Abstract

In the amoebae of the myxomycetePhysarum polycephalum, procentrioles are formed on the anterior and posterior centrioles in early prophase. Although the relative position of the parental and procentrioles is fixed, all relative positions of the daughter and parental centrioles were observed. During the different stages of mitosis daughter centrioles elongate and acquire anterior satellites, one of the characteristic features of the anterior centrioles. All other anterior morphological characteristics appear only in telophase and early reconstruction stages. In contrast to the parental posterior centrioles, which do not change morphologically during the successive mitotic stages, the parental anterior centrioles lose their morphological characteristics in late prophase and early prometaphase and then acquire the morphological features characteristic of the posterior centrioles. Thus, the following maturation scheme is suggested: a procentriole becomes an anterior centriole during the first mitosis and a posterior centriole during the second mitosis. Since posterior features are maintained during mitosis, the posterior centriole corresponds to the final state of centriole maturation.

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