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1.
Mitosis in Boergesenia forbesii (Harvey) Feldman was studied by immunofluorescence microscopy using anti-β–tubulin, anti-γ–tubulin, and anti-centrin antibodies. In the interphase nucleus, one, two, or rarely three anti-centrin staining spots were located around the nucleus, indicating the existence of centrioles. Microtubules (MTs) elongated randomly from the circumference of the nuclear envelope, but distinct microtubule organizing centers could not be observed. In prophase, MTs located around the interphase nuclei became fragmented and eventually disappeared. Instead, numerous MTs elongated along the nuclear envelope from the discrete anti-centrin staining spots. Anti-centrin staining spots duplicated and migrated to the two mitotic poles. γ–Tubulin was not detected at the centrioles during interphase but began to localize there from prophase onward. The mitotic spindle in B. forbesii was a typical closed type, the nuclear envelope remaining intact during nuclear division. From late prophase, accompanying the chromosome condensation, spindle MTs could be observed within the nuclear envelope. A bipolar mitotic spindle was formed at metaphase, when the most intense staining of γ-tubulin around the centrioles could also be seen. Both spindle MT poles were formed inside the nuclear envelope, independent of the position of the centrioles outside. In early anaphase, MTs between separating daughter chromosomes were not detected. Afterward, characteristic interzonal spindle MTs developed and separated both sets of the daughter chromosomes. From late anaphase to telophase, γ-tubulin could not be detected around the centrioles and MT radiation from the centrioles became diminished at both poles. γ-Tubulin was not detected at the ends of the interzonal spindle fibers. When MTs were depolymerized with amiprophos methyl during mitosis, γ-tubulin localization around the centrioles was clearly confirmed. Moreover, an influx of tubulin molecules into the nucleus for the mitotic spindle occurred at chromosome condensation in mitosis.  相似文献   

2.
Summary The three-dimensional ultrastructural organization of the mitotic apparatus ofDimastigella mimosa was studied by computer-aided, serial-section reconstruction. The nuclear envelope remains intact during nuclear division. During mitosis, chromosomes do not condense, whereas intranuclear microtubules are found in close association with six pairs of kinetochores. No discrete microtubule-organizing centers, except kinetochore pairs, could be found within the nucleus. The intranuclear microtubules form six separate bundles oriented at different angles to each other. Each bundle contains up to 8 tightly packed microtubules which push the daughter kinetochores apart. At late anaphase only, midzones of these bundles align along an extended interzonal spindle within the narrow isthmus between segregating progeny nuclei. The nuclear division inD. mimosa can be described as closed intranuclear mitosis with acentric and separate microtubular bundles and weakly condensed chromosomes.Abbreviation MTOC microtubule-organizing center  相似文献   

3.
Entamoeba histolytica: cell cycle and nuclear division   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
The cell cycle of Entamoeba histolytica, the duration of its phases, and the details of the nuclear division stages are described in this paper. Trophozoites from clone L-6, strain HM1:IMSS, were synchronized by colchicine. Synchrony was observed immediately after treatment and cultures remained synchronous for at least three replicative cycles with synchrony indexes between 13 and 15 hr. The stages of nuclear division were studied by light and electron microscopy. Four stages of the nuclear division were defined: prophase, early anaphase, late anaphase, and telophase. No metaphase stage was observed by light or electron microscopy. One of the first events in the nuclear division was the presence of a bud close to the juxtanuclear body, which grew to a daughter nucleus. The karyosome and the nuclear membrane remained throughout the mitotic process. Bundles of intranuclear microtubules were observed forming a "V" from the center of the nucleus to one of the poles, and associated with them, 12 to 16 chromosomes-like structures appeared. The results of these studies strongly suggest that division of E. histolytica involved a pleuromitotic process which is carried out in about 120 min.  相似文献   

4.
Nagasato C  Motomura T 《Protoplasma》2002,219(3-4):140-149
Summary. The ultrastructure of mitosis and cytokinesis in Scytosiphon lomentaria (Lyngbye) Link zygotes was studied by freeze fixation and substitution. During mitosis, the nuclear envelope remained mostly intact. Spindle microtubules (MTs) from the centrosome passed through the gaps of the nuclear envelope and entered the nucleoplasm. In anaphase and telophase, two daughter chromosome masses were partially surrounded with endoplasmic reticulum. After telophase, the nuclear envelope was reconstructed and two daughter nuclei formed. Then, several large vacuoles occupied the space between the daughter nuclei. MTs from the centrosomes extended toward the mid-plane between two daughter nuclei, among the vacuoles. At that time, Golgi bodies near the centrosome actively produced many vesicles. Midway between the daughter nuclei, small globular vesicles and tubular cisternae accumulated. These vesicles derived from Golgi bodies were transported from the centrosome to the future division plane. Cytokinesis then proceeded by fusion of these vesicles, but not by a furrowing of the plasma membrane. After completion of the continuity with the plasma membrane, cell wall material was deposited between the plasma membranes. The tubular cisternae were still observed at the periphery of the newly formed septum. Microfilaments could not be observed by this procedure. We conclude that cytokinesis in the brown algae proceeds by fusion of Golgi vesicles and tubular cisternae, not by a furrowing of the plasma membrane. Received September 12, 2001 Accepted November 12, 2001  相似文献   

5.
Mitosis is described in the flagellate Oxyrrhis marina Dujardin and is compared in related genera. Dense plaques develop in the nuclear envelope at prophase and give rise to an intranuclear spindle. Some of the microtubules associate with the chromosomes while others extend across the nucleus. The basal bodies migrate toward the poles early in division and retain a position lateral to the nuclear poles throughout mitosis. Microtubules are not present between the nucleus and the basal bodies. The nucleolus is persistent and elongates throughout anaphase and telophase. Chromosomal separation is accomplished by sliding of non-chromosomal microtubules and by elongation of the nuclear envelope rather than by shortening of the spindle microtubules. The nuclear envelope begins to constrict in the center early in anaphase. Continued constriction of the envelope and elongation of the nucleus leads to the formation of a dumbbell-shaped nucleus by late telophase. Mitosis culminates by the constriction of the nucleus into two daughter nuclei. The taxonomic position of Oxyrrhis marina is discussed in light of these findings.  相似文献   

6.
Megakaryocytes undergo a unique differentiation program, becoming polyploid through repeated cycles of DNA synthesis without concomitant cell division. However, the mechanism underlying this polyploidization remains totally unknown. It has been postulated that polyploidization is due to a skipping of mitosis after each round of DNA replication. We carried out immunohistochemical studies on mouse bone marrow megakaryocytes during thrombopoietin- induced polyploidization and found that during this process megakaryocytes indeed enter mitosis and progress through normal prophase, prometaphase, metaphase, and up to anaphase A, but not to anaphase B, telophase, or cytokinesis. It was clearly observed that multiple spindle poles were formed as the polyploid megakaryocytes entered mitosis; the nuclear membrane broke down during prophase; the sister chromatids were aligned on a multifaced plate, and the centrosomes were symmetrically located on either side of each face of the plate at metaphase; and a set of sister chromatids moved into the multiple centrosomes during anaphase A. We further noted that the pair of spindle poles in anaphase were located in close proximity to each other, probably because of the lack of outward movement of spindle poles during anaphase B. Thus, the reassembling nuclear envelope may enclose all the sister chromatids in a single nucleus at anaphase and then skip telophase and cytokinesis. These observations clearly indicate that polyploidization of megakaryocytes is not simply due to a skipping of mitosis, and that the megakaryocytes must have a unique regulatory mechanism in anaphase, e.g., factors regulating anaphase such as microtubule motor proteins might be involved in this polyploidization process.  相似文献   

7.
The position of the division plane affects cell shape and size, as well as tissue organization. Cells of the fission yeast Schizosaccharomyces pombe have a centrally placed nucleus and divide by fission at the cell center. Microtubules (MTs) are required for the central position of the nucleus. Genetic studies lead to the hypothesis that the position of the nucleus may determine the position of the division plane. Alternatively, the division plane may be positioned by the spindle or by morphogen gradients or reaction diffusion mechanisms. Here, we investigate the role of MTs in nuclear positioning and the role of the nucleus in division-plane positioning by displacing the nucleus with optical tweezers. A displaced nucleus returned to the cell center by MT pushing against the cell tips. Nuclear displacement during interphase or early prophase resulted in asymmetric cell division, whereas displacement during prometaphase resulted in symmetric division as in unmanipulated cells. These results suggest that the division plane is specified by the predividing nucleus. Because the yeast nucleus is centered by MTs during interphase but not in mitosis, we hypothesize that the establishment of the division plane at the beginning of mitosis is an optimal mechanism for accurate symmetric division in these cells.  相似文献   

8.
Structural changes of microtubules (MTs) in the generative cell (GC) of Amaryllis vittara Alt. during mitosis in pollen tube have been investigated with electron microscopy. The division cycle was completed approximately within 12 h. During prophase, the MTs bundles distributed in the cortex of the GC, they were less and shorter than that before mitosis, some of which beginning to be near the nucleus. When the chromatin condensed and the GC entered metaphase, the MTs increased in number and distributed among the chromosomes (CHs) in the original nuclear zone, but they were not arranged in distinct bundlesed. Some of them connected with the CHs to form kinetochore MTs (KMTs), where as the cortical MTs in prophase still remained there. During metaphase, the CHs were arranged on the equartor forming a metaphase plate, and all the MTs formed a diffuse spindle. When the GC entered anaphase, the KMTs were shortened and they were involved in the segregation of the CHs into two groups. The MTs were much more and focused in the two polar regions. In late anaphase, while the MTs still existed at the poles, rich phragmoplast MTs appeared in the equator zone and the precusors of cell plate (CP) aggregated in the middle of the phragmoplast. When the GC entered telophase, the CHs diffused as chromatin, and phragmoplast MTs extended between the two newly formed nuclear envelops and even through the CP While the polar MTs and KMTs disappeared, the MTs in the newly formed sperm cells were different from that of the GC.  相似文献   

9.
用透射电镜的方法,对朱顶红(Am aryllisvittata Ait.)花粉管中生殖细胞的分裂过程中微管分布和结构形态变化进行了观察,获得如下主要的结果:有丝分裂前期,微管的数量较分裂前减少并变短,靠近细胞核分布。分裂前中期,微管出现于原来的核区并与染色体发生联系,形成着丝点微管。分裂中期,染色体排列于赤道面上形成赤道板,微管构成纺锤体。分裂后期,染色体分成两群,被缩短的着丝点微管拉向两极。在纺锤体两极的微管汇聚。后期的晚期,当极的微管尚未消失时,在赤道区域出现丰富的成膜体微管,在成膜体中央,细胞板前体物聚集。分裂末期,极微管和着丝点微管消失,成膜体微管在新形成的核膜和细胞板间扩展并穿过细胞板  相似文献   

10.
Current spindle models explain “anaphase A” (movement of chromosomes to the poles) in terms of a motility system based solely on microtubules (MTs) and that functions in a manner unique to mitosis. We find both these propositions unlikely. An evolutionary perspective suggests that when the spindle evolved, it should have come to share not only components (e.g., microtubules) of the interphase cell but also the primitive motility systems available, including those using actin and myosin. Other systems also came to be involved in the additional types of motility that now accompany mitosis in extant spindles. The resultant functional redundancy built reliability into this critical and complex process. Such multiple mechanisms are also confusing to those who seek to understand how chromosomes move. Narrowing this commentary down to just anaphase A, we argue that the spindle matrix participates with MTs in anaphase A and that this matrix may contain actin and myosin. The diatom spindle illustrates how such a system could function. This matrix may be motile and work in association with the MT cytoskeleton, as it does with the actin cytoskeleton during cell ruffling and amoeboid movement. Instead of pulling the chromosome polewards, the kinetochore fibre’s role might be to slow polewards movement to allow correct chromosome attachment to the spindle. Perhaps the earliest eukaryotic cell was a cytoplast organised around a radial MT cytoskeleton. For cell division, it separated into two cytoplasts via a spindle of overlapping MTs. Cytokinesis was actin-based cleavage. As chromosomes evolved into individual entities, their interaction with the dividing cytoplast developed into attachment of the kinetochore to radial (cytoplast) MTs. We believe it most likely that cytoplasmic motility systems participated in these events.  相似文献   

11.
In Schizosaccharomyces pombe, a late mitotic kinase pathway called the septation initiation network (SIN) triggers cytokinesis. Here we show that the SIN is also involved in regulating anaphase spindle elongation and telophase nuclear positioning via inhibition of Klp2, a minus end–directed kinesin-14. Klp2 is known to localize to microtubules (MTs) and have roles in interphase nuclear positioning, mitotic chromosome alignment, and nuclear migration during karyogamy (nuclear fusion during mating). We observe SIN-dependent disappearance of Klp2 from MTs in anaphase, and we find that this is mediated by direct phosphorylation of Klp2 by the SIN kinase Sid2, which abrogates loading of Klp2 onto MTs by inhibiting its interaction with Mal3 (EB1 homologue). Disruption of Klp2 MT localization is required for efficient anaphase spindle elongation. Furthermore, when cytokinesis is delayed, SIN inhibition of Klp2 acts in concert with microtubules emanating from the equatorial microtubule-organizing center to position the nuclei away from the cell division site. These results reveal novel functions of the SIN in regulating the MT cytoskeleton and suggest that the SIN may have broader functions in regulating cellular organization in late mitosis than previously realized.  相似文献   

12.
The dynamics of the microtubule (MT) were studied by α-tubulin immunofluorescence methods during the polleng rain ontogeny inTradescantia paludosa. Before the microspore division, interphase nuclei of themicrospore cells were twice displaced from the center to one side (NM-1) and from the side to the center near the inner wall (NM-2). During NM-1, a few MTs appeared around the nucleus, but the movement was not interrupted by colchicine treatment. In NM-2, however, which was essential to the unequal division of microspores, many MTs and MT bundles became organized and shifted in a manner corresponding to the nuclear movement. This movement was inhibited by the colchicine treatment. It was concluded that NM-2 was dependent on the MT cytoskeleton, but NM-1 was independent. Througthout the microspore division, mitotic spindles were organized asymmetrically. From prophase to prometaphase, the spindle began to construct itself in the vegetative pole preceding the generative pole. The half-spindles were asymmetric at the metaphase and the phragmoplast developed curving toward the generative pole at the telophase. No pre-prophase band of MTs was observed throughout the cell cycle. The relationship between the characteristic MT dynamics and the nuclear movement, or unequal cell division, was revealed and is discussed here.  相似文献   

13.
Amebae of D. discoideum on coverslips were fixed in situ with glutaraldehyde and permeabilized with Triton X-100. Of six antibodies tested, only a monoclonal antibody to yeast tubulin consistently gave bright fluorescence. Counterstaining with DAPI facilitated the identification of interphase and mitotic stages. Most microtubules (MTs) in interphase amebae emanated from a nucleus-associated centre that had a non-fluorescent core. Amebae in early stages of mitosis lacked cytoplasmic MTs almost entirely. The nascent spindle in prophase appeared as a brightly fluorescent dot, whereas the prometaphase spindle was a short rod. Spindles in metaphase and anaphase nuclei were more elongate, some consisting of several fluorescent lines. Astral MTs were prominent on spindles in anaphase and telophase. Asters are obviously converted to the interphase complex of MTs in post-mitotic cells, while the shaft-like remnant of the central spindle disappears. The cyclical changes in the MT system related to cell division resemble those observed in higher eukaryotes and probably reflect changes in the locomotory behavior of the amebae rather than changes in cell shape.  相似文献   

14.
Summary Mitotic divisions during sporangiogenous plasmodial cleavage inWoronina pythii were studied with transmission electron microscopy. We conclude that these nuclear divisions (e.g., transitional nuclear division, and sporangial mitoses) share basic similarities with the cruciform nuclear divisions inW. pythii and other plasmo-diophoraceous taxa. The major distinction appeared to be the absence of nucleoli during sporangial mitosis and the presence of nucleoli during cruciform nuclear division. The similarities were especially evident with regard to nuclear envelope breakdown and reformation. The mitotic divisions during formation of sporangia were centric, and closed with polar fenestrae, and characterized by the formation of intranuclear membranous vesicles. During metaphase, anaphase, and telophase, these vesicles appeard to bleb from the inner membrane of the original nuclear envelope and appeared to coalesce on the surface of the separating chromatin masses. By late telophase, the formation of new daughter nuclear envelopes was complete, and original nuclear envelope was fragmented. New observation pertinent to the mechanisms of mitosis in thePlasmodiophoromycetes include a evidence for the incorporation of membrane fragments of the original nuclear envelope into new daughter nuclear envelopes, and b the change in orientation of paired centrioles during sporangial mitosis.  相似文献   

15.
The marine dinoflagellate Oxyrrhis marina has three major microtubular systems: the flagellar apparatus made of one transverse and one longitudinal flagella and their appendages, cortical microtubules, and intranuclear microtubules. We investigated the dynamic changes of these microtubular systems during cell division by transmission and scanning electron microscopy, and confocal fluorescent laser microscopy. During prophase, basal bodies, both flagella and their appendages were duplicated. In the round nucleus situated in the cell centre, intranuclear microtubules appeared radiating toward the centre of the nucleus from densities located in some nuclear pores. During metaphase, both daughter flagellar apparatus separated and moved apart along the main cell axis. Microtubules of ventral cortex were also duplicated and moved with the flagellar apparatus. The nucleus flattened in the longitudinal direction and became discoid-shaped close to the equatorial plane. Many bundles of microtubules ran parallel to the short axis of the nucleus (cell long axis), between which chromosomes were arranged in the same direction. During ana-telophase, the nucleus elongated along the longitudinal axis and took a dumbbell shape. At this stage a contractile ring containing actin was clearly observed in the equatorial cortex. The cortical microtubule network seemed to be cut into two halves at the position of the actin bundle. Shortly after, the nucleus divided into two nuclei, then the cell body was constricted at its equator and divided into one anterior and one posterior halves which were soon rebuilt to produce two cells with two full sets of cortical microtubules. From our observations, several mechanisms for the duplication of the microtubule networks during mitosis in O. marina are discussed.  相似文献   

16.
Electron microscopy of glutaraldehyde-osmium-fixed samples of haploid myxamoebae and diploid plasmodia of the myxomycete Physarum flavicomum Berk. reveal dissimilar spindle apparatus during mitosis in the two cell types. Myxamoebae exhibit an astral type of mitosis with centrioles at the poles and nuclear envelope breakdown during prophase. Plasmodial nuclei lack centrioles at mitosis and have an intranuclear spindle, with nuclear envelope persisting during the entire division. Coated vesicles are noted during prophase and telophase in myxamoebae and their role in spindle formation and dispersion is suggested.  相似文献   

17.
Tyrosine phosphorylation has emerged as a mechanism to control cellular events in the nucleus. The c-Fes protein-tyrosine kinase is an important regulator of cell growth and differentiation in several cell types, and is found in the nucleus of hematopoietic cells. In this study, we showed nuclear localization of c-Fes in both hematopoietic (K562, TF-1, HEL, U937, and HL-60) and nonhematopoietic cell lines (293T, CaOv3, TfxH, MG-63, HeLa, DU-145) by immunofluorescence and confocal microscopy. c-Fes showed striking changes in subcellular localization at specific stages of mitosis. In interphase cells, the intranuclear distribution of c-Fes was diffuse with occasional bright foci. Some c-Fes was present in the cytosol after breakdown of the nuclear membrane, in prometaphase. At prometaphase and metaphase c-Fes was also associated with the chromosomes, in a punctate pattern that partially overlapped with the centromere. Further comparison with proteins that are known components of the kinetochore suggested that some c-Fes protein was located at the centromeric alpha-satellite DNA, between the kinetochores. At anaphase and telophase, c-Fes was entirely cytoplasmic and no protein was found associated with the chromosomes. The timing of c-Fes' appearance at the centromere coincides with the period of kinetochore assembly. These data suggest that c-Fes is recruited to the kinetochore during mitosis.  相似文献   

18.
The cycle of spindle pole body (SPB) duplication, differentiation, and segregation in Schizosaccharomyces pombe is different from that in some other yeasts. Like the centrosome of vertebrate cells, the SPB of S. pombe spends most of interphase in the cytoplasm, immediately next to the nuclear envelope. Some gamma-tubulin is localized on the SPB, suggesting that it plays a role in the organization of interphase microtubules (MTs), and serial sections demonstrate that some interphase MTs end on or very near to the SPB. gamma-Tubulin is also found on osmiophilic material that lies near the inner surface of the nuclear envelope, immediately adjacent to the SPB, even though there are no MTs in the interphase nucleus. Apparently, the MT initiation activities of gamma-tubulin in S. pombe are regulated. The SPB duplicates in the cytoplasm during late G2 phase, and the two resulting structures are connected by a darkly staining bridge until the mitotic spindle forms. As the cell enters mitosis, the nuclear envelope invaginates beside the SPB, forming a pocket of cytoplasm that accumulates dark amorphous material. The nuclear envelope then opens to form a fenestra, and the duplicated SPB settles into it. Each part of the SPB initiates intranuclear MTs, and then the two structures separate to lie in distinct fenestrae as a bipolar spindle forms. Through metaphase, the SPBs remain in their fenestrae, bound to the polar ends of spindle MTs; at about this time, a small bundle of cytoplasmic MTs forms in association with each SPB. These MTs are situated with one end near to, but not on, the SPBs, and they project into the cytoplasm at an orientation that is oblique to the simple axis. As anaphase proceeds, the nuclear fenestrae close, and the SPBs are extruded back into the cytoplasm. These observations define new fields of enquiry about the control of SPB duplication and the dynamics of the nuclear envelope.  相似文献   

19.
Based on the assumption that the ancestral proto-eukaryote evolved from an ameboid prokarybte I propose the hypothesis that nuclear division of the proto-eukaryote was effected by the same system of contractile filaments it used for ameboid movement and cytosis. When the nuclear membranes evolved from the cell membrane, contractile filaments remained associated with them. The attachment site of the genome in the nuclear envelope was linked to the cell membrane by specialized contractile filaments. During protomitosis, i.e., nuclear and cell division of the proto-eukaryote, these filaments performed segregation of the chromosomes, whereas others constricted and cleaved the nucleus and the mother cell. When microtubules (MTs) had evolved in the cytoplasm, they also became engaged in nuclear division. Initially, an extranuolear bundle of MTs assisted chromosome segregation by establishing a defined axis. The evolutionary tendency then was towards an increasingly important role for MTs. Spindle pole bodies (SPBs) developed from the chromosomal attachment sites in the nuclear envelope and organized an extranuclear central spindle. The chromosomes remained attached to the SPBs during nuclear division. In a subsequent step the spindle became permanently lodged inside the nucleus. Chromosomes detached from the SPBs and acquired kinetochores and kinetochore-MTs. At first, this spindle segregated chromosomes by elongation, the kinetochore-MTs playing the role of static anchors. Later, spindle elongation was supplemented by poleward movement of the chromosomes. When dissolution of the nuclear envelope at the beginning of mitosis became a permanent feature, the open spindle of higher eukaryotes was born.  相似文献   

20.
The mitotic spindle contains several classes of microtubules (MTs) whose lengths change independently during mitosis. Precise control over MT polymerization and depolymerization during spindle formation, anaphase chromosome movements, and spindle breakdown is necessary for successful cell division. This model proposes the site of addition and removal of MT subunits in each of four classes of spindle MTs at different stages of mitosis, and suggests how this addition and removal is controlled. We propose that spindle poles and kinetochores significantly alter the assembly-disassembly kinetics of associated MT ends. Control of MT length is further modulated by localized forces affecting assembly and disassembly kinetics of individual sets of MTs.  相似文献   

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