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1.
We have used the mouse monoclonal antibody 6-11 B-1, specific for acetylated alpha-tubulin, to determine the distribution of acetylated alpha-tubulin in in vitro-assembled microtubules and retinal tissue. Analysis by immunoblots revealed that microtubules assembled from bovine brain extracts contain both acetylated and nonacetylated alpha-tubulin. Immunofluorescence, using 6-11 B-1 and antitubulin B-5-1-2, a monoclonal antibody specific for alpha-tubulin, demonstrated the colocalization of both alpha-tubulin species in neurons of the retina and that acetylated microtubules are relatively abundant in neurons. However, analysis at higher resolution revealed that rod photoreceptors contain spatially distinct microtubule arrays which differ in content of acetylated alpha-tubulin and differ in stability. Acetylated microtubules which composed those of the rod outer segment and connecting cilium were resistant to depolymerization in nocodazole or colchicine. In contrast, the nonacetylated microtubules which composed those of the rod-inner segment were depolymerized in nocodazole or colchicine. Therefore, these acetylated microtubules are more resistant to depolymerization than non-acetylated microtubules.  相似文献   

2.
alpha-Tubulin in the microtubules of mouse oocytes and embryos is acetylated in a specific spatial and temporal sequence. In the unfertilized oocyte, a monoclonal antibody to the acetylated form of alpha-tubulin is bound predominantly at the poles of the arrested metaphase meiotic spindle. The labeling intensity of the spindle microtubules is weaker as observed by immunofluorescence using oocytes double-labeled for total tubulin and acetylated alpha-tubulin, and as measured by immuno high-voltage electron microscopy (immunoHVEM) with colloidal gold; cytasters are not acetylated. At meiotic anaphase, the spindle becomes labeled, and by telophase and during second polar body formation only the meiotic midbody is acetylated. The sperm axoneme retains its acetylation after incorporation though the interphase microtubules are not detected. First mitosis follows a pattern similar to that observed at the second meiosis and during interphase only the mitotic midbodies are acetylated. After treatment with cold, colcemid, or griseofulvin, the remaining stable microtubules are acetylated, but immunoHVEM observations suggest that these fibers might not have been acetylated prior to microtubule disruption. Taxol stabilization does not alter acetylation patterns. Acetylated microtubules are not necessarily old microtubules since acetylated fibers are observed at 30 sec after cold recovery. These results show the presence of acetylated microtubules during meiosis and mitosis and demonstrate a cell-cycle-specific pattern of acetylation, with acetylated microtubules found at the centrosomes at metaphase, an increase in spindle labeling at anaphase, and the selective deacetylation of all but midbody microtubules at telophase.  相似文献   

3.
The distribution of microtubules (MTs) enriched in detyrosinated alpha-tubulin (Glu-tubulin) was studied in Drosophila embryos by immunofluorescence microscopy by using a monoclonal antibody (ID5) which was raised against a 14-residue synthetic peptide spanning the carboxyterminal sequence of Glu-tubulin (Wehland and Weber: J. Cell Sci. 88:185-203, 1987). While all MT arrays contained tyrosinated alpha-tubulin (Tyr-tubulin), MTs rich in Glu-tubulin were not found during early stages of development even by using an image intensification camera. Elevated levels of microtubular Glu-tubulin were first detected after CNS condensation in neurone processes. In addition, sperm tails, which remained remarkably stable inside the embryo until late stages of development, were decorated by ID5. This was in marked contrast to the distribution of microtubule arrays containing acetylated alpha-tubulin, which could already be detected during the cellular blastoderm stage. Additional experiments with taxol suggested that the absence of MTs rich in Glu-tubulin during early stages of development was not due to the rapid turnover rate of MTs, which would be too fast for alpha-tubulin to be detyrosinated. The possible significance of the differential detyrosination and acetylation of microtubules during development is discussed.  相似文献   

4.
We have examined the distribution of acetylated alpha-tubulin using immunofluorescence microscopy in fibroblastic cells of rat brain meninges. Meningeal fibroblasts showed heterogeneous staining patterns with a monoclonal antibody against acetylated alpha-tubulin ranging from staining of primary cilia or microtubule-organising centers (MTOCs) alone to extensive microtubule networks. Staining with a broad spectrum anti-alpha-tubulin monoclonal indicated that all cells possessed cytoplasmic microtubule networks. From double-labeling experiments using an antibody against acetylated alpha-tubulin (6-11B-1) and antibodies against either tyrosinated or detyrosinated alpha-tubulin, it was found that acetylated alpha-tubulin and tyrosinated alpha-tubulin were often segregated to different microtubules. The microtubules containing acetylated but not tyrosinated alpha-tubulin were cold stable. Therefore, it appeared that in general meningeal cells possessed two subset of microtubules: One subset contained detyrosinated and acetylated alpha-tubulin and was cold stable, and the other contained tyrosinated alpha-tubulin and was cold labile. These results are consistent with the idea that acetylation and detyrosination of alpha-tubulin are involved in the specification of stable microtubules.  相似文献   

5.
Early development in Xenopus is characterized by dramatic changes in the organization of the microtubule cytoskeleton. We have used whole-mount immunocytochemistry to follow the expression of the acetylated form of alpha-tubulin during early Xenopus development. In the egg and early embryo, the monoclonal anti-acetylated tubulin antibody 6-11B-1 stained meiotic and mitotic spindles, midbody microtubules, and what appears to be the central region of the sperm aster; the antibody did not stain the sperm aster itself or the cortical microtubule system associated with the rotation of the fertilized egg. Following gastrulation, acetylated tubulin disappeared from all but mitotic midbody microtubules. During the course of neurulation high levels of acetylated tubulin reappeared in the precursors of the ciliated epidermal cells (stage 15), transiently in neural folds (stage 16/17), in neuronal processes (stage 18/19), and in somas (stage 21). The changing pattern of anti-acetylated tubulin staining during Xenopus development raises intriguing questions as to the physiological significance of tubulin acetylation.  相似文献   

6.
A monoclonal antibody, 6-11B-1, specific for acetylated alpha-tubulin (Piperno, G., and M. T. Fuller, 1985, J. Cell Biol., 101:2085-2094) was used to study the distribution of this molecule in interphase cells of Chlamydomonas reinhardtii. Double-label immunofluorescence was performed using 6-11B-1, and 3A5, an antibody specific for all alpha-tubulin isoforms. It was found that acetylated alpha-tubulin is not restricted to the axonemes, but is also present in basal bodies and in a subset of cytoplasmic microtubules that radiate from the basal bodies just beneath the plasma membrane. Immunoblotting experiments of basal body polypeptide components using 6-11B-1 as a probe confirmed that basal bodies contain acetylated alpha-tubulin. In the cell body, 6-11B-1 stained an average of 2.2 microtubules/cell, while 3A5 stained an average of 6.5 microtubules. Although exposure to 0 degrees C depolymerized both types of cytoplasmic microtubules, exposure to various concentrations of colchicine or nocodazole showed that the acetylated microtubules are much more resistant to drug-induced depolymerization than nonacetylated microtubules. Axonemes and basal bodies are already known to be colchicine-resistant. All acetylated microtubules appear, therefore, to be more drug-resistant than nonacetylated microtubules. The acetylation of alpha-tubulin may be part of a mechanism that stabilizes microtubules.  相似文献   

7.
The organization of microtubules within the surface caps of Drosophila embryos is described for the mitotic cycles of the syncytial blastoderm stage (particularly cycle 10), and for the subsequent cellularization process. Tubulin was labelled with the well characterized monoclonal antibody YL 1/2 (Kilmartin et al., J cell biol 93 (1982) 576). Each surface cap was found to contain an array of microtubules running around the nucleus. The microtubules originated at prominent centrosomes located close to the apical surface of each cap nucleus. During mitosis the spindle microtubules stained strongly for tubulin. A novel finding was that the spindle microtubules of the interzone region appeared to reduce their connections with the centrosomes at the end of anaphase. The spindle remnant remained in position during telophase but then became smaller in size, disappearing by interphase. At this phase of the cell cycle duplication of the aster centrosomes occurred. The cellular blastoderm stage was marked by a change in the main axis of microtubule orientation. The centrosomes of each cap separated somewhat and formed initiation centres for the development of a well developed basket of microtubules around each nucleus, but now perpendicular to the surface. The microtubule baskets were seen to extend in parallel with nuclear elongation, but not in concert with growth of the cell membranes, which extended some way beneath the bases of the nuclei.  相似文献   

8.
We used monoclonal antibodies specific for acetylated and nonacetylated alpha-tubulin to detect and to localize microtubules containing acetylated alpha-tubulin (stable microtubules) in the pathogenic protozoa Tritrichomonas foetus and Trichomonas vaginalis. SDS-PAGE analysis showed that tubulin is a major protein of both parasites, being enriched in cytoskeletal preparations of whole cells extracted with Triton X-100. The monoclonal antibodies, which recognize all isoforms of alpha-tubulin (B-5-1-2) and only acetylated alpha-tubulin (6-11B-1), bind to the tubulin of T. foetus and T. vaginalis as seen by immunoblotting. Tubulin-containing structures were localized using immunofluorescence microscopy and transmission electron microscopy of the whole cytoskeleton previously incubated in the presence of the anti-tubulin antibodies and a second antibody-gold complex, and then processed using the negative staining or replica techniques. The results obtained indicate that, in addition to the flagellar microtubules, those which form the peltar-axostyle system represent stable microtubules containing acetylated alpha-tubulin.  相似文献   

9.
The subcellular distribution of microtubules containing acetylated alpha-tubulin in mammalian cells in culture was analyzed with 6-11B-1, a monoclonal antibody specific for acetylated alpha-tubulin. Cultures of 3T3, HeLa, and PtK2 cells were grown on coverslips and observed by immunofluorescence microscopy after double-staining by 6-11B-1 and B-5-1-2, a monoclonal antibody specific for all alpha-tubulins. The antibody 6-11B-1 binds to primary cilia, centrioles, mitotic spindles, midbodies, and to subsets of cytoplasmic microtubules in 3T3 and HeLa cells, but not in PtK2 cells. These observations confirm that the acetylation of alpha-tubulin is a modification occurring in different microtubule structures and in a variety of eukaryotic cells. Some features of the acetylation of cytoplasmic microtubules of mammalian cells are also described here. First, acetylated alpha-tubulin is present in microtubules that, under depolymerizing conditions, are more stable than the majority of cytoplasmic microtubules. In addition to the specific microtubule frameworks already mentioned, cytoplasmic microtubules resistant to nocodazole or colchicine, but not cold-resistant microtubules, contain more acetylated alpha-tubulin than the rest of cellular microtubules. Second, the alpha-tubulin in all cytoplasmic microtubules of 3T3 and HeLa cells becomes acetylated in the presence of taxol, a drug that stabilizes microtubules. Third, acetylation and deacetylation of cytoplasmic microtubules are reversible in cells released from exposure to 0 degrees C or antimitotic drugs. Fourth, the epitope recognized by the antibody 6-11B-1 is not absolutely necessary for cell growth and division. This epitope is absent in PtK2 cells. The acetylation of alpha-tubulin could regulate the presence of microtubules in specific intracellular spaces by selective stabilization.  相似文献   

10.
Summary Microtubule arrays in developing spermatogenous cells of pteridophytes have unique microtubule organizing centers and post-translation modifications of tubulin. Sensitivity of these arrays to the microtubule-destabilizing effects of the mitotic disrupter herbicides was examined by immunofluorescence, transmission and immunogold electron microscopy. Acetylated, stabilized arrays, such as the spline, and microtubules of the basal bodies and flagella are formed after the final mitotic division and are resistant to these herbicides. Non-acetylated, dynamic arrays that exist prior to the final mitosis, such as interphase and mitotic arrays, are eliminated by all of these herbicides, with symptomology (arrested prometaphase, lobed nuclei, irregular cell plate formation) similar to that observed in other land plants. The only exception to the instability of these mitotic microtubule arrays are the few microtubules that are collected by kinetochores into short tufts. The presence of structurally-distinguishable MTOCs, such as the blepharoplast, did not confer resistance, despite the anchoring of the minus ends of the microtubules. Simultaneous treatment with herbicide and 5-bromodeoxyuridine (BrdU), with subsequent detection with anti-BrdU of cells that had gone through S-phase during the BrdU incubation, reveals that only acetylated arrays formed prior to herbicide treatment are resistant. These data indicate that only actively polymerizing, dynamic microtubule arrays are sensitive to the destabilizing effects of the mitotic disrupter herbicides.Abbreviations MTOC microtubule organizing center - BrdU 5-bromodeoxyuridine  相似文献   

11.
Rhodamine-labeled monoclonal antibodies, which react with tyrosinated alpha-tubulin (clone YL 1/2; Kilmartin, J. V., B. Wright, and C. Milstein, 1982, J. Cell Biol., 93:576-582) and label microtubules in vivo (Wehland, J., M. C. Willingham, and I. Sandoval, 1983, J. Cell Biol., 97:1467-1475) were microinjected into syncytial stage Drosophila embryos. At 1 mg/ml antibody concentration, the microtubule arrays of the surface caps became labeled by YL 1/2 but normal development was found to continue. The results are compared with the data from fixed material particularly with regard to interphase microtubules, centrosome separation, and spindle and midbody formation. At 5 mg/ml antibody concentration the microtubules took up larger quantities of antibodies and clumped around the nuclei. Nuclei with clumped microtubules lost their position in the surface layer and moved into the interior. As a result, the F-actin cap meshwork associated with such nuclei either failed to form or subsided. It is concluded that microtubule activity is required to maintain the nuclei in the surface layer and organize the F-actin meshwork of the caps.  相似文献   

12.
During the course of preimplantation development, the cells of the mouse embryo undergo both a major subcellular reorganization (at the time of compaction) and, subsequently, a process of differentiation as the phenotypes of trophectoderm and inner cell mass cell types diverge. We have used antibodies specific for tyrosinated (Kilmartin, J. V., B. Wright, and C. Milstein. 1982. J. Cell Biol. 93:576-582) and acetylated (Piperno, G., and M. T. Fuller. 1985. J. Cell Biol. 101:2085-2094) alpha-tubulin in immunofluorescence studies and found that subsets of microtubules can be distinguished within and between cells during the course of these events. Whereas all microtubules contained tyrosinated alpha-tubulin, acetylated alpha-tubulin was detected only in a subpopulation, located predominantly in the cell cortices. Striking differences developed between the distribution of the two populations during the course of development. Firstly, whereas the microtubule population as a whole tends to redistribute towards the apical domain of cells as they polarize during compaction (Houliston, E., S. J. Pickering, and B. Maro. 1987. J. Cell Biol. 104:1299-1308), the microtubules recognized by the antiacetylated alpha-tubulin antibody became enriched in the basal part of the cell cortex. After asymmetric division of polarized cells to generate two distinct cell types (termed inside and outside cells) we found that, despite the relative abundance of microtubules in outside cells, acetylated microtubules accumulated preferentially in inside cells. Treatment with nocodazole demonstrated that within each cell type acetylated microtubules were the more stable ones; however, the difference in composition of the microtubule network between cell types was not accompanied by a greater stability of the microtubule network in inside cells.  相似文献   

13.
Three monoclonal alpha-tubulin antibodies YL 1/2 (Kilmartin et al., 1982), 6-11B-1 (Piperno and Fuller, 1985) and DM1A (Blose et al., 1984) were used in indirect immunofluorescence (IIF) microscopy of the microtubule (MT) cytoskeleton in tobacco (Nicotiana tabacum) pollen tubes. The majority of pollen tube MTs contain tyrosinated alpha-tubulin recognized by YL 1/2. Acetylated alpha-tubulin revealed by 6-11B-1 was detected in the generative cell and in the kinetochore fibers, in polar spindle regions, and in the cell plate of the phragmoplast during generative cell division. In addition, small fragments of acetylated microtubules were seen in the older parts of the pollen tube grown on a taxol medium. The interaction of pollen tube MTs with mAb 6-11B-1 suggested that acetylation of alpha-tubulin correlates well with the putative arrays of stable MTs.  相似文献   

14.
J. C. Hoffman  K. C. Vaughn 《Protoplasma》1995,186(3-4):169-182
Summary Acetylation and tyrosinization are post-translational modifications of tubulin generally associated, respectively, with highly stable or dynamic microtubule arrays in animals and protists. Little is known of these modifications in land plants, however. We examined the presence and distribution of post-translational tubulin modifications in developing spermatogenous cells of the pteridophyteCeratopteris richardii by immunofluorescence and immunogold, utilizing antibodies specific for acetylated and tyrosinated tubulin. Acetylated tubulin is found in mid to late stage spermatogenous cells in stable microtubule configurations: the spline, flagella, and basal bodies. Tyrosinated tubulin, a modification associated with dynamic microtubule arrays, is also present in these structures as well as all other microtubules in the cell. The lamellar strip of the multilayered structure, a body previously described as tubulin-containing, was not labelled by any of the tubulin antibodies or antiserum. Treatment of cultures with the microtubule stabilizer taxol results in the appearance of new arrays of microtubules, including bundles in the cytoplasm. Only those new taxol-induced microtubule arrays present in mid to late stage cells (i.e., those with other normally acetylated tubulin arrays) have acetylated domains. Younger spermatogenous cells had similar microtubule bundles but no acetylated tubulin. Tyrosinated tubulin was found in all these taxol-stabilized arrays. These data indicate that, although these pteridophyte cells have the ability to acetylate tubulin, that this ability is limited to stages after the final spermatogenous cell mitosis and is limited to the highly stable spline and flagella microtubules.Abbreviations LS lamellar strip of multilayered structure - MTOC microtubule organizing center  相似文献   

15.
Seven monoclonal antibodies raised against tubulin from the axonemes of sea urchin sperm flagella recognize an acetylated form of alpha-tubulin present in the axoneme of a variety of organisms. The antigen was not detected among soluble, cytoplasmic alpha-tubulin isoforms from a variety of cells. The specificity of the antibodies was determined by in vitro acetylation of sea urchin and Chlamydomonas cytoplasmic tubulins in crude extracts. Of all the acetylated polypeptides in the extracts, only alpha-tubulin became antigenic. Among Chlamydomonas tubulin isoforms, the antibodies recognize only the axonemal alpha-tubulin isoform acetylated in vivo on the epsilon-amino group of lysine(s) (L'Hernault, S.W., and J.L. Rosenbaum, 1985, Biochemistry, 24:473-478). The antibodies do not recognize unmodified axonemal alpha-tubulin, unassembled alpha-tubulin present in a flagellar matrix-plus-membrane fraction, or soluble, cytoplasmic alpha-tubulin from Chlamydomonas cell bodies. The antigen was found in protein fractions that contained axonemal microtubules from a variety of sources, including cilia from sea urchin blastulae and Tetrahymena, sperm and testis from Drosophila, and human sperm. In contrast, the antigen was not detected in preparations of soluble, cytoplasmic tubulin, which would not have contained tubulin from stable microtubule arrays such as centrioles, from unfertilized sea urchin eggs, Drosophila embryos, and HeLa cells. Although the acetylated alpha-tubulin recognized by the antibodies is present in axonemes from a variety of sources and may be necessary for axoneme formation, it is not found exclusively in any one subset of morphologically distinct axonemal microtubules. The antigen was found in similar proportions in fractions from sea urchin sperm axonemes enriched for central pair or outer doublet B or outer doublet A microtubules. Therefore the acetylation of alpha-tubulin does not provide the mechanism that specifies the structure of any one class of axonemal microtubules. Preliminary evidence indicates that acetylated alpha-tubulin is not restricted to the axoneme. The antibodies described in this report may allow us to deduce the role of tubulin acetylation in the structure and function of microtubules in vivo.  相似文献   

16.
We have used monoclonal antibodies specific for acetylated and unacetylated alpha-tubulin to characterize the acetylated alpha-tubulin isotype of Physarum polycephalum, its expression in the life cycle, and its localization in particular microtubular organelles. We have used the monoclonal antibody 6-11B-1 (Piperno, G., and M. T. Fuller, 1985, J. Cell Biol., 101:2085-2094) as the probe for acetylated alpha-tubulin and have provided a biochemical characterization of the monoclonal antibody KMP-1 as a probe for unacetylated tubulin in Physarum. Concomitant use of these two probes has allowed us to characterize the acetylated alpha-tubulin of Physarum as the alpha 3 isotype. We have detected this acetylated alpha 3 tubulin isotype in both the flagellate and in the myxameba, but not in the plasmodium. In the flagellate, acetylated tubulin is present in both the flagellar axonemes and in an extensive array of cytoplasmic microtubules. The extensive arrangement of acetylated cytoplasmic microtubules and the flagellar axonemes are elaborated during the myxameba-flagellate transformation. In the myxameba, acetylated tubulin is not present in the cytoplasmic microtubules nor in the mitotic spindle microtubules, but is associated with the two centrioles of this cell. These findings, taken together with the apparent absence of acetylated alpha-tubulin in the ephemeral microtubules of the plasmodium suggest a natural correspondence between the presence of acetylated alpha-tubulin and microtubule organelles that are intrinsically stable or cross-linked.  相似文献   

17.
We have investigated the appearance and reorganization of tubulin-containing arrays induced by colchicine in the root meristem of wheat Triticum aestivum, using immunostaining and electron microscopy. Colchicine caused depolymerization of microtubules and formation of tubulin cortical strands composed of filamentous material only in C-mitotic cells. After prolonged exposure to the drug, both interphase and C-mitotic cells acquired needle-type bundles, arranged as different crystalloids and/or macrotubules. The unmodified tyrosinated form of alpha-tubulin was detected within microtubules in control cells, but was not found within cortical strands. It was identified, however, within needle-type bundles. The modified acetylated form of alpha-tubulin, which was absent in control cells, was detected within needle-type bundles. Thus, cortical strands were transitory arrays, transformed into needle-type bundles during prolonged exposure to colchicine. Cortical strands appeared in a cell cycle-dependent manner, whereas needle-type bundles were cell cycle stable arrays. The diverse morphological organization, intracellular distribution and stability of tubulin-containing arrays may be associated with heterogeneity of alpha-tubulin isoforms. We assume that non-microtubular arrays substitute for microtubules in conditions where normal tubulin polymerization is inhibited.  相似文献   

18.
Some effects of gravity on early morphogenesis are correlated with microtubule locations within cells. During first cleavage in Ilyanassa obsoleta embryos, a transitory polar lobe constriction forms and then relaxes, allowing the polar lobe to merge with one daughter cell. If the polar lobe is equally divided or removed, morphogenesis is severely disrupted. To examine microtuble locations during early Ilyanassa development, eggs were fixed and stained for polymerized alpha-tubulin during first cleavage. The mitotic apparatus assembles at the animal pole. The cleavage furrow forms between the asters, constricting to a stabilized intercellular bridge encircling midbody-bound microtubules, whereas the polar lobe constriction forms below and parallel to the spindle, constricting to a transitory intercellular bridge encircling no detectable microtubules. At metaphase an alpha-tubulin epitope is distributed throughout the spindle, whereas a beta-tubulin epitope is present predominantly in the asters. Incubation in hexylene glycol, a drug that increases microtubule polymerization, during mitosis causes the polar lobe constriction to tighten around polymerized alpha-tubulin and remain stably constricted. If hexylene glycol is removed, alpha-tubulin staining disappears from the polar lobe constriction, which relaxes, whereas microtubules remain in the cleavage furrow, which remains constricted. These observations suggest that asymmetric distribution of microtubules affects early Ilyanassa cleavage patterns, and that continued presence of microtubules extending through an intercellular bridge is important for stabilization of the bridge constriction prior to completion of cytokinesis. These data provide the basis for further analysis of the role of microtubules in possible microgravity disruptions of Ilyanassa development.  相似文献   

19.
Dramatic changes in the localization of conventional non-muscle myosin characterize early embryogenesis in Drosophila melanogaster. During cellularization, myosin is concentrated around the furrow canals that form the leading margin of the plasma membrane as it plunges inward to package each somatic nucleus into a columnar epithelial cell. During gastrulation, there is specific anti-myosin staining at the apical ends of those cells that change shape in regions of invagination. Both of these localizations appear to result from a redistribution of a cortical store of maternal myosin. In the preblastoderm embryo, myosin is localized to the egg cortex, sub-cortical arrays of inclusions, and, diffusely, the yolk-free periplasm. At the syncytial blastoderm stage, myosin is found within cytoskeletal caps associated with the somatic nuclei at the embryonic surface. Following the final syncytial division, these myosin caps give rise to the myosin rings observed during cellularization. These distributions are observed with both whole immune serum and affinity-purified antibodies directed against Drosophila non-muscle myosin heavy chain. They are not detected in embryos stained with anti-Drosophila muscle myosin antiserum or with preimmune serum. Although immunolocalization can only suggest possible function, these myosin localizations and the coincident changes in cell morphology are consistent with a key role for non-muscle myosin in powering cellularization and gastrulation during embryogenesis.  相似文献   

20.
Centrosome splitting during nuclear elongation in the Drosophila embryo   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
In the early Drosophila embryo, nuclear elongation occurs during cellularization of the syncytial blastoderm. This process is closely related to the presence of microtubular bundles forming a basket-like structure surrounding the nuclei. In immunofluorescence observations with antibodies against alpha-tubulin, the microtubules appear to radiate from two bright foci widely separated from each other. We used electron microscopy to show that these foci are true centrosomes constituted by daughter and parent centrioles orthogonally disposed and surrounded by pericentriolar electrondense material. The centrosomes may be observed in the apical region of the blastoderm cells from the beginning of cellularization until the reestablishment of the first postblastodermic mitosis, when they organize the spindle poles. Until this time the dimensions of the procentrioles remain unchanged. The significance of these results is discussed in relation to the known behavior of centrioles in the cell cycle.  相似文献   

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