Experimental separation of pronuclei in fertilized sea urchin eggs: chromosomes do not organize a spindle in the absence of centrosomes.
Open Access
- 1 March 1985
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Rockefeller University Press in The Journal of cell biology
- Vol. 100 (3) , 897-903
- https://doi.org/10.1083/jcb.100.3.897
Abstract
We tested the ability of chromosomes in a mitotic cytoplasm to organize a bipolar spindle in the absence of centrosomes. Sea urchin eggs were treated with 5 X 10(-6) colcemid for 7-9 min before fertilization to block future microtubule assembly. Fertilization events were normal except that a sperm aster was not formed and the pronuclei remained up to 70 microns apart. After nuclear envelope breakdown, individual eggs were irradiated with 366-nm light to inactivate photochemically the colcemid. A functional haploid bipolar spindle was immediately assembled in association with the male chromosomes. In contrast to the male pronucleus, the female pronucleus in most of these eggs remained as a small nonbirefringent hyaline area throughout mitosis. High-voltage electron microscopy of serial semithick sections from individual eggs, previously followed in vivo, revealed that the female chromosomes were randomly distributed within the remnants of the nuclear envelope. No microtubules were found in these pronuclear areas even though the chromosomes were well-condensed and had prominent kinetochores with well-developed coronas. In the remaining eggs, a weakly birefringent monaster was assembled in the female pronuclear area. These observations demonstrate that chromosomes in a mitotic cytoplasm cannot organize a bipolar spindle in the absence of a spindle pole or even in the presence of a monaster. In fact, chromosomes do not even assemble kinetochore microtubules in the absence of a spindle pole, and kinetochore microtubules form only on kinetochores facing the pole when a monaster is present. This study also provides direct experimental proof for the longstanding paradigm that the sperm provides the centrosomes used in the development of the sea urchin zygote.Keywords
This publication has 26 references indexed in Scilit:
- Respective roles of centrosomes and chromatin in the conversion of microtubule arrays from interphase to metaphase.The Journal of cell biology, 1984
- Centrosome development in early mouse embryos as defined by an autoantibody against pericentriolar materialCell, 1983
- Control mechanisms of the cell cycle: role of the spatial arrangement of spindle components in the timing of mitotic eventsThe Journal of cell biology, 1983
- Mitosis in a cell with multiple centrioles.The Journal of cell biology, 1982
- Nucleated assembly of mitotic microtubules in living PTK2 cells after release from nocodazole treatmentCell Motility, 1981
- The diatom spindle in perspectiveCell, 1978
- The role of the centriolar region in animal cell mitosis. A laser microbeam study.The Journal of cell biology, 1977
- Experimental manipulation of the amount of tubulin available for assembly into the spindle of dividing sea urchin eggs.The Journal of cell biology, 1976
- NUCLEAR MEMBRANE FUSION IN FERTILIZED LYTECHINUS VARIEGATUS EGGSThe Journal of cell biology, 1973
- REPETITIVE PROCUREMENT OF MATURE GAMETES FROM INDIVIDUAL SEA STARS AND SEA URCHINSThe Journal of cell biology, 1973