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1.
Chlamydomonas eugametos gametes can sexually agglutinate via their flagellar surfaces whereas vegetative cells cannot. Therefore, flagellar glycoproteins, present in gamete cells but absent from vegetative cells, were investigated as prospective mt -agglutination factors. They were identified as periodic acid Schiff (PAS) stained bands separated in sodium dodecyl sulphate-polyacrylamide electrophoresis gels. Gamete-specific bands were determined by comparison with equivalent gels of vegetative flagella and by immunological techniques using antisera raised against isolated mt - gamete flagella. Four high molecular weight flagellar glycoproteins proved to be gamete specific (PAS-1.2, PAS-1.3, PAS-3 and PAS-4). They were extracted from flagella by 3 M guanidine thiocyanate, separated in a column of Sepharose 2B, and tested for in vitro agglutination activity on mt + gametes. A single peak of activity was found to be correlated with the presence of the PAS-1.2 band. It is shown that mt - agglutination activity is related to the concentration of this glycoprotein in flagellar membranes.Abbreviations SDS sodium dodecyl sulphate - PAS periodic acid Schiff - GTC guanidine thiocyanate - mt -/+ mating type plus or minus  相似文献   

2.
The flagellar glycoproteins exposed on Chlamydomonas eugametos gametes were labeled by means of lactoperoxidase, diiodosulfanilic acid and chloramine T, and characterised in SDS-electrophoresis gels. The medium from gamete cultures contains particles (isoagglutinins) that agglutinate gametes of the opposite mating type. When crude preparations of these particles were subjected to isopycnic centrifugation in a caesium chloride gradient, two bands of particles were found. The lighter, active band consisted of membrane vesicles. The denser, inactive band consisted of cell wall material. The active band had the same glycoprotein composition as membrane vesicles artificially made from isolated flagella. Preparations of glagella were also separated on a caesium chloride cushion into pure flagella and cell wall material. The flagella, but not the cell wall material, isoagglutinated opposite gametes. Again the glycoprotein composition of pure flagella was similar to that of pure isoagglutinin vesicles. No difference was detected between the protein and glycoprotein compositions of flagella and isoagglutinins from both mating types.Abbreviations LPO lactoperoxidase - PB phosphate buffer - DISA diazotized 125I-iodo-sulfanilic acid - SDS sodium dodecyl sulphate - CBD coomassie Brilliant Blue - PAS periodic acid Schiff  相似文献   

3.
When Chlamydomonas reinhardtii gametes of opposite mating type are mixed together, they adhere by a flagella-mediated agglutination that triggers three rapid mating responses: flagellar tip activation, cell wall loss, and mating structure activation accompanied by actin polymerization. Here we show that a transient 10-fold elevation of intracellular cAMP levels is also triggered by sexual agglutination. We further show that gametes of a single mating type can be induced to undergo all three mating responses when presented with exogenous dibutyryl-cAMP (db-cAMP). These events are also induced by cyclic nucleotide phosphodiesterase inhibitors, which elevate endogenous cAMP levels and act synergistically with db-cAMP. Non-agglutinating mutants of opposite mating type will fuse efficiently in the presence of db-cAMP. No activation of mating events is induced by calcium plus ionophores, 8-bromo-cGMP, dibutyryl-cGMP, nigericin at alkaline pH, phorbol esters, or forskolin. H-8, an inhibitor of cyclic nucleotide-dependent protein kinase, inhibits mating events in agglutinating cells and antagonizes the effects of cAMP on non-agglutinating cells. Adenylate cyclase activity was detected in both the gamete cell body and flagella, with the highest specific activity displayed in flagellar membrane fractions. The flagellar membrane adenylate cyclase is preferentially stimulated by Mn++, unresponsive to NaF, GTP, GTP gamma S, AlF4-, and forskolin, and is inhibited by trifluoperazine. Cyclic nucleotide phosphodiesterase activity is also present in flagella. Our observations indicate that cAMP is a sufficient initial signal for all of the known mating reaction events in C. reinhardtii, and suggest that the flagellar cyclase and/or phosphodiesterase may be important loci of control for the agglutination-stimulated production of this signal.  相似文献   

4.
A new study of sexual agglutination between Chlamydomonas eugametos gametes and between vis-à-vis pairs has been made using techniques that allow one to distinguish between the flagella or cell bodies of individual mating types (mt+ or mt-). It is shown that before mt+ and mt- gametes fuse in pairs, their flagella, which adhere over their whole length, are maintained in a particular conformation around the mt- cell body. In clumps of agglutinating gametes the cells are asymmetrically distributed with the mt+ gametes constituting the outer surface of the clumps with the mt- gametes on the inside. The flagella are then all directed towards the middle of the clump. This orientation of the flagella is maintained for approx. 8 min after cell fusion before the vis-à-vis pair becomes motile. At this stage, all the flagellar tips are activated. The original mt+ flagellar tips then deactivate and swimming is resumed. The original mt- flagella remain immotile and activated after cell fusion and eventually shorten by a third, but only 30 min or more after fusion. Motile vis-à-vis pairs eventually settle to the substrate when the gamete bodies fuse completely to form a zygote. Settling vis-à-vis pairs are attracted to those that have already settled, to glutaraldehyde-fixed pairs and to flagella isolated from mt- gametes. They are not chemotactically attracted, rather they are weakly agglutinated. Living vis-à-vis pairs can be shown to aggregate in rows with the cell bodies lying side by side. It is argued that the flagellar agglutination sites involved in gamete recognition are also involved in vis-à-vis pair aggregationAbbreviations mt+/- mating type plus or minus - FTA flagellar tip activation  相似文献   

5.
In the green alga Chlamydomonas reinhardtii flagellar adhesion between gametes of opposite mating types leads to rapid cellular changes, events collectively termed gamete activation, that prepare the gametes for cell-cell fusion. As is true for gametes of most organisms, the cellular and molecular mechanisms that underlie gamete activation are poorly understood. Here we report on the regulated movement of a newly identified protein kinase, Chlamydomonas aurora/Ipl1p-like protein kinase (CALK), from the cell body to the flagella during gamete activation. CALK encodes a protein of 769 amino acids and is the newest member of the aurora/Ipl1p protein kinase family. Immunoblotting with an anti-CALK antibody showed that CALK was present as a 78/80-kDa doublet in vegetative cells and unactivated gametes of both mating types and was localized primarily in cell bodies. In cells undergoing fertilization, the 78-kDa CALK was rapidly targeted to the flagella, and within 5 min after mixing gametes of opposite mating types, the level of CALK in the flagella began to approach levels normally found in the cell body. Protein synthesis was not required for targeting, indicating that the translocated CALK and the cellular molecules required for its movement are present in unactivated gametes. CALK was also translocated to the flagella during flagellar adhesion of nonfusing mutant gametes, demonstrating that cell fusion was not required for movement. Finally, the requirement for flagellar adhesion could be bypassed; incubation of cells of a single mating type in dibutyryl cAMP led to CALK translocation to flagella in gametes but not vegetative cells. These experiments document a new event in gamete activation in Chlamydomonas and reveal the existence of a mechanism for regulated translocation of molecules into an intact flagellum.  相似文献   

6.
Gametes ofChlamydomonas eugametos produce membrane vesicles, called isoagglutinins, which are shed into the culture fluid. It is assumed that they originate from the flagellar membrane for, like flagella, they can bind to the flagellar surface of gametes of the opposite mating type (mt). The composition ofmt - isoagglutinin was investigated with respect to this agglutinability. When the agglutination factor present on the surface ofmt - isoagglutinins (PAS-1.2) was removed, together with other membrane bound glycoproteins, the membrane vesicles were rendered inactive. They could be reactivated however by incubation with the extracted glycoproteins in a time-and concentration-dependent manner. The agglutination factor proved to be necessary yet sufficient in itself for the reactivation process to occur. Experiments with CsCl density gradients showed that the agglutination factor truly bound to the vesicles during reactivation. Inactivated vesicles derived frommt + gametes could be reactivated to gainmt - properties. Reactivation was inhibited by prior treatment with trypsin. The results indicate that the agglutination factor inmt - isoagglutinins is an extrinsic membrane protein bound to an intrinsic proteinaceous receptor.Abbreviations GTC guanidine thiocyanate - mt +/- mating type plus or minus - PAS periodic acid Schiff  相似文献   

7.
The mating activity of mating-type plus gametes of Chlamydomonas eugametos depends on light. Cells lost their ability to agglutinate with mating-type minus gametes after a dark period of 30 min. They regained their agglutinability after 10 min exposure to light. Other mating reactions, such as tipping and flagellar tip activation, were not dependent upon light. Since cycloheximide and tunicamycin did not affect the light-induced activation of flagellar agglutinability, no protein synthesis or glycosylation is involved in this process. Equal amounts of biologically active agglutination factor could be extracted from cells placed either in light or in darkness. A minor portion of the active material was found to be located on the flagellar surface of illuminated cells. No active material was found on the flagellar surface of dark-exposed cells, whereas their cell bodies contained the same amount of active material as the cell bodies of illuminated cells. Since a light-induced flow of agglutination factors from the cell body to the flagella could not be detected and dark-exposed cells could be slightly activated by amputation or fixation by glutaraldehyde, we propose that light affects flagellar agglutinability by an in-situ modification of the agglutination factor on the flagella. When mt + and mt - strains were crossed and the progeny examined for light-sensitivity, it was apparent that this phenomenon is not mating type-linked.Abbreviations and symbols FTA flagellar tip activation - mt +/- mating type plus or minus - WGA wheat-germ agglutinin  相似文献   

8.
When Chlamydomonas gametes of opposite mating type are mixed together, flagellar adhesion through sex-specific adhesion molecules triggers a transient elevation of intracellular cAMP, leading to gamete activation in preparation for cell-cell fusion and zygote formation. Here, we have identified a protein-tyrosine kinase (PTK) activity that is stimulated by flagellar adhesion. We determined that the protein-tyrosine kinase inhibitor genistein inhibited fertilization, and that fertilization was rescued by dibutyryl cAMP, indicating that the genistein-sensitive step was upstream of the increase in cAMP. Incubation with ATP of flagella isolated from non-adhering and adhering gametes followed by SDS-PAGE and immunoblotting with anti-phosphotyrosine antibodies showed that adhesion activated a flagellar PTK that phosphorylated a 105-kDa flagellar protein. Assays using an exogenous protein-tyrosine kinase substrate confirmed that the activated PTK could be detected only in flagella isolated from adhering gametes. Our results indicate that stimulation of the PTK is a very early event during fertilization. Activation of the PTK was blocked when gametes underwent flagellar adhesion in the presence of the protein kinase inhibitor staurosporine, but not in the presence of the cyclic nucleotide-dependent protein kinase inhibitor, H8, which (unlike staurosporine) does not block the increases in cAMP. In addition, incubation of gametes of a single mating type in dibutyryl cAMP failed to activate the PTK. Finally, flagella adhesion between plus and minus fla10-1 gametes, which have a temperature-sensitive lesion in the microtubule motor protein kinesin-II, failed to activate the PTK at elevated temperatures. Our results show that kinesin-II is essential for coupling flagellar adhesion to activation of a flagellar PTK and cAMP generation during fertilization in Chlamydomonas.  相似文献   

9.
10.
Evidence is presented which supports the concept of a functional membrane barrier in the transition zone at the base of each flagellum of Chlamydomonas eugametos gametes. This makes it unlikely that agglutination factors present on the surface of the cell body can diffuse or be transported to the flagellar membrane. The evidence is as follows: 1) The glycoprotein composition of the flagellar membrane is very different to that of the cell-body plasma membrane. 2) The flagella of gametes treated with cycloheximide, tunicamycin or , -dipyridyl become non-agglutinable but the source of agglutination factors on the cell body is not affected. 3) Even under natural conditions when the flagella are non-agglutinable, for example in vis-à-vis pairs or in appropriate cell strains that are non-agglutinable in the dark, the cell bodies maintain the normal complement of active agglutinins. 4) When flagella of living cells are labeled with antibodies bound to fluorescein, the label does not diffuse onto the cell-body surface. 5) When gametes fuse to form vis-à-vis pairs, the original mating-type-specific antigenicity of each cell body is slowly lost (probably due to the antigens diffusing over both cell bodies), while the specific antigenicity of the flagellar surface is maintained. Even when the flagella of vis-à-vis pairs are regenerated from cell bodies with mixed antigenicity, the antigenicity of the flagella remains matingtype-specific. 6) Evidence is presented for the existence of a pool of agglutination factors within the cell bodies but not on the outer surface of the cells.Abbreviations and symbols CHI cycloheximide - GTC guaniline thiocyanate - mt +/mt - mating type plus or minus - PAS Periodic-acid-Schiff reagent - SDS sodium dodecyl sulphate  相似文献   

11.
Cell fusion between mating type plus (mt+) and minus (mt-) gametes of Chlamydomonas reinhardtii is analyzed structurally and subjected to experimental manipulation. Cell wall lysis, a necessary prelude to fusion, is shown to require flagellar agglutination between competent gametes; glutaraldehyde-fixed gametes ("corpses") of one mating type will elicit both agglutination and cell wall lysis in the opposite mating type, whereas nonagglutinating impotent (imp) mutant strains are without effect. The fusion process is mediated by a narrow fertilization tubule which extends from the mt+ gamete and establishes contact with the mt- gamete. Formation of the tubule requires the "activation" of a specialized mating structure associated with the ml+ cell membrane; activation causes microfilaments to polymerize from the mating structure into the growing fertilization tubule. Mating structure activation is shown to depend on gametic flagellar agglutination; isoagglutination mediated by the lectin concanavalin A has no effect. Gametes carrying the imp-l mt+ mutation are able to agglutinate but not fuse with mt- cells; the imp-l gametes are shown to have structurally defective mating structures that do not generate microfilaments in response to gametic agglutination.  相似文献   

12.
Membrane differentiations at sites specialized for cell fusion   总被引:13,自引:12,他引:1       下载免费PDF全文
Fusion of plasma membranes between Chlamydomonas reinhardtii gametes has been studied by freeze-fracture electron microscopy of unfixed cells. The putative site of cell fusion developes during gametic differentiation and is recognized in thin sections of unmated gametes as a plaque of dense material subjacent to a sector of the anterior plasma membrane (Goodenough, U.W., and R.L. Weiss. 1975.J. Cell Biol. 67:623-637). The overlying membrane proves to be readily recognized in replicas of unmated gametes as a circular region roughly 500 nm in diameter which is relatively free of "regular" plasma membrane particles on both the P and E fracture faces. The morphology of this region is different for mating-type plus (mt+) and mt- gametes: the few particles present in the center of the mt+ region are distributed asymmetrically and restricted to the P face, while the few particles present in the center of the mt- region are distributed symmetrically in the E face. Each gamete type can be activated for cell fusion by presenting to it isolated flagella of opposite mt. The activated mt+ gamete generates large expanses of particle-cleared membrane as it forms a long fertilization tubule from the mating structure region. In the activated mt- gamete, the E face of the mating structure region is transformed into a central dome of densely clustered particles surrounded by a particle-cleared zone. When mt+ and mt- gametes are mixed together, flagellar agglutination triggeeeds to fuse with an activated mt- region. The fusion lip is seen to develop within the particle-dense central dome. We conclude that these mt- particles play an active role in membrane fusion.  相似文献   

13.
Sexual reproduction inEudorina elegans Ehr. was studied in detail in laboratory cultures, with particular regard to conjugation between gametes and gone colony formation. Male and female gametes fused after being induced by changing the medium. The anterior end, including the flagellar base, of the male gamete entered the anterior region of the female gamete. Fusion of the two protoplasts proceeded laterally and posteriorly. The male gamete bore a slender cytoplasmic protrusion at the base of the flagella. This structure has not been previously described in the male gamete ofEudorina, and may participate in plasmogamy. A biflagellate gone cell swam from the germinating zygote and secreted a gelatinous envelope. It then divided to form a gone colony within the gelatious envelope, which moved during colony formation by means of the two flagella which were retained intact from the original gone cell.  相似文献   

14.
Behaviors of the flagellar apparatuses (flagella, basal bodies, microtubular roots, etc.), mating structures and eyespots of gametes during the fertilization of Monostroma nitidum were studied using field emission scanning electron microscopy and transmission electron microscopy. The biflagellate isogamete (mt+ and mt?) mating structure has a position that is converse between mt+ and mt? gametes relative to the flagellar beat plane and the eyespot. After the adhesion of mt+ and mt? gametes, gamete fusion occurred between the two mating structures. The cell fusion plane expanded to the cell surface as circumscribed by 1s–2d roots in mt+ gamete and 1d–2s roots in the mt? gamete. Two sets of flagellar apparatuses lay side by side in the planozygote and soon become mutually close. The no. 1 basal body of mt+ gamete and the no. 2 basal body of mt? gamete rotated in a counterclockwise direction, as viewed from the cell anterior. Then, the no. 2 basal body of mt+ gamete and the no. 1 basal body of mt? gamete slid into a face to face position. Finally, four flagella and basal bodies exhibited a cruciate arrangement. The basal bodies of the opposing pair (no. 1 and no. 2) were offset in a counterclockwise orientation by the basal body diameter. The 1s and 2d roots of the mt+ gamete lay nearly parallel to the 1d and 2s roots of the mt? gamete, respectively, at the cell fusion plane. Because of the asymmetric localization of the mating structure, association, and subsequent rearrangement of basal bodies and microtubular roots, two eyespots lay on the same side of the planozygote. After the settlement of the planozygote, the flagellar apparatus started to disintegrate in the zygote cytoplasm.  相似文献   

15.
The flagella of Chlamydomonas reinhardi are required for the initiation of mating between opposite mating type gametes. It has been suggested that flagellar length is a crucial factor in a cell's ability to transmit and receive the sexual signals necessary for fusion. Mating type + (mt+) cells of gam-5, a mutant which is characterized by variable length, paralyzed flagella, were mated with wild-type, mt cells. Activation of the mating structures of the gam-5 gametes, and therefore successful signalling, was demonstrated for cells with flagella as short as 1.5 μm (less than 1/6 normal length). Because this mutant displays aberrant axonemal structures, and because various mutants with other defects in axonemal structure are also able to mate, it seems likely that the flagellar membrane may provide the main conduit for gametic sexual signals.  相似文献   

16.
The temperature-sensitive gametogenesis-defective mutant, gam-1 is sex- limited, expressed only in mating type minus (mt-), and can sexually agglutinate but not fuse at the restrictive temperature (35 degrees C) with gametes of wild type (wt) mt+. Thin-section, freeze-cleave, and scanning electron microscopy reveal that the gam-1 phenotype is dependent on both the temperature at which the cells undergo nitrogen starvation (and therefore gamete formation) and the temperature at which the cells are maintained during the 12 h before mating. Under all conditions of gametogenesis at 35 degrees C, each gam-1 cell produces a normal-appearing membrane-associated mating structure that fails to activate in response to flagellar agglutination. Varying with the conditions of gametogenesis, on the other hand, are the agglutination and signaling properties of the gam-1 flagella. The two mutant phenotypes displayed by gam-1 have been denoted gam-1-I and gam-1-II. An agglutination reaction involving gam-1-I cells does not result in activation of the wt mt+ mating structure. A more stable agglutination reaction, which can result in activation of the wt mt+ mating structure, is characteristic of gam-1-II cells, but because the gam-1 mt- mating sturcture still fails to activate, cell fusion is precluded. We conclude that the gam-1 mutation affects flagellar component(s) involved in establishing an effective, signal-generating agglutination reaction.  相似文献   

17.
Experimental manipulations of gametes of Chlamydomonas reinhardi and ultrastructural observation were used to examine the composition of the microfilaments in the fertilization tubule, their probable mode of formation, and their interaction with intracellular signals. Decoration with myosin subfragment-1 was used to demonstrate that the microfilaments in the fertilization tubule were actin filaments having uniform polarity: Myosin subfragment-1 arrowheads pointed away from the membrane at the tip of the process. Filaments were attached to the cone- shaped "doublet zone" at the base of the process by their pointed ends. Discrete attachment sites for filaments on the surface of the doublet zone were seen in stereo view. To test whether actin polymerization might accompany elongation of the fertilization tubule, mating gametes were exposed to cytochalasin D in an attempt to block actin polymerization. Treatment of mating type "plus" gametes with cytochalasin D prior to and during mating inhibited the appearance of actin filaments in fertilization tubules, suppressed fertilization tubule outgrowth, and lowered mating efficiency from 90 to 15%. The role of signals generated by flagellar adhesion in maintaining the structural integrity of the microfilament-doublet zone complex was examined by correlating flagellar disadhesion with the kinetics of breakdown of the complex. In zygotes, where flagellar disadhesion occurred after cell fusion, the complex disassembled within 3 h after mating. In gametes that had been agglutinated by isolated mating type "minus" flagella, microfilaments and fertilization tubules progressively disassembled over a 3-h time course following flagellar disadhesion. Disassembly of microfilaments was inhibited by maintaining flagellar agglutination, suggesting that signals generated by flagellar adhesion were necessary to maintain microfilaments intact.  相似文献   

18.
Because our previous studies (Snell, W.J., and W.S. Moore, 1980, J. Cell Biol. 84:203- 210) on the mating reaction of chlamydomonas reinhardtii showed that there was an adhesion-induced turnover of proteins whose synthesis is induced during aggregation. Analysis by SDS PAGE and autoradiography showed that proteins of 220,000 M(r) and 165, 000 M(r) (designated A(1) and A(2) respectively) consistently showed a high rate of synthesis only in flagella or flagellar membrane-enriched fractions prepared from aggregating gametes. Since the two proteins were soluble in the non-ionic detergent NP-40 and were removed from intact cells by a brief pronase treatment, it is likely that A(1) and A(2) are membrane proteins expose on the cell surface. A(1) and A(2) were each synthesized by gametes of both mating types (mt(-) and mt(+)) and synthesis of these two proteins could be detected in the normal mating reaction (wild type mt(-) and mt(+)), in mixtures of mt(-) and impotent mt(+) gametes (which could aggregate but not fuse), and in mixtures of gametes of a single mating type with isolated flagella of the opposite mating type. Cells aggregating in tunicamycin, an inhibitor of protein glycosylation, lost their adhesiveness during aggregation and did not synthesize the 220,000 M(r) protein but instead produced a protein (possibly an underglycosylated form of A(1)) of slightly lower mol wt. The 220,000 and 165,000 M(R) proteins appeared to be flagellar proteins and not cell wall proteins because A(1) and A(2) did not co-migrate with previously identified cell wall proteins, and synthesis of the two proteins could not be detected in flagella-less (bald-2) mutant cells. Analysis of the adhesive activity of sucrose gradient fraction of detergent (octyl glucoside)-solubilized flagellar membranes revealed that fractions containing A(1) and A(2) did not have detectable adhesive activity. The possibility remains that A(1) and A(2) are adhesion molecules whose activity could not be measured in the assay we used. Alternatively, the 220,000 and 165,000 M(r) proteins may be inactivated adhesion molecules or else they may be flagellar surface proteins involved only indirectly in the adhesion process.  相似文献   

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