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1.
Summary The ultrastructure of the melanophores of Pterophyllum scalare was studied with respect to changes in cell shape during melanosome migration and the number and distribution of microtubules within the cell extensions. Cells were fixed with pigment fully aggregated or fully dispersed. All measurements were carried out on cross sections of cell processes, i.e. sections cut perpendicular to the long axis of the cell extensions. Cross sections of processes of melanophores with dispersed pigment are more or less ovoid in shape, and microtubules are arranged predominantly just below the cell membrane. These microtubules exhibit a relatively constant centre-to-centre spacing of about 55–65 nm. Processes of melanophores with aggregated pigment seem to be collapsed; their volume is substantially decreased but their circumference equals that of dispersed melanophores. The number of microtubules is reduced, and their regular arrangement is lost. The differences in microtubule number associated with the aggregated or dispersed state occur irrespective of the nature of the agent inducing dispersion or aggregation. In addition, apparent insertion of microtubules into the plasma membrane of the cell processes and associations of microtubules with cytoplasmic densities in the cell centre are described.The results indicate a rapid disassembly and assembly of microtubules associated with pigment movements. The possible role of microtubule associations with cell membrane and densities as sites of microtubule polymerization is briefly discussed.This work was supported by a grant from the Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft.  相似文献   

2.
《The Journal of cell biology》1995,129(6):1601-1615
The three dimensional organization of microtubules in mitotic spindles of the yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae has been determined by computer- aided reconstruction from electron micrographs of serially cross- sectioned spindles. Fifteen spindles ranging in length from 0.6-9.4 microns have been analyzed. Ordered microtubule packing is absent in spindles up to 0.8 micron, but the total number of microtubules is sufficient to allow one microtubule per kinetochore with a few additional microtubules that may form an interpolar spindle. An obvious bundle of about eight interpolar microtubules was found in spindles 1.3- 1.6 microns long, and we suggest that the approximately 32 remaining microtubules act as kinetochore fibers. The relative lengths of the microtubules in these spindles suggest that they may be in an early stage of anaphase, even though these spindles are all situated in the mother cell, not in the isthmus between mother and bud. None of the reconstructed spindles exhibited the uniform populations of kinetochore microtubules characteristic of metaphase. Long spindles (2.7-9.4 microns), presumably in anaphase B, contained short remnants of a few presumed kinetochore microtubules clustered near the poles and a few long microtubules extending from each pole toward the spindle midplane, where they interdigitated with their counterparts from the other pole. Interpretation of these reconstructed spindles offers some insights into the mechanisms of mitosis in this yeast.  相似文献   

3.
EB1 is an evolutionarily conserved protein that localizes to the plus ends of growing microtubules. In yeast, the EB1 homologue (BIM1) has been shown to modulate microtubule dynamics and link microtubules to the cortex, but the functions of metazoan EB1 proteins remain unknown. Using a novel preparation of the Drosophila S2 cell line that promotes cell attachment and spreading, we visualized dynamics of single microtubules in real time and found that depletion of EB1 by RNA-mediated inhibition (RNAi) in interphase cells causes a dramatic increase in nondynamic microtubules (neither growing nor shrinking), but does not alter overall microtubule organization. In contrast, several defects in microtubule organization are observed in RNAi-treated mitotic cells, including a drastic reduction in astral microtubules, malformed mitotic spindles, defocused spindle poles, and mispositioning of spindles away from the cell center. Similar phenotypes were observed in mitotic spindles of Drosophila embryos that were microinjected with anti-EB1 antibodies. In addition, live cell imaging of mitosis in Drosophila embryos reveals defective spindle elongation and chromosomal segregation during anaphase after antibody injection. Our results reveal crucial roles for EB1 in mitosis, which we postulate involves its ability to promote the growth and interactions of microtubules within the central spindle and at the cell cortex.  相似文献   

4.
To characterize the control mechanisms for mitosis, we studied the relationship between the spatial organization of microtubules in the mitotic spindle and the timing of mitotic events. Spindles of altered geometry were produced in sea urchin eggs by two methods: (a) early prometaphase spindles were cut into half spindles by micromanipulation or (b) mercaptoethanol was used to indirectly induce the formation of spindles with only one pole. Cells with monopolar spindles produced by either method required an average of 3 X longer than control cells to traverse mitosis. By the time the control cells started their next mitosis, the experimental cells were usually just finishing the original mitosis. In all cases, only the time from nuclear envelope breakdown to the start of telophase was prolonged. Once the cells entered telophase, events leading to the next mitosis proceeded with normal timing. Once prolonged, the cell cycle never resynchronized with the controls. Several types of control experiments showed that were not an artifact of the experimental techniques. These results show that the spatial arrangement of spindle components plays an important role in the mechanisms that control the timing of mitotic events and the timing of the cell cycle as a whole.  相似文献   

5.
The kinesin superfamily of microtubule motor proteins is important in many cellular processes, including mitosis and meiosis, vesicle transport, and the establishment and maintenance of cell polarity. We have characterized two related kinesins in fission yeast, klp5+ and klp6+,, that are amino-terminal motors of the KIP3 subfamily. Analysis of null mutants demonstrates that neither klp5+ nor klp6+, individually or together, is essential for vegetative growth, although these mutants have altered microtubule behavior. klp5Delta and klp6Delta are resistant to high concentrations of the microtubule poison thiabendazole and have abnormally long cytoplasmic microtubules that can curl around the ends of the cell. This phenotype is greatly enhanced in the cell cycle mutant cdc25-22, leading to a bent, asymmetric cell morphology as cells elongate during cell cycle arrest. Klp5p-GFP and Klp6p-GFP both localize to cytoplasmic microtubules throughout the cell cycle and to spindles in mitosis, but their localizations are not interdependent. During the meiotic phase of the life cycle, both of these kinesins are essential. Spore viability is low in homozygous crosses of either null mutant. Heterozygous crosses of klp5Delta with klp6Delta have an intermediate viability, suggesting cooperation between these proteins in meiosis.  相似文献   

6.
Feedback control of mitosis in budding yeast.   总被引:158,自引:0,他引:158  
R Li  A W Murray 《Cell》1991,66(3):519-531
We have investigated the feedback control that prevents cells with incompletely assembled spindles from leaving mitosis. We isolated budding yeast mutants sensitive to the anti-microtubule drug benomyl. Mitotic arrest-deficient (mad) mutants are the subclass of benomyl-sensitive mutants in which the completion of mitosis is not delayed in the presence of benomyl and that die as a consequence of their premature exit from mitosis. A number of properties of the mad mutants indicate that they are defective in the feedback control over the exit from mitosis: their killing by benomyl requires passage through mitosis; their benomyl sensitivity can be suppressed by an independent method for delaying the exit from mitosis; they have normal microtubules; and they have increased frequencies of chromosome loss. We cloned MAD2, which encodes a putative calcium-binding protein whose disruption is lethal. We discuss the role of feedback controls in coordinating events in the cell cycle.  相似文献   

7.
In budding yeast, the essential roles of microtubules include segregating chromosomes and positioning the nucleus during mitosis. Defects in these functions can lead to aneuploidy and cell death. To ensure proper mitotic spindle and cytoplasmic microtubule formation, the cell must maintain appropriate stoichiometries of alpha- and beta-tubulin, the basic subunits of microtubules. The experiments described here investigate the minimal levels of tubulin heterodimers needed for mitotic function. We have found a triple-mutant strain, pac10Delta plp1Delta yap4Delta, which has only 20% of wild-type tubulin heterodimer levels due to synthesis and folding defects. The anaphase spindles in these cells are approximately 64% the length of wild-type spindles. The mutant cells are viable and accurately segregate chromosomes in mitosis, but they do have specific defects in mitosis such as abnormal nuclear positioning. The results establish that cells with 20% of wild-type levels of tubulin heterodimers can perform essential cellular functions with a short spindle, but require higher tubulin heterodimer concentrations to attain normal spindle length and prevent mitotic defects.  相似文献   

8.
Mitosis of the free-living flagellate Bodo saltans of the Ps+ strain characterized by the presence of prokaryotic cytobionts in the perinuclear space was studied. Division of B. saltans Ps+ nuclei occurs by the closed intranuclear type of mitosis without condensation of chromosomes. At the initial stages of nuclear division, consecutive anlage of two spatially separated microtubular spindles begins. The spindle containing about 20 microtubules appears first, then, at an angle of 30–40° to it, the second spindle containing half as many microtubules is formed. The microtubules of the first spindle are associated with 4 pairs of kinetochores, the microtubules of the second one—with 2 pairs. The kinetochores of B. saltans Ps+ have a pronounced laminar structure. Both spindles rest with their ends directly on the internal membrane of the nuclear envelope and form 4 well-pronounced poles. The equatorial phase of mitosis in B. saltans Ps+ is not revealed. The divergence of sister kinetochores towards the poles occurs independently in each spindle. At the elongation phase of mitosis, the poles of both spindles are united in pairs to form a single bipolar structure composed of two loose bundles of microtubules. At this stage of nuclear division, the kinetochores reach the poles of the subspindles and cease to be visible. At subsequent nuclear division stages the nucleus acquires a dumbbell shape. During the reorganization phase the sister nuclei are separated. In the perinuclear space of the interphase nuclei of B. saltans Ps+, 1–2 prokaryotic cytobionts are present. In the course of mitosis, these organisms divide intensively, such that their number can reach 20 and more per nucleus. During separation of sister nuclei, the “excessive” cytobionts are released into the cytoplasmic vacuoles formed by external membranes of the nuclear envelope.  相似文献   

9.
Faithful segregation of genetic material during cell division requires alignment of chromosomes between two spindle poles and attachment of their kinetochores to each of the poles. Failure of these complex dynamical processes leads to chromosomal instability (CIN), a characteristic feature of several diseases including cancer. While a multitude of biological factors regulating chromosome congression and bi-orientation have been identified, it is still unclear how they are integrated so that coherent chromosome motion emerges from a large collection of random and deterministic processes. Here we address this issue by a three dimensional computational model of motor-driven chromosome congression and bi-orientation during mitosis. Our model reveals that successful cell division requires control of the total number of microtubules: if this number is too small bi-orientation fails, while if it is too large not all the chromosomes are able to congress. The optimal number of microtubules predicted by our model compares well with early observations in mammalian cell spindles. Our results shed new light on the origin of several pathological conditions related to chromosomal instability.  相似文献   

10.
Role of spindle microtubules in the control of cell cycle timing   总被引:14,自引:10,他引:4       下载免费PDF全文
Sea urchin eggs are used to investigate the involvement of spindle microtubules in the mechanisms that control the timing of cell cycle events. Eggs are treated for 4 min with Colcemid at prophase of the first mitosis. No microtubules are assembled for at least 3 h, and the eggs do not divide. These eggs show repeated cycles of nuclear envelope breakdown (NEB) and nuclear envelope reformation (NER). Mitosis (NEB to NER) is twice as long in Colcemid-treated eggs as in the untreated controls. Interphase (NER to NEB) is the same in both. Thus, each cycle is prolonged entirely in mitosis. The chromosomes of treated eggs condense and eventually split into separate chromatids which do not move apart. This "canaphase" splitting is substantially delayed relative to anaphase onset in the control eggs. Treated eggs are irradiated after NEB with 366-nm light to inactivate the Colcemid. This allows the eggs to assemble normal spindles and divide. Up to 14 min after NEB, delays in the start of microtubule assembly give equal delays in anaphase onset, cleavage, and the events of the following cell cycle. Regardless of the delay, anaphase follows irradiation by the normal prometaphase duration. The quantity of spindle microtubules also influences the timing of mitotic events. Short Colcemid treatments administered in prophase of second division cause eggs to assemble small spindles. One blastomere is irradiated after NEB to provide a control cell with a normal-sized spindle. Cells with diminished spindles always initiate anaphase later than their controls. Telophase events are correspondingly delayed. This work demonstrates that spindle microtubules are involved in the mechanisms that control the time when the cell will initiate anaphase, finish mitosis, and start the next cell cycle.  相似文献   

11.
The morphological characteristics of microtubule-organizing centers (MTOCs) in dermal interphase melanophores of Xenopus laevis larvae in vivo at 51-53 stages of development has been studied using immuno-stained semi-thick sections by fluorescent microscopy combined with computer image analysis. Computer image analysis of melanophores with aggregated and dispersed pigment granules, stained with the antibodies against the centrosome-specific component (CTR210) and tubulin, has revealed the presence of one main focus of microtubule convergence in the cell body, which coincides with the localization of the centrosome-specific antigen. An electron microscopy of those melanophores has shown that aggregation or dispersion of melanosomes is accompanied by changes in the morphological arrangement of the MTOC/centrosome. The centrosome in melanophores with dispersed pigment exhibits a conventional organization, and their melanosomes are situated in an immediate vicinity of the centrioles. In melanophores with aggregated pigment, MTOC is characterized by a three-zonal organization: the centrosome with centrioles, the centrosphere, and an outlying radial arrangement of microtubules and their associated inclusions. The centrosome in interphase melanophores is presumed to contain a pair of centrioles or numerous centrioles. Because of an inability of detecting additional MTOCs, it has been considered that an active MTOC in interphase melanophores of X. laevis is the centrosome. We assume that remaining intact microtubules in the cytoplasmic processes of mitotic melanophores (Rubina et al., 1999) derive either from the aster or the centrosome active at the interphase.  相似文献   

12.
Mitotic spindles constitute the machinery responsible for equidistribution of the genetic material into each daughter cell during cell division. They are transient and hence quite labile structures, changing their morphology even while performing their function. Biochemical, immunological and genetic analyses of mitotic cells have allowed us to identify a variety of molecules that are recruited to form the spindle at the onset of mitosis. Evaluation of the roles of these molecules in both the formation and in the dynamics of spindle microtubules should be important for understanding the molecular basis of mitosis and its regulation. We have recently identified a novel mitosis-specific microtubule-associated protein (MAP) using a monoclonal antibody probe raised against the mitotic spindles isolated from cultured mammalian cells. This 95/105 kDa antigen represents a unique component of the spindle distinct from any of the other MAPs reported so far. Antibody microinjection resulted in mitotic inhibition in a stage-specific and dose-dependent manner, indicating that the protein is an essential spindle component.  相似文献   

13.
Brown RC  Lemmon BE  Nguyen H 《Protoplasma》2003,222(3-4):167-174
Summary. Endosperm begins development as a single fertilized cell that undergoes many rounds of mitosis without cytokinesis resulting in a syncytium. The multinucleate cytoplasm is organized by nucleus-based radial microtubule systems into nuclear-cytoplasmic domains. When microtubules are organized into mitotic spindles, the integrity of the common cytoplasm is maintained by an unaltered network of filamentous actin. The first four rounds of mitosis result in the establishment of three developmental domains within the common cytoplasm. The spindles of the first two rounds of mitosis are oriented parallel to the long axis of the central cell, resulting in four nuclear-cytoplasmic domains in a filamentous arrangement. A switch in spindle orientation occurs in the third round of mitosis; all four spindles are oriented perpendicular to the long axis resulting in eight nuclear-cytoplasmic domains arranged in two adjacent files. Whereas the first three rounds of mitosis are synchronous, the fourth occurs as a wave of successive mitoses that begins at the micropylar pole. By the 16-nuclei stage, differences in nuclear shape, cytoskeletal arrays, and cytoplasmic characteristics mark the differentiation of the syncytium into micropylar, central, and chalazal developmental chambers. Nuclei in the micropylar chamber are fusiform and sheathed by parallel microtubules that flare from their tips, while those in the central and chalazal chambers are spherical. Nuclei in the central chamber are surrounded by radial microtubule systems, while those in the chalaza are enmeshed in a reticulum of microtubules. Whereas the cytoplasm in both micropylar and chalazal chambers is dense and nearly nonvacuolate, the syncytium in the central chamber consists of a single layer of evenly spaced nuclear-cytoplasmic domains surrounding a large central vacuole.Correspondence and reprints: Department of Biology, University of Louisiana at Lafayette, Lafayette, LA 70504-2451, U.S.A.Present address: Department of Plant Sciences, University of Arizona, Tucson, Arizona, U.S.A.  相似文献   

14.
The morphological characteristics of microtubule-organizing centers (MTOCs) in dermal interphase melanophores of Xenopus laevis larvae in vivo at 51-53 stages of development has been studied using immunostained semi-thick sections by fluorescent microscopy combined with computer image analysis. Computer image analysis of melanophores with aggregated and dispersed pigment granules, stained with the antibodies against the centrosome-specific component (CTR210) and tubulin, has revealed the presence of one main focus of microtubule convergence in the cell body, which coincides with the localization of the centrosome-specific antigen. An electron microscopy of those melanophores has shown that aggregation or dispersion of melanosomes is accompanied by changes in the morphological arrangement of the MTOC/centrosome. The centrosome in melanophores with dispersed pigment exhibits a conventional organization, and their melanosomes are situated in an immediate vicinity of the centrioles. In melanophores with aggregated pigment, MTOC is characterized by a three-zonal organization: the centrosome with centrioles, the centrosphere, and an outlying radial arrangement of microtubules and their associated inclusions. The centrosome in interphase melanophores is presumed to contain a pair of centrioles or numerous centrioles. Because of an inability of detecting additional MTOCs, it has been considered that an active MTOC in interphase melanophores of X. laevis is the centrosome. We assume that remaining intact microtubules in the cytoplasmic processes of mitotic melanophores (Rubina et al., 1999) derive either from the aster or the centrosome active at the interphase.  相似文献   

15.
The morphology of budding and conjugating cells and associated changes in microtubules and actin distribution were studied in the yeast Xanthophyllomyces dendrorhous (Phaffia rhodozyma) by phase-contrast and fluorescence microscopy. The non-budding interphase cell showed a nucleus situated in the central position and bundles of cytoplasmic microtubules either stretching parallel to the longitudinal cell axis or randomly distributed in the cell; none of these, however, had a character of astral microtubules. During mitosis, the nucleus divided in the daughter cell, cytoplasmic microtubules disappeared and were replaced by a spindle. The cytoplasmic microtubules reappeared after mitosis had finished. Actin patches were present both in the bud and the mother cell. Cells were induced to mate by transfer to ribitol- containing medium without nitrogen. Partner cells fused by conjugation projections where actin patches had been accumulated. Cell fusion resulted in a zygote that produced a basidium with parallel bundles of microtubules extended along its axis and with actin patches concentrated at the apex. The fused nucleus moved towards the tip of the basidium. During this movement, nuclear division was taking place; the nuclei were eventually distributed to basidiospores. Mitochondria appeared as vesicles of various sizes; their large amounts were found, often lying adjacent to microtubules, in the subcortical cytoplasm of both vegetative cells and zygotes.  相似文献   

16.
Kinesins and dyneins play important roles during cell division. Using RNA interference (RNAi) to deplete individual (or combinations of) motors followed by immunofluorescence and time-lapse microscopy, we have examined the mitotic functions of cytoplasmic dynein and all 25 kinesins in Drosophila S2 cells. We show that four kinesins are involved in bipolar spindle assembly, four kinesins are involved in metaphase chromosome alignment, dynein plays a role in the metaphase-to-anaphase transition, and one kinesin is needed for cytokinesis. Functional redundancy and alternative pathways for completing mitosis were observed for many single RNAi knockdowns, and failure to complete mitosis was observed for only three kinesins. As an example, inhibition of two microtubule-depolymerizing kinesins initially produced monopolar spindles with abnormally long microtubules, but cells eventually formed bipolar spindles by an acentrosomal pole-focusing mechanism. From our phenotypic data, we construct a model for the distinct roles of molecular motors during mitosis in a single metazoan cell type.  相似文献   

17.
A monoclonal antibody raised against mitotic spindles isolated from CHO cells ([CHO1], Sellitto, C., and R. Kuriyama. 1988. J. Cell Biol. 106:431-439) identifies an epitope that resides on polypeptides of 95 and 105 kD and is localized in the spindles of diverse organisms. The antigen is distributed throughout the spindle at metaphase but becomes concentrated in a progressively narrower zone on either side of the spindle midplane as anaphase progresses. Microinjection of CHO1, either as an ascites fluid or as purified IgM, results in mitotic inhibition in a stage-specific and dose-dependent manner. Parallel control injections with nonimmune IgMs do not yield significant mitotic inhibition. Immunofluorescence analysis of injected cells reveals that those which complete mitosis display normal localization of CHO1, whereas arrested cells show no specific localization of the CHO1 antigen within the spindle. Immunoelectron microscopic images of such arrested cells indicate aberrant microtubule organization. The CHO1 antigen in HeLa cell extracts copurifies with taxol-stabilized microtubules. Neither of the polypeptides bearing the antigen is extracted from microtubules by ATP or GTP, but both are approximately 60% extracted with 0.5 M NaCl. Sucrose gradient analysis reveals that the antigens sediment at approximately 11S. The CHO 1 antigen appears to be a novel mitotic MAP whose proper distribution within the spindle is required for mitosis. The properties of the antigen(s) suggest that the corresponding protein(s) are part of the mechanism that holds the antiparallel microtubules of the two interdigitating half spindles together during anaphase.  相似文献   

18.
Establishment of anterior-posterior polarity in one-cell stage Caenorhabditis elegans embryos depends in part on astral microtubules. As the zygote enters mitosis, these microtubules promote the establishment of a posterior pole by binding to and protecting a cytoplasmic pool of the posterior polarity protein PAR-2 from phosphorylation by the cortically localized anterior polarity protein PKC-3. Prior to activation of the sperm aster, the oocyte Meiosis I and II spindles assemble and function, usually at the future anterior pole, but these meiotic spindle microtubules fail to establish posterior polarity through PAR-2. Here we show that a semi-dominant mutation in the general splicing factor SF3a66 can lead to a reversed axis of AP polarity that depends on PAR-2 and possibly on close proximity of oocyte meiotic spindles with the cell cortex. One possible explanation is that reduced levels of PKC-3, due to a general splicing defect, can result in axis reversal due to a failure to prevent oocyte meiotic spindle microtubules from interfering with AP axis formation.  相似文献   

19.
An electron microscopy study showed that in melanophores with dispersed and aggregated pigment the sensitivity of the centrosome and the stability of microtubules were different and depended on the colcemid concentration. The structure of the centrosome didn't change upon exposure to colcemid in dispersed melanophores. In aggregated melanophores, on exposure to 10(-6) M colcemid, the centrosome retained its structure; colcemid at 10(-5)-10(-3) M caused a dramatic collapse of the centrosome. Treatment of aggregated melanophores with colcemid resulted in the complete disassembly of the microtubules; though microtubules in dispersed melanophores appear to be colcemid resistant. Light microscopy studies indicated that in Xenopus melanophores with aggregated or dispersed pigment melanosomes didn't change their location after exposure to 10(-3)-10(-6) M colcemid. Subsequent incubation in colcemid-free medium revealed that the cells retained their ability to translocate melanosomes in response to hormone stimulation. Electron microscopy data revealed the inactivation of the centrosome as MTOC (microtubule-organizing center) in dispersed melanophores with melatonin substituted for MSH in the presence of colcemid. In contrast, with melanocyte-stimulating hormone (MSH) substituted for melatonin, we observed the activation of the centrosome in aggregated cells. We showed that in aggregated melanophores pigment movement proceeded in the complete absence of microtubules, suggesting the involvement of a microtubule-independent component in the hormone-induced melanosome dispersion. However, we observed abnormal aggregation along colcemid-resistent microtubules in dispersed melanophores, suggesting the involvement of not only stable but also labile microtubules in the centripetal movement of melanosomes. The results raise the intriguing questions about the mechanism of the hormone and colcemid action on the centrosome structure and microtubule network in melanophores with dispersed and aggregated pigment.  相似文献   

20.
The role of centrosomes and centrioles during mitotic spindle assembly in vertebrates remains controversial. In cell-free extracts and experimentally derived acentrosomal cells, randomly oriented microtubules (MTs) self-organize around mitotic chromosomes and assemble anastral spindles. However, vertebrate somatic cells normally assemble a connected pair of polarized, astral MT arrays--termed an amphiaster ("a star on both sides")--that is formed by the splitting and separation of the microtubule-organizing center (MTOC) well before nuclear envelope breakdown (NEB). Whether amphiaster formation requires splitting of duplicated centrosomes is not known. We found that when centrosomes were removed from living vertebrate cells early in their cell cycle, an acentriolar MTOC reassembled, and, prior to NEB, a functional amphiastral spindle formed. Cytoplasmic dynein, dynactin, and pericentrin are all recruited to the interphase aMTOC, and the activity of kinesin-5 is needed for amphiaster formation. Mitosis proceeded on time and these karyoplasts divided in two. However, ~35% of aMTOCs failed to split and separate before NEB, and these entered mitosis with persistent monastral spindles. Chromatin-associated RAN-GTP--the small GTPase Ran in its GTP bound state--could not restore bipolarity to monastral spindles, and these cells exited mitosis as single daughters. Our data reveal the novel finding that MTOC separation and amphiaster formation does not absolutely require the centrosome, but, in its absence, the fidelity of bipolar spindle assembly is highly compromised.  相似文献   

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