* Marine Biological Laboratory, Woods Hole, Massachusetts; Department of Biochemistry and Biophysics, University of
California, San Francisco, California; § Department of Biology, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill, North Carolina; and
Department of Cell Biology, Harvard Medical School, Boston, Massachusetts
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Abstract |
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We have used local fluorescence photoactivation to mark the lattice of spindle microtubules during anaphase A in Xenopus extract spindles. We find that both poleward spindle microtubule flux and anaphase A chromosome movement occur at similar rates (~2 µm/min). This result suggests that poleward microtubule flux, coupled to microtubule depolymerization near the spindle poles, is the predominant mechanism for anaphase A in Xenopus egg extracts. In contrast, in vertebrate somatic cells a "Pacman" kinetochore mechanism, coupled to microtubule depolymerization near the kinetochore, predominates during anaphase A. Consistent with the conclusion from fluorescence photoactivation analysis, both anaphase A chromosome movement and poleward spindle microtubule flux respond similarly to pharmacological perturbations in Xenopus extracts. Furthermore, the pharmacological profile of anaphase A in Xenopus extracts differs from the previously established profile for anaphase A in vertebrate somatic cells. The difference between these profiles is consistent with poleward microtubule flux playing the predominant role in anaphase chromosome movement in Xenopus extracts, but not in vertebrate somatic cells. We discuss the possible biological implications of the existence of two distinct anaphase A mechanisms and their differential contributions to poleward chromosome movement in different cell types.
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Introduction |
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A major focus in the study of cell division is to define
the physical mechanisms that segregate replicated
chromosomes to daughter cells. Both mitotic and
meiotic cells assemble a bipolar, microtubule (MT)1-based
spindle to execute chromosome segregation. The primary site for attachment of chromosomes to the spindle MTs is
the kinetochorea nucleoprotein structure formed at the
primary constriction of mitotic chromosomes (Rieder and
Salmon, 1998
). During spindle assembly, kinetochores
capture the plus ends of dynamically unstable MTs associated with opposite spindle poles, and become tethered to
the poles by forming a stable bundle of kinetochore MTs
(kMTs). After all the chromosomes are properly attached,
the connections holding the sister chromatids (mitosis,
meiosis II) or homologous chromosomes (meiosis I) are
dissolved and the separated chromosomes move toward
opposite spindle poles. Segregation of sisters to daughter cells
involves both chromosome-to-pole movement (anaphase A)
and spindle pole-to-pole elongation (anaphase B).
An important issue in the study of chromosome segregation is defining the mechanism of anaphase A chromosome-to-pole movement. The most popular model for
anaphase A is the "Pacman" kinetochore model, which
postulates that the kinetochore pulls the chromosome poleward on relatively stationary kMTs and this movement is coupled to depolymerization of the kMTs at the
kinetochore (Fig. 1 A; for reviews see Rieder and Salmon,
1994, 1998
; Yen and Schaar, 1996
). The popularity of this
model is derived in large part from the identification of the
kinetochore as the primary site of kMT disassembly during chromosome-to-pole movement in vertebrate somatic cells (Mitchison et al., 1986
; Wadsworth and Salmon, 1986
;
Gorbsky et al., 1987
, 1988
; Mitchison and Salmon, 1992
;
Zhai et al., 1995
; Waters et al., 1996
).
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Another model for anaphase A chromosome movement
postulates that kinetochores are pulled poleward by the
poleward movement or "flux" of kMTs coupled to depolymerization of kMT minus ends near the poles (Fig. 1 B).
According to this model, kMTs flux poleward (or treadmill, see Margolis and Wilson, 1981) during metaphase
concurrent with plus end assembly at the kinetochores and
minus end disassembly near the poles. In anaphase, assembly stops at the kinetochore and the poleward movement
of the kMTs coupled to their minus end disassembly pulls
the kinetochore and its associated chromosome poleward
(Fig. 1 B). Related "traction fiber" models have been proposed by Inoué and Sato (1967)
, Forer (1965
, 1966
), Margolis and Wilson (1981)
, and others (for reviews see Fuge,
1989
; Salmon, 1989
), primarily on the basis of indirect evidence for poleward MT transport, including observations
that various types of organelles, "particles or states" and
UV ablation zones in spindle fibers move poleward during
both metaphase and anaphase.
Mitchison (1989) provided direct evidence for poleward
MT flux by using fluorescence photoactivation to locally
mark the lattice of kinetochore fiber MTs in mitotic PtK2
cells. Fluorescent marks on the kMTs moved poleward at
an average rate of 0.5 µm/min during metaphase with plus
end assembly near the kinetochore being balanced by minus end disassembly near the poles. Subsequent fluorescence photoactivation analysis of the sites of kMT disassembly during anaphase in newt, PtK1, and porcine
somatic cells has shown that the majority of kMT disassembly during chromosome-to-pole movement occurs at
the kinetochore (Mitchison and Salmon, 1992
; Zhai et al.,
1995
; Waters et al., 1996
). In these cell types, chromosome-to-pole movement (1.5-2.5 µm/min) is much faster
than anaphase poleward kMT flux (0.3-0.5 µm/min).
Thus, during anaphase, fluorescent marks made on kMTs
near the kinetochore disappear because kinetochore poleward movement coupled to kMT disassembly at the kinetochore is three to eight times faster than the rate of poleward flux coupled to kMT disassembly at the poles.
Waters et al. (1996)
have shown in newt lung cells that, if
MT assembly and disassembly at the kinetochore are
blocked during anaphase by taxol concentrations that do
not inhibit kMT poleward flux, then chromosomes are
pulled poleward slowly at kMT flux rates. Taken together,
these studies have led to the conclusion that, although
poleward MT flux is capable of generating force to move
chromosomes, it is only a minor contributor to anaphase A
chromosome movement in vertebrate somatic cells.
The marking studies in somatic cells raise the question
as to what is the function of poleward MT fluxa concerted dynamic behavior of spindle MTs that reflects considerable structural complexity in the spindle. One possibility is that MT flux is the dominant mechanism for
poleward chromosome movement in systems other than
vertebrate somatic cells. Sawin and Mitchison (1991)
found that the majority of MTs in spindles assembled in
meiosis II metaphase-arrested Xenopus egg extracts flux
poleward at 2.9 ± 0.4 µm/min, approximately six times
faster than the rate of kMT poleward flux in somatic cells.
Forer and co-workers found that in insect meiocytes both
zones of reduced birefringence generated by UV ablation
of spindle MTs (Forer, 1965
, 1966
) and acetylated tubulin
distributions along kinetochore fibers (Wilson et al., 1994
)
move poleward at rates similar to chromosomes during
anaphase A; however, interpretation of these two studies
is complicated by the fact that the first involved cutting
spindle MTs, and the second involved extrapolating dynamic information from fixed samples. Nevertheless, these
three observations suggest that poleward MT flux may
play the predominant role in anaphase A chromosome
movement in certain systems. Consistent with the flux hypothesis, direct observations of anaphase in Xenopus extract spindles showed that chromosomes move poleward
at 2.4 ± 1 µm/min (Murray et al., 1996
), within the range
of values observed for poleward MT flux during metaphase in this system (Sawin and Mitchison, 1991
). However, Mitchison and Salmon (1992)
showed in newt lung
cells that the rate of kMT poleward flux during early
anaphase is similar to that during metaphase, but slows
down significantly in late anaphase. A subsequent study
on porcine and marsupial somatic cells showed that kMT
flux in these cell types was ~50% slower during anaphase than during metaphase (Zhai et al., 1995
). Since these somatic cell studies demonstrated changes in the flux rate
between metaphase and anaphase, determining whether
poleward MT flux plays the predominant role during
anaphase A in Xenopus extract spindles requires simultaneous observation of MT flux and anaphase chromosome
movement.
In this paper, we have used fluorescence photoactivation to mark the lattice of spindle MTs during anaphase in Xenopus extract spindles. We have directly compared the rate of poleward flux to the rate of poleward chromosome movement and find that both the spindle MT lattice and the disjoined chromosomes move poleward at ~2 µm/min under our experimental conditions. We also show that anaphase A in the extract spindles exhibits a distinct pharmacological profile from anaphase A in somatic cell spindles, and that the extract spindle profile is consistent with a predominantly MT flux-driven mechanism for moving chromosomes poleward.
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Materials and Methods |
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In Vitro Spindle Assembly
All experiments were performed using fresh cytostatic factor (CSF)-arrested
Xenopus egg extracts prepared as described (Murray, 1991; Desai et al.,
1998
). Extracts were supplemented with 5-10 µg/ml X-rhodamine tubulin,
200-400 permeabilized sperm nuclei/µl and bipolar spindles were assembled as described (Shamu and Murray, 1992
; Murray et al., 1996
; Desai et
al., 1998
). Briefly, calcium was added to a final concentration of 0.4 mM
(from a 10× [4 mM] stock in sperm dilution buffer (SD) (10 mM Hepes,
pH 7.7, 100 mM KCl, 1 mM MgCl2, 150 mM sucrose, 10 µg/ml cytochalasin D) to CSF extract containing sperm nuclei, incubated at room temperature (20°-23°C) for 80 min to allow the sperm DNA to decondense and replicate, after which 20 µl of CSF extract (without any sperm nuclei but
with X-rhodamine tubulin) was added to drive the reactions into
metaphase. To maximize the time of use of an extract for real-time experiments, we stored CSF extracts on ice after preparation and started a new
set of spindle assembly reactions every 3-3.5 h. There is significant day-to-day variability in both the lifetime and anaphase competency of these extracts, which considerably limits experimental manipulations.
X-rhodamine tubulin and bis-caged carboxyfluorescein (C2CF) tubulin
were prepared using the high pH tubulin labeling protocol (Hyman et al.,
1991; Desai and Mitchison, 1998
). The C2CF tubulin used in these experiments was labeled to a stoichiometry of ~0.8 moles C2CF/mole tubulin.
H1 kinase assays were performed as described (Murray, 1991
).
Sample Preparation for Real Time Analysis
Slides and coverslips were cleaned using water, acetone, and ethanol sequentially as described (Murray et al., 1996; Desai et al., 1998
). For marking experiments, C2CF tubulin was added at least 10 min before starting
anaphase to a final concentration of 100-150 µg/ml. All steps involving
C2CF tubulin were performed under dim red illumination in a dark room.
For simultaneous observation of poleward flux and chromosome-to-pole
movement, the 10× calcium stock in SD was supplemented with 5 µg/ml
4,6-diamidino-2-phenylindole (DAPI) (Ca/DAPI5). 1:9 vol of Ca/DAPI5
was added to a reaction supplemented with C2CF tubulin and 8 µl of this
mixture were pipetted onto a clean slide, covered using a clean 22 × 22-mm
coverslip, and then sealed using Valap (1:1:1 vaseline/lanolin/paraffin). Sample preparations with large visible air bubbles were discarded. The
submillimolar concentration of calcium added to the extract to initiate
anaphase was sequestered within 1 min to basal levels, as measured using
Fluo-3 (Molecular Probes, Inc., Eugene, OR) calcium fluorimetry (not
shown). The calcium pulse did not appear to have a significant effect on
assembled spindles since their morphology and MT density remained typical of metaphase until 5-10 min after calcium addition when anaphase
chromosome segregation began.
For anaphase pharmacology studies, various 10× calcium stocks were
prepared in SD containing 4 mM CaCl2, 1 µg/ml DAPI, and 10× concentration of the desired dosage of a specific pharmacological agent. For flux
pharmacology studies, DAPI was omitted from the stocks. Analysis of the
effect of taxol on flux was performed on metaphase spindles. An analysis
of the effect of 5'-adenylylimidodiphosphate (AMPPNP) on flux was
done previously on metaphase Xenopus extract spindles (Sawin and
Mitchison, 1991). Our analysis of the effect of AMPPNP on flux was done
on anaphase spindles. Samples for pharmacology studies were prepared as
described above, with a specific 10× stock being used to deliver a pharmacological agent.
Microscopy and Data Analysis
Photoactivation experiments were performed on an upright Photoscope
III (Carl Zeiss Inc., Thornwood, NY) with a rotating stage and 60×, 1.4 NA PlanApo objective. Spindles were located at low magnification and
aligned with respect to the photoactivation beam using phase contrast microscopy. Modifications of the microscope for photoactivation and for acquisition and storage of images at multiple wavelengths have been described (Sawin and Mitchison, 1991, 1994
; Mitchison et al., 1998
). 100-W
mercury arcs were used for both illumination and photoactivation, and a
SIT video camera (Dage-MTI, Wabash, WI) was used to acquire eight
frame-averaged images in the fluorescein and X-rhodamine channels. Illumination intensity was controlled using a combination of an out of focus (epi-condenser) diaphragm and neutral density filters. To avoid activation
of the C2CF tubulin, DAPI illumination was carefully limited by closing
down the out of focus diaphragm, leaving the UV turning mirror to guide
the photoactivation beam (Mitchison, 1989
; Mitchison et al., 1998
) in the
epi-illumination light path, and acquiring only two video frames per time
point in the DAPI channel. Only the residual UV, not bounced out of the
epifluorescence light path by the UV turning mirror, contributed to the
DAPI excitation. The amount of DAPI, X-rhodamine tubulin, and C2CF
tubulin added to extracts was empirically optimized to allow image acquisition in all three channels at constant camera gain and black level. Images
at each wavelength were acquired 5-s apart, and sequential images at a
specific wavelength were acquired 20-30-s apart. Images were stored on
optical disks using a optical memory disc recorder (TQ 3038F; Panasonic,
Secaucus, NJ) and digitized for analysis using a Metamorph Imaging System (Universal Imaging Corp., West Chester, PA).
For each digitized sequence, the peak of fluorescence in the fluorescein channel (photoactivated C2CF tubulin) and the leading edge of fluorescence in the DAPI channel (marking the leading edges of the chromosomes) were defined from fluorescence intensities measured using a 5-pixel-wide linescan that was oriented along the trajectory of poleward chromosome movement and extended past the polar edge of the spindle. This linescan was also positioned such that distinct regions of photoactivated C2CF tubulin and DAPI-labeled chromosomes could be monitored through most of the duration of anaphase A. At each time point, the intensity values in each fluorescence channel along this linescan were transferred to an Excel spreadsheet. The spindle pole was defined for each time point in the X-rhodamine channel by the position of the drop-off in fluorescence intensity at the polar edge of the spindle. The change in the distance at 30-60-s intervals between the pole defined in the X-rhodamine channel and the peak of fluorescein fluorescence was used to measure flux rate and similarly the change in distance between the pole and the leading edge of DAPI fluorescence was used to measure chromosome movement rate. When feasible, rates were obtained from several linescans (two to four) through different regions of a spindle. These were generally similar to each other and their average value was used.
Given the considerable technical difficulty of simultaneous observations of poleward MT flux and anaphase chromosome movement in Xenopus extract spindles, analysis of the effects of pharmacological agents were
performed independently for flux and chromosome movement. The photoactivation experiments were done as described above, except that the
relatively tricky visualization of DAPI-labeled chromosomes was omitted.
Analysis of anaphase chromosome movement was performed on a multiwavelength epifluorescence microscope described previously (Salmon et al.,
1994, 1998
). For these experiments, extracts were supplemented with
X-rhodamine tubulin to 30-50 µg/ml and images in the X-rhodamine and
DAPI channels were acquired at 30-s intervals using a Nikon 20×, 0.7 NA
fluor objective (Murray et al., 1996
). The movements of chromosomes at
the metaphase plate were recorded at high magnification using a Nikon
60×, 1.4 NA objective. Using the Metamorph software, color overlays of
the X-rhodamine and DAPI images were analyzed to determine chromosome-to-pole movement rates as described previously (Murray et al., 1996
).
Fixation and Immunofluorescence of Spindles During Anaphase
To detect kinetochore antigens during anaphase chromosome movement
in vitro, 20 µl of a spindle assembly reaction were diluted into 2 ml of
BRB80 (80 mM K-Pipes, pH 6.8, 1 mM MgCl2, 1 mM EGTA) + 30% (vol/
vol) glycerol + 0.5% Triton X-100 at room temperature, mixed gently by
inversion for 30-60 s, and then fixed by addition of 2 ml of BRB80 + 0.5%
Triton X-100 + 30% (vol/vol) glycerol + 5% formaldehyde for ~10 min
at room temperature. The fixed reactions were layered onto a 4-ml cushion of 40% (vol/vol) glycerol in BRB80 and sedimented at 5,500 rpm for
20 min at 16°C in an HS-4 rotor. After centrifugation, the sample was aspirated until just below the sample-cushion interface, rinsed with BRB80,
and then the cushion was aspirated before transferring the coverslips to a
coverslip holder. The coverslips were briefly rinsed in TBSTx (20 mM
Tris-Cl, pH 7.4, 150 mM NaCl, 0.1% Triton X-100) to remove residual
glycerol, postfixed using 20°C methanol, rehydrated in TBSTx, and then
processed for anti-CENP-E immunofluorescence using a cross-reactive
anti-human CENP-E antibody as described (Desai et al., 1997
).
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Results |
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Poleward Microtubule Flux and Chromosome Movement Occur at Similar Rates in Xenopus Egg Extract Spindles
Metaphase-arrested in vitro spindles containing replicated
chromosomes were induced into anaphase by addition of a
pulse of calcium to inactivate the CSF metaphase arrest, as
described by Murray and co-workers (Shamu and Murray,
1992; Murray et al., 1996
). These previous studies showed
that sister chromatids segregate under these conditions,
but did not analyze the role of kinetochores in the observed segregation. To determine if poleward force on chromosomes during anaphase in vitro acts at their kinetochores, we examined the distribution of a known kinetochore protein. We found that CENP-E, a conserved kinetochore-localized MT motor in vertebrates (Yen et al.,
1992
; Desai et al., 1997
; Wood et al., 1997
), localizes to the
leading edges of the poleward-moving chromosomes in
anaphase (Fig. 2). Furthermore, during poleward movement the leading edges of chromosomes are often seen
close to one end, consistent with the fact that many Xenopus chromosomes are "acrocentric" (i.e., have their centromeres near one end of the chromosome) (Graf and Kobel, 1991
). Thus, kinetochores of in vitro spindles contain a
conserved kinetochore MT motor protein and lead the
chromosomes poleward in anaphase.
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To directly compare the rate of chromosome poleward
movement to that of spindle MT flux, we imaged both processes simultaneously using multiwavelength time lapse
fluorescence microscopy. To visualize spindle structure,
we added X-rhodamine-labeled tubulin to the extract immediately after preparation. To visualize poleward MT flux, we added caged fluorescein tubulin to metaphase
spindles 10-30 min before inducing anaphase. Both modified tubulins rapidly equilibrate into spindle MTs as a result of MT turnover (Sawin and Mitchison, 1991). Since
UV illumination photolyses caged fluorescein, activating
its fluorescence, we initially avoided using UV-excited, DNA-binding dyes to visualize chromosome movement.
Instead, we attempted to use phase contrast microscopy, a
method that was successful for similar studies in somatic
cells. However, we found that chromosomes formed in
vitro in Xenopus extracts lack sufficient phase density, relative to extract cytoplasm, to allow reliable tracking of
their movement. Therefore, we developed conditions using minimal UV-excited DAPI fluorescence that allowed
us to visualize chromosomes without causing significant
uncaging of caged fluorescein. Using these conditions, we
recorded spindles until they had just begun anaphase chromosome movement (~8-12 min after calcium addition),
then used a brief (1-3-s duration) slit of UV illumination
to fluorescently mark the MTs between the poleward-
migrating chromosomes and a spindle pole. The subsequent movement of the fluorescent mark, the chromosomes
and changes in spindle structure were recorded.
The result of an anaphase marking experiment performed using this procedure is shown in Fig. 3 A. In this experiment, the mark was made just to the left of the leading edges of the chromosomes as they started to move poleward. As shown in the middle column of Fig. 3 A, the fluorescent mark moved poleward during the next 5 min at a rate of ~2 µm/min. Since the spindle pole-to-pole distance did not change significantly during this period, the movement of the mark must represent disassembly of the spindle MTs at their minus ends near the pole. During the same period the chromosomes moved poleward (Fig. 3 A, left and right columns). The striking correspondence between the poleward movement of the chromosomes and the fluorescent mark is evident in the right column of Fig. 3 A.
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To analyze the data generated by such an experiment, we used fluorescence linescan intensity profiles along the same 5-pixel-wide linescan in all three channels to track chromosome leading edge-to-pole and peak of fluorescent mark intensity-to-pole distances as a function of time. As shown in Fig. 3 B, the movement of the fluorescent mark polewards closely parallels the movement of the leading edge of the chromosome mass (indicated by a dot in the linescan profile). The similarity of the average rates of anaphase poleward flux and anaphase chromosome movement from experiments performed on 11 spindles is shown in Fig. 3 C. After the onset of chromosome separation, chromosomes moved poleward at 2.2 ± 0.8 µm/min and MTs fluxed poleward at 2.0 ± 0.7 µm/min (mean ± SD for 11 spindles). These average rates were not significantly different (P < 0.005 in a t test). As the mark moved poleward, it both lost intensity and broadened, indicating the existence of faster and slower fluxing MT populations within the mark. Whereas the majority of segregating chromosomes did not move faster than the leading edge of the fluorescent mark, we occasionally observed short poleward movements by a few small chromosomes, well separated from the chromosomal mass, which were faster than the average flux rate (not shown).
Pharmacological Comparison of Anaphase Chromosome Movement and Poleward Microtubule Flux in Xenopus Extract Spindles
The similarity between the rate of chromosome movement
and the rate of poleward MT flux during anaphase suggests that MT flux may be the predominant mechanism for
chromosome-to-pole movement in Xenopus extract spindles. If this were true, then agents that inhibit MT flux
should also inhibit chromosome-to-pole movement. In a
previous study testing the effect of a variety of agents on
poleward MT flux in Xenopus extract metaphase spindles,
only AMPPNP was found to inhibit flux, blocking flux at a
final concentration of 1.7 mM (Sawin and Mitchison,
1991). Therefore, to test the prediction that AMPPNP
would also inhibit chromosome movement, we analyzed
anaphase chromosome movement at three AMPPNP concentrations: 0.5, 1, and 1.5 mM. We found that AMPPNP
inhibited the rate of chromosome-to-pole movement in a
dose-dependent manner (Fig. 4 A, bottom row; Figs. 5 C,
and 6 A). We also confirmed that AMPPNP inhibited
poleward MT flux by independently analyzing the effect of
AMPPNP on MT flux in anaphase (Figs. 4 B, and 6 B).
Since the chromosome movement and flux measurements
were performed in separate experiments on different extract preparations and under different experimental conditions, the rates of the two processes are not directly comparable.
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To address the concern that AMPPNP inhibition of
chromosome movement had little to do with flux but was
an indirect result of inhibiting exit from metaphase, we
measured cdc2-cyclin B kinase activity after calcium addition in the absence or presence of varying amounts of
AMPPNP. cdc2-cyclin B kinase activity, as measured by
histone H1 phosphorylation, decays to interphase levels
about 10-12 min after calcium addition in untreated extracts (Shamu and Murray, 1992). We found that AMPPNP did not inhibit exit from metaphase but delayed the
drop in H1 kinase activity by ~3 min at 0.5 mM, 6 min at
1 mM, and 11 min at 1.5 mM (data not shown; n = 2 experiments with kinase assays performed at 2-min intervals for
30 min after calcium addition). This AMPPNP-induced
delay in exit from metaphase is too short to account for
the observed inhibition of chromosome-to-pole movement
(see Fig. 4 A, comparing top and bottom rows). In addition, our analysis of chromosome movement in AMPPNP
takes into consideration this delay, since chromosome position was tracked until "karyomere-associated motility" was apparent on the filmed spindles. Karyomere-associated motility is the rapid motility of decondensing chromosomes with nuclear envelopes (karyomeres) towards
centers of MT asters, that has been previously shown to
occur after anaphase A and to require inactivation of
cdc2-cyclin B kinase activity (Murray et al., 1996
). Consistent with the results of the H1 kinase assays, karyomere-associated motility was also delayed in the AMPPNP-treated spindles.
AMPPNP also did not appear to inhibit sister chromatid separation, since separated sisters were visible on some of the analyzed spindles after being moved apart by spindle expansion (Fig. 4 A, bottom row). That the observed separation of sister chromatids in 1.5 mM AMPPNP is not due to chromosome-to-pole movement but because of spindle expansion is demonstrated by tracking the position of the spindle poles and of the chromosomes as a function of time (Fig. 5 C).
In some of the spindles treated with 1.5 mM AMPPNP, we observed a small number of chromosomes (six chromosomes from five spindles in 1.5 mM AMPPNP) that appeared to be well separated from the chromosomal mass and moved short poleward distances at rates significantly faster than those for the bulk chromosomal mass (average rate of 0.6 µm/min; maximum rate of 0.8 µm/min versus average rate of 0.15 µm/min; maximum rate of 0.25 µm/ min for the bulk chromosomal mass). These faster chromosomes moved at a third of the control rates of chromosome movement (~2 µm/min), but significantly faster than expected from the independently measured average flux rate (0.25 µm/min). Each spindle contains at least 18 chromosomes, with many spindles containing >18 as a result of lateral fusion of single sperm nucleus spindles. The faster moving chromosomes represent a small percentage (<5%) of the total number of observed chromosomes.
Taxol treatment of somatic newt lung cells during
anaphase rapidly reduces the rate of chromosome-to-pole
movement approximately fivefold. This occurs because
taxol rapidly blocks MT assembly/disassembly at the kinetochore, inhibiting the "Pacman" kinetochore mechanism for anaphase A that predominates in these cells. Chromosomes continue moving poleward at the slow kMT flux
rates, because taxol does not initially block poleward MT
flux (Waters et al., 1996). These results predict that, if
poleward MT flux is the predominant mechanism for
anaphase chromosome movement in Xenopus extract
spindles, then taxol should have little effect on anaphase A
velocity in this system. To test this hypothesis, we analyzed
anaphase chromosome movement in Xenopus extract
spindles in the presence of 0.1, 0.5, 1, and 2 µM taxol. At 1 and 2 µM, taxol did not affect the rate of chromosome-
to-pole movement even though it greatly increased the
MT density near the spindle poles (Fig. 4 A, middle row;
Figs. 5, and 6 A). The separated chromosomes migrated at
control rates to the edge of this dense mass of MTs. Treatment with higher taxol concentrations (5 µM) was not possible because of the formation of taxol-tubulin aggregates
throughout the extract. We also confirmed that 1 µM taxol
did not significantly affect the rate of poleward MT flux in
metaphase Xenopus extract spindles (Figs. 4 B, and 6 B).
Analysis of the effect of taxol on MT flux was performed on metaphase spindles because the combination of the exit
from metaphase and the taxol treatment greatly perturbed
anaphase spindle structure, making marking experiments
very difficult. The similar effects of taxol on MT flux during both metaphase and anaphase in somatic cells suggests
that the sensitivity of the flux machinery to taxol does not
change between metaphase and anaphase (Waters et al.,
1996
). We found that at longer times after addition of taxol (>30 min) metaphase spindles possessed extremely
dense MT asters near the spindle poles and very weak MT
density in the spindle midregion. Marks made at the edge
of the very dense zone moved poleward slowly at <1 µm/
min (not shown). Although the complex kinetic effects of
taxol treatment remain to be explored, in the time and
place that most anaphase chromosome movement occurs (between 5 and 15 min after the addition of taxol and from
the middle of the spindle to the edge of the dense MT asters), chromosome-to-pole movement and poleward MT
flux were unaffected.
In addition to poleward MT flux, a different type of minus end-directed poleward transport has been described
recently in Xenopus extract spindles (Heald et al., 1996,
1997
). When added to extracts, short fluorescently labeled
MTs were found to move poleward with their minus end
leading at average rates of ~6 µm/min, three times faster
than anaphase chromosome movement. This poleward transport of short MTs was unaffected by addition of 2.5 mM
AMPPNP but was inhibited by addition of either vanadate, which is known to inhibit cytoplasmic dynein motor
activity, or an anti-cytoplasmic dynein intermediate chain
monoclonal antibody (Heald et al., 1996
, 1997
). These results suggest that cytoplasmic dynein is responsible for the
observed transport. To test if this dynein-dependent poleward transport plays any role in anaphase chromosome
movement, we monitored anaphase in the presence of 25 or 50 µM vanadate. Although vanadate often accelerated
spindle dissolution during anaphase (not shown), we did
not find a significant effect of vanadate addition at these concentrations on the rate of chromosome-to-pole movement (Fig. 6 A). Rapid spindle dissolution during anaphase in the presence of vanadate prevented us from determining the effect of vanadate on anaphase poleward
MT flux. However, cytoplasmic dynein does not appear to
play a major role in poleward MT flux since neither treatment with 50-150 µM vanadate (Sawin and Mitchison,
1991
) nor addition of p50dynamitin, a specific inhibitor of
cytoplasmic dynein function (Echeverri et al., 1996
), has a
significant effect on flux in metaphase Xenopus extract
spindles (Shirasu, M., unpublished results).
Poleward Forces Act on Kinetochores during Metaphase in Xenopus Extract Spindles
Since poleward MT flux occurs during both metaphase and anaphase in Xenopus extract spindles, we looked for evidence of a poleward force acting on kinetochores during metaphase. In the in vitro spindles, chromosome arms are normally confined to a narrow equatorial region at metaphase (Figs. 2, and 7 A). However, unlike in somatic cells, the chromosomes on the in vitro spindles do not oscillate (not shown), indicating that the in vitro kinetochores do not exhibit directional instability. Thus, it was possible that poleward forces at kinetochores occur only after activation of anaphase in Xenopus extract spindles. Evidence that there is a poleward force on kinetochores during metaphase came from the morphology of chromosomes after spindles were held for 4-8 h in CSF metaphase arrest. Over this period, chromosome arms became partially disjoined and acrocentric centromere regions were seen extended poleward (Fig. 7 B). There was no detectable movement of the leading edges of the partially disjoined chromosomes over a 10-min period, indicating that poleward movement of the kinetochores was constrained by incomplete disjunction of the chromosome arms. Consistent with this hypothesis, small chromosomes were occasionally observed to move poleward at a rate similar to anaphase when they were no longer constrained by attachments near the metaphase plate (not shown). The prolonged metaphase-arrested spindles exhibited normal metaphase spindle morphology and retained anaphase competency since addition of a calcium pulse to these spindles activated the completion of chromosome disjunction and normal poleward chromosome movement (not shown).
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Discussion |
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Anaphase A and Poleward Microtubule Flux Occur at Similar Rates in Xenopus Extract Spindles
Our anaphase marking experiments demonstrate that in
Xenopus extract spindles the leading edge of the chromosomal mass moves poleward at the same average rate as a
mark made on the spindle MTs (~2 µm/min). In contrast,
kinetochores in vertebrate somatic cells move poleward
during most of anaphase A at ~2 µm/min, whereas fluorescent marks on the kMTs flux poleward much more
slowly at 0.3-0.5 µm/min (Mitchison and Salmon, 1992;
Zhai et al., 1995
). These results indicate that the "poleward flux/traction fiber" model (Fig. 1 B) applies for
anaphase A chromosome movement in spindles assembled in Xenopus extracts.
One caveat, when comparing MT marking experiments
in Xenopus extract spindles to marking experiments in somatic cell spindles, is that MT populations detected by the
marking procedure in the two systems are not the same.
Marking experiments in somatic cell spindles detect primarily kMTs (Mitchison, 1989; Mitchison and Salmon,
1992
; Zhai et al., 1995
; Waters et al., 1996
), whereas in Xenopus extract spindles they detect a large majority of the spindle MTs (Sawin and Mitchison, 1991
). This difference
most likely arises from the very different kMT/nonkMT
(nonkinetochore microtubule) ratios in embryonic/meiotic
versus somatic spindles and the much greater total number
of MTs in the large embryonic spindles (Salmon and Segall, 1980
; Sawin and Mitchison, 1991
; Wise et al., 1991
).
Since in vitro spindle marking experiments are dominated
by nonkMTs (Sawin and Mitchison, 1991
, 1994
), the conclusion from marking studies that poleward MT flux is the
predominant mechanism for anaphase A chromosome
movement rests on the untested assumption that kMTs
and nonkMTs flux at the same rate. One way to avoid this
assumption would be to determine the nonkMT flux rate
in somatic cells, where the kMT flux rate is already known. However, the rapid turnover of nonkMTs has prevented a
determination of their flux rate in somatic cells. Given our
inability to distinguish kMTs from nonkMTs in Xenopus
extract spindles, we have attempted to strengthen the conclusion from the marking experiment by comparing the response of anaphase A chromosome movement and poleward MT flux to treatment with different pharmacological
agents.
Anaphase A and Poleward Microtubule Flux Exhibit Similar Responses to Pharmacological Perturbations in Xenopus Extract Spindles
If kinetochores and their associated chromosomes are
pulled poleward primarily by MT flux, then inhibition of
flux should inhibit anaphase A, whereas inhibition of MT
disassembly at kinetochores should not inhibit anaphase
A. An important finding in this study is that 1.5 mM AMPPNP, previously shown to inhibit flux (Sawin and Mitchison, 1991), inhibits anaphase A in the in vitro spindles. In
contrast, microinjection of AMPPNP at final concentrations up to 5 mM in mitotic PtK1 cells does not substantially inhibit anaphase A, although it does strongly inhibit
anaphase B (Lee, 1989
). These results are consistent with
an AMPPNP-insensitive Pacman kinetochore mechanism
(Fig. 1 A) predominating during anaphase A in somatic
cells versus an AMPPNP-sensitive poleward flux mechanism (Fig. 1 B) predominating during anaphase A in Xenopus extracts.
Interpretation of AMPPNP effects in extracts is complicated by the relative nonspecificity of this inhibitor. Several lines of evidence suggest that inhibition of poleward
chromosome movement by AMPPNP is not due to inhibition of exit from metaphase or inhibition of chromosome
disjunction. First, measurement of H1 kinase levels showed
that AMPPNP did not inhibit exit from metaphase although it did delay the drop in H1 kinase activity in a dose-dependent manner. However, this delay was too short to account
for the observed inhibition of chromosome-to-pole movement. Second, concentrations of AMPPNP higher than those
used in our study did not inhibit either exit from metaphase or chromosome disjunction in PtK1 cells (Lee, 1989).
Third, in the presence of AMPPNP, spindle pole-to-pole elongation revealed the presence of separated sisters on
the in vitro spindles (Figs. 4 A, and 5 C).
The lack of an effect of taxol treatments on the rate of
chromosome-to-pole movement is also consistent with
poleward MT flux playing the predominant role during
anaphase A in Xenopus extract spindles. This result was
predicted from the effect of taxol on mitotic newt lung
cells, where it does not immediately inhibit flux but does
inhibit MT plus end assembly dynamics at the kinetochore and the component of anaphase A produced by kinetochores (Waters et al., 1996). Chromosome-to-pole movement at control rates in the presence of vanadate also excludes a significant role for dynein-dependent transport in
anaphase chromosome movement in Xenopus extract
spindles.
The combination of the marking studies and the pharmacology strongly suggest that MT flux plays a more dominant role in poleward chromosome movement in Xenopus extract spindles than in vertebrate somatic cells.
However, in the AMPPNP treatments, as well as in control spindles, a small number of chromosomes moved significantly faster than the rest of the chromosomal mass
and the independently measured average flux rate. These
fast movements might represent either Pacman kinetochore activity or the latching of chromosomes onto a different type of poleward transport mechanism, such as the
dynein-dependent transport of MT fragments (Heald et al., 1996, 1997
). Alternatively, the faster movements may represent differentially fluxing MT subpopulations, the existence of which is indicated by spreading of the width of the
fluorescent mark in both control (Fig. 3 B) and AMPPNP-treated spindles (Sawin and Mitchison, 1991
).
Implications of Two Distinct Mechanisms for Anaphase A Chromosome Movement
It is tempting to speculate that anaphase A is produced
primarily by Pacman kinetochore activity in cell types that
have oscillating chromosomes, whereas a MT flux mechanism predominates in cell types that do not exhibit chromosome oscillations. In addition to Xenopus extract spindles, chromosome oscillations do not occur in spindles of
insect spermatocytes (Forer, 1965, 1966
; Nicklas, 1989
),
higher plants (Hard and Allen, 1977
; Khodjakov et al., 1996
), and echinoderm embryos (Ito et al., 1994a,b). Nicklas (1989)
severed spindle fibers between the chromosomes and the pole of anaphase grasshopper spermatocytes and found that chromosome poleward movement
persisted toward the severed ends of the fibers. From these results, Nicklas (1989)
proposed that force generation for anaphase A is at or close to the kinetochore for
this cell type. However, it is possible that the mechanisms
that support/organize the poleward ends of the severed
spindle fibers also produce poleward flux and minus end
depolymerization. MT marking experiments using non-perturbing methods, like the fluorescence photoactivation method used in our study, are urgently needed in these different systems to determine the generality of a predominantly poleward flux-driven mechanism for anaphase A.
Although it is possible that different cell types use fundamentally different mechanisms for anaphase A, we favor the idea that both mechanisms exist in all higher eukaryotic mitotic and meiotic spindles with one of them
predominating during anaphase A (see also Mitchison and
Salmon, 1992). We think this for the following reasons: (a)
poleward MT flux makes a small but significant contribution to anaphase A in vertebrate somatic cells, where Pacman kinetochore movement predominates. Furthermore,
in the later stages of anaphase A in newt lung cells, the kinetochores "park" on the MT lattice and are pulled poleward exclusively by MT flux (Mitchison and Salmon,
1992
), much like kinetochores throughout anaphase A in
Xenopus extract spindles; (b) kinetochores on Xenopus extract spindles, where poleward MT flux appears to predominate, recruit kinetochore components such as CENP-E,
MCAK/XKCM1, and cytoplasmic dynein that are present
at the kinetochores of somatic cells (Walczak et al., 1996
;
Desai et al., 1997
; Wood et al., 1997
). In addition, we saw
limited evidence for occasional chromosome movement
faster than the flux rate, possibly indicative of a Pacman contribution; and (c) in insect meiosis, where poleward
movement of MT ablation zones at anaphase A rates argues for a predominance of the flux mechanism, analysis
of acetylated tubulin distributions indicates that at least
some depolymerization occurs at kinetochores during
anaphase A (Wilson et al., 1994
).
Why would many, perhaps all, cells have apparently redundant mechanisms for poleward chromosome movement? One possibility is that overlapping mechanisms provide a fail-safe system and increase the fidelity of segregation.
Alternatively, both mechanisms play other roles in mitosis/meiosis, and may happen to overlap in moving chromosomes poleward. Specifically, we suspect that poleward
MT flux, in addition to its role in moving chromosomes, is
probably important in spindle assembly and may also help
align chromosomes at the metaphase plate. MT dynamics
at kinetochores, in addition to its role in moving chromosomes, may reflect the mechanisms used to attach MTs to
kinetochores, and ensure bipolar orientation of chromosomes. In addition, motors at kinetochores may communicate with the checkpoint system (Nicklas, 1997; Rieder and Salmon, 1998
) that proofreads this attachment using a
tension sensor, which might be a motor itself.
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Footnotes |
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Received for publication 9 December 1997 and in revised form 10 March 1998.
Address all correspondence to Arshad Desai, 240 Longwood Avenue, Bldg. C-517, Department of Cell Biology, Harvard Medical School, Boston, MA 02115. Tel.: (617) 432-2688. Fax: (617) 432-3702. E-mail: Arshad_Desai{at}hms.harvard.eduWe thank A. Murray for his role in starting this collaborative project and for his constant encouragement; S. Inoué and the Woods Hole Marine Biological Laboratory for providing laboratory space; the Marine Biological Laboratory (Woods Hole, MA) Physiology course for access to equipment; K. Oegema, C. Walczak, J. Swedlow, C. Waterman-Storer, and M. Shirasu for helpful comments on the manuscript.
This work was supported by grants from the National Institutes of Health to T.J. Mitchison and to E.D. Salmon (GM24364). A. Desai is a Howard Hughes Medical Institute pre-doctoral fellow.
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Abbreviations used in this paper |
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MT, microtubule; kMT, kinetochore microtubule; nonkMT, nonkinetochore microtubule; C2CF, bis-caged carboxyfluorescein; AMPPNP, 5'-adenylylimidodiphosphate; DAPI, 4',6'-diamidino-2-phenylindole; CSF, cytostatic factor.
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