Abstract

Recognition of homologous chromosomes during meiotic prophase is associated in most cases with the formation of the synaptonemal complex along the length of the chromosome. Telomeres, located at the nuclear periphery, are preferential initiation sites for the assembly of the synaptonemal complex. In most eukaryotic cells, telomeres cluster in a restricted area, leading to the "bouquet" configuration in leptotene-zygotene, while this typical organization progressively disappears in late zygotene-pachytene. We wondered whether such striking changes in the intranuclear ordering and pairing of meiotic chromosomes during the progression of prophase I could be correlated with activity of the centrosome and/or microtubule-organizing center (MTOC). Plant cells may be used as a model of special interest for this study as the whole nuclear surface acts as an MTOC, unlike other cell types where MTOCs are restricted to centrosomes or spindle pole bodies. Using a monoclonal antibody (mAb 6C6) raised against isolated calf centrosomes we found that the 6C6 antigen is present over the entire surface of the plant meiotic nucleus, in early prophase I, before chromosomal pairing. At zygotene, short fragments of chromosomes become stained near the nuclear envelope and within the nucleus. At pachytene, after complete synapsis, the labeling specifically concentrates within the synaptonemal complexes, although the nuclear surface is no longer reactive. Ultrastructural localization using immunogold labeling indicates that the 6C6 antigen is colocalized with the synaptonemal complex structures. Later in metaphase I, the antigen is found at the kinetochores. Our data favor the idea that the 6C6 antigen may function as a particular "chromosomal passenger-like" protein. These observations shed new light on the molecular organization of the plant synaptonemal complex and on the redistribution of cytoskeleton-related antigens during initiation of meiosis. They suggest that antigens of MTOCs are relocated to chromosomes during the synapsis process starting at telomeres and contribute to the spatial arrangement of meiotic chromosomes. Such cytoskeleton-related antigens may acquire different functions depending on their localization, which is cell-cycle regulated.

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