| In this paper the authors investigated errors in
chromosome orientation from grasshopper spermatocytes treated with
the protein kinase inhibitor Genistein.
Nicklas RB, Krawitz LE, Ward SC
J Cell Sci 1993 Apr 104 ( Pt 4) 961-73
Abstract
Errors in chromosome orientation in mitosis and meiosis are inevitable,
but normally they are quickly corrected. We find that such errors
usually are not corrected in cells treated with protein kinase inhibitors.
Highly inaccurate chromosome distribution is the result. When grasshopper
spermatocytes were treated with the kinase inhibitor 6-dimethylaminopurine
(DMAP), 84% of maloriented chromosomes failed to reorient; in anaphase,
both partner chromosomes were distributed to the same daughter cell.
These chromosomes were observed for a total of over 60 h, and not
a single reorientation was seen. In contrast, in untreated cells,
maloriented chromosomes invariably reoriented, and quickly: in 10
min, on average. A second protein kinase inhibitor, genistein, had
exactly the same effect as DMAP. DMAP affected PtK1 cells in mitosis
as it did spermatocytes in meiosis: improper chromosome orientations
persisted, leading to frequent errors in distribution. We micromanipulated
chromosomes in spermatocytes treated with DMAP to learn why maloriented
chromosomes often fail to reorient. Reorientation requires the loss
of improper microtubule attachments and the acquisition of new,
properly directed kinetochore microtubules. Micromanipulation experiments
disclose that neither the loss of old nor the acquisition of new
microtubules is sufficiently affected by DMAP to account for the
indefinite persistence of malorientations. Drug treatment causes
a novel form of chromosome movement in which one kinetochore moves
toward another kinetochore. Two kinetochores in the same chromosome
or in different chromosomes can participate, producing varied, dance-like
movements executed by one or two chromosomes. These kinetochore-kinetochore
interactions evidently are at the expense of kinetochore-spindle
interactions. We propose that malorientations persist in treated
cells because the kinetochores have numerous, short microtubules
with a free end that can be captured by a second kinetochore. Kinetochores
capture each other's kinetochore microtubules, leaving too few sites
available for the efficient capture of spindle microtubules. Since
the efficient capture of spindle microtubules is essential for the
correction of errors, failure of capture allows malorientations
to persist. Whether the effects of DMAP actually are due to protein
kinase inhibition remains to be seen. In any case, DMAP reveals
interactions of one kinetochore with another, which, though ordinarily
suppressed, have implications for normal mitosis.
|