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1.
We have studied the response of interphase and mitotic microtubule arrays in root meristem cells of spring and winter cultivars of wheat Triticum aestivum L. (Moskovskaya 35 and Moskovskaya 39) to cold stress (1 h at 0°C) and acclimation to cold (3–48 h at 0°C). We show that, in general, interphase microtubules are more resistant to cold then mitotic arrays in both cultivars. During cold stress, no changes are detected in the microtubule system of interphase cells of spring wheat, whereas the density of endoplasmic microtubules increases in interphase cells of winter wheat. During mitosis, the density of the kinetochore fibers of the spindle decreases in the cells of both cultivars, but it is prevailing in the cells of spring cultivar of wheat. During acclimation to cold, the disorganization of the cortical microtubule bundles and the enhanced growth of the endoplasmic microtubule network, which is comprised of microtubule converging centers, are observed in cells of both cultivars. However, the mitotic microtubule systems of winter and spring cultivars respond differently to cold acclimation. During prophase, a diffuse tubulin “halo,”followed by the assembly of microtubule converging centers, accumulate at the perinuclear area in the cells of winter wheat. In cells of spring cultivar, the prophase spindle is only detected during initial stages of cold acclimation. During metaphase, aberrant mitotic spindles, abnormal metaphase plates, and the excessive appearance of microtubule converging centers are observed in cells of both cultivars. Acclimation induces the disorganization of the phragmoplast and the formation of multiple microtubule converging centers during telophase in the cells of both cultivars. Microtubule converging centers are detected at the perinuclear area of daughter cells in winter wheat and in the cortical cytoplasm in spring wheat. The excessive formation of microtubule converging centers suggests the activation of microtubule assembly during prolonged exposure to low temperature. Our data also demonstrates common pathways of microtubule response to cold treatment (0°C).  相似文献   

2.
We have studied the response of the interphase and mitotis microtubule arrays in root meristem cells of spring and winter cultivars of wheat Triticum aestivum L. (Moskovskaya 35 and Moskovskaya 39) during cold stress (1 h at 0 degrees C) and acclimation to cold (3-48 h at 0 degrees C). Our data show that interphase microtubules are more resistant to cold than mitotic arrays in both cultivars. During cold stress the density of endoplasmic microtubules increases in interphase cells of winter plants, yet no changes are detected in cells of spring plants. In mitotic cells of both wheat cultivars the density of microtubules within the kinetochore fibers decreases, yet this effect is more evident in the cells of spring plants. During acclimation to cold of both cultivars, we have observed the disorganization of the interphase cortical arrays and the enhanced growth of endoplasmic microtubule arrays, composed of microtubule converging centers. However, the reaction of mitotic microtubule arrays differs in the cells of winter and spring plants. In winter plants, during prophase diffuse tubulin "halo" accumulates first at perinuclear area, followed by the appearance of the microtubule converging centers. In spring plants, we have observed the formation of the prophase spindle, yet later the prophase spindle is not detected. Metaphase cells of both cultivars show similar aberrations of the mitotic spindle, accumulation of abnormal metaphases and the excessive formation of microtubule converging centers. In telophase cells of both cultivars, acclimation induces similar reaction, resulting in the disorganization of the phragmoplast and the formation of multiple microtubule converging centers. The latter are detected in the perinuclear areas of the daughter cells in winter plants and in the cortical cytoplasm of cells in spring plants. Our data point to the common pathways of microtubule response to cold treatment (0 degrees C). The excessive formation of the microtubule converging centers indicates the activation of microtubule assembly during prolonged cold treatment.  相似文献   

3.
Plant morphogenesis is driven by a surprising number of microtubule arrays. The four arrays of vegetative tissues are hoop-like cortical, preprophase band (PPB), spindle, and phragmoplast. When syncytia occur during the reproductive phase of the plant life cycle, neither hoop-like corticals nor PPBs are present, and functional phragmoplasts fail to form following the proliferative mitoses that give rise to the multinucleate cytoplasm. Instead, the interphase microtubules are radial microtubule systems (RMSs) that emanate from the nuclei. These RMSs organize the cytoplasm into nascent cells and ultimately trigger phragmoplast formation at their boundaries. During investigations of the syncytial stage that initiates development of the female gametophyte in gymnosperms, we studied the large (3–4 mm) female gametophyte of Ginkgo biloba. Here we describe the microtubule cycle correlated with successive mitotic waves and discuss the importance of this system in studying the acentrosomal nucleation and organization of cycling microtubule arrays. Electronic Publication  相似文献   

4.
Using immunofluorescent localization techniques and TEM methods, the organization of microtubule arrays during the cell cycle of root tip cells of Allium fistulosum L. was studied. There are four basic types of microtubule organization, namely, interphase cortical microtubule, pre-prophase band microtubule, spindle microtubule and phragmoplast microtubule, which constitute the typical microtubule cycle in dividing cells of higher plants. The fluorescent figures of microtubules observed under fluorescent microscope were explained and analysed by the ultrastractural informations of microtubules obtained from TEM.  相似文献   

5.
Cells were prepared for indirect immunofluorescence microscopy after paraformaldehyde fixation of multicellular root apices and brief incubation in cell wall-digesting enzymes. This allowed subsequent separation of the tissue into individual cells or short files of cells which were put onto coverslips coated with polylysine. Unlike spherical protoplasts made from living tissues, these preparations retain the same polyhedral shape as the cells from which they are derived. Cellular contents, including organized arrays of microtubules, are likewise structurally stabilized. Antibodies to porcine brain tubulin react with all types of microtubule array known to occur in plant meristematic cells, namely, interphase cortical microtubules, pre- prophase bands, the mitotic spindle, and phragmoplast microtubules. The retention of antigenicity in permeabilized, isolated, stabilized cells from typical, wall-enclosed plant cells has much potential for plant immunocytochemistry, and in particular should facilitate work on the role of microtubules in the morphogenesis of organized plant tissues.  相似文献   

6.
A new class of microtubule-associated proteins in plants   总被引:4,自引:0,他引:4  
In plants there are three microtubule arrays involved in cellular morphogenesis that have no equivalent in animal cells. In animals, microtubules are decorated by another class of proteins - the structural MAPS - which serve to stabilize microtubules and assist in their organization. The best-studied members of this class in plants are the MAP-65 proteins that can be purified together with plant microtubules after several cycles of polymerization and depolymerization. Here we identify three similar MAP-65 complementary DNAs representing a small gene family named NtMAP65-1, which encode a new set of proteins, collectively called NtMAP65-1. We show that NtMAP65-1 protein localizes to areas of overlapping microtubules, indicating that it may function in the behaviour of antiparallel microtubules in the mitotic spindle and the cytokinetic phragmoplast.  相似文献   

7.
MICROTUBULE ORGANIZATION 1 (MOR1) is a plant member of the highly conserved MAP215/Dis1 family of microtubule-associated proteins. Prior studies with the temperature-sensitive mor1 mutants of Arabidopsis (Arabidopsis thaliana), which harbor single amino acid substitutions in an N-terminal HEAT repeat, proved that MOR1 regulates cortical microtubule organization and function. Here we demonstrate by use of live cell imaging and immunolabeling that the mor1-1 mutation generates specific defects in the microtubule arrays of dividing vegetative cells. Unlike the universal cortical microtubule disorganization in elongating mor1-1 cells, disruption of mitotic and cytokinetic microtubule arrays was not detected in all dividing cells. Nevertheless, quantitative analysis identified distinct defects in preprophase bands (PPBs), spindles, and phragmoplasts. In nearly one-half of dividing cells at the restrictive temperature of 30 degrees C, PPBs were not detected prior to spindle formation, and those that did form were often disrupted. mor1-1 spindles and phragmoplasts were short and abnormally organized and persisted for longer times than in wild-type cells. The reduced length of these arrays predicts that the component microtubule lengths are also reduced, suggesting that microtubule length is a critical determinant of spindle and phragmoplast structure, orientation, and function. Microtubule organizational defects led to aberrant chromosomal arrangements, misaligned or incomplete cell plates, and multinucleate cells. Antiserum raised against an N-terminal MOR1 sequence labeled the full length of microtubules in interphase arrays, PPBs, spindles, and phragmoplasts. Continued immunolabeling of the disorganized and short microtubules of mor1-1 at the restrictive temperature demonstrated that the mutant mor1-1(L174F) protein loses function without dissociating from microtubules, providing important insight into the mechanism by which MOR1 may regulate microtubule length.  相似文献   

8.
The general architecture of the mitotic apparatus was studied at the ultrastructural level in Drosophila cultured cells. Its two main characteristics are a very polarized spindle and a strong compartmentalization, ensured by large remnants of the nuclear envelope. Such compartmentalization has previously been reported for the rapid syncytial divisions of the early embryo; a similar finding in these cells with a long cycle strongly suggests that this organization constitutes a general mechanism for mitosis in Drosophila. We followed the modifications of these structures after a heat shock of 20, 50 or 120 min at 37°C. Contrary to interphase cells, mitotic cells appear very sensitive to hyperthermia. This stress treatment induced a disruption of the mitotic spindle, a reappearance and an extension of the Golgi apparatus, an inactivation of microtubule nucleation and a disorganization of the centrosome. This organelle seems the first to be affected by the heat shock response. The centrosome is not only inactivated, but also is structurally affected. During the recovery phase after heat stress, the mitotic cells presented a remarkable ring-shaped accumulation of electrondense material around the centrioles. We conclude that in Drosophila cells the mitotic phase, and more specifically the centrosome, are targets of the stress response.  相似文献   

9.
利用改进的冰冻切片法结合间接免疫荧光标记技术对甘蔗茎尖细胞有丝分裂过程中微管骨架的变化进行了研究。结果表明, 在甘蔗茎尖细胞有丝分裂过程中存在4种循序变化的典型微管列阵,即周质微管、早前期微管带、纺锤体微管及成膜体微管。同时, 还观察到在各种典型微管列阵相互转变过程中存在各种微管列阵的过渡状态。甘蔗茎尖正在伸长的幼叶部位细胞的周质微管主要为与细胞伸长轴相垂直的横向周质微管; 茎尖幼叶部位伸长缓慢细胞的微管主要为纵向及斜向排列的周质微管,在甘蔗茎尖幼叶基部初生增粗分生组织处, 横向、斜向、纵向及随机排列的周质微管列阵均有分布。在少数分裂前期的细胞中, 发现细胞具有2条早前期微管带, 其具体功能还不清楚。表明甘蔗茎尖细胞微管列阵的变化与许多双子叶植物及部分单子叶植物具有共同的变化规律, 进一步证明微管骨架的周期性变化在植物中具有普遍性。  相似文献   

10.
利用改进的冰冻切片法结合间接免疫荧光标记技术对甘蔗茎尖细胞有丝分裂过程中微管骨架的变化进行了研究。结果表明,在甘蔗茎尖细胞有丝分裂过程中存在4种循序变化的典型微管列阵,即周质微管、早前期微管带、纺锤体微管及成膜体微管。同时,还观察到在各种典型微管列阵相互转变过程中存在各种微管列阵的过渡状态。甘蔗茎尖正在伸长的幼叶部位细胞的周质微管主要为与细胞伸长轴相垂直的横向周质微管:茎尖幼叶部位伸长缓慢细胞的微管主要为纵向及斜向排列的周质微管,在甘蔗茎尖幼叶基部初生增粗分生组织处,横向、斜向、纵向及随机排列的周质微管列阵均有分布。在少数分裂前期的细胞中,发现细胞具有2条早前期微管带,其具体功能还不清楚。表明甘蔗茎尖细胞微管列阵的变化与许多双子叶植物及部分单子叶植物具有共同的变化规律,进一步证明微管骨架的周期性变化在植物中具有普遍性。  相似文献   

11.
Polarity of spindle microtubules in Haemanthus endosperm   总被引:12,自引:7,他引:5       下载免费PDF全文
Structural polarities of mitotic spindle microtubules in the plant Haemanthus katherinae have been studied by lysing endosperm cells in solutions of neurotubulin under conditions that will decorate cellular microtubules with curved sheets of tubulin protofilaments. Microtubule polarity was observed at several positions in each cell by cutting serial thin sections perpendicular to the spindle axis. The majority of the microtubules present in a metaphase or anaphase half-spindle are oriented with their fast-growing or "plus" ends distal to the polar area. Near the polar ends of the spindle and up to about halfway between the kinetichores and the poles, the number of microtubules with opposite polarity is low: 8-20% in metaphase and 2-15% in anaphase cells. Direct examination of 10 kinetochore fibers shows that the majority of these microtubules, too, are oriented with their plus ends distal to the poles, as had been previously shown in animal cells. Sections from the region near the spindle equator reveal an increased fraction of microtubules with opposite polarity. Graphs of polarity vs. position along the spindle axis display a smooth transition from microtubules of one orientation near the first pole, through a region containing equal numbers of the two orientations, to a zone near the second pole where the opposite polarity predominates. We conclude that the spindle of endosperm cells is constructed from two sets of microtubules with opposite polarity that interdigitate near the spindle equator. The length of the zone of interdigitation shortens from metaphase through telophase, consistent with a model that states that during anaphase spindle elongation in Haemanthus, the interdigitating sets of microtubules are moved apart. We found no major changes in the distribution of microtubule polarity in the spindle interzone from anaphase to telophase when cells are engaged in phragmoplast formation. Therefore, the initiation and organization of new microtubules, thought to take place during phragmoplast assembly, must occur without significant alteration of the microtubule polarity distribution.  相似文献   

12.
The duration of the different phases of the microtubule and chromosome cycles were estimated in the native diploid cell populations of Allium cepa L root meristems proliferating undisturbed, under steady state conditions, at the physiological temperature of 15°C. The cycles were coupled by considering their fitting in relation to the short process of nuclear envelope breakdown. In the cycle related to cytoplasmic division, the preprophase band which predicts the future position of the phragmoplast made its appearance, as a wide band, 16 mm before the G2 to prophase transition, ie it was only present during the final 5% of the total G2 timing (5 h 30 mm). The band became narrow only 6 mm after prophase had started and it was present in this form for the remaining prophase time (2 h 24 mm). Its disappearance occurred strictly coinciding with nuclear envelope breakdown, at the end of prophase. No microtubules related to cytoplasmic division were apparent until 9 mm after telophase had initiated. The two initial stages of phragmoplast formation which followed occupied, respectively, 27 mm and 54.5 mm of the 2-h long telophase. On the other hand, the third and last stage in phragmoplast formation covered both the final 35 mm of mitosis and the 6 initial mm of the G1 of the next interphase. A very short (less than 4 mm) stage of microtubular nucleation around the nuclear envelope took place immediately afterwards, before the cortical array of microtubules appeared. The microtubule cycle related to nuclear division started with the apparent activation of the future spindle poles 7.4 mm before prophase was over. The mitotic spindle developed in the 5.6 mm long prometaphase. The spindle functioned in metaphase for the 42 mm it lasted, half spindles being separated for the 37 mm anaphase occupied in these cells.  相似文献   

13.
Microtubule reorganization in tobacco BY-2 cells stably expressing GFP-MBD   总被引:11,自引:0,他引:11  
Granger CL  Cyr RJ 《Planta》2000,210(3):502-509
 Microtubule organization plays an important role in plant morphogenesis; however, little is known about how microtubule arrays transit from one organized state to another. The use of a genetically incorporated fluorescent marker would allow long-term observation of microtubule behavior in living cells. Here, we have characterized a Nicotiana tabacum L. cv. Bright Yellow 2 (BY-2) cell line that had been stably transformed with a gfp-mbd construct previously demonstrated to label microtubules (J. Marc et al., 1998, Plant Cell 10: 1927–1939). Fluorescence levels were low, but interphase and mitotic microtubule arrays, as well as the transitions between these arrays, could be observed in individual gfp-mbd-transformed cells. By comparing several attributes of transformed and untransformed cells it was concluded that the transgenic cells are not adversely affected by low-level expression of the transgene and that these cells will serve as a useful and accurate model system for observing microtubule reorganization in vivo. Indeed, some initial observations were made that are consistent with the involvement of motor proteins in the transition between the spindle and phragmoplast arrays. Our observations also support the role of the perinuclear region in nucleating microtubules at the end of cell division with a progressive shift of these microtubules and/or nucleating activity to the cortex to form the interphase cortical array. Received: 2 June 1999 / Accepted: 13 August 1999  相似文献   

14.
EB1 is an evolutionarily conserved protein that localizes to the plus ends of growing microtubules. In yeast, the EB1 homologue (BIM1) has been shown to modulate microtubule dynamics and link microtubules to the cortex, but the functions of metazoan EB1 proteins remain unknown. Using a novel preparation of the Drosophila S2 cell line that promotes cell attachment and spreading, we visualized dynamics of single microtubules in real time and found that depletion of EB1 by RNA-mediated inhibition (RNAi) in interphase cells causes a dramatic increase in nondynamic microtubules (neither growing nor shrinking), but does not alter overall microtubule organization. In contrast, several defects in microtubule organization are observed in RNAi-treated mitotic cells, including a drastic reduction in astral microtubules, malformed mitotic spindles, defocused spindle poles, and mispositioning of spindles away from the cell center. Similar phenotypes were observed in mitotic spindles of Drosophila embryos that were microinjected with anti-EB1 antibodies. In addition, live cell imaging of mitosis in Drosophila embryos reveals defective spindle elongation and chromosomal segregation during anaphase after antibody injection. Our results reveal crucial roles for EB1 in mitosis, which we postulate involves its ability to promote the growth and interactions of microtubules within the central spindle and at the cell cortex.  相似文献   

15.
Directional cell expansion in interphase and nuclear and cell division in M-phase are mediated by four microtubule arrays, three of which are unique to plants: the interphase array, the preprophase band, and the phragmoplast. The plant microtubule-associated protein MAP65 has been identified as a key structural component in these arrays. The Arabidopsis genome has nine MAP65 genes, and here we show that one, AtMAP65-3/PLE, locates only to the mitotic arrays and is essential for cytokinesis. The Arabidopsis pleiade (ple) alleles are single recessive mutations, and we show that these mutations are in the AtMAP65-3 gene. Moreover, these mutations cause C-terminal truncations that abolish microtubule binding. In the ple mutants the anaphase spindle is normal, and the cytokinetic phragmoplast can form but is distorted; not only is it wider, but the midline, the region where oppositely oriented microtubules overlap, is unusually expanded. Here we present data that demonstrate an essential role for AtMAP65-3/PLE in cytokinesis in plant cells.  相似文献   

16.
 The ultrastructure of periclinally dividing fusiform cells was studied in the vascular cambium of Robinia pseudoacacia. Fusiform cell division begins in April at Madison, Wisconsin, when the cambial cells still have many characteristics of a dormant cambium. Soon afterward, the cambial cells acquire the appearance typical of an active cambium. Sequential phases of the microtubule cycle were documented: cortical microtubules bordering the cell wall during interphase, perinuclear microtubules preceding formation of the mitotic spindle, spindle microtubules, and phragmoplast microtubules. A preprophase band of microtubules was not encountered. An extended phragmosome was not encountered in periclinally dividing fusiform cells. During cytokinesis, the phragmosome is represented by a broad cytoplasmic plate which precedes the developing phragmoplast and cell plate as they migrate toward the ends of the cell.  相似文献   

17.
The distribution and organisation of F-actin during the cell cycle of meristematic root-tip cells of Allium was investigated using a rhodamine-labelled phalloidin to stain F-actin in isolated cell preparations. Such preparations could, in addition, be stained for tubulin by immunofluorescence, enabling a comparison between F-actin and microtubule distributions in the same cell. In interphase, an extensive array of actin-filament bundles was present in the cytoplasm of elongating cells, the bundles generally following the long axis of the cell and passing in close proximity to the nucleus. In contrast, the interphase microtubule array occupied the cortex of the cell and was oriented at right angles to the actin bundles. In smaller, isodiametric cells, microfilament arrays were present but less well developed. During cell division, phalloidin-specific staining was seen in the cytokinetic phragmoplast, and co-distributed with microtubules at all stages of cell plate formation; however, neither the pre-prophase band nor the mitotic spindle were stained with phalloidin. Co-distribution of F-actin and microtubules only occurs, therefore, at cytokinesis. The relationship between microfilaments and microtubules is discussed, together with the possible role of actin in the phragmoplast.  相似文献   

18.
Precise spatiotemporal control of microtubule nucleation and organization is critical for faithful segregation of cytoplasmic and genetic material during cell division and signaling via the primary cilium in quiescent cells. Microtubule-associated proteins (MAPs) govern assembly, maintenance, and remodeling of diverse microtubule arrays. While a set of conserved MAPs are only active during cell division, an emerging group of MAPs acts as dual regulators in dividing and nondividing cells. Here, we elucidated the nonciliary functions and molecular mechanism of action of the ciliopathy-linked protein CCDC66, which we previously characterized as a regulator of ciliogenesis in quiescent cells. We showed that CCDC66 dynamically localizes to the centrosomes, the bipolar spindle, the spindle midzone, the central spindle, and the midbody in dividing cells and interacts with the core machinery of centrosome maturation and MAPs involved in cell division. Loss-of-function experiments revealed its functions during mitotic progression and cytokinesis. Specifically, CCDC66 depletion resulted in defective spindle assembly and orientation, kinetochore fiber stability, chromosome alignment in metaphase as well as central spindle and midbody assembly and organization in anaphase and cytokinesis. Notably, CCDC66 regulates mitotic microtubule nucleation via noncentrosomal and centrosomal pathways via recruitment of gamma-tubulin to the centrosomes and the spindle. Additionally, CCDC66 bundles microtubules in vitro and in cells by its C-terminal microtubule-binding domain. Phenotypic rescue experiments showed that the microtubule and centrosome-associated pools of CCDC66 individually or cooperatively mediate its mitotic and cytokinetic functions. Collectively, our findings identify CCDC66 as a multifaceted regulator of the nucleation and organization of the diverse mitotic and cytokinetic microtubule arrays and provide new insight into nonciliary defects that underlie ciliopathies.

The ciliopathy-linked protein CCDC66 is only known for its ciliary functions. This study reveals that CCDC66 also has extensive non-ciliary functions, localizing to the spindle poles, spindle midzone, central spindle and midbody throughout cell division, where it regulates mitosis and cytokinesis by promoting microtubule nucleation and organization.  相似文献   

19.
All land plants (embryophytes) use a phragmoplast for cytokinesis. Phragmoplasts are distinctive cytoskeletal structures that are instrumental in the deposition of new walls in both vegetative and reproductive phases of the life cycle. In meristems, the phragmoplast is initiated among remaining non-kinetochore spindle fibers between sister nuclei and expands to join parental walls at the site previously marked by the preprophase band of microtubules (PPB). The microtubule cycle and cell cycle are closely coordinated: the hoop-like cortical microtubules of interphase are replaced by the PPB just prior to prophase, the PPB disappears as the spindle forms, and the phragmoplast mediates cell plate deposition after nuclear division. In the reproductive phase, however, cortical microtubules and PPBs are absent and cytokinesis may be uncoupled from the cell cycle resulting in multinucleate cells (syncytia). Minisyncytia of 4 nuclei occur in microsporocytes and several (typically 8) nuclei occur in the developing megagametophyte. Macrosyncytia with thousands of nuclei may occur in the nuclear type endosperm. Cellularization of syncytia involves formation of adventitious phragmoplasts at boundaries of nuclear-cytoplasmic domains (NCDs) defined by radial microtubule systems (RMSs) emanating from non-sister nuclei. Once initiated in the region of microtubule overlap at interfaces of opposing RMSs, the adventitious phragmoplasts appear structurally identical to interzonal phragmoplasts. Phragmoplasts are constructed of multiple opposing arrays similar to what have been termed microtubule converging centers. The individual phragmoplast units are distinctive fusiform bundles of anti-parallel microtubules bisected by a dark mid-zone where vesicles accumulate and fuse into a cell plate.  相似文献   

20.
Several different cytokinetic mechanisms operate in flowering plants. During 'conventional' somatic cytokinesis, the mitotic spindle remnants give rise to a phragmoplast that serves as a framework for the assembly of the cell plate. Cell plates fuse with the parental plasma membrane at specific cortical sites previously defined by the preprophase band of microtubules. In nuclear endosperms, meiocytes, and gametophytic cells, cytokinesis occurs without preprophase bands. The position of the new cell walls is determined instead by interacting arrays of microtubules that radiate from the nuclear envelope surfaces. The nuclear cytoplasmic domains defined by these microtubule arrays demarcate the boundaries of the future cells. Recent studies have provided new insights into the ultrastructural similarities and dissimilarities between conventional and non-conventional cytokinesis. Numerous proteins have also been localized to cytokinesis-related cytoskeletal arrays and cell plates but the functions of most of them have yet to be elucidated.  相似文献   

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