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1.
Most bryophytes produce tetrahedral spore tetrads. However, linear spore tetrads have been reported to occur in Conocephalum japonicum (Thunb.) Grolle. In this study, the distribution of microtubules (MTs) during meiosis in C. japonicum was examined to determine the division pattern resulting in a linear tetrad. Spore mother cells in the pre-meiotic stage were cylindrical with randomly distributed cytoplasmic MTs. In the prophase-metaphase transition, spindle MTs replaced cytoplasmic MTs and a barrel-shaped spindle with two flattened poles developed. Cortical MT arrays were not detectable throughout meiosis. Although a phragmoplast appeared between sister nuclei in telophase-I, it disappeared without expanding to the parental cell wall. Metaphase-II spindles oriented parallel to the long axis of the cell and in tandem to each other resulted in a linear arrangement of telophase nuclei. Radial arrays of MTs developed from the nuclear surfaces and three phragmoplasts appeared among the four nuclei to produce four spores. Two phragmoplasts separating the paired sister nuclei appeared prior to the appearance of a phragmoplast between non-sister nuclei. The MT cycle is basically the same as that reported in meiosis of C. conicum, which produces non-linear tetrads. A morphometric study indicated that the difference in the division pattern between C. conicum and C. japonicum is due to a difference in the shape of spore mother cells. The cylindrical shape of sporocytes of C. japonicum restricts the orientation of spindles and phragmoplasts so that the four resultant spores are arranged linearly. Received: 22 April 1998 / Accepted: 15 May 1998  相似文献   

2.
Y.-R. Julie Lee  Hoa M. Giang    Bo Liu 《The Plant cell》2001,13(11):2427-2440
In higher plants, the formation of the cell plate during cytokinesis requires coordinated microtubule (MT) reorganization and vesicle transport in the phragmoplast. MT-based kinesin motors are important players in both processes. To understand the mechanisms underlying plant cytokinesis, we have identified AtPAKRP2 (for Arabidopsis thaliana phragmoplast-associated kinesin-related protein 2). AtPAKRP2 is an ungrouped N-terminal motor kinesin. It first appeared in a punctate pattern among interzonal MTs during late anaphase. When the phragmoplast MT array appeared in a mirror pair, AtPAKRP2 became more concentrated near the division site, and additional signal could be detected elsewhere in the phragmoplast. In contrast, the previously identified AtPAKRP1 protein is associated specifically with bundles of MTs in the phragmoplast at or near their plus ends. Localization of the tobacco homolog(s) of AtPAKRP2 was altered by treatment of brefeldin A in BY-2 cells. We discuss the possibility that AtPAKRP1 plays a role in establishing and/or maintaining the phragmoplast MT array, and AtPAKRP2 may contribute to the transport of Golgi-derived vesicles in the phragmoplast.  相似文献   

3.
Microtubule cytoskeleton organization during microspore mother cell (MMC) meiosis in Allium cepa L. and microsporogenesis in Nicotiana tabacum L. was examined. The MMC microtubules (MTs) were short and well dispersed in the cytoplasm of both taxa. As the MMCs of both species entered metaphase of meiosis I, the MTs constructed a spindle that facilitated the chromosomes to orient in the meridian plane. At anaphase of meiosis I, the spindle MTs differentiated into two types: one MT type became short, pulled the chromosomes toward the two poles, and was designated as centromere MTs; the second type of MT connected the two poles, and was designated as pole MTs. In A. cepa, where successive cytokinesis was observed, pole MTs assumed a tubbish shape. Some new short MTs aggregated in the meridian plane and constricted to form a phragmoplast, which developed into a cell plate, divided the cytoplasm into two parts and produced a dyad. However, in tobacco, a phragmoplast was not generated in anaphase of meiosis I and II and cytokinesis did not occur. The spindle MTs depolymerized and reorganized the radial arrangement of MTs from the nucleate surface to the periplasm during anaphase. Following telophase of meiosis II, the cytoplasm produced centripetal furrows, which met in the center of the cell and divided it into four parts, serving as a form of cytokinesis. In this process, MTs appeared to bear no relationship to cytokinesis.  相似文献   

4.
Ho CM  Hotta T  Guo F  Roberson RW  Lee YR  Liu B 《The Plant cell》2011,23(8):2909-2923
In plant cells, microtubules (MTs) in the cytokinetic apparatus phragmoplast exhibit an antiparallel array and transport Golgi-derived vesicles toward MT plus ends located at or near the division site. By transmission electron microscopy, we observed that certain antiparallel phragmoplast MTs overlapped and were bridged by electron-dense materials in Arabidopsis thaliana. Robust MT polymerization, reported by fluorescently tagged End Binding1c (EB1c), took place in the phragmoplast midline. The engagement of antiparallel MTs in the central spindle and phragmoplast was largely abolished in mutant cells lacking the MT-associated protein, MAP65-3. We found that endogenous MAP65-3 was selectively detected on the middle segments of the central spindle MTs at late anaphase. When MTs exhibited a bipolar appearance with their plus ends placed in the middle, MAP65-3 exclusively decorated the phragmoplast midline. A bacterially expressed MAP65-3 protein was able to establish the interdigitation of MTs in vitro. MAP65-3 interacted with antiparallel microtubules before motor Kinesin-12 did during the establishment of the phragmoplast MT array. Thus, MAP65-3 selectively cross-linked interdigitating MTs (IMTs) to allow antiparallel MTs to be closely engaged in the phragmoplast. Although the presence of IMTs was not essential for vesicle trafficking, they were required for the phragmoplast-specific motors Kinesin-12 and Phragmoplast-Associated Kinesin-Related Protein2 to interact with MT plus ends. In conclusion, we suggest that the phragmoplast contains IMTs and highly dynamic noninterdigitating MTs, which work in concert to bring about cytokinesis in plant cells.  相似文献   

5.
Interaction between actin filaments (AFs) and microtubules (MTs) has been reported in various plant cells, and the presence of a factor(s) connecting these two cytoskeletal networks has been suggested, but its molecular entity has not been elucidated yet. We obtained a fraction containing MT-binding polypeptides, which induced bundling of AFs and of MTs. A 190 kDa polypeptide which associated with AFs was selectively isolated from the fraction. This polypeptide was thought to have an ability to bind to both AFs and MTs. We raised a monoclonal antibody against the 190 kDa polypeptide. Immunostaining demonstrated the association of the 190 kDa polypeptide with AF bundles and with MT bundles formed in vitro. Immunocytochemical studies throughout the cell cycle revealed that the 190 kDa polypeptide was localized in the nucleus before nuclear envelope breakdown, and in the spindle and the phragmoplast during cell division. After the re-formation of the nuclear envelope, the 190 kDa polypeptide was sequestered to the daughter nuclei. Using the antibody, we succeeded in cloning a cDNA encoding the 190 kDa polypeptide.  相似文献   

6.
The microtubule (MT)‐associated putative kinase RUNKEL (RUK) is an important component of the phragmoplast machinery involved in cell plate formation in Arabidopsis somatic cytokinesis. Since loss‐of‐function ruk mutants display seedling lethality, it was previously not known whether RUK functions in mature sporophytes or during gametophyte development. In this study we utilized RUK proteins that lack the N‐terminal kinase domain to further examine biological processes related to RUK function. Truncated RUK proteins when expressed in wild‐type Arabidopsis plants cause cellularization defects not only in seedlings and adult tissues but also during male meiocyte development, resulting in abnormal pollen and reduced fertility. Ultrastructural analysis of male tetrads revealed irregular and incomplete or absent intersporal cell walls, caused by disorganized radial MT arrays. Moreover, in ruk mutants endosperm cellularization defects were also caused by disorganized radial MT arrays. Intriguingly, in seedlings expressing truncated RUK proteins, the kinesin HINKEL, which is required for the activation of a mitogen‐activated protein kinase signaling pathway regulating phragmoplast expansion, was mislocalized. Together, these observations support a common role for RUK in both phragmoplast‐based cytokinesis in somatic cells and syncytial cytokinesis in reproductive cells.  相似文献   

7.
Summary The patterns of F-actin in relation to microtubule (Mt) organization in dividing root tip cells ofAdiantum capillus veneris were studied with rhodamine-phalloidin (RP) labelling and tubulin immunofluorescence. Interphase cells display a well organized network of cortical/subcortical, endoplasmic and perinuclear actin filaments (AFs), not particularly related to the interphase Mt arrays. The cortical AFs seem to persist during the cell cycle while the large subcortical AF bundles disappear by preprophase/prophase and reappear after cytokinesis is completed. In some but not all of the preprophase cells the cortical AFs tend to form a band (AF-PPB) coincident with the preprophase band of Mts (Mt-PPB). In metaphase and anaphase cells AFs are localized in the cell cortex, around the spindle and inside it coincidently with kinetochore Mt bundles. During cytokinesis AFs are consistently found in the phragmoplast. In oryzalin treated cells neither Mt-PPBs, spindles and phragmoplasts exist, nor such F-actin structures can be observed. In cells recovering from oryzalin, AF-PPBs, AF kinetochore bundles and AF phragmoplasts reform. They show the same pattern with the reinstating respective Mt arrays. In contrast, in cells treated with cytochalasin B (CB), AFs disappear but all categories of Mt arrays form normally.These observations show that F-actin organization in root tip cells ofA. capillus veneris differs from that of root tip cells of flowering plants examined so far. In addition, Mts seem to be crucial for F-actin organization as far as it concerns the PPB, the mitotic spindle, and the phragmoplast.Abbreviations AF actin filament - CB cytochalasin B - MBS m-male-imidobenzoyl-N-hydroxysuccinimide ester - MSB microtubule stabilizing buffer - Mt microtubule - PBS phosphate buffered saline - PPB preprophase band - RP rhodamine phalloidin  相似文献   

8.
Plant cytokinesis is brought about by the phragmoplast, which contains an antiparallel microtubule (MT) array. The MT-associated protein MAP65-3 acts as an MT-bundling factor that specifically cross-links antiparallel MTs near their plus ends. MAP65 family proteins contain an N-terminal dimerization domain and C-terminal MT interaction domain. Compared with other MAP65 isoforms, MAP65-3 contains an extended C terminus. A MT binding site was discovered in the region between amino acids 496 and 588 and found to be essential for the organization of phragmoplast MTs. The frequent cytokinetic failure caused by loss of MAP65-3 was not rescued by ectopic expression of MAP65-1 under the control of the MAP65-3 promoter, indicating nonoverlapping functions between the two isoforms. In the presence of MAP65-3, however, ectopic MAP65-1 appeared in the phragmoplast midline. We show that MAP65-1 could acquire the function of MAP65-3 when the C terminus of MAP65-3, which contains the MT binding site, was grafted to it. Our results also show that MAP65-1 and MAP65-3 may share redundant functions in MT stabilization. Such a stabilization effect was likely brought about by MT binding and bundling. We conclude that MAP65-3 contains a distinct C-terminal MT binding site with a specific role in cross-linking antiparallel MTs toward their plus ends in the phragmoplast.  相似文献   

9.
E. Schnepf 《Protoplasma》1984,120(1-2):100-112
Summary The microtubules (MTs) of developingSphagnum leaflets rearrange from the interphase array into the preprophase band without obvious participation of definite initiation sites. At late prophase, additional MTs appear along the nuclear envelope, with the same orientation as in the peripherally situated preprophase band. Spindle formation begins along the nuclear envelope; spindle MTs run perpendicular to preprophase band MTs and converge in several focus points with indistinct polar bodies. After cytokinesis, most spindle and phragmoplast MTs disappear. Interphase MTs reappear at first along the central part of the new cell wall, in a region which was occupied before by the initial phragmoplast; their orientation is perpendicular to the phragmoplast MTs. Also here, distinct MT organizing centers could not be observed. Then the MT spread out over the cell periphery. The observations suggest that diffuse MT organizing zones rather than definite MT organizing centers play a role in the rearrangement of the different MT arrays during the cell cycle.  相似文献   

10.
In eukaryotic cells, the actin and microtubule (MT) cytoskeletal networks are dynamic structures that organize intracellular processes and facilitate their rapid reorganization. In plant cells, actin filaments (AFs) and MTs are essential for cell growth and morphogenesis. However, dynamic interactions between these two essential components in live cells have not been explored. Here, we use spinning-disc confocal microscopy to dissect interaction and cooperation between cortical AFs and MTs in Arabidopsis thaliana, utilizing fluorescent reporter constructs for both components. Quantitative analyses revealed altered AF dynamics associated with the positions and orientations of cortical MTs. Reorganization and reassembly of the AF array was dependent on the MTs following drug-induced depolymerization, whereby short AFs initially appeared colocalized with MTs, and displayed motility along MTs. We also observed that light-induced reorganization of MTs occurred in concert with changes in AF behavior. Our results indicate dynamic interaction between the cortical actin and MT cytoskeletons in interphase plant cells.  相似文献   

11.
Cytoskeletal rearrangements were studied during meiotic telophase in a number of monocotyledonous plant species. Wild type and abnormal meiosis (in wide cereal hybrids, meiotic mutants and allolines) was analyzed. It was found that central spindle fibers that move centrifugally, along with newly-formed MTs, are the basis of phragmoplast formation and function in PMCs of monocotyledonous plant species with successive cytokinesis stages. A model for centrifugal movement of the meiotic phragmoplast is proposed; this model is a modification of the corresponding process during B-anaphase.  相似文献   

12.
The unique cytokinetic apparatus of higher plant cells comprises two cytoskeletal systems: a predictive preprophase band of microtubules (MTs), which defines the future division site, and the phragmoplast, which mediates crosswall formation after mitosis. We review features of plant cell division in an evolutionary context and from the viewpoint that the cell is a domain of cytoplasm (cytoplast) organized around the nucleus by a cytoskeleton consisting of a single "tensegral" unit. The term "tensegrity" is a contraction of "tensional integrity" and the concept proposes that the whole cell is organized by an integrated cytoskeleton of tension elements (e.g., actin fibers) extended over compression-resistant elements (e.g., MTs).During cell division, a primary role of the spindle is seen as generating two cytoplasts from one with separation of chromosomes a later, derived function. The telophase spindle separates the newly forming cytoplasts and the overlap between half spindles (the shared edge of two new domains) dictates the position at which cytokinesis occurs. Wall MTs of higher plant cells, like the MT cytoskeleton in animal and protistan cells, spatially define the interphase cytoplast. Redeployment of actin and MTs into the preprophase band (PPB) is the overt signal that the boundary between two nascent cytoplasts has been delineated. The "actin-depleted zone" that marks the site of the PPB throughout mitosis may be a more persistent manifestation of this delineation of two domains of cortical actin. The growth of the phragmoplast is controlled by these domains, not just by the spindle. These domains play a major role in controlling the path of phragmoplast expansion. Primitive land plants show different morphological changes that reveal that the plane of division, with or without the PPB, has been determined well in advance of mitosis.The green alga Spirogyra suggests how the phragmoplast system might have evolved: cytokinesis starts with cleavage and then actin-related determinants stimulate and positionally control cell-plate formation in a phragmoplast arising from interzonal MTs from the spindle. Actin in the PPB of higher plants may be assembling into a potential furrow, imprinting a cleavage site whose persistent determinants (perhaps actin) align the outgrowing edge of the phragmoplast, as in Spirogyra. Cytochalasin spatially disrupts polarized mitosis and positioning of the phragmoplast. Thus, the tensegral interaction of actin with MTs (at the spindle pole and in the phragmoplast) is critical to morphogenesis, just as they seem to be during division of animal cells. In advanced green plants, intercalary expansion driven by turgor is controlled by MTs, which in conjunction with actin, may act as stress detectors, thereby affecting the plane of division (a response clearly evident after wounding of tissue). The PPB might be one manifestation of this strain detection apparatus.  相似文献   

13.
The effects of actin filaments (AFs) and microtubules (MTs) on quasi-in situ tensile properties and intracellular force balance were studied in cultured rat aortic smooth muscle cells (SMCs). A SMC cultured on substrates was held using a pair of micropipettes, gradually detached from the substrate while maintaining in situ cell shape and cytoskeletal integrity, and then stretched up to approximately 15% and unloaded three times at the rate of 1 mum every 5 s. Cell stiffness was approximately 20 nN per percent strain in the untreated case and decreased by approximately 65% and approximately 30% following AF and MT disruption, respectively. MT augmentation did not affect cell stiffness significantly. The roles of AFs and MTs in resisting cell stretching and shortening were assessed using the area retraction of the cell upon noninvasive detachment from thermoresponsive gelatin-coated dishes. The retraction was approximately 40% in untreated cells, while in AF-disrupted cells it was <20%. The retraction increased by approximately 50% and decreased by approximately 30% following MT disruption and augmentation, respectively, suggesting that MTs resist intercellular tension generated by AFs. Three-dimensional measurements of cell morphology using confocal microscopy revealed that the cell volume remained unchanged following drug treatment. A concomitant increase in cell height and decrease in cell area was observed following AF disruption and MT augmentation. In contrast, MT disruption significantly reduced the cell height. These results indicate that both AFs and MTs play crucial roles in maintaining whole cell mechanical properties of SMCs, and that while AFs act as an internal tension generator, MTs act as a tension reducer, and these contribute to intracellular force balance three dimensionally.  相似文献   

14.
BACKGROUND: Morphogenesis on a cellular level includes processes in which cytoskeleton and cell wall expansion are strongly involved. In brown algal zygotes, microtubules (MTs) and actin filaments (AFs) participate in polarity axis fixation, cell division and tip growth. Brown algal vegetative cells lack a cortical MT cytoskeleton, and are characterized by centriole-bearing centrosomes, which function as microtubule organizing centres. SCOPE: Extensive electron microscope and immunofluorescence studies of MT organization in different types of brown algal cells have shown that MTs constitute a major cytoskeletal component, indispensable for cell morphogenesis. Apart from participating in mitosis and cytokinesis, they are also involved in the expression and maintenance of polarity of particular cell types. Disruption of MTs after Nocodazole treatment inhibits cell growth, causing bulging and/or bending of apical cells, thickening of the tip cell wall, and affecting the nuclear positioning. Staining of F-actin using Rhodamine-Phalloidin, revealed a rich network consisting of perinuclear, endoplasmic and cortical AFs. AFs participate in mitosis by the organization of an F-actin spindle and in cytokinesis by an F-actin disc. They are also involved in the maintenance of polarity of apical cells, as well as in lateral branch initiation. The cortical system of AFs was found related to the orientation of cellulose microfibrils (MFs), and therefore to cell wall morphogenesis. This is expressed by the coincidence in the orientation between cortical AFs and the depositing MFs. Treatment with cytochalasin B inhibits mitosis and cytokinesis, as well as tip growth of apical cells, and causes abnormal deposition of MFs. CONCLUSIONS: Both the cytoskeletal elements studied so far, i.e. MTs and AFs are implicated in brown algal cell morphogenesis, expressed in their relationship with cell wall morphogenesis, polarization, spindle organization and cytokinetic mechanism. The novelty is the role of AFs and their possible co-operation with MTs.  相似文献   

15.
Kinesins are versatile nano‐machines that utilize variable non‐motor domains to tune specific motor microtubule encounters. During plant cytokinesis, the kinesin‐12 orthologs, PHRAGMOPLAST ORIENTING KINESIN (POK)1 and POK2, are essential for rapid centrifugal expansion of the cytokinetic apparatus, the phragmoplast, toward a pre‐selected cell plate fusion site at the cell cortex. Here, we report on the spatio‐temporal localization pattern of POK2, mediated by distinct protein domains. Functional dissection of POK2 domains revealed the association of POK2 with the site of the future cell division plane and with the phragmoplast during cytokinesis. Accumulation of POK2 at the phragmoplast midzone depends on its functional POK2 motor domain and is fine‐tuned by its carboxy‐terminal region that also directs POK2 to the division site. Furthermore, POK2 likely stabilizes the phragmoplast midzone via interaction with the conserved microtubule‐associated protein MAP65‐3/PLEIADE, a well‐established microtubule cross‐linker. Collectively, our results suggest that dual localized POK2 plays multiple roles during plant cell division.  相似文献   

16.
Soon-Ok Cho  Susan M. Wick 《Protoplasma》1990,157(1-3):154-164
Summary The dynamics of actin distribution during stomatal complex formation in leaves of winter rye was examined by means of immunofluorescence microscopy of epidermal sheets. This method results in actin localization patterns that are the same as those seen with rhodamine-phalloidin staining, but are more stable. During stomatal development MFs are extensively rearranged, and most of the time the orientation or placement of MFs is distinctly different from that of MTs, the exception being co-localization of MTs and MFs in phragmoplasts. Although MFs show an orientation similar to that of MTs in interphase guard mother cells, no banding of MFs into anything resembling the interphase MT band is observed. From prophase to telophase, a distinct, dense concentration of MFs is found in subsidiary cell mother cells (SMCs) between the nucleus and the region of the cell cortex facing the guard mother cell. Cytochalasin B treatment causes incorrect positioning of the SMC nucleus/daughter nuclei and abarrent placement and orientation of the new cell wall that forms the boundary of the subsidiary cell at cytokinesis. These results suggest that MFs are involved in maintaining the SMC nucleus in its correct position and the SMC spindle in the correct orientation relative to the division site previously delineated by the preprophase band. Because these MFs thus appear to assure that the SMC phragmoplast begins to form in the correct orientation near the division site to which it needs to grow, we suggest that MFs are involved in control of correct placement and orientation of the new cell wall of the subsidiary cell.Abbreviations CB cytochalasin B - DIC differential interference contrast - DMSO dimethylsulfoxide - MBS m-maleimidobenzoyl-N-hydroxylsuccinimide ester - MF microfilament - MT microtubule - PBS phosphate buffered saline - SMC subsidiary cell mother cell Dedicated to the memory of Professor Oswald Kiermayer  相似文献   

17.
Summary The reorganization of the actin and microtubule (MT) cytoskeleton was immunocytochemically visualized by confocal laser scanning microscopy throughout the photomorphogenetic differentiation of tip-growing characean protonemata into multicellular green thalli. After irradiating dark-grown protonemata with blue or white light, decreasing rates of gravitropic tip-growth were accompanied by a series of events leading to the first cell division: the nucleus migrated towards the tip; MTs and plastids invaded the apical cytoplasm; the polar zonation of cytoplasmic organelles and the prominent actin patch at the cell tip disappeared and the tip-focused actin microfilaments (MFs) were reorganized into a homogeneous network. During prometaphase and metaphase, extranuclear spindle microtubules formed between the two spindle poles. Cytoplasmic MTs associated with the apical spindle pole decreased in number but did not disappear completely during mitosis. The basal cortical MTs represent a discrete MT population that is independent from the basal spindle poles and did not redistribute during mitosis and cytokinesis. Preprophase MT bands were never detected but cytokinesis was characterized by higher-plant-like phragmoplast MT arrays. Cytoplasmic actin MFs persisted as a dense network in the apical cytoplasm throughout the first cell division. They were not found in close contact with spindle MTs, but actin MFs were clearly coaligned along the MTs of the early phragmoplast. The later belt-like phragmoplast was completely depleted of MFs close to the time of cell plate fusion except for a few actin MF bundles that extended to the margin of the growing cell plate. The cell plate itself and young anticlinal cell walls showed strong actin immunofluorescence. After several anticlinal cell divisions, basal cells of the multicellular protonema produced nodal cell complexes by multiple periclinal divisions. The apical-dome cell of the new shoot which originated from a nodal cell becomes the meristem initial that regularly divides to produce a segment cell. The segment cell subsequently divides to produce a single file of alternating internodal cells and multicellular nodes which together form the complexly organized characean thallus. The actin and MT distribution of nodal cells resembles that of higherplant meristem cells, whereas the internodal cells exhibit a highly specialized cortical system of MTs and streaming-generating actin bundles, typical of highly vacuolated plant cells. The transformation from the asymmetric mitotic spindle of the polarized tip-growing protonema cell to the symmetric, higher-plant-like spindle of nodal thallus cells recapitulates the evolutionary steps from the more primitive organisms to higher plants.Abbreviations FITC fluorescein isothiocyanate - MF microfilament - MT microtubule - MSB microtubule-stabilizing buffer - PBS phosphate-buffered saline  相似文献   

18.
C. J. Hogan 《Protoplasma》1987,138(2-3):126-136
Summary A monoclonal antibody to higher plant tubulin was used to trace microtubule (MT) structures by immunofluorescence throughout mitosis and meiosis in two angiosperms,Lycopersicon esculentum andOrnithogalum virens. Root tip cells showed stage specific MT patterns typical of higher plant cells. These included parallel cortical interphase arrays oriented perpendicular to the long axis of the cell, preprophase band MTs in late interphase through prophase, barrelshaped spindles, and finally phragmoplasts. Pollen mother cell divisions exhibited randomly oriented cortical MT arrays in prophase I, pointed spindles during karyokinesis, and elongate phragmoplasts. A preprophase band was not observed in either meiotic division. MT initiation sites were seen as broad zones associated with the nuclear envelope.  相似文献   

19.
Kinesin-like calmodulin-binding protein (KCBP), a novel kinesin-like protein from plants, is unique among kinesins and kinesin-like proteins in having a calmodulin-binding domain adjacent to its motor domain. KCBP localizes to mitotic microtubule (MT) arrays including the preprophase band, the spindle apparatus, and the phragmoplast, suggesting a role for KCBP in establishing these MT arrays by bundling MTs. To determine if KCBP bundles MTs, we expressed C-terminal motor and N-terminal tail domains of KCBP, and used the purified proteins in MT bundling assays. The 1.5 C protein with the motor and calmodulin-binding domains induced MT bundling. The 1.5 C-induced bundles were dissociated in the presence of Ca(2+)/calmodulin. Similar results were obtained with a 1.4 C protein, which lacks much of the coiled-coil region present in 1.5 C protein and does not form dimers. The N-terminal tail of KCBP, which contains an ATP-independent MT binding site, is also capable of bundling MTs. These results, together with the KCBP localization data, suggest the involvement of KCBP in establishing mitotic MT arrays during different stages of cell division and that Ca(2+)/calmodulin regulates the formation of these MT arrays.  相似文献   

20.
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   

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