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1.
Physarum possesses two different microtubule cytoskeletons. In amoebae, cytoplasmic and mitotic microtubules are nucleated by a typical centrosome. In contrast, it has been reported that plasmodia have an intranuclear spindle organizing centre (SPOC) devoid of centrioles. We present genetic evidence suggesting that the SPOC located in the centrosome is very similar to the intranuclear plasmodial SPOC. The immunostaining properties of a new monoclonal antibody against Physarum centrosome has been used to compare these different MTOCs. Moreover, a dense plasmodial microtubule network was present in interphase plasmodia and absent in plasmodia undergoing mitosis. MTOCs responsible for the nucleation of the cytoplasmic microtubule network and intranuclear SPOCs were located in two different compartments of the plasmodium.  相似文献   

2.
Using a selfing strain of Physarum polycephalum that forms haploid plasmodia, we have isolated temperature-sensitive growth mutants in two ways. The negative selectant, netropsin, was used to enrich for temperature-sensitive mutants among a population of mutagenized amoebae, and, separately, a nonselective screening method was used to isolate plasmodial temperature-sensitive mutants among clonal plasmodia derived from mutagenized amoebae. Complementation in heterokaryons was used to sort the mutants into nine functional groups. When transferred to the restrictive temperature, two mutants immediately lysed, whereas the remainder slowed or stopped growing. Of the two lytic mutants, one affected both amoebae and plasmodia, and the other affected plasmodia alone. The growth-defective mutants were examined for protein and deoxyribonucleic acid synthesis and for aberrations in mitotic behavior. One mutant may be defective in both protein and deoxyribonucleic acid synthesis, and another only in deoxyribonucleic acid synthesis. The latter shows a striking reduction in the frequency of postmitotic reconstruction nuclei at the restrictive temperature. We believe that this mutant, MA67, is affected in a step in the nuclear replication cycle occurring late in G2. Execution of this step is necessary for both mitosis and chromosome replication.  相似文献   

3.
Summary Oscillations of ectoplasmic contraction in plasmodia of the myxomycetePhysarum polycephalum growing on agar containing semidefined medium were studied to determine if the contractile force is altered during the synchronous mitosis. In interphase the regular oscillations of contraction in the plasmodial sheet had an average period of 0.93 minutes in plasmodia growing at 24 °C. During mitosis the amplitude of these oscillations gradually decreased, ceasing for an average time of 2.7 minutes in 74% of the 23 plasmodia studied. Cessation of oscillating contractions in mitosis was accompanied by a decrease in the width of the channels embedded in the plasmodial sheet, and a decrease in the velocity of endoplasmic shuttle streaming usually to a complete standstill. Of 13 plasmodia in which the mitotic stage was very accurately determined, the stop in oscillating contractions occurred during metaphase in 10 plasmodia, and in prometaphase, anaphase, telophase in the 3 others. The cessation of contractile oscillations or of streaming did not occur absolutely simultaneously during mitosis in widely separated locations within one plasmodium, indicating mitotic asynchrony over a period of a few minutes within each plasmodium. We suggest that the halt of plasmodial migration during mitosis reported by others is caused by a decrease or cessation at slightly different times in the amplitude of ectoplasmic contractile oscillations in different areas of a plasmodium in mitosis resulting in an overall lack of coordination of endoplasmic flow throughout the plasmodium, thus temporarily halting migration. Possible physiological mechanisms linking a decrease in actomyosin contraction with the metaphase stage of mitosis are discussed.  相似文献   

4.
5.
We reported previously that myosins from amoebal and plasmodial stages in the life cycle of Physarum polycephalum differ in the primary structure of heavy chains and phosphorylatable 18,000 Mr light chains, while Ca-binding 14,000 Mr light chains are common to both myosins (Kohama & Takano-Ohmuro, Proc Jpn acad 60B (1984) 431; Kohama et al., J biol chem 260 (1986) 8022). We have carried out immunofluorescence microscopical studies upon differentiating cultures of amoebic colonies, which show apogamic amoebo-plasmodial differentiation as follows: Typical amoebae differentiate into mono-nucleate intermediate cells with swollen nuclei and then into two or multi-nucleate young plasmodia (Anderson et al., Protoplasma 89 (1976) 29. Antibodies against plasmodial myosin heavy chain (PMHC) and 18,000 Mr plasmodial myosin light chain (PMLC18) stained intermediate cells and young plasmodia, but not typical amoebae. On the other hand, antibody against amoebal myosin heavy chain (AMHC) stained typical amoebae and intermediate cells--but not young plasmodia. Thus staining was detected using antibodies against both PMHC and AMHC in intermediate cells. Intermediate cells were also stained by antibody against another plasmodium-specific cytoskeletal protein, viz., high molecular weight actin-binding protein (HMWP). We propose that synthesis of myosin subunits switches immediately from amoebal to plasmodial type in mono-nucleate cells with swollen nuclei. This myosin switching is associated with the initiation of HMWP synthesis.  相似文献   

6.
Ian K. Ross 《Protoplasma》1968,66(1-2):173-184
Summary Photomicrographic evidence is presented of the difference in behavior of nuclear membranes during mitosis in amoebae, zygotes and plasmodia of Myxomycetes. One of the species was cultured on bacteria and possessed a normal cycle of plasmogamy and karyogamy between the amoebal and plasmodial phases. The second species was axenically grown in liquid media and had become highly heteroploid and lacked the ability to develop into plasmodia, existing only in the amoeboid form. The significance of the amoeboid form of mitosis in the heteroploid axenically cultured strain is discussed in relation to the difference in nuclear membrane behavior and the possible significance of such behavior.  相似文献   

7.
Summary Strain CL ofPhysarum polycephalum forms multinucleate plasmodia within clones of uninucleate amoebae. The plasmodia have the same nuclear DNA content as the amoebae. Analysis of plasmodial development, using time-lapse cinematography, showed that binucleate cells were formed as a result of nuclear division in uninucleate cells. Binucleate cells developed into plasmodia by further nuclear divisions and cell fusions. No fusions involving uninucleate cells were observed. A temporary increase in cell and nuclear size occurred at the time of binucleate cell formation.  相似文献   

8.
We have used anti-tubulin antibodies and immunofluorescence microscopy to determine the overall distribution of microtubules during interphase and mitosis in both the myxamoebae and plasmodia of the slime mold Physarum polycephalum. We have paralleled these observations with electron microscopy of the same stages. The myxamoebae possess a network of cytoplasmic microtubules whilst the coenocytic plasmodium does not possess any cytoplasmic microtubules--at either interphase or mitosis. In plasmodia microtubules are, however, elaborated by an intranuclear microtubule organizing centre (MTOC) during prophase of mitosis and these microtubules proceed to form part of the mitotic spindle. There is little difference in the overall distribution and arrangement of microtubules during division of either the myxamoebal or plasmodial nuclei. These findings are discussed in relation to the synthesis of tubulin during the plasmodial cell cycle and the rearrangements of the nuclear envelope during mitosis.  相似文献   

9.
The development of a uninucleate ameba into a multinucleate, syncytial plasmodium in myxomycetes involves a change from the open, astral mitosis of the ameba to the intranuclear, anastral mitosis of the plasmodium, and the omission of cytokinesis from the cell cycle. We describe immunofluorescence microscopic studies of the amebal-plasmodial transition (APT) in Physarum polycephalum. We demonstrate that the reorganization of mitotic spindles commences in uninucleate cells after commitment to plasmodium formation, is completed by the binucleate stage, and occurs via different routes in individual developing cells. Most uninucleate developing cells formed mitotic spindles characteristic either of amebae or of plasmodia. However, chimeric mitotic figures exhibiting features of both amebal and plasmodial mitoses, and a novel star microtubular array were also observed. The loss of the ameba-specific alpha 3-tubulin and the accumulation of the plasmodium-specific beta 2-tubulin isotypes during development were not sufficient to explain the changes in the organization of mitotic spindles. The majority of uninucleate developing cells undergoing astral mitoses (amebal and chimeric) exhibited cytokinetic furrows, whereas cells with the anastral plasmodial mitosis exhibited no furrows. Thus, the transition from astral to anastral mitosis during the APT could be sufficient for the omission of cytokinesis from the cell cycle. However, astral mitosis may not ensure cytokinesis: some cells undergoing amebal or chimeric mitosis contained unilateral cytokinetic furrows or no furrow at all. These cells would, most probably, fail to divide. We suggest that a uninucleate committed cell undergoing amebal or chimeric mitosis can either divide or else form a binucleate cell. In contrast, a uninucleate cell with a mitotic spindle of the plasmodial type gives rise only to a binucleate cells. Further, the decision to enter mitosis after commitment to the APT is independent of the developmental changes in the organization of the mitotic spindle and cytokinesis.  相似文献   

10.
In the acellular slime mold, Physarum polycephalum, the differentiation of amoebae into plasmodia is controlled by a mating type locus, mt. Amoebae carrying heterothallic alleles usually do not differentiate within clones; plasmodia form when two amoebae carrying different alleles fuse and undergo karyogamy. In this paper, we show that amoebae heterozygous for heterothallic alleles can be isolated and maintained as amoebae; the amoebae form plasmodia in clones without a change in ploidy. Plasmodia were also found to be formed, infrequently, by heterothallic amoebae of a single mating type. The plasmodia are healthy and are also formed without a change in ploidy. Thus, the presence of two different heterothallic mating type genes in a single nucleus is compatible with the amoebal state and one heterothallic mating type gene is compatible with the plasmodial state, once established.  相似文献   

11.
Summary Methods are described for the isolation and testing of temperature-sensitive plasmodial strains of Physarum polycephalum. Nineteen temperature-sensitive strains were found by screening plasmodia derived from mutagenised amoebae and the properties of these are described. A scheme is outlined for the detection of specific mitotic cycle lesions amongst temperature-sensitive strains, and the properties of a presumptive mitotic cycle mutant are described.  相似文献   

12.
Summary The same basic ultrastructural features of interphase and mitotic nuclei were found for both the haploid Colonia and the diploid wild type strains of the myxomycete,Physarum polycephalum. Differences in nuclear size and chromocenter numbers were observed, but the nucleolar cycle and the intranuclear and acentriolar type of mitosis characteristic of the plasmodial stage of the diploid is present in haploid plasmodia, ruling out any relation between ploidy level and type of mitotic figure.  相似文献   

13.
A. Lemoine  L. Mir  M. Wright 《Protoplasma》1984,120(1-2):43-50
Summary The microtubules ofPhysarum amoebae have been decorated with rat antibodies against yeast tubulin. The indirect fluorescent staining observed in interphase amoebae and in flagellated amoebae is consistent with the three-dimensional reconstructions previously deduced from electron microscopic studies. Mitotic amoebae exhibit a pattern of fluorescence which is similar to that exhibited by mammalian cells and is consistent with the previous electron microscopic studies, except that we also observe pole-pole microtubule fibers during metaphase and anaphase and the presence of a typical midbody during cytokinesis. The various types of tripolar mitosis which are observed suggest that there is a regulatory mechanism allowing the formation of pseudo-bipolar mitotic apparatuses in amoebae possessing more than two mitotic centers during mitosis. The mitotic center, located in the middle of the centrosphere, is not fluorescent after staining of the monoasters induced with taxol suggesting the absence of tubulin in the mitotic center.  相似文献   

14.
Genetic evidence has shown the presence of a common spindle pole organiser in Physarum amoebae and plasmodia. But the typical centrosome and mitosis observed in amoebae are replaced in plasmodia by an intranuclear mitosis devoid of any structurally defined organelle. The fate of gamma-tubulin and of another component (TPH17) of the centrosome of Physarum amoebae was investigated in the nuclei of synchronous plasmodia. These two amoebal centrosomal elements were present in the nuclear compartment during the entire cell cycle and exhibited similar relocalisation from metaphase to telophase. Three preparation methods showed that gamma-tubulin containing material was dispersed in the nucleoplasm during interphase. It constituted an intranuclear thread-like structure. In contrast, the TPH17 epitope exhibited a localisation close to the nucleolus. In late G2-phase, the gamma-tubulin containing elements condensed in a single organelle which further divided. Intranuclear microtubules appeared before the condensation of the gamma-tubulin material and treatment with microtubule poisons suggested that microtubules were required in this process. The TPH17 epitope relocalised in the intranuclear spindle later than the gamma-tubulin containing material suggesting a maturation process of the mitotic poles. The decondensation of the gamma-tubulin material and of the material containing the TPH17 epitope occurred immediately after telophase. Hence in the absence of a structurally defined centrosome homologue, the microtubule nucleating material undergoes a cycle of condensation and decondensation during the cell cycle.  相似文献   

15.
Nuclear divisions in plasmodia of Physarum polycephalum were advanced by applying immunologically purified plasmodial extracts of late G2 phase on the surface of plasmodia which were 1.5 h before the third mitosis. The purification of G2 extracts was achieved by interaction of antibodies prepared against the antigens of early S phase plasmodia with the antigens of late G2 plasmodia. There was no advancement of mitosis by extracts prepared from early S phase plasmodia. Untreated G2 extracts did not accelerate mitosis with the same effectiveness as did antibody purified G2 extracts.  相似文献   

16.
Amoebae and plasmodia constitute the two vegetative growth phases of the Myxomycete Physarum. In vitro and in vivo phosphorylation of actin in plasmodia is tightly controlled by fragmin P, a plasmodium-specific actin-binding protein that enables actin phosphorylation by the actin-fragmin kinase. We investigated whether amoebal actin is phosphorylated by this kinase, in spite of the lack of fragmin P. Strong actin phosphorylation was detected only following addition of recombinant actin-fragmin kinase to cell-free extracts of amoebae, suggesting that amoebae contain a protein with properties similar to plasmodial fragmin. We purified the complex between actin and this protein to homogeneity. Using an antibody that specifically recognizes phosphorylated actin, we demonstrate that Thr203 in actin can be phosphorylated in this complex. A full-length amoebal fragmin cDNA was cloned and the deduced amino acid sequence shows 65% identity with plasmodial fragmin. However, the fragmins are encoded by different genes. Northern blots using RNA from a developing Physarum strain demonstrate that this fragmin isoform (fragmin A) is not expressed in plasmodia. In situ localization showed that fragmin A is present mainly underneath the plasma membrane. Our results indicate that Physarum amoebae express a fragmin P-like isoform which shares the property of binding actin and converting the latter into a substrate for the actin-fragmin kinase.  相似文献   

17.
In Physarum, microscopic uninucleate amoebae develop into macroscopic multinucleate plasmodia. In the mutant strain, RA614, plasmodium development is blocked. RA614 carries a recessive mutation (npfL1) in a gene that functions in sexual as well as apogamic development. In npfL+ apogamic development, binucleate cells arise from uninucleate cells by mitosis without cytokinesis at the end of an extended cell cycle. In npfL1 cultures, apogamic development became abnormal at the end of the extended cell cycle. The cells developed a characteristic rounded, vacuolated appearance, nuclear fusion and vigorous cytoplasmic motion occurred, and the cells eventually died. Nuclei were not visible by phase-contrast microscopy in most of the abnormally developing cells, but fluorescence microscopy after DAPI staining revealed intensely staining, condensed nuclei without nucleoli. Studies of tubulin organization during npfL1 development indicated a high frequency of abnormal mitotic spindles and, in some interphase cells, abnormally thick microtubules. Some of these features were observed at low frequency in the parental npfL+ strain and may represent a pathway of cell death, resembling apoptosis, that may be triggered in more than one way. Nuclear fusion occurred during interphase and mitosis in npfL1 cells, and multipolar spindles were also observed. None of these features were observed in npfL+ cells, suggesting that a specific effect of the npfL1 mutation may be an incomplete alteration of nuclear structure from the amoebal to the plasmodial state.  相似文献   

18.
In the heterothallic myxomycete Physarum polycephalum, uninucleate amoebae normally differentiate into syncytial plasmodia following heterotypic mating. In order to study the genetic control of this developmental process, mutations affecting the amoebal-plasmodial transition have been sought. Numerous mutants characterized by self-fertility have been isolated. The use of alkylating mutagens increases the mutant frequency over the spontaneous level but does not alter the mutant spectrum. Three spontaneous and 14 induced mutants have been analyzed genetically. In each, the mutation appears to be linked to the mating type locus. In three randomly selected mutants, the nuclear DNA content is the same in amoebae and plasmodia, indicating that amoebal syngamy does not precede plasmodium development in these strains. These results indicate that a highly specific type of mutational event, occurring close to or within the mating type locus, can abolish the requirement for syngamy normally associated with plasmodial differentiation. These mutations help define a genomic region regulating the switch from amoebal to plasmodial growth.  相似文献   

19.
Plasmodia are giant, multinucleate single cells which develop from mononucleate amoebae during the developmental cycle of Physarum polycephalum. In visible light, starving plasmodia lose their unlimited replicative potential and terminally differentiate into fruiting bodies (sporulation). Aiming at genetic dissection of the circuits controlling commitment and differentiation, we worked out a standardized procedure for the generation and screening of plasmodial mutants altered in sporulation by mutagenesis with ethylnitrosourea. To obtain a homogeneous population of cells of those strains which cannot grow axenically, we describe a protocol for preparing a suspension of flagellates to be used as starting material for mutagenesis. Flagellates can transform into plasmodia via the amoebal stage. Pilot phenotypic screening yielded plasmodial mutants altered in the photocontrol of sporulation or with disturbed developmental program. The existence of mutants with a disturbed developmental program indicates that the sequence and synchrony of morphogenetic steps of fruiting body formation can be uncoupled through mutation. Complementation testing by plasmodial fusion identified three complementation groups of non-sporulating mutants. The work described provides an experimental basis for performing mass screens for Physarum mutants altered in sporulation.  相似文献   

20.
Mitotic divisions in the plasmodia of Physarum polycephalum were advanced by about 1 h by applying to the plasmodial surface extracts of other plasmodia. Advancement of mitosis was greatest when the extracts were prepared from plasmodia harvested at late G2. The activity in the extracts responsible for the advancement of mitosis was found to be heat labile and non-dialysable. It is suggested that this activity belongs to proteins responsible for the regulation of mitosis.  相似文献   

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