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Journal ArticleDOI

Reconstructions of Centriole Formation and Ciliogenesis in Mammalian Lungs

S. P. Sorokin
- 01 Jun 1968 - 
- Vol. 3, Iss: 2, pp 207-230
TLDR
Reconstruction of the processes of centriolar formation and ciliogenesis based on evidence found in electron micrographs of tissues and organ cultures obtained chiefly from the lungs of foetal rats leads to an interpretation of the centriole as a semi-autonomous organelle whose replicative capacity is separable from the characteristic triplet fibre structure of its wall.
Abstract
This study presents reconstructions of the processes of centriolar formation and ciliogenesis based on evidence found in electron micrographs of tissues and organ cultures obtained chiefly from the lungs of foetal rats. A few observations on living cultures supplement the major findings. In this material, centrioles are generated by two pathways. Those centrioles that are destined to participate in forming the achromatic figure, or to sprout transitory, rudimentary (primary) cilia, arise directly off the walls of pre-existing centrioles. In pulmonary cells of all types this direct pathway operates during interphase. The daughter centrioles are first recognizable as annular structures (procentrioles) which lengthen into cylinders through acropetal deposition of osmiophilic material in the procentriolar walls. Triplet fibres develop in these walls from singlet and doublet fibres that first appear near the procentriolar bases and thereafter extend apically. When little more than half grown, the daughter centrioles are released into the cytoplasm, where they complete their maturation. A parent centriole usually produces one daughter at a time. Exceptionally, up to 8 have been observed to develop simultaneously about 1 parent centriole. Primary cilia arise from directly produced centrioles in differentiating pulmonary cells of all types throughout the foetal period. In the bronchial epithelium they appear before the time when the ciliated border is generated. Fairly late in foetal life, centrioles destined to become kinetosomes in ciliated cells of the epithelium become assembled from masses of fibrogranular material located in the apical cytoplasm. Formation of these centrioles may be under the remote influence of the diplosomal centrioles. More certainly, the precursor material accumulates in close proximity to Golgi elements. Within the fibrogranular areas, osmiophilic granules (400-800A) increase in size and eventually become consolidated into dense spheroidal bodies (deuterosomes), which organize the growth of procentrioles around them. When mature, the newly formed centrioles become aligned in rows beneath the apical plasma membrane. There each centriole produces satellites from its sides, a root from its base, and a cilium from its apex. Early stages in the formation of both primary cilia and those of the ciliated border are similar. In developing cilia of the ciliated border, however, the outer ciliary fibres rapidly reach the tips of the elongating shafts, and a central pair of fibres is formed (9 + 2 arrangement). In primary cilia, development of the fibres seems to lag behind the elongation of the shafts, and only the outer ciliary fibres appear (9 + 0 arrangement). The strengths and weaknesses of the proposed reconstructions of centriolar formation and ciliogenesis are discussed, and the occurrence in other living forms of similar pathways for centriolar formation is noted. Further discussion leads to an interpretation of the centriole as a semi-autonomous organelle whose replicative capacity is separable from the characteristic triplet fibre structure of its wall.

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A light and electron microscopical study of spermatogenesis in Hydra cauliculata

TL;DR: Morphological changes in the interstitial cells were studied during their differentiation into spermatozoa, finding that microtubules associated with the basal body flagellum complex appear to define the axis of chromatin condensation during spermiogenesis.
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Bronchial ciliogenesis and oral steroid treatment in patients with asthma.

TL;DR: Bronchial biopsies were taken during bronchoscopy from five asthmatics before and after oral steroid treatment, and ciliogenesis was abundant in all patients.
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MDM1 is a microtubule-binding protein that negatively regulates centriole duplication.

TL;DR: 3D-SIM microscopy shows MDM1 to be closely associated with the centriole barrel, likely residing in the Centriole lumen, and overexpression and depletion experiments suggest thatMDM1 is a negative regulator of centrioles duplication.
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TL;DR: This review systemically summarizes mitochondrial alterations in chondrocytes during OA progression and proposes the potential signaling pathways that may regulate this process, which provide new views and therapeutic targets for the prevention and treatment of mechanical stress-associated OA.
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Dynamics of ‘immotile’ olfactory cilia in the silkmoth Antheraea

Thomas A. Keil
- 01 Aug 1993 - 
TL;DR: The elongation and shortening of the dendrites is explained here by a sliding-filament mechanism similar to the one acting in 'true motile' cilia, as the cytoskcleton is not as highly organized as in the latter, the resulting movements are limited to elongations and contraction.
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