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Reproductive cell specification during Volvox obversus development   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
Asexual spheroids of the genus Volvox contain only two cell types: flagellated somatic cells and immotile asexual reproductive cells known as gonidia. During each round of embryogenesis in Volvox obversus, eight large gonidial precursors are produced at the anterior extremity of the embryo. These cells arise as a consequence of polarized, asymmetric divisions of the anteriormost blastomeres at the fourth through nine cleavage cycles, while all other blastomeres cleave symmetrically to yield somatic cell precursors. Blastomeres isolated from embryos at any point between the 2-cell and the 32-cell stage cleaved in the normal pattern and produced the same complement and spatial distribution of cell types as they would have in an intact embryo. This result indicates that intrinsic features control the cleavage patterns and developmental potentials of blastomeres, and rules out any significant role for cell-cell interactions in gonidial specification. When substantial quantities of anterolateral cytoplasm were deleted from uncleaved gonidia or 4-cell stage blastomeres, the cell fragments frequently regulated and embryos were produced with the expected number of asymmetrically cleaving cells and gonidial precursors at their anterior ends. However, when anterior cytoplasm was deleted from 8-cell stage blastomeres, the depleted cells frequently failed to cleave asymmetrically and produced no gonidial precursors. Furthermore, when compression was used to reorient cleavage planes at the fourth division cycle, so that anterior cytoplasm was transmitted to more than the normal number of cells, those cells receiving a significant amount of such cytoplasm cleaved asymmetrically to produce supernumerary gonidial precursors. Together, these last two experiments indicate that blastomeres in the V. obversus embryo acquire (at least by the end of the third cleavage cycle) a polarized organization in which anterior cytoplasm plays a causal role in the process of reproductive-cell specification.  相似文献   

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The relationship between cell size and cell fate in Volvox carteri   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1       下载免费PDF全文
In Volvox carteri development, visibly asymmetric cleavage divisions set apart large embryonic cells that will become asexual reproductive cells (gonidia) from smaller cells that will produce terminally differentiated somatic cells. Three mechanisms have been proposed to explain how asymmetric division leads to cell specification in Volvox: (a) by a direct effect of cell size (or a property derived from it) on cell specification, (b) by segregation of a cytoplasmic factor resembling germ plasm into large cells, and (c) by a combined effect of differences in cytoplasmic quality and cytoplasmic quantity. In this study a variety of V. carteri embryos with genetically and experimentally altered patterns of development were examined in an attempt to distinguish among these hypotheses. No evidence was found for regionally specialized cytoplasm that is essential for gonidial specification. In all cases studied, cells with a diameter > approximately 8 microns at the end of cleavage--no matter where or how these cells had been produced in the embryo--developed as gonidia. Instructive observations in this regard were obtained by three different experimental interventions. (a) When heat shock was used to interrupt cleavage prematurely, so that presumptive somatic cells were left much larger than they normally would be at the end of cleavage, most cells differentiated as gonidia. This result was obtained both with wild-type embryos that had already divided asymmetrically (and should have segregated any cytoplasmic determinants involved in cell specification) and with embryos of a mutant that normally produces only somatic cells. (b) When individual wild-type blastomeres were isolated at the 16-cell stage, both the anterior blastomeres that normally produce two gonidia each and the posterior blastomeres that normally produce no gonidia underwent modified cleavage patterns and each produced an average of one large cell that developed as a gonidium. (c) When large cells were created microsurgically in a region of the embryo that normally makes only somatic cells, these large cells became gonidia. These data argue strongly for a central role of cell size in germ/soma specification in Volvox carteri, but leave open the question of how differences in cell size are actually transduced into differences in gene expression.  相似文献   

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Nuclear division immediately follows nuclear DNA doubling in all stages of the life cycle examined in the green alga Volvox; fluorescence microfluorometry of individual cells revealed no evidence of prolonged accumulation of nuclear DNA prior to mitosis in reproductive cells. Somatic cell nuclear DNA quantity is unaffected by developmental events in gonidia of the same spheroid; it remains constant from the end of cleavage until the death of the cell. In reproductive cells, chloroplast DNA replication precedes nuclear replication. The sites of plastid DNA accumulation, made visible by use of the fluorochrome 4′,6-diamidino-2-phenylindole, increase in number during the prolonged growth phase of the V. carteri gonidium. Microspectrofluorometry of fluorochrome-stained DNA in situ shows that plastid DNA increases exponentially throughout this phase. The continuous plastid DNA accumulation during gonidial growth appears to represent a prokaryote-like instead of a eukaryote-like control of DNA synthesis. Most somatic cells contain plastid DNA, and this does not increase in amount during colony growth and reproduction. Most sperm cells also contain plastid DNA, although approximately 5% of somatic cells and up to 20% of sperm cells have no discernable plastid DNA. This is the second group of organisms in which DNA-free plastids have been observed.  相似文献   

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Volvox carteri is a spherical alga with a complete division of labor between around 2000 biflagellate somatic cells and 16 asexual reproductive cells (gonidia). It provides an attractive system for studying how a molecular genetic program for cell-autonomous differentiation is encoded within the genome. Three types of genes have been identified as key players in germ-soma differentiation: a set of gls genes that act in the embryo to shift cell-division planes, resulting in asymmetric divisions that set apart the large-small sister-cell pairs; a set of lag genes that act in the large gonidial initials to prevent somatic differentiation; and the regA gene, which acts in the small somatic initials to prevent reproductive development. Somatic-cell-specific expression of regA is controlled by intronic enhancer and silencer elements.  相似文献   

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Two types of mutants, those resistant to the base analog 5-bromo-2′-deoxyuridine (BrdU) and somatic regenerator (SR) mutants, have been analyzed in Volvox carteri. In somatic regenerator mutants, the somatic cells which are normally terminally differentiated dedifferentiate and regenerate gonidia [Sessoms, A., and Huskey, R. J. (1973). Proc. Nat. Acad. Sci. USA70, 1335–1338; Starr, R. C. (1970). Develop. Biol. Suppl.4, 59–100]. The SR phenotype allows recovery of SR mutations arising in somatic cells, since such somatic cells would regenerate gonidia and give rise to mutant clones. Mutants of any phenotype other than SR can only be recovered if the mutation first appears in a gonidium. Since the somatic cells are 100-fold more numerous than reproductive cells (gonidia), we have determined the spontaneous frequency of both somatic regenerator mutants and mutations to BrdU resistance in order to determine if the SR mutation exerts its effect in the gonidium or in the somatic cell. The two frequencies were found to be nearly identical, suggesting that the SR mutation must first appear in a gonidium in order to be expressed.  相似文献   

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Summary Electron microscopic studies of thin sections of filaments, knots, resettes, gonidia, and gonidial-forming filaments of Leucothrix mucor were carried out. The cell wall is typical of gram-negative bacteria, with a double outer layer of variable thickness, a single thin middle layer which is probably peptidoglycan, and a double inner layer which is the cell membrane. The transverse septa of these filaments show two peptidoglycan layers, and no clearly demarked outer layer. During gonidial formation, there is a gradual rounding up of the cells, and the transverse septa become part of the gonidial wall. The cell membrane contains many invaginations, both along the outer wall and along the transverse septa. Thin sections through rosettes show the holdfast as material which is a heavily-staining amorphous material peripheral to the outer wall layer. Sections through knots show highly contorted cell walls, closely appressed. Fibrillar nuclear material, ribosomes, and storage granules can be seen within the cytoplasmic matrix.  相似文献   

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