Effects of pressure stress on the fission yeast Schizosaccharomyces pombe cold-sensitive mutant nda3.

1999 
To investigate the influence of pressure stress on the cell cycle of Schizosaccharomyces pombe, we used a cold-sensitive nda3-KM311 mutant which arrests cell division at a step similar to the mitotic prophase, proposed by Hiraoka and colleagues (Cell 39 (1984) 349–358), under the restrictive temperature, 20°C. The nda3-KM311 cells were first aerobically grown at 30°C, transferred to 20°C for 4 h and shifted to a permissive temperature of 36°C for 15 min. The cells were treated with 100–200 MPa pressure and studied by electron and fluorescence microscopy. At 100 MPa, the nuclear membrane was damaged and the matrix of mitochondria had an electron-dense area. At 150 MPa, the nuclear membrane was broken over broad areas; numerous small vacuoles had fused into large pieces. Actin patches were concentrated in the central region and actin rings were seen in the 20°C-grown cells. Even at 100 MPa, specific actin distribution was lost. Although at 100 MPa, long and fine actin cables were seen all over the cells, large actin patches and the actin rings remained in the center of the cell. They changed into thick and short cables at 150 MPa and above 200 MPa they decomposed but the actin ring was visible even with faint fluorescence. Immunoelectron microscopic observation confirmed this phenomenon.
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