Abstract

In uninucleate cells, cytokinesis follows karyokinesis, thereby reestablishing a specific nucleus-to-cytoplasm ratio. In multinucleate cells, cytokinesis is absent or infrequent; no plasmalemma boundary defines the cytoplasmic territory of an individual nucleus. Several genera of large multinucleate green algae were examined with epifluorescence light microscopy to determine whether the patterns of cytoplasmic organization establish nuclear cytoplasmic domains. Randomly spaced nuclei, singular mitotic events and cytoplasmic streaming characterize the organization of two genera,Derbesia andBryopsis (Caulerpales). The cells ofValonia, Valoniopsis, Boergesenia, Ventricaria (Siphonocladales), andHydrodictyon (Chlorococcales) display regularly spaced nuclei which undergo synchronous divisions in a stationary cytoplasm. In the cytoplasm of genera with regularly spaced nuclei, microtubules radiate from all nuclei in late telophase-early interphase. These internuclear microtubule arrays are not found in algal genera with randomly spaced nuclei. It is hypothesized that these microtubule arrays play a role in establishing the cytoplasmic domain of each nucleus in genera with regularly spaced nuclei. Loss of microtubule arrays during the events of mitosis correlated positively with the increasing randomization of nuclear patterns in algae grown in microtubule inhibitors. Cytoplasmic domains were maintained when cells were grown in the same media in the dark. This suggests that, after a round of division, regular nuclear spacing in certain multinucleate algae is reestablished by internuclear microtubule arrays, which are not, however, required to maintain spacing during interphase.

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