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Megakaryocyte fragments and the microtubule coil.
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1987
Year
Blood CellPlatelet PathobiologyCytoskeletonBiomedical EngineeringCellular PhysiologyMicrotubule CoilHematologyCell DivisionBone Marrow ExplantsPlatelet LiberationMorphogenesisCell BiologyBiologyThrombopoiesisDevelopmental BiologyBlood PlateletNatural SciencesCellular StructureCellular BiochemistryMedicine
We have examined megakaryocyte process fragments that migrate out of bone marrow explants after a short period of incubation and assume a beaded form, consisting of 2 or more putative platelets. The fragmentation appears to occur in vivo and supports the proposal that platelet liberation does not always occur in a sequential manner from the distal ends of megakaryocyte processes. Transmission electron microscopy revealed that microtubules were generally oriented longitudinally in the process fragments. Rarely, a microtubule coil was found in a terminally located putative platelet. The observations favour the view that the marginal coil of microtubules, which is a characteristic of circulating platelets, does not usually form until after platelets have been liberated.