Using time-lapse video recording and comparing successive digital images, we found that 38% of Xenopus laevis embryos (n=118) exhibited rotation during the second cell cycle. This rotation, which we term the second rotation, started approximately during the appearance of the first cleavage furrow and proceeded clockwise or counterclockwise around the vertical axis. Rotations lasted for 5-30 minutes, i.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFCell Mol Biol (Noisy-le-grand)
November 1999
An electron microscopy study showed that in melanophores with dispersed and aggregated pigment the sensitivity of the centrosome and the stability of microtubules were different and depended on the colcemid concentration. The structure of the centrosome didn't change upon exposure to colcemid in dispersed melanophores. In aggregated melanophores, on exposure to 10(-6) M colcemid, the centrosome retained its structure; colcemid at 10(-5)-10(-3) M caused a dramatic collapse of the centrosome.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe morphological characteristics of microtubule-organizing centers (MTOCs) in dermal interphase melanophores of Xenopus laevis larvae in vivo at 51-53 stages of development has been studied using immunostained semi-thick sections by fluorescent microscopy combined with computer image analysis. Computer image analysis of melanophores with aggregated and dispersed pigment granules, stained with the antibodies against the centrosome-specific component (CTR210) and tubulin, has revealed the presence of one main focus of microtubule convergence in the cell body, which coincides with the localization of the centrosome-specific antigen. An electron microscopy of those melanophores has shown that aggregation or dispersion of melanosomes is accompanied by changes in the morphological arrangement of the MTOC/centrosome.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFMitotic melanophores of Xenopus laevis larvae at 51-53 stages of development were morphologically studied using light and electron microscopy, with special reference to their microtubule-organizing centers. These melanophores represented a highly branched cell shape in mitosis, each cell process is distributed with melanosomes without exhibiting any responsiveness to hormonal (melatonin) stimulation, and upon completion of mitosis, recovered the ability to translocate these granules in response to such a stimulus. At the metaphase, these cells contained bipolar or multipolar spindles, whose poles were composed of three zones: the centrosome with centrioles; the centrosphere; and an outlying radial arrangement of microtubules and their associated inclusions.
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