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1.
The role of calcium signaling in cytokinesis has long remained ambiguous. Past studies of embryonic cell division discovered that calcium concentration increases transiently at the division plane just before cleavage furrow ingression, suggesting that these calcium transients could trigger contractile ring constriction. However, such calcium transients have only been found in animal embryos and their function remains controversial. We explored cytokinetic calcium transients in the fission yeast Schizosaccharomyces pombe by adopting GCaMP, a genetically encoded calcium indicator, to determine the intracellular calcium level of this model organism. We validated GCaMP as a highly sensitive calcium reporter in fission yeast, allowing us to capture calcium transients triggered by osmotic shocks. We identified a correlation between the intracellular calcium level and cell division, consistent with the existence of calcium transients during cytokinesis. Using time-lapse microscopy and quantitative image analysis, we discovered calcium spikes both at the start of cleavage furrow ingression and the end of cell separation. Inhibition of these calcium spikes slowed the furrow ingression and led to frequent lysis of daughter cells. We conclude that like the larger animal embryos, fission yeast triggers calcium transients that may play an important role in cytokinesis (197).  相似文献   

2.
Slow calcium waves accompany cytokinesis in medaka fish eggs   总被引:11,自引:6,他引:5  
Animal cells are cleaved by the formation and contraction of an extremely thin actomyosin band. In most cases this contractile band seems to form synchronously around the whole equator of the cleaving cell; however in giant cells it first forms near the mitotic apparatus and then slowly grows outwards over the cell. We studied the relationship of calcium to such contractile band growth using aequorin injected medaka fish eggs: we see two successive waves of faint luminescence moving along each of the first three cleavage furrows at approximately 0.5 micron/s. The first, narrower waves accompany furrow extension, while the second, broader ones, accompany the subsequent apposition or slow zipping together of the separating cells. If the first waves travel within the assembling contractile band, they would indicate local increases of free calcium to concentrations of about five to eight micromolar. This is the first report to visualize high free calcium within cleavage furrows. Moreover, this is also the first report to visualize slow (0.3-1.0 micron/s) as opposed to fast (10-100 microns/s) calcium waves. We suggest that these first waves are needed for furrow growth; that in part they further furrow growth by speeding actomyosin filament shortening, while such shortening in turn acts to mechanically release calcium and thus propagates these waves as well as furrow growth. We also suggest that the second waves act to induce the exocytosis which provides new furrow membrane.  相似文献   

3.
It has been proposed that a localized calcium (Ca) signal at the growing end of the cleavage furrow triggers cleavage furrow formation in large eggs. We have examined the possible role of a Ca signal in cleavage furrow formation in the Xenopus laevis egg during the first cleavage. We were able to detect two kinds of Ca waves along the cleavage furrow. However, the Ca waves appeared after cleavage furrow formation in late stages of the first cleavage. In addition, cleavage was not affected by injection of dibromoBAPTA or EGTA into the eggs at a concentration sufficient to suppress the Ca waves. Furthermore, even smaller classes of Ca release such as Ca puffs and Ca blips do not occur at the growing end of the cleavage furrow. These observations demonstrate that localized Ca signals in the cleavage furrow are not involved in cytokinesis. The two Ca waves have unique characteristics. The first wave propagates only in the region of newly inserted membrane along the cleavage furrow. On the other hand, the second wave propagates along the border of new and old membranes, suggesting that this wave might be involved in adhesion between two blastomeres.  相似文献   

4.
The intracellular distribution of calcium and phosphorus during metaphase and anaphase of the first cleavage in sea urchin eggs was studied with the electron-probe microanalyzer. This study allowed a comparison of the relative concentrations of both elements on the polar and cleavage furrow regions of the membrane and on the mitotic asters and cytoplasm. The results show that in most eggs, both calcium and phosphorus are more highly concentrated in the mitotic asters than in surrounding cytoplasm during both anaphase and metaphase. Calcium is more concentrated at the furrow region than at the polar region during metaphase but not anaphase. The role of calcium during mitosis was reviewed with special reference to the theories on the formation of the cleavage furrow along the equatorial zone between two mitotic centers.  相似文献   

5.
We have previously visualized three Ca2+ transients, generated by release from intracellular stores, which are associated with cytokinesis during the early cell division cycles of zebrafish embryos: the furrow positioning, propagation and deepening transients. Here we demonstrate the requirement of the latter for furrow deepening, and identify the Ca2+ release channels responsible for generating the deepening transient. The introduction of the Ca2+ buffer 5,5'-dibromo-BAPTA, at an appropriate time to challenge only the deepening transient, resulted in the dissipation of this transient and an inhibition of furrow deepening. Introduction of antagonists of the inositol 1,4,5-trisphosphate (IP3) receptor (heparin and 2-aminoethoxydiphenylborate; 2-APB) at the appropriate time, blocked the furrow deepening transient and resulted in an inhibition of furrow deepening. In contrast, antagonists of the ryanodine receptor and the NAADP-sensitive channel had no effect on either the furrow deepening transient or on furrow deepening. In addition, microinjection of IP3 led to the release of calcium from IP3-sensitive stores, whereas the introduction of caffeine or cADPR failed to induce any increase in intracellular Ca2+. Our new data thus support the idea that Ca2+ released via IP3 receptors is essential for generating the furrow deepening transient and demonstrate a requirement for a localized cytosolic Ca2+ riseforthe furrow deepening process. We also present data to show that the endoplasmic reticulum and IP3 receptors are localized on either side of the cleavage furrow, thus providing the intracellular Ca2+ store and release mechanism for generating the deepening transient.  相似文献   

6.
During cytokinesis, cleavage furrow invagination requires an actomyosin-based contractile ring and addition of new membrane. Little is known about how this actin and membrane traffic to the cleavage furrow. We address this through live analysis of fluorescently tagged vesicles in postcellularized Drosophila melanogaster embryos. We find that during cytokinesis, F-actin and membrane are targeted as a unit to invaginating furrows through formation of F-actin-associated vesicles. F-actin puncta strongly colocalize with endosomal, but not Golgi-derived, vesicles. These vesicles are recruited to the cleavage furrow along the central spindle and a distinct population of microtubules (MTs) in contact with the leading furrow edge (furrow MTs). We find that Rho-specific guanine nucleotide exchange factor mutants, pebble (pbl), severely disrupt this F-actin-associated vesicle transport. These transport defects are a consequence of the pbl mutants' inability to properly form furrow MTs and the central spindle. Transport of F-actin-associated vesicles on furrow MTs and the central spindle is thus an important mechanism by which actin and membrane are delivered to the cleavage furrow.  相似文献   

7.
Calcium signals can be communicated between cells by the diffusion of a second messenger through gap junction channels or by the release of an extracellular purinergic messenger. We investigated the contribution of these two pathways in endothelial cell lines by photoliberating InsP(3) or calcium from intracellular caged precursors, and recording either the resulting intercellular calcium wave or else the released ATP with a luciferin/luciferase assay. Photoliberating InsP(3) in a single cell within a confluent culture triggered an intercellular calcium wave, which was inhibited by the gap junction blocker alpha-glycyrrhetinic acid (alpha-GA), the connexin mimetic peptide gap 26, the purinergic inhibitors suramin, PPADS and apyrase and by purinergic receptor desensitisation. InsP(3)-triggered calcium waves were able to cross 20 microm wide cell-free zones. Photoliberating InsP(3) triggered ATP release that was blocked by buffering intracellular calcium with BAPTA and by applying gap 26. Gap 26, however, did not inhibit the gap junctional coupling between the cells as measured by fluorescence recovery after photobleaching. Photoliberating calcium did not trigger intercellular calcium waves or ATP release. We conclude that InsP(3)-triggered ATP release through connexin hemichannels contributes to the intercellular propagation of calcium signals.  相似文献   

8.
During fertilization and cleavage, embryos undergo transient rises in their intracellular free calcium levels that are postulated to provide essential signals enabling normal development to proceed. In order to analyze the spatiotemporal patterns and possible biological significance of these calcium transients, time-lapse confocal microscopy was used to monitor starfish embryos during normal development and following experimental manipulations that disrupted cleavage and/or the release of calcium ions from internal stores in the embryo. For such analyses, oocytes were co-injected with dextran-conjugated forms of the calcium-sensitive fluorochrome calcium green (CG) and the calcium-insensitive dye rhodamine (Rh) for dual-channel confocal ratioing. Based on CG/Rh ratioed images obtained every 15 sec far the first few hours of development, no prominent calcium spikes were typically evident at the onset of the first cell cycle as hormone-treated oocytes resumed maturation and underwent germinal vesicle breakdown (GVBD). Subsequently, fertilizations of post-GVBD oocytes caused a single prolonged calcium wave that reached relatively uniform amplitudes throughout the ooplasm. Within 90 min after fertilization, most starfish zygotes began to display clusters of repetitive calcium oscillations that typically—but not invariably—preceded nuclear envelope breakdown, anaphase onset, and the formation of the first cleavage furrow. Rapidly decaying calcium oscillations continued through at least the first five cleavages in specimens that developed into normal blastulae, and unlike fertilization-induced calcium waves, such spikes tended to be more pronounced in the cortical cytoplasm during early cleavages. Thus, three different types of calcium dynamics—no marked transients, a single nonoscillating wave, and repetitive oscillations—were observed as normally developing starfish underwent prefertilization maturation, fertilization, and cleavage, respectively, suggesting that the spatiotemporal patterns of calcium spiking can change during starfish early development. In specimens microinjected with colchicine, calcium transients were also visible in the absence of cell divisions, indicating that calcium spiking can be uncoupled from cytokinesis. To assess whether calcium fluxes are required for normal development, oocytes were also treated with haparia to black calcium release mediated by inositol 1,4,5-trisphosphate (IP3). Injections of heparin, but not the control molecule de-N-sulfated heparin, caused abnormal fertilization-induced calcium dynamics in a does-dependent fashion and typically abolished marked postfertilization calcium oscillations and normal cleavage. Based on correlative studies using caged IP3, heparin interfered with IP3-mediated calcium release, suggesting that such release is involved in the production of the free calcium elevations that occur in normally developing starfish embryos.  相似文献   

9.
We describe an embryonic lethal mutation in Xenopus laevis that provokes regression of cleavage furrow formation. The mutant females (designated as af) were obtained by the back-cross of a female with one of her sons. All the fertilized eggs laid by the mutant females, regardless of the wild-type male used in the mating, failed to cleave although each furrow ran at a proper position superficially. Light and electron microscopic observations of the embryos revealed that the cleavage furrows stayed on the surface and cytoplasmic divisions did not take place at all, while nuclear divisions did. Two-dimensional gel-electrophoretic comparisons of af and wild-type embryos demonstrated that two proteins, having estimated molecular masses of about 38 kDa (pI 6.6) and 78 kDa (pI 7.6), were missing in af embryos. Microinjection of clear cytoplasm from a wild-type egg into fertilized af eggs provoked partial surface contraction and cleavage furrow formation in recipient af eggs. The results showed that the af females carry a lethal maternal-effect mutation which causes cleavage furrow regression by being deficient in a few proteins, and that cytoplasm of wild-type eggs can partially rescue the cleavage furrow formation of af eggs by furnishing the corrective material, presumably a product of the normal allele of af.  相似文献   

10.
《The Journal of cell biology》1995,131(6):1539-1545
Cytokinesis, a key step in cell division, is known to be precisely regulated both in its timing and location. At present, the regulatory mechanism of cytokinesis is not well understood, although it has been suggested that calcium signaling may play an important role in this process. To test this notion, we introduced a sensitive fluorescent Ca2+ indicator into the zebrafish embryo and used confocal microscopy to measure the spatiotemporal variation of intracellular free Ca2+ concentration ([Ca2+]i) during cell cleavage. It was evident that a localized elevation of [Ca2+]i is closely associated with cytokinesis. First, we found that during cytokinesis, the level of free Ca2+ was elevated locally precisely at the cleavage site. Second, the rise of free Ca2+ was very rapid and occurred just preceding the initiation of furrow contraction. These observations strongly suggest that cytokinesis may be triggered by a calcium signal. In addition, we found that this cytokinesis-associated calcium signal arose mainly from internal stores of Ca2+ rather than from external free Ca2+; it could be blocked by the antagonist of inositol trisphosphate (InsP3) receptors. These findings suggest that the localized elevation of [Ca2+]i is caused by the release of free Ca2+ from the endoplasmic reticulum through the InsP3-regulated calcium channels.  相似文献   

11.
It is well known that stimulation of egg metabolism after fertilization is due to a rise in intracellular free calcium concentration. In sea urchin eggs, this first calcium signal is followed by other calcium transients that allow progression through mitotic control points of the cell cycle of the early embryo. How sperm induces these calcium transients is still far from being understood. In sea urchin eggs, both InsP3 and ryanodine receptors contribute to generate the fertilization calcium transient, while the InsP3 receptor generates the subsequent mitotic calcium transients. The identity of the mechanisms that generate InsP3 after fertilization remains an enigma. In order to determine whether PLCgamma might be the origin of the peaks of InsP3 production that punctuate the first mitotic cell cycles of the fertilized sea urchin egg, we have amplified by RT-PCR several fragments of sea urchin PLCgamma containing the two SH2 domains. The sequence shares similarities with SH2 domains of PLCgamma from mammals. One fragment was subcloned into a bacterial expression plasmid and a GST-fusion protein was produced and purified. Antibodies raised to the GST fusion protein demonstrate the presence of PLCgamma protein in eggs. Microinjection of the fragment into embryos interferes with mitosis. A related construct made from bovine PLCgamma also delayed or prevented entry into mitosis and blocked or prolonged metaphase. The bovine construct also blocked the calcium transient at fertilization, in contrast to a tandem SH2 control construct which did not inhibit either fertilization or mitosis. Our data indicate that PLCgamma plays a key role during fertilization and early development.  相似文献   

12.
Developmental modifications in cell shape depend on dynamic interactions between the extracellular matrix and cytoskeleton. In contrast, existing models of cytokinesis describe substantial cell surface remodeling that involves many intracellular regulatory and structural proteins but includes no contribution from the extracellular matrix [1-3]. Here, we show that extracellular hemicentins assemble at the cleavage furrow of dividing cells in the C.?elegans germline and in preimplantation mouse embryos. In the absence of hemicentin, cleavage furrows form but retract prior to completion, resulting in multinucleate cells. In addition to their role in tissue organization, the data indicate that hemicentins are the first secreted proteins required during mammalian development and the only known secreted proteins required for cytokinesis, with an evolutionarily conserved role in stabilizing and preventing retraction of nascent cleavage furrows. Together with studies showing that extracellular polysaccharides are required for cytokinesis in diverse species [4-9], our data suggest that assembly of a cell type-specific extracellular matrix may be a general requirement for cleavage furrow maturation and contractile ring function during cytokinesis.  相似文献   

13.
Cleavage furrows of amphibian eggs exhibit characteristic morphological features: the presence of finger-like microvilli (MV) along their outer edges, the formation of furrow walls from new plasma membrane lacking MV, and the subsequent retrieval of this membrane during the infolding of the furrow. A similar structure can be induced, specifically, by certain cytoplasmic components such as centrosomes, polyamines and calcium. Their respective roles in the events associated with the furrowing process have been investigated by injecting these agents into nucleated and enucleated Pleurodeles eggs and evaluating their effects using cytochemical labelling of the egg surface with a biotin-streptavidin system. The injection of polyamines (spermine or spermidine) and in some cases, calcium into enucleated eggs provoked MV elongation and the appearance of newly formed, smooth plasma membrane. In these eggs, this membrane was not incorporated into the furrows, and as a consequence, the blastomeres did not actually separate. In contrast, the injection of centrosomes into enucleated eggs induced both the incorporation and internalization of new membrane, resulting in the formation of furrows and a true cellularization of the eggs, identical to the cleavage process observed in fertilized eggs. The present results provide further evidence that the establishment of the furrow depends on two complementary interacting systems: the contractile elements of the egg cortex which regulate the insertion of new membrane and the mitotic center which is essential for the invagination of the furrow.  相似文献   

14.
K. Katoh  H. Ishikawa 《Protoplasma》1989,150(2-3):83-95
Summary The distribution and arrangement of cytoskeletal components in the early embryo ofDrosophila melanogaster were examined by thin-section electron microscopy to elucidate their involvement in the formation of the cellular blastoderm, a process called cellularization. During the final nuclear division in the cortex of the syncytial blastoderm bundles of astral microtubules were closely associated with the surface plasma membrane along the midline where a new gutter was initiated. Thus the new gutter together with the pre-formed ones compartmentalized the embryo surface to reflect underlying individual daughter nuclei. Subsequently such gutters became deeper by further invagination of the plasma membrane between adjacent nuclei to form so-called cleavage furrows. Nuclei simultaneously elongated in the direction perpendicular to the embryo surface and numerous microtubules from the centrosomes ran longitudinally between the nucleus and the cleavage furrow. Microtubules often appeared to be in close association with the nuclear envelope and the cleavage furrow membrane. The plasma membrane at the advancing tip of the furrow was always undercoated with an electron-dense layer, which could be shown to be mainly composed of 5–6 nm microfilaments. These microfilaments were decorated with H-meromyosin to be identified as actin filaments. As cleavage proceeded, each nucleus with its perikaryon became demarcated by the furrow membrane, which then extended laterally to constrict the cytoplasmic connection between each newly forming cell and the central yolk region. The cytoplasmic strand thus formed possessed a prominent circular bundle of microfilaments which were also decorated with H-meromyosin and bidirectionally arranged, similar in structure to the contractile ring in cytokinesis. These observations strongly suggest that both microtubules and actin filaments play a crucial role in cellularization ofDrosophila embryos.  相似文献   

15.
BACKGROUND: In syncytial blastoderm Drosophila embryos, actin caps assemble during telophase. As the cell cycle progresses through interphase, these small caps expand and fuse to form pseudocleavage furrows that are structurally related to the cleavage furrows that assemble during somatic cell division. The molecular mechanism driving cell cycle coordinated actin reorganization from the caps to the furrows is not understood. RESULTS: We show that Drosophila embryos contain a typical Arp2/3 complex and that components of this complex localize to the margins of the expanding caps, to mature pseudocleavage furrows, and to somatic cell cleavage furrows during the postcellularization embryonic divisions. A mutation that disrupts the arpc1 subunit of Arp2/3 leads to spindle fusions that are characteristic of pseudocleavage furrow disruption. By contrast, this mutation does not significantly affect nuclear positioning during interphase, which is dependent on actin cap function. In vivo analysis of actin reorganization demonstrates that the arpc1 mutation does not prevent assembly of small actin caps but blocks cap expansion and furrow assembly as the cell cycle progresses through interphase. The scrambled gene is also required for cap expansion and furrow assembly, and Scrambled is required for Arp2/3 localization to the cap margins. CONCLUSIONS: The Drosophila Arp2/3 complex and Scrambled protein are required for actin cap expansion and pseudocleavage furrow formation during the syncytial blastoderm divisions. We propose that Scrambled-dependent localization of Arp2/3 to the margins of the expanding caps triggers local actin polymerization that drives cap expansion and pseudocleavage furrow assembly.  相似文献   

16.
The experiments with chimerous embryos of teleost loach (Misgurnus fossilis) have shown that before furrows of the 1st cleavage appeared, the eggs were completely nonadhesive. At the stages of cleavages II-IV whole eggs were able to adhere and then make extended junctions in the blastodisc region. Adhesive domains of blastomeres were discovered by using carmine dye particles which attached primarily in the region of blastomere cleavage furrows. Scanning electron microscopy (SEM) showed that the cells in the depth of the cleavage furrows have domains with a smoother relief than their outer surface with numerous folds. Moreover, most adhesive flat lamellar formations (ruffles) with microvilli at their ends were discovered in the furrow region, particularly in its apical part (in the sites of intercellular contact formation and carmine absorption). Colchicine (5 X 10(-4) M) treatment affects the reorganization of the cleavage furrow surface, and the eggs, one by one, lose their ability to adhere, and then to attach dye particles. Mechanisms of formation of an adhesive contact between divided cells are discussed.  相似文献   

17.
This paper aims at examining the effect of colchicine, a microtubular poison, on the process of furrow formation in whole eggs and egg fragments as well as the process of artificial induction of furrow-like dents, in eggs of the newt, Cynops pyrrhogaster. To apply colchicine locally to eggs, the eggs were slit across or along a furrow in a colchicine solution during first cleavage. When a slit was made across or in front of a growing furrow at the onset of its growth, the furrow quickly ceased growing and often regressed. Cortices containing an entire growing furrow were isolated along with a thin layer of subcortical cytoplasm immediately after the start of the first cleavage. Furrows in the cortices degenerated when the cortices were cultured in a colchicine solution, whereas they continued growing when they were cultured in Holtfreter's saline. Furrow-inducing cytoplasm was injected to a site beneath the cortex in the animal half of the egg during first cleavage. When a small slit was made close to the site of the injection in a colchicine solution, no furrow-like dent was induced. These results imply that microtubules are directly involved in the generation and growth of cleavage furrows.  相似文献   

18.
Imaging studies, using both luminescent and fluorescent Ca(2+)-sensitive reporters, have revealed that during the first few meroblastic cleavages of the large embryos of teleosts, localized elevations of intracellular Ca(2+) accompany positioning, propagation, deepening and apposition of the cleavage furrows. Here, we will review the Ca(2+) transients reported during the cleavage period in these embryos, with reference mainly to that of the zebrafish (Danio rerio). We will also present the latest findings that support the proposal that Ca(2+) transients are an essential feature of embryonic cytokinesis. In addition, the potential upstream triggers and downstream targets of the different cytokinetic Ca(2+) transients will be discussed. Finally, we will present a hypothetical model that summarizes what has been suggested to be the various roles of Ca(2+) signalling during cytokinesis in teleost embryos.  相似文献   

19.
BACKGROUND: The initiation of a cleavage furrow is essential to separate cells during cytokinesis, but little is known about the mechanisms controlling this actin-driven process. Previous studies in C. elegans embryos revealed that inactivation of the CUL-3-based E3 ligase activator rfl-1 results in an aberrant microtubule network, ectopic furrowing during pronuclear migration, and defects during cytokinesis. RESULTS: Here, we show that MEL-26, a substrate-specific adaptor of the CUL-3-based E3 ligase, is required for efficient cell separation and cleavage furrow ingression during the C. elegans early mitotic divisions. Loss of MEL-26 function leads to delayed onset and slow ingression of cytokinesis furrows that frequently regress. Conversely, increased levels of MEL-26 in cul-3(RNAi) and rfl-1 mutant embryos cause a hypercontractile cortex, with several simultaneously ingressing furrows during pronuclear migration. MEL-26 accumulates at cleavage furrows and binds the actin-interacting protein POD-1. Importantly, POD-1 is not a substrate of the MEL-26/CUL-3 ligase but is required to localize MEL-26 to the cortex. CONCLUSIONS: Our results suggest that MEL-26 not only acts as a substrate-specific adaptor within the MEL-26/CUL-3 complex, but also promotes cytokinesis by a CUL-3- and microtubule-independent mechanism.  相似文献   

20.
We have previously reported that injection of purified basal bodies or sperm into unfertilized eggs of Xenopus laevis induced the formation of asters and irregular cleavage furrows. Fully grown oocytes were found to be unable to form asters or cleavage furrows. In this paper we show that the oocyte acquires the ability to form asters upon basal body injection at the time of germinal vesicle breakdown during in vitro maturation. Our evidence indicates that aster formation requires progesterone-stimulated changes in the oocyte and mixing of cytoplasm and germinal vesicle plasm. The ability of the oocyte to form cleavage furrows arises six to eight hours after germinal vesicle breakdown. We infer that some maturational change in the cell cortex occurs to enable the egg surface to furrow. Experiments on the relationship of aster formation to furrow initiation indicates that asters stimulate furrow formation. However, some furrowing could be induced without aster formation in mature oocytes and unfertilized eggs by an activation stimulus, showing that asters are not essential for cleavage initiation. The significance of these observations are discussed in the light of our current understanding of meiotic maturation, cell cleavage and aster growth.  相似文献   

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