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1.
Mitosis in Mantoniella squamata (Manton and Parke) Desikachary, a small scale-covered green monad, is presented. Organelle replication precedes nuclear division and begins with the replication of the chloroplast. As the chloroplasts separate, the Golgi and flagellar apparatuses divide. The discoid microbody enlarges and becomes ‘V'-shaped, with the arms extending toward depressions in the pyrenoid stalks of the chloroplasts. At prophase, microtubules produced by an amorphous microtubule organizing center enter the nucleus via polar fenestre. The nuclear membrane remains intact. As the chloroplasts migrate further apart, the spindle pole-to-pole distance increases. By metaphase, daughter-cell lobes are discernible as a cleavage furrow, which appears as early as prophase, and begins to incise the cell. A single Golgi apparatus is situated near the spindle pole; the flagellar apparatus lies adjacent to the pole. The cleavage furrow continues to constrict the cell, resulting in a narrowing isthmus containing the elongate microbody, nucleus and a rootlet system connecting the basal bodies of the daughter flagella. At telophase, no extra-nuclear microtubular systems other than the previously observed rootlet are present and the nuclei remain separated from each other. In cells undergoing multiple divisions to produce more than two daughter cells, the orientation of organelles changes somewhat, with the basal bodies and the Golgi apparatus separating daughter nuclei prior to the onset of cytokinesis. The mechanics of mitosis in Mantoniella are compared with other green monads and the evolutionary implications discussed.  相似文献   

2.
Apical-basal polarity of epithelial cells is critical for their symmetric versus asymmetric division and commonly thought to be established in interphase. In a novel type of cell division termed "mirror-symmetric", apical cell constituents accumulate during M-phase at the cleavage furrow, resulting in epithelial daughter cells with opposite apical-basal polarity.  相似文献   

3.
Cell surface changes during mitosis and cytokinesis of epithelial cells   总被引:4,自引:0,他引:4  
Summary PtK2 cells were studied with scanning electron microscopy to record changes on the cell surface during mitosis and cytokinesis. During prophase, prometaphase and metaphase, the cells remain very flat with few microvilli on their surfaces. In anaphase cells, there is a marked increase in the number of microvilli, most of which are clumped over the separating chromosomes and polar regions of the mitotic spindle leaving the surface of the interzonal spindle region relatively smooth. Microvilli appear over the interzonal spindle region in telophase and the cells also increase in height. At the beginning of cleavage, the distribution of microvilli is roughly uniform over the surface but it becomes asymmetric at the completion of cleav-age when the daughter cells begin to spread. At this time most microvilli are over the daughter nuclei and the surfaces that border the former cleavage furrow. The regions of the daughter cells distal to the furrow are the first to spread and their surfaces have very few microvilli. When chromosome movement is inhibited by either Nocodazole or Taxol, microvilli formation is inhibited on the arrested cells. Nevertheless cell rounding still takes place in the normal time period. It is concluded from these observations that the signal for the onset of chromosome movement in anaphase is accompanied by a signal for the formation of microvilli. It is suggested that there is also a separate signal for the cell-rounding event in mitosis and that microvilli do not play a role in this contractile process.  相似文献   

4.
Dictyostelium DdINCENP is a chromosomal passenger protein associated with centromeres, the spindle midzone, and poles during mitosis and the cleavage furrow during cytokinesis. Disruption of the single DdINCENP gene revealed important roles for this protein in mitosis and cytokinesis. DdINCENP null cells lack a robust spindle midzone and are hypersensitive to microtubule-depolymerizing drugs, suggesting that their spindles may not be stable. Furthermore DdCP224, a protein homologous to the microtubule-stabilizing protein TOGp/XMAP215, was absent from the spindle midzone of DdINCENP null cells. Overexpression of DdCP224 rescued the weak spindle midzone defect of DdINCENP null cells. Although not required for the localization of the myosin II contractile ring and subsequent formation of a cleavage furrow, DdINCENP is important for the abscission of daughter cells at the end of cytokinesis. Finally, we show that the localization of DdINCENP at the cleavage furrow is modulated by myosin II but it occurs by a mechanism different from that controlling the formation of the contractile ring.  相似文献   

5.
Neuroepithelial (NE) cells, the primary stem and progenitor cells of the vertebrate central nervous system, are highly polarized and elongated. They retain a basal process extending to the basal lamina, while undergoing mitosis at the apical side of the ventricular zone. By studying NE cells in the embryonic mouse, chick and zebrafish central nervous system using confocal microscopy, electron microscopy and time-lapse imaging, we show here that the basal process of these cells can split during M phase. Splitting occurred in the basal-to-apical direction and was followed by inheritance of the processes by either one or both daughter cells. A cluster of anillin, an essential component of the cytokinesis machinery, appeared at the distal end of the basal process in prophase and was found to colocalize with F-actin at bifurcation sites, in both proliferative and neurogenic NE cells. GFP-anillin in the basal process moved apically to the cell body prior to anaphase onset, followed by basal-to-apical ingression of the cleavage furrow in telophase. The splitting of the basal process of M-phase NE cells has implications for cleavage plane orientation and the relationship between mitosis and cytokinesis.  相似文献   

6.
After the separation of sister chromatids in anaphase, it is essential that the cell position a cleavage furrow so that it partitions the chromatids into two daughter cells of roughly equal size. The mechanism by which cells position this cleavage furrow remains unknown, although the best current model is that furrows always assemble midway between asters. We used micromanipulation of human cultured cells to produce mitotic heterokaryons with two spindles fused in a V conformation. The majority (15/19) of these cells cleaved along a single plane that transected the two arms of the V at the position where the metaphase plate had been, a result at odds with current views of furrow positioning. However, four cells did form an additional ectopic furrow between the spindle poles at the open end of the V, consistent with the established view. To begin to address the mechanism of furrow assembly, we have begun a detailed study of the properties of the chromosome passenger inner centromere protein (INCENP) in anaphase and telophase cells. We found that INCENP is a very early component of the cleavage furrow, accumulating at the equatorial cortex before any noticeable cortical shape change and before any local accumulation of myosin heavy chain. In mitotic heterokaryons, INCENP was detected in association with spindle midzone microtubules beneath sites of furrowing and was not detected when furrows were absent. A functional role for INCENP in cytokinesis was suggested in experiments where a nearly full-length INCENP was tethered to the centromere. Many cells expressing the chimeric INCENP failed to complete cytokinesis and entered the next cell cycle with daughter cells connected by a large intercellular bridge with a prominent midbody. Together, these results suggest that INCENP has a role in either the assembly or function of the cleavage furrow.  相似文献   

7.
Using a high-resolution, automated confocal high-content imaging system, we investigated the sub-cellular localization of the Serine 2481-autophosphorylated form of mTOR (PP-mTORSer2481) during mitosis and cytokinesis in human cancer cells. PP-mTORSer2481 exhibited a punctate nuclear distribution in interphase cancer cells, with the number of PP-mTORSer2481 nuclear speckles positively relating with the proliferative capacity of cancer cells. PP-mTORSer2481 expression dynamically rearranged within the cytoplasm in a close association near and between separating chromosomes during early stages of mitosis. Towards the end of anaphase and in telophase, PP-mTORSer2481 drastically focused on the midzone and ultimately in the centre of the midbody at the presumptive cleavage furrow. In cells at cytokinesis, PP-mTORSer2481 appeared as a doublet facing each other at the apical ends of two daughter cells. Three-dimensional analysis confirmed that PP-mTORSer2481 positioned at a ring structure wrapped round by microtubule bundles to connect daughter cells. These results reveal for the first time that PP-mTORSer2481 may be unexpectedly involved in the terminal stages of cytokinesis.  相似文献   

8.
Changes in fine structure of cells associated with interkinetic nuclear migration in the developing chick neuroepithelium were investigated. Interphase cells are elongated and span the entire thickness of the neuroepithelium. As cells round up in preparation for mitosis, they sever their contacts with the basement membrane, but retain their apical junctions. Meanwhile, microtubules lose their apico-basal orientation and the apical microfilament bundle relaxes to allow broadening of the luminal surface. These changes in the cytoarchitecture together with an increased cytoplasmic viscosity may cause rounding of mitotic cells and their juxtaluminal position. Mitotic cells remain at the lumen from late prophase through early telophase. By late telophase, daughter cells start to elongate toward the base of the neuroepithelium. The ultrastructural changes during elongation recapitulate, in a reverse order, the events of rounding up in preparation for mitosis. Daughter cells are connected for some time after mitosis by a thread of cytoplasm. The thread is filled with microtubules representing a remnant of the spindle complex and has an electron-dense midbody at about the middle of its length. During the final stage of separation of daughter cells, the thread is split at the level of the midbody.  相似文献   

9.
The cytokinetic cleavage furrow is typically positioned symmetrically relative to the cortical cell boundaries, but it can also be asymmetric. The mechanisms that control furrow site specification have been intensively studied, but how polar cortex movements influence ultimate furrow position remains poorly understood. We measured the position of the apical and the basal cortex in asymmetrically dividing Drosophila neuroblasts and observed preferential displacement of the apical cortex that becomes the larger daughter cell during anaphase, effectively shifting the cleavage furrow toward the smaller daughter cell. Asymmetric cortical extension is correlated with the presence of cortical myosin II, which is polarized in neuroblasts. Loss of myosin II asymmetry by perturbing heterotrimeric G-protein signaling results in symmetric extension and equal-sized daughter cells. We propose a model in which contraction-driven asymmetric polar extension of the neuroblast cortex during anaphase contributes to asymmetric furrow position and daughter cell size.  相似文献   

10.
This study shows that the zonula adhaerens in chicken retinal pigment epithelial (RPE) cells in situ consists of independent subunits which are composed of extracellular intermembrane discs sandwiched between cytoplasmic plaques. These zonula adhaerens complexes (ZACs) are hexagonally arranged within the junction. Previous immunocytochemical studies suggest that the zonula adhaerens region, composed of ZACs, contains the actin associated proteins vinculin and alpha-actinin. The intermembrane discs of ZACs likely mediate cell-to-cell adhesion whereas the cytoplasmic plaques are probably involved in binding the microfilaments of the relatively large circumferential microfilament bundles (CMBs), associated with the zonula adhaerens, to the cell membrane. The CMBs of chicken RPE cells in situ show striations similar to those found in stress fibers of other cell types and in CMBs of cultured epithelial cells. The observation that in the striated regions of CMBs the adjacent junctional membranes tend to follow an undulating path suggests that the CMBs are attached intermittently to the cell membrane and are contractile. The structural similarities between CMBs and stress fibers and the fact that they share similar actin associated proteins support the view that CMBs and stress fibers are related structures.  相似文献   

11.
Summary Retinal pigmented epithelial cells of chicken have circumferential microfilament bundles (CMBs) at the zonula adherens region. Isolated CMBs are polygons filled with a meshwork composed primarily of intermediate filaments; they show three major components of 200000, 55000, and 42000 daltons in SDS-gel electrophoresis. Here we have characterized the 55000-dalton protein immunochemically and ultrastructurally. Immunoblotting and immunofluorescence microscopy have shown that the 55000-dalton protein is an intermediate filament protein, vimentin.Vimentin filaments changed their distribution during differentiation of pigmented epithelial cells in culture. The protein in the elongated cells showed a fibroblast-type pattern of intermediate filaments. During epithelium formation, the filaments were uniformly distributed and formed a finer meshwork at the apical level. In pigmented epithelial cells that differentiated and matured in culture, vimentin and actin exhibited their characteristic behavior after treatment with colcemid. In the central to basal region of the cell, intermediate filaments formed thick perinuclear bundles. In the apical region, however, intermediate filaments changed in organization from a nonpolarized meshwork to a polarized bundle-like structure. Simultaneously, new actin bundles were formed, running parallel to the intermediate filaments. This suggests that there is some interaction between microfilaments and intermediate filaments in the apical region of these cells.  相似文献   

12.
Cytokinesis involves the concerted efforts of the microtubule and actin cytoskeletons as well as vesicle trafficking and membrane remodeling to form the cleavage furrow and complete daughter cell separation. The exact mechanisms that support membrane remodeling during cytokinesis remain largely undefined. In this study, we report that the large GTPase dynamin, a protein involved in membrane tubulation and vesiculation, is essential for successful cytokinesis. Using biochemical and morphological methods, we demonstrate that dynamin localizes to the spindle midzone and the subsequent intercellular bridge in mammalian cells and is also enriched in spindle midbody extracts. In Caenorhabditis elegans, dynamin localized to newly formed cleavage furrow membranes and accumulated at the midbody of dividing embryos in a manner similar to dynamin localization in mammalian cells. Further, dynamin function appears necessary for cytokinesis, as C. elegans embryos from a dyn-1 ts strain, as well as dynamin RNAi-treated embryos, showed a marked defect in the late stages of cytokinesis. These findings indicate that, during mitosis, conventional dynamin is recruited to the spindle midzone and the subsequent intercellular bridge, where it plays an essential role in the final separation of dividing cells.  相似文献   

13.
We have treated fertilized and KCl-activated eggs of Chaetopterus pergamentaceus with microfilament and microtubule inhibitors to test the relationship of these cytoskeletal components to cytoplasmic localization. Low doses of cytochalasin B inhibited cleavage in fertilized eggs. Such embryos underwent differentiation without cleavage, a process characterized by relocalization of the yolky endoplassm to the center of the uncleaved egg and by the formation of cilia. Similar treatment of KCl-activated eggs inhibited ciliation, but not endoplasmic relocalization. Reversible inhibition of the first cleavage resulted in equal cleavage and differentiation of a larva lacking an apical organ. Inhibition of the first two cleavages resulted in differentiation without cleavage. At all concentrations high enough to block mitosis, colchicine prevented ciliation and endoplasmic relocalization. Thus microtubule organization, but not microfilament organization, is required for ooplasmic reorganization and differentiation without cleavage.  相似文献   

14.
Glial fibrillary acidic protein (GFAP) is a component of glial filaments specific to astroglia. We now report the spatial and temporal distributions of four phosphorylated sites in the GFAP molecule during mitosis of astroglial cells, determined by antibodies which can distinguish phosphorylated epitopes from non-phosphorylated-epitopes. Immunofluorescence microscopy showed that the Ser8 residues in the entire cytoplasmic glial filament system are initially phosphorylated when the cells enter mitosis. In cytokinesis, the phosphoSer8 residues become dephosphorylated, whereas Thr7, Ser13 and Ser34 in glial filaments at the cleavage furrow become the preferred sites of phosphorylation. The cdc2 kinase purified from mitotic cells can phosphorylate GFAP at Ser8 but not at Thr7, Ser13 or Ser34, in vitro. These results suggest that cdc2 kinase acts as a glial filament kinase only at the G2-M phase transition while other glial filament kinases are probably activated at the cleavage furrow before final separation of the daughter cells.  相似文献   

15.
Summary Cytokinesis consists of a contractile phase followed by sealing of the connecting midbody to form two separated cells. To determine how soon the midbody sealed after cleavage furrow contraction, the fluorescent dye Lucifer Yellow CH(457.3 M.W.) was microinjected into cells at various intervals after cleavage had begun. Mitotic PtK2 cells were recorded with video-microscopy so that daughter cells in the epithelial sheet could be identified for several hours after cell division. One daughter cell of each pair followed was microinjected to determine whether the dye diffused into the other daughter cell. For intervals up to four hours after the beginning of cytokinesis, diffusion took place between daughter cells. After this time the dye did not spread between daughter cells. In sea urchin blastomeres of the first, second and third divisions, Lucifer Yellow passed between daughter blastomeres only during the first 15 min after cytokinesis. If one cell of a two-cell, four-cell or eight-cell embryo was microinjected more than 15 min after the last cleavage, the dye remained in the injected cell and was distributed to all progeny of that cell, resulting in blastulae that were either one-half, one-quarter or one-eighth fluorescent, respectively. Thus, although cleavage furrow contraction takes approximately the same amount of time in sea urchin blastomeres and PtK2 cells, the time of midbody sealing differs dramatically in the two cell types. Our results also indicate the importance of knowing the mitotic history of cells when injecting dyes into interphase cells for the purpose of detecting gap junctions.  相似文献   

16.
Chinese hamster ovary cells can be forced to enter mitosis without prior DNA replication by treatment with hydroxyurea and caffeine. Cells treated in this way assemble a spindle that functions normally except that it does not accomplish anaphase spindle elongation (anaphase B). The chromatin detaches from the unreplicated kinetochores, which fragment, but establish microtubule attachments and migrate to the metaphase plate. Partitioning of the kinetochore fragments ensues on the normal schedule. Typical midbodies and cleavage furrows are established and daughter cells of equal size are produced. These results imply that intact chromosomes are not necessary for correct cleavage furrow placement but that kinetochores might be. Further, it is clear that cleavage furrow placement does not depend on anaphase spindle elongation.  相似文献   

17.
Some effects of gravity on early morphogenesis are correlated with microtubule locations within cells. During first cleavage in Ilyanassa obsoleta embryos, a transitory polar lobe constriction forms and then relaxes, allowing the polar lobe to merge with one daughter cell. If the polar lobe is equally divided or removed, morphogenesis is severely disrupted. To examine microtuble locations during early Ilyanassa development, eggs were fixed and stained for polymerized alpha-tubulin during first cleavage. The mitotic apparatus assembles at the animal pole. The cleavage furrow forms between the asters, constricting to a stabilized intercellular bridge encircling midbody-bound microtubules, whereas the polar lobe constriction forms below and parallel to the spindle, constricting to a transitory intercellular bridge encircling no detectable microtubules. At metaphase an alpha-tubulin epitope is distributed throughout the spindle, whereas a beta-tubulin epitope is present predominantly in the asters. Incubation in hexylene glycol, a drug that increases microtubule polymerization, during mitosis causes the polar lobe constriction to tighten around polymerized alpha-tubulin and remain stably constricted. If hexylene glycol is removed, alpha-tubulin staining disappears from the polar lobe constriction, which relaxes, whereas microtubules remain in the cleavage furrow, which remains constricted. These observations suggest that asymmetric distribution of microtubules affects early Ilyanassa cleavage patterns, and that continued presence of microtubules extending through an intercellular bridge is important for stabilization of the bridge constriction prior to completion of cytokinesis. These data provide the basis for further analysis of the role of microtubules in possible microgravity disruptions of Ilyanassa development.  相似文献   

18.
The distribution of actin and the microfilament-associated proteins myosin and tropomyosin was studied in mitotic PtK2 cells. Using fluorescent heavy meromyosin and two different antibodies against actin we have found no evidence for increased accumulations of actin in the mitotic spindle but have found increased levels of actin in the cleavage furrow and the contractile ring. Short, thin microfilament pieces remain detectable in the cytoplasm throughout mitosis. Purified antibodies against myosin and tropomyosin also revealed no increased levels of these proteins in the spindle region, although both proteins were found in the contractile ring and areas of the cytoplasm close to the intercellular bridge. These data are in agreement with functional and ultrastructural studies involving a role for actin and microfilament-related proteins in cytokinesis. They do not support models in which microfilament-related proteins are assumed to be a major constituent of the mitotic spindle.  相似文献   

19.
During Drosophila development, neuroblasts divide to generate progeny with two different fates. One daughter cell self-renews to maintain the neuroblast pool, whereas the other differentiates to populate the central nervous system. The difference in fate arises from the asymmetric distribution of proteins that specify either self-renewal or differentiation, which is brought about by their polarization into separate apical and basal cortical domains during mitosis. Neuroblast symmetry breaking is regulated by numerous proteins, many of which have only recently been discovered. The atypical protein kinase C (aPKC) is a broad regulator of polarity that localizes to the neuroblast apical cortical region and directs the polarization of the basal domain. Recent work suggests that polarity can be explained in large part by the mechanisms that restrict aPKC activity to the apical domain and those that couple asymmetric aPKC activity to the polarization of downstream factors. Polarized aPKC activity is created by a network of regulatory molecules, including Bazooka/Par-3, Cdc42, and the tumor suppressor Lgl, which represses basal recruitment. Direct phosphorylation by aPKC leads to cortical release of basal domain factors, preventing them from occupying the apical domain. In this framework, neuroblast polarity arises from a complex system that orchestrates robust aPKC polarity, which in turn polarizes substrates by coupling phosphorylation to cortical release.Cells use polarity for remarkably diverse functions. In this article, I discuss a polarity that is harnessed to generate daughter cells with different fates. Using polarity to divide asymmetrically addresses several challenges that complex organisms face. The diversification of cell types and tissues that occurs during the development of complex organisms is one such challenge. Drosophila neuroblasts, the subject of this article, undergo repeated symmetry breaking asymmetric cell divisions (ACDs) to populate the central nervous system. In a similar manner in adult organisms, ACDs are important for adult homeostasis, replenishing cells that are turned over during the course of normal physiology (Betschinger and Knoblich 2004).A fundamental aspect of ACD is the production of daughter cells containing distinct fate determinants. To segregate fate determinants, the cell becomes polarized to form mutually exclusive cortical domains, each with a set of fate determinants appropriate for one of the two daughter cells. The cleavage furrow forms at the interface of the two domains, partitioning the fate determinants into the two daughter cells where they function to either self-renew (to keep the progenitor population) or to differentiate (e.g., by changing the pattern of gene expression). One of the unique features of the symmetry breaking that occurs during ACD, at least as implemented by the neuroblast, is that it is remarkably dynamic, developing early in mitosis and depolarizing following the completion of cytokinesis.Since the discovery of the first polarized components, neuroblasts have been an excellent model system for investigating the mechanisms of cell polarization and have been extensively analyzed. Although aspects of neuroblast polarity remain unclear, a core framework for how polarity is created and maintained is emerging. In this article, I focus on neuroblast polarity as centered around the activity of atypical protein kinase C, which has emerged as a key regulator of the process. In this framework, neuroblast polarity can be explained by events that polarize aPKC and those that couple aPKC activity to the polarization of fate determinants.  相似文献   

20.
Using high-resolution timelapse microscopy, we have followed individual phagocytized fibres through the later stages of division in MeT-5A human mesothelial cells and LLC-MK(2)monkey epithelial cells. The fibres used were crocidolite and chrysotile asbestos, fibrous glass (MMVF), and refractory ceramic fibres (RCF). Long fibres (15-80 microm) trapped within the cleavage furrow can partially or completely block cytokinesis. Cells proceed in one of three ways: (1) eventual completion of cytokinesis; (2) incomplete cytokinesis, resulting in two cells joined by a fibre-containing intercellular channel; or (3) failure of cytokinesis, resulting in a binucleate or trinucleate cell. Two factors associated with fibre-induced bi/trinucleation are: (1) an initial association between the fibre and the forming daughter nuclei, which is sometimes lost over time, and (2) disintegration of the midbody. The studies suggest that delay of cytokinesis by interzonal fibres can result in bi/trinucleation through the loss of midbody/intercellular bridge proteins that are required for completion of cytokinesis.  相似文献   

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