|
|
|
||||
| Home Help Feedback Subscriptions Archive Search Table of Contents | |||||
Journal of Cell Science, Vol 94, Issue 2 237-244, Copyright © 1989 by Company of Biologists
JOURNAL ARTICLES |
M Moudjou, M Lanotte and M Bornens
Centre de Genetique Moleculaire, CNRS, Gif-sur-Yvette, France.
Avian monocyte-derived giant cells in vitro, which are in many respects similar to osteoclasts, display a complex microtubule array that plays a prominent role in cell spreading. It is organized by a polygonal row of regularly spaced centrosomes surrounding an irregular cluster of nuclei. The immediate progenitor cells are binucleate cells with a single microtubule-organising center (MTOC), the result of the congregation of the two individual centrosomes. The one-to-one correspondence between numbers of centrosomes and nuclei in giant cells suggests that the centrosome of each precursor cell has been conserved through the fusion process. This is in marked contrast to the absence of centrosomes in myotubes, another example of a differentiated cell derived from the fusion of progenitor cells.
This article has been cited by other articles:
![]() |
F Solari, C Domenget, V Gire, C Woods, E Lazarides, B Rousset, and P Jurdic Multinucleated cells can continuously generate mononucleated cells in the absence of mitosis: a study of cells of the avian osteoclast lineage J. Cell Sci., January 10, 1995; 108(10): 3233 - 3241. [Abstract] [PDF] |
||||