Abstract: | Using time-lapse microscopy, the changes in L-929 cells shape were analyzed during a cell cycle. During this time the cells were established to pass through three spreading stages. The highest rate of the cell spreading was observed during the first 1.5 h of mitosis. In this period, the cell area increases approximately 3-3.5 times following sigmoid dependence. After a short plateau the augmentation of the cell area starts also as a sigmoid dependence. This period is longer (up to 6 h after the beginning of cell division) with an additional 1.5-fold augmentation of the cells size. Next, the augmentation of the cells area goes linearly up to the beginning of the following mitosis. After the mother L-929 cell division, the daughter cells remained to be bridged together in the fission furrow site almost in 100% cases. The structure known as an intercellular bridge is related to a late telophase. In this connected state the L-cells are spreading and migrating up to 2.13 +/- 0.06 h where upon they are separated. Transition of the daughter cells from a round shape to the spread one occurring with the simultaneous maintenance of the intercellular bridge during a strictly determined time allows us to consider this phenomenon as independent and not relating to mitosis. We suggest naming this junction between the daughter cells as the "posttelophase intercellular bridge". |