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1.
Orientation of cell division is a vital aspect of tissue morphogenesis and growth. Asymmetric divisions generate cell fate diversity and epithelial stratification, whereas symmetric divisions contribute to tissue growth, spreading, and elongation. Here, we describe a mechanism for positioning the spindle in symmetric cell divisions of an embryonic epithelium. We show that during the early stages of epiboly, spindles in the epithelium display dynamic behavior within the plane of the epithelium but are kept firmly within this plane to give a symmetric division. This dynamic stability relies on balancing counteracting forces: an apically directed force exerted by F-actin/myosin-2 via active cortical flow and a basally directed force mediated by microtubules and myosin-10. When both forces are disrupted, spindle orientation deviates from the epithelial plane, and epithelial surface is reduced. We propose that this dynamic mechanism maintains symmetric divisions while allowing the quick adjustment of division plane to facilitate even tissue spreading.  相似文献   

2.
In budding yeast, the mitotic spindle is positioned in the neck between the mother and the bud so that both cells inherit one nucleus. The movement of the mitotic spindle into the neck can be divided into two phases: (1) Kip3p-dependent movement of the nucleus to the neck and alignment of the short spindle, followed by (2) dynein-dependent movement of the spindle into the neck and oscillation of the elongating spindle within the neck. Actin has been hypothesized to be involved in all these movements. To test this hypothesis, we disrupted the actin cytoskeleton with the use of mutations and latrunculin A (latrunculin). We assayed nuclear segregation in synchronized cell populations and observed spindle movements in individual living cells. In synchronized cell populations, no actin cytoskeletal mutant segregated nuclei as poorly as cells lacking dynein function. Furthermore, nuclei segregated efficiently in latrunculin-treated cells. Individual living cell analysis revealed that the preanaphase spindle was mispositioned and misaligned in latrunculin-treated cells and that astral microtubules were misoriented, confirming a role for filamentous actin in the early, Kip3p-dependent phase of spindle positioning. Surprisingly, mispositioned and misaligned mitotic spindles moved into the neck in the absence of filamentous actin, albeit less efficiently. Finally, dynein-dependent sliding of astral microtubules along the cortex and oscillation of the elongating mitotic spindle in the neck occurred in the absence of filamentous actin.  相似文献   

3.
The cell division axis determines the position of daughter cells and is therefore critical for cell fate. During vertebrate neurogenesis, most cell divisions take place within the plane of the neuroepithelium (Das, T., Payer, B., Cayouette, M., and Harris, W.A. (2003). In vivo time-lapse imaging of cell divisions during neurogenesis in the developing zebrafish retina. Neuron 37, 597-609. Haydar, T.F., Ang, E., Jr., and Rakic, P. (2003). Mitotic spindle rotation and mode of cell division in the developing telencephalon. Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A 100, 2890-5. Kosodo, Y., Roper, K., Haubensak, W., Marzesco, A. M., Corbeil, D., and Huttner, W. B. (2004). Asymmetric distribution of the apical plasma membrane during neurogenic divisions of mammalian neuroepithelial cells. EMBO J. 23, 2314-24). The cellular constraints responsible for this preferential orientation are poorly understood. Combining electroporation and time-lapse confocal imaging of chick neural progenitors, the events responsible for positioning the mitotic spindle and their dependence on RhoA were investigated. The results indicate that the spindle forms with a random orientation. However, the final orientation of cell divisions is dependent on two main factors: (i) an early rotation of the spindle that aligns it within the plane of the neuroepithelium, and (ii) a specific limitation of spindle oscillations, despite free rotation around the apico-basal axis. Expressing a dominant-negative RhoA leads to apico-basal cell divisions after a correct initial rotation of the spindle. Our data reveal a specific role for RhoA in the maintenance of spindle orientation, prior to anaphase. Thus, RhoA could be a key player potentially regulated by the neurogenic program or by the neural stem cell environment to control the balance between planar and apico-basal divisions, during normal or pathological development.  相似文献   

4.
Female meiosis in higher organisms consists of highly asymmetric divisions, which retain most maternal stores in the oocyte for embryo development. Asymmetric partitioning of the cytoplasm results from the spindle's "off-center" positioning, which, in mouse oocytes, depends mainly on actin filaments [1, 2]. This is a unique situation compared to most systems, in which spindle positioning requires interactions between astral microtubules and cortical actin filaments [3]. Formin 2, a straight-actin-filament nucleator, is required for the first meiotic spindle migration to the cortex and cytokinesis in mouse oocytes [4, 5]. Although the requirement for actin filaments in the control of spindle positioning is well established in this model, no one has been able to detect them in the cytoplasm [6]. Through the expression of an F-actin-specific probe and live confocal microscopy, we show the presence of a cytoplasmic actin meshwork, organized by Formin 2, that controls spindle migration. In late meiosis I, these filaments organize into a spindle-like F-actin structure, which is connected to the cortex. At anaphase, global reorganization of this meshwork allows polar-body extrusion. In addition, using actin-YFP, our FRAP analysis confirms the presence of a highly dynamic cytoplasmic actin meshwork that is tightly regulated in time and space.  相似文献   

5.
In animal cells, the mitotic spindle is aligned perpendicular to the axis of cell division. This ensures that sister chromatids are separated to opposite sides of the cytokinetic actomyosin ring (CAR). We show that, in fission yeast, spindle rotation is dependent on the interaction of astral microtubules with the cortical actin cytoskeleton. Interaction initially occurs with a region surrounding the nucleus, which we term the astral microtubule interaction zone (AMIZ). Simultaneous contact of astral microtubules from both poles with the AMIZ directs spindle rotation and this requires both actin and two type V myosins, Myo51 and Myo52. Astral microtubules from one pole only then contact the CAR, which is located at the centre of the AMIZ. We demonstrate that the anillin homologue Mid1, which dictates correct placement of the CAR, is necessary to stabilise the mitotic spindle perpendicular to the axis of cell division. Finally, we show that the position of the mitotic spindle is monitored by a checkpoint that regulates the timing of sister chromatid separation.  相似文献   

6.
For many years after the discovery of actin filaments and microtubules, it was widely assumed that their polymerization, organization, and functions were largely distinct. However, in recent years it has become increasingly apparent that coordinated interactions between microtubules and filamentous actin are involved in many polarized processes, including cell shape, mitotic spindle orientation, motility, growth cone guidance, and wound healing. In the past few years, significant strides have been made in unraveling the intricacies that govern these intertwined cytoskeletal rearrangements.  相似文献   

7.
The mature mammalian oocyte is highly polarized because asymmetrical spindle migration to the oocyte cortex ensures extrusion of small polar bodies in the two meiotic divisions, essential for generation of the large egg. Actin filaments, myosin motors, and formin-2, but not microtubules, are required for spindle migration. Here, we show that Cdc42, a key regulator of cytoskeleton and cell polarity in other systems , is essential for meiotic maturation and oocyte asymmetry. Disrupting CDC42 function by ectopic expression of its GTPase-defective mutants causes both halves of the first meiotic spindle to extend symmetrically toward opposing cortical regions and prevents an asymmetrical division. The elongated spindle has numerous astral-like microtubules, and aPKCzeta, normally associated with the spindle poles, is distributed along its length. Dynactin is displaced from kinetochores, consistently homologous chromosomes do not segregate, and polar body extrusion is prevented. Perturbing the function of aPKCzeta also causes elongation of the meiotic spindle but still permits spindle migration and polar body extrusion. Thus, at least two pathways appear to be downstream of CDC42: one affecting the actin cytoskeleton and required for migration of the meiotic spindle, and a second affecting the spindle microtubules in which aPKCzeta plays a role.  相似文献   

8.
R D Vale 《Cell》1991,64(4):827-839
Eukaryotic cells disassemble and reorganize their cytoskeleton during the cell cycle and in response to environmental cues. Disassembly of the actin cytoskeleton is aided by proteins that sever filamentous actin, but microtubule-severing proteins thus far have not been identified. Here, we describe an activity in extracts from Xenopus eggs that rapidly severs stable microtubules along their length. Severing is elicited by a protein(s) whose activity is greatly stimulated during mitosis through a posttranslational mechanism. The microtubule-severing factor may be involved in disassembling the interphase microtubule network prior to constructing the mitotic spindle.  相似文献   

9.
The interaction of astral microtubules with cortical actin networks is essential for the correct orientation of the mitotic spindle; however, little is known about how the cortical actin organization is regulated during mitosis. LIM kinase-1 (LIMK1) regulates actin dynamics by phosphorylating and inactivating cofilin, an actin-depolymerizing protein. LIMK1 activity increases during mitosis. Here we show that mitotic LIMK1 activation is critical for accurate spindle orientation in mammalian cells. Knockdown of LIMK1 suppressed a mitosis-specific increase in cofilin phosphorylation and caused unusual cofilin localization in the cell cortex in metaphase, instability of cortical actin organization and astral microtubules, irregular rotation and misorientation of the spindle, and a delay in anaphase onset. Similar results were obtained by treating the cells with a LIMK1 in hibitor peptide or latrunculin A or by overexpressing a non-phosphorylatable cofilin(S3A) mutant. Furthermore, localization of LGN (a protein containing the repetitive Leu-Gly-Asn tripeptide motifs), an important regulator of spindle orientation, in the crescent-shaped cortical regions was perturbed in LIMK1 knockdown cells. Our results suggest that LIMK1-mediated cofilin phosphorylation is required for accurate spindle orientation by stabilizing cortical actin networks during mitosis.  相似文献   

10.
Asymmetric stem cell division is thought to require precise orientation of the mitotic spindle. However, a recent study in Cell (Yingling et al., 2008) analyzes the role of LIS1 in the developing mouse brain and shows that spindle orientation is more important during early, symmetric progenitor cell divisions than for later asymmetric divisions.  相似文献   

11.
The process of oriented divisions of polarised cells is a recurrent mechanism of cell fate diversification in development. It is commonly assumed that a specialised mechanism of spindle alignment into the axis of polarity is a prerequisite for such systems to generate cell fate diversity. Oriented divisions also take place in the frog blastula, where orientation of the spindle into the apicobasal axis of polarised blastomeres generates inner and outer cells with different fates. Here, we show that, in this system, the spindle orients according to the shape of the cells, a mechanism often thought to be a default. We show that in the embryo, fatedifferentiative, perpendicular divisions correlate with a perpendicular long axis and a small apical surface, but the long axis rather then the size of the apical domain defines the division orientation. Mitotic spindles in rounded, yet polarised, isolated Xenopus blastula cells orient randomly, but align into an experimentally introduced long axis when cells are deformed early in the cell cycle. Unlike other systems of oriented divisions, the spindle aligns at prophase, rotation behaviour is rare and restricted to small angle adjustments. Disruption of astral microtubules leads to misalignment of the spindle. These results show that a mechanism of spindle orientation that depends on cell shape rather than cortical polarity can nevertheless generate cell fate diversity from a population of polarised cells.  相似文献   

12.
In animal and yeast cells, the mitotic spindle is aligned perpendicularly to the axis of cell division. This ensures that sister chromatids are separated to opposite sides of the cytokinetic actomyosin ring. In fission yeast, spindle rotation is dependent upon the interaction of astral microtubules with the cortical actin cytoskeleton. In this article, we show that addition of Latrunculin A, which prevents spindle rotation, delays the separation of sister chromatids and anaphase promoting complex-mediated destruction of spindle-associated Securin and Cyclin B. Moreover, we find that whereas sister kinetochore pairs normally congress to the spindle midzone before anaphase onset, this congression is disrupted when astral microtubule contact with the actin cytoskeleton is disturbed. By analyzing the timing of kinetochore separation, we find that this anaphase delay requires the Bub3, Mad3, and Bub1 but not the Mad1 or Mad2 spindle assembly checkpoint proteins. In agreement with this, we find that Bub1 remains associated with kinetochores when spindles are mispositioned. These data indicate that, in fission yeast, astral microtubule contact with the medial cell cortex is monitored by a subset of spindle assembly checkpoint proteins. We propose that this checkpoint ensures spindles are properly oriented before anaphase takes place.  相似文献   

13.
Summary The reorganization of the actin and microtubule (MT) cytoskeleton was immunocytochemically visualized by confocal laser scanning microscopy throughout the photomorphogenetic differentiation of tip-growing characean protonemata into multicellular green thalli. After irradiating dark-grown protonemata with blue or white light, decreasing rates of gravitropic tip-growth were accompanied by a series of events leading to the first cell division: the nucleus migrated towards the tip; MTs and plastids invaded the apical cytoplasm; the polar zonation of cytoplasmic organelles and the prominent actin patch at the cell tip disappeared and the tip-focused actin microfilaments (MFs) were reorganized into a homogeneous network. During prometaphase and metaphase, extranuclear spindle microtubules formed between the two spindle poles. Cytoplasmic MTs associated with the apical spindle pole decreased in number but did not disappear completely during mitosis. The basal cortical MTs represent a discrete MT population that is independent from the basal spindle poles and did not redistribute during mitosis and cytokinesis. Preprophase MT bands were never detected but cytokinesis was characterized by higher-plant-like phragmoplast MT arrays. Cytoplasmic actin MFs persisted as a dense network in the apical cytoplasm throughout the first cell division. They were not found in close contact with spindle MTs, but actin MFs were clearly coaligned along the MTs of the early phragmoplast. The later belt-like phragmoplast was completely depleted of MFs close to the time of cell plate fusion except for a few actin MF bundles that extended to the margin of the growing cell plate. The cell plate itself and young anticlinal cell walls showed strong actin immunofluorescence. After several anticlinal cell divisions, basal cells of the multicellular protonema produced nodal cell complexes by multiple periclinal divisions. The apical-dome cell of the new shoot which originated from a nodal cell becomes the meristem initial that regularly divides to produce a segment cell. The segment cell subsequently divides to produce a single file of alternating internodal cells and multicellular nodes which together form the complexly organized characean thallus. The actin and MT distribution of nodal cells resembles that of higherplant meristem cells, whereas the internodal cells exhibit a highly specialized cortical system of MTs and streaming-generating actin bundles, typical of highly vacuolated plant cells. The transformation from the asymmetric mitotic spindle of the polarized tip-growing protonema cell to the symmetric, higher-plant-like spindle of nodal thallus cells recapitulates the evolutionary steps from the more primitive organisms to higher plants.Abbreviations FITC fluorescein isothiocyanate - MF microfilament - MT microtubule - MSB microtubule-stabilizing buffer - PBS phosphate-buffered saline  相似文献   

14.
Summary Changes in the actin filament and microtubule cytoskeleton were examined during heat- and cytochalasin D-induced embryogenesis in microspores ofBrassica napus cv. Topas by rhodamine phalloidin and immunofluorescence labelling respectively. The nucleus was displaced from its peripheral to a more central position in the cell, and perinuclear actin microfilaments and microtubules extended onto the cytoplasm. Heat treatment induced the formation of a preprophase band of microtubules in microspores; preprophase bands are not associated with the first pollen mitosis. Actin filament association with the preprophase band was not observed. The orientation and position of the mitotic spindle were altered, and it was surrounded with randomly oriented microfilaments. The phragmoplast contained microfilaments and microtubules, as in pollen mitosis I, but it assumed a more central position. Cytoskeletal reorganisation also occurred in microspores subjected to a short cytochalasin D treatment, in the absence of a heat treatment. Cytochalasin D treatment of microspores resulted in dislocated mitotic spindles, disrupted phragmoplasts, and symmetric divisions and led to embryogenesis, confirming that a normal actin cytoskeleton has a role in preventing the induction of embryogenesis.Abbreviations CD cytochalasin D - MF actin microfilament - MT microtubule - PPB preprophase band  相似文献   

15.
The centrosome is the dominant microtubule-organizing center in animal cells. At the onset of mitosis, each cell normally has two centrosomes that lie on opposite sides of the nucleus. Centrosomes nucleate the growth of microtubules and orchestrate the efficient assembly of the mitotic spindle. Recent studies in vivo and in vitro have shown that the spindle can form even in the absence of centrosomes and demonstrate that individual cells can divide without this organelle. However, since centrosomes are involved in multiple processes in vivo, including polarized cell divisions, which are an essential developmental mechanism for producing differentiated cell types, it remains to be shown whether or not a complete organism can develop without centrosomes. Here we show that in Drosophila a centrosomin (cnn) null mutant, which fails to assemble fully functional mitotic centrosomes and has few or no detectable astral microtubules, can develop into an adult fly. These results challenge long-held assumptions that the centrosome and the astral microtubules emanating from it are essential for development and are required specifically for spindle orientation during asymmetric cell divisions.  相似文献   

16.
In mammals, female meiosis consists of two asymmetric cell divisions, which generate a large haploid oocyte and two small polar bodies. Asymmetric partitioning of the cytoplasm results from migration of the meiotic spindle toward the cortex and requires actin filaments. However, the subcellular localization and the role of the existing two cytoplasmic actin (CYA) isoforms, beta and gamma, have not been characterized. We show that beta- and gamma-CYA are differentially distributed in the maturing oocyte from late metaphase I as well as in preimplantation embryos. Gamma-CYA is preferentially enriched in oocyte cortices and is absent from all cell-cell contact areas from metaphase II until the blastocyst stage. Beta-CYA is enriched in contractile structures, at cytokinesis, at cell-cell contacts, and around the forming blastocoel. Alteration of beta- or gamma-CYA function by isoform-specific antibody microinjection suggests that gamma-CYA holds a major and specific role in the establishment and/or maintenance of asymmetry in meiosis I and in the maintenance of overall cortical integrity. In contrast, beta- and gamma-CYA, together, appear to participate in the formation and the cortical anchorage of the second meiotic spindle in waiting for fertilization. Finally, differences in gamma-CYA expression are amongst the earliest markers of cell fate determination in development.  相似文献   

17.
The mitotic spindle checkpoint prevents the onset of anaphase and subsequent cell division until chromosomes are properly aligned on a bipolar spindle. Thus, it regulates the cell division cycle by keeping cells with defective spindles from leaving mitosis. The budding uninhibited by benzimidazole (Bub1) is a key component of mitotic checkpoint. Bub1 encodes a serine/threonine kinase required for mitotic spindle checkpoint function. The regulation of cell morphology in eukaryotic cells is a complex process involving major components of the cytoskeleton including actin microfilaments, microtubules, and intermediate filaments (IFs). Here we show that Bub1 directly affects the structural integrity of IFs. Constitutive expression of Bub1 caused disappearance of filamentous vimentin, a type III IF, and consequently changed cell morphology. Expression of kinase domain—deleted Bub1 induced neither morphological change nor disappearance of vimentin. These observations suggest that Bub1 not only regulates the cell cycle, but also may be involved in the cytoskeletal control in interphase cells.  相似文献   

18.
The spindle apparatus ofCoprinus micaceus begins to develop from the diglobular polar body outside the nucleus. During both meiotic divisions it operates inside the nuclear envelope and consists of two amorphous poles, a central bundle of interpolar microtubules, and chromosomal microtubules. A metaphase plate cannot exist because the interpolar strand of fibers is persistent throughout the division process. Within the spindle axis more than 100 microtubules can be estimated. They are encircled by a ring of chromatic structures. During the telophase the former spindle pole is evaginated from the nuclear envelope and contacts the plasmalemma near the cell wall.  相似文献   

19.
Cytokinesis, the physical division of one cell into two, is thought to be fundamentally similar in most animal cell divisions and driven by the constriction of a contractile ring positioned and controlled solely by the mitotic spindle. During asymmetric cell divisions, the core polarity machinery (partitioning defective [PAR] proteins) controls the unequal inheritance of key cell fate determinants. Here, we show that in asymmetrically dividing Caenorhabditis elegans embryos, the cortical PAR proteins (including the small guanosine triphosphatase CDC-42) have an active role in regulating recruitment of a critical component of the contractile ring, filamentous actin (F-actin). We found that the cortical PAR proteins are required for the retention of anillin and septin in the anterior pole, which are cytokinesis proteins that our genetic data suggest act as inhibitors of F-actin at the contractile ring. Collectively, our results suggest that the cortical PAR proteins coordinate the establishment of cell polarity with the physical process of cytokinesis during asymmetric cell division to ensure the fidelity of daughter cell formation.  相似文献   

20.
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   

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