The disassembly and reassembly of functional centrosomes in vitro
- *Department of Biochemistry, Cell, and Molecular Biology, University of Kansas, Lawrence, KS 66045; †Division of Molecular Medicine, Wadsworth Center, New York State Department of Health, Albany, NY 12201-0509; and ‡The Marine Biological Laboratory, Woods Hole, MA 02543
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Communicated by Thomas N. Taylor, University of Kansas, Lawrence, KS (received for review April 10, 1998)
Abstract
Animal cells contain a single centrosome that nucleates and organizes a polarized array of microtubules which functions in many cellular processes. In most cells the centrosome is composed of two centrioles surrounded by an ill-defined “cloud” of pericentriolar material. Recently, γ-tubulin-containing 25-nm diameter ring structures have been identified as likely microtubule nucleation sites within the pericentriolar material of isolated centrosomes. Here we demonstrate that when Spisula centrosomes are extracted with 1.0 M KI they lose their microtubule nucleation potential and appear by three-dimensional electron microscopy as a complex lattice, built from 12- to 15-nm thick elementary fiber(s), that lack centrioles and 25-nm rings. Importantly, when these remnants are incubated in extracts prepared from Spisula oocytes they recover their 25-nm rings, γ-tubulin, and microtubule nucleation potential. This recovery process occurs in the absence of microtubules, divalent cations, and nucleotides. Thus, in animals the centrosome is structurally organized around a KI-insoluble filament-based “centromatrix” that serves as a scaffold to which those proteins required for microtubule nucleation bind, either directly or indirectly, in a divalent cation and nucleotide independent manner.
Footnotes
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↵ § To whom reprint requests should be addressed. e-mail: Palazzo{at}aster.bio.ukans.edu.
- ABBREVIATIONS:
- MNP,
- microtubule organizing potential;
- 6-DMAP,
- 6-dimethylaminopurine;
- KICR,
- KI insoluble centrosome remnant;
- γ-TuRC,
- γ-tubulin ring complex;
- EM,
- electron microscopy;
- IVEM,
- intermediate voltage EM;
- PCM,
- pericentriolar material
- Copyright © 1998, The National Academy of Sciences





