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1.
Sea urchin eggs stained with fluorescein-conjugated wheat germ agglutinin (F-WGA) before or after fixation showed a marked accumulation of fluorescence at the cleavage furrow in the first and the second cell divisions. WGA receptors (WGA-binding membrane glycoproteins) were redistributed to the equatorial region through several steps in compressed eggs. Accumulated WGA receptors showed a distribution similar to that of contractile-ring microfilaments throughout most of the steps. Therefore, the former is probably associated with the latter directly or indirectly. Labeling with F-WGA provides a simple method to detect contractile-ring microfilaments in living eggs. Treatment of eggs with colcemid shortly before cytokinesis dispersed the ring-like accumulation of WGA receptors together with contractile-ring microfilaments. This result suggests that microtubule structures, probably asters, are involved in the redistribution of WGA receptors. Cytochalasin B prevented furrowing when it was applied shortly before cytokinesis. While contractile-ring microfilaments showed a spotty distribution in the expected furrow region, WGA receptors were normally redistributed. Furthermore, a higher concentration of the drug allowed the appearance of accumulated WGA receptors in compressed eggs although the development into a ring-like configuration was inhibited. These observations suggest the possibility that the redistribution of WGA receptors is involved in the formation of contractile ring.  相似文献   

2.
Astral microtubules are elongated greatly during anaphase and telophase in sea urchin eggs. The surface density of microtubules reaching the cell surface can be defined at each surface point. Gradients of the surface-density function were assumed to drive membrane proteins whose accumulation causes the formation of contractile-ring microfilaments. An equation was constructed to calculate the movements of the membrane proteins on a curved surface. The equation was applied to eggs compressed between a coverslip and a glass slide by regarding the egg shape as an oblate spheroid. The simulations explained the observations that contractile-ring microfilaments locally appeared and then developed into a complete ring in compressed eggs. When one aster in the mitotic apparatus stopped growing during anaphase, the equation predicted that the zone of contractile-ring microfilaments is displaced toward the inactivated aster, curves in the view from above and tapers off toward the cell edge. The curve gets sharper as eggs are compressed more greatly and as microtubules from the growing aster penetrate more deeply into the opposite hemisphere. The predictions were compared with the observations by Ishii and Shimizu in 1995 and by Hamaguchi in 1998 regarding the furrow formation by the asymmetric mitotic apparatus.  相似文献   

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

4.
Microtubules in ascidian eggs during meiosis, fertilization, and mitosis   总被引:14,自引:0,他引:14  
The sequential changes in the distribution of microtubules during germinal vesicle breakdown (GVBD), fertilization, and mitosis were investigated with antitubulin indirect immunofluorescence microscopy in several species of ascidian eggs (Molgula occidentalis, Ciona savignyi, and Halocynthia roretzi). These alterations in microtubule patterns were also correlated with observed cytoplasmic movements. A cytoplasmic latticework of microtubules was observed throughout meiosis. The unfertilized egg of M. occidentalis had a small meiotic spindle with wide poles; the poles became focused after egg activation. The other two species had more typical meiotic spindles before fertilization. At fertilization, a sperm aster first appeared near the cortex close to the vegetal pole. It enlarged into an unusual asymmetric aster associated with the egg cortex. The sperm aster rapidly grew after the formation of the second polar body, and it was displaced as far as the equatorial region, corresponding to the site of the myoplasmic crescent, the posterior half of the egg. The female pronucleus migrated to the male pronucleus at the center of the sperm aster. The microtubule latticework and the sperm aster disappeared towards the end of first interphase with only a small bipolar structure remaining until first mitosis. At mitosis the asters enlarged tremendously, while the mitotic spindle remained remarkably small. The two daughter nuclei remained near the site of cleavage even after division was complete. These results document the changes in microtubule patterns during maturation in Ascidian oocytes, demonstrate that the sperm contributes the active centrosome at fertilization, and reveal the presence of a mitotic apparatus at first division which has an unusually small spindle and huge asters.  相似文献   

5.
Astral microtubules are rapidly elongated during anaphase and telophase in sea urchin eggs. The number of microtubules extending to the cell surface was calculated with a computer. For the calculations, microtubules were assumed to radiate from the astral center uniformly over angles. Although microtubules from two asters freely overlapped around the equator, the number per the unit area, i.e. the surface density, was larger in the polar region than in the equatorial region. The ratio of the theoretically calculated numbers in the two regions was close to the ratio obtained from the ultrastructural observations by Asnes and Schroeder in 1979. When counted in the longitudinal section including two astral centers, the microtubule number was a little larger in the equatorial region than in the polar region. However, the numbers do not represent the surface density because the two-dimensional section contains only a small portion of all the microtubules spreading in the three-dimensional space. The fluorescence image for tubulin, in most cases, provides the microtubule distribution in the longitudinal section. Therefore, from such an image, we cannot judge whether the surface density of astral microtubules is larger at the pole or at the equator.  相似文献   

6.
The mechanism that positions the cytokinetic contractile ring is unknown, but derives from the spindle midzone. We show that an interaction between the Rho GTP exchange factor, Pebble, and the Rho family GTPase-activating protein, RacGAP50C, connects the contractile ring to cortical microtubules at the site of furrowing in D. melanogaster cells. Pebble regulates actomyosin organization, while RacGAP50C and its binding partner, the Pavarotti kinesin-like protein, regulate microtubule bundling. All three factors are required for cytokinesis. As furrowing begins, these proteins colocalize to a cortical equatorial ring. We propose that RacGAP50C-Pavarotti complexes travel on cortical microtubules to the cell equator, where they associate with the Pebble RhoGEF to position contractile ring formation and coordinate F-actin and microtubule remodeling during cytokinesis.  相似文献   

7.
Three types of models have been proposed about how the mitotic apparatus determines the position of the cleavage furrow in animal cells. In the first and second types, the contractile ring appears in a cortical region that least and most astral microtubules reach, respectively. The third type is that the spindle midzone positions the contractile ring. In the previous study, a new model was proposed through analyses of cytokinesis in sand dollar and sea urchin eggs. Gradients of the surface density of microtubule plus ends are assumed to drive membrane proteins whose accumulation causes the formation of contractile-ring microfilaments. In the present study, the validity of each model is examined by simulating the furrow formation in conical sand dollar eggs with the mitotic apparatus oriented perpendicular to the cone axis. The new model predicts that unilateral furrows with cleavage planes roughly parallel to the spindle axis appear between the mitotic apparatus and the vertex besides the normally positioned furrow. The predictions are consistent with the observations by Rappaport & Rappaport (1994, Dev. Biol.164, 258-266). The other three types of models do not predict the formation of the ectopic furrows. Furthermore, it is pointed out that only the new model has the ability to explain the geometrical relationship between the mitotic apparatus and the contractile ring under various experimental conditions. These results strongly suggest the real existence of the membrane proteins postulated in the model.  相似文献   

8.
Sea-urchin blastomeres have two domains of the plasma membrane which can be distinguished immunocytochemically. An egg-surface antibody (anti-ES), which binds to the membrane of the entire surface region of eggs before cleavage, binds to the membrane of the outer surface region of blastomeres after cleavage, but not to that of the cleavage furrow region or interblastomeric surface region.
The anti-ES binding sites on the egg membrane were chased after cleavage by labeling the egg plasma membrane with FITC conjugated monovalent anti-ES (FITC-Fab anti-ES) before the first cleavage, and then allowing the eggs to cleave. The surface fluorescence increased in intensity in the cleavage furrow region with progress of furrowing, but after completion of the furrowing, the fluorescence became uniform and finally decreased in the interblastomeric surface region.
The distributions of pigment granules and NBD-phallacidin stainable microfilaments in the cortex after completion of furrowing were polarized in the same way as the anti-ES binding area. As cytochalasin B completely inhibited the polarization in both the surface and cortical layer but colchicine did not, polarization of the anti-ES binding area was concluded to be due to the post-cleavage polarized distribution of submembranous microfilaments in the cortical layer.  相似文献   

9.
Taxol, a microtubule stabilizing agent, has been used to study changes in spindle microtubule organization during mitosis. PtK1 cells have been treated with 5 μg/ml taxol for brief periods to determine its effect on spindle architecture. During prophase taxol induces microtubules to aggregate, particularly evident in the region between the nucleus and cell periphery. Taxol induces astral microtubule formation in prometaphase and metaphase cells concomitant with a reduction in spindle length. At anaphase taxol induces an increase in length in astral microtubules and reduces microtubule length in the interzone. Taxol-treated telophase cells show a reduction in the rate of furrowing and astral microtubules lack a discrete focus and are arranged more diffusely on the surface of the nuclear envelope. In summary, taxol treatment of cells prior to anaphase produces an increase in astral microtubules, a reduction in kinetochore microtubules and a decrease in spindle length. Brief taxol treatments during anaphase through early G1 promotes stabilization of microtubules, an increase in the length of astral microtubules and a delayed rate of cytokinesis.  相似文献   

10.
Animal cells decide where to build the cytokinetic apparatus by sensing the position of the mitotic spindle. Reflecting a long-standing presumption that a furrow-inducing stimulus travels from spindle to cortex via microtubules, debate continues about which microtubules, and in what geometry, are essential for accurate cytokinesis. We used live imaging in urchin and frog embryos to evaluate the relationship between microtubule organization and cytokinetic furrow position. In normal cells, the cytokinetic apparatus forms in a region of lower cortical microtubule density. Remarkably, cells depleted of astral microtubules conduct accurate, complete cytokinesis. Conversely, in anucleate cells, asters alone can support furrow induction without a spindle, but only when sufficiently separated. Ablation of a single centrosome displaces furrows away from the remaining centrosome; ablation of both centrosomes causes broad, inefficient furrowing. We conclude that the asters confer accuracy and precision to a primary furrow-inducing signal that can reach the cell surface from the spindle without transport on microtubules.  相似文献   

11.
Fertilization and the cytoskeleton in the mouse   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
The behaviour and roles of the microtubule network and the microfilaments following fertilization in the mouse oocyte are described. The microtubule network is organized by multiple microtubule organizing centres (MTOCs) and these play a major role in establishing spindle structure and pronuclear movement following fertilization; in contrast to sea urchin and frog eggs, the sperm centriole plays little part in organization of the post-fertilization spindle. The microfilaments are required for spindle rotation, polar body formation, certain changes in the egg cortex, and also for pronuclear movement. Influences of the chromosomes on microtubule and microfilament organisation are also discussed.  相似文献   

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

13.
The purpose of the present investigation was to test experimentally the possibility that division mechanism establishment at the equator of sand dollar eggs may be a consequence of cortical tension gradients between the equator and the poles. Cytochalasin has been shown to decrease tension at the sea urchin egg surface. The concave ends of cytochalasin D-containing agarose cylinders were held against regions of the surface of Echinarachnius parma blastomeres and enucleated fertilized egg fragments. The ability to interfere with normal furrowing activity was used as a biological indicator of the effectiveness of cytochalasin. When agarose containing 2 microg/mL cytochalasin contacted the equatorial region of the blastomeres resulting from the first cleavage, or the equatorial surfaces of nucleated fertilized egg halves, furrowing was blocked, stalled or delayed, indicating that the concentration of cytochalasin was effective. When the same concentration of cytochalasin was applied to the poles, the cells and nucleated fertilized egg fragments divided in the same way as the controls, indicating that the effectiveness of the cytochalasin did not spread from the poles to the equator and that bisection did not interfere with the division of nucleated fertilized egg fragments. When the same concentration of cytochalasin was applied to diametrically opposed surfaces of enucleated, spherical egg fragments, there was no evidence of furrowing activity between the areas that contacted the cytochalasin or in any other part of the surface. Because of the tension-reducing effect of cytochalasin, a tension gradient existed between the regions affected and unaffected by cytochalasin. The results strongly suggest that establishment of the division mechanism by simple gradients of tension at the surface is unlikely.  相似文献   

14.
The mitotic microtubule array plays two primary roles in cell division. It acts as a scaffold for the congression and separation of chromosomes, and it specifies and maintains the contractile-ring position. The current model for initiation of Drosophila and mammalian cytokinesis [1-5] postulates that equatorial localization of a RhoGEF (Pbl/Ect2) by a microtubule-associated motor protein complex creates a band of activated RhoA [6], which subsequently recruits contractile-ring components such as actin, myosin, and Anillin [1-3]. Equatorial microtubules are essential for continued constriction, but how they interact with the contractile apparatus is unknown. Here, we report the first direct molecular link between the microtubule spindle and the actomyosin contractile ring. We find that the spindle-associated component, RacGAP50C, which specifies the site of cleavage [1-5], interacts directly with Anillin, an actin and myosin binding protein found in the contractile ring [7-10]. Both proteins depend on this interaction for their localization. In the absence of Anillin, the spindle-associated RacGAP loses its association with the equatorial cortex, and cytokinesis fails. These results account for the long-observed dependence of cytokinesis on the continual presence of microtubules at the cortex.  相似文献   

15.
Cytokinesis is powered by the contraction of actomyosin filaments within the newly assembled contractile ring. Microtubules are a spindle component that is essential for the induction of cytokinesis. This induction could use central spindle and/or astral microtubules to stimulate cortical contraction around the spindle equator (equatorial stimulation). Alternatively, or in addition, induction could rely on astral microtubules to relax the polar cortex (polar relaxation). To investigate the relationship between microtubules, cortical stiffness, and contractile ring assembly, we used different configurations of microtubules to manipulate the distribution of actin in living silkworm spermatocytes. Mechanically repositioned, noninterdigitating microtubules can induce redistribution of actin at any region of the cortex by locally excluding cortical actin filaments. This cortical flow of actin promotes regional relaxation while increasing tension elsewhere (normally at the equatorial cortex). In contrast, repositioned interdigitating microtubule bundles use a novel mechanism to induce local stimulation of contractility anywhere within the cortex; at the antiparallel plus ends of central spindle microtubules, actin aggregates are rapidly assembled de novo and transported laterally to the equatorial cortex. Relaxation depends on microtubule dynamics but not on RhoA activity, whereas stimulation depends on RhoA activity but is largely independent of microtubule dynamics. We conclude that polar relaxation and equatorial stimulation mechanisms redundantly supply actin for contractile ring assembly, thus increasing the fidelity of cleavage.  相似文献   

16.
Fertilized eggs of the leech Helobdella triserialis undergo a cytoplasmic reorganization which generates domains of nonyolky cytoplasm, called teloplasm, at the animal and vegetal poles. The segregation of teloplasm to one cell of the eight-cell embryo is responsible for a unique developmental fate of that cell, i.e., to give rise to segmental ectoderm and mesoderm. We have studied the cytoplasmic movements that generate teloplasm using time-lapse video microscopy; the formation and migration of rings of nonyolky cytoplasm were visualized using transmitted light, while the movements of mitochondria into these rings were monitored with epifluorescence after labeling embryos with rhodamine 123, a fluorescent mitochondrial dye. To examine the likelihood that cytoskeletal elements play a role in the mechanism of teloplasm formation in Helobdella, we examined the distribution of microtubules and microfilaments during the first cell cycle by indirect immunofluorescence and rhodamine-phalloidin labeling, respectively. The cortex of the early embryo contained a network of microtubules many of which were oriented parallel to the cell surface. As teloplasm formation ensued, microtubule networks became concentrated in the animal and the vegetal cortex relative to the equatorial cortex. More extensive microtubule arrays were found within the rings of teloplasm. Actin filaments appeared in the form of narrow rings in the cortex, but these varied apparently randomly from embryo to embryo in terms of number, size, and position. The role of microtubules and microfilaments in teloplasm formation was tested using depolymerizing agents. Teloplasm formation was blocked by microtubule inhibitors, but not by microfilament inhibitors. These results differ significantly from those obtained in embryos of the oligochaete Tubifex hattai, suggesting that the presumably homologous cytoplasmic reorganizations seen in these two annelids have different cytoskeletal dependencies.  相似文献   

17.
The first cleavage in the freshwater oligochaete Tubifex hattai is unequal and meridional, and produces a smaller cell AB and a larger cell CD. This study traces the process of furrow formation, reorganization of cortical F-actin and the assembly of a mitotic apparatus during this unequal division. Cleavage furrow formation consists of two stages: (i) when eggs are viewed from the animal pole, meridionally running furrows emerge at two points of the egg's equator that are 90° apart from each other and approach the egg axis as they deepen; and (ii) at the midpoint between the equator and the egg center, the bottoms of these furrows link to each other on the animal and vegetal surfaces of the egg and form a continuous ring of constriction in a plane parallel to the egg axis. Egg cortices, isolated during the first step and stained with rhodamine-phalloidin, show that the bottoms of recently formed furrows are underlaid by a belt of tightly packed actin bundles (i.e. a contractile arc). The transition to the second stage of furrow formation coincides with the conversion of these actin belts into a continuous ring of F-actin. Whole-mount immunocytochemistry of microtubules reveals that the first cleavage in Tubifex involves an asymmetric mitotic spindle, which initially possesses an aster at one pole but not the other. This ‘monastral’ spindle is located at the egg's center and orients itself perpendicular to the egg axis. During anaphase, astral rays elongate to reach the cell surface, so that the array of astral microtubules in the plane of the egg's equator covers a sector of 270–300°. In contrast, it is not until the transition to telophase that microtubules emanating from the anastral spindle pole approach the cell margin. If eggs are compressed along the egg axis or forced to elongate, they form monastral spindles and divide unequally. In living compressed eggs, mitotic spindles, which are recognizable as bright streaks at the egg's center, appear not to shift their position along the spindle axis during division, suggesting that without eccentric migration of spindles Tubifex eggs are able to divide unequally. These results suggest that mechanisms that translocate the mitotic spindle eccentrically do not operate in Tubifex eggs during the first cell cycle. The mechanisms that generate asymmetry in spindle organization are discussed in the light of the present results.  相似文献   

18.
How microtubules act to position the plane of cell division during cytokinesis is a topic of much debate. Recently, we showed that a subpopulation of stable microtubules extends past chromosomes and interacts with the cell cortex at the site of furrowing, suggesting that these stabilized microtubules may stimulate contractility. To test the hypothesis that stable microtubules can position furrows, we used taxol to rapidly suppress microtubule dynamics during various stages of mitosis in PtK1 cells. Cells with stabilized prometaphase or metaphase microtubule arrays were able to initiate furrowing when induced into anaphase by inhibition of the spindle checkpoint. In these cells, few microtubules contacted the cortex. Furrows formed later than usual, were often aberrant, and did not progress to completion. Images showed that furrowing correlated with the presence of one or a few stable spindle microtubule plus ends at the cortex. Actin, myosin II, and anillin were all concentrated in these furrows, demonstrating that components of the contractile ring can be localized by stable microtubules. Inner centromere protein (INCENP) was not found in these ingressions, confirming that INCENP is dispensable for furrow positioning. Taxol-stabilization of the numerous microtubule-cortex interactions after anaphase onset delayed furrow initiation but did not perturb furrow positioning. We conclude that taxol-stabilized microtubules can act to position the furrow and that loss of microtubule dynamics delays the timing of furrow onset and prevents completion. We discuss our findings relative to models for cleavage stimulation.  相似文献   

19.
Meiotic spindle formation in Spisula solidissima oocytes hasbeen studied in vivo and in vitro. Measurements were made ofpolymerized tubulin content during the first meiotic division.The amount of polymer was high prior to activation of the eggs,fell to a minimum of about 5 min after activation and at 15min (metaphase) returned to approximately its initial value.The polymerized tubulin in the unactivated eggs appears to beorganized into granular spheres about 10–20 microns indiameter attached to the egg cortex. This particle containsfew microtubules but is composed primarily of a granular matrixand fibrous material. The granular matrix may be a polymorphicaggregate of tubulin and could be a storage form of tubulinor an intermediate in microtubule assembly. The polymerization and organization of microtubules has beenstudied in vitro, using crude homogenates of Spisula oocytes.Microtubules can be formed in homogenates of both activatedand unactivated eggs; however, in homogenates of eggs in whichnuclear membrane breakdown has occurred, microtubules form arounda central phase dense particle resulting in a structure whichresembles a spindle aster. The central particle appears to bea microtubule organizing center (MTOC). The MTOC can be pelleledby centrifugation and will induce aster formation when remixedwith the supernatant. Aster formation can be obtained usingsupernatants prepared from either activated or unactivated eggs,while the pellet must be obtained from activated eggs. Thus,tubulin subunits appear to be capable of spindle formation atall stages, while MTOC formation or activation does not occuruntil about the time of nuclear membrane breakdown.  相似文献   

20.
Mitosis in the cellular slime mold Polysphondylium violaceum   总被引:9,自引:9,他引:0       下载免费PDF全文
Myxamebas of Polysphondylium violaceum were grown in liquid medium and processed for electron microscopy. Mitosis is characterized by a persistent nuclear envelope, ring-shaped extranuclear spindle pole bodies (SPBs), a central spindle spatially separated from the chromosomal microtubules, well-differentiated kinetochores, and dispersion of the nucleoli. SPBs originate from the division, during prophase, of an electron-opaque body associated with the interphase nucleus. The nuclear nevelope becomes fenestrated in their vicinity, allowing the build-up of the intranuclear, central spindle and chromosomal microtubules as the SPBs migrate to opposite poles. At metaphase the chromosomes are in amphitelic orientation, each sister chromatid being directly connected to the corresponding SPB by a single microtubule. During ana- and telophase the central spindle elongates, the daughter chromosomes approach the SPBs, and the nucleus constricts in the equatorial region. The cytoplasm cleaves by furrowing in late telophase, which is in other respects characterized by a re- establishment of the interphase condition. Spindle elongation and poleward movement of chromosomes are discussed in relation to hypotheses of the mechanism of mitosis.  相似文献   

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