|
|
Science 4 April 2003: Vol. 300. no. 5616, pp. 91 - 96 DOI: 10.1126/science.1082177
|
|

|
Mitosis Through the Microscope: Advances in Seeing Inside Live Dividing Cells
Conly L. Rieder and Alexey Khodjakov
|
Supporting Online Material
This file is in Adobe Acrobat PDF format. If you have not installed and configured the Adobe Acrobat Reader on your system, please see Help with Printing for instructions.
Figure S1
Microtubules at the edge of a newt lung cell visualized, after fixation and
staining, by video-enhanced DIC (A, A’) and indirect immunofluorescence (B,B’) LM.
The boxed region shown in A and B is seen at higher magnification in A’ and B’. Note
that although individual microtubules are visible in the more cluttered DIC image, they
are much easier to follow in the fluorescence image.
Linked websites of labs that work on mitosis: Many contain pictures, movies, etc.
http://www.bio.unc.edu/faculty/salmon/lab/mitosis/mitosislabs.html
Linked websites of labs that work on cytokinesis:
http://www.bio.unc.edu/faculty/salmon/lab/mafia/mafialabs.html
To view these movies, download a QuickTime viewer.
- Movie S1
Time-lapse video light microscopy of a newt lung epithelial cell, undergoing
the metaphase to anaphase transition, as seen by the Oldenbourg 360°r; polarized system.
In these images the spindle appears white. [courtesy of Rudolf Oldenbourg (Marine
Biology Laboratory, Woods Hole, MA USA) and Phong Tran, Dept. of Biology, Univ. of
N. Carolina, Chapel Hill, N.C., USA) .
- Movie S2
Time-lapse polarization video light microscopy of several primary crane fly
spermatocytes entering and completing meiosis I. As the spindle forms in these cells the
kinetochore fibers appear as prominent white bundles that connect each chromosome to
the spindle poles. The stem body also is clearly visible as it forms during cytokinesis,
[courtesy of Rudolf Oldenbourg (Marine Biology Laboratory, Woods Hole, MA USA)
and James R. LaFountain (Department of Biology, State Univ. of New York, Buffalo,
Buffalo, N.Y. USA)].
- Movie S3
Time-lapse DIC video light microscopy of spindle formation and chromosome
congression in a PtK1 cell. After nuclear envelope breakdown (6 sec into the movie)
several chromosomes mono-orient to the top and bottom poles of the forming spindle.
One of these exhibits rapid poleward motion (7 seconds). Over the next 28 seconds all of
these mono-oriented chromosomes become bioriented and move to the spindle equator, to
establish the metaphase plate. In the movie 1 second is equivalent to approximately 1
minute in real time. (courtesy of Alexey Khodjakov, Lab of Cell Regulation, Division of
Molecular Medicine, Wadsworth Center, Albany, New York USA).
- Movie S4
Time-lapse video DIC light microscopy of a chromosome as it attaches to the
prometaphase spindle during in a newt lung cell. In this example one chromosome (at 7
o’clock) suddenly exhibits rapid motion ~ 1 second into the movie towards the closest
centrosome (at 11 o’clock) . (courtesy of Conly L. Rieder, Lab of Cell Regulation,
Division of Molecular Medicine, Wadsworth Center, Albany, New York USA)
- Movie S5
Time-lapse video-enhanced DIC light microscopy of a growing astral
microtubule (arrowhead from 1 sec on) contacting one of the kinetochores on an
unattached chromosome. As a result of this contact the chromosome becomes attached to
one of the spindle poles, which it subsequently moves rapidly towards. (courtesy of
Conly L. Rieder, Lab of Cell Regulation, Division of Molecular Medicine, Wadsworth
Center, Albany, New York USA).
- Movie S6
Time-lapse video DIC light microscopy showing how chromosomes behave
during meiosis I in a wildtype Drosophila spermatocyte. In this example the persistent
nucleolus, defined as the refractive spherical organelle in the nucleus at the start of the
movie, is expelled towards the left-hand pole of the forming spindle ~ 3 seconds into the
movie. By this time all of the chromosomes have achieved a metaphase alignment, and
anaphase starts 8 seconds into the movie. Time in hrs:min:sec, is seen in upper left hand
corner of the movie (courtesy of Conly L. Rieder and Matthew Savoian, Lab of Cell
Regulation, Division of Molecular Medicine, Wadsworth Center, Albany, New York
USA)
- Movie S7
Time-lapse video DIC light microscopy of how chromosomes behave during
anaphase I in a Drosophila primary spermatocyte mutant for the kinetochore protein, zw-
10. Note that the rate of poleward motion is severely attenuated relative to that seen in
wildtype (Movie S6) spermatocytes, and also that the chromosomes decondense well
prior to reaching the polar regions. Time in hrs:min:sec, is seen in upper left hand corner
of the movie (courtesy of Conly L. Rieder and Matthew Savoian, Lab of Cell Regulation,
Division of Molecular Medicine, Wadsworth Center, Albany, New York USA).
- Movie S8
Recovery of fluorescence after photobleaching the -tubulin-GFP associated
with one of the centrosomes in a PtK1 cell blocked in mitosis by nocodazole treatment.
The left hand panel shows the centrosomes as seen by epi-fluorescence, while the right
panel shows the cell and chromosomes as seen by DIC. The upper centrosome (3
o’clock) is photobleached at 9:57 AM, and slowly regains its fluorescence intensity over
the next several hours. Time, in hrs:min:sec, is in lower right hand corner of each frame.
(courtesy of Alexey Khodjakov, Lab of Cell Regulation, Division of Molecular Medicine,
Wadsworth Center, Albany, New York USA).
- Movie S9
Speckled fluorescence microscopy imaging of a spindle formed in vitro in Xenopus
oocyte extracts. This film reveals that tubulin subunits within spindle microtubules are
constantly moving (fluxing) poleward. (courtesy of Tarun Kapoor, Rockefeller
University, New York, N.Y., USA).
- Movie S10
Time-lapse multi-mode light microscopy of mitosis in a cancer (HT1080)
cell transfected with histone H2B-GFP. In this example the cell is followed with both epifluorescence
(left) and phase-contrast (right) light microscopy. The former reveals the
behavior of the chromosomes during spindle formation, anaphase and telophase, while
the latter depicts the dynamic properties of the rest of the cell, especially during
cytokinesis. Each frame represents a maximum intensity projections of 17 optical
sections, and 5950 fluorescence images were used to construct the film (courtesy of Dr. Olga Kisurina-Evgenieva, Lab of Cell Regulation, Division of Molecular Medicine,
Wadsworth Center, Albany, New York USA).
|
|