780 research outputs found

    Lynne Cassimeris

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    Mitosis: Riding the Protofilament Curl

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    More than 50 years ago, microtubule depolymerization was proposed as the force responsible for chromosome movement. New studies measure the force produced by depolymerization and show that protein ring complexes can couple depolymerization to movement. These results have implications for anaphase chromosome motility and mitotic evolution

    Gene expression profiles in mouse embryo fibroblasts lacking stathmin, a microtubule regulatory protein, reveal changes in the expression of genes contributing to cell motility

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    <p>Abstract</p> <p>Background</p> <p>Stathmin (STMN1) protein functions to regulate assembly of the microtubule cytoskeleton by destabilizing microtubule polymers. Stathmin over-expression has been correlated with cancer stage progression, while stathmin depletion leads to death of some cancer cell lines in culture. In contrast, stathmin-null mice are viable with minor axonopathies and loss of innate fear response. Several stathmin binding partners, in addition to tubulin, have been shown to affect cell motility in culture. To expand our understanding of stathmin function in normal cells, we compared gene expression profiles, measured by microarray and qRT-PCR, of mouse embryo fibroblasts isolated from STMN1<sup>+/+ </sup>and STMN1<sup>-/- </sup>mice to determine the transcriptome level changes present in the genetic knock-out of stathmin.</p> <p>Results</p> <p>Microarray analysis of STMN1 loss at a fold change threshold of ≥ 2.0 revealed expression changes for 437 genes, of which 269 were up-regulated and 168 were down-regulated. Microarray data and qRT-PCR analysis of mRNA expression demonstrated changes in the message levels for STMN4, encoding RB3, a protein related to stathmin, and in alterations to many tubulin isotype mRNAs. KEGG Pathway analysis of the microarray data indicated changes to cell motility-related genes, and qRT-PCR plates specific for focal adhesion and ECM proteins generally confirmed the microarray data. Several microtubule assembly regulators and motors were also differentially regulated in STMN1<sup>-/- </sup>cells, but these changes should not compensate for loss of stathmin.</p> <p>Conclusion</p> <p>Approximately 50% of genes up or down regulated (at a fold change of ≥ 2) in STMN1<sup>-/- </sup>mouse embryo fibroblasts function broadly in cell adhesion and motility. These results support models indicating a role for stathmin in regulating cell locomotion, but also suggest that this functional activity may involve changes to the cohort of proteins expressed in the cell, rather than as a direct consequence of stathmin-dependent regulation of the microtubule cytoskeleton.</p

    Real-time observations of microtubule dynamic instability in living cells

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    Individual microtubule dynamics were observed in real time in primary cultures of newt lung epithelium using video-enhanced differential interference contrast microscopy and digital image processing. The linear filaments observed in cells corresponded to microtubules based on three criteria: (a) small particles translocated along them; (b) the majority of them disappeared after incubation in nocodazole; (c) and the distribution observed by differential interference contrast correlated with anti-tubulin immunofluorescence staining of the same cell. Microtubules were most clearly observed at the leading edge of cells located at the periphery of the epithelial sheet. Microtubules exhibited dynamic instability behavior: individual microtubules existed in persistent phases of elongation or rapid shortening. Microtubules elongated at a velocity of 7.2 micron/min +/- 0.3 SEM (n = 42) and rapidly shortened at a velocity of 17.3 micron/min +/- 0.7 SEM (n = 35). The transitions between elongation and rapid shortening occurred abruptly and stochastically with a transition frequency of 0.014 s-1 for catastrophe and 0.044 s-1 for rescue. Approximately 70% of the rapidly shortening microtubules were rescued and resumed elongation within the 35 x 35 micron microscopic field. A portion of the microtubule population appeared differentially stable and did not display any measurable elongation or shortening during 10-15-min observations

    Chromosome Oscillations in Mitosis

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    Successful cell division requires a tight regulation of chromosome motion via the activity of molecular motors. Many of the key players at the origin of the forces generating the movement have been identified, but their spatial and temporal organization remains elusive. The protein complex Kinetochore on the chromosome associates with microtubules emanating from one of the spindle poles and drives the chromosome toward the pole. Chromokinesin motors on the chromosome arms also interact with microtubules, ejecting the chromosome away from the pole. In animal cells, a monooriented chromosome (associated to a single pole) periodically switches between phases of poleward and away from the pole movement[, a behavior tentatively explained so far by the existence of a complex switching mechanism within the kinetochore itself. Here we show that the interplay between the morphology of the mitotic spindle and the collective kinetics of chromokinesins can account for the highly non-linear periodic chromosome motion. Our analysis provides a natural explanation for the origin of chromosome directional instability and for the mechanism by which chromosomes feel their position in space.Comment: http://hogarth.pct.espci.fr/~pierre

    Kinetochore microtubules shorten by loss of subunits at the kinetochores of prometaphase chromosomes

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    The site of tubulin subunit dissociation was determined during poleward chromosome movement in prometaphase newt lung cell mitotic spindles using fluorescence photobleaching techniques and nocodazole-induced spindle shortening. Synchronous shortening of all kinetochore microtubules was produced by incubating cells in 17 microM nocodazole to block microtubule assembly. Under these conditions the spindle poles moved towards the metaphase plate at a rate of 3.6 +/- 0.4 microns min-1 (n = 3). On the basis of anti-tubulin immunofluorescent staining of cells fixed after incubation in nocodazole, we found that nonkinetochore microtubules rapidly disappeared and only kinetochore fibers were present after 60-90 s in nocodazole. To localize the site of tubulin subunit dissociation, a narrow bar pattern was photobleached across one half-spindle in prometaphase-metaphase cells previously microinjected with 5-(4,6-dichlorotriazin-2-yl) amino fluorescein (DTAF)-labeled tubulin. Immediately after photobleaching, cells were perfused with 17 microM nocodazole to produce shortening of kinetochore microtubules. Shortening was accompanied by a decrease in the distance between the bleach bar and the kinetochores. In contrast, there was little or no decrease in the distance between the bleach bar and the pole. Compared to their initial lengths, the average kinetochore to pole distance shortened by 18%, the bleach bar to kinetochore distance shortened by 28% and the average bleached bar to pole distance shortened by 1.6%. The data provide evidence that tubulin subunits dissociate from kinetochore microtubules at a site near the kinetochore during poleward chromosome movement. These results are consistent with models of poleward force generation for chromosome movement in which prometaphase-metaphase poleward force is generated in association with the kinetochore
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