The effects of aluminium (Al) on dividing root-tip cells of Triticum turgidum were investigated with tubulin
immunolabelling and electron microscopy. Aluminium affects the mechanisms controlling the organization of
microtubule (MT) cytoskeleton, as well as tubulin polymerization, and induces the following aberrations in
mitotic cells. (1) It delays the MT disassembly during mitosis, resulting in the persistence of preprophase MT
bands in the late prophase cells, the presence of prophase spindles in prometaphase cells, and a disturbance in the
shortening of kinetochore MT bundles in anaphase cells. (2) It interferes with the self-organization process of
MTs into bipolar systems, inhibiting the formation of prophase and metaphase spindles. (3) Aluminium induces
the formation of atypical MT arrays, which in the immunofluorescent specimens appear as ring-like tubulin
aggregations in the cortical cytoplasm of the preprophase/prophase cells and as endoplasmic tubulin bundles in
prophase and metaphase/anaphase cells; abnormal preprophase MT bands are assembled, consisting of atypical
cortical and endoplasmic MT bundles, the latter clearly lining the nuclear envelope on the preprophase MT band
plane. (4) It disorders the chromosome movements carried out by the mitotic spindle. In addition, after prolonged
Al treatments chromatin condensation is inhibited. The outcome is greatly disturbed organization and function
of the mitotic apparatus, as well as inhibition of cells from entering mitosis. This study shows that the MT
cytoskeleton is a target site of Al toxicity in mitotic root-tip cells of T. turgidum. The possible mechanisms by
which Al exerts its toxicity on MT organization and function are discussed.