrial division (mitochondrion-dividing ring) has been proved by electron microscopy. Since mitochondrial division, mitosis, and cytokinesis regularly occurred in that order, we can assume that tight linkage exists between mitochondrial division and the mitotic cycle. To examine this assumption, we performed experiments with aphidicolin, a specific inhibitor of DNA polymerase , using cells that had been synchronized by a 12 h light/12 h dark treatment. The effects of aphidicolin onC. merolae cells were examined by both epifluorescence and electron microscopy. When cells synchronized at the S phase were treated with aphidicolin, neither mitosis nor cytokinesis occurred. Epifluorescence microscopy after staining with 3,3-dihexyloxacarbocyanine iodide (DiOC6; a mitochondrion-specific fluorochrome) revealed that mitochondrial division was also completely inhibited. Nevertheless, electron-microscopic examination of the aphidicolin-treated cells clearly revealed the presence of a mitochondrion-dividing ring in mitochondria in all cells examined, in spite of the absence of mitochondrial division. Microbodies, which might be related to mitochondrial division inC. merolae, also failed to divide and became attached to the mitochondrion-dividing rings. These results imply the presence of a checkpoint control mechanism that inhibits division of mitochondria and microbodies in the absence of the synthesis of cell-nuclear DNA.Abbreviation DiOC6 3,3-dihexyloxacarbocyanine iodide  相似文献   

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