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1.
While previous studies have shown that microtubules (MTs) are essential for maintaining the highly biased axial growth of the Drosophila bristle, the mechanism for this process has remained vague. We report that the MT minus-end marker, Nod-KHC, accumulates at the bristle tip, suggesting that the MT network in the bristle is organized minus end out. Potential markers for studying the importance of properly polarized MTs to bristle axial growth are Ik2 and Spindle-F (Spn-F), since mutations in spn-F and ik2 affect bristle development. We demonstrate that Spn-F and Ik2 are localized to the bristle tip and that mutations in ik2 and spn-F affect bristle MT and actin organization. Specifically, mutation in ik2 affects polarized bristle MT function. It was previously found that the hook mutant exhibited defects in bristle polarity and that hook is involved in endocytic trafficking. We found that Hook is localized at the bristle tip and that this localization is affected in ik2 mutants, suggesting that the contribution of MTs within the bristle shaft is important for correct endocytic trafficking. Thus, our results show that MTs are organized in a polarized manner within the highly elongated bristle and that this organization is essential for biased bristle axial growth.Polarized cell growth, manifested as cellular growth biased toward one pole of a cell, is the result of dynamic developmental processes that require an extensive reorganization of the cytoplasm in response to both intracellular and extracellular signals. Essentially, all cells can polarize in response to internal and/or external cues, such as matrix components, cell-cell contacts, or chemical gradients. Eukaryotic cells generally interpret these cues by assembling a polarized actin cytoskeleton at the cortex, which in turn coordinates with microtubules to guide internal membranes. This network ultimately polarizes events that occur internally and at the cell surface (10). A critical issue in this respect concerns how the cytoskeleton responds to those cues that lead to polarized growth.During development, Drosophila epidermal cells form a variety of polarized structures. These include the epidermal hairs that decorate much of the adult cuticular surface, the shafts of the bristle sense organs, the lateral extensions of the arista, and the larval denticles. These cuticular structures are produced by cytoskeleton-mediated outgrowths of the epiderma (13, 16). Since alterations in bristle morphology are easy to detect in living flies and since small changes in the actin cytoskeleton, as induced by drugs or mutations, often result in an easily detectable phenotype, the growth of the bristle cell is used to define the role of the cytoskeleton in polarized cell growth.Bristle cells sprout during metamorphosis and elongate over the course of ∼18 h. Growth is driven by actin filament polymerization (41). The actin bundles in bristle sprouts begin as microvilli (45) and are cross-bridged into modular bundles 1 to 5 μm in length by at least two cross-linking proteins, forked and fascin (43, 45, 46). These modules are then grafted together by end-to-end joining into stiff bundles (15) which run longitudinally along the bristle shaft, attached to the plasma membrane (40), to support the cell extension as well-spaced ribs. Bundles are tapered, with the largest cross-sectional area of individual bundles found at the base, containing >500 filaments (40). In Drosophila pupae, developing bristles contain 7 to 11 (microchaeta) or 12 to 18 (macrochaeta) bundles of cross-linked actin filaments and a large population of microtubules (MTs) that run longitudinally along the bristle shaft. It was suggested that bristle MTs are highly stable, forming at the start of elongation and then moving out along the shaft as the cell elongates (44). Inhibitor studies suggest that MTs are essential for maintaining bristle axial growth, since injection of microtubule antagonists, such as vinblastine, into pupae resulted in short and fat bristles (13).It was previously demonstrated that mutations in the Drosophila ikkɛ homologue, ik2, and in the novel gene spindle-F (spn-F), which is not conserved outside insect species, affect both egg chamber polarity and bristle development (1, 37). During oogenesis, both ik2 and spn-F affect mRNA localization due to their effects on actin and MT minus-end organization. Moreover, we were able to show that Ik2 and Spn-F form a complex that regulates cytoskeleton organization during Drosophila oogenesis, with Spn-F serving as the direct regulatory target for Ik2 kinase activity (11). Further evidence for the role of ik2 in cytoskeleton-related processes comes from its interaction with the Drosophila inhibitor of apoptosis 1 (DIAP1). It was suggested that ik2 acts as a negative regulator of F-actin assembly and maintains the fidelity of polarized elongation during cell morphogenesis by modulating DIAP1 levels (22, 29). Recently it was shown that ik2 regulates the dendrite pruning involved in MT disassembly (23).Since ik2 and spn-F affect bristle polarity organization, we investigated the role of these genes in shaping bristle morphology. We report that MTs within the bristle are organized in a polarized manner, minus-end out. We also demonstrate that both the Spn-F and Ik2 proteins are localized to the bristle tip. Close examination during the bristle elongation period revealed that mutations in either gene affect cytoskeleton organization. Specifically, upon mutation of ik2, the MT minus-end marker is no longer accumulated at the bristle tip. Moreover, we found that the Hook protein is localized at the bristle tip and that such localization is affected in spn-F and ik2 mutants, suggesting that MT functionality within the bristle is essential for recruitment of components of the endocytic trafficking to the tip of the bristle. Thus, we suggest that ik2 and spn-F affect MT functions which are required for the biased axial shape of the bristle. This, in turn, affects the localization of the endocytic trafficking machinery to the bristle tip.  相似文献   

2.
Within interphase cells, microtubules (MTs) are organized in a cell-specific manner to support cell shape and function. Here, we report that coordination between stable and dynamic MTs determines and maintains the highly elongated bristle cell shape. By following MT-decorating hooks and by tracking EB1 we identified two MT populations within bristles: a stable MT population polarized with their minus ends distal to the cell body, and a dynamic MT population that exhibits mixed polarity. Manipulating MT dynamics by Klp10A downregulation demonstrates that MTs can initiate new shaft extensions and thus possess the ability to determine growth direction. Actin filament bundling subsequently supports the newly formed shaft extensions. Analysis of ik2 mutant bristles, established by elongation defects in the Drosophila ikkε homolog, led to the observation that stable and dynamic MT orientation and polarized organization are important for proper bristle elongation. Thus, we demonstrate for the first time that coordination between stable and dynamic MT sets that are axially organized yet differently polarized drives cell elongation.  相似文献   

3.
Microtubules (MTs) often form a polarized array with minus ends anchored at the centrosome and plus ends extended toward the cell margins. Plus ends display behavior known as dynamic instability—transitions between rapid shortening and slow growth. It is known that dynamic instability is regulated locally to ensure entry of MTs into nascent areas of the cytoplasm, but details of this regulation remain largely unknown. Here, we test an alternative hypothesis for the local regulation of MT behavior. We used microsurgery to isolate a portion of peripheral cytoplasm from MTs growing from the centrosome, creating cytoplasmic areas locally depleted of MTs. We found that in sparsely populated areas MT plus ends persistently grew or paused but never shortened. In contrast, plus ends that entered regions of cytoplasm densely populated with MTs frequently transitioned to shortening. Persistent growth of MTs in sparsely populated areas could not be explained by a local increase in concentration of free tubulin subunits or elevation of Rac1 activity proposed to enhance MT growth at the cell leading edge during locomotion. These observations suggest the existence of a MT density–dependent mechanism regulating MT dynamics that determines dynamic instability of MTs in densely populated areas of the cytoplasm and persistent growth in sparsely populated areas.  相似文献   

4.
Microtubules (MTs) are often organized by a nucleus-associated MT organizing center (MTOC). In addition, in neurons and epithelial cells, motor-based transport of assembled MTs determines the polarity of the MT array. Here, we show that MT motility participates in MT organization in the fungus Ustilago maydis. In budding cells, most MTs are nucleated by three to six small and motile gamma-tubulin-containing MTOCs at the boundary of mother and daughter cell, which results in a polarized MT array. In addition, free MTs and MTOCs move rapidly throughout the cytoplasm. Disruption of MTs with benomyl and subsequent washout led to an equal distribution of the MTOC and random formation of highly motile and randomly oriented MTs throughout the cytoplasm. Within 3 min after washout, MTOCs returned to the neck region and the polarized MT array was reestablished. MT motility and polarity of the MT array was lost in dynein mutants, indicating that dynein-based transport of MTs and MTOCs polarizes the MT cytoskeleton. Observation of green fluorescent protein-tagged dynein indicated that this is achieved by off-loading dynein from the plus-ends of motile MTs. We propose that MT organization in U. maydis involves dynein-mediated motility of MTs and nucleation sites.  相似文献   

5.
Cell migration requires polarization of the cell into the leading edge and the trailing edge. Microtubules (MTs) are indispensable for polarized cell migration in the majority of cell types. To support cell polarity, MT network has to be functionally and structurally asymmetric. How is this asymmetry achieved? In interphase cells, MTs form a dynamic system radiating from a centrosome-based MT-organizing center (MTOC) to the cell edges. Symmetry of this radial array can be broken according to four general principles. Asymmetry occurs due to differential modulation of MT dynamics, relocation of existing MTs within a cell, adding an asymmetric nucleation site, and/or repositioning of a symmetric nucleation site to one side of a cell. Combinations of these asymmetry regulation principles result in a variety of asymmetric MT networks typical for diverse motile cell types. Importantly, an asymmetric MT array is formed at a non-conventional MT nucleation site, the Golgi. Here, we emphasize the contribution of this array to the asymmetry of MT network.  相似文献   

6.
In the fields of axonal and dendritic guidance, there is now a significant accumulation of knowledge of how extracellular signaling molecules activate their cognate growth cone receptors. Relatively little is known about the subsequent activation of intracellular signaling pathways and actin reorganization, and very little is known about how microtubules (MTs) reorganize during growth cone turning. I hypothesize that dynamic MTs are required in order to catalyze the polarized actin assembly necessary for growth cone turning, that MTs and actin filaments promote each other's assembly through positive feedback, that MT stability is enhanced further through the formation of membrane-associated MT attachment sites, and that these MT stabilization events subsequently accelerate axonal/dendritic shaft formation.  相似文献   

7.
The cytoskeleton is essential for the maintenance of cell morphology in eukaryotes. In fission yeast, for example, polarized growth sites are organized by actin, whereas microtubules (MTs) acting upstream control where growth occurs. Growth is limited to the cell poles when MTs undergo catastrophes there and not elsewhere on the cortex. Here, we report that the modulation of MT dynamics by forces as observed in vitro can quantitatively explain the localization of MT catastrophes in Schizosaccharomyces pombe. However, we found that it is necessary to add length‐dependent catastrophe rates to make the model fully consistent with other previously measured traits of MTs. We explain the measured statistical distribution of MT–cortex contact times and re‐examine the curling behavior of MTs in unbranched straight tea1Δ cells. Importantly, the model demonstrates that MTs together with associated proteins such as depolymerizing kinesins are, in principle, sufficient to mark the cell poles.  相似文献   

8.
In neurons, tubulin is synthesized primarily in the cell body, whereas the molecular machinery for neurite extension and elaboration of microtubule (MT) array is localized to the growth cone region. This unique functional and biochemical compartmentalization of neuronal cells requires transport mechanisms for the delivery of newly synthesized tubulin and other cytoplasmic components from the cell body to the growing axon. According to the polymer transport model, tubulin is transported along the axon as a polymer. Because the majority of axonal MTs are stationary at any given moment, it has been assumed that only a small fraction of MTs translocates along the axon by saltatory movement reminiscent of the fast axonal transport. Such intermittent "stop and go" MT transport has been difficult to detect or to exclude by using direct video microscopy methods. In this study, we measured the translocation of MT plus ends in the axonal shaft by expressing GFP-EB1 in Xenopus embryo neurons in culture. Formal quantitative analysis of MT assembly/disassembly indicated that none of the MTs in the axonal shaft were rapidly transported. Our results suggest that transport of axonal MTs is not required for delivery of newly synthesized tubulin to the growing nerve processes.  相似文献   

9.
《Biophysical journal》2020,118(8):1914-1920
The densely packed microtubule (MT) array found in neuronal cell projections (neurites) serves two fundamental functions simultaneously: it provides a mechanically stable track for molecular motor-based transport and produces forces that drive neurite growth. The local pattern of MT polarity along the neurite shaft has been found to differ between axons and dendrites. In axons, the neurons’ dominating long projections, roughly 90% of the MTs orient with their rapidly growing plus end away from the cell body, whereas in vertebrate dendrites, their orientations are locally mixed. Molecular motors are known to be responsible for cytoskeletal ordering and force generation, but their collective function in the dense MT cytoskeleton of neurites remains elusive. We here hypothesized that both the polarity pattern of MTs along the neurite shaft and the shaft’s global extension are simultaneously driven by molecular motor forces and should thus be regulated by the mechanical load acting on the MT array as a whole. To investigate this, we simulated cylindrical bundles of MTs that are cross-linked and powered by molecular motors by iteratively solving a set of force-balance equations. The bundles were subjected to a fixed load arising from actively generated tension in the actomyosin cortex enveloping the MTs. The magnitude of the load and the level of motor-induced connectivity between the MTs have been varied systematically. With an increasing load and decreasing motor-induced connectivity between MTs, the bundles became wider in cross section and extended more slowly, and the local MT orientational order was reduced. These results reveal two, to our knowledge, novel mechanical factors that may underlie the distinctive development of the MT cytoskeleton in axons and dendrites: the cross-linking level of MTs by motors and the load acting on this cytoskeleton during growth.  相似文献   

10.
Vorob'ev IA  Malyĭ IV 《Tsitologiia》2008,50(6):477-486
In interphase cells, microtubules (MT) are long and form extended radial array. The length of individual MTs in living cells exhibits substantial stochastic fluctuations while the average length distribution in a cell remains nearly constant. We present a quantitative model that describes relation of the MT length and dynamics in the steady state in the cell using the minimal set of parameters (cell radius, tubulin concentration, critical concentration for plus end elongation, and the number of nucleation sites). The MT array is approximated as a radial system, where MT minus ends are associated with the nucleation sites on the centrosome, while plus ends grow and shorten. Dynamic instability of MT plus ends is approximated as a random walk process with boundary conditions and the behavior of MT array is quantified using diffusion and drift coefficients (Vorobjev et al., 1997, 1999). We show that establishment of the extended steady-state array could be accomplished solely by the limitation of the MT growth by the cell margin. We determined for the cell radius, tubulin concentration, critical concentration for plus end elongation, and number of nucleation sites the reference point in the parameter space where plus ends of individual MT on average neither elongate nor shorten. In this case average length of MT is equal to the half of cell radius. When any parameter is shifted from its reference value MTs become longer or shorter and consequently acquire positive or negative drift of their ends. In the vicinity of reference point, change in any parameter has major effect on the MT length and rather small effect on the drift. When mean length of the MTs is close to the cell radius the drift of the free plus ends becomes substantial, resulting in processive growth of individual MTs in the internal cytoplasm accompanied by apparent stabilization of the plus ends at the cell margin. Under these conditions small changes in parameters have significant impact on the magnitude of drift. Experimental analysis of the MT plus ends dynamics in different cultured cells shows that in most cases plus ends display positive drift, which, in the framework of the presented model, is in agreement with the simultaneous presence of long MTs.  相似文献   

11.
The cell biological processes underlying axon growth and guidance are still not well understood. An outstanding question is how a new segment of the axon shaft is formed in the wake of neuronal growth cone advance. For this to occur, the highly dynamic, splayed-out microtubule (MT) arrays characteristic of the growth cone must be consolidated (bundled together) to form the core of the axon shaft. MT-associated proteins stabilize bundled MTs, but how individual MTs are brought together for initial bundling is unknown. Here, we show that laterally moving actin arcs, which are myosin II-driven contractile structures, interact with growing MTs and transport them from the sides of the growth cone into the central domain. Upon Myosin II inhibition, the movement of actin filaments and MTs immediately stopped and MTs unbundled. Thus, Myosin II-dependent compressive force is necessary for normal MT bundling in the growth cone neck.  相似文献   

12.
Summary The reorganization of the actin and microtubule (MT) cytoskeleton was immunocytochemically visualized by confocal laser scanning microscopy throughout the photomorphogenetic differentiation of tip-growing characean protonemata into multicellular green thalli. After irradiating dark-grown protonemata with blue or white light, decreasing rates of gravitropic tip-growth were accompanied by a series of events leading to the first cell division: the nucleus migrated towards the tip; MTs and plastids invaded the apical cytoplasm; the polar zonation of cytoplasmic organelles and the prominent actin patch at the cell tip disappeared and the tip-focused actin microfilaments (MFs) were reorganized into a homogeneous network. During prometaphase and metaphase, extranuclear spindle microtubules formed between the two spindle poles. Cytoplasmic MTs associated with the apical spindle pole decreased in number but did not disappear completely during mitosis. The basal cortical MTs represent a discrete MT population that is independent from the basal spindle poles and did not redistribute during mitosis and cytokinesis. Preprophase MT bands were never detected but cytokinesis was characterized by higher-plant-like phragmoplast MT arrays. Cytoplasmic actin MFs persisted as a dense network in the apical cytoplasm throughout the first cell division. They were not found in close contact with spindle MTs, but actin MFs were clearly coaligned along the MTs of the early phragmoplast. The later belt-like phragmoplast was completely depleted of MFs close to the time of cell plate fusion except for a few actin MF bundles that extended to the margin of the growing cell plate. The cell plate itself and young anticlinal cell walls showed strong actin immunofluorescence. After several anticlinal cell divisions, basal cells of the multicellular protonema produced nodal cell complexes by multiple periclinal divisions. The apical-dome cell of the new shoot which originated from a nodal cell becomes the meristem initial that regularly divides to produce a segment cell. The segment cell subsequently divides to produce a single file of alternating internodal cells and multicellular nodes which together form the complexly organized characean thallus. The actin and MT distribution of nodal cells resembles that of higherplant meristem cells, whereas the internodal cells exhibit a highly specialized cortical system of MTs and streaming-generating actin bundles, typical of highly vacuolated plant cells. The transformation from the asymmetric mitotic spindle of the polarized tip-growing protonema cell to the symmetric, higher-plant-like spindle of nodal thallus cells recapitulates the evolutionary steps from the more primitive organisms to higher plants.Abbreviations FITC fluorescein isothiocyanate - MF microfilament - MT microtubule - MSB microtubule-stabilizing buffer - PBS phosphate-buffered saline  相似文献   

13.
Spinning disc confocal microscopy of LLCPK1 cells expressing GFP-tubulin was used to demonstrate that microtubules (MTs) rapidly elongate to the cell cortex after anaphase onset. Concurrently, individual MTs are released from the centrosome and the centrosome fragments into clusters of MTs. Using cells expressing photoactivatable GFP-tubulin to mark centrosomal MT minus ends, a sevenfold increase in MT release in anaphase is documented as compared with metaphase. Transport of both individually released MTs and clusters of MTs is directionally biased: motion is directed away from the equatorial region. Clusters of MTs retain centrosomal components at their focus and the capacity to nucleate MTs. Injection of mRNA encoding nondegradable cyclin B blocked centrosome fragmentation and the stimulation of MT release in anaphase despite allowing anaphase-like chromosome segregation. Biased MT release may provide a mechanism for MT-dependent positioning of components necessary for specifying the site of contractile ring formation.  相似文献   

14.
In interphase cells, microtubules (MT) form an extended radial array. The length of individual MTs in living cells exhibits substantial stochastic fluctuations, while the average length distribution in a cell remains nearly constant. We present a quantitative model that describes the relation of the MT length and dynamics in the steady state in the cell using the minimal set of parameters (cell radius, tubulin concentration, critical concentration for plus-end elongation and the number of nucleation sites). The MT array is approximated as a radial system, where minus-ends of MTs are associated with nucleation sites on the centrosome, while plus ends grow and shorten. Dynamic instability of MT plus ends is approximated as a random walk process with boundary conditions; the behavior of an MT array is quantified using diffusion and drift coefficients (Vorobjev et al., 1997; Vorobjev et al., 1999). We show that the establishment of the extended steady-state array could be accomplished solely by the limitation of MT growth by the cell margin. For the cell radius, tubulin concentration, critical concentration for plus-end elongation, and the number of nucleation sites we determined the reference point in the parameter space where plus ends of individual MTs, on average, neither elongate nor shorten. In this case, the average MT length is equal to the half of the cell radius. When any parameter is shifted from its reference value, MTs become longer or shorter and, consequently, acquire a positive or negative drift of their plus ends. In the vicinity of the reference point, a change in any parameter has a major effect on the MT length and a rather small effect on the drift. When the average MT length is close to the cell radius, the drift of free plus ends becomes substantial, resulting in processive growth of individual MTs in the internal cytoplasm, accompanied by the apparent stabilization of plus ends at the cell margin. Under these conditions small changes in parameters have a significant impact on the magnitude of the drift. Experimental analysis of MT plus-end dynamics in different cultured cells shows that, in most cases, plus ends display positive drift, which, in the framework of the presented model, is in agreement with the simultaneous presence of long MTs.  相似文献   

15.
Growth of most eukaryotic cells requires directed transport along microtubules (MTs) that are nucleated at nuclear-associated microtubule organizing centers (MTOCs), such as the centrosome and the fungal spindle pole body (SPB). Herein, we show that the pathogenic fungus Ustilago maydis uses different MT nucleation sites to rearrange MTs during the cell cycle. In vivo observation of green fluorescent protein-MTs and MT plus-ends, tagged by a fluorescent EB1 homologue, provided evidence for antipolar MT orientation and dispersed cytoplasmic MT nucleating centers in unbudded cells. On budding gamma-tubulin containing MTOCs formed at the bud neck, and MTs reorganized with >85% of all minus-ends being focused toward the growth region. Experimentally induced lateral budding resulted in MTs that curved out of the bud, again supporting the notion that polar growth requires polar MT nucleation. Depletion or overexpression of Tub2, the gamma-tubulin from U. maydis, affected MT number in interphase cells. The SPB was inactive in G2 phase but continuously recruited gamma-tubulin until it started to nucleate mitotic MTs. Taken together, our data suggest that MT reorganization in U. maydis depends on cell cycle-specific nucleation at dispersed cytoplasmic sites, at a polar MTOC and the SPB.  相似文献   

16.
We have investigated the sites of microtubule (MT) assembly in neurons during axon growth by taking advantage of the relationship between the proportion of tyrosinated alpha-tubulin (tyr-tubulin) in MTs and their age. Specifically, young (newly assembled) MTs contain more tyr-tubulin than older (more long-lived) MTs. To quantify the relative proportion of tyr-tubulin in MTs, cultured rat sympathetic neurons were permeabilized under conditions that stabilize existing MTs and remove unassembled tubulin. The MTs were then double-stained with antibodies to tyr-tubulin (as a measure of the amount of tyr-tubulin in MTs) and to beta-tubulin (as a measure of total MT mass), using immunofluorescence procedures. Cells were imaged with a cooled charge-coupled device camera and the relative proportion of tyr-tubulin in the MTs was quantified by computing the ratio of the tyr-tubulin fluorescence to the beta-tubulin fluorescence using a novel application of digital image processing and analysis techniques. The amount of tyr-tubulin in the MTs was highest in the cell body and at the growth cone; peak ratios in these two regions were approximately 10-fold higher than for the axon shaft. Moving out from the cell body into the axon, the tyr-tubulin content declined over an average distance of 40 microns to reach a constant low value within the axon shaft and then rose again more distally, over an average distance of 110 microns, to reach a peak at the growth cone (average axon length = 358 microns). These observations indicate that newly assembled MTs are concentrated in the proximal and distal regions of growing axons and therefore that the cell body and growth cone are the most active sites of MT assembly dynamics in neurons that are actively extending axons.  相似文献   

17.
The centrosome is positioned at the cell center by pushing and pulling forces transmitted by microtubules (MTs). Centrosome decentering is often considered to result from asymmetric, cortical pulling forces exerted in particular by molecular motors on MTs and controlled by external cues affecting the cell cortex locally. Here we used numerical simulations to investigate the possibility that it could equally result from the redistribution of pushing forces due to a reorientation of MTs. We first showed that MT gliding along cell edges and pivoting around the centrosome regulate MT rearrangement and thereby direct the spatial distribution of pushing forces, whereas the number, dynamics, and stiffness of MTs determine the magnitude of these forces. By modulating these parameters, we identified different regimes, involving both pushing and pulling forces, characterized by robust centrosome centering, robust off-centering, or “reactive” positioning. In the last-named conditions, weak asymmetric cues can induce a misbalance of pushing and pulling forces, resulting in an abrupt transition from a centered to an off-centered position. Taken together, these results point to the central role played by the configuration of the MTs on the distribution of pushing forces that position the centrosome. We suggest that asymmetric external cues should not be seen as direct driver of centrosome decentering and cell polarization but instead as inducers of an effective reorganization of the MT network, fostering centrosome motion to the cell periphery.  相似文献   

18.
ABSTRACT

Indirect immunofluorescence performed using sections of actively growing maize root apices fixed and then embedded in low-melting-point Steedman's wax has proved efficient in revealing the arrangements and reorganizations of motility-related cytoskeletal elements which are associated with root cell development and tissue differentiation. This powerful, yet relatively simple, technique shows that specific rearrangements of both microtubular (MT) and actin microfilament (MF) arrays occur in cells as they leave the meristem and traverse the transitional region interpolated between meristem and elongation region. Cytoskeletal and growth analyses have identified the transition zone as critical for both cell and root development; it is in this zone that cell growth is channelled, by the cytoskeleton, into a strictly polarized mode which enables root tips to extend rapidly through the soil in search of water and nutrients. An integrated cytoskeletal network is crucial for both the cytomorphogenesis of individual cells and the overall morphogenesis of the plant body. The latter process can be viewed as a reflection of the tight control which cytoskeletal networks exert not only over cell division planes in the cells within meristematic apices but also over the orientation of cell growth in the meristem and elsewhere. Endoplasmic MTs interconnecting the plasma membrane with the nucleus are suggested to be involved in cell division control; they may also act as a two-way cytoskeletal communication channel for signals passing to and fro between the extracellular environment and the genome. Moreover, the dynamism of endoplasmic MTs exerts direct effects on chromatin structure and the accompanying nuclear architecture and hence can help exert a cellular level of control over cell growth and cell cycle progression. Because the inherent dynamic instability of MTs depends on the concentration of tubulin dimers within the cytoplasm, we propose that when asymmetric cell division occurs, it will result in two daughter cells which differ in the turnover rates of their MTs. This phenomenon could be responsible for different cell fates of daughter plant cells produced by such cell divisions.  相似文献   

19.
The asymmetric distribution of stable, posttranslationally modified microtubules (MTs) contributes to the polarization of many cell types, yet the factors controlling the formation of these MTs are not known. We have found that lysophosphatidic acid (LPA) is a major serum factor responsible for rapidly generating stable, detyrosinated (Glu) MTs in serum-starved 3T3 cells. Using C3 toxin and val14 rho we showed that rho was both necessary and sufficient for the induction of Glu MTs by LPA and serum. Unlike previously described factors that induce MT stability, rho induced the stabilization of only a subset of the MTs and, in wound-edge cells, these stable MTs were appropriately oriented toward the leading edge of the cell. LPA had little effect on individual parameters of MT dynamics, but did induce long states of pause in a subset of MTs near the edge of the cell. Rho stimulation of MT stability was independent of actin stress fiber formation. These results identify rho as a novel regulator of the MT cytoskeleton that selectively stabilizes MTs during cell polarization by acting as a switch between dynamic and stable states of MTs rather than as a modulator of MT assembly and disassembly.  相似文献   

20.
In order to study the dynamic behavior of the mitotic apparatus leading to unequal cleavage, we investigated the distribution of mitotic microtubules (MTs) during maturation division of starfish oocytes. When the mitotic apparatus attached to the cell surface at metaphase, in both the first and second meiotic division, it is revealed, by immunofluorescence, that the MT distribution in the spindle, as well as in the aster, became asymmetric. MTs in the peripheral half spindle increased in number compared with those in the inner half spindle. Furthermore, these results were confirmed in the living cell by polarization microscopy; shortly after the attachment, the birefringence retardation of the peripheral half spindle became greater than that of the inner one, and the difference increased with time during anaphase. By inhibiting the attachment of the mitotic apparatus by means of centrifugation, the MT distribution maintained a symmetrical pattern through mitosis. These results suggest that the attachment of the mitotic apparatus to the cell surface induces the asymmetrical distribution of MTs not only in the aster but also in the spindle. Such a rich distribution of MTs in the peripheral half spindle appears to ensure chromosome exclusion into the polar body by anchoring them firmly to the cell surface of the animal pole.  相似文献   

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