Ultrastructure of mitosis and the spindle pole body cycle in the smut fungus, Tilletia foetida

1985 ◽  
Vol 63 (1) ◽  
pp. 86-96 ◽  
Author(s):  
James A. Hoffmann ◽  
Blair J. Goates

The interphase nucleus in secondary sporidia of Tilletia foetida consists of mostly diffuse chromatin, one or two nucleoli, and an area of heterochromatin located opposite an electron-dense, extranuclear spindle pole body (SPB). The interphase SPB is an oval- to bar-shaped, double-structured disc that has a crystallinelike substructure. During nuclear migration into nascent sporidia, SPBs and nucleoli are randomly oriented. At the onset of division, chromatin begins to condense and the SPB becomes located on a nuclear protuberance. Cytoplasmic microtubules terminate at the SPBs and multivesicular bodies surround the SPBs from the early stages of SPB division to early postdivision. SPB discs become spheroid and each develops a medial, dense layer. Then, a basal, dense layer develops and elongates as the SPBs separate and become positioned on opposite sides of the nuclear protuberance. The nuclear membrane opens opposite the SPB during SPB division. The nucleolus is extruded into a nuclear bleb and degenerates. SPBs migrate to opposing sides of the nucleus and become diffuse as a microtubular spindle develops between them. Some spindle microtubules terminate at dense chromatin patches that are contiguous with the major mass of chromatin surrounding the spindle. During late division stages, spindle microtubules often appear to be closely juxtaposed. Except for polar openings adjacent to the SPBs, the nuclear membrane is entire until late division when it degenerates in the midregion of the nucleus. During early postdivision, the SPB condenses into a small, dense sphere as the chromatin and heterochromatin opposite the SPB become diffuse. The SPB then elongates into a dense bar and SPB material increases, except at the midportion, reforming the double structure of interphase.

2019 ◽  
Author(s):  
Rowan S M Howell ◽  
Attila Csikász-Nagy ◽  
Peter H Thorpe

1AbstractThe yeast centrosome or Spindle Pole Body (SPB) is situated in the nuclear membrane, where it nucleates spindle microtubules and acts as a signalling hub. Previously, we used Synthetic Physical Interactions to map the regions of the cell that are sensitive to forced relocalization of proteins across the proteome [Berry et al., 2016]. Here, we expand on this work to show that the SPB, in particular, is sensitive to the relocalization of many proteins. This work inspired a new data analysis approach that indicates that relocalization screens may produce more growth defects than previously reported. A set of associations with the SPB result in elevated SPB number and since hyper-proliferation of centrosomes is a hallmark of cancer cells, these associations point the way for the use of yeast models in the study of spindle formation and chromosome segregation in cancer.


1980 ◽  
Vol 46 (1) ◽  
pp. 341-352
Author(s):  
R.A. Quinlan ◽  
C.I. Pogson ◽  
K. Gull

Methyl benzimidazol-2-yl-carbamate (MBC), at a concentration of 100 microM, has a pronounced effect on the growth of Saccharomyces cerevisiae, resulting in the accumulation of cells as large doublets. We have determined a specific execution point for the effect of MBC on the yeast cell cycle, and have shown that this execution point is between the cycle events of spindle pole body duplication and spindle pole body separation. An ultrastructural examination of the MBC-treated cells revealed the absence of cytoplasmic and spindle microtubules. MBC treatment also produced an altered spindle pole body morphology, causing the disappearance of the outer component. Nuclear size was also markedly increased in the MBC-induced doublet cells, although the septa were completely absent from these doublet cells. It is proposed that MBC inhibits microtubule polymerization, rather than causing the depolymerization of stable microtubules.


Nucleus ◽  
2014 ◽  
Vol 5 (4) ◽  
pp. 352-366 ◽  
Author(s):  
Greetchen Diaz-Muñoz ◽  
Terri A Harchar ◽  
Tsung-Po Lai ◽  
Kuo-Fang Shen ◽  
Anita K Hopper

1975 ◽  
Vol 53 (4) ◽  
pp. 403-414 ◽  
Author(s):  
H. C. Huang ◽  
R. D. Tinline ◽  
L. C. Fowke

An ultrastructural study of mitosis in a diploid strain of Cochliobolus sativus showed the event to be intranuclear. Two nucleoli occasionally were present in interphase nuclei. During division the spindle pole body peripheral to the nuclear envelope divided; spindle microtubules radiated into the nucleoplasm from the amorphous granular region abutting the nuclear envelope beneath the bodies; chromosomes condensed at prophase, approached the equatorial plane at metaphase, and moved asynchronously at anaphase; single microtubules appeared attached to kinetochore-like structures. At telophase, nuclei exhibited maximal elongation; fissures of the nuclear envelope appeared in the interzonal region; the nucleolus dispersed. The polar nuclear areas became new daughter nuclei with nucleoli.


2011 ◽  
Vol 30 (16) ◽  
pp. 3337-3352 ◽  
Author(s):  
Thomas Kupke ◽  
Leontina Di Cecco ◽  
Hans-Michael Müller ◽  
Annett Neuner ◽  
Frank Adolf ◽  
...  

2000 ◽  
Vol 11 (9) ◽  
pp. 2949-2959 ◽  
Author(s):  
Rita K. Miller ◽  
Soo-Chen Cheng ◽  
Mark D. Rose

In Saccharomyces cerevisiae, positioning of the mitotic spindle depends on the interaction of cytoplasmic microtubules with the cell cortex. In this process, cortical Kar9p in the bud acts as a link between the actin and microtubule cytoskeletons. To identify Kar9p-interacting proteins, a two-hybrid screen was conducted with the use of full-length Kar9p as bait, and three genes were identified: BIM1, STU2, andKAR9 itself. STU2 encodes a component of the spindle pole body. Bim1p is the yeast homologue of the human microtubule-binding protein EB1, which is a binding partner to the adenomatous polyposis coli protein involved in colon cancer. Eighty-nine amino acids within the third quarter of Bim1p was sufficient to confer interaction with Kar9p. The two-hybrid interactions were confirmed with the use of coimmunoprecipitation experiments. Genetic analysis placed Bim1p in the Kar9p pathway for nuclear migration. Bim1p was not required for Kar9p's cortical or spindle pole body localization. However, deletion ofBIM1 eliminated Kar9p localization along cytoplasmic microtubules. Furthermore, in the bim1 mutants, the cytoplasmic microtubules no longer intersected the cortical dot of Green Fluorescent Protein–Kar9p. These experiments demonstrate that the interaction of cytoplasmic microtubules with the Kar9p cortical attachment site requires the microtubule-binding protein Bim1p.


2005 ◽  
Vol 16 (1) ◽  
pp. 141-152 ◽  
Author(s):  
Tennessee J. Yoder ◽  
Mark A. McElwain ◽  
Susan E. Francis ◽  
Joy Bagley ◽  
Eric G.D. Muller ◽  
...  

The spindle pole body (SPB) is the microtubule organizing center in Saccharomyces cerevisiae. An essential task of the SPB is to ensure assembly of the bipolar spindle, which requires a proper balancing of forces on the microtubules and chromosomes. The SPB component Spc110p connects the ends of the spindle microtubules to the core of the SPB. We previously reported the isolation of a mutant allele spc110-226 that causes broken spindles and SPB disintegration 30 min after spindle formation. By live cell imaging of mutant cells with green fluorescent protein (GFP)-Tub1p or Spc97p-GFP, we show that spc110-226 mutant cells have early defects in spindle assembly. Short spindles form but do not advance to the 1.5-μm stage and frequently collapse. Kinetochores are not arranged properly in the mutant cells. In 70% of the cells, no stable biorientation occurs and all kinetochores are associated with only one SPB. Examination of the SPB remnants by electron microscopy tomography and fluorescence microscopy revealed that the Spc110-226p/calmodulin complex is stripped off of the central plaque of the SPB and coalesces to from a nucleating structure in the nucleoplasm. The central plaque components Spc42p and Spc29p remain behind in the nuclear envelope. The delamination is likely due to a perturbed interaction between Spc42p and Spc110-226p as detected by fluorescence resonance energy transfer analysis. We suggest that the force exerted on the SPB by biorientation of the chromosomes pulls the Spc110-226p out of the SPB; removal of force exerted by coherence of the sister chromatids reduced fragmentation fourfold. Removal of the forces exerted by the cytoplasmic microtubules had no effect on fragmentation. Our results provide insights into the relative contributions of the kinetochore and cytoplasmic microtubules to the forces involved in formation of a bipolar spindle.


1976 ◽  
Vol 22 (4) ◽  
pp. 507-522 ◽  
Author(s):  
N. H. Poon ◽  
A. W. Day

In unbudded cells of the anther smut fungus Ustilago violacea there is a dome-shaped spindle-pole body (SPB) consisting of a core 0.1 μm in diameter surrounded by a ribosome-free region 0.3–0.4 μm in diameter lying in a pocket of the nuclear membrane. After budding the nucleus moves towards the bud and begins to rotate rapidly. At about this stage the SPB divides into two parallel bars each about 0.1–0.15 μm in diameter and 0.3 μm long, separated by a distance of about 0.3 μm. Microtubules associated with the nuclear membrane but not with the SPB are present at the time of nuclear rotation. These microtubules disappear when rotation stops. Microtubules attached to the SPB are found during migration of the chromatinic portion of the nucleus into the bud cell. These microtubules disappear when migration stops and the nuclear membrane begins to break down. The twin SPB bars appear to move into the nucleus through a break in the membrane and begin to move apart forming a spindle about 1 μm long. Chromosomal microtubules (one per kinetochore) were found in several serial sections, and in addition there appeared to be several continuous microtubules present. The separation of the two chromatinic masses appeared to result from elongation of the continuous microtubules to about 3 μm long. Cytoplasmic microtubules and spindle microtubules were both found attached to the SPB as it elongated and one nucleus returned to the mother cell.The paper concludes with a discussion of the SPB as a multifunctional control center affecting nuclear migration, spindle formation, membrane breakdown and synthesis, karyogamy, conjugation, budding, chromosomal movement, replication, and disjunction.


2010 ◽  
Vol 21 (5) ◽  
pp. 753-766 ◽  
Author(s):  
Claudia Lang ◽  
Sandrine Grava ◽  
Mark Finlayson ◽  
Rhonda Trimble ◽  
Peter Philippsen ◽  
...  

In the multinucleate fungus Ashbya gossypii, cytoplasmic microtubules (cMTs) emerge from the spindle pole body outer plaque (OP) in perpendicular and tangential directions. To elucidate the role of cMTs in forward/backward movements (oscillations) and bypassing of nuclei, we constructed mutants potentially affecting cMT nucleation or stability. Hyphae lacking the OP components AgSpc72, AgNud1, AgCnm67, or the microtubule-stabilizing factor AgStu2 grew like wild- type but showed substantial alterations in the number, length, and/or nucleation sites of cMTs. These mutants differently influenced nuclear oscillation and bypassing. In Agspc72Δ, only long cMTs were observed, which emanate tangentially from reduced OPs; nuclei mainly moved with the cytoplasmic stream but some performed rapid bypassing. Agnud1Δ and Agcnm67Δ lack OPs; short and long cMTs emerged from the spindle pole body bridge/half-bridge structures, explaining nuclear oscillation and bypassing in these mutants. In Agstu2Δ only very short cMTs emanated from structurally intact OPs; all nuclei moved with the cytoplasmic stream. Therefore, long tangential cMTs promote nuclear bypassing and short cMTs are important for nuclear oscillation. Our electron microscopy ultrastructural analysis also indicated that assembly of the OP occurs in a stepwise manner, starting with AgCnm67, followed by AgNud1 and lastly AgSpc72.


1990 ◽  
Vol 111 (6) ◽  
pp. 2573-2586 ◽  
Author(s):  
V Berlin ◽  
C A Styles ◽  
G R Fink

BIK1 function is required for nuclear fusion, chromosome disjunction, and nuclear segregation during mitosis. The BIK1 protein colocalizes with tubulin to the spindle pole body and mitotic spindle. Synthetic lethality observed in double mutant strains containing a mutation in the BIK1 gene and in the gene for alpha- or beta-tubulin is consistent with a physical interaction between BIK1 and tubulin. Furthermore, over- or underexpression of BIK1 causes aberrant microtubule assembly and function, bik1 null mutants are viable but contain very short or undetectable cytoplasmic microtubules. Spindle formation often occurs strictly within the mother cell, probably accounting for the many multinucleate and anucleate bik1 cells. Elevated levels of chromosome loss in bik1 cells are indicative of defective spindle function. Nuclear fusion is blocked in bik1 x bik1 zygotes, which have truncated cytoplasmic microtubules. Cells overexpressing BIK1 initially have abnormally short or nonexistent spindle microtubules and long cytoplasmic microtubules. Subsequently, cells lose all microtubule structures, coincident with the arrest of division. Based on these results, we propose that BIK1 is required stoichiometrically for the formation or stabilization of microtubules during mitosis and for spindle pole body fusion during conjugation.


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