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1.
Summary A detailed account of the ultrastructure of mitosis in a member of theCryptophyceae is given for the first time. The initial indication of mitosis is the duplication of the flagellar bases. The nucleus migrates towards the anterior of the cell and its envelope and nucleolus break down. The chromatin which at interphase is in the form of scattered clumps, condenses into a solid mass through which run narrow tunnels. Each tunnel allows the passage of one to four microtubules. At metaphase the dense plate of chromatin is situated on the equator and the spindle has a rectangular shape. Individual chromosomes cannot be recognized and no morphologically differentiated kinetochores have been observed. The flagella remain functional, their bases stay at the anterior side of the nucleus and do not move to the poles. At anaphase two plates of chromatin separate and these move apart until they come to lie against the ER sheath surrounding the chloroplasts. The new nuclear envelope starts to form on the opposite side of the daughter nucleus. Cytokinesis may commence early in mitosis and consists of a constriction of the parent cell, starting from the posterior end, followed by separation of the two daughters. The present work supports earlier views that only one chromosome is evident during the nuclear division of these organisms. The mitosis is completely different from that of theDinophyceae with which theCryptophyceae were formerly linked.  相似文献   

2.
The fine structure of stages in mitosis in a colorless euglenoid, Anisonema sp., reveals that chromosomes remain condensed throughout the life cycle and are attached to the nuclear envelope at interphase. The onset of mitosis is marked by the anterior migration of the nucleus towards the base of the reservoir and by elongation of the nucleolus. The nuclear envelope persists throughout mitosis. Microtubules are generated in the peripheral nucleoplasm adjacent to the envelope and attach to the chromosomes while they are still associated with the envelope. The region of microtubular contact develops into a distinct layered kinetochore as the developing spindle with attached chromosomes separates from the nuclear envelope and moves into the nucleoplasm. The mature spindle consists of a number of subspindles each containing about 8–10 microtubules and a few associated chromosomes. Both chromosomal and non-chromosomal microtubules are present in each subspindle and extend towards the envelope terminating at or near the nuclear pores. Chromosomal segregation is concomitant with nuclear elongation. By late division, an interzonal spindle develops in the dumbbell-shaped nucleus and nucleolar separation occurs. Continued invagination of the nuclear envelope in the region of the interzonal spindle eventually separates the daughter nuclei. A remnant of the interzonal spindle persists in the cytoplasm until cytokinesis.  相似文献   

3.
The structure of centric, intranuclear mitosis and of organelles associated with nuclei are described in developing zoosporangia of the chytrid Rhizophydium spherotheca. Frequently dictyosomes partially encompass the sides of diplosomes (paired centrioles). A single, incomplete layer of endoplasmic reticulum with tubular connections to the nuclear envelope is found around dividing nuclei. The nuclear envelope remains intact during mitosis except for polar fenestrae which appear during spindle incursion. During prophase, when diplosomes first define the nuclear poles, secondary centrioles occur adjacent and at right angles to the sides of primary centrioles. By late metaphase the centrioles in a diplosome are positioned at a 40° angle to each other and are joined by an electron-dense band; by telophase the centrioles lie almost parallel to each other. Astral microtubules radiate into the cytoplasm from centrioles during interphase, but by metaphase few cytoplasmic microtubules are found. Cytoplasmic microtubules increase during late anaphase and telophase as spindle microtubules gradually disappear. The mitotic spindle, which contains chromosomal and interzonal microtubules, converges at the base of the primary centriole. Throughout mitosis the semipersistent nucleolus is adjacent to the nuclear envelope and remains in the interzonal region of the nucleus as chromosomes separate and the nucleus elongates. During telophase the nuclear envelope constricts around the chromosomal mass, and the daughter nuclei separate from each end of the interzonal region of the nucleus. The envelope of the interzonal region is relatively intact and encircles the nucleolus, but later the membranes of the interzonal region scatter and the nucleolus disperses. The structure of the mitotic apparatus is similar to that of the chytrid Phlyctochytrium irregulare.  相似文献   

4.
Mitosis in vegetative cells of the siphonocladalean algaBoergesenia forbesii (Harvey) Feldmann was investigated mainly by electron microscopy. The mitotic spindle was centric and closed. The interphase nucleus contained a spherical nucleolus. The nucleolus was slightly dispersed at prophase, but nucleolar materials remained during nearly all stages of mitosis. Kinetochores were evident on chromosomes. The polar regions of nuclear envelope had no fenestrae during mitosis. Anaphase separation of the chromosomes was asynchronous. Elongation of interzonal spindle at telophase separated the two daughter nuclei widely. The ultrastructural features of mitosis inB. forbesii revealed by the present investigation are compared with those of other siphonous and siphonocladous algae in the Ulvophyceae.  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.
At the ultrastructural level, cell division in Ochromonas danica exhibits several unusual features. During interphase, the basal bodies of the 2 flagella replicate and the chloroplast divides by constriction between its 2 lobes. The rhizoplast, which is a fibrous striated root attached to the basal body of the long flagellum, extends under the Golgi body to the surface of the nucleus in interphase cells. During proprophase, the Golgi body replicates, apparently by division, and a daughter rhizoplast, appears. During prophase, the 2 pairs of flagellar basal bodies, each with their accompanying rhizoplast and Golgi body, begin to separate. Three or 4 flagella are already present at this stage. At the same time, there is a proliferation of microtubules outside the nuclear envelope. Gaps then appear in the nuclear envelope, admitting the microtubules into the nucleus, where they form a spindle. A unique feature of mitosis in O. danica is that the 2 rhizoplasts form the poles of the spindle, spindle microtubules inserting directly onto the rhizoplasts. Some of the spindle microtubules extend from pole to pole; others appear to attach to the chromosomes. Kinetochores, however, are not present. The nuclear envelope breaks down, except, in the regions adjacent, to the chloroplasts; chloroplast ER remains intact throughout mitosis. At late anaphase the chromosomes come to lie against part of the chloroplast ER. This segment of the chloroplast ER appears to be incorporated as part of the reforming nuclear envelope, thus reestablishing the characteristic nuclear envelope—chloroplast ER association of the interphase cell.  相似文献   

7.
Dividing cells of Spirogyra sp. were examined with both the light and electron microscopes. By preprophase many of the typical transverse wall micro-tubules disappeared while others were seen in the thickened cytoplasmic strands. Microtubules appeared in the polar cytoplasm at prophase and by prometaphase they penetrated the nucleus. They were attached to chromosomes at metaphase and early anaphase, and formed a sheath surrounding the spindle during anaphase; they were seen in the interzonal strands and cytoplasmic strands at telophase. The interphase nucleolus, containing 2 distinct zones and chromatinlike material, fragmented at prophase; at metaphase and anaphase nucleolar material coated the chromosomes, obscuring them by late anaphase. The chromosomes condensed in the nucleoplasm at prophase, moving into the nucleolus at prometaphase. The nuclear envelope was finally disrupted at anaphase during spindle elongation; at telophase membrane profiles coated the reforming nuclei. During anaphase and early telophase the interzonal region contained vacuoles, a few micro-tubules, and sometimes eliminated n ucleolar material; most small organelles, including swollen endoplasmic reticulum and tubular membranes, were concentrated in the polar cytoplasm. Quantitative and qualitative cytological observations strongly suggest movement of intact wall rnicrotubules to the spindle at preprophase and then back again at telophase.  相似文献   

8.
A detailed ultrastructure study was made of cell division and colony development in Eudorina elegans Ehrenberg. At the onset of cell division and prior to nuclear division the nucleus moved from the cell center to the cell surface. During nuclear division the nuclear membrane remained intact, except for openings occurring at the nuclear poles. The spindle microtubules appeared to arise from a MTOC-like (microtubule organizing centers) structure, while centrioles were absent from the nuclear poles. Following telophase, daughter nuclei formed which were separated by several distinct bands of endoplasmic reticulum. Cytokinesis occurred with formation of a cleavage furrow, associated with a typical phycoplast band of microtubules. However, cytokinesis was incomplete, resulting in formation of cytoplasmic bridges between the plakeal cells. Upon completion of up to five successive cell divisions, the plakea underwent inversion, which appeared to involve the production of colonial envelope material and rearrangement of cytoplasmic bridges. A new hypothesis concerning inversion is postulated based on these observations.  相似文献   

9.
Naegleria gruberi is an amoeboflagellate found in soil; mitosis is restricted to the amoeboid phase of its life-cycle. Ultrastructural examination of mitotic stages has confirmed some aspects of karyokinesis reported in earlier light-microscopic studies and expanded on other features of nuclear division described in electron-microscopic studies of Naegleria The nuclear envelope remained intact throughout division, the nucleolus persisted, and centrioles were not found Chromosomes were indistinguishable at the ultrastructural level, nor was any evidence detected of sites of microtubular attachment to possible chromosomes. An interzonal body, formed during separation in two of the nucleolus, was not an invariable feature of mitosis. The same was true of the polar caps, which appeared to be little more than the ends of the mitotic spindle. It is suggested that, in line with comparable situations in other protists, expansion of the nuclear envelope is chiefly responsible for separation of the nucleus into two daughter nuclei.  相似文献   

10.
Cell division in the marine red algae Polysiphonia harveyi Bailey and P. denudata (Dillwyn) Kutzing was studied with the electron microscope. Cells comprising the compact spermatangial branches of male plants were used exclusively because of their small size, large numbers and the ease with which the division planes can be predetermined. Some features characterizing mitosis in Polysiphonia confirm earlier electron microscope observations in Membranoptera, the only other florideophycean algae in which mitosis has been studied in detail. Common to both genera are a closed, fenestrated spindle, perinuclear endoplasmic reticulum, a typical metaphase plate arrangement of chromosomes, conspicuous, layered kinetochores, chromosomal and non-chromosomal microtubules, and nucleus associated organelles (NAOs) known as polar rings (PRs) located singly in large ribosome-free zones of exclusion at division poles in late prophase. However, other features, unreported in Membranoptera, were observed consistently in Polysiphonia. These include the presence of PR pairs in interphase-early prophase cells, the attachment of PRs to the nuclear envelope during all mitotic stages, the migration of a single PR to establish the division axis, a prominent, nuclear envelope protrusion (NEP) at both division poles at late prophase, the prometaphase splitting of PRs into proximal and distal portions, and the reformation of post-mitotic nuclei by the separation of an elongated interzonal nuclear midpiece at telophase. During cytokinesis, cleavage furrows impinge upon a central vacuolar region located between the two nuclei and eventually pit connections are formed in a manner basically similar to that reported for other red algae. Diagrammatic sequences of proposed PR behavior during mitosis are presented which can account for events known to occur during cell division in Polysiphonia. Mitosis is compared with that reported in several other lower plants and it is suggested that features of cell division are useful criteria to aid in the assessment of phylogenetic relationships of red algae.  相似文献   

11.
Summary A unique spindle apparatus develops during mitosis in the micronucleus ofParamecium bursaria. During interphase the micronucleus contains short microtubule profiles and clumps of condensed chromatin. Throughout mitosis the nuclear envelope remains intact. During prophase, cup-shaped structures termed microlamellae develop in close association with regions of condensed chromatin. Each micromella consists of an outer sublamella, an inner sublamellae, and ring-shaped structures termed microsepta that join the two sublamellae. Microtubules elongate parallel to the division axis. During metaphase, the microlamellae appear to act as kinetochorelike structures that aid in the alignment of the chromosomes. The microlamellae appear conical and join to a meshwork of microfilaments at their apices. Further toward the polar regions the microfilaments join with microtubules that converge and terminate near the nuclear envelope. During metaphase-anaphase and anaphase the chromosomes are apparently moved by the microfilaments pulling on the kinetochorelike microlamellae. Also during metaphase-anaphase, extranuclear microtubules join the nuclear envelope of the micronucleus to microtubule elements of the cell cortex. By anaphasetelophase, microlamellae and the microfilament meshwork degenerate and microtubules represent the only spindle elements. The evidence of this report supports the hypothesis that microfilaments can participate with microtubules in the movement of chromosomes.This report is part of a Ph.D. Thesis presented by the senior author at Fordham University.  相似文献   

12.
Cells of onion and garlic root tips were examined under the electron and phase contrast microscopes after fixation in KMnO4. Special attention was focused on the distribution and behavior of the endoplasmic reticulum (ER) during the several phases of mitosis. Slender profiles, recognized as sections through thin lamellar units of the ER (most prominent in KMnO4-fixed material), are distributed more or less uniformly in the cytoplasm of interphase cells and show occasional continuity with the nuclear envelope. In late prophase the nuclear envelope breaks down and its remnants plus cytoplasmic elements of the ER, which are morphologically identical, surround the spindle in a zone from which mitochondria, etc., are excluded. During metaphase these ER elements persist and concentrate as two separate systems in the polar caps or zones of the spindle. At about this same time they begin to proliferate and to invade the ends of the spindle. The invading lamellar units form drape-like partitions between the anaphase chromosomes. In late anaphase, their advancing margins reach the middle zone of the spindle and begin to fray out. Finally, in telophase, while elements of the ER in the poles of the spindle coalesce around the chromosomes to form the new envelope, the advancing edges of those in the middle zone reticulate at the level of the equator to form a close lattice of tubular elements. Within this, which is identified as the phragmoplast, the earliest signs of the cell plate appear in the form of small vesicles. These subsequently grow and fuse to complete the separation of the two protoplasts. Other morphological units apparently participating in mitosis are described. Speculation is provided on the equal division or not of the nuclear envelope and the contribution the envelope fragments make to the ER of the new cell.  相似文献   

13.
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   

14.
T. Hori  J. C. Green 《Protoplasma》1985,125(1-2):140-151
Summary Mitosis and cytokinesis have been studied in the flagellate algaIsochrysis galbana Parke (Prymnesiophyceae). Nuclear division is preceded by replication of the flagella and haptonema, the Golgi body and the chloroplast; fission in the chloroplast occurs in the region of the pyrenoid. During prophase, spindle microtubules radiating from two ill-defined poles are formed. The nuclear envelope breaks down and the chromatin condenses. At metaphase the spindle is fully developed, some pole-to-pole microtubules passing through the well-defined chromatin plate, others terminating at it. No kinetochores or individual chromosomes were observed. By late metaphase, many Golgi-derived vesicles may be seen against the two poleward faces of the metaphase plate. During anaphase, the two daughter masses of chromatin move towards the poles. In early telophase, the nuclear envelope of each daughter nucleus is complete only on the side towards the adjacent chloroplast, remaining open on the interzonal side. However, during telophase each nucleus becomes reorientated so that it lies lateral to the long axis of the spindle and with its open side towards the chloroplasts. By late telophase, each new nuclear envelope is complete and confluence with the adjacent chloroplast ER established.Cytokinesis and subsequent segregation of the daughter cells are effected by the dilation of Golgi- and ER-derived vesicles in the interzonal region. No microtubular structures are involved. Comparisons with the results from other studies of mitosis in members of thePrymnesiophyceae show that they all have a number of features in common, but that there are differences in detail between species.  相似文献   

15.
Cell division is described in the octaflagellate prasinophyte Pyramimonas amylifera Conrad and is compared in related genera. Basal bodies replicate at preprophase and move toward the poles. Cells remain motile throughout division. The nuclear envelope disperses and chromosomes begin to condense at prophase. Pairs of multilayered kinetochores are evident on the chromosomes of the metaphase plate. Spindle microtubules extending from the region of the basal bodies and rhizoplasts attach to the kinetochores or extend from pole to pole. Numerous vesicles and ribosomes have entered the nuclear region and the incipient cleavage furrow invaginates. The chromosomes move toward the poles at anaphase leaving a broad interzonal spindle between the two chromosomal plates. The nuclear envelope reforms first around the chromatin on the side adjacent to the spindle poles and later on the interzonal side. The cleavage furrow progresses into the interzonal spindle at telophase. By late telophase the nucleoli have reformed and the chromosomes have decondensed. The interzonal spindle has not been observed late in telophase. As the cleavage furrow nears completion the cells begin to twist and contort, ultimately separating the two cells.  相似文献   

16.
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   

17.
D. Motzko  A. Ruthmann 《Chromosoma》1990,99(3):212-222
The fate of intracellular membranes stained by the osmium ferricyanide (OsFeCN) procedure was followed from premeiotic interphase to interkinesis inDysdercus intermedius. During diakinesis the centrioles forming primary cilia attach temporarily with their proximal ends to the nuclear envelope which is stretched from pole to pole. Breakdown of the nuclear envelope is preceded by deep indentations with microtubules from growing asters. Vesicles of smooth endoplasmic reticulum which accumulate gradually in the course of prophase contribute to the ensheathment of the chromosomes with membranes. When the nuclear envelope breaks down, the polar parts of the formerly perinuclear membranes follow the ingrowth of the spindle microtubules towards the cell equator where the seven bivalents are arranged in a circle with the X1X2 sex chromosomes in the centre. The metaphase I spindle thus contains longitudinally oriented membranes between the poles, membranous envelopes around all chromosomes and radial connections from the autosomes to the sex chromosomes in the centre. At anaphase the homologues leave their common sheath and a microtubular stembody surrounded by membranes appears between the receding dyads. In the interkinetic nucleus the gonosomes are separated from the autosomes by a common membranous sheath which may be instrumental in their joint assignment to only one pole in the second meiotic division. Calcium sequestering sites visualized by oxalate precipitation are the Golgi lamellae and vesicles derived from them that surround the whole spindle body.  相似文献   

18.
Summary The ultrastructure of mitosis and cytokinesis of the uninucleateTribonema regulare has been investigated by employing transmission electron microscopy. Prophase is characterized by settlement of a pair of centrioles at the presumptive poles of the spindle, metaphase by equatorial bulging of the nucleus, anaphase by non-synchronous separation of the chromosomes, and telophase by a persistent, strongly elongated, interzonal spindle. Throughout mitosis, at each pole dictyosomes are associated with the polar gaps of the nuclear envelope that otherwise remains intact. Cytokinesis does not immediately follow mitosis; from the static images it can be concluded that it is necessary for the daughter nuclei to approach each other before cytokinesis is initiated by complete division of the protoplast via plasma membrane cleavage. Afterwards, a ring of cell wall material is deposited close near the lateral wall in the plane of protoplast separation followed by a simultaneous or centripetal development of a single integral partitioning septum. Once the septum is completed, the cylindrical portion of the H-shaped segment is manufactured. The phylogenetic position ofTribonema amongst those algae, which may have evolved from unicells into filaments, is discussed.  相似文献   

19.
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   

20.
T. Kanbe  K. Tanaka 《Protoplasma》1985,129(2-3):198-213
Summary Mitosis in the dermatophyteMicrosporum canis was studied by freeze substitution and electron microscopy, and analyzed by three dimensional reconstruction from serial sections of the mitotic nuclei. The interphase nucleus has associated nucleus-associated organelle (NAO) on a portion of the outer surface of the nuclear envelope, subjacent to which there was dense intranuclear material. The NAO divided and separated on the envelope, and a spindle was formed. The spindle was composed mostly of microtubules extended between opposite NAOs. Pairing of kinetochores was observed in the spindle from an early stage of development, when chromosomes were not so condensed, and remained unchanged while chromosome condensation proceeded until metaphase. Before the completion of nuclear division, daughter nuclei were connected by a narrow spindle channel, and then the nucleolus, whose structure underwent minimal change during mitosis, was eliminated into the cytoplasm.  相似文献   

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