|
||
J. Cell Biol.,
Volume 145, Number 4, May 17, 1999 809-823
MRC Laboratory of Molecular Biology, Cambridge CB2 2QH, United Kingdom
We have examined the process of spindle
pole body (SPB) duplication in Saccharomyces cerevisiae by electron microscopy and found several stages.
These include the assembly, probably from the satellite,
of a large plaque-like structure, the duplication plaque,
on the cytoplasmic face of the half-bridge and its insertion into the nuclear envelope. We analyzed the role of
the main SPB components in the formation of these
structures by identifying them from an SPB core fraction by mass spectrometry. Temperature-sensitive mutants for two of the components, Spc29p and Nud1p,
were prepared to partly define their function. The composition of two of the intermediates in SPB duplication,
the satellite and the duplication plaque, was examined
by immunoelectron microscopy. Both contain cytoplasmic SPB components showing that duplication has already been partly achieved by the end of the preceding
cell cycle when the satellite is formed. We show that by
overexpression of SPB components the structure of the
satellite can be changed and SPB duplication inhibited
by disrupting the attachment of the plaque-like intermediate to the half-bridge. We present a model for SPB
duplication where binding of SPB components to either
end of the bridge structure ensures two separate SPBs.
This article has been cited by other articles:
|
|