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Vol. 11, Issue 8, 2553-2563, August 2000

*Department of Zoology, and Cortical flow, the directed movement of cortical F-actin and
cortical organelles, is a basic cellular motility process. Microtubules are thought to somehow direct cortical flow, but whether they do so by
stimulating or inhibiting contraction of the cortical actin
cytoskeleton is the subject of debate. Treatment of
Xenopus oocytes with phorbol 12-myristate 13-acetate
(PMA) triggers cortical flow toward the animal pole of the oocyte; this
flow is suppressed by microtubules. To determine how this
suppression occurs and whether it can control the direction of cortical
flow, oocytes were subjected to localized manipulation of either the
contractile stimulus (PMA) or microtubules. Localized PMA application
resulted in redirection of cortical flow toward the site of
application, as judged by movement of cortical pigment granules,
cortical F-actin, and cortical myosin-2A. Such redirected flow was
accelerated by microtubule depolymerization, showing that the
suppression of cortical flow by microtubules is independent of the
direction of flow. Direct observation of cortical F-actin by time-lapse confocal analysis in combination with photobleaching showed that cortical flow is driven by contraction of the cortical F-actin network
and that microtubules suppress this contraction. The oocyte germinal
vesicle serves as a microtubule organizing center in Xenopus oocytes; experimental displacement of the
germinal vesicle toward the animal pole resulted in localized flow away
from the animal pole. The results show that 1) cortical flow is
directed toward areas of localized contraction of the cortical F-actin cytoskeleton; 2) microtubules suppress cortical flow by inhibiting contraction of the cortical F-actin cytoskeleton; and 3) localized, microtubule-dependent suppression of actomyosin-based contraction can
control the direction of cortical flow. We discuss these findings in
light of current models of cortical flow.
Program in Cellular and
Molecular Biology, University of Wisconsin, Madison, Wisconsin 53706
Corresponding author. E-mail
address: wmbement{at}facstaff.wisc.edu.
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