首页 | 本学科首页   官方微博 | 高级检索  
相似文献
 共查询到20条相似文献,搜索用时 15 毫秒
1.
Mating between gametes of the biflagellated unicellular green alga Chlamydomonas reinhardi consists of several events culminating in zygote formation. Initially, the cells agglutinate by their flagellar tips. This is followed by pairing, cell wall loss, and cell fusion. Here we report on the relationship between the length of the flagellum, and the cells' ability to agglutinate, undergo cell wall loss (as measured by medium carbohydrate accumulation), and to form zygotes. We found that deflagellated gametes regained the potential for sexual agglutination when the flagella had regenerated to less than 3 μm (compared to the full length flagella of approx. 11 μm), while medium carbohydrate appeared only after the flagella had reached an average length greater than 5 μm. By inhibiting flagellar regeneration with cycloheximide or colchicine, we determined that carbohydrate release is related to the length of the flagellum and not to the time after deflagellation. A flagellar length dependence similar to that of carbohydrate release was also observed when we measured the relationship between the gametes' ability to fuse and flagellar length.  相似文献   

2.
Flagella can be removed from the biflagellate Chlamydomonas and the cells begin to regenerate flagella almost immediately by deceleratory kinetics. Under usual conditions of deflagellation, more than 98% of all flagella are removed. Under less drastic conditions, cells can be selected in which one flagellum is removed and the other left intact. When only one of the two flagella is amputated, the intact flagellum shortens by linear kinetics while the amputated one regenerates. The two flagella attain an equal intermediate length and then approach their initial length at the same rate. A concentration of cycloheximide which inhibits protein synthesis permits less than one-third of each flagellum to form when both flagella are amputated. When only one is amputated in cycloheximide, shortening proceeds normally and the degree of elongation in the amputated flagellum is greater than if both were amputated in the presence of cycloheximide. The shortening process is therefore independent of protein synthesis, and the protein from the shortening flagellum probably enters the pool of precursors available for flagellar formation. Partial regeneration of flagella occurs in concentrations of cycloheximide inhibitory to protein synthesis suggesting that some flagellar precursors are present. Cycloheximide and flagellar pulse-labeling studies indicate that precursor is used during the first part of elongation, is resynthesized at mid-elongation, and approaches its original level as the flagella reach their initial length. Colchicine completely blocks regeneration without affecting protein synthesis, and extended exposure of deflagellated cells to colchicine increases the amount of flagellar growth upon transfer to cycloheximide. When colchicine is applied to cells with only one flagellum removed, shortening continues normally but regeneration is blocked. Therefore, colchicine can be used to separate the processes of shortening and elongation. Radioautographic studies of the growth zone of Chlamydomonas flagella corroborate previous findings that assembly is occurring at the distal end (tip growth) of the organelle.  相似文献   

3.
Flagellar development during the asexual synchronous cell cycle of Chlamydomonas reinhardtii (11.32 aM) was studied by light microscopy. Cell walls of sporangia of different developmental status were dissolved using gamete lysin (g-lysin) enabling direct observation of flagellar development. Flagellar growth in progeny cells exhibits a linear kinetic with a growth rate of 28 nm/min at 30°C leading to a flagellar length of 7–7.5 μm in 4–4.5 h. After this time the flagellar growth rate drops to 2.8 nm/min (as in interphase). Both flagella of a single cell and all flagella within a sporangium grow out at the same time and with the same rate. Cycloheximide (10 μg/ml) completely blocks flagellar development. If cycloheximide is removed flagellar growth resumes at the normal rate with no lag-phase. Flagellar development during the cell cycle in C. reinhardtii differs considerably from the well-studied model system of flagellar regeneration following amputation in the same species.  相似文献   

4.
FLAGELLAR REGENERATION IN PROTOZOAN FLAGELLATES   总被引:44,自引:30,他引:14       下载免费PDF全文
The flagella of populations of three protozoan species (Ochromonas, Euglena, and Astasia) were amputated and allowed to regenerate. The kinetics of regeneration in all species were characterized by a lag phase during which there was no apparent flagellar elongation; this phase was followed by elongation at a rate which constantly decelerated as the original length was regained. Inhibition by cycloheximide applied at the time of flagellar amputation showed that flagellar regeneration was dependent upon de novo protein synthesis. This was supported by evidence showing that a greater amount of leucine was incorporated into the proteins of regenerating than nonregenerating flagella. The degree of inhibition of flagellar elongation observed with cycloheximide depended on how soon after flagellar amputation it was applied: when applied to cells immediately following amputation, elongation was almost completely inhibited, but its application at various times thereafter permitted considerable elongation to occur prior to complete inhibition of flagellar elongation. Hence, a sufficient number of precursors were synthesized and accumulated prior to addition of cycloheximide so that their assembly (elongation) could occur for a time under conditions in which protein synthesis had been inhibited. Evidence that the site of this assembly may be at the tip of the elongating flagellum was obtained from radioautographic studies in which the flagella of Ochromonas were permitted to regenerate part way in the absence of labeled leucine and to complete their regeneration in the presence of the isotope. Possible mechanisms which may be operating to control flagellar regeneration are discussed in light of these and other observations.  相似文献   

5.
Flagellar regeneration after experimental amputation was studied in synchronized axenic cultures of the scaly green flagellateTetraselmis striata (Prasinophyceae). After removal of flagella by mechanical shearing, 95% of the cells regrow all four flagella (incl. the scaly covering) to nearly full length with a linear velocity of 50 nm/min under standard conditions. Flagellar regeneration is independent of photosynthesis (no effect of DCMU; the same regeneration rate in the light or in the dark), but depends on de novo protein synthesis: cycloheximide at a low concentration (0.35 μM) blocks flagellar regeneration reversibly. No pool of flagellar precursors appears to be present throughout the flagellated phase of the cell cycle. A transient pool of flagellar precursors, sufficient to generate 2.5 μm of flagellar length, however, develops during flagellar regeneration. Tunicamycin (2 μg/ml) inhibits flagellar regeneration only after a second flagellar amputation, when flagella reach only one third the length of the control. Flagellar regeneration inT. striata differs considerably from that ofChlamydomonas reinhardtii and represents an excellent model system for the study of synchronous Golgi apparatus (GA) activation, and transport and exocytosis of GA-derived macromolecules (scales).  相似文献   

6.
Summary Cells ofScherffelia dubia regenerate flagella with a complete scale covering after experimental flagellar amputation. Flagellar regeneration was used to study Golgi apparatus (GA) activity during flagellar scale production. By comparing the number of scales present on mature flagella with the flagellar regeneration kinetics, it is calculated that each cell produces ca. 260 scales per minute during flagellar regeneration. Flagellar scales are assembled exclusively in the GA and abstricted from the rims of thetrans-most GA cisternae into vesicles. Exocytosis of scales occurs at the base of the anterior flagellar groove. The central portion of thetrans-most cisterna, containing no scales, detaches from the stack of cisternae and develops a coat to become a coated polygonal vesicle. Scale biogenesis involves continuous turnover of GA cisternae, and scale production rates indicate maturation of four cisternae per minute from each of the cells two dictyosomes. A possible model of membrane flow routes during flagellar regeneration, which involves a membrane recycling loop via the coated polygonal vesicles, is presented.  相似文献   

7.
The assembly and maintenance of eukaryotic flagella are regulated by intraflagellar transport (IFT), the bidirectional traffic of IFT particles (recently renamed IFT trains) within the flagellum. We previously proposed the balance-point length control model, which predicted that the frequency of train transport should decrease as a function of flagellar length, thus modulating the length-dependent flagellar assembly rate. However, this model was challenged by the differential interference contrast microscopy observation that IFT frequency is length independent. Using total internal reflection fluorescence microscopy to quantify protein traffic during the regeneration of Chlamydomonas reinhardtii flagella, we determined that anterograde IFT trains in short flagella are composed of more kinesin-associated protein and IFT27 proteins than trains in long flagella. This length-dependent remodeling of train size is consistent with the kinetics of flagellar regeneration and supports a revised balance-point model of flagellar length control in which the size of anterograde IFT trains tunes the rate of flagellar assembly.  相似文献   

8.
The unicellular green alga Spermatozopsis similis Preisig et Melkonian bears two flagella of unequal length. After deflagellation, cells first regenerated the longer flagellum to about one third of its original length, before the shorter flagellum started to develop. Growth rates were similar for both flagella. Thus, the length difference between both flagella was restored by a lag-phase during regeneration of the shorter flagellum. To explain the lag-phase, we have considered a gating mechanism near the flagellar base that controls the entry of precursors into the flagellum. This would allow cells to restrict the time of effective flagellar growth and thereby control flagellar length. Our data indicated that cells are capable of individually regulating flagellar assembly onto basal bodies. We discuss a recent model of flagellar length regulation based on a balance of assembly and disassembly and conclude that flagellar length is controlled by additional factors, including the availability of flagellar proteins and the developmental status of basal bodies.  相似文献   

9.
To study the mechanisms responsible for the regulation of flagellar length, we examined the effects of colchicine and Cytochalasin D (CD) on the growth and maintenance of Chlamydomonas flagella on motile wild type cells as well as on pf 18 cells, whose flagella lack the central microtubules and are immobile. CD had no effect on the regeneration of flagella after deflagellation but it induced fully assembled flagella to shorten at an average rate of 0.03 microns-min. Cells remained fully motile in CD and even stubby flagella continued to move, indicating that flagellar shortening did not selectively disrupt machinery necessary for motility. To observe the effects of the drug on individual cells, pf 18 cells were treated with CD and flagella on cells were monitored by direct observation over a 5-hour period. Flagella on control pf 18 cells maintained their initial lengths throughout the experiment but flagella on CD-treated cells exhibited periods of elongation, shortening, and regrowth suggestive of the dynamic behavior of cytoplasmic microtubules observed in vitro and in vitro. Cells behaved individually, with no two cells exhibiting the same flagellar behavior at any given time although both flagella on any single cell behaved identically. The rate of drug-induced flagellar shortening and elongation in pf 18 cells varied from 0.08 to 0.17 microns-min-1, with each event occurring over 10-60-min periods. Addition of colchicine to wild type and pf 18 cells induced flagella to shorten at an average rate of 0.06 microns-min-1 until the flagella reached an average of 73% of their initial length, after which they exhibited no further shortening or elongation. Cells treated with colchicine and CD exhibited nearly complete flagellar resorption, with little variation in flagellar length among cells. The effects of these drugs were reversible and flagella grew to normal stable lengths after drug removal. Taken together, these results show that the distal half to one-third of the Chlamydomonas flagellum is relatively unstable in the presence of colchicine but that the proximal half to two-thirds of the flagellum is stable to this drug. In contrast to colchicine, CD can induce nearly complete flagellar microtubule disassembly as well as flagellar assembly. Flagellar microtubules must, therefore, be inherently unstable, and flagellar length is stabilized by factors that are sensitive, either directly or indirectly, to the effects of CD.  相似文献   

10.
Flagellar and basal body development during cell division was studied in the biflagellate green alga Spermatozopsis similis Preisig et Melkonian by light microscopy of immobilized living cells, statistical analysis of flagellar lengths during the cell cycle, and electron microscopy of cells and isolated cytoskeletons. Interphase cells display two flagella of unequal/subequal length. An eyespot located in an anterior lobe of the chloroplast is connected to the basal body bearing the shorter flagellum by means of a five-stranded microtubular root. Until cell division, the two parental flagella attain the same length. During cell division, each cell forms two new flagella that grow to a length of 1.5 μm before they are distributed in a semiconservative fashion together with the parental flagella to the two progeny cells at cytokinesis. During the following interphase, the flagella newly formed during the preceding cell division grow to attain the same length as the parental flagella until the subsequent cell division. The shorter of the two flagella of a cell thus represents the developmentally younger flagellum, which transforms to the mature state during two consecutive cell cycles. Interphase cells display only two flagella-bearing basal bodies; two nascent basal bodies are formed during cell division and are connected to the microtubular d-roots of respective parental basal bodies with which the newly formed basal bodies are later distributed to the progeny cells. During segregation, basal body pairs shaft into the 11/5 o'clock direction, thus conserving the 1/7 o'clock configuration of basal body pairs of interphase cells. Prior to chloroplast and cell division, an eyespot is newly formed near the cell posterior in close association with a 1s microtubular root, while the parental eyespot is retained. During basal body segregation, eyespot-root connections for both the old and newly formed eyespots are presumably lost, and new associations of the eyespots with the 2s roots of the newly formed basal bodies are established during cytokinesis. The significance of this “eyespot-flagellar root developmental cycle” for the absolute orientation of the progeny cells is discussed.  相似文献   

11.
The Ypt/Rab proteins are small GTPases, which belong to the Ras superfamily and have been shown to be involved in endo-and exocytosis in mammalian cells and yeast. Using affinity-purified antibodies specific for four Ypt proteins, namely Ypt1p, Ypt4p, Ypt5p and Ypt6p, of the multicellular green alga Volvox carteri (YptVp) and its close unicellular relative Chlamydomonas reinhardtii (YptCp), we examined the abundance of the corresponding antigens during the asexual life cycle of Volvox, and their intracellular localization. The YptV proteins were found in all stages throughout the asexual life cycle and are tightly associated with intracellular membranes. Indirect immunofluorescence revealed that YptV4p, YptV5p and YptV6p are present in perinuclear regions of the cell, indicating an association with the Golgi region. Golgi localization of YptV4p and YptV6p in Volvox was confirmed by immunogold electron microscopy. In contrast, we found Ypt1p associated with the contractile vacuole in both V. carteri and C. reinhardtii. Furthermore, the YptV proteins were also detected along the entire length of the flagella of somatic Volvox cells. This flagellar location was substantiated by western blot analysis of extracts prepared from isolated flagella of both algae. While localization to exocytic compartments is in agreement with the established Ypt/Rab function in intracellular vesicle transport of eukaryotic cells, presence in the algal flagellum is the first hint of a possible role for small G proteins also in motility organelles.  相似文献   

12.
13.
Summary Flagellar development during cell division was studied inCyanophora paradoxa using agarose-embedded cells, Nomarski optics and electronic flash photography. The cells bear two heterodynamic and differently oriented (anterior and posterior) flagella. Prior to cell division, cells produce two new anterior flagella while the parental anterior flagellum transforms into a posterior flagellum. The parental posterior flagellum remains a posterior flagellum throughout this and subsequent cell divisions. The development of a single flagellum thus extends through at least two cell cycles and flagellar heterogeneity is achieved by semiconservative distribution of the flagella during cell division. Based on these principles a universal numbering system for basal bodies and flagella of eukaryotic cells is proposed.  相似文献   

14.
The thecate green flagellate Scherffelia dubia (Perty) Pascher divides within the parental cell wall into two progeny cells. It sheds all four flagella before cell division, and the maturing progeny cells regenerate new walls and flagella. By synchronizing cell division, we observed mitosis, cytokinesis, cell maturation, flagella extension, and cell wall formation via differential interference contrast microscopy of live cells and serial thin‐section EM. Synthesis of thecal and flagellar scales is spatially and temporally strictly separated. Flagellar scales are collected in a pool during late interphase. Before prophase, Golgi stacks divide, flagella are shed, the parental theca separates from the plasma membrane, and flagellar scales are deposited on the plasma membrane near the flagellar bases. At prophase, Golgi bodies start to synthesize thecal scales, continuing into interphase after cytokinesis. During cytokinesis, vesicles containing thecal scales coalesce near the cell posterior, forming a cleavage furrow that is initially oriented slightly diagonal to the longitudinal cell axis but later becomes transverse. After the progeny nuclei have moved into opposite directions, resulting in a “head to tail” orientation of the progeny cells, theca biogenesis is completed and flagellar scale synthesis resumes. Progeny cells emerge through a hole near the posterior end of the parental theca with four flagella of about 8 μm long. The precise timing of flagellar and thecal scale synthesis appears to be an evolutionary adaptation in a scaly green flagellate for the thecal condition, necessary for the evolution of the phycoplast and thus multicellularity in the Chlorophyta.  相似文献   

15.
Luo M  Cao M  Kan Y  Li G  Snell W  Pan J 《Current biology : CB》2011,21(7):586-591
Flagella and cilia are structurally polarized organelles whose lengths are precisely defined, and alterations in length are related to several human disorders. Intraflagellar transport (IFT) and protein signaling molecules are implicated in specifying flagellar and ciliary length, but evidence has been lacking for a flagellum and cilium length sensor that could participate in active length control or establishment of structural polarity. Previously, we showed that the phosphorylation state of the aurora-like protein kinase CALK in Chlamydomonas is a marker of the absence of flagella. Here we show that CALK phosphorylation state is also a marker for flagellar length. CALK is phosphorylated in cells without flagella, and during flagellar assembly it becomes dephosphorylated. Dephosphorylation is not simply a consequence of initiation of flagellar assembly or of time after experimentally induced flagellar loss, but instead requires flagella to be assembled to a threshold length. Analysis of cells with flagella of varying lengths shows that the threshold length for CALK dephosphorylation is ~6 μm (half length). Studies with short and long flagellar mutants indicate that cells detect absolute rather than relative flagellar length. Our results demonstrate that cells possess a mechanism for translating flagellar length into a posttranslational modification of a known flagellar regulatory protein.  相似文献   

16.
The regeneration kinetics of Chlamydomonas reinhardtii mutants TS-6 and TS-79, whose flagella were mechanically amputated, indicated that the flagellar precursor in cytoplasm was used for regeneration when cycloheximide was present. The TS-6 cells rendered nonflagellate by regression at 35 C did not regenerate in the presence of cycloheximide, indicating that the precursor was inactivated by the high temperature. Neither mutant was able to use the absorbed flagellar components for regeneration in the presence of cycloheximide.  相似文献   

17.
18.
Amputating the flagella of Chlamydomonas reinhardtii stimulates increased synthesis of many flagellar proteins within 30 min. We have isolated a series of mutants which are defective in this stimulation, taking advantage of the fact that cells which cannot stimulate flagellar protein synthesis cannot regenerate flagella. More than a dozen mutants which have flagella, but cannot regenerate them after amputation, were isolated and studied by in vivo labeling to identify those non-regenerator mutants which were specifically defective in the induction of flagellar protein synthesis. Ten such mutants have been identified, and in each of them flagellar amputation does not stimulate the synthesis of any of the major flagellar proteins. At least four of the mutants display an interesting conditional phenotype. The synthesis of flagellar proteins after deflagellation is defective only in gametic cells; vegetative cells of these mutants are capable of flagellar protein synthesis after flagellar amputation.  相似文献   

19.
The somatic cell flagellar apparatuses of Volvox carteri f. weismannia (Powers) Iyengar and V. rousseletii G. S. West have parallel or nearly parallel basal bodies which are separated at their proximal ends. The four microtubular rootlets alternate between two and four members, and all are associated with a striated microtubular associated component (SMAC) that runs between the basal bodies. In addition, each half of the flagellar apparatus apparently rotates during development and loses the 180° rotational symmetry characteristic of most unicellular chlorophycean motile cells. All of these features appear necessary for efficient motion of a colony composed of numerous radially arranged cells. However, the structural details of the flagellar apparatuses of these two species differ. The distance between flagella is greater in V. rousseletii than in V. carteri. One distal striated fiber and two proximal striated fibers connect the basal bodies in V. carteri, but both types of fibers are absent from V. rousseletii. In the latter species, a striated fiber wraps around each of the basal bodies and attaches to the rootlets and the SMAC. No such fiber is present in V. carteri. Since the similarities in the flagellar apparatuses can be explained as a result of adaptation for efficient colonial motion in organisms with similar colonial morphology, the differences suggest a wider phylogenetic distance than previously believed.  相似文献   

20.
Summary Cells ofEpipyxis pulchra possess two heteromorphic flagella that differ markedly in function, particularly during motility and prey capture. Flagellar heterogeneity is achieved during the course of at least three cell cycles. Prior to cell division, cells produce two new long, hairy flagella while the parental long flagellum is transformed into a new short, smooth flagellum. The parental short flagellum remains a short flagellum for this and subsequent cell division cycles. Although flagellar transformation requires only two cell cycles, developmental differences exist between daughter cells and the maturation of a flagellum/basal body requires at least three cycles.  相似文献   

设为首页 | 免责声明 | 关于勤云 | 加入收藏

Copyright©北京勤云科技发展有限公司  京ICP备09084417号