首页 | 本学科首页   官方微博 | 高级检索  
相似文献
 共查询到20条相似文献,搜索用时 15 毫秒
1.
Cytokinesis in cells of Spirogyra sp. was studied with both light and electron microscopes. Early formation of the cross wall was achieved by annular ingrowth of a septum; the cross wall was completed by a phragmoplast containing Golgi vesicles, longitudinally aligned microtubules, and associated electron-dense material. Spirogyra may represent an intermediate stage in the evolution of the phragmoplast seen in higher plants.  相似文献   

2.
Detailed correlation of in vitro observations with the arrangement of microtubules (MTs) during anaphase-telophase were made on endosperm of Haemanthus katherinae. It is stressed that the general course of events leading to the formation of the phragmoplast is the same in all cells, but considerable variation of details may be found in different objects and even in various cells of the same tissue. The changes of MT arrangement in the interzonal region responsible for formation of the phragmoplast already occur in anaphase. During this stage continuous fibers (composed of numerous MTs) lengthen, become thinner (the number of MTs on a cross-section decreases), and often seem to break. After mid-anaphase, thin fibers begin to oscillate transversely to the axis of the phragmoplast and often are considerably laterally displaced (lateral movements). The longest MTs in the phragmoplast are present during oscillations and lateral movements. The new MTs arise in the phragmoplast regions depleted of MTs as a result of lateral movements (usually geometric central region of the phragmoplast). Clusters of vesicles, which accumulate in relation to MTs which move, fuse and form the cell plate. After the fusion, the number and the length of MTs decrease. Several processes are superimposed and occur simultaneously. Also the cell plate is, as a rule, in different stages of development in various regions of the phragmoplast. The movements of MTs and fusion of the vesicles is complex and the details of these processes are not entirely clear. The data supplied here modify some generally accepted concepts of phragmoplast formation and development. This concerns the center of origin of new MTs, the moment when they arise, and the way they subsequently behave.  相似文献   

3.
 The ultrastructure of periclinally dividing fusiform cells was studied in the vascular cambium of Robinia pseudoacacia. Fusiform cell division begins in April at Madison, Wisconsin, when the cambial cells still have many characteristics of a dormant cambium. Soon afterward, the cambial cells acquire the appearance typical of an active cambium. Sequential phases of the microtubule cycle were documented: cortical microtubules bordering the cell wall during interphase, perinuclear microtubules preceding formation of the mitotic spindle, spindle microtubules, and phragmoplast microtubules. A preprophase band of microtubules was not encountered. An extended phragmosome was not encountered in periclinally dividing fusiform cells. During cytokinesis, the phragmosome is represented by a broad cytoplasmic plate which precedes the developing phragmoplast and cell plate as they migrate toward the ends of the cell.  相似文献   

4.
In plant cells, Golgi vesicles are transported to the division plane to fuse with each other, forming the cell plate, the initial membrane-bordered cell wall separating daughter cells. Vesicles, but not organelles, move through the phragmoplast, which consists of two opposing cylinders of microtubules and actin filaments, interlaced with endoplasmic reticulum membrane. To study physical aspects of this transport/inhibition process, we microinjected fluorescent synthetic 1,2-dioleoyl-sn-glycero-3-phospho-rac-1-glycerol (DOPG) vesicles and polystyrene beads into Tradescantia virginiana stamen hair cells. The phragmoplast was nonselective for DOPG vesicles of a size up to 150 nm in diameter but was a physical barrier for polystyrene beads having a diameter of 20 and 40 nm and also when beads were coated with the same DOPG membrane. We conclude that stiffness is a parameter for vesicle transit through the phragmoplast and discuss that cytoskeleton configurations can physically block such transit.Cells and their constituents are physical entities, and next to chemical interactions, cell structures are determinants of cell behavior. Therefore, apart from techniques to image living cells at the subcellular level, experiments are needed that probe physical parameters important in cell function in vivo. We took the plant phragmoplast structure to answer the question whether the physical aspect “stiffness” is a factor in the inhibition of transport through this structure by microinjecting synthetic vesicles and polystyrene beads in Tradescantia virginiana stamen hair cells during cytokinesis, when the phragmoplast is essential for partitioning the cytoplasm between two daughter cells. Plant cells partition by producing a cell plate made of fused 60- to 80-nm-diameter vesicles (Staehelin and Hepler, 1996; Jürgens, 2005) proven to be Golgi vesicles (Reichardt et al., 2007). Their content becomes the new cell wall and their membranes become the daughter cell plasma membranes. The phragmoplast consists of two opposing cylinders of microtubules and actin filaments, interlaced with similarly aligned endoplasmic reticulum (ER) membranes. This phragmoplast cytoskeleton is the transport vehicle for Golgi vesicles to the plane where the cell plate is being formed (Staehelin and Hepler, 1996; Valster et al., 1997), keeps them in this plane (Esseling-Ozdoba et al., 2008b), where they fuse with each other (Samuels et al., 1995; Otegui et al., 2001; Seguí-Simarro et al., 2004), and assists in the proper attachment of the cell plate to the parental cell wall (Valster et al., 1997; Molchan et al., 2002). Transit of organelles, including Golgi bodies, is inhibited (Staehelin and Hepler, 1996; Nebenführ et al., 2000; Seguí-Simarro et al., 2004). Most of these data are known from static electron microscopy images. Electron microscopy after high-pressure freezing and freeze substitution (Thijsen et al., 1998) and electron tomography studies (Otegui et al., 2001; Seguí-Simarro et al., 2004; Austin et al., 2005) show that, in the early stage of cell plate formation in the center and later at the phragmoplast border, microtubules are aligned parallel to each other at distances of 20 to 100 nm. Keeping in mind that also actin filaments and ER membranes, aligned in the same orientation, are present between the microtubules, this leaves little room for the cell plate-forming vesicles during their transport through this phragmoplast.Clearly, during the past decade, significant progress has been made in the elucidation of the structural organization of cell plate-forming phragmoplasts, which has set the stage for studies to elucidate physical properties of phragmoplasts. The experimental approach we use is injecting particulate and vesicular fluorescent probes into living and dividing cells and observing the extent to which such probes can enter the phragmoplast and can be transported to the cell plate region. We have shown before that synthetic lipid 1,2-dioleoyl-sn-glycero-3-phospho-rac-1-glycerol (DOPG) vesicles of 60 nm diameter are transported through the phragmoplast, accumulate, and are kept in the cell plate region but do not fuse (Esseling-Ozdoba et al., 2008b). Now, we asked whether similar, flexible, synthetic lipid (DOPG) vesicles of various sizes, smaller and larger than endogenous vesicles, as well as stiff polystyrene beads, and such beads coated with the DOPG membrane, are transported through the phragmoplast and enter the plane where the cell plate is being formed, a question pertaining to a physical property of the phragmoplast. Our principal finding is that injected synthetic vesicles up to 150 nm diameter can enter and be transported to the cell plate region, where they accumulate but do not become incorporated into the cell plate. In contrast, polystyrene beads, the noncoated ones and those coated with the same lipid as the vesicles with diameters of 20 and 40 nm, can enter phragmoplasts but cannot be transported to the cell plate region, and the 40-nm beads slow cell plate formation, possibly by interfering with the delivery of normal, cell plate-forming vesicles to the cell plate.  相似文献   

5.
The cell plate is the new cell wall, with bordering plasma membrane, that is formed between two daughter cells in plants, and it is formed by fusion of vesicles (approximately 60 nm). To start to determine physical properties of cell plate forming vesicles for their transport through the phragmoplast, and fusion with each other, we microinjected fluorescent synthetic lipid vesicles that were made of 1,2-dioleoyl-sn-glycero-3-[phospho-rac-(1-glycerol)] (DOPG) into Tradescantia virginiana stamen hair cells. During interphase, the 60-nm wide DOPG vesicles moved inside the cytoplasm comparably to organelles. During cytokinesis, they were transported through the phragmoplast and accumulated in the cell plate region together with the endogenous vesicles, even inside the central cell plate region. Because at this stage microtubules are virtually absent from that region, while actin filaments are present, actin filaments may have a role in the transport of vesicles toward the cell plate. Unlike the endogenous vesicles, the synthetic DOPG vesicles did not fuse with the developing cell plate. Instead, they redistributed into the cytoplasm of the daughter cells upon completion of cytokinesis. Because the redistribution of the vesicles occurs when actin filaments disappear from the phragmoplast, actin filaments may be involved in keeping the vesicles inside the developing cell plate region.  相似文献   

6.
Summary The aim of this study was to search for uncharacterized components of the plant cytoskeleton using monoclonal antibodies raised against spermatozoids of the fernPteridium (Marc et al. 1988). The cellular distribution of crossreacting immunoreactive material during the division cycle in wheat root tip cells was determined by immunofluorescence microscopy and compared to the fluorescence pattern obtained with antitubulin. Five antibodies are of special interest. Pas1D3 and Pas5F4 detect a diffuse cytoplasmic material, which, during mitosis, follows the distribution of microtubules (MTs) at the nuclear surface and in the preprophase band (PPB), spindle and phragmoplast. The immunoreactive material codistributes specifically with MT arrays of the mitotic apparatus and does not associate with interphase cortical MTs. Pas5D8 is relevant to the PPB and spatial control of cytokinesis. It binds in a thin layer at the cytoplasmic surface throughout the cell cycle, except when its coverage is transiently interrupted by an exclusion zone at the PPB site and later at the same site when the phragmoplast fuses with the parental cell wall.Pas2G6 reacts with a component of basal bodies and the flagellar band in thePteridium spermatozoid and recognizes irregularly shaped cytoplasmic vesicles in wheat cells. During interphase these particles form a cortical network.Pas6D7 binds to dictyosomes and dictyosome vesicles. At anaphase the vesicles accumulate at the equator and subsequently condense into the cell plate.Abbreviations MT microtubule - PPB preprophase band  相似文献   

7.
Summary Young leaves ofNicotiana tabacum were fixed in glutaraldehyde-formaldehyde followed by osmium tetroxide. The fine structure of dividing cells was studied. Before prophase a band of microtubules was observed between the nucleus and the cell wall at a position judged as the future plane of division. The microtubules in the band are 4–6 units deep and relatively closely packed, giving sections of the band a characteristic appearance. Micro-tubules of the mitotic spindle, the phragmoplast, and the preprophase band are morphologically similar. Some of the microtubules of the mitotic spindle and the phragmoplast have an undulate appearance. It is suggested that the undulate microtubules may have been fixed at a time when microwaves were traveling along them. The cell plate is formed by a fusion of small smooth surfaced vesicles and small coated vesicles. Fusion of small vesicles results first in larger vesicles and then in a meshwork of new cell-wall material surrounded by new regions of plasma membrane. Most of the vesicles are derived from dictyosomes and may be produced before and during prophase as well as during later stages of division. The ER may also contribute some vesicles to the cell plate.  相似文献   

8.
Microtubules and microfilaments have been imaged in living plant cells and their dynamic changes recorded during division, growth and development. Carboxyfluorescein labeled brain tubulin has been injected into cells that are maintained in an active state in a culture chamber on the microscope stage. Subsequent imaging with the confocal microscope reveals microtubules in the preprophase band, the mitotic apparatus, the phragmoplast, and the cortical array. The structural changes of these microtubules have been observed during transitional stages. In addition, their dynamic features are demonstrated by depolymerization in elevated calcium, low temperature, and in the drug oryzalin, and by repolymerization when returned to normal conditions. Examination of living Tradescantia stamen hair cells, which have been injected with fluorescent phalloidin to label the actin microfilaments, reveals hitherto undisclosed aspects of the preparation of the division site and dynamics of the phragmoplast cytoskeleton. During prophase microfilaments occur throughout the cell cortex, with those in the region of the preprophase band becoming transversely aligned. At nuclear envelope breakdown, these specifically disassemble, leaving a circumferential zone from which microfilaments remain absent throughout division. During cytokinesis microfilaments arise within the phragmoplast, oriented parallel to the microtubules, but excluded from the zone where the MTs overlap and where cell plate vesicles aggregate. The phragmoplast microfilaments, in a manner similar to microtubules, shorten in length, expand in girth, and eventually disassemble when the cell plate is complete.  相似文献   

9.

Background  

Plant cells divide by the formation of new cross walls, known as cell plates, from the center to periphery of each dividing cell. Formation of the cell plate occurs in the phragmoplast, a complex structure composed of membranes, microtubules (MTs) and actin microfilaments (MFs). Disruption of phragmoplast MTs was previously found to completely inhibit cell plate formation and expansion, indicative of their crucial role in the transport of cell plate membranes and materials. In contrast, disruption of MFs only delays cell plate expansion but does not completely inhibit cell plate formation. Despite such findings, the significance and molecular mechanisms of MTs and MFs remain largely unknown.  相似文献   

10.
Cytokinesis in apical cells of actively growing cultures of Cephaleuros parasiticus Karsten sporangiate thalli was examined with transmission electron microscopy. A massive, interzonal cytokinetic microtubule spindle is anchored at its poles to the medial surfaces of the daughter nuclei at telophase. Later, the daughter nuclei are widely separated and no longer associated with the interzonal spindle; however, the spindle retains its shape and becomes a distinct phragmoplast with an array of vesicles, presumably derived from dictyosomes, aligned in the division plane. Fusion of the vesicles gives rise to a thin cell plate. Some bundles of microtubules in the spindle appear to mark the sites of plasmodesmata formation, but no endoptasmic reticulum is directly involved in plasmodesmata formation. No infurrowing or phycoplast array of microtubules is involved in the cytokinesis. The relationship, if any. between the metaphase-anaphase mitotic microtubule system and the interzonal cytokinetic spindle has not been determined. Cephaleuros parasiticus isone of only four green algae now known to contain a higher plant-like phragmoplast and cytokinetic process. The observations reported can be interpreted as very strong evidence for a phylogenetic affinity between the Trentepohliaceae and the Charophyceae, but consideration of ulvophycean features of the Trentepohliaceae such as motile cell ultrastructure and life histories precludes unequivocal assignment of the family to either the Charophyceae or Ulvophyceae.  相似文献   

11.
The fine structure of dividing cambial cells of Ulmus americana and Tilia americana has been studied in material fixed in glutaraldehyde followed by osmium tetroxide. The cambia examined consisted of 7–9 rows of unexpanded fusiform cells, all of which had similar ultrastructural components. The fine structure and sequence of events of mitosis and cytokinesis in the dividing cambial cells apparently are similar to those of dividing cells in root tips and leaves. Of special interest was the observation that during cytokinesis, a broad cytoplasmic plate or phragmosome precedes the developing phragmoplast and cell plate through the dividing cambial cell. Smooth and coated vesicles derived from dictyosomes are associated with cell plate formation in these cells, smooth vesicles primarily with earlier stages of plate formation, and coated vesicles in later stages.  相似文献   

12.
Summary Centrin and calmodulin are members of the EF-hand calcium-binding superfamily of proteins. In this study we compared localisation and immunoblotting of centrin with calmodulin in several monocot (onion and wheat) and dicot (mung bean andArabidopsis) plants. We confirmed that an anti-calmodulin antibody recognised a 17 kDa protein in all species tested and localises to the cytoplasm, mitotic matrix and with microtubules of the preprophase band and phragmoplast. In contrast, immunoblotting using anti-centrin antibodies shows that plant centrins vary from 17 to 20 kDa. Immunofluorescence microscopy with anti-centrin antibodies revealed only weak centrin immunoreactivity in the cytoplasm, nucleus, nuclear envelope, phragmoplast and mitotic matrix in meristematic cells. There was a slightly more intense perinuclear labelling in large differentiating onion cells and between separating anaphase chromosomes. While centrin is known to localise to the mitotic spindle poles in animal and algal cells, there was no appreciable immunoreactivity at the spindle poles in higher plants. In contrast, there was an intense immunofluorescence signal with anti-centrin antibodies in the developing cell plate. Further characterisation of the cell plate labelling by immunogold electron microscopy shows centrin immunoreactivity was closely associated with vesicles in the cell plate. Our observations suggest that centrin may play a role in cell plate formation.Abbreviations BSA bovine serum albumin - MTs microtubules - MTOCs microtubule organising centres - PBS phosphate buffered saline - PBST phosphate buffered saline with Tween-20  相似文献   

13.
Plant cytokinesis starts in the center of the division plane, with vesicle fusion generating a new membrane compartment, the cell plate, that subsequently expands laterally by continuous fusion of newly arriving vesicles to its margin. Targeted delivery of vesicles is assisted by the dynamic reorganization of a plant-specific cytoskeletal array, the phragmoplast, from a solid cylinder into an expanding ring-shaped structure. This lateral translocation is brought about by depolymerization of microtubules in the center, giving way to the expanding cell plate, and polymerization of microtubules along the edge. Whereas several components are known to mediate cytokinetic vesicle fusion [8-10], no gene function involved in phragmoplast dynamics has been identified by mutation. Mutations in the Arabidopsis HINKEL gene cause cytokinesis defects, such as enlarged cells with incomplete cell walls and multiple nuclei. Proper targeting of the cytokinesis-specific syntaxin KNOLLE [8] and lateral expansion of the phragmoplast are not affected. However, the phragmoplast microtubules appear to persist in the center, where vesicle fusion should result in cell plate formation. Molecular analysis reveals that the HINKEL gene encodes a plant-specific kinesin-related protein with a putative N-terminal motor domain and is expressed in a cell cycle-dependent manner similar to the KNOLLE gene. Our results suggest that HINKEL plays a role in the reorganization of phragmoplast microtubules during cell plate formation.  相似文献   

14.
We have investigated the process of somatic-type cytokinesis in Arabidopsis (Arabidopsis thaliana) meristem cells with a three-dimensional resolution of approximately 7 nm by electron tomography of high-pressure frozen/freeze-substituted samples. Our data demonstrate that this process can be divided into four phases: phragmoplast initials, solid phragmoplast, transitional phragmoplast, and ring-shaped phragmoplast. Phragmoplast initials arise from clusters of polar microtubules (MTs) during late anaphase. At their equatorial planes, cell plate assembly sites are formed, consisting of a filamentous ribosome-excluding cell plate assembly matrix (CPAM) and Golgi-derived vesicles. The CPAM, which is found only around growing cell plate regions, is suggested to be responsible for regulating cell plate growth. Virtually all phragmoplast MTs terminate inside the CPAM. This association directs vesicles to the CPAM and thereby to the growing cell plate. Cell plate formation within the CPAM appears to be initiated by the tethering of vesicles by exocyst-like complexes. After vesicle fusion, hourglass-shaped vesicle intermediates are stretched to dumbbells by a mechanism that appears to involve the expansion of dynamin-like springs. This stretching process reduces vesicle volume by approximately 50%. At the same time, the lateral expansion of the phragmoplast initials and their CPAMs gives rise to the solid phragmoplast. Later arriving vesicles begin to fuse to the bulbous ends of the dumbbells, giving rise to the tubulo-vesicular membrane network (TVN). During the transitional phragmoplast stage, the CPAM and MTs disassemble and then reform in a peripheral ring phragmoplast configuration. This creates the centrifugally expanding peripheral cell plate growth zone, which leads to cell plate fusion with the cell wall. Simultaneously, the central TVN begins to mature into a tubular network, and ultimately into a planar fenestrated sheet (PFS), through the removal of membrane via clathrin-coated vesicles and by callose synthesis. Small secondary CPAMs with attached MTs arise de novo over remaining large fenestrae to focus local growth to these regions. When all of the fenestrae are closed, the new cell wall is complete. Few endoplasmic reticulum (ER) membranes are seen associated with the phragmoplast initials and with the TVN cell plate that is formed within the solid phragmoplast. ER progressively accumulates thereafter, reaching a maximum during the late PFS stage, when most cell plate growth is completed.  相似文献   

15.
Werner Herth  Yves Meyer 《Planta》1978,142(1):11-21
Tobacco (Nicotiana tabacum L., cv. Maryland) mesophyll protoplasts cultivated in saline medium divide by bud formation, migration of one nucleus into the bud, and subsequent furrowing. This process was investigated light and electron microscopically. The cytoplasm of the growing bud is richer in dictyosomes, rough endoplasmic reticulum profiles, mitochondria, and small vacuoles than is the cytoplasm of the mother cell, but in early stages lacks plastids. Only patches of wall material are found; most of the cell surface appears naked. Oriented sections of the cleavage furrow do not reveal a contractile ring of microfilaments under the fixation conditions used. The furrow is flanked by numerous microtubules, and is rich in coated vesicles. Nuclear division appears normal, but the phragmoplast vesicles appear empty, and the phragmoplast seems to disintegrate again later. The nucleus migrating into the bud does not show any signs of associated contractile structures. The results demonstrate that, in principle, higher plant cells are capable of a mode of division usually said to be yeast-like. The events of karyokinesis and cell plate formation are not therefore obligatorily linked processes.  相似文献   

16.
Collings DA  Harper JD  Vaughn KC 《Planta》2003,218(2):204-216
We have investigated changes in the distribution of peroxisomes through the cell cycle in onion (Allium cepa L.) root meristem cells with immunofluorescence and electron microscopy, and in leek (Allium porrum L.) epidermal cells with immunofluorescence and peroxisomal-targeted green fluorescent protein. During interphase and mitosis, peroxisomes distribute randomly throughout the cytoplasm, but beginning late in anaphase, they accumulate at the division plane. Initially, peroxisomes occur within the microtubule phragmoplast in two zones on either side of the developing cell plate. However, as the phragmoplast expands outwards to form an annulus, peroxisomes redistribute into a ring immediately inside the location of the microtubules. Peroxisome aggregation depends on actin microfilaments and myosin. Peroxisomes first accumulate in the division plane prior to the formation of the microtubule phragmoplast, and throughout cytokinesis, always co-localise with microfilaments. Microfilament-disrupting drugs (cytochalasin and latrunculin), and a putative inhibitor of myosin (2,3-butanedione monoxime), inhibit aggregation. We propose that aggregated peroxisomes function in the formation of the cell plate, either by regulating hydrogen peroxide production within the developing cell plate, or by their involvement in recycling of excess membranes from secretory vesicles via the -oxidation pathway. Differences in aggregation, a phenomenon which occurs in onion, some other monocots and to a lesser extent in tobacco BY-2 suspension cells, but which is not obvious in the roots of Arabidopsis thaliana (L.) Heynh., may reflect differences within the primary cell walls of these plants.Abbreviations BDM 2,3-butanedione monoxime - DAPI 4,6-diamidino-2-phenylindole - ER endoplasmic reticulum - GFP green fluorescent protein  相似文献   

17.
Ilse Foissner 《Protoplasma》1988,142(2-3):164-175
Summary Wound healing in internodal cells of the freshwater algaNitella flexilis (Characeae) was studied in the light and electron microscope. Immediately after punctation of the cell wall a wound plug is formed which stops outflow of cytoplasm. The plug consists of echinate inclusions which are normally located in the central vacuole. A wound wall consisting of pectin and cellulose microfibrils is formed beneath the plug within one to several hours. During that time the wound shows intensive fluorescence when treated with chlorotetracycline indicating transmembrane Ca2+ fluxes. Numerous coated pits and vesicles are found at the plasmalemma. The glycosomes undergo pronounced structural changes. Neither plug nor wound wall formation depend on actin filaments or microtubules as shown by inhibitor experiments with cytochalasin and amiprophos-methyl. The function of the coated vesicles and their interrelationship with other cell organelles is discussed.  相似文献   

18.
A. H. Valster  P. K. Hepler 《Protoplasma》1997,196(3-4):155-166
Summary The distribution of microtubules and actin microfilaments during caffeine-induced inhibition of cell plate formation has been studied in livingTradescantia stamen hair cells. Previous studies have shown that caffeine allows cell plate initiation but prevents its completion, resulting in binucleate cells. In the present study, confocal microscopy of cells microinjected with fluorescent brain tubulin or phalloidin, and cultured in the presence 5 mM caffeine, revealed that the initiation and early lateral expansion phase of the phragmoplast occur normally. However, caffeine completely inhibits the formation of the cytoskeletal torus which occurs in untreated cells during the late stages of cell plate and phragmoplast expansion. Caffeine further causes the disintegration of the incomplete cell plate. The results allow us to distinguish two phases in cell plate and phragmoplast growth: the initiation and early expansion phase, which is not affected by caffeine, and the late lateral expansion phase, which is completely inhibited in the presence of caffeine. Also in this study, the use of a high phalloidin concentration has revealed structural detail about the actin microfilaments involved in cell plate formation: microfilaments are observed that link the expanding edge of the phragmoplast with the cortical division site. In addition, cortical actin patches are observed within the actin depleted zone that might play a role in guidance of phragmoplast and cell plate expansion.  相似文献   

19.
Treatment of tobacco BY-2 cells with 20 microM brefeldin A (BFA), which causes disassembly of the Golgi apparatus (Yasuhara et al. 1995), completely inhibited the formation of the cell plate when the treatment was started before the chromosomes had begun to to condense. In cells in which cell-plate formation was inhibited by BFA, the centrifugal development of the phragmoplast was also inhibited. In such cells, the depolymerization of microtubules in the central region of the phragmoplast did not occur at least for 1 h after the formation of the phragmoplast, while the centrifugal development of the phragmoplast and cell-plate formation were completed in almost all cells not treated with BFA. The inhibition of cell-plate formation seems to inhibit the centrifugal development of the phragmoplast by inhibiting the depolymerization of microtubules in the central region of the phragmoplast, which is required for the supply of free tubulin necessary for the polymerization of microtubules at the outer margins of the phragmoplast.  相似文献   

20.
Summary This report is a light microscopic histochemical and fine structural study of transitional epithelium of the urinary tract of normal and dehydrated rats. Four types of cells were recognized: basal, intermediate, squamous or luminal and bundle cells. The transitional epithelium of normal rat ureter and bladder shows distinct cytoplasmic staining of the squamous cells layer by PAS. The luminal free border stains more intensely with PAS. With the electron microscope, abundant cytoplasmic tonofilaments, free ribosomes and the characteristic thick-walled fusiform and round vesicles are observed, which were in greater number in the squamous cells. Lysosomes are identified with PAS, and Toluidine Blue 0, by their content of acid phosphatase and non-specific carboxylic esterase, and by their ultrastructural appearance. The bundle cell (Hicks, 1965) is characterized by histochemical technics. These cells form about 2.5% of the total cell population of normal transitional epithelium. The bundle cell contains basophilic metachromatic granules, which indicates the presence of a weakly acid mucosubstance. It is suggested that bundle cell granules are released in the intercellular spaces of transitional epithelium and that the mucosubstance may regulate flow of ions and metabolites in the epithelial intercellular channels.Several ultrastructural changes occur in the transitional epithelium of dehydrated rats: marked increase in number of thick-walled vesicles, development of polysomes, relative increase of cytoplasmic filaments and greater number of enlarged lysosomes. Bundle cells decrease in number. These ultrastructural changes promptly regressed by allowing the animal to drink water.It is suggested that the rate of formation of the characteristic vesicles of transitional epithelium, a function of membrane synthesis, may be under the control of the antidiuretic hormone.This investigation was supported in part by the Consejo Nacional de Investigaciones Científicas y Técnicas, Argentina, through a travel grant to Dr. Monis, who would like to thank Dr. E. de Robertis for the use of the electron microscope facilities of the Instituto de Anatomía General y Embriología, Facultad de Medicina, Universidad de Buenos Aires.  相似文献   

设为首页 | 免责声明 | 关于勤云 | 加入收藏

Copyright©北京勤云科技发展有限公司  京ICP备09084417号