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1.
The molecular signals that determine the position and timing of the furrow that forms during mammalian cell cytokinesis are presently unknown. It is apparent, however, that these signals are generated by the mitotic spindle after the onset of anaphase. Recently we have described a structure that bisects the cell during telophase at the position of the cytokinetic furrow. This structure, the telephase disc, appears to the templated by the motitc spindle during anaphase, and precedes the formation of the cytokinetic furrow. The relationship of the telephase disc to the myosin and actin based furrowing mechanism is discussed here. We propose that the telophase disc may determine the position and timing of cleavage by recruitment and alignment of myosin.  相似文献   

2.
Mitotic PtK1cells were treated both during mid-anaphase and at furrow initiation with the potent microtubule (MT) stabilizing agent, taxol, to determine the role of MTs in the rate of cytokinetic events. Rates of cytokinesis (μm/min) were measured by changes in furrow diameter. Incubation of PtK1cells during mid-anaphase with 5 μg/ml taxol slows the rate of cytokinesis by an average of 43%. Instead of furrow initiation to midbody formation taking an average of 10.7 min (1.6 μm/min), furrowing to midbody formation was completed in an average of 19.0 min (0.9 μm/min), which does not include the 7-min period between taxol application in mid-anaphase and furrow initiation. Application of 5 μg/ml taxol to cells at furrow initiation had a reduced effect on decreasing the rate of cytokinesis and midbody formation; furrowing to midbody formation took an average of 14.6 min (1.2 μm/min). These data suggest that delays in the rate of cytokinesis is dependent on the mitotic stage at which taxol is applied. Ultrastructural analysis shows that taxol treatment of anaphase cells prevents midbody formation during early G1, yet MT number and organization in the furrowed region is not significantly altered from untreated cells. There is little change in the organization and amount of contractile ring microfilaments, yet filaments are also found parallel to midbody MTs. Our results may be explained by the fact that taxol tends to stabilize MTs which probably affects the rate at which they depolymerize in the terminal phases of cytokinesis. Reduction in depolymerization rates of a stable population of MTs could serve to regulate the rate of cytokinesis.  相似文献   

3.
Calmodulin is a major cytoplasmic calcium receptor that performs multiple functions in the cell including cytokinesis. Central spindle appears between separating chromatin masses after metaphase-anaphase transition. The interaction of microtubules from central spindle with cell cortex regulates the cleavage furrow formation. In this paper, we use green fluorescence protein (GFP)-tagged calmodulin as a living cell probe to examine the detailed dynamic redistribution and co-localization of calmodulin with central spindle during cytokinesis and the function of this distribution pattern in a tripolar HeLa cell model. We found that calmodulin is associated with spindle microtubules during mitosis and begins to aggregate with central spindle after anaphase initiation. The absence of either central spindle or central spindle-distributed calmodulin is correlated with the defect in the formation of cleavage furrow, where contractile ring-distributed CaM is also extinct. Further analysis found that both the assembly of central spindle and the formation of cleavage furrow are affected by the W7 treatment. The microtubule density of central spindle was decreased after the treatment. Only less than 10% of the synchronized cells enter cytokinesis when treated with 25 microM W7, and the completion time of furrow regression is also delayed from 10 min to at least 40 min. It is suggested that calmodulin plays a significant role in cytokinesis including furrow formation and regression, The understanding of the interaction between calmodulin and microtubules may give us insight into the mechanism through which calmodulin regulates cytokinesis.  相似文献   

4.
The rearrangement of the Golgi apparatus during mitosis is regulated by several protein kinases, including Cdk1 and Plk1. Several peripheral Golgi proteins that dissociate from the Golgi during mitosis are implicated in regulation of cytokinesis or chromosome segregation, thereby coordinating mitotic and cytokinetic events to Golgi rearrangement. Here we show that, at the onset of mitosis, Cdk1 phosphorylates the peripheral Golgi protein Nir2 at multiple sites; of these, S382 is the most prominent. Phosphorylation of Nir2 by Cdk1 facilitates its dissociation from the Golgi apparatus, and phospho-Nir2(pS382) is localized in the cleavage furrow and midbody during cytokinesis. Mitotic phosphorylation of Nir2 is required for docking of the phospho-Ser/Thr binding module, the Polo box domain of Plk1, and overexpression of a Nir2 mutant, which fails to interact with Plk1, affects the completion of cytokinesis. These results demonstrate a mechanism for coordinating mitotic and cytokinetic events with Golgi rearrangement during cell division.  相似文献   

5.
The mitotic spindle provides the spatial cue that coordinates cytokinesis with nuclear division. However, the specific property of the mitotic spindle that mediates this spatial regulation remains obscure, in part because different aspects of the mitotic spindle appear to have furrow inducing activity in different systems. We show that in C. elegans embryos, although the central spindle is usually dispensable for furrow initiation, it becomes essential for furrow formation when the extent of centrosome separation during anaphase is reduced. Measurements of microtubule density demonstrate that furrow formation occurs in the vicinity of a local minimum of microtubule density. Reduction of the extent of spindle elongation or disruption of the central spindle causes delayed formation of the cleavage furrow. These data suggest that reduced microtubule density triggers cleavage furrow initiation and demonstrate that redundant mechanisms direct efficient formation of the cleavage furrow.  相似文献   

6.
Although Aurora B is important in cleavage furrow ingression and completion during cytokinesis, the mechanism by which kinase activity is targeted to the cleavage furrow and the molecule(s) responsible for this process have remained elusive. Here, we demonstrate that an essential mitotic kinesin MKlp2 requires myosin-II for its localization to the equatorial cortex, and this event is required to recruit Aurora B to the equatorial cortex in mammalian cells. This recruitment event is also required to promote the highly focused accumulation of active RhoA at the equatorial cortex and stable ingression of the cleavage furrow in bipolar cytokinesis. Specifically, in drug-induced monopolar cytokinesis, targeting Aurora B to the cell cortex by MKlp2 is essential for cell polarization and furrow formation. Once the furrow has formed, MKlp2 further recruits Aurora B to the growing furrow. This process together with continuous Aurora B kinase activity at the growing furrow is essential for stable furrow propagation and completion. In contrast, a MKlp2 mutant defective in binding myosin-II does not recruit Aurora B to the cell cortex and does not promote furrow formation during monopolar cytokinesis. This mutant is also defective in maintaining the ingressing furrow during bipolar cytokinesis. Together, these findings reveal that targeting Aurora B to the cell cortex (or the equatorial cortex) by MKlp2 is essential for the maintenance of the ingressing furrow for successful cytokinesis.  相似文献   

7.
In animal cells, formation of the cytokinetic furrow requires activation of the GTPase RhoA by the guanine nucleotide exchange factor Ect2. How Ect2, which is associated with the spindle midzone, controls RhoA activity at the equatorial cortex during anaphase is not understood. Here, we show that Ect2 concentrates at the equatorial membrane during cytokinesis in live cells. Ect2 membrane association requires a pleckstrin homology domain and a polybasic cluster that bind to phosphoinositide lipids. Both guanine nucleotide exchange function and membrane targeting of Ect2 are essential for RhoA activation and cleavage furrow formation in human cells. Membrane localization of Ect2 is spatially confined to the equator by centralspindlin, Ect2's spindle midzone anchor complex, and is temporally coordinated with chromosome segregation through the activation state of CDK1. We propose that targeting of Ect2 to the equatorial membrane represents a key step in the delivery of the cytokinetic signal to the cortex.  相似文献   

8.
Cleavage furrow formation marks the onset of cell division during early anaphase. The small GTPase RhoA and its regulators ECT2 and MgcRacGAP have been implicated in furrow ingression in mammalian cells, but the signaling upstream of these molecules remains unclear. We now show that the inhibition of cyclin-dependent kinase (Cdk)1 is sufficient to initiate cytokinesis. When mitotically synchronized cells were treated with the Cdk-specific inhibitor BMI-1026, the initiation of cytokinesis was induced precociously before chromosomal separation. Cytokinesis was also induced by the Cdk1-specific inhibitor purvalanol A but not by Cdk2/Cdk5- or Cdk4-specific inhibitors. Consistent with initiation of precocious cytokinesis by Cdk1 inhibition, introduction of anti-Cdk1 monoclonal antibody resulted in cells with aberrant nuclei. Depolymerization of mitotic spindles by nocodazole inhibited BMI-1026-induced precocious cytokinesis. However, in the presence of a low concentration of nocodazole, BMI-1026 induced excessive membrane blebbing, which appeared to be caused by formation of ectopic cleavage furrows. Depletion of ECT2 or MgcRacGAP by RNA interference abolished both of the phenotypes (precocious furrowing after nocodazole release and excessive blebbing in the presence of nocodazole). RNA interference of RhoA or expression of dominant-negative RhoA efficiently reduced both phenotypes. RhoA was localized at the cleavage furrow or at the necks of blebs. We propose that Cdk1 inactivation is sufficient to activate a signaling pathway leading to cytokinesis, which emanates from mitotic spindles and is regulated by ECT2, MgcRacGAP, and RhoA. Chemical induction of cytokinesis will be a valuable tool to study the initiation mechanism of cytokinesis.  相似文献   

9.
Summary Microinjection of spermine induces cytokinesis of Amoeba proteus. Within 30–60 s after spermine injection cells form one, or less commonly, two cleavage furrows and within the following 4–10 min the constrictions are completed. The resulting nucleated cell parts show normal streaming and locomotion, whereas the non-nucleated cell parts remain stationary and later degenerate.The intracellular distribution of fully polymerization-competent fluorescently labelled muscle actin was followed by image intensification. Double injection experiments initially using labelled actin and 30 min later spermine revealed a ring-like structure of enhanced fluorescence corresponding to the constricting cleavage furrow. Immediately after cleavage was completed, the ring disappeared. Electron microscopy of cells fixed during spermine-induced cytokinesis showed numerous well aligned actin and myosin filaments in the developing cleavage furrow. These filaments are a specialized manifestation of the cell cortex.The results demonstrate that cycles of actin and myosin polymerization and depolymerization and the parallel alignment of preexisting filaments (crosslinking) represent a basic mechanism in the generation of the motive force during cytokinesis.  相似文献   

10.
Abstract. In the Calliphora blastoderm, cytokinesis is preceded, during the final cleavage mitosis, by a radical surface remodelling which leads to the initiation of cytokinetic furrows. The egg is initially covered with oval surface bulges, each of which contains a mitotic nucleus. The shallow furrows between these bulges are then retracted and replaced by smooth membrane areas. Concomitantly, the remnants of the bulges become covered with large numbers of microprojections, and each bulge splits into two new bulges. The new bulges then increase in size, and cytokinetic furrows appear between them. At this point, the nuclei have also divided and reached interphase. During the first 60 min of cytokinesis, the plasma-membrane area of the egg is increased by the growth of surface microprojections; however, the furrows grow very slowly. During the final 30 min of cytokinesis, the surface becomes almost perfectly smooth, and the furrows grow very rapidly, As a result, cytokinesis is almost complete, and a columnar blastodermal epithelium is formed. Thus, surface microprojections play an essential role in cytokinesis. Plasma membrane utilized for furrow extension is apparently provided by the unfolding of these microprojections. In addition, filamentous microprojections may play an active part in the remodelling of the surface.  相似文献   

11.
Mitochondria are dynamic organelles with multiple cellular functions, including ATP production, calcium buffering, and lipid biosynthesis. Several studies have shown that mitochondrial positioning is regulated by the cytoskeleton during cell division in several eukaryotic systems. However, the distribution of mitochondria during mammalian cytokinesis and whether the distribution is regulated by the cytoskeleton has not been examined. Using live spinning disk confocal microscopy and quantitative analysis of mitochondrial fluorescence intensity, we demonstrate that mitochondria are recruited to the cleavage furrow during cytokinesis in HeLa cells. After anaphase onset, the mitochondria are recruited towards the site of cleavage furrow formation, where they remain enriched as the furrow ingresses and until cytokinesis completion. Furthermore, we show that recruitment of mitochondria to the furrow occurs in multiple mammalian cells lines as well as in monopolar, bipolar, and multipolar divisions, suggesting that the mechanism of recruitment is conserved and robust. Using inhibitors of cytoskeleton dynamics, we show that the microtubule cytoskeleton, but not actin, is required to transport mitochondria to the cleavage furrow. Thus, mitochondria are specifically recruited to the cleavage furrow in a microtubule-dependent manner during mammalian cytokinesis. Two possible reasons for this could be to localize mitochondrial function to the furrow to facilitate cytokinesis and / or ensure accurate mitochondrial inheritance.  相似文献   

12.
Cytokinesis is a highly ordered cellular process driven by interactions between central spindle microtubules and the actomyosin contractile ring linked to the dynamic remodelling of the plasma membrane. The mechanisms responsible for reorganizing the plasma membrane at the cell equator and its coupling to the contractile ring in cytokinesis are poorly understood. We report here that Syndapin, a protein containing an F-BAR domain required for membrane curvature, contributes to the remodelling of the plasma membrane around the contractile ring for cytokinesis. Syndapin colocalizes with phosphatidylinositol 4,5-bisphosphate (PI(4,5)P2) at the cleavage furrow, where it directly interacts with a contractile ring component, Anillin. Accordingly, Anillin is mislocalized during cytokinesis in Syndapin mutants. Elevated or diminished expression of Syndapin leads to cytokinesis defects with abnormal cortical dynamics. The minimal segment of Syndapin, which is able to localize to the cleavage furrow and induce cytokinesis defects, is the F-BAR domain and its immediate C-terminal sequences. Phosphorylation of this region prevents this functional interaction, resulting in reduced ability of Syndapin to bind to and deform membranes. Thus, the dephosphorylated form of Syndapin mediates both remodelling of the plasma membrane and its proper coupling to the cytokinetic machinery.  相似文献   

13.
Before cytokinesis, the identically constructed chromatophores ofHantzschia amphioxys andAchnanthes coarctata are transformed into less effigurated bodies. In normal cytokinesis, the course of mitosis, chromatophore division, and cleavage furrowing are exactly synchronized. The division of the chromatophore appears as a passive process, i.e. intersection by the cleavage furrow. In inequal cell divisions before the formation of inner valves cytokinesis can take place without chromatophore division. Once chromatophore division without mitosis and cytokinesis was observed. InHantzschia there are three types of inner valve formation, inAchnanthes coarctata only two. The inner valves develop under unfavorable growth conditions, the cells possessing them, however, are not resting spores as in some other diatoms. InHantzschia, auxospore formation is suppressed under the cultural conditions used, the cells multiply intensely without diminution.
  相似文献   

14.
Formation of the mitotic cleavage furrow is dependent upon both microtubules and activity of the small GTPase RhoA. GEF-H1 is a microtubule-regulated exchange factor that couples microtubule dynamics to RhoA activation. GEF-H1 localized to the mitotic apparatus in HeLa cells, particularly at the tips of cortical microtubules and the midbody, and perturbation of GEF-H1 function induced mitotic aberrations, including asymmetric furrowing, membrane blebbing, and impaired cytokinesis. The mitotic kinases Aurora A/B and Cdk1/Cyclin B phosphorylate GEF-H1, thereby inhibiting GEF-H1 catalytic activity. Dephosphorylation of GEF-H1 occurs just prior to cytokinesis, accompanied by GEF-H1-dependent GTP loading on RhoA. Using a live cell biosensor, we demonstrate distinct roles for GEF-H1 and Ect2 in regulating Rho activity in the cleavage furrow, with GEF-H1 catalyzing Rho activation in response to Ect2-dependent localization and initiation of cell cleavage. Our results identify a GEF-H1-dependent mechanism to modulate localized RhoA activation during cytokinesis under the control of mitotic kinases.  相似文献   

15.
It has been recently proposed that AMP-activated protein kinase (AMPK) might indirectly promote the phosphorylation of MRLC (myosin II regulatory light chain) at Ser19 to regulate the transition from metaphase to anaphase and the completion of cytokinesis. Although these findings provide biochemical support for our earlier observations showing that the active form of the α catalytic AMPK subunit associates dynamically with essential mitotic regulators, several important issues remained unexplored. Does glucose starvation alter the ability of AMPK to bind to the mitotic apparatus and travel from centrosomes to the spindle midzone during mitosis and cytokinesis? Does AMPK activate MRLC exclusively at the cleavage furrow during cytokinesis? What is the mitosis-specific stimulus that activates the mito-cytokinetic AMPK/MRLC axis regardless of energy deprivation? First, we confirm that exogenous glucose deprivation fails to alter the previously described distribution of phospho-AMPKαThr172 in all of the mitotic phases and does not disrupt its apparent association with the mitotic spindle and other structures involved in cell division. Second, we establish for the first time that phospho-AMPKαThr172 colocalizes exclusively with Ser19-phosphorylated MRLC at the cleavage furrow of dividing cells, a previously unvisualized interaction between phospho-AMPKαThr172 and phospho-MRLCSer19 that occurs in cleavage furrows, intercellular bridges and the midbody during cell division that appears to occur irrespective of glucose availability. Third, we reveal for the first time that the inhibition of AMPK mitotic activity in response to PLK1 inhibition completely prevents the co-localization of phospho-AMPKαThr172 and phospho-MRLCSer19 during the final stages of cytokinesis and midbody ring formation. Because PLK1 inhibition efficiently suppresses the AMPK-mediated activation of MRLC at the cytokinetic cleavage furrow, we propose a previously unrecognized role for AMPK in ensuring that cytokinesis occurs at the proper place and time by establishing a molecular dialog between PLK1 and MRLC in an energy-independent manner.  相似文献   

16.
In eukaryotic cells, recycling endosome-mediated trafficking contributes to the completion of cytokinesis, in a manner under the control of the centrosome. We report that the exocyst complex and its interacting GTPase RalA play a critical role in this polarized trafficking process. RalA resides in the recycling endosome and relocates from the pericentrosomal region to key cytokinetic structures including the cleavage furrow, and later, the abscission site. This event is coupled to the dynamic redistribution of the exocyst proteins. These associate with the centrosome in interphase and concentrate on the central spindle/midbody during cytokinesis. Disruption of RalA-exocyst function leads to cytokinesis failure in late stages, particularly abscission, resembling the cytokinesis defects induced by loss of centrosome function. These data suggest that RalA and the exocyst may regulate vesicle delivery to the centrosome-related abscission site during the terminal stage of cytokinesis, implicating RalA as a critical regulator of cell cycle progression.  相似文献   

17.
Varvarigos V  Galatis B  Katsaros C 《Protoplasma》2005,226(3-4):241-245
Summary. The organization of actin filaments and their role in cytokinesis was studied in regenerating protoplasts and thallus cells of gametophytes of the brown alga Macrocystis pyrifera. Before the onset of cytokinesis, a ring of actin filaments appeared on the putative cytokinetic plane just under the plasmalemma. Light and electron microscopy of cytokinetic cells revealed that large vacuoles occupy the space between the daughter nuclei, which very often are eccentrically positioned at the cell cortex. By the progress of cytokinesis, actin filament bundles emanating from the cytokinetic ring tend to form an actin plate that enters cytoplasmic pockets in which the cytokinetic diaphragm develops. The mechanism of this cytokinetic pattern that has not been reported so far for brown algae is discussed. Correspondence and reprints: Department of Botany, Faculty of Biology, University of Athens, Athens 157 84, Greece.  相似文献   

18.
Separase cleaves cohesin to allow chromosome segregation. Separase also regulates cortical granule exocytosis and vesicle trafficking during cytokinesis, both of which involve RAB-11. We investigated whether separase regulates exocytosis through a proteolytic or non-proteolytic mechanism. In C. elegans, protease-dead separase (SEP-1PD::GFP) is dominant negative. Consistent with its role in cohesin cleavage, SEP-1PD::GFP causes chromosome segregation defects. As expected, partial depletion of cohesin rescues this defect, confirming that SEP-1PD::GFP acts through a substrate trapping mechanism. SEP-1PD::GFP causes cytokinetic defects that are synergistically exacerbated by depletion of the t-SNARE SYX-4. Furthermore, SEP-1PD::GFP delays furrow ingression, causes an accumulation of RAB-11 vesicles at the cleavage furrow site and delays the exocytosis of cortical granules during anaphase I. Depletion of syx-4 further enhanced RAB-11::mCherry and SEP-1PD::GFP plasma membrane accumulation during cytokinesis, while depletion of cohesin had no effect. In contrast, centriole disengagement appears normal in SEP-1PD::GFP embryos, indicating that chromosome segregation and vesicle trafficking are more sensitive to inhibition by the inactive protease. These findings suggest that separase cleaves an unknown substrate to promote the exocytosis of RAB-11 vesicles and paves the way for biochemical identification of substrates.  相似文献   

19.
Myosin II assembles into force-generating filaments that drive cytokinesis and the organization of the cell cortex. Regulation of myosin II activity can occur through modulation of filament assembly and by targeting to appropriate cellular sites. Here we show, using salt-dependent solubility and a novel fluorescence resonance energy transfer assay, that assembly of the Drosophila non-muscle myosin II heavy chain, zipper, is mediated by a 90-residue region (1849-1940) of the coiled-coil tail domain. This filament assembly domain, transiently expressed in Drosophila S2 cells, does not localize to the interphase cortex or the cytokinetic cleavage furrow, whereas a 500-residue region (1350-1865) that overlaps the NH(2) terminus of the assembly domain localizes to the interphase cortex but not the cytokinetic cleavage furrow. Targeting to these two sites appears to utilize distinct localization mechanisms as the assembly domain is required for cleavage furrow recruitment of a truncated coiled-coil tail region but not targeting to the interphase cortex. These results delineate the requirements for zipper filament assembly and indicate that the ability to form filaments is necessary for targeting to the cleavage furrow but not to the interphase cortex.  相似文献   

20.
Microtubules, membranes and cytokinesis   总被引:10,自引:0,他引:10  
Proper division of the cell requires coordination between chromosome segregation by the mitotic spindle and cleavage of the cell by the cytokinetic apparatus. Interactions between the mitotic spindle, the contractile ring and the plasma membrane ensure that the cleavage furrow is properly placed between the segregating chromosomes and that new membrane compartments are formed to produce two daughter cells. The microtubule midzone is able to stimulate the cortex of the cell to ensure proper ingression and completion of the cleavage furrow. Specialized microtubule structures are responsible for directing membrane vesicles to the site of cell cleavage, and vesicle fusion is required for the proper completion of cytokinesis.  相似文献   

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