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1.
Actin cytoskeleton and microtubules were studied in a human fungal pathogen, the basidiomycetous yeast Cryptococcus neoformans (haploid phase of Filobasidiella neoformans), during its asexual reproduction by budding using fluorescence and electron microscopy. Staining with rhodamine-conjugated phalloidin revealed an F-actin cytoskeleton consisting of cortical patches, cables and cytokinetic ring. F-actin patches accumulated at the regions of cell wall growth, i. e. in sterigma, bud and septum. In mother cells evenly distributed F-actin patches were joined to F-actin cables, which were directed to the growing sterigma and bud. Some F-actin cables were associated with the cell nucleus. The F-actin cytokinetic ring was located in the bud neck, where the septum originated. Antitubulin TAT1 antibody revealed a microtubular cytoskeleton consisting of cytoplasmic and spindle microtubules. In interphase cells cytoplasmic microtubules pointed to the growing sterigma and bud. As the nucleus was translocated to the bud for mitosis, the cytoplasmic microtubules disassembled and were replaced by a short intranuclear spindle. Astral microtubules then emanated from the spindle poles. Elongation of the mitotic spindle from bud to mother cell preceded nuclear division, followed by cytokinesis (septum formation in the bud neck). Electron microscopy of ultrathin sections of chemically fixed and freeze-substituted cells revealed filamentous bundles directed to the cell cortex. The bundles corresponded in width to the actin microfilament cables. At the bud neck numerous ribosomes accumulated before septum synthesis. We conclude: (i) the topology of F-actin patches, cables and rings in C. neoformans resembles ascomycetous budding yeast Saccharomyces, while the arrangement of interphase and mitotic microtubules resembles ascomycetous fission yeast Schizosaccharomyces. The organization of the cytoskeleton of the mitotic nucleus, however, is characteristic of basidiomycetous yeasts. (ii) A specific feature of C. neoformans was the formation of a cylindrical sterigma, characterized by invasion of F-actin cables and microtubules, followed by accumulation of F-actin patches around its terminal region resulting in development of an isodiametrical bud.  相似文献   

2.
Transfer of mitochondria to daughter cells during yeast cell division is essential for viable progeny. The actin cytoskeleton is required for this process, potentially as a track to direct mitochondrial movement into the bud. Sedimentation assays reveal two different components required for mitochondria–actin interactions: (1) mitochondrial actin binding protein(s) (mABP), a peripheral mitochondrial outer membrane protein(s) with ATP-sensitive actin binding activity, and (2) a salt-inextractable, presumably integral, membrane protein(s) required for docking of mABP on the organelle. mABP activity is abolished by treatment of mitochondria with high salt. Addition of either the salt-extracted mitochondrial peripheral membrane proteins (SE), or a protein fraction with ATP-sensitive actin-binding activity isolated from SE, to salt-washed mitochondria restores this activity. mABP docking activity is saturable, resistant to high salt, and inhibited by pre-treatment of salt-washed mitochondria with papain. Two integral mitochondrial outer membrane proteins, Mmm1p (Burgess, S.M., M. Delannoy, and R.E. Jensen. 1994. J.Cell Biol. 126:1375–1391) and Mdm10p, (Sogo, L.F., and M.P. Yaffe. 1994. J.Cell Biol. 126:1361– 1373) are required for these actin–mitochondria interactions. Mitochondria isolated from an mmm1-1 temperature-sensitive mutant or from an mdm10 deletion mutant show no mABP activity and no mABP docking activity. Consistent with this, mitochondrial motility in vivo in mmm1-1 and mdm10Δ mutants appears to be actin independent. Depolymerization of F-actin using latrunculin-A results in loss of long-distance, linear movement and a fivefold decrease in the velocity of mitochondrial movement. Mitochondrial motility in mmm1-1 and mdm10Δ mutants is indistinguishable from that in latrunculin-A–treated wild-type cells. We propose that Mmm1p and Mdm10p are required for docking of mABP on the surface of yeast mitochondria and coupling the organelle to the actin cytoskeleton.Mitochondria are indispensable organelles for normal eukaryotic cell function. Since mitochondria cannot be synthesized de novo, these organelles are inherited, i.e., transferred from mother to daughter during cell division. In the yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae, vegetative cell division occurs by budding, a form of proliferation in which growth is directed toward the developing bud. Previous studies indicate that mitochondria undergo a series of cell cycle–linked motility events during normal inheritance in yeast (Simon et al., 1997). These are: (a) polarization of mitochondria towards the site of bud emergence in G1 phase; (b) linear, polarized movement of mitochondria from mother cells to developing buds in S phase; (c) immobilization of newly inherited mitochondria in the bud tip during S and G2 phases; and (d) release of immobilized mitochondria from the bud tip during M phase.There is mounting evidence that the actin cytoskeleton controls mitochondrial morphology and inheritance during vegetative yeast cell growth. The two major actin structures of yeast observed by light microscopy are patches and cables. Actin cables are bundles of actin filaments that extend from the mother into the bud. Mitochondria colocalize with these actin cables (Drubin et al., 1993; Lazzarino et al., 1994). Moreover, mutations such as deletion of the tropomyosin I gene, TPM1, or the mitochondrial distribution and morphology gene, MDM20, which selectively destabilize actin cables, result in the loss of polarized mitochondrial movement and reduce transfer of mitochondria into buds (Herman et al., 1997; Simon et al., 1997). Together, these studies indicate that normal mitochondrial inheritance in yeast requires association of mitochondria with actin cables.Cell-free studies reveal a possible mechanism underlying actin control of mitochondrial inheritance. Sedimentation assays document binding of mitochondria to the lateral surface of F-actin. This mitochondrial actin-binding activity is ATP-sensitive, saturable, reversible, and mediated by protein(s) on the mitochondrial surface (Lazzarino et al., 1994). In addition, ATP-driven, actin-dependent motor activity has been identified on the surface of mitochondria (Simon et al., 1995). These observations support a model of mitochondrial inheritance whereby mitochondria use an actin-dependent motor to drive their movement from mother to daughter cells along actin cable tracks.Yeast genetic screens have revealed several genes, collectively referred to as mdm (mitochondrial distribution and morphology) and mmm (maintenance of mitochondrial morphology), which are required for mitochondrial inheritance (McConnell et al., 1990; Burgess et al., 1994; Sogo and Yaffe, 1994). We have focused on two of these genes: MDM10 and MMM1. Deletion of MDM10 leads to the development of giant spherical mitochondria, presumably by the collapse of elongated mitochondria into a spherical mass (Sogo and Yaffe, 1994). Deletion of MMM1 (Burgess et al., 1994) produces a similar phenotype. In both mutants, the fraction of buds without mitochondria is high, indicating defective mitochondrial inheritance. The proteins encoded by these genes, Mdm10p and Mmm1p, appear to be integral membrane proteins in the mitochondrial outer membrane. Here, we report tests of the hypothesis that Mmm1p and Mdm10p are required to link mitochondria to the cytoskeleton.  相似文献   

3.
Ustilago maydis is a dimorphic Basidiomycete fungus with a yeast-like form and a hyphal form. Here we present a comprehensive analysis of bud formation and the actin and microtubule cytoskeletons of the yeast-like form during the cell cycle. We show that bud morphogenesis entails a series of shape changes, initially a tubular or conical structure, culminating in a cigar-shaped cell connected to the mother cell by a narrow neck. Labelling of cells with concanavalin A demonstrated that growth occurs at bud tip. Indirect immunofluorescence studies revealed that the actin cytoskeleton consists of patches and cables that polarize to the presumptive bud site and the bud tip and an actin ring that forms at the neck region. Because the bud tip corresponds to the site of active cell wall growth, we hypothesize that actin is involved in secretion of cell wall components. The microtubule cytoskeleton has recently been shown to consist of a cytoplasmic network during interphase that disassembles at mitosis when a spindle and astral microtubules are formed. We have carried out studies of U. maydis cells synchronized by the microtubule-depolymerizing drug thiabendazole which allow us to construct a temporal sequence of steps in spindle formation and spindle elongation during the cell cycle. These studies suggest that astral microtubules may be involved in early stages of spindle orientation and migration of the nucleus into the bud and that the spindle pole bodies may be involved in reestablishment of the cytoplasmic microtubule network.  相似文献   

4.
The cytoskeleton, capsule and cell ultrastructure were studied during the cell cycle of Cryptococcus laurentii. In an encapsulated strain, cytoplasmic microtubules and a mitotic spindle were detected. Mitosis was preceded by migration of the nucleus into the bud. F-actin failed to be visualised by rhodamine-phalloidin (RhPh) in encapsulated cells and therefore an acapsular strain was used. The following actin structures were found: actin dots, actin cables and cytokinetic ring. Ultrastructural studies showed the presence of a nucleus in the bud before mitosis. A collar-shaped structure was seen at the base of bud emergence. A lamellar cell wall and a rough outer surface of the cells were detected. Cytoskeletal structures found in C. laurentii are similar to those in Cryptococcus neoformans, which is a serious human pathogen.  相似文献   

5.
Microtubular and actin cytoskeletons were investigated in the lipophilic yeast Malassezia pachydermatis by fluorescence and electron microscopy. To detect microtubules by indirect immunofluorescence using monoclonal anti-tubulin antibody, a prolonged incubation with lysing enzymes was necessary due to its very thick cell wall. Cytoplasmic microtubules were detected in interphase and a spindle with astral microtubules was seen in M-phase. The disintegration of cytoplasmic microtubules and migration of the nucleus to the bud before mitosis were characteristic features of the basidiomycetous yeast Malassezia pachydermatis. The visualisation of F-actin structures (patches, cables and cytokinetic rings) by fluorescence microscopy using both monoclonal anti-actin antibody and rhodamine-phalloidin failed, but actin was detected by electron microscopy with immunogold labelling. Clusters of gold particles indicating actin structures were detected at the plasma membrane of cells with unique cortical ultrastructural features characteristic of the genus Malassezia. A possible association of these with the actin cytoskeleton is suggested.  相似文献   

6.
Summary. The morphology of conidiogenesis and associated changes in microtubules, actin distribution and ultrastructure were studied in the basidiomycetous yeast Fellomyces fuzhouensis by phase-contrast, fluorescence, and electron microscopy. The interphase cell showed a central nucleus with randomly distributed bundles of microtubules and actin, and actin patches in the cortex. The conidiogenous mother cell developed a slender projection, or stalk, that contained cytoplasmic microtubules and actin cables stretched parallel to the longitudinal axis and actin patches accumulated in the tip. The conidium was produced on this stalk. It contained dispersed cytoplasmic microtubules, actin cables, and patches concentrated in the cortex. Before mitosis, the nucleus migrated through the stalk into the conidium and cytoplasmic microtubules were replaced by a spindle. Mitosis started in the conidium, and one daughter nucleus then returned to the mother via an eccentrically elongated spindle. The cytoplasmic microtubules reappeared after mitosis. A strong fluorescence indicating accumulated actin appeared at the base of the conidium, where the cytoplasm cleaved eccentrically. Actin patches then moved from the stalk together with the retracting cytoplasm to the mother and conidium. No septum was detected in the long neck by electron microscopy, only a small amount of fine “wall material” between the conidium and mother cell. Both cells developed a new wall layer, separating them from the empty neck. The mature conidium disconnected from the empty neck at the end-break, which remained on the mother as a tubular outgrowth. Asexual reproduction by conidiogenesis in the long-neck yeast F. fuzhouensis has unique features distinguishing it from known asexual forms of reproduction in the budding and fission yeasts. Fellomyces fuzhouensis develops a unique long and narrow neck during conidiogenesis, through which the nucleus must migrate into the conidium for eccentric mitosis. This is followed by eccentric cytokinesis. We found neither an actin cytokinetic ring nor a septum in the long neck, from which cytoplasm retracted back to mother cell after cytokinesis. Both the conidium and mother were separated from the empty neck by the development of a new lateral wall (initiated as a wall plug). The cytoskeleton is clearly involved in all these processes. Correspondence and reprints: Department of Biology, Faculty of Medicine, Masaryk University, Tomešova 12, 602 00 Brno, Czech Republic.  相似文献   

7.
To understand fully the function of mitochondria during the development of cells and organs, it is important to elucidate the dynamics of their morphology. However, the detailed morphology of mitochondria during meiosis has not yet been studied in algae. We examined the mitochondrial morphology of Chlamydomonas reinhardtii and classified zygotes into seven types by mitochondrial morphology in order to analyse the morphological change in mature and meiotic zygotes. We also investigated the oxygen consumption of living zygotes and the effects of tubulin and actin polymerization inhibitors on mitochondria, using fluorescence microscopy and oxygen electrodes. During zygote maturation, mitochondria fragmented into small particles, with a large decrease in oxygen consumption. When mature zygotes were exposed to light, mitochondria became tubular and formed a network, and oxygen consumption gradually recovered. At the same time, particle-like mitochondrial nucleoids became stringy and produced new nucleoid particles. Tubular mitochondria accumulated around the cell nucleus and then spread throughout the cell. Cell division followed (first and second rounds), and the resultant daughter cells had tubular mitochondria in a mesh-like arrangement. An inhibitor of tubulin polymerization, demecolcine, inhibited the assembly of mitochondria around the cell nucleus, whereas an inhibitor of actin polymerization, latrunculin B, inhibited the formation of tubular mitochondria. These results suggest that microtubules are probably involved in mitochondrial accumulation around the cell nucleus, whereas microfilaments may maintain the tubular network of mitochondria.  相似文献   

8.
Summary Two different techniques have been adapted forMicrasterias denticulata to depict the actin cytoskeleton of both untreated and inhibitor-treated developing cells: the quickstaining method, where the cells are fixed in a mixture of glutaraldehyde and formaldehyde followed by staining with phalloidin without embedding, and the methacrylate method, where the cells are also fixed by aldehydes and where the embedding medium is removed prior to incubation with an actin antibody. Both methods produce sufficient preservation and visualization of actin microfilaments (MFs) and confirm earlier observations on the presence of a cortical actin MF network in both the growing and the nongrowing semicell as well as of a basketlike MF arrangement around the migrating nucleus. The results show that a network of actin MFs is essential for the proper development of the young lobes ofM. denticulata. Early developmental stages expanding uniformly at the beginning of growth lack any netlike actin MF arrangement. The actin cytoskeleton in developing cells treated with the actin-targeting agents cytochalasin D and latrunculin B is markedly influenced. Cytochalasin D, which produces the most pronounced effects, causes a breakdown of the network of actin MFs, resulting in bright actin clusters as well as in short and abnormally thick actin fragments particularly in cortical cell regions. In latrunculin B-treated cells remnants of the former actin MF network are still visible, yet most of the actin cytoskeleton appears collapsed and is reduced to short filament pieces. The disturbance of the actin MF system visualized in the present study correlates with the severe morphological and ultrastructural changes occurring in desmid cells as a consequence of both drugs. The dinitroanilin herbicide oryzalin, known to deploymerize cytoplasmic microtubules, causes also an impairment of the actin cytoskeleton inM. denticulata though not sufficient to influence normal cell growth and differentiation.Abbreviations CB cytochalasin B - CD cytochalasin D - DMSO dimethyl sulfoxide - FA formaldehyde - GA glutaraldehyde - LAT-A latrunculin A - LAT-B latrunculin B - MFs microfilaments - MT microtubule Dedicated to Professor Walter Gustav Url on the occasion of his 70th birthday  相似文献   

9.
Mitochondria are indispensable for normal eukaryotic cell function. As they cannot be synthesized de novo and are self-replicating, mitochondria must be transferred from mother to daughter cells. Studies in the budding yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae indicate that mitochondria enter the bud immediately after bud emergence, interact with the actin cytoskeleton for linear, polarized movement of mitochondria from mother to bud, but are equally distributed among mother and daughter cells [1] [2] [3]. It is not clear how the mother cell maintains its own supply of mitochondria. Here, we found that mother cells retain mitochondria by immobilization of some mitochondria in the 'retention zone', the base of the mother cell distal to the bud. Retention requires the actin cytoskeleton as mitochondria colocalized with actin cables in the retention zone, and mutations that perturb actin dynamics or actin-mitochondrial interactions produced retention defects. Our results support the model that equal distribution of mitochondria during cell division is a consequence of two actin-dependent processes: movement of some mitochondria into the daughter bud and immobilization of others in the mother cell.  相似文献   

10.

Background

The role of the cytoskeleton in regulating mitochondrial distribution in dividing mammalian cells is poorly understood. We previously demonstrated that mitochondria are transported to the cleavage furrow during cytokinesis in a microtubule-dependent manner. However, the exact subset of spindle microtubules and molecular machinery involved remains unknown.

Methods

We employed quantitative imaging techniques and structured illumination microscopy to analyse the spatial and temporal relationship of mitochondria with microtubules and actin of the contractile ring during cytokinesis in HeLa cells.

Results

Superresolution microscopy revealed that mitochondria were associated with astral microtubules of the mitotic spindle in cytokinetic cells. Dominant-negative mutants of KIF5B, the heavy chain of kinesin-1 motor, and of Miro-1 disrupted mitochondrial transport to the furrow. Live imaging revealed that mitochondrial enrichment at the cell equator occurred simultaneously with the appearance of the contractile ring in cytokinesis. Inhibiting RhoA activity and contractile ring assembly with C3 transferase, caused mitochondrial mislocalisation during division.

Conclusions

Taken together, the data suggest a model in which mitochondria are transported by a microtubule-mediated mechanism involving equatorial astral microtubules, Miro-1, and KIF5B to the nascent actomyosin contractile ring in cytokinesis.
  相似文献   

11.
Haruko Kuroiwa  T. Kuroiwa 《Protoplasma》1992,168(3-4):184-188
Summary Giant mitochondrial nuclei (known as nucleoids or mt-nuclei), which contain extremely large amounts of DNA, were studied in thin sections of the mature egg and proembryo (2 and 6 days after double fertilization) ofPelargonium zonale. Samples were embedded in Technovit 7100 resin, stained with 4,6-diamidino-2-phenylindole (DAPI) and examined by immuno-gold electron microscopic cytochemistry. The egg cell contained giant mitochondria (either long and stretched or cup-shaped) which contained a large amount of DNA (more than 4 megabase pairs). However, the other cells, such as synergids, the central cell and nucellus contained small spherical mitochondria. Giant mitochondria in the egg cell were often found to make mitochondria complexes due to the grouping of cupule-shaped mitochondria. Immuno-gold electron microscopic cytochemistry revealed that the mitochondrial DNA is localized in the electron transparent of the giant mitochondria. Apparently, the large mitochondria in the egg cell divided in stages to form small, spherical mitochondria during the early stages of embryogenesis and the DNA content in individual large mitochondrion also decreased significantly. The amount of mitochondrial DNA reached approximately 800 kbp in the globular embryo 6 days after double fertilization. The formation of giant mitochondria in mature eggs has significant aspects after double fertilization.  相似文献   

12.
In the budding yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae, the mitotic spindle must align along the mother-bud axis to accurately partition the sister chromatids into daughter cells. Previous studies showed that spindle orientation required both astral microtubules and the actin cytoskeleton. We now report that maintenance of correct spindle orientation does not depend on F-actin during G2/M phase of the cell cycle. Depolymerization of F-actin using Latrunculin-A did not perturb spindle orientation after this stage. Even an early step in spindle orientation, the migration of the spindle pole body (SPB), became actin-independent if it was delayed until late in the cell cycle. Early in the cell cycle, both SPB migration and spindle orientation were very sensitive to perturbation of F-actin. Selective disruption of actin cables using a conditional tropomyosin double-mutant also led to defects in spindle orientation, even though cortical actin patches were still polarized. This suggests that actin cables are important for either guiding astral microtubules into the bud or anchoring them in the bud. In addition, F-actin was required early in the cell cycle for the development of the actin-independent spindle orientation capability later in the cell cycle. Finally, neither SPB migration nor the switch from actin-dependent to actin-independent spindle behavior required B-type cyclins.  相似文献   

13.
The distribution of F-actin microfilaments and microtubules was analyzed in germinating sporangiospores of Mucor rouxii by labeling with rhodamine-tagged phalloidin and by immunofluorescence microscopy. The transition from isodiametrical to apical growth was accompanied by a switch from uniform distribution of F-actin patches to a polarized accumulation of F-actin material at the germ tube tips. Immunoblotting of cell-free extracts of M. rouxii with a monoclonal anti-porcine -tubulin antibody (TU-01) disclosed two discrete bands of -tubulin suggesting the existence of two -tubulin genes in this fungus. Immunofluorescence microscopy of germinating cells stained with the same antibody revealed an elaborate network of cytoplasmic microtubules that persisted during the entire germination process and extended into the apex of the germ tube. Although their precise roles remain undetermined, the observed arrangement of cytoskeletal elements during germination is consistent with their presumed involvement in cell wall morphogenesis: the long axial microtubules serving as long-distance conveyors of wall-building vesicles to the apical region while the concentrated F-actin patches mark the participation of microfilaments in the zone of intense vesicle exocytosis at the hyphal apex.Abbreviations DAPI 4,6-diamidino-2-phenylindole - DTT dithiothreitol - EGTA Ethylene glycol-bis (beta-aminoethyl ether) - N,N,N,N tetraacetic acid - F-actin Filamentous actin - MES 2-(N0morpholino)-ethanesulfonic acid - PIPES Piperazine-N,N-bis-2-ethanesulfonic acid - PMSF Phenyl-methylsulphonyl fluoride - TBS Tris-buffered saline  相似文献   

14.
Summary Changes in the spatial relationship between actin filaments and microtubules during the differentiation of tracheary elements (TEs) was investigated by a double staining technique in isolatedZinnia mesophyll cells. Before thickening of the secondary wall began to occur, the actin filaments and microtubules were oriented parallel to the long axis of the cell. Reticulate bundles of microtubules and aggregates of actin filaments emerged beneath the plasma membrane almost simultaneously, immediately before the start of the deposition of the secondary wall. The aggregates of actin filaments were observed exclusively between the microtubule bundles. Subsequently, the aggregates of actin filaments extended preferentially in the direction transverse to the long axis of the cell, and the arrays of bundles of microtubules which were still present between the aggregates of actin filaments became transversely aligned. The deposition of the secondary walls then took place along the transversely aligned bundles of microtubules.Disruption of actin filaments by cytochalasin B produced TEs with longitudinal bands of secondary wall, along which bundles of microtubules were seen, while TEs produced in the absence of cytochalasin B had transverse bands of secondary wall. These results indicate that actin filaments play an important role in the change in the orientation of arrays of microtubules from longitudinal to transverse. Disruption of microtubules by colchicine resulted in dispersal of the regularly arranged aggregates of actin filaments, but did not inhibit the formation of the aggregates itself, suggesting that microtubules are involved in maintaining the arrangement of actin filaments but are not involved in inducing the formation of the regularly arranged aggregates of actin filaments.These findings demonstrate that actin filaments cooperate with microtubules in controlling the site of deposition of the secondary wall in developing TEs.Abbreviations DMSO dimethylsulfoxide - EGTA ethyleneglycolbis(-aminoethyl ether)-N,N,N,N-tetraacetic acid - FITC fluorescein isothiocyanate - MSB microtubule-stabilizing buffer - PBS phosphate buffered saline - PIPES piperazine-N,N-bis(2-ethanesulfonic acid) - TE tracheary element  相似文献   

15.
The behavior of organelle nucleoids and cell nuclei was studied in the shoot apical meristem and developing first foliage leaves of Arabidopsis thaliana. Samples were embedded in Technovit 7100 resin, cut into thin sections and stained with 4-6-diamidino-2-phenylindole to observe DNA. Fluorimetry was performed using a video-intensified microscope photon-counting system. The DNA content of individual mitochondria was more than 1 Mbp in the shoot apical meristem and the young leaf primordium, and decreased to approximately 170 kbp in the mature foliage leaf. In contrast, the DNA content of individual plastids was low in the shoot apical meristem and increased until day 7 after sowing. Application of 5-bromo-2-deoxyuridine, an analogue of thymidine, was usesd to investigate DNA synthesis in situ. The activities of DNA synthesis in the mitochondria and plastids changed according to the stage of development. Mitochondrial DNA was actively synthesized in the shoot apical meristem and young leaf primordia. This strongly suggests that the amount of mitochondrial DNA per mitochondrion, which has been synthesized in the shoot apical meristem and young leaf primordium, is gradually reduced due to continual divisions of the mitochondria during low levels of mitochondrial DNA synthesis. Synthesis of DNA in the plastid became active in the leaf primordia following DNA synthesis in the mitochondria, and the small plastids were filled with large plastid nucleotids. This enlargement of the plastid nucleoids occurred before the synthesis of ribulose-1,5-bisphosphate carboxylase/oxygenase and the development of thylakoids.Abbreviations BrdU 5-bromo-2-deoxyuridine - DAPI 4-6-diamidino-2-phenylindole - DiOC6a 3,3-dihexyloxacarbocyanine - mtDNA mitochondrial DNA - mt-nucleoid mitochondrial nucleoid - ptDNA plastid DNA - pt-nucleoid plastid nucleoid - Rubisco ribulose-1,5-bisphosphate carboxylase/oxygenase This work was supported by grant No. 2553 to M.F. and Nos. 04454019, 03304005 and 06262204 to T.K. from the Ministry of Education, Science and Culture of Japan, and by a grant for a pioneering research project in biotechnology from the Ministry of Agriculture, Forestry and Fisheries of Japan.  相似文献   

16.
In Saccharomyces cerevisiae, the growing bud inherits a portion of the mitochondrial network from the mother cell soon after it emerges. Although this polarized transport of mitochondria is thought to require functions of the cytoskeleton, there are conflicting reports concerning the nature of the cytoskeletal element involved. Here we report the isolation of a yeast mutant, mdm20, in which both mitochondrial inheritance and actin cables (bundles of actin filaments) are disrupted. The MDM20 gene encodes a 93-kD polypeptide with no homology to other characterized proteins. Extra copies of TPM1, a gene encoding the actin filament–binding protein tropomyosin, suppress mitochondrial inheritance defects and partially restore actin cables in mdm20Δ cells. Synthetic lethality is also observed between mdm20 and tpm1 mutant strains. Overexpression of a second yeast tropomyosin, Tpm2p, rescues mutant phenotypes in the mdm20 strain to a lesser extent. Together, these results provide compelling evidence that mitochondrial inheritance in yeast is an actin-mediated process. MDM20 and TPM1 also exhibit the same pattern of genetic interactions; mutations in MDM20 are synthetically lethal with mutations in BEM2 and MYO2 but not SAC6. Although MDM20 and TPM1 are both required for the formation and/or stabilization of actin cables, mutations in these genes disrupt mitochondrial inheritance and nuclear segregation to different extents. Thus, Mdm20p and Tpm1p may act in vivo to establish molecular and functional heterogeneity of the actin cytoskeleton.  相似文献   

17.
The distributional arrangement of mitochondria in the granulosa cells surrounding stage III zebrafish oocyte has been reported as a contiguous aggregation of mitochondria at the margin of the each granulosa cell. The aim of the present study was to further investigate the mitochondrial distribution in the granulosa cell layer in stage III ovarian follicles and the interaction between mitochondria and cytoskeleton elements actin and tubulin. To determine mitochondrial distribution/transport, immunocytochemistry analysis of tubulin and mitochondrial COX-I was carried out along with phalloidin staining of polymerised F-actin. The follicles were also exposed to a range of conditions that are known to affect mitochondria and the cytoskeleton proteins actin and tubulin. The mitochondrial inhibitor FCCP, the anti-mitotic drug nocodazole, and actin polymerisation inhibitor cytochalasin B were used. Levels of ATP, mtDNA copy number, and viability assessed by Trypan blue were also studied after exposure to inhibitors in order to determine the relationship between mitochondrial distribution/activity and ATP production. F-actin showed a hexagonal-polygonal distribution surrounding the mitochondria in granulosa cells, with the F-actin network adjacent to the plasma membrane of each granulosa cell. Tubulin structure presented a less organised distribution than F-actin, it was sparse in the cytosol. Interaction between mitochondria and tubulin was found indicating that mitochondria and tubulin are colocalised in zebrafish ovarian follicles. The exposure of ovarian follicles to inhibitors induced the loss of mitochondrial structural integrity showing that mitochondria distribution in granulosa cells of stage III zebrafish ovarian follicles is determined by the microtubules network.  相似文献   

18.
T. L. M. Rutten  J. Derksen 《Protoplasma》1992,167(3-4):231-237
Summary Microtubules inNicotiana tabacum pollen tube subprotoplasts reassembled in wave-like to concentric cortical arrays. Crosslinks between microtubules were either 15 or 80 nm in length. Cortical actin filaments showed different distributions; no colocalization like that in pollen tubes was observed. Degradation of actin filaments by cytochalasin D had no influence on microtubule organization. Degradation of microtubules and/or actin filaments did not affect outgrowth of the subprotoplasts. Organization of the microtubules occurred independent of the presence of the generative cell and/or the vegetative nucleus. No relation of actin filament and microtubule organization with organelle distribution could be detected.Abbreviations AFs actin filaments - DAPI 4,6-diamidino-2-phenylindole - EGTA ethylene glycol bis (2-amino ethylether) N,N,N,N-tetraacetic acid - FITC fluorescein isothiocyanate - MTs microtubules - SPPs subprotoplasts - TRITC tetramethyl rhodamine B isothiocyanate  相似文献   

19.
The plus ends of microtubules have been speculated to regulate the actin cytoskeleton for the proper positioning of sites of cell polarization and cytokinesis. In the fission yeast Schizosaccharomyces pombe, interphase microtubules and the kelch repeat protein tea1p regulate polarized cell growth. Here, we show that tea1p is directly deposited at cell tips by microtubule plus ends. Tea1p associates in large "polarisome" complexes with bud6p and for3p, a formin that assembles actin cables. Tea1p also interacts in a separate complex with the CLIP-170 protein tip1p, a microtubule plus end-binding protein that anchors tea1p to the microtubule plus end. Localization experiments suggest that tea1p and bud6p regulate formin distribution and actin cable assembly. Although single mutants still polarize, for3Deltabud6Deltatea1Delta triple-mutant cells lack polarity, indicating that these proteins contribute overlapping functions in cell polarization. Thus, these experiments begin to elucidate how microtubules contribute to the proper spatial regulation of actin assembly and polarized cell growth.  相似文献   

20.
The assembly of filamentous actin is essential for polarized bud growth in budding yeast. Actin cables, which are assembled by the formins Bni1p and Bnr1p, are thought to be the only actin structures that are essential for budding. However, we found that formin or tropomyosin mutants, which lack actin cables, are still able to form a small bud. Additional mutations in components for cortical actin patches, which are assembled by the Arp2/3 complex to play a pivotal role in endocytic vesicle formation, inhibited this budding. Genes involved in endocytic recycling were also required for small-bud formation in actin cable-less mutants. These results suggest that budding yeast possesses a mechanism that promotes polarized growth by local recycling of endocytic vesicles. Interestingly, the type V myosin Myo2p, which was thought to use only actin cables to track, also contributed to budding in the absence of actin cables. These results suggest that some actin network may serve as the track for Myo2p-driven vesicle transport in the absence of actin cables or that Myo2p can function independent of actin filaments. Our results also show that polarity regulators including Cdc42p were still polarized in mutants defective in both actin cables and cortical actin patches, suggesting that the actin cytoskeleton does not play a major role in cortical assembly of polarity regulators in budding yeast.  相似文献   

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