Abstract

The spatial distribution of the microtubules (MT) in the rat 3Y1 cells in mitosis was investigated by immunoelectron microscopy and computer-graphic reconstruction of serial thin sections. In anaphase the interzone-MT increased in number gradually with advancing phase, while the kinetochore-MT in half-spindles decreased. The interzone-MT overlapped with each other at the equatorial region of the cell, and they formed a specific structure called the ‘stem bodies’. The ends of the interzone-MT opposite to the stem bodies often attached to chromosomes but not to the poles. The stem bodies were not labeled with immunogold particles of anti-α tubulin. Some of the stem bodies or MT which originate from stem bodies were found just beneath the plasma membrane in the equatorial region where abundant actin filaments appear showing the formation of the contractile ring and subsequently the cleavage furrow begins. On the basis of these observations it is assumed that the interzone-MT is involved both in the separation of chromosomes in anaphase and in the formation of the cleavage furrow in telophase.

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