Keratin filaments restrict organelle migration into the forming spindle of newt pneumocytes
- 1 January 1990
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Wiley in Cell Motility
- Vol. 15 (2), 111-120
- https://doi.org/10.1002/cm.970150207
Abstract
When viewed by light microscopy the mitotic spindle of newt pneumocytes appears to assemble in an optically clear area of cytoplasm, virtually devoid of mitochondria and other organelles, which is often much larger than the spindle. This clear area is also frequently larger than the region previously occupied by the nucleus. It forms even in prometaphase cells depleted of microtubules prior to nuclear envelope breakdown by colchicine treatment. Time-lapse video microscopy reveals that as prometaphase proceeds this clear area slowly and progressively collapses around the forming spindle so that it is greatly diminished or nonexistent by the onset of anaphase. The sharply defined nature of the boundary between the clear area and the remaining cytoplasm and the fact that organelles accumulate at its periphery suggest that a structural barrier is present at the boundary that limits organelle migration into the forming spindle. Immunofluo- rescence and electron microscopy, of cells previously followed in the living state, reveal that the periphery of the clear area contains prominent bundles of keratin filaments but lacks microtubules and actin. From our observations we conclude that keratin filaments form a loosely organized cage that surrounds the forming newt pneumocyte spindle. We propose that this cage functions, in part, to restrict the dispersion of chromosomes during nuclear envelope breakdown and to impede the bulk migration of organelles into the forming spindle.Keywords
This publication has 28 references indexed in Scilit:
- Electron microscopy of semithick sections: Advantages for biomedical researchJournal of Electron Microscopy Technique, 1985
- The organizational fate of intermediate filament networks in two epithelial cell types during mitosis.The Journal of cell biology, 1985
- Intermediate filaments.The Journal of cell biology, 1984
- Dynamics of keratin filaments and the intermediate filament distribution center during shape change in PtK1 cellsCell Motility, 1984
- Change of cytokeratin filament organization during the cell cycle: selective masking of an immunologic determinant in interphase PtK2 cells.The Journal of cell biology, 1983
- Evidence for coordinated phosphorylation of keratins and vimentin during mitosis in transformed human amnion cellsFEBS Letters, 1983
- An alteration in the phosphorylation of vimentin-type intermediate filaments is associated with mitosis in cultured mammalian cellsCell, 1982
- Reorganization of arrays of prekeratin filaments during mitosisExperimental Cell Research, 1981
- Intermediate filaments of the vimentin-type and the cytokeratin-type are distributed differently during mitosisExperimental Cell Research, 1980
- Heat-induced reversible hexagonal packing of spindle microtubules.The Journal of cell biology, 1977