Mechanisms of Meiotic Spindle Initiation in Caenorhabditis elegans Oocytes

Read the full article See related articles

Listed in

This article is not in any list yet, why not save it to one of your lists.
Log in to save this article

Abstract

Microtubule-based spindle formation is essential to faithful chromosome segregation during cell division. In many animal species, the oocyte meiotic spindle forms without centrosomes, unlike most mitotic cells. Even in mitotic cells, centrosomes are sometimes dispensable for bipolar spindle formation. In some systems, Ran-GEF on chromatin initiates spindle assembly. We found that in C. elegans oocytes, endogenously-tagged Ran-GEF dissociates from chromatin during spindle assembly but re-associates during meiotic anaphase. Meiotic spindle assembly was normal after auxin-induced degradation of Ran-GEF but anaphase I was faster than controls and extrusion of the first polar body frequently failed. In search of a possible alternative pathway for spindle assembly, we found that soluble tubulin concentrates in the nuclear volume during germinal vesicle breakdown as well as in the spindle region during metaphase I and metaphase II. Through light and electron microscopy we found that the concentration of soluble tubulin in the metaphase II spindle region is enclosed by ER sheets which exclude cytoplasmic organelles including mitochondria and yolk granules from the meiotic spindle. We suggest that this concentration of soluble tubulin may be a redundant mechanism promoting spindle assembly near chromosomes. We present data supporting a model in which cytoplasmic organelles exclude cytoplasmic volume to drive concentration of tubulin within the nuclear/spindle envelope.

Article activity feed