Abstract

ABSTRACTThere is a strategic difference between the process of cell division by mitosis in animal cells and that in cells of higher plants. One particularly puzzling feature is the absence of centrioles in plant cells, when they appear to be of central importance in the control of the process in animal cells. It is argued that in both cases the dividing cell uses the versatility of the liquid crystalline state of the mitotic cytoplasm created by the wide-scale assembly of microtubules prior to mitosis. It is not the centrioles per se which are vital – it is the director field of the mesophase which is crucial – and alternative procedures have been developed by plants and animals to create this. In both cases, they can be related to known spontaneous alignment states of liquid crystalline systems.

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