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1.
Cytoskeleton (Hoboken) ; 81(2-3): 167-183, 2024.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37812128

ABSTRACT

Time-lapse imaging with liquid crystal polarized light (LC-PolScope) and fluorescent speckle microscopy (FSM) enabled this study of spindle microtubules in monoastral spindles that were produced in crane-fly spermatocytes through flattening-induced centrosome displacement. Monoastral spindles are found in several other contexts: after laser ablation of one of a cell's two centrosomes (in the work of Khodjakov et al.), in Drosophila "urchin" mutants (in the works of Heck et al. and of Wilson et al.), in Sciara males (in the works of Fuge and of Metz), and in RNAi variants of Drosophila S2 cells (in the work of Goshima et al.). In all cases, just one pole has a centrosome (the astral pole); the other lacks a centrosome (the anastral pole). Thus, the question: How is the anastral half-spindle, lacking a centrosome, constructed? We learned that monoastral spindles are assembled in two phases: Phase I assembles the astral half-spindle composed of centrosomal microtubules, and Phase II assembles microtubules of the anastral half through extension of new microtubule polymerization outward from the spindle's equatorial mid-zone. That process uses plus ends of existing centrosomal microtubules as guiding templates to assemble anastral microtubules of opposite polarity. Anastral microtubules slide outward with their minus ends leading, thereby establishing proper bipolarity just like in normal biastral spindles that have two centrosomes.


Subject(s)
Drosophila Proteins , Spindle Apparatus , Animals , Male , Microtubules , Centrosome , Drosophila , Drosophila Proteins/genetics
2.
Nature ; 573(7772): 122-125, 2019 09.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31413368

ABSTRACT

Fossilized eyes permit inferences of the visual capacity of extinct arthropods1-3. However, structural and/or chemical modifications as a result of taphonomic and diagenetic processes can alter the original features, thereby necessitating comparisons with modern species. Here we report the detailed molecular composition and microanatomy of the eyes of 54-million-year-old crane-flies, which together provide a proxy for the interpretation of optical systems in some other ancient arthropods. These well-preserved visual organs comprise calcified corneal lenses that are separated by intervening spaces containing eumelanin pigment. We also show that eumelanin is present in the facet walls of living crane-flies, in which it forms the outermost ommatidial pigment shield in compound eyes incorporating a chitinous cornea. To our knowledge, this is the first record of melanic screening pigments in arthropods, and reveals a fossilization mode in insect eyes that involves a decay-resistant biochrome coupled with early diagenetic mineralization of the ommatidial lenses. The demonstrable secondary calcification of lens cuticle that was initially chitinous has implications for the proposed calcitic corneas of trilobites, which we posit are artefacts of preservation rather than a product of in vivo biomineralization4-7. Although trilobite eyes might have been partly mineralized for mechanical strength, a (more likely) organic composition would have enhanced function via gradient-index optics and increased control of lens shape.


Subject(s)
Arthropods/anatomy & histology , Arthropods/chemistry , Diptera/anatomy & histology , Diptera/chemistry , Fossils , Pigments, Biological/analysis , Pigments, Biological/chemistry , Animals , Biomarkers/analysis , Biomarkers/chemistry , Female , Finches , Male , Melanins/analysis , Melanins/chemistry , Optics and Photonics
3.
Methods Cell Biol ; 145: 249-267, 2018.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29957207

ABSTRACT

This chapter covers methods that are useful for the in vitro culture and live-cell study of insect spermatocytes in general and of crane-fly spermatocytes in particular. The merits of crane-fly spermatocytes are detailed in the Introduction section. In the following sections, step-by-step instructions are given for optimizing visualization of meiotic events taking place within living spermatocytes by employing microaspiration to flatten cells and then in subsequent operations to manipulate them via microinjection. Emphasis is on the attributes of ionophoretic injection as a way of introducing fluorescently conjugated proteins into the cytoplasm of flattened spermatocytes. In the last section of this chapter, the presentation of pressure injection is an alternative for delivering cell permeable probes into the interstitial space surrounding spermatocytes within in vitro preparations.


Subject(s)
Insecta/physiology , Meiosis/physiology , Spermatocytes/physiology , Animals , Cytoplasm/physiology , Male , Microinjections/methods
4.
Mol Biol Cell ; 25(9): 1437-45, 2014 May.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-24574457

ABSTRACT

We use liquid crystal polarized light imaging to record the life histories of single kinetochore (K-) fibers in living crane-fly spermatocytes, from their origins as nascent K-fibers in early prometaphase to their fully matured form at metaphase, just before anaphase onset. Increased image brightness due to increased retardance reveals where microtubules are added during K-fiber formation. Analysis of experimentally generated bipolar spindles with only one centrosome, as well as of regular, bicentrosomal spindles, reveals that microtubule addition occurs at the kinetochore-proximal ends of K-fibers, and added polymer expands poleward, giving rise to the robust K-fibers of metaphase cells. These results are not compatible with a model for K-fiber formation in which microtubules are added to nascent fibers solely by repetitive "search and capture" of centrosomal microtubule plus ends. Our interpretation is that capture of centrosomal microtubules-when deployed-is limited to early stages in establishment of nascent K-fibers, which then mature through kinetochore-driven outgrowth. When kinetochore capture of centrosomal microtubules is not used, the polar ends of K-fibers grow outward from their kinetochores and usually converge to make a centrosome-free pole.


Subject(s)
Diptera/cytology , Kinetochores/physiology , Spermatocytes/metabolism , Animals , Cells, Cultured , Centrosome/metabolism , Centrosome/ultrastructure , Insect Proteins/metabolism , Kinetochores/ultrastructure , Male , Microtubules/metabolism , Spermatocytes/ultrastructure
5.
Mol Biol Cell ; 23(16): 3133-42, 2012 Aug.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-22740625

ABSTRACT

We report on experiments directly in living cells that reveal the regulation of kinetochore function by tension. X and Y sex chromosomes in crane fly (Nephrotoma suturalis) spermatocytes exhibit an atypical segregation mechanism in which each univalent maintains K-fibers to both poles. During anaphase, each maintains a leading fiber (which shortens) to one pole and a trailing fiber (which elongates) to the other. We used this intriguing behavior to study the motile states that X-Y kinetochores are able to support during anaphase. We used a laser microbeam to either sever a univalent along the plane of sister chromatid cohesion or knock out one of a univalent's two kinetochores to release one or both from the resistive influence of its sister's K-fiber. Released kinetochores with attached chromosome arms moved poleward at rates at least two times faster than normal. Furthermore, fluorescent speckle microscopy revealed that detached kinetochores converted their functional state from reverse pac-man to pac-man motility as a consequence of their release from mechanical tension. We conclude that kinetochores can exhibit pac-man motility, even though their normal behavior is dominated by traction fiber mechanics. Unleashing of kinetochore motility through loss of resistive force is further evidence for the emerging model that kinetochores are subject to tension-sensitive regulation.


Subject(s)
Diptera/cytology , Kinetochores , Anaphase , Animals , Cells, Cultured , Chromosome Segregation , Cytoskeletal Proteins/metabolism , Diptera/genetics , Diptera/physiology , Insect Proteins/metabolism , Larva/cytology , Larva/genetics , Larva/physiology , Lasers , Male , Microdissection , Microtubules/metabolism , Protein Multimerization , Single-Cell Analysis , Spermatocytes , Time-Lapse Imaging , X Chromosome , Y Chromosome
6.
Mol Biol Cell ; 22(24): 4801-8, 2011 Dec.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-22031294

ABSTRACT

The impact of mechanical forces on kinetochore motility was investigated using laser microsurgery to detach kinetochores with associated chromatin (K fragment) from meiotic chromosomes in spermatocytes from the crane fly Nephrotoma suturalis. In spermatocytes, elastic tethers connect telomeres of homologues during anaphase A of meiosis I, thus preventing complete disjunction until mid- to late anaphase A. K fragments liberated from tethered arms moved at twice the normal velocity toward their connected poles. To assess functional states of detached and control kinetochores, we loaded cells with fluorescently labeled tubulin for fluorescent speckle microscopy on kinetochore microtubules. Control kinetochores added fluorescent speckles at the kinetochore during anaphase A, whereas kinetochores of K fragments generally did not. In cases in which speckles reappeared in K-fragment K fibers, speckles and K fragments moved poleward at similar velocities. Thus detached kinetochores convert from their normal polymerization (reverse pac-man) state to a different state, in which polymerization is not evident. We suggest that the converted state is "park," in which kinetochores are anchored to plus ends of kinetochore microtubules that shorten exclusively at their polar ends.


Subject(s)
Chromosomes, Insect/metabolism , Kinetochores/metabolism , Meiosis/physiology , Microtubules/metabolism , Spermatocytes/metabolism , Anaphase/physiology , Animals , Diptera , Male , Microscopy, Fluorescence , Microsurgery , Spermatocytes/cytology
7.
J Biomed Opt ; 13(1): 014011, 2008.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-18315369

ABSTRACT

We describe a combined orientation-independent differential interference contrast OI-DIC and polarization microscope and its biological applications. Several conventional DIC images were recorded with the specimen oriented in different directions followed by digital alignment and processing of the images. Then the obtained images are used for computation of the phase gradient magnitude and azimuth distribution and, further, the phase image. The OI-DIC images were obtained using optics having numerical aperture (NA) 1.4, thus achieving a level of resolution not previously achieved with phase contrast or interference microscope. The combined system yields two complementary phase images of thin optical sections of the specimen: distribution of refractive index and distribution of birefringence due to anisotropy of the cell structure. For instance, in a live dividing cell, the OI-DIC image clearly shows the detailed shape of the chromosomes, while the polarization image quantitatively depicts the distribution of birefringent microtubules in the spindle, both without any need for staining or other modifications of the cell. We present pseudo-color combined images of a crane fly spermatocyte at diakinesis and metaphase of meiosis I. Those images provide clear evidence that the proposed technique can reveal fine architecture and molecular organization in live cells without perturbation associated with staining or fluorescent labeling.


Subject(s)
Algorithms , Image Enhancement/instrumentation , Image Enhancement/methods , Image Interpretation, Computer-Assisted/instrumentation , Image Interpretation, Computer-Assisted/methods , Microscopy, Polarization/instrumentation , Equipment Design , Equipment Failure Analysis , Microscopy, Polarization/methods , Reproducibility of Results , Sensitivity and Specificity
8.
Mol Biol Cell ; 18(5): 1645-56, 2007 May.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-17314397

ABSTRACT

This study investigated the basis of meiosis II nondisjunction. Cold arrest induced a fraction of meiosis II crane fly spermatocytes to form (n + 1) and (n - 1) daughters during recovery. Live-cell liquid crystal polarized light microscope imaging showed nondisjunction was caused by chromosome malorientation. Whereas amphitely (sister kinetochore fibers to opposite poles) is normal, cold recovery induced anaphase syntely (sister fibers to the same pole) and merotely (fibers to both poles from 1 kinetochore). Maloriented chromosomes had stable metaphase positions near the equator or between the equator and a pole. Syntelics were at the spindle periphery at metaphase; their sisters disconnected at anaphase and moved all the way to a centrosome, as their strongly birefringent kinetochore fibers shortened. The kinetochore fibers of merotelics shortened little if any during anaphase, making anaphase lag common. If one fiber of a merotelic was more birefringent than the other, the less birefringent fiber lengthened with anaphase spindle elongation, often permitting inclusion of merotelics in a daughter nucleus. Meroamphitely (near amphitely but with some merotely) caused sisters to move in opposite directions. In contrast, syntely and merosyntely (near syntely but with some merotely) resulted in nondisjunction. Anaphase malorientations were more frequent after longer arrests, with particularly long arrests required to induce syntely and merosyntely.


Subject(s)
Meiosis/genetics , Nondisjunction, Genetic , Animals , Chromatids/ultrastructure , Cold Temperature/adverse effects , Diptera/genetics , Diptera/ultrastructure , Male , Models, Genetic , Spermatogenesis/genetics
10.
Mol Biol Cell ; 15(12): 5724-32, 2004 Dec.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-15469981

ABSTRACT

Microtubule flux in spindles of insect spermatocytes, long-used models for studies on chromosome behavior during meiosis, was revealed after iontophoretic microinjection of rhodamine-conjugated (rh)-tubulin and fluorescent speckle microscopy. In time-lapse movies of crane-fly spermtocytes, fluorescent speckles generated when rh-tubulin incorporated at microtubule plus ends moved poleward through each half-spindle and then were lost from microtubule minus ends at the spindle poles. The average poleward velocity of approximately 0.7 microm/min for speckles within kinetochore microtubules at metaphase increased during anaphase to approximately 0.9 microm/min. Segregating half-bivalents had an average poleward velocity of approximately 0.5 microm/min, about half that of speckles within shortening kinetochore fibers. When injected during anaphase, rhtubulin was incorporated at kinetochores, and kinetochore fiber fluorescence spread poleward as anaphase progressed. The results show that tubulin subunits are added to the plus end of kinetochore microtubules and are removed from their minus ends at the poles, all while attached chromosomes move poleward during anaphase A. The results cannot be explained by a Pac-man model, in which 1) kinetochore-based, minus end-directed motors generate poleward forces for anaphase A and 2) kinetochore microtubules shorten at their plus ends. Rather, in these cells, kinetochore fiber shortening during anaphase A occurs exclusively at the minus ends of kinetochore microtubules.


Subject(s)
Anaphase , Diptera/cytology , Diptera/metabolism , Metaphase , Microtubules/metabolism , Spermatocytes/cytology , Spermatocytes/metabolism , Animals , Cells, Cultured , Chromosome Segregation , Chromosomes/chemistry , Chromosomes/metabolism , Diptera/genetics , Kinetochores/metabolism , Male , Meiosis , Microtubules/chemistry , Protein Subunits/chemistry , Protein Subunits/metabolism , Rhodamines/chemistry , Rhodamines/pharmacology , Time Factors , Tubulin/chemistry , Tubulin/metabolism
11.
Mol Biol Cell ; 15(12): 5346-55, 2004 Dec.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-15385630

ABSTRACT

To test the "traction fiber" model for metaphase positioning of bivalents during meiosis, kinetochore fibers of maloriented bivalents, induced during recovery from cold arrest, were analyzed with a liquid crystal polarizing microscope. The measured birefringence retardation of kinetochore fibers is proportional to the number of microtubules in a fiber. Five of the 11 maloriented bivalents analyzed exhibited bipolar malorientations that had at least four times more kinetochore microtubules to one pole than to the other pole, and two had microtubules directed to only one pole. Yet all maloriented bivalents had positions at or near the spindle equator. The traction fiber model predicts such maloriented bivalents should be positioned closer to the pole with more kinetochore microtubules. A metaphase position at the spindle equator, according to the model, requires equal numbers of kinetochore microtubules to both poles. Data from polarizing microscope images were not in accord with those predictions, leading to the conclusion that other factors, in addition to traction forces, must be involved in metaphase positioning in crane-fly spermatocytes. Although the identity of additional factors has not been established, one possibility is that polar ejection forces operate to exert away-from-the-pole forces that could counteract pole-directed traction forces. Another is that kinetochores are "smart," meaning they embody a position-sensitive mechanism that controls their activity.


Subject(s)
Cell Polarity , Diptera/cytology , Kinetochores/metabolism , Metaphase , Microtubules/metabolism , Animals , Male , Meiosis , Spermatozoa/cytology , Spermatozoa/metabolism , Spindle Apparatus/metabolism
12.
J Cell Sci ; 115(Pt 7): 1541-9, 2002 Apr 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-11896200

ABSTRACT

As chromosomes move polewards during anaphase in crane-fly spermatocytes, trailing arms commonly stretch backwards for a brief time, as if tethered to their partners. To test that notion, a laser microbeam was used to sever trailing arms and thereby release telomere-containing arm segments (called acentric fragments because they lack kinetochores) from segregating chromosomes. Analysis of the movement of acentric fragments after their release provided clear evidence that previously conjoined partners were indeed tethered at their telomeres and that tethers exerted backward forces that were sufficient to move the fragment across the equator and into the opposite half-spindle. To address concerns that tethers might be artifacts of in vitro cell culture, spermatocytes were fixed in situ, and stretched arms within fixed cells provided strong evidence for tethers in vivo. The substantial resistance that tethers impose on the poleward movement of chromosomes must normally be over-ridden by the poleward 'pulling' forces exerted at kinetochores. In spermatocytes, poleward forces are supplied primarily by the 'traction fibers' that are firmly attached to kinetochores through end-on attachments to the plus ends of kinetochore microtubules.


Subject(s)
Diptera/cytology , Diptera/ultrastructure , Spermatocytes/ultrastructure , Telomere/ultrastructure , Anaphase , Animals , Cell Polarity , Elasticity , Kinetochores/physiology , Male , Meiosis , Microtubules/physiology , Models, Biological , Movement , Telomere/metabolism
13.
Cell Motil Cytoskeleton ; 51(1): 16-26, 2002 Jan.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-11810693

ABSTRACT

Laser microsurgery was employed to reveal kinetochore-independent forces acting on chromosome arms in crane-fly spermatocytes. When a portion of an arm situated along the interpolar axis between the equator and a pole was cut off, the resultant acentric fragment was transported poleward and outward into the peripheral domain of the spindle. If the fragment was generated well in advance of the onset of anaphase, then at the spindle periphery, it changed direction and moved away from the pole and back toward the equator. That domain-specific movement-poleward in the central spindle and away from the pole at the spindle periphery-not only provides the first evidence for polar ejection forces acting on acentric fragments in a meiotic system, but it is the first example of kinetochore-independent forces in both directions at the same stage of division. Sniglets generated by laser pulses directed at specific sites in the spindle revealed that the mechanism underlying ejection forces was specific to chromosomes. At anaphase onset, polar ejection forces ceased, and pole-directed forces took over. At that time, chromosome fragments that had been ejected to the equator moved poleward again, providing clear evidence for kinetochore-independent forces on chromosome arms during anaphase.


Subject(s)
Cell Polarity/physiology , Diptera/physiology , Spermatocytes/physiology , Spindle Apparatus/physiology , Anaphase/genetics , Anaphase/physiology , Animals , Kinetochores/diagnostic imaging , Kinetochores/physiology , Male , Metaphase/genetics , Metaphase/physiology , Microtubules/diagnostic imaging , Microtubules/physiology , Mitosis/genetics , Mitosis/physiology , Spermatocytes/ultrastructure , Spindle Apparatus/ultrastructure , Ultrasonography
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