The success of an organism is contingent upon its ability to faithfully pass on its genetic material. In the meiosis of many species, the process of chromosome segregation requires that bipolar spindles be formed without the aid of dedicated microtubule organizing centers, such as centrosomes. Here, we describe detailed analyses of acentrosomal spindle assembly and disassembly in time-lapse images, from live meiotic cells of Zea mays. Microtubules organized on the nuclear envelope with a perinuclear ring structure until nuclear envelope breakdown, at which point microtubules began bundling into a bipolar form. However, the process and timing of spindle assembly was highly variable, with frequent assembly errors in both meiosis I and II. Approximately 61% of cells formed incorrect spindle morphologies, with the most prevalent being tripolar spindles. The erroneous spindles were actively rearranged to bipolar through a coalescence of poles before proceeding to anaphase. Spindle disassembly occurred as a two-state process with a slow depolymerization, followed by a quick collapse. The results demonstrate that maize meiosis I and II spindle assembly is remarkably fluid in the early assembly stages, but otherwise proceeds through a predictable series of events.
more »
« less
Zea mays Meiotic Spindle Ultrastructure Reveals Kinetochore-Microtubule Interface and Embedded Membrane Components
Introduction: Spindles are microtubules-based machines whose primary function is to accurately segregate chromosomes in both mitotic and meiotic cell division. The structure of spindles is critical for their function; errors in morphology or attachment to chromosomes lead to aneuploidy, potentially resulting in disease, infertility, and lethality. Electron microscopy studies have yielded fine-detail spindle ultrastructures in many plant and animal species, but no studies have investigated the spindle of Zea mays, a critical crop, and cytogenetic model system. Methods: Here we use electron tomography (ET), reconstruction, and modeling to obtain three-dimensional, nanometer-resolution of the Z. mays meiotic spindle. Structures such as microtubules, kinetochores, vesicles, membrane channels, and nuclear envelope were modeled through a partial spindle reconstruction, and confirmed using immunostaining and live fluorescence microscopy. Results: ET revealed that maize spindles contain 8–18 kinetochore microtubules (kMTs) per kinetochore, which are approximately 776 nm in diameter and 316 nm in depth. Small ∼37 nm vesicles were identified, as well as larger (∼5 µm long, 800 nm wide) membrane structures with channels that allow spindle microtubules to pass through. These membrane channels stain positively for the ER-marker protein disulfide isomerase. Imaging of prophase meiotic cells revealed a cross-hatch microtubule arrangement in the perinuclear ring on the external surface of the nuclear envelope, which also contained type II nuclear grooves with transnuclear microtubules passing from the nucleus to the cytoplasm. Conclusions: Z. mays meiotic spindles are similar to animal counterparts with a comparable number of kMTs and pre-spindle transnuclear microtubules but also plant-specific features such as Golgi-derived vesicles to assist cell plate formation, internal ER membrane channels, and a perinuclear microtubule ring that aids spindle assembly. Maize kinetochores have an electron-diffuse ball in cup morphology that is comparable in size to Drosophila kinetochores and larger than mammalian kinetochores.
more »
« less
- Award ID(s):
- 1925546
- PAR ID:
- 10661352
- Publisher / Repository:
- Cytogenetics Genome Research
- Date Published:
- Journal Name:
- Cytogenetic and Genome Research
- ISSN:
- 1424-8581
- Page Range / eLocation ID:
- 1 to 17
- Format(s):
- Medium: X
- Sponsoring Org:
- National Science Foundation
More Like this
-
-
Zea mays (maize) is both an agronomically important crop and a powerful genetic model system with an extensive molecular toolkit and genomic resources. With these tools, maize is an optimal system for cytogenetic study, particularly in the investigation of chromosome segregation. Here, we review the advances made in maize chromosome segregation, specifically in the regulation and dynamic assembly of the mitotic and meiotic spindle, the inheritance and mechanisms of the abnormal chromosome variant Ab10, the regulation of chromosome–spindle interactions via the spindle assembly checkpoint, and the function of kinetochore proteins that bridge chromosomes and spindles. In this review, we discuss these processes in a species-specific context including features that are both conserved and unique to Z. mays. Additionally, we highlight new protein structure prediction tools and make use of these tools to identify several novel kinetochore and spindle assembly checkpoint proteins in Z. mays.more » « less
-
Bloom, Kerry (Ed.)In prophase of meiosis I, homologous chromosomes pair and become connected by cross-overs. Chiasmata, the connections formed by cross-overs, enable the chromosome pair, called a bivalent, to attach as a single unit to the spindle. When the meiotic spindle forms in prometaphase, most bivalents are associated with one spindle pole and then go through a series of oscillations on the spindle, attaching to and detaching from microtubules until the partners of the bivalent become bioriented—attached to microtubules from opposite sides of the spindle. The conserved kinase, Mps1, is essential for the bivalents to be pulled by microtubules across the spindle in prometaphase. Here we show that MPS1 is needed for efficient triggering of the migration of microtubule-attached kinetochores toward the poles and promotes microtubule depolymerization. Our data support the model Mps1 acts at the kinetochore to coordinate the successful attachment of a microtubule and the triggering of microtubule depolymerization to then move the chromosome.more » « less
-
In contrast to well-studied fungal and animal cells, plant cells assemble bipolar spindles that exhibit a great deal of plasticity in the absence of structurally defined microtubule-organizing centers like the centrosome. While plants employ some evolutionarily conserved proteins to regulate spindle morphogenesis and remodeling, many essential spindle assembly factors found in vertebrates are either missing or not required for producing the plant bipolar microtubule array. Plants also produce proteins distantly related to their fungal and animal counterparts to regulate critical events such as the spindle assembly checkpoint. Plant spindle assembly initiates with microtubule nucleation on the nuclear envelope followed by bipolarization into the prophase spindle. After nuclear envelope breakdown, kinetochore fibers are assembled and unified into the spindle apparatus with convergent poles. Of note, compared to fungal and animal systems, relatively little is known about how plant cells remodel the spindle microtubule array during anaphase. Uncovering mitotic functions of novel proteins for spindle assembly in plants will illuminate both common and divergent mechanisms employed by different eukaryotic organisms to segregate genetic materials.more » « less
-
Abstract Microtubules are generated at centrosomes, chromosomes, and within spindles during cell division. Whereas microtubule nucleation at the centrosome is well characterized, much remains unknown about where, when, and how microtubules are nucleated at chromosomes. To address these questions, we reconstitute microtubule nucleation from purified chromosomes in meiotic Xenopus egg extract and find that chromosomes alone can form spindles. We visualize microtubule nucleation near chromosomes using total internal reflection fluorescence microscopy to find that this occurs through branching microtubule nucleation. By inhibiting molecular motors, we find that the organization of the resultant polar branched networks is consistent with a theoretical model where the effectors for branching nucleation are released by chromosomes, forming a concentration gradient that spatially biases branching microtbule nucleation. In the presence of motors, these branched networks are ultimately organized into functional spindles, where the number of emergent spindle poles scales with the number of chromosomes and total chromatin area.more » « less
An official website of the United States government

