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Nucleolus-like bodies in micronuclei of cultured Xenopus cells
Authors:Stephanie Gordon Phillips  David M Phillips
Institution:1. Department of Human Genetics and Development, College of Physicians and Surgeons, Columbia University, New York, NY 10032, USA;2. The Population Council, The Rockefeller University, New York, NY 10021, USA
Abstract:Two of the 36 chromosomes in Xenopus laevis are known to carry nucleolar organizer loci. Partitioning of the chromosomes of cultured, early-passage Xenopus cells among variable numbers of micronuclei could be induced by extended colcemid treatment. A large, obvious nucleolus occurred in a maximum of 4 micronuclei per colcemid-induced tetraploid cell. The large, deeply-stained nucleoli incorporated 3H]uridine and appeared by electron microscopy to have typical nucleolar morphology with fibrillar and granular areas disposed in nucleolonema. In situ hybridization to radioactive ribosomal RNA (rRNA) resulted in heavy labelling of nucleoli in no more than 4 micronuclei per cell. The other micronuclei generally contained small bodies (blobs) which stained for RNA and protein as well as with ammoniacal silver. In the electron microscope, these appeared as round, dense bodies resembling nucleoli segregated by actinomycin D treatment. Nucleoplasmic RNA synthesis occurred in all micronuclei regardless of whether they contained definitive nucleoli. These observations suggest that micronuclei which formed large, typical, RNA-synthesizing nucleoli contained nucleolar organizer chromosomes, while the other micronuclei, which contained nucleolus-like “blobs” probably lacked nucleolar organizer loci. It is possible that the nucleolus-like bodies may have been aggregates of previously synthesized nucleolar RNA and protein trapped in micronuclei after mitosis.
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