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1.
Astral microtubules extend close to the cell surface just before cytokinesis in sea urchin eggs. At this time, a small region with a constant area is considered around a point on the egg surface. To calculate the number of microtubules that reach the surface region, i.e. the microtubule density at the point, a simple mathematical model was set up. The density was estimated at many surface points in multipolar and distorted eggs by using the model. A contour map was drawn to investigate the density gradients. The gradient patterns were compared with the distributions of contractile-ring microfilaments. The simulated cases were: (1) an unusual distribution of contractile-ring microfilaments in an egg that had polyasters and was compressed by a coverslip; (2) formation of contractile-ring microfilaments at the equatorial region in compressed eggs with a centrally-located mitotic apparatus; (3) normal furrowing in the plane of the spindle midpoint in eggs inserted into a glass loop or confined in a capillary; (4) failure of furrow formation in spherical eggs treated with ethyl urethane and revival of furrowing by pushing the equatorial surface close to the spindle. These simulations proposed the hypothesis that contractile-ring microfilaments form at surface regions where the microtubule density has a local minimum, not a local maximum. In addition, it was suggested that the probability of the formation of the contractile-ring microfilaments is dependent on how abruptly the density gradient changes at the local-minimum point. These results support the idea that the gradient pattern of the microtubule density determines whether and where contractile-ring microfilaments appear.  相似文献   

2.
Three types of models have been proposed about how the mitotic apparatus determines the position of the cleavage furrow in animal cells. In the first and second types, the contractile ring appears in a cortical region that least and most astral microtubules reach, respectively. The third type is that the spindle midzone positions the contractile ring. In the previous study, a new model was proposed through analyses of cytokinesis in sand dollar and sea urchin eggs. Gradients of the surface density of microtubule plus ends are assumed to drive membrane proteins whose accumulation causes the formation of contractile-ring microfilaments. In the present study, the validity of each model is examined by simulating the furrow formation in conical sand dollar eggs with the mitotic apparatus oriented perpendicular to the cone axis. The new model predicts that unilateral furrows with cleavage planes roughly parallel to the spindle axis appear between the mitotic apparatus and the vertex besides the normally positioned furrow. The predictions are consistent with the observations by Rappaport & Rappaport (1994, Dev. Biol.164, 258-266). The other three types of models do not predict the formation of the ectopic furrows. Furthermore, it is pointed out that only the new model has the ability to explain the geometrical relationship between the mitotic apparatus and the contractile ring under various experimental conditions. These results strongly suggest the real existence of the membrane proteins postulated in the model.  相似文献   

3.
In cytokinesis of sea urchin eggs, the numerical density of astral microtubules extending close to the cell surface has been thought to determine the position of the cleavage furrow. In the present study, a new model was constructed to simulate the relationship between the microtubule density and the furrow formation. In the model, gradients of the microtubule density drive fluid membrane proteins whose accumulation triggers the formation of contractile-ring microfilaments. The model could explain the behavior of the cleavage furrow under various experimental conditions. These simulations revealed two aspects of furrow formation. One is that in some cases, the cleavage furrow appears in a surface region where the microtubule density has neither a minimum nor a maximum. In all furrow regions, however, the second derivative of the microtubule-density function has large positive values. Membrane proteins greatly slow down to accumulate in such a region. The other is that the cleavage furrow is mobile, not fixed in one position, because of the fluidity of membrane proteins. These results strongly suggested that the mitotic apparatus determines the position of the cleavage furrow by redistributing membrane proteins through gradients of the microtubule density at the cell surface.  相似文献   

4.
Sea urchin eggs stained with fluorescein-conjugated wheat germ agglutinin (F-WGA) before or after fixation showed a marked accumulation of fluorescence at the cleavage furrow in the first and the second cell divisions. WGA receptors (WGA-binding membrane glycoproteins) were redistributed to the equatorial region through several steps in compressed eggs. Accumulated WGA receptors showed a distribution similar to that of contractile-ring microfilaments throughout most of the steps. Therefore, the former is probably associated with the latter directly or indirectly. Labeling with F-WGA provides a simple method to detect contractile-ring microfilaments in living eggs. Treatment of eggs with colcemid shortly before cytokinesis dispersed the ring-like accumulation of WGA receptors together with contractile-ring microfilaments. This result suggests that microtubule structures, probably asters, are involved in the redistribution of WGA receptors. Cytochalasin B prevented furrowing when it was applied shortly before cytokinesis. While contractile-ring microfilaments showed a spotty distribution in the expected furrow region, WGA receptors were normally redistributed. Furthermore, a higher concentration of the drug allowed the appearance of accumulated WGA receptors in compressed eggs although the development into a ring-like configuration was inhibited. These observations suggest the possibility that the redistribution of WGA receptors is involved in the formation of contractile ring.  相似文献   

5.
The role of membranes in the ogranization of the mitotic apparatus.   总被引:17,自引:0,他引:17  
The relationship between the microtubules and a massive system of vesicles associated with the sea urchin mitotic apparatus was examined by light and electron microscopy. Astral rays made up of elongated vesicles and associated tracts of microtubules continue to grow toward the cell surface during late anaphase and telophase at the same time the aster center appears to be breaking down in preparation for the next division. On the basis of current knowledge of the requirements for microtubule polymerization and the known presence of a calcium-dependent ATPase in the mitotic apparatus, it is proposed that the vesicle system functions to control the polymerization and depolymerization of microtubules by calcium ion regulation. A model for such a system is proposed.  相似文献   

6.
The relationship between the microtubules and a massive system of vesicles associated with the sea urchin mitotic apparatus was examined by light and electron microscopy. Astral rays made up of elongated vesicles and associated tracts of microtubules continue to grow toward the cell surface during late anaphase and telophase at the same time the aster center appears to be breaking down in preparation for the next division. On the basis of current knowledge of the requirements for microtubule polymerization and the known presence of a calcium-dependent ATPase in the mitotic apparatus, it is proposed that the vesicle system functions to control the polymerization and depolymerization of microtubules by calcium ion regulation. A model for such a system is proposed.  相似文献   

7.
Porcine brain tubulin labeled with fluorescein isothiocyanate (FITC) was able to polymerize by itself and co-polymerize with tubulin purified from starfish sperm flagella. When we injected the FITC-labeled tubulin into unfertilized eggs of the sand dollar, Clypeaster japonicus, and the eggs were then fertilized, the labeled tubulin was incorporated into the sperm aster. When injected into fertilized eggs at streak stage, the tubulin was quickly incorporated into each central region of growing asters. It was clearly visualized that the labeled tubulin, upon reaching metaphase, accumulated in the mitotic apparatus and later disappeared over the cytoplasm during interphase. The accumulation of the fluorescence in the mitotic apparatus was observed repeatedly at successive cleavage. After lysis of the fertilized eggs with a microtubule-stabilizing solution, fluorescent fibrous structures around the nucleus and those of the sperm aster and the mitotic apparatus were preserved and coincided with the fibrous structures observed by polarization and differential interference microscopy. We found the FITC-labeled tubulin to be incorporated into the entire mitotic apparatus within 20-30 s when injected into the eggs at metaphase or anaphase. This rapid incorporation of the labeled tubulin into the mitotic apparatus suggests that the equilibrium between mitotic microtubules and tubulin is attained very rapidly in the living eggs. Axonemal tubulin purified from starfish sperm flagella and labeled with FITC was also incorporated into microtubular structures in the same fashion as the FITC-labeled brain tubulin. These results suggest that even FITC-labeled heterogeneous tubulins undergo spatial and stage-specific regulation of assembly-disassembly in the same manner as does sand dollar egg tubulin.  相似文献   

8.
To understand the unusual polar body formation in the androgenetic clam, Corbicula leana, whole-mount eggs stained with monoclonal antibodies against α-tubulin, γ-tubulin, and 4’-6’-diamidino-2-phenylindole were examined. The meiotic spindle was located at the peripheral region of the egg at metaphase I, and its axis was parallel to the egg surface. After segregation of chromosomes at anaphase I, cytoplasmic bulges formed at both meiotic spindle pole sites. Centrosomes were located at the apical portion of the each bulge. From the apical portion of the bulge a bundle of astral microtubules radiated toward the bulge base in late anaphase resembling a half spindle. Maternal chromosomes and both centrosomes were all distributed in two ”first polar bodies” and were eventually discarded. After the polar body formation only one male pronucleus existed in the egg cytoplasm. The present study showed that the anaphase microtubules originating from a single aster can induce the polar body formation without overlapping of microtubules from the opposing aster. Received: 29 September 1999 / Accepted: 24 November 1999  相似文献   

9.
The first cleavage in the freshwater oligochaete Tubifex hattai is unequal and meridional, and produces a smaller cell AB and a larger cell CD. This study traces the process of furrow formation, reorganization of cortical F-actin and the assembly of a mitotic apparatus during this unequal division. Cleavage furrow formation consists of two stages: (i) when eggs are viewed from the animal pole, meridionally running furrows emerge at two points of the egg's equator that are 90° apart from each other and approach the egg axis as they deepen; and (ii) at the midpoint between the equator and the egg center, the bottoms of these furrows link to each other on the animal and vegetal surfaces of the egg and form a continuous ring of constriction in a plane parallel to the egg axis. Egg cortices, isolated during the first step and stained with rhodamine-phalloidin, show that the bottoms of recently formed furrows are underlaid by a belt of tightly packed actin bundles (i.e. a contractile arc). The transition to the second stage of furrow formation coincides with the conversion of these actin belts into a continuous ring of F-actin. Whole-mount immunocytochemistry of microtubules reveals that the first cleavage in Tubifex involves an asymmetric mitotic spindle, which initially possesses an aster at one pole but not the other. This ‘monastral’ spindle is located at the egg's center and orients itself perpendicular to the egg axis. During anaphase, astral rays elongate to reach the cell surface, so that the array of astral microtubules in the plane of the egg's equator covers a sector of 270–300°. In contrast, it is not until the transition to telophase that microtubules emanating from the anastral spindle pole approach the cell margin. If eggs are compressed along the egg axis or forced to elongate, they form monastral spindles and divide unequally. In living compressed eggs, mitotic spindles, which are recognizable as bright streaks at the egg's center, appear not to shift their position along the spindle axis during division, suggesting that without eccentric migration of spindles Tubifex eggs are able to divide unequally. These results suggest that mechanisms that translocate the mitotic spindle eccentrically do not operate in Tubifex eggs during the first cell cycle. The mechanisms that generate asymmetry in spindle organization are discussed in the light of the present results.  相似文献   

10.
In order to study the dynamic behavior of the mitotic apparatus leading to unequal cleavage, we investigated the distribution of mitotic microtubules (MTs) during maturation division of starfish oocytes. When the mitotic apparatus attached to the cell surface at metaphase, in both the first and second meiotic division, it is revealed, by immunofluorescence, that the MT distribution in the spindle, as well as in the aster, became asymmetric. MTs in the peripheral half spindle increased in number compared with those in the inner half spindle. Furthermore, these results were confirmed in the living cell by polarization microscopy; shortly after the attachment, the birefringence retardation of the peripheral half spindle became greater than that of the inner one, and the difference increased with time during anaphase. By inhibiting the attachment of the mitotic apparatus by means of centrifugation, the MT distribution maintained a symmetrical pattern through mitosis. These results suggest that the attachment of the mitotic apparatus to the cell surface induces the asymmetrical distribution of MTs not only in the aster but also in the spindle. Such a rich distribution of MTs in the peripheral half spindle appears to ensure chromosome exclusion into the polar body by anchoring them firmly to the cell surface of the animal pole.  相似文献   

11.
Chlortetracycline (CTC) has been used to study sequential changes in the distribution of calcium-sequestering membranes during the first cell cycle of fertilized sea urchin eggs CTC staining patterns first appear as a diffuse ring around the centered zygote nucleus at the time of syngamy. As development proceeds, the ring becomes brighter and then elongates concurrently with the formation of the streak apparatus. Fluorescence subsequently accumulates in the centrospheres of the developing mitotic apparatus and is present in mitotic asters throughout mitosis. When the mitotic apparatus disappears, the fluorescence associated with each aster condenses into a bright ring surrounding each daughter nucleus. Ultrastructural studies show that CTC-fluorescent areas are rich in membranes while experiments with rhodamine 123, a mitochondrion-specific laser dye, indicate that mitochondria are excluded from areas in which membranes accumulate. Microtubule inhibitors prevent the initial accumulation of fluorescence around the zygote nucleus and arrest the development of existing fluorescence patterns when applied at later stages. In contrast, changes in fluorescence patterns are unaffected by the microfilament inhibitor cytochalasin D. These observations show that calcium-sequestering membranes are associated consecutively with the sperm aster, streak, and mitotic apparatus and that the continual reorganization of these membranes during the first cell cycle depends on the assembly and disassembly of microtubules.  相似文献   

12.
The fine structure of the animal pole cortex is examined in the fertilized Tubifex egg undergoing the formation of the second meiotic apparatus (MA). The fully formed MA which orients its axis at right angles to the surface is found at the animal pole about 40 min after formation of the first polar body. It is composed of a spindle and asters at its poles; a centriole is found in the inner aster, but not in the peripheral aster adjacent to the surface. During the formation of the MA, the animal pole surface is lined with a 0.15-μm-thick, electron-dense cortical layer, which is rich in microfilaments. The arrangement of the filaments in the layer changes from a parallel array to a meshwork with progressive formation of the MA. Microtubules of the peripheral aster terminate in the cortical layer. When a jet stream of glycerol/dimethyl sulfoxide solution is applied to an egg fragment glued on a polylysine-coated coverslip, an egg cortex-MA complex is isolated on the coverslip; the MA appears to be tethered to the egg surface by the structural connection between the filamentous cortical layer and microtubules of the peripheral aster. Cytochalasin B (50 μg/ml), when administrated at early phase of the MA formation, does not show any effect on the structure of the cortical layer and the MA; however, if eggs shortly before the termination of the first polar body formation are immersed in the same test solution, the cortical layer of the animal pole becomes thinner, and the filamentous material is not observed in it. Furthermore, in these eggs, the peripheral aster and the spindle are not structurally discernible because of the suppression of microtubule assembly, whereas microtubules on kinetochores and in the inner aster are normally developed. These results are discussed in relation to the role of the animal pole cortex in fixing of the MA to the egg surface and in forming of the MA.  相似文献   

13.
In animal cells, microtubules (MTs) of the mitotic apparatus (MA) communicate with the cell cortex to stimulate cytokinesis; however, the molecular nature of this stimulus remains elusive . A signal for cytokinesis likely involves the MT plus end binding family of proteins, which includes EB1, p150glued, APC, LIS1, and CLIP-170. These proteins modulate MT dynamics and facilitate interactions between growing MTs and their intracellular targets, including kinetochores, organelles, and the cell cortex . The dynein-dynactin complex mediates many of these microtubule capture events . We report that EB1 and p150glued interactions are required for stimulation of cytokinesis in dividing sea urchin eggs. Injected antibodies against EB1 or p150glued suppressed furrow ingression but did not prevent elongation of anaphase astral MTs toward the cortex, suggesting that EB1 and dynactin are both required for communication between the MA and the cortex. Targeted disruption of the interaction between EB1 and p150glued suppressed anaphase astral MT elongation and resulted in a delay of cytokinesis that could not be overcome by manipulation of the asters toward the cortex. We conclude that EB1 and dynactin participate in stimulation of the cleavage furrow, and their interaction promotes elongation of astral MTs at anaphase onset.  相似文献   

14.
Two Ca2(+)-binding proteins of sea urchin eggs were purified and partially characterized. They showed Ca2(+)-dependent binding to actin filaments and Ca2(+)-dependent changes of fluorescence intensity which was used to estimate the affinity constant of these proteins to Ca2+ ions. Ca2+ ions did not increase phospholipid binding ability of these proteins. Therefore these proteins are distinguished from the calpactin family. Staining of sections of metaphase eggs embedded in paraffin showed their localization in the mitotic apparatus. Furthermore, staining of whole mount eggs with anti-tubulin and antibodies against these proteins, followed by observations with confocal laser-scanning microscopy showed their co-localization with microtubules more clearly. In vitro co-sedimentation assay of microtubules with these proteins, however, showed no interaction between them. This suggested that some structures surrounding the mitotic apparatus microtubules are responsible for their localization.  相似文献   

15.
《The Journal of cell biology》1985,101(5):1858-1870
We have studied cytoskeletal architectures of isolated mitotic apparatus from sea urchin eggs using quick-freeze, deep-etch electron microscopy. This method revealed the existence of an extensive three- dimensional network of straight and branching crossbridges between spindle microtubules. The surface of the spindle microtubules was almost entirely covered with hexagonally packed, small, round button- like structures which were very uniform in shape and size (approximately 8 nm in diameter), and these microtubule buttons frequently provided bases for crossbridges between adjacent microtubules. These structures were removed from the surface of microtubules by high salt (0.6 M NaCl) extraction. Microtubule- associated proteins (MAPs) and microtubules isolated from mitotic spindles which were mainly composed of a large amount of 75-kD protein and some high molecular mass (250 kD, 245 kD) proteins were polymerized in vitro and examined by quick-freeze, deep-etch electron microscopy. The surfaces of microtubules were entirely covered with the same hexagonally packed round buttons, the arrangement of which is intimately related to that of tubulin dimers. Short crossbridges and some longer crossbridges were also observed. High salt treatment (0.6 M NaCl) extracted both 75-kD protein and high molecular weight proteins and removed microtubule buttons and most of crossbridges from the surface of microtubules. Considering the relatively high amount of 75- kD protein among MAPs isolated from mitotic spindles, it is concluded that these microtubule buttons probably consist of 75-kD MAP and that some of the crossbridges in vivo could belong to MAPs. Another kind of granule, larger in size (11-26 nm in diameter), was also on occasion associated with the surface of microtubules of mitotic spindles. A fine sidearm sometimes connected the larger granule to adjacent microtubules. Localization of cytoplasmic dynein ATPase in the mitotic spindle was investigated by electron microscopic immunocytochemistry with a monoclonal antibody (D57) against sea urchin sperm flagellar 21S dynein and colloidal gold-labeled second antibody. Immunogold particles were closely associated with spindle microtubules. 76% of these were within 50 nm and 55% were within 20 nm from the surface of the microtubules. These gold particles were sporadically found on both polar and kinetochore microtubules of half-spindles at both metaphase and anaphase. They localized also on the microtubules between sister chromatids in late anaphase. These data indicate that cytoplasmic dynein is attached to the microtubules in sea urchin mitotic spindles.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)  相似文献   

16.
"Spiral asters" composed of swirls of subcortical microtubules were recently described in fertilized eggs of the sea urchin Strongylocentrotus purpuratus. In our study, these structures did not occur at culture temperatures below 16 degrees C. When the culture temperature was elevated, however, "spiral asters" routinely appeared during a susceptible period before mitotic prophase when the sperm aster-diaster normally exists. A massive and protracted rotation of the cytoplasm (excluding an immobile cortex and perinuclear region) began within 1 min of exposure to elevated temperature. Fibrils of the "spiral aster" could be seen within this rotating mass even by bright-field microscopy. The identity of microtubules in these structures was confirmed by indirect immunofluorescence microscopy. A mechanistic association between "spiral aster" formation and cytoplasmic rotation was indicated by the simultaneous inhibitory effects of microtubule and dynein poisons. Inhibitors of microfilaments, however, had no effect. We infer that elevated temperature induces unique changes in the microtubules of the pre-prophase sperm aster-diaster, resulting in cytoplasmic rotation and the spiral configuration of microtubules. Comparative cytological evidence supports the idea that "spiral asters" do not normally occur in fertilized sea urchin eggs. Biogeographic evidence for S. purpuratus indicates that fertilization and development naturally occur below 15 degrees C, hence "spiral asters" in eggs of this species should be regarded as abnormalities induced in the laboratory by unnaturally elevated temperatures.  相似文献   

17.
Micromanipulation studies of the mitotic apparatus in sand dollar eggs   总被引:9,自引:0,他引:9  
Mechanical properties of the mitotic spindle and the effects of various operations of the mitotic apparatus on the chromosome movement and spindle elongation were investigated in fertilized eggs and blastomeres of the sand dollar, Clypeaster japonicus. On the basis of results with mechanical stretching and compression of the spindle with a pair of microneedles and the behavior of an oil drop microinjected into the spindle, it was concluded that the equatorial region of the spindle is mechanically weaker than the half-spindle region. Anaphase chromosome movement occurred in the spindle from which an aster had been removed or separated with its polar end and in the spindle in which the interzonal region had been removed. This fact indicates that chromosomes move poleward in anaphase by forces generated near the kinetochores in the half-spindle. Because of the effects of separation or removal of an aster from the spindle on the spindle elongation in anaphase and the behavior of the aster, it was concluded that the spindle elongation in anaphase is caused by pulling forces generated by asters attached to the ends of the spindle.  相似文献   

18.
Fluorescently labeled tubulin was quickly incorporated into the mitotic apparatus when injected into a live sand dollar egg. After a rectangular area (1.6 X 16 microns) of the mitotic spindle was photobleached at metaphase or anaphase by the irradiation of a laser microbeam, redistribution of fluorescence was almost complete within 30 sec. The photobleached area did not change in shape during the redistribution. During the period of redistribution, the bleached area moved slightly toward the near pole at metaphase and anaphase (means: 1.6 and 1.8 micron/min, respectively). These results indicate that redistribution was not due to the exchange of tubulin subunits only at the ends of microtubules but to their rapid exchange at sites along the microtubules in the bleached region. Furthermore, treadmilling of tubulin molecules along with the spindle microtubules possibly occurred at the rate of 1.6 micron/min at metaphase. Birefringence of the mitotic apparatus increased with a large increase in both the number and length of astral rays shortly after taxol was injected. However, the microtubules did not all seem to elongate at the same rate but appeared to become equalized in length. Chromosome movement stopped within 60 sec after the injection. Centrospheres became large and the labeled tubulin already incorporated into the centrospheres was excluded from the enlarged centrospheres. Shortly after the labeled tubulin was injected following the injection of taxol, it accumulated in the peripheral region of the centrospheres, suggesting that microtubules first assembled at this region. Fluorescently labeled tubulin in the mitotic apparatus in the egg after injection of taxol was redistributed much more slowly after photobleaching than in uninjected eggs.  相似文献   

19.
Changes in the cortical organization at the animal pole are examined by scanning and transmission electron microscopy in the Tubifex egg undergoing second polar body formation. At very early anaphase of the second meiosis, the egg surface overlying the meiotic apparatus is undulated, but its neighboring surface appears to be smooth. Although a microfilamentous cortical layer is found in the smooth area, the cortical layer of the undulating area is thin and devoid of filamentous structures except for its central part where some filaments are observed. This local differentiation takes place normally in colchicine-treated eggs where the meiotic apparatus is destroyed. Along with the progression of the anaphase movement, the egg surface of the undulating area is, first, uplifted into a cone-shaped cytoplasmic bulge (presumptive polar body); then the height and surface area of the bulge gradually increase. The distal surface of the growing bulge appears to be undulated whereas the sides of the bulge are relatively smooth. Transmission electron microscopy reveals that a thick microfilamentous cortical layer is always localized at the proximal region of this bulge; other regions of the bulge are characterized by a thin cortical layer which is devoid of filamentous structure except for the apical portion of the bulge. Microfilaments at the base of the bulge are perpendicular or oblique to the egg surface. The cortical layer of the egg which is continuous to that of the proximal region of the bulge comprises microfilaments running parallel to the surface. The attainment of the bulge to its full size is followed by the development of the cleavage furrow along its base. The cleavage furrow appears to bisect the spindle midway between its poles. In cytochalasin B-treated eggs, where some cortical microfilaments are detected at the animal pole, a cytoplasmic bulge lower in height and wider in the diameter of its base than the normal one forms at the animal pole; however, it is subsequently resorbed into the egg. The formation of a cleavage furrow is not observed in these eggs. The mechanism of the polar body formation is discussed in the light of the present observations.  相似文献   

20.
The focusing of microtubules into mitotic spindle poles in vertebrate somatic cells has been assumed to be the consequence of their nucleation from centrosomes. Contrary to this simple view, in this article we show that an antibody recognizing the light intermediate chain of cytoplasmic dynein (70.1) disrupts both the focused organization of microtubule minus ends and the localization of the nuclear mitotic apparatus protein at spindle poles when injected into cultured cells during metaphase, despite the presence of centrosomes. Examination of the effects of this dynein-specific antibody both in vitro using a cell-free system for mitotic aster assembly and in vivo after injection into cultured cells reveals that in addition to its direct effect on cytoplasmic dynein this antibody reduces the efficiency with which dynactin associates with microtubules, indicating that the antibody perturbs the cooperative binding of dynein and dynactin to microtubules during spindle/aster assembly. These results indicate that microtubule minus ends are focused into spindle poles in vertebrate somatic cells through a mechanism that involves contributions from both centrosomes and structural and microtubule motor proteins. Furthermore, these findings, together with the recent observation that cytoplasmic dynein is required for the formation and maintenance of acentrosomal spindle poles in extracts prepared from Xenopus eggs (Heald, R., R. Tournebize, T. Blank, R. Sandaltzopoulos, P. Becker, A. Hyman, and E. Karsenti. 1996. Nature (Lond.). 382: 420–425) demonstrate that there is a common mechanism for focusing free microtubule minus ends in both centrosomal and acentrosomal spindles. We discuss these observations in the context of a search-capture-focus model for spindle assembly.  相似文献   

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