After fusion of BHK cells with polyethylene glycol, the resulting syncitia contained in 77% of the cases multiple microtubule organizing centers (MTOCs), which were aggregated into a common centrosphere. Based on the observation of phagokinetic tracks, we found that the syncitia were able to locomote if the MTOCs aggregated into a common centrosphere cluster, and the clustered centrospheres were excluded from the cluster of nuclei of the syncitium. The results suggest that each individual pair of one nucleus and one centrosphere contributes, in a process of vectorial addition, its individual polarity to the polarity of the syncitium. Thus the widely accepted idea that the centrosphere is involved in the determination of cell polarity can be generalized beyond the case of single cells.
Translocation of human fibroblasts in culture was studied using techniques of time-lapse cinemicrography, indirect immunofluorescence, and computer analysis. An inverse relationship between the velocity of cells during the last hour of life and the density of stress fibers seen by immune staining was demonstrated. Translocating cells generally assumed one of two interconvertible morphologies: a triangular tailed shape or tailed fibroblast (TF), and a tailless form that resembled a half-moon, which we call a half-moon fibroblast (HMF). The tail of TFs formed only on regions of substrate that had been previously traversed by cells. The half-moon morphology developed either on previously used or on virgin substrate. Cells adopted the HMF rather than the TF morphology with a four-fold greater frequency. HMFs translocated slightly faster than TFs. The foregoing observation suggest that the fibroblast tail is not an organelle essential for translocation. Since our technique allowed us to distinguish between cells which were cycling and those which had left cycle, we compared their velocities and found them to be similar. Also the average velocities of cells of different population-doubling levels (10th, 30th, 40th) were approximately equal.
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