Mitotic spindle assembly by two different pathways in vitro.
Open Access
- 1 March 1991
- journal article
- Published by Rockefeller University Press in The Journal of cell biology
- Vol. 112 (5) , 925-940
- https://doi.org/10.1083/jcb.112.5.925
Abstract
We have used Xenopus egg extracts to study spindle morphogenesis in a cell-free system and have identified two pathways of spindle assembly in vitro using methods of fluorescent analogue cytochemistry. When demembranated sperm nuclei are added to egg extracts arrested in a mitotic state, individual nuclei direct the assembly of polarized microtubule arrays, which we term half-spindles; half-spindles then fuse pairwise to form bipolar spindles. In contrast, when sperm nuclei are added to extracts that are induced to enter interphase and arrested in the following mitosis, a single sperm nucleus can direct the assembly of a complete spindle. We find that microtubule arrays in vitro are strongly biased towards chromatin, but this does not depend on specific kinetochore-microtubule interactions. Indeed, although we have identified morphological and probably functional kinetochores in spindles assembled in vitro, kinetochores appear not to play an obligate role in the establishment of stable, bipolar microtubule arrays in either assembly pathway. Features of the two pathways suggest that spindle assembly involves a hierarchy of selective microtubule stabilization, involving both chromatin-microtubule interactions and antiparallel microtubule-microtubule interactions, and that fundamental molecular interactions are probably the same in both pathways. This in vitro reconstitution system should be useful for identifying the molecules regulating the generation of asymmetric microtubule arrays and for understanding spindle morphogenesis in general.Keywords
This publication has 63 references indexed in Scilit:
- Real-time visualization of cell cycle-dependent changes in microtubule dynamics in cytoplasmic extractsCell, 1990
- Calcium and calmodulin-dependent phosphorylation of a 62 kd protein induces microtubule depolymerization in sea urchin mitotic apparatusesCell, 1988
- Reactivation of spindle elongation in vitro is correlated with the phosphorylation of a 205 kd spindle-associated proteinCell, 1987
- Micromanipulated bivalents can trigger mini-spindle formation in Drosophila melanogaster spermatocyte cytoplasm.The Journal of cell biology, 1986
- Respective roles of centrosomes and chromatin in the conversion of microtubule arrays from interphase to metaphase.The Journal of cell biology, 1984
- Centrosomes and mitotic polesExperimental Cell Research, 1984
- The germinal vesicle material required for sperm pronuclear formation is located in the soluble fraction of egg cytoplasmExperimental Cell Research, 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
- Achromosomal cleavage of fertilized starfish eggs in the presence of aphidicolinDevelopmental Biology, 1981
- Calcium-labile mitotic spindles isolated from sea urchin eggs (Lytechinus variegatus).The Journal of cell biology, 1980