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Vol. 16, Issue 9, 4423-4436, September 2005
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* Department of Biology, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill, NC 27599-3280;
Institute of Molecular Biology, University of Oregon, Eugene, OR 97403; and
Center for Molecular Medicine, University of Connecticut Health Center, Farmington, CT 06030-3101
Submitted November 8, 2004;
Revised June 3, 2005;
Accepted June 14, 2005
Monitoring Editor: Thomas Pollard
| ABSTRACT |
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| INTRODUCTION |
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The components of the spindle required for furrow positioning have been extensively investigated, and, surprisingly, many parts of the spindle are not essential for the initiation of cytokinesis. Microtubules are both necessary and sufficient for furrow positioning, because cells containing only asters or only the central spindle were able to induce furrowing (Alsop and Zhang, 2003
), whereas cells lacking microtubules fail to do so (Hamaguchi, 1975
; Canman et al., 2000
). Although microtubules are indispensable for furrow initiation, the nature of the signal and the population of microtubules responsible continue to be debated. Experiments in echinoderm embryos led to a model that asters stimulate furrow formation at the equator, where signals from overlapping microtubules are maximal (Rappaport, 1986
). Observations in mammalian cells suggest that the central spindle, not astral, microtubules positively regulate furrow formation (Cao and Wang, 1996
). A model proposing negative regulation of furrowing by microtubules, based on experiments in Caenorhabditis elegans, speculates that the formation of the central spindle may result in furrowing due to removal of microtubule inhibition of furrowing at the equator (Dechant and Glotzer, 2003
).
These models all propose a role for overlapping microtubule plus ends either at the equator or the central spindle to produce the signal for furrow formation. Recently, the requirement for a bipolar spindle for cytokinesis was tested in animal cells using the small molecule inhibitor monastrol (Canman et al., 2003
). This study showed that cells with monopolar spindles can undergo cytokinesis, with the furrow forming on the side of the cell facing the chromosomes rather than the pole. Polar microtubules were found to be dynamic, whereas a subset of microtubules extending past chromosomes formed stable interactions with the cell cortex at the site of furrowing (Canman et al., 2003
). This led to a model in which microtubule dynamics contribute to furrow positioning, with a subpopulation of relatively stable microtubules interacting with the equatorial cortex to promote furrow formation, and dynamic microtubules at the polar regions helping to suppress ectopic furrowing (Canman et al., 2003
). Therefore, microtubule dynamics, rather than their location at asters or the central spindle, may be important for furrow positioning.
Taxol is commonly used to perturb microtubule dynamics, because it has been shown to stabilize microtubules and to promote microtubule assembly in vitro and in vivo (Schiff et al., 1979
; Schiff and Horwitz, 1980
; De Brabander et al., 1981
, 1986
). Previous studies on cytokinesis using taxol produced conflicting results: furrow initiation in sea urchin eggs was blocked, but in sand dollar eggs it was not (Salmon and Wolniak, 1990
; Hamaguchi, 1998
). Addition of taxol to PtK1 cells before the metaphase-anaphase transition results in a mitotic block (De Brabander et al., 1986
).
PtK1 cells treated with taxol after anaphase onset showed either a reduced degree and rate of furrowing (Snyder and Mullins, 1993
; Snyder and McLelland, 1996
) or no effect on the timing of cytokinesis (Amin-Hanjani and Wadsworth, 1991
). These PtK1 studies were not able to address furrow positioning, because taxol treatment occurred after the small window in early anaphase when furrow position is established.
To test the hypothesis that stable microtubules can position furrows, we imaged cytokinesis in cells in which microtubules were stabilized by taxol. Unlike previous experiments, cells were treated with taxol before anaphase and then induced into anaphase by inhibiting the spindle checkpoint. We found that taxol-stabilized microtubules are sufficient for furrow initiation and that the position of furrowing correlates with the interaction of a stable spindle microtubule with the cell cortex. Our data also confirm that although dynamic microtubules are not necessary for furrow initiation, they are required for the normal timing of furrow initiation and the completion of cytokinesis.
| MATERIALS AND METHODS |
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Immunofluorescence
Cells were lysed in freshly prepared 0.5% Triton X-100 in PHEM buffer (60 mM PIPES, 25 mM HEPES, 10 mM EGTA, and 4 mM MgSO4, pH 6.9) at 37°C and fixed in freshly prepared 4% formaldehyde in PHEM buffer at 37°C for 20 min. Cells were then rinsed three times for 5 min in phosphate-buffered saline with 0.05% Tween 20 (PBST) and blocked overnight at 4°C in PHEM with 5% donkey serum (except for PRC1 and tubulin immunofluorescence, for which cells were first fixed, then rinsed, and then lysed before blocking). Primary antibodies were diluted into PHEM with 5% donkey serum and cells were incubated at room temperature for an hour. After three 5-min PBST washes, X-rhodamine-labeled secondary donkey anti-rabbit (Jackson ImmunoResearch Laboratories, West Grove, PA) and/or Alexa 488-labeled phalloidin (Molecular Probes, Eugene, OR) diluted 1:100 in PHEM with 5% donkey serum were added for 45 min.
Rabbit anti-anillin antibody was a generous gift from Christine Field (Harvard Medical School, Boston, MA) and was used at 1:600. Rabbit anti-inner centromere protein (INCENP) antibody was kindly provided by Aaron Straight (Stanford University School of Medicine, Stanford, CA) and used at 1:1500. Antibody to PRC1 (H-170) (Santa Cruz Biotechnology, Santa Cruz, CA) was used at 1:500, and anti-tubulin antibody DM1A (Sigma) at 1:300. The rabbit polyclonal antibody to nonmuscle myosin II was purchased from Biomedical Technologies (Cambridge, MA) and used for immunofluorescence as per manufacturer's instructions.
Microinjection
Before microinjection, coverslips were mounted in modified Rose chambers (Rieder and Hard, 1990
) lacking the top coverslip, and chambers were filled with L-15 media. A circle was inscribed on the bottom coverslip using a diamond-tip scribing objective (Carl Zeiss, Thornwood, NY) and was used as a reference to relocate injected cells. Injections were performed on a Zeiss IM microscope equipped with phase contrast optics and a 40x/0.75 numerical aperture (NA) objective. The microinjection system is essentially as described previously (Waters et al., 1996
). His-Mad2
C was purified as described previously (Canman et al., 2002
) and injected at a needle concentration of 5 mg/ml in human embryonic kidney (HEK) (20 mM HEPES, 100 mM KCl, and 1 mM dithiothreitol, pH 7.7). Cells were treated with 10 µM taxol for a minimum of 30 min before microinjection of Mad2
C. The X-rhodamine-labeled tubulin was prepared as described previously (Hyman et al., 1991
; Waterman-Storer et al., 1998
), or rhodamine-labeled tubulin was purchased from Cytoskeleton (Denver, CO) and injected at a needle concentration of 1 mg/ml. For time-lapse microscopy on the injection scope, the top of the chamber was sealed using mineral oil. Chambers used for imaging on the confocal microscope were sealed using a top coverslip and filled with fresh, dye-free high glucose L-15 medium supplemented with 0.3 U/ml oxygen-scavenging system Oxyrase (Oxyrase).
Microscopy and Image Acquisition
Images of immunofluorescently labeled cells were obtained with a Hamamatsu ER cooled charge-coupled device (CCD) digital camera (Hamamatsu Photonics, Bridgewater, NJ), using a Nikon TE 300 inverted microscope equipped with a 100x/1.4 NA Plan Apo Phase 3 objective lens, a 100-W mercury arc fluorescence light source, and a Sutter filter wheel. Digital images were acquired by MetaMorph image processing software (Universal Imaging, Downingtown, PA). Z series optical sections through each cell were obtained at 0.2-µm steps, using MetaMorph software to control the stepping motor on the Nikon TE 300.
For live cell imaging, cells were imaged using the spinning disk confocal microscope essentially as described previously (Maddox et al., 2003
). Briefly, images were obtained on a Nikon TE300 inverted microscope equipped with an OrcaER cooled CCD camera (Hamamatsu Photonics). Pairs of fluorescence and phase contrast images were obtained using a 100x 1.4 NA Plan Apo Phase 3 objective with excitation light supplied from an optical fiber connected to a 100-W argon-krypton air-cooled laser. The microscope and shutters were controlled by MetaMorph imaging software, using a Nikon stepping motor to take 0.5-µm steps in the z-axis. Stage temperature was maintained at
37°C using an ASI 400 air curtain incubator (Nevtek, Burnsville, VA).
Data Analysis
Image deconvolution of stacks of optical sections was performed with a DeltaVision deconvolution system and Softworx software (Applied Precision, Issaquah, WA). For cell area calculations, the region tool in MetaMorph was used to trace the cell boundary at the time of anaphase onset in phase contrast images, and the area was calculated using calibrated region measurements. All averages, standard deviations, and p values were calculated using Excel (Microsoft, Redmond, WA).
| RESULTS |
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tubulin in the microtubule lattice, causing stabilization under conditions that normally result in depolymerization: when the GTP-binding site contains GDP or microtubules are exposed to cold or calcium (Schiff et al., 1979
tubulin-expressing PtK2 cells (Rusan et al., 2001
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To determine how quickly taxol suppressed microtubule dynamics, we used PtK1 cells expressing EB1-GFP. Normally, EB1 associates strongly with growing, but not stable, plus ends (Morrison et al., 1998
; Tirnauer et al., 2002
). We observed live EB1-GFP-expressing mitotic cells before and after treatment with 10 µM taxol using spinning disk confocal microscopy. Analysis of these cells showed that EB1 was lost from the plus ends of microtubules within an average of 5 min 35 s ± 48 s after taxol addition (n = 7), as shown in Figure 2, A-C. After strong EB1-GFP association with microtubule plus ends was lost, the weak association of EB1 with the microtubule lattice and spindle poles persisted (Figure 2C) (Tirnauer et al., 2002
). This shows that taxol rapidly suppresses microtubule dynamics in live PtK1 cells.
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Stabilization of Microtubules before Anaphase Onset Disrupts Cytokinetic Furrow Position, Timing, and Completion
We first examined the effects of microtubule stabilization before the window of furrow formation during early anaphase. Because treatment of mitotic PtK1 cells with taxol before the metaphase-anaphase transition results in a mitotic arrest, we used a dominant negative-truncated Mad2 His fusion protein, Mad2
C, to bypass this mitotic arrest (Canman et al., 2002
). Mad2
C has been shown to induce premature anaphase onset in prometaphase cells without affecting the timing or morphology of the subsequent cytokinesis (Canman et al., 2002
). Taxol treatment coupled with the use of Mad2
C to induce anaphase allowed us to ask whether cells in which all microtubules are stabilized can initiate furrows. Cells arrested in prometaphase or metaphase by taxol treatment were injected with Mad2
C and followed by time-lapse microscopy. Mad2
C induced anaphase onset (visualized by separation of sister chromatid arms) in taxol-treated cells after an average of 17 ± 8 min after injection (n = 14), similar to control cells (Table 1). Also similar to control cells, taxol-treated, Mad2
C-injected cells spent an average of 58 ± 24 min in the cytokinesis phase (C phase) before respreading and reforming the nuclear envelope. This 1-h window after anaphase onset in which cells are capable of furrowing is similar to previous observations (Martineau et al., 1995
; Canman et al., 2000
; Shannon et al., 2002
; Straight et al., 2003
).
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We saw three phenotypes in cells entering anaphase with taxol-stabilized microtubules: no furrowing, normal furrowing, and abnormal furrowing (Figure 3 and Table 1). In none of these cases did cytokinesis progress to completion. Of the 14 cells assayed, five did not form any cleavage furrows before respreading and exiting C phase (Figure 3A, Figure 3A Movie, and Table 1). Three cells initiated normal furrows, which began as two ingressions near the equator perpendicular to the spindle axis (Figure 3B and Figure 3B Movie). Six cells furrowed abnormally, having either an incorrect number or location of furrows (Table 1). Two cells had three ingressions, two cells had only a one-sided furrow, and two cells furrowed on an axis not perpendicular to the spindle. An example of a cell that furrowed on an abnormal axis is shown in Figure 3C (Figure 3C Movie available online).
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In the nine cells that formed furrows, either normal or abnormal, the time from anaphase onset to furrow induction was longer than controls, 30 ± 15 min versus 11 ± 4 min (p < 0.01) (Table 1). Therefore, taxol stabilization of microtubules delayed, but did not prevent, the onset of furrowing in these cells. In all cases, cells failed to complete cytokinesis. Furrowing often did not progress to the midpoint of the cell, and most furrows regressed around the end of C phase.
Random cortical contractions occur during C phase in cells treated with nocodazole to depolymerize microtubules and induced to enter anaphase by microinjection of Mad2
C (Canman et al., 2000
). We saw no evidence for these random cortical ingressions in the taxol-treated cells induced into anaphase. This was true both for cells that exhibited furrowing and cells that did not furrow. This indicates that the presence of microtubule polymer, rather than dynamics, is important to suppress global contractility.
We looked for differences between cells that furrowed and those that did not. Cell cycle state did not seem to differentiate the two populations, because cells with a metaphase plate were not more likely to furrow or position furrows normally than cells with stabilized prometaphase spindles. Formation of a midzone microtubule complex is prevented in cells treated with taxol before anaphase onset, but this disruption did not differ between cells that did or did not exhibit furrowing (see below). Cell area did seem to be an important variable, because cells with a larger area were less likely to furrow than cells with smaller areas. Area measurements at anaphase onset showed that the average area of cells that failed to form furrows was 915 µm2, whereas those that did form furrows had an average area of 603 µm2 (p < 0.05). Therefore, cells that failed to furrow were 50% larger in area on average than those that did produce furrows.
From these observations, we conclude that PtK1 cells induced to enter anaphase after microtubule stabilization are capable of initiating furrows, although these furrows often have an abnormal number of ingressions or are mispositioned relative to the spindle. These data suggest that dynamic microtubule plus ends are not required for furrow induction or for suppression of the random cortical contractions that occur during anaphase in the absence of microtubules. However, the failure of some cells to initiate furrows, as well as the high frequency of abnormal furrows and the delay in furrow initiation, suggest that microtubule organization, density, or dynamics is key for some aspect(s) of furrow positioning or signaling, as well as completion of cytokinesis.
Stable Microtubule Plus Ends Contact the Cell Cortex at the Site of Furrowing
We suspected that one reason cells with smaller area might be more likely to initiate furrows is that they were biased toward increased incidence of microtubule-cortex interactions. Because furrows have been shown to be associated with stable microtubules (Canman et al., 2003
), we imaged microtubules in taxol-treated cells to determine whether stable microtubules contacted the cell cortex before the initiation of furrowing. To do this, we imaged cells that were microinjected with rhodamine-labeled tubulin and Mad2
C and subsequently treated with 10 µM taxol. When cells with taxol-stabilized spindles were induced into anaphase, they retained the short astral microtubules typical of preanaphase spindles. Microtubule arrays were examined using image deconvolution and single plane projections of multiple Z sections acquired by spinning disk confocal microscopy. As in the previous experiment, pleiotropic effects on furrowing were observed: of twelve cells analyzed, three furrowed normally, six abnormally, and three did not furrow. In all cases, the presence or absence of microtubule-cortex interactions correlated with furrowing. The nine cells that furrowed produced a total of seventeen ingressions, all of which exhibited a microtubule-cortical interaction at the site before furrow initiation. Four of the six cells that furrowed abnormally exhibited furrowing in a polar region of the cell. These cells had seven polar furrows total, each of which was preceded by a polar astral microtubule interacting with the polar cortex. The three cells that did not furrow lacked any contacts between spindle microtubules and the cell cortex (see below).
Figure 4 shows the relationship between microtubules and furrowing in a control cell, a cell that did not furrow, a cell that furrowed near the equator, and a cell that furrowed abnormally near the pole. Figure 4A (Figure 4A Movie available online) shows a control cell injected with rhodamine-labeled tubulin and Mad2
C. During anaphase, numerous microtubules extended from the spindle poles to the peripheral equatorial cortex (arrows). The furrow formed
10 min after this image was acquired, in the region of the multiple contacts between the microtubules and the cortex (Figure 4A' and Figure 4A' Movie). An example of a taxol-treated cell that did not furrow is shown in Figure 4, B and B'. No spindle microtubule plus ends contacted the cell periphery (Figure 4B and Figure 4B Movie), and the cell failed to form a cleavage furrow (Figure 4B' and Figure 4B' Movie) before exiting mitosis. Note the large area of the cell compared with other cells in the figure and lack of random cortical contractions. We are confident that we did not miss a stable microtubule in any of the cells that failed to furrow, because Z sections covered the entire height of the cells. An example of a stable microtubule interacting with the cortex near the equator at the eventual site of furrow formation in a taxol-treated cell is shown in Figure 4, C-C''. The single plane projection of deconvolved Z series images shows microtubule(s) extending out from the spindle to the cell periphery near the equator (Figure 4C, arrow). Single plane images reveal the interaction of the microtubule(s) with the cortex (arrow) before furrow initiation (Figure 4C' and Figure 4C' Movie). The furrow begins at the site of microtubule contact and ingresses about halfway through the cell before regressing (Figure 4C'' and Figure 4C'' Movie). Notice that the top of the cell, which lacks microtubule interactions, does not furrow. Figure 4, D-D'', is an example of a cell with an abnormally positioned furrow in the polar region of the cell. Figure 4D shows the single plane projections of deconvolved Z series images showing all the microtubules in the cell at two time points, indicating that there is no spindle reorganization during the time course of these experiments due to the lack of microtubule dynamics. The arrow points to a microtubule extending from the spindle pole to the polar cortex before the induction of the furrow. Single plane images in Figure 4, D' and D'' (Figure 4, D' and D'', Movies available online) show the interaction of the microtubule with the cortex (arrows) and the subsequent furrow that forms in the polar region.
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Localization of Contractile Ring Components to Furrows Formed in Cells with Taxol-stabilized Microtubules
To test whether the furrows that formed at the ends of taxol-stabilized microtubules contained typical components, we examined their molecular composition. PtK1 cells arrested by taxol and injected with Mad2
C were followed by time-lapse phase microscopy and fixed shortly after furrow initiation. Anillin and INCENP, which normally localize to the cortex before furrow initiation as well as actin and myosin II localizations were examined.
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C injected cells that furrowed, phalloidin staining showed an accumulation of F-actin at the site of furrow ingression (n = 26) (Figure 5B). Myosin II distribution in control cells, as visualized by immunofluorescence, was uniform along the cortex until late anaphase, when it became concentrated in and around the site of furrowing (Figure 5C). Twenty-one of 24 taxol-treated cells injected with Mad2
C showed enhanced myosin II localization at the ingressing furrow, as shown in Figure 5D. No actin or myosin II accumulation at the equator was seen in control or taxol-treated cells before anaphase.
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C. An example is shown in Figure 5F, where anillin is localized to the site of furrowing, although the band of anillin is not as well organized as in controls. The localization of anillin indicates that these furrows contain components of the contractile ring and are not random cortical contractions as seen in cells treated with nocodazole (Canman et al., 2000
We also determined the localization of INCENP, a chromosomal passenger protein that localizes to centromeres in mitosis and moves to the spindle midzone and equatorial cortex during anaphase, where it has been implicated in the completion of cytokinesis (Cooke et al., 1987
; Eckley et al., 1997
; Mackay et al., 1998
). In control PtK1 cells, INCENP localized to the equatorial cortex in anaphase between the separated chromosomes as expected (Figure 6A). In 14 taxol-treated cells that furrowed after injection of Mad2
C, we found no localization of INCENP at the cortex (Figure 6B). Whereas actin accumulated at the ingressions, INCENP showed diffuse localization near the chromosomes, indicating that it dissociated from the centromeres but did not localize to the cortex (Figure 6B). These data are consistent with a previous report that INCENP requires dynamic microtubules to localize to the cleavage furrow (Wheatley et al., 2001
) and provide further evidence that furrow initiation does not depend on INCENP localization to the cortex (Adams et al., 2001
).
Stabilization of Microtubules during Anaphase Affects the Timing of Furrow Initiation but Not Its Position
One possibility for the lack of furrowing, poor furrowing, and one-sided furrowing in some cells with stabilized preanaphase spindles is too few microtubule interactions with the cortex, because addition of taxol stabilized the short astral arrays typical of these spindles (Figure 4, B-D). Because astral microtubules grow rapidly during anaphase, we stabilized microtubules by adding taxol just after anaphase onset to try and increase the number of stable microtubules interacting with the cortex. To test the effects of microtubule stabilization during anaphase, we used PtK2 cells expressing GFP-
tubulin (Rusan et al., 2001
). Cells were followed by phase contrast microscopy, and taxol was added at the first sign of sister chromatid separation. In all cells treated with taxol after anaphase onset (n = 7), furrow position was normal, with ingressions on both sides of the spindle equator. However, there was a delay in the onset of furrow formation, with an average time of 22 ± 10 min from anaphase onset to furrow initiation, compared with 12 ± 4 min in control cells (n = 3). Unlike previous reports (Snyder and McLelland, 1996
), there was no decrease in the rate of furrow progression, with an average time from furrow onset to maximum ingression of 13 ± 3 min in taxol-treated cells and 12 ± 3 min in controls.
Deconvolution and single plane projection of GFP-tubulin images showed that these cells had numerous microtubules that interacted with the cortex at the position of the spindle equator. Two examples are shown in Figure 7. Note the increased number and length of astral microtubules compared with the spindles in Figure 4. Taxol was added very early in anaphase to the cell in Figure 7, A and B, and this cell furrowed normally even though it failed to form the central spindle, as evidenced by the lack of GFP-tubulin signal between the two half-spindles. The other six cells were similar to the one shown in Figure 7C, where anaphase A occurred before the addition of taxol, and cells were able to form a central spindle.
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There was some blebbing in the polar regions of these cells (Figure 7, B and D), but because this blebbing also occurred in untreated GFP-
tubulin-expressing PtK2 cells, it cannot simply be due to a lack of dynamic microtubules. All cells treated with taxol after anaphase onset initiated furrows (7 of 7 initiate furrows), indicating more vigorous furrowing than cells treated with taxol in prometaphase or metaphase (9 of 12 initiate furrows). From these experiments, we conclude that taxol stabilization of anaphase spindle microtubules does not affect furrow position or rate of ingression, but it does cause a delay in the onset of furrowing.
Central Spindle Formation in the Presence of Taxol
The central spindle, or spindle midzone, forms during anaphase as interdigitating oppositely oriented microtubule plus ends are bundled by PRC1, which is essential for midzone formation (Mollinari et al., 2002
). Previous studies indicated that this structure plays an important role in furrow induction in mammalian cells (Wheatley and Wang, 1996
; Murata-Hori and Wang, 2002
). However, monopolar cells undergo cytokinesis, although they lack a central spindle, and all microtubules are oriented in the same direction (Canman et al., 2003
), casting doubt on the requirement of this structure for furrowing.
Our experiments visualizing microtubules in live cells suggested that there were differences in central spindle formation depending on when taxol was added. When taxol was added to cells with prometaphase or metaphase spindles and these cells were induced to enter anaphase by Mad2
C, the lack of microtubule dynamics prevented formation of the central spindle. Notice that the spindles in the cells in Figure 4 lack microtubule bundles between the half-spindles. However, six of seven cells treated with taxol after anaphase onset were able to form at least a partial central spindle (Figure 7).
We further examined midzone formation in our taxol-treated cells through tubulin and PRC1 immunofluorescence. In control anaphase cells, PRC1 was localized to the midzone as expected (Figure 8A; Jiang et al., 1998
). In cells arrested by taxol in metaphase, PRC1 was diffusely localized on the spindle (Figure 8B). Cells that furrowed after treatment with 10 µM taxol at anaphase onset (n = 10) showed PRC1 localization to the plus ends of some, but not all microtubules, as well as PRC1 between the two half-spindles (Figure 8C). We did not observe tubulin immunofluorescence between the two half-spindles, but it is well known that epitope shielding occurs in this area of the spindle. Based on PRC1 localization and live cell imaging of GFP-
-tubulin cells (Figure 7), we conclude that cells treated with taxol after anaphase onset can form a central spindle. Cells induced to enter anaphase by Mad2
C injection after taxol treatment exhibited PRC1 on a few microtubules, regardless of whether or not furrowing occurred (n = 10) (Figure 7, D and E). However, unlike cells treated with taxol after anaphase onset, there was no PRC1 localized between the two half-spindles. Based on PRC1 localization and rhodamine tubulin imaging in live cells (Figure 4), we conclude that cells treated with taxol before anaphase onset do not form a central spindle. Our data do not rule out a role for PRC1 in furrow formation, but suggest that the presence of overlapping microtubule plus ends in the spindle midzone is not required for furrow initiation. These results confirm that the localization of PRC1 is cell-cycle regulated (Zhu and Jiang, 2005
) and are consistent with recent findings that depletion of PRC1 in mammalian cells did not prevent furrow initiation or completion (Mollinari et al., 2005
).
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| DISCUSSION |
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In our current study, taxol-stabilized microtubules that contacted the cortex were able to elicit a furrowing response from the cortex, even though these microtubules were artificially stabilized. The structure of preassembled microtubules changes slightly after taxol is added (Arnal and Wade, 1995
), so the taxol-stabilized microtubules in our experiments are likely to differ from the stable microtubules that are normally attached to the equatorial cortex at anaphase. We have shown that both types of stable microtubules lack concentrated EB1 at their plus ends, and both are associated with furrow initiation, even though they are stabilized by different mechanisms (Canman et al., 2003
). In support of our data, recent experiments with taxol-treated sea urchin eggs show that the stabilized spindle can cause furrowing if brought into contact with the cortex (David Burgess, personal communication). We conclude that nondynamic plus ends of spindle microtubules are able to induce furrowing when they persist in contacting the cortex.
How can we reconcile our model for positioning of the cleavage furrow by stable microtubules with the ectopic Rappaport furrows that form between spindle poles lacking intervening chromosomes? Stable microtubules were not previously observed in the polar regions of dividing PtK1 cells (Canman et al., 2003
); however, it is possible that astral microtubules from two independent spindles may become stabilized due to interdigitating plus ends or cross-linking of oppositely oriented microtubules by microtubule-associated proteins. Rappaport furrows in PtK1 cells have previously been associated with the presence of overlapping microtubules (Savoian et al., 1999
). However, it remains to be shown whether these microtubules were stabilized or in contact with cortex.
Our data also show that the central spindle is not required for furrow initiation in mammalian cells. PtK1 cells treated with taxol before anaphase onset can furrow, even though overlapping microtubule bundles between segregated chromosomes are not able to form. This extends previous findings that overlapping microtubules are not required for furrow formation (Canman et al., 2003
).
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We suspect that one explanation for the lack of furrowing and abnormal furrow positioning in cells treated with taxol before anaphase onset is due to the stabilization of the short microtubule arrays typical of the preanaphase spindle. Anaphase spindles have longer astral microtubules and greater numbers of microtubules interacting with the cortex than metaphase spindles (compare Figure 4, A and C). Even though Mad2
C induces anaphase by activating the APC/C (Luo et al., 2000
; Canman et al., 2002
), the presence of taxol prevents the rearrangement of microtubules that usually accompanies anaphase onset. As a result, the microtubule contacts with the cortex are few and random, which could account for the variability in the presence and position of furrows in these cells (Figure 9). We saw a correlation between cell size and furrowing, with smaller cells more likely to form a furrow. If stabilized microtubules can induce a furrow only when they contact the cortex, then cells of larger area would be less likely to contain these random contacts. Therefore, stabilization of the preanaphase spindle sometimes results in a lack of microtubule-cortex interactions and a failure to furrow, especially in larger cells. In support of this idea, we found that stabilizing the long microtubules that grew immediately after anaphase onset produced numerous microtubule-cortex interactions, particularly at the equator. This stabilization resulted in correct furrow placement (Figures 7 and 9). Therefore, the growth of numerous microtubules to the cortex during early anaphase is likely required to provide a strong stimulus for proper furrowing (Figure 9).
What is the Role of Dynamic Microtubules in Cytokinesis?
Our studies indicate that the strength of the stimulus for furrowing depends on the location and number of stabile microtubule ends proximal to the cortex. It is not surprising that a single or few microtubule ends contacting the cortex would result in a delay in furrow formation compared with the normal timing with a large anaphase array. However, it was unexpected to see the 10-min delay that resulted when cells entering anaphase were treated with taxol. Long, stable microtubules were formed in these cells that extended out to the equatorial cortex. Once furrowing began, ingression progressed at normal velocities.
These data indicate that dynamic microtubules are not strictly required for furrow positioning or a normal rate of furrow ingression but that they do accelerate the timing of furrow formation. If reduction in the number of microtubule-cortical contacts is not the cause of the delay, other possibilities include loss of contributions from growing ends or from an incomplete midzone microtubule complex. Microtubule polymerization may recruit a plus end tracking protein or an unknown factor which could play a role in accelerating furrow formation at the equator. Dynamic microtubules could also contribute to timely furrowing by promoting relaxation at polar cortical regions, allowing contraction at the equator to occur more rapidly. Further experimentation will be needed to distinguish between these possibilities.
Whereas furrow positioning and initiation were able to occur in the presence of taxol, cells were not able to complete cytokinesis. Therefore, microtubule dynamics are required for furrow completion. A simple explanation may be that the stabilization of microtubules by taxol may have created a physical block to complete furrow ingression. Another possibility is that because dynamic microtubules are required for localization of INCENP (Wheatley et al., 2001
), furrows regressed due to lack of INCENP at the cortex. Alternatively, microtubules may play a more direct role in furrow completion. Because midzone microtubules are required for furrow completion (Wheatley and Wang, 1996
), and taxol prevents normal central spindle formation when added before anaphase onset (Figure 8) (Amin-Hanjani and Wadsworth, 1991
; Snyder and McLelland, 1996
), blocking microtubule dynamics may inhibit furrow completion due to the lack of a midzone. Interestingly, furrows formed in cells lacking a midzone (those treated with taxol before anaphase) often regressed, whereas furrows formed in cells with a midzone (treated with taxol after anaphase onset) progressed farther and did not regress.
Nature of Stimulatory Signal
What is it about stable microtubules that elicit a furrowing response from the cortex? It may be that the stable microtubule plus ends directly induce contractility. One possible mechanism would be the regulation of a GTPase by stable microtubule ends (Canman et al., 2003
). It has been shown in mammalian cells that the growth of microtubules activates the Rac1 GTPase, leading to actin polymerization in the leading edge of lamellipodia (Waterman-Storer et al., 1999
; Canman et al., 2003
). GTPases of the Rho family have been shown to be important for cytokinesis in a number of systems (Kishi et al., 1993
; Mabuchi et al., 1993
; O'Connell et al., 1999
; Tolliday et al., 2002
). Perhaps the presence of stable microtubules at the cortex locally activates Rho GTPases, leading to furrow formation. Alternatively, stable microtubules could promote delivery of a stimulating factor along microtubules to the cell cortex or removal of an inhibitory factor from a specific cortical region. By this mechanism, stable attachment of the microtubule plus end to the cortex would concentrate at this site a stimulatory factor transported along the microtubules. This would suggest an important role for kinesins, which could transport the stimulating molecule toward plus ends to the cortex or directly act to induce furrow formation. There is evidence that the kinesin PAV-KLP/ZEN-4/Chinese hamster ovary-1 is involved in cytokinesis, although whether it is required for furrow initiation or completion is unclear (Adams et al., 1998
; Kuriyama et al., 2002
; Matuliene and Kuriyama, 2002
). Although it has long been appreciated that microtubules are required for furrow positioning, the molecular nature of the signal has yet to be elucidated.
| ACKNOWLEDGMENTS |
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tubulin-expressing cells, Aaron Straight (Stanford University School of Medicine, Stanford, CA) and Christine Field (Harvard Medical School, Boston, MA) for antibodies, and Lisa Cameron for labeled tubulin. K.B.S. is a fellow in the Seeding Postdoctoral Innovators in Science and Education (SPIRE) program supported by the Minority Opportunities in Research Division of National Institute of General Medical Sciences Grant GM-000678. E.D.S. is supported by National Institutes of Health Grant GM-24364. | Footnotes |
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The online version of this article contains supplemental material at MBC Online (http://www.molbiolcell.org). ![]()
Address correspondence to: Katie B. Shannon (ktphd{at}email.unc.edu).
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