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1.
Summary The giant coenocytic green algaCaulerpa is well known for its large scale amyloplast transport. The majority of chloroplasts, however, is immobilized in the cortex of the cell. By applying UV-irradiation to localized areas of the cortex chloroplasts can be induced to slowly move towards and aggregate around the irradiated spot. Chloroplast movement is blocked by cytochalasin D, but not by colchicine or the microtubule herbicide cremart. The dynein inhibitor erythro-9-[3-(2-hydroxynonyl)] adenine (EHNA) also has no effect on chloroplast movement. However, both microtubule- and dynein-specific inhibitors block movement of amyloplasts. Using the previously developed technique of microdissection followed by immunofluorescence microscopy it can be shown that, concomitant with changes in motile behavior of chloroplasts upon irradiation, actin filaments form and rearrange around the irradiation spot. It is concluded that in contrast to amyloplast movement, immobilization and movement of chloroplasts are dependent on actin but not on microtubules. Therefore, two individual motile mechanisms appear to have evolved for independent positioning and motility of the two populations of plastids in the giant coenocyteCaulerpa.Abbreviations EHNA erythro-9-[3-(2-hydroxynonyl)] adenine - DMSO dimethylsulfoxide - MT microtubule - NEM N-ethylmaleimide  相似文献   

2.
Q. -Y. Wang  P. Nick 《Protoplasma》1998,204(1-2):22-33
Summary The rice mutantYin-Yang has been selected during a screen for resistance to cytoskeletal drugs and is characterized by alterations in epidermal cell length and a precocious onset of gravitropism. The elongation response of coleoptile segments to auxin does not reveal changes of auxin sensitivity inYin-Yang. However, in contrast to the wild type, cell elongation inYin-Yang is highly sensitive to the actin-polymerisation blocker cytochalasin D. This increased sensitivity to cytochalasin D requires optimal concentrations of auxin to become manifest. The auxin response of actin microfilaments in epidermal cells differs between wild type and mutant. In the wild type, the longitudinal microfilament bundles become loosened in response to auxin. In the mutant, these bundles disintegrate partially and are replaced by a network of short filaments surrounding the nucleus. Several aspects of the mutant phenotype can be mimicked in the wild type by treatment with cytochalasin D. The mutant phenotype is discussed in terms of signal-dependent changes of actin dynamics and the putative role of actin during cell elongation.Abbreviations CD cytochalasin D - EPC ethyl-N-phenylcarbamate  相似文献   

3.
Summary The dynamics of the cytoskeletal proteins centrin, actin, and tubulin were investigated during post-division development in the radially symmetrical phytoflagellateApedinella radians (Pedinellophyceae). Each daughter cell inherits a triangular arrangement of centrin filamentous bundles that develops, during post-division, into the six-pointed star configuration observed at interphase. This coincides with developmental processes including plaque duplication and migration, chloroplast division and migration, and spine-scale deployment. Centrin filamentous bundles appear to be involved in maintaining radial symmetry throughout the cell cycle and re-establishing interphase morphology. Actin filamentous bundles, prominent at interphase, depolymerize just prior to mitosis and do not reform until late post-division, indicating they are not involved in maintaining cell symmetry during cell division. Although the precise dynamics of microtubular triads and their associated cylindrical caps has not been determined, they may work in concert with centrin filamentous bundles in re-establishing interphase morphology. Three centrin, or centrin-like, components inA. radians appear to coordinate independent architectural events during the cell cycle. The nature of the three centrin components is discussed and compared to the flagellar roots/pericentriolar material of the eukaryotic centrosome.  相似文献   

4.
Summary The ultrastructure of chloroplasts from two genera of coenocytic green algae,Codium andCaulerpa, were examined after suspension in hypotonic solution and in detergent at various concentrations. The capacity of the suspensions to carry out CO2-dependent and ferricyanide-dependent O2 evolution was measured under the same conditions of osmotic strength and detergent concentration.The chloroplasts in the preparations were in the form of cytoplasts and gave rates of O2 evolution comparable with those expected from undamaged chloroplasts. Suspension in hypotonic solution depressed the rate of CO2-dependent O2 evolution in both species, but this was partially restored in theCodium chloroplasts when these were re-suspended in iso-osmotic solutions. Major structural changes were observed only after suspension in buffer when theCodium chloroplasts lost their outer envelope, most of their stroma, and the thylakoids became swollen.Caulerpa chloroplasts were more variable in their response and, even when suspended in buffer only, the proportion of the plastids which had lost all of their stroma and thylakoid swelling was never as common as inCodium chloroplasts. However, once suspended in hyper-osmotic medium below 700 mosmolar,Caulerpa chloroplasts could not regain their capacity for CO2-dependent O2 evolution.Detergent treatment removed the cytoplast membrane but not the cytoplasmic material adhering to the chloroplast envelope. High concentrations of detergent were needed to cause loss of the chloroplast envelope, loss of stromal contents and unstacking of the thylakoids.Caulerpa chloroplasts were less sensitive to detergent than those ofCodium. There was no indication that specific structures such as the thylakoid organizing body were resistant to detergent action. The results show that exposure to hypotonic solutions and to detergent results in less damage to these chloroplasts than it would to those of higher plants. It is proposed that the basis of this unusual resistance is not due to the properties of the chloroplast membranes but to the presence of material which coats the organelles during isolation. This material is likely to be identical with the sulphated xylo-mannogalactan isolated from the vacuole contents of these algae and which has the visco-elastic properties essential to allow the organelles to resist disruption by osmotic forces and disintegration by detergents.  相似文献   

5.
Summary The behavior of organelle nuclei during maturation of the male gametes ofLilium longiflorum andPelargonium zonale was examined by fluorescence microscopy after staining with 4,6-diamidino-2-phenylindole (DAPI) and Southern hybridization. The organelle nuclei in both generative and vegetative cells inL. longiflorum were preferentially degraded during the maturation of the male gametes. In the mature pollen grains ofL. longiflorum, there were absolutely no organelle nuclei visible in the cytoplasm of the generative cells. In the vegetative cells, almost all the organelle nuclei were degraded. However, in contrast to the situation in generative cells, the last vestiges of organelle nuclei in vegetative cells did not disappear completely. They remained in evidence in the vegetative cells during germination of the pollen tubes. InP. zonale, however, no evidence of degradation of organelle nuclei was ever observed. As a result, a very large number of organelle nuclei remained in the sperm cells during maturation of the pollen grains. When the total DNA isolated from the pollen or pollen tubes was analyzed by Southern hybridization with a probe that contained therbc L gene, for detection of the plastid DNA and a probe that contained thecox I gene, for detection of the mitochondrial DNA, the same results were obtained. Therefore, the maternal inheritance of the organelle genes inL. longiflorum is caused by the degradation of the organelle DNA in the generative cells while the biparental inheritance of the organelle genes inP. zonale is the result of the preservation of the organelle DNA in the generative and sperm cells. To characterize the degradation of the organelle nuclei, nucleolytic activities in mature pollen were analyzed by an in situ assay on an SDS-DNA-gel after electrophoresis. The results revealed that a 40kDa Ca2+-dependent nuclease and a 23 kDa Zn2+ -dependent nuclease were present specifically among the pollen proteins ofL. longiflorum. By contrast, no nucleolytic activity was detected in a similar analysis of pollen proteins ofP. zonale.  相似文献   

6.
In the giant marine green alga Bryopsis the chloroplasts are attached with their flattened, ventral sides to the inner surface of the cortical cytoplasm. They move at speeds up to 60 microns/min in the direction of the long axis of the cell either in a coordinated fashion or independently of each other. Intracellular sedimentation of chloroplasts by centrifugation leaves an intact cell cortex in which the movement of mitochondria and nuclei--normally obscured by chloroplasts--can be observed. Mitochondria display a saltatory type of movement alongside an extensive, two-dimensional system of phase-translucent channels. Nuclei appear to be entangled in the channel system and move in an unusual, rolling fashion. With a new technique involving the microsurgical removal of the chemically fixed cytoplasm from the confinement of the cell wall, this unique cell type is made accessible to immunocytochemical procedures. Microtubules (MT) can be visualized using a variety of tubulin antibodies, while actin only reacts with one monoclonal antibody out of several antibodies tested. Microtubules form a dense, two-dimensional palisade of bundles extending longitudinally in the cortical cytoplasm. Parallel arrays of actin fibers closely, but not exclusively, colocalize with the MT bundles. Particularly strong actin staining is observed near converging MT bundles underneath the tip regions of the chloroplasts. Because of the extensive superposition of actin and MTs, both cytoskeletal elements could potentially cooperate in creating the diversity of organelle movements in this alga. The respective roles of MTs and actin in chloroplast movement are experimentally tested in the accompanying paper.  相似文献   

7.
A. L. Cleary 《Protoplasma》1995,185(3-4):152-165
Summary Microinjection of rhodamine-phalloidin into living cells of isolatedTradescantia leaf epidermis and visualisation by confocal microscopy has extended previous results on the distribution of actin in mitotic cells of higher plants and revealed new aspects of actin arrays in stomatal cells and their initials. Divisions in the stomatal guard mother cells and unspecialised epidermal cells are symmetrical. Asymmetrical divisions occur in guard mother precursor cells and subsidiary mother cells. Each asymmetrical division is preceded by migration of the nucleus and the subsequent accumulation of thick bundles of anticlinally oriented actin filaments localised to the area of the anticlinal wall closest to the polarised nucleus. During prophase, in all cell types, a subset of cortical actin filaments coaligns to form a band, which, like the preprophase band of microtubules, accurately delineates the site of insertion of the future cell wall. Following the breakdown of the nuclear envelope, F-actin in these bands disassembles but persists elsewhere in the cell cortex. Thus, cortical F-actin marks the division site throughout mitosis, firstly as an appropriately positioned band and then by its localised depletion from the same region of the cell cortex. This sequence has been detected in all classes of division inTradescantia leaf epidermis, irrespective of whether the division is asymmetrical or symmetrical, or whether the cell is vacuolate or densely cytoplasmic. Taken together with earlier observations on stamen hair cells and root tip cells it may therefore be a general cytoskeletal feature of division in cells of higher plants.Abbreviations GMC guard mother cell - MT microtubule - PPB preprophase band - Rh rhodamine - SMC subsidiary mother cell  相似文献   

8.
Summary The organization of the microtubule cytoskeleton in the generative cell ofConvallaria majalis has been studied during migration of the cell through the pollen tube and its division into the two sperm cells. Analysis by conventional or confocal laser scanning microscopy after tubulin staining was used to investigate changes of the microtubule cytoskeleton during generative-cell migration and division in the pollen tube. Staining of DNA with 4,6-diamidino-2-phenylindole was used to correlate the rearrangement of microtubules with nuclear division during sperm cell formation. Before pollen germination the generative cell is spindle-shaped, with microtubules organized in bundles and distributed in the cell cortex to form a basketlike structure beneath the generative-cell plasma membrane. During generative-cell migration through the pollen tube, the organization of the microtubule bundles changes following nuclear division. A typical metaphase plate is not usually formed. The generative-cell division is characterized by the extension of microtubules concomitant with a significant cell elongation. After karyokinesis, microtubule bundles reorganize to form a phragmoplast between the two sperm nuclei. The microtubule organization during generative-cell division inConvallaria majalis shows some similarities but also differences to that in other members of the Liliaceae.Abbreviations CLSM confocal laser scanning microscopy - EM electron microscopy - GC generative cell - GN generative nucleus - MT microtubule - SC sperm cell - SN sperm nucleus - VN vegetative nucleus  相似文献   

9.
Summary Motile unicells ofApedinella radians have the extraordinary ability to instantaneously reorient six elongate spine-scales located on the cell surface. Extracellular striated fibrous connectors (termed microligaments) attach spine-scales to discrete regions of the plasma membrane underlain by intricate cytoplasmic plaques. A complex cytoskeleton is associated with the plaques and appears responsible for spine-scale movement. Three cytoskeletal proteins have thus far been identified by immunofluorescence using anti-tubulin, anti-actin, and anti-centrin. The three-dimensional configuration of the cytoskeleton has been established and consists of filamentous bundles of actin and centrin which form stellate systems interconnecting the plaques. Additionally, there is a network of microtubular triads which originate on the surface of the nuclear envelope and subtend the plasma membrane and also support several tentacular protrusions. It is proposed that contraction of the actin and/or centrin filamentous bundles is responsible for the reorientation of the spine-scales.  相似文献   

10.
Moving mitochondria: establishing distribution of an essential organelle   总被引:4,自引:0,他引:4  
Mitochondria form a dynamic network responsible for energy production, calcium homeostasis and cell signaling. Appropriate distribution of the mitochondrial network contributes to organelle function and is essential for cell survival. Highly polarized cells, including neurons and budding yeast, are particularly sensitive to defects in mitochondrial movement and have emerged as model systems for studying mechanisms that regulate organelle distribution. Mitochondria in multicellular eukaryotes move along microtubule tracks. Actin, the primary cytoskeletal component used for transport in yeast, has more subtle functions in other organisms. Kinesin, dynein and myosin isoforms drive motor-based movement along cytoskeletal tracks. Milton and syntabulin have recently been identified as potential organelle-specific adaptor molecules for microtubule-based motors. Miro, a conserved GTPase, may function with Milton to regulate transport. In yeast, Mmr1p and Ypt11p, a Rab GTPase, are implicated in myosin V-based mitochondrial movement. These potential adaptors could regulate motor activity and therefore determine individual organelle movements. Anchoring of stationary mitochondria also contributes to organelle retention at specific sites in the cell. Together, movement and anchoring ultimately determine mitochondrial distribution throughout the cell.  相似文献   

11.
The ultrastructure of chloroplasts from 28 of the 73 species of Caulerpa Lamouroux (Chlorophyta, Caulerpales) has been studied to aid in interpreting phylogenetic relationships among the 12 recognized sections. Variations of systematic value include pyrenoid occurrence and fine structure, thylakoid architecture and amount of photosynthate storage. Comparisons of field and culture specimens indicate these characters are consistent. Chloroplast thylakoids are grouped into bands, with the distribution of bands differing among species. In the most common arrangement, bands are evenly distributed throughout the chloroplast. A few species show lateral displacement of bands whereas others have a majority of bands arranged at one end of the chloroplast. Starch is stored cither as one or two large grains (> 1 μm diam.) or numerous small grains (< 0.5 μm diam.). Electron-transparent regions are common in other species in which chloroplasts rarely store starch. Simple, embedded pyrenoids are present in several species of section Sedoideae. An opaque region occurs in chloroplasts of C. elongata which may represent an intermediate stage in the evolutionary loss of the pyrenoid. It is suggested that the chloroplast of Caulerpa evolved, from a large, complex, pyrenoid-containing organelle housing both photosynthetic and amylogenic functions, to a small, structurally simpler one, specialized for photosynthesis alone. A phylogeny of the 12 sections of Caulerpa is constructed, based on chloroplast evolution which agrees with an earlier morphology-based hypothesis on the origin and evolution of Caulerpa.  相似文献   

12.
In the present paper 29 species ofCaulerpa from Indonesia, the Philippines and Papua New Guinea are listed, with reference to their distribution and occurrence of ecological phenotypes (ecads). Other names ofCaulerpa taxa recorded for Malesia in literature are dealt with in the paragraph on excluded and changed names. The variability and nomenclature of mainly the species recorded from Indonesia are discussed, especially regarding the implications of the recognition of ecads in several species. The ecads in the sectionSedoideae are discussed as an example of use of the designation ecad for a number of growth forms. Biogeography of the genusCaulerpa is discussed with focus on areas of high biodiversity, both inside and outside Malesia, followed by a discussion on biodiversity assessment. It is suggested that the genusCaulerpa is a good indicator for the quantitative assessment of biodiversity. The need for a modern world-monograph of this genus is stressed. Such a monograph can be a stimulus for ecosystem studies ofCaulerpa stands.  相似文献   

13.
Summary Changes in the intracellular distribution of microtubules and microfilaments during amoeba-to-flagellate and flagellate-to-amoeba transformations inPhysarum polycephalum were examined by fluorescence microscopy using anti-tubulin antibody and NBD-phallacidin, respectively. Amoebae contained an extensive microtubular cytoskeleton, which was converted to a flagellar cone structure during transformation to flagellates in liquid medium. When flagellates reverted back to amoebae, this conical structure disintegrated prior to flagella resorption. Amoebae showed some microfilament-enriched domains along the periphery, from which numerous filamentous extrusions, probably pseudopods and filopods, emanated. Flagellates contained a ridge, a sheet-like structure, along their dorsal axis, especially in the earlier stages of flagellation. Another microfilament-enriched thick filamentous structure ran along the dorsal axis, starting from the anterior tip of the cell. This structure apparently coincided spatially with one of the bundles of microtubules. During the reversion to amoebae, other localized microfilaments were transiently observed at the posterior end. A model of cytoskeletal changes in the transformations between these two cell types was proposed.  相似文献   

14.
There is worldwide concern about the aquarium strain of the green alga Caulerpa taxifolia (Vahl) C. Agardh that was introduced to the Mediterranean Sea in 1984. Since that time, it has flourished and now covers thousands of hectares of near-shore waters. More recently, aquarium strains of C. taxifolia invaded southern California and Australian waters. Our goal was to evaluate potential invasion of C. taxifolia to Florida’s coastal waters. We looked for evidence of C. taxifolia—aquarium strain, as well as the present distribution of all species of Caulerpa, in Florida’s near-shore waters. We surveyed 24 areas in six zones along the Floridian coastline, and evaluated the association of potential indicators for the presence of Caulerpa. Latitude, presence of seagrass beds, human population density, and proximity to marinas were the four variables simultaneously considered. Caulerpa taxifolia—aquarium strain was not found at any of our survey locations. However, 14 species of Caulerpa were found at 31 of the 132 sites visited. Percent correct for our model was 61.5% for presence and 98.1% for absence. There was a positive correlation between Caulerpa spp. and seagrass beds and proximity to marinas. There was a negative correlation with latitude and human population density. The parameters in the logistic regression model assessing the association of Caulerpa occurrence with the measured variables were then used to predict current and future probabilities of Caulerpa spp. presence throughout the state. This prediction model will allow resource managers to focus their efforts in future surveys.  相似文献   

15.
B. A. Palevitz 《Protoplasma》1990,157(1-3):120-127
Summary Previous observations indicate that division of the generative cell inTradescantia virginiana is characterized by several unusual features, including persistence of surrounding microtubule (Mt) bundles during karyokinesis, lack of a distinct metaphase plate and direct contribution by mitotic Mts to the cytoskeleton of young sperm. We have further probed karyokinesis in these cells using additional antitubulin and chromosome staining, as well as kinetochore visualizations with CREST serum. The CREST antibodies reveal kinetochores as paired and single fluorescent dots similar to those seen in other species stained with this preparation. Double localizations show that the dots are located at the ends of Mt bundles previously identified as kinetochore fibers (Palevitz and Cresti 1989). Before anaphase, paired kinetochores are distributed along the length of the cell. They also tend to be located at the cell periphery or are directly connected to peripheral Mt bundles by their kinetochore (K)-fibers. Twelve pairs of dots can be counted per cell, equal to the expected number of chromosomes. During anaphase, kinetochore separation starts at various positions along the length of the cell, producing single, relatively uniformly distributed kinetochores in the crotches of forks formed by K-fiber trunks and elongating Mt branches attached to the base of the trunks. Eventually, K-fibers with attached kinetochores aggregate in stepwise fashion on thick Mt bundles at both ends of the cell. This pattern is reflected in the cytoskeleton of young sperm. These results further document the unusual distribution of chromosomes and kinetochores inTradescantia generative cells and the origin of the Mt cytoskeleton in sperm cells.Abbreviations CREST Calcinosis, Raynaud's phenomenon, Esophageal dysmotility, Sclerodactyly, Telangiectasia - K-fiber kinetochore fiber - Mt microtubule Dedicated to the memory of Professor Oswald Kiermayer  相似文献   

16.
F. Grolig 《Protoplasma》1990,155(1-3):29-42
Summary Organelle transport in the cortical cytoplasm of interphaseSpirogyra crassa cells was investigated in vivo by real-time video-enhanced DIC microscopy. Four classes of particles with different temporal pattern of movement shared the same tracks, which by staining with rhodamine phalloidine and reversible inhibition of organelle transport by cytochalasin D were identified as bundles of actin filaments. The most intriguing type of movement was revealed by a tubular organelle resembling elements of the endoplasmic reticulum. Elements of this organelle showed scarcely any net translocation during interphase, so that movement appeared rather agitational. In contrast to an immobile, polygonal network of endoplasmic reticulum underneath the plasmalemma, the tubular organelle did not stain in vivo by 3,3-dihexyloxacarbocyanine iodide (DiOC).Abbreviations DIC differential interference contrast - DiOC 3,3-dihexyloxacarbocyanine iodide - ER endoplasmic reticulum - MF microfilament (bundle of actin filaments) - MT microtubule - RLP rhodamine(-labeled) phalloidin  相似文献   

17.
D. Menzel 《Protoplasma》1986,134(1):30-42
Summary The cytoskeleton in the siphonous, marine green algaAcetabularia is visualized by immunocytochemistry using antibodies against plant alfa tubulin and animal smooth muscle actin. In the vegetative phase of the life cycle, when the cell grows a cylindrical stalk and until the reproductive cap is completed, actin forms continuous, parallel bundles that extend through the entire length of the stalk and cap rays respectively. Microtubules (MTs) cannot be detected until the primary nucleus, located in the rhizoid of the giant cell, divides to form thousands of secondary nuclei. MTs can then be seen radiating from each secondary nucleus that is encountered in the stalk on its migration upwards into the cap rays. They are oriented mostly parallel to the long axis of the cell. At arrival in the cap rays up to the white spot stage, when nuclei assume equidistant positions in the cap ray cytoplasm, a radiating system of MTs forms around each nucleus and dramatically increases until impressive radial arrays have developed. This phase coincides with a disappearance of actin bundles in the cap rays, but they are retained in the stalk cytoplasm. Shortly after that additional MTs appear around the disk like partitions of cap ray cytoplasm. Concomitantly, bundles of actin reappear colinearly with the circumferrential MTs eventually forming complete rings around each disk of cap ray cytoplasm. During this process the compartments of the future cysts are gradually bulging outwards and simultaneously the rings of actin sink inwards until domes are formed with the nuclei fixed in the top centers of the domes. At this stage the peripheral areas of the radiating MT systems around the nuclei start to break down, whereas the circumferrential MT systems remain intact. Subsequently, the rings of both actin and MTs decrease in diameter, and finally contract to a spot opposite the nucleus, while the cysts continue to develop their oval shape. After the cysts have become separated, they round up and enter several rounds of nuclear divisions. MTs form short radial arrays around each nucleus with minor changes due to a reduction of MTs during division followed by a reappearance after completion of each division. Actin is rearranged in the cysts to a cortical network of randomly oriented, short bundles, that is maintained until gamete formation sets in.These findings accentuate the involvement of Cytoskeletal elements in the key steps of morphogenesis inAcetabularia to an extent that is unknown in higher plants.  相似文献   

18.
Summary The sub-thecal microtubular cytoskeleton of the dinoflagellatesAmphidinium rhynchocephalum, Gymnodinium sanguineum, andGymnodinium. sp has been investigated by indirect immunofluorescence microscopy. In these cells, the majority of cytoskeletal microtubules lie in the anterior-posterior plane. These longitudinal microtubules clearly originate from one of two radially arranged microtubular bands that correspond in location with the anterior and posterior edge of the cingolar depression. Despite the morphological variability of these gymnodinioid dinoflagellates, our data indicate that the microtubular cytoskeleton perfectly reflects the spatial patterning of the epicone and hypocone in each cell.Abbreviations ALB Anterior longitudinal microtubular bundles - ATB Anterior transverse microtubular bands - C cingulum - CLB Cingular longitudinal microtubular bundles - E Epicone - H Hypocone - PLB Posterior longitudinal microtubular bundles - PTB Posterior transverse microtubular bands - S Sulcus  相似文献   

19.
Summary Mesophyll cells (MCs) ofAdiantum capillus veneris are elongated and highly asymmetric, bearing several lateral branches and forming a meshwork resembling aerenchyma. Young MCs are polyhedral and display oppositely arranged walls and transverse cortical microtubules (Mts). Their morphogenesis is accomplished in three stages. At first they become cylindrical. Intercellular space (IS) canals, containing PAS-positive material, open through their junctions and expand laterally. During the second stage the cortical Mts form a reticulum of bundles, externally of which an identical reticulum of wall thickenings, containing bundles of parallel cellulose microfibrils, emerges. MCs do not grow in girth in the regions of wall thickenings, where constrictions form and new ISs open. Thus, MCs obtain a multi-lobed form. At the third morphogenetic stage MCs display a multi-axial growth. During this process, additional Mt rings are assembled at the base of cell lobes accompanied by similarly organized wall thickenings-cellulose microfibrils. Consequently, cell lobes elongate to form lateral branches, where MCs attach one another, while the IS labyrinth broadens considerably. Colchicine treatment, destroying Mts, inhibits MC morphogenesis and the concomitant IS expansion, but does not affect IS canal formation. These observations show that: (a) MC morphogenesis inA. capillus veneris is an impressive phenomenon accurately controlled by highly organized cortical Mt systems. (b) The disposition of Mt bundles between neighbouring MCs is highly coordinated, (c) The perinuclear cytoplasm does not appear to be involved in cortical Mt formation. Cortical sites seem to participate in Mt bundling, (d) Although extensive IS canals open before Mt bundling, the Mtdependent MC morphogenesis contributes in IS formation.Abbreviations EM electron microscopy - ER endoplasmic reticulum - IS intercellular space - MC mesophyll cell - MSB microtubule stabilizing buffer - Mt microtubule - PBS phosphate buffered saline  相似文献   

20.
The peripheral feeding network of the giant freshwater ameba Reticulomyxa can be easily and rapidly lysed to produce an extensive, stable, and completely exposed cytoskeletal framework of colinear microtubules and microfilaments. Most of the organelles that remain attached to this framework resume rapid saltatory movements at rates of up to 20 micron/s if ATP is added. This lysed model system is also capable of other forms of motility, namely an active splaying of microtubule bundles and bulk streaming. Reactivation does not occur with other nucleoside triphosphates, requires Mg ions, is insensitive to even high concentrations of erythro-9-(3-[2-hydroxynonyl]) adenine, is sensitive to vanadate only at concentrations of approximately 100 microM, and is inhibited by N-ethylmaleimide at concentrations greater than 100 microM. The physiology of this reactivation suggests an organelle transport motor distinct from cytoplasmic dynein and possibly the recently described kinesin. This system can serve as a model for elucidating the mechanisms of intracellular transport and, in addition, provides a unique opportunity to examine associations between microtubules and microfilaments.  相似文献   

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