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1.
The intermediate filament cytoskeleton of cultured bovine kidney epithelial cells and human HeLa cells changes dramatically during mitosis. The bundles of cytokeratin and vimentin filaments progressively unravel into protofilament-like threads of 2–4 nm diameter, and intermediate filament protein is included in numerous, variously sized (2–15 μm) spheroidal aggregates containing densely stained granular particles of 5–16 nm diameter. We describe these mitotic bodies in intact cells and in isolated cytoskeletons. In metaphase to anaphase of normal mitosis and after colcemid arrest of mitotic stages, many cells contain all their detectable cytokeratin and vimentin material in the form of such spheroidal aggregate bodies, whereas in other mitotic cells such bodies occur simultaneously with bundles of residual intermediate filaments. In telophase, the extended normal arrays of intermediate filament bundles are gradually reestablished. We find that vimentin and cytokeratins can be organized in structures other than intermediate filaments. Thus, at least during mitosis of some cell types, factors occur that promote unraveling of intermediate filaments into protofilament-like threads and organization of intermediate filament proteins into distinct granules that form large aggregate bodies. Some cells, at least certain epithelial and carcinoma cells, may contain factors effective in structural modulation and reorganization of intermediate filaments.  相似文献   

2.
The epithelial derived cell lines PtK2 and HeLa were characterized by double immunofluorescence microscopy using purified antibodies against vimentin and prekeratin. The results show that both cell types express simultaneously two immunologically distinct intermediate-sized filaments. Use of colcemid-treated cells confirms that the vimentin fibers and not the keratin-related fibers are rearranged into coils around the nucleus. In some cells staining of fibrous fragments is observed, which are perhaps involved in the synthesis or breakdown of this class of filaments. The concept that growing cells derived from differentiated cell types express not only the intermediate-sized filament system typical of the differentiated cell type but in addition contain intermediate-sized filaments of the vimentin type is discussed.  相似文献   

3.
T E Kreis  B Geiger  E Schmid  J L Jorcano  W W Franke 《Cell》1983,32(4):1125-1137
Poly(A)+ RNA isolated from bovine muzzle epidermis was microinjected into nonepithelial cells containing only intermediate-sized filaments of the vimentin type. In recipient cells keratin polypeptides are synthesized and assemble into intermediate-sized filaments at multiple dispersed sites. We describe the time course and the pattern of de novo assembly of keratin filaments within living cells. These filaments were indistinguishable, by immunofluorescence and immunoelectron microscopic criteria, from keratin filament arrays present in true epithelial cells. The presence of extended keratin fibril meshworks in these injected cells is compatible with cell growth and mitosis. Double immunolabeling revealed that newly assembled keratin was not codistributed with microfilament bundles, microtubules or vimentin filaments. We suggest that assembly mechanisms exist which in vivo sort out newly synthesized cytokeratin polypeptides from vimentin.  相似文献   

4.
The location of constitutive proteins of different types of intermediate-sized (about 10 mm) filaments (cytokeratin, vimentin, desmin, brain filament protein) was examined in various tissues of 11--20 day chick embryos, using specific antibodies against the isolated proteins and immunofluorescence microscopy on frozen sections and on isolated serous membrane. The tissues studied which contained epithelia were small intestine, gizzard, esophagus, crop, liver, kidney, thymus, mesenteries, and epidermis. The results show that the different intermediate filament proteins, as seen in the same organ, are characteristic of specific lines of differentiation: Cytokeratin filaments are restricted to--and specific for--epithelial cells; vimentin filaments are seen--at this stage of embryogenesis--only in mesenchymal cells, including connective tissue, endothelial and blood cells, and chondrocytes; filaments containing protein(s) related to the subunit protein prepared from gizzard 10 nm filaments (i.e., desmin) are significant only in muscle cells; and intermediate filament protein of brain, most probably neurofilament protein, is present only in nerve cells. We conclude that for most tissues the expression of filaments of cytokeratin, vimentin, desmin, and neurofilament protein is mutually exclusive, and that these protein structurees provide useful markers for histochemical and cytochemical differentiation of cells of epithelial, mesenchymal, myogenic, and neurogenic differentiation.  相似文献   

5.
The location of constitutive proteins of different types of intermediate-sized (about 10 mm) filaments (cytokeratin, vimentin, desmin, brain filament protein) was examined in various tissues of 11–20 day chick embryos, using specific antibodies against the isolated proteins and immunofluorescence microscopy on frozen sections and on isolated serous membrane. The tissues studied which contained epithelia were small intestine, gizzard, esophagus, crop, liver, kidney, thymus, mesenteries, and epidermis. The results show that the different intermediate filament proteins, as seen in the same organ, are characteristic of specific lines of differentiation: Cytokeratin filaments are restricted to – and specific for – epithelial cells; vimentin filaments are seen – at this stage of embryogenesis – only in mesenchymal cells, including connective tissue, endothelial and blood cells, and chondrocytes; filaments containing protein(s) related to the subunit protein prepared from gizzard 10 nm filaments (i.e., desmin) are significant only in muscle cells; and intermediate filament protein of brain, most probably neurofilament protein, is present only in nerve cells. We conclude that for most tissues the expression of filaments of cytokeratin, vimentin, desmin, and neurofilament protein is mutually exclusive, and that these protein structures provide useful markers for histochemical and cytochemical differentiation of cells of epithelial, mesenchymal, myogenic, and neurogenic differentiation.  相似文献   

6.
The cytoplasmic structure of Sertoli cells of rat testes has been studied by electron microscopy of ultrathin sections. Sertoli cells contain numerous intermediate-sized (7-11 nm) filaments which form a meshwork extending throughout the whole cytoplasm. Often the frequency of such filaments appears especially high in juxtanuclear and cortical regions, including the apical recesses containing the spermatids. Examination of frozen sections of testes by indirect immunofluorescence microscopy using guinea pig antibodies to prekeratin and vimentin has shown the absence of intermediate-sized filaments of the cytokeratin type in all cells of the testes but the presence of filaments of the vimentin type in Sertoli cells as well as in cells of the interstitial space. These results show that the intermediate-sized filaments, abundant in Sertoli cells, are of the vimentin type. In addition we conclude that the "germ epithelium" differs from others true epithelia by the absence of cytokeratin filaments and typical desmosomes and, in Sertoli cells, the presence of vimentin filaments, suggestive of a mesenchymal character or derivation.  相似文献   

7.
Immunofluorescence microscopy has been used to follow the rearrangement of intermediate-sized filaments during mitosis in rat kangaroo PtK2 cells. These epithelial cells express two different intermediate filament systems: the keratin-related tonofilament-like arrays typical of epithelial cells, and the vimentin-type filaments characteristic of mesenchymal cells in vivo, and of many established cell lines. The two filament systems do not appear to depolymerize extensively during mitosis, but show differences in their organization and display which may indicate different functions. The most striking rearrangements have been seen with the vimentin filaments, and in particular in prometaphase a transient cage-like structure of vimentin fibers surrounding the developing spindle is formed. In metaphase, this cage disappears, and vimentin fibers are found in an elliptical band surrounding the chromosomes and the interzone. In telophase, these bands separate, usually breaking first on the side closest to where the cleavage furrow has started to form. Double label experiments with tubulin and vimentin antibodies have indicated that the microtubules and the chromosomes are contained within the thick crescents of vimentin filaments and suggest that the vimentin intermediate filaments may be involved in the orientation of the spindle and/or the chromosomes during mitosis. In contrast, extensive arrays of cytokeratin filaments are present throughout mitosis on the substrate-attached side of the cell and also in other cellular areas, although they are usually not present in the spindle region. Thus the cytokeratin filaments probably continue to play a cytoskeletal role during mitosis and may be responsible for the flat shape that certain epithelial cells such as PtK2 cells continue to maintain during mitosis.  相似文献   

8.
We studied the distribution of intermediate-sized filaments in developing and adult kidneys and renal cell carcinoma (RCC) by indirect immunohistochemistry, using a pan-cytokeratin mouse monoclonal antibody (MAb), chain-specific anti-cytokeratin MAb, and anti-vimentin and anti-desmin MAb, to resolve controversy concerning intermediate-sized filament expression in the kidney. With the pan-cytokeratin MAb, cytokeratin expression was detectable in all stages of nephron development, starting with expression in the renal vesicles, the progenitors of the glomeruli, proximal tubules, Henle's loop, and part of the distal tubules. Using chain-specific anti-cytokeratin MAb, cytokeratin 8 and 18 expression was demonstrated in all developmental structures of the nephron, whereas cytokeratin 19 expression was more complex. None of the nephrogenic blastema cells from which the renal vesicles arise expressed cytokeratins. Transient expression of vimentin and cytokeratin 19 was observed in differentiating collecting ducts and proximal tubule cells at the S-shaped stage of nephron development, respectively. In RCC, cytokeratin expression closely resembled that of the mature proximal tubule, i.e., RCC cells expressed cytokeratins 8 and 18. However, in a subset of RCC additional cytokeratin 19 expression was noted. In addition, all except one RCC showed co-expression of cytokeratins and vimentin.  相似文献   

9.
Intermediate filaments are one of the three major cytoskeletons. Some roles of intermediate filaments in cellular functions have emerged based on various diseases associated with mutations of cytokeratins. However, the precise functions of intermediate filament are still unclear. To resolve this, we manipulated intermediate filaments of cultured cells by expressing a mutant cytokeratin. Arginine 89 of cytokeratin18 plays an important role in intermediate filament assembly. The expression of green fluorescent protein-tagged cytokeratin18 arg89cys induced aggregations and loss of the intermediate filament network composed of cytokeratins in liver-derived epithelial cells, Huh7 and OUMS29, but only induced the formation of cytokeratin aggregates and did not affect the intermediate filament network of endogenous vimentin in HEK293. The expression of this mutant affected the distribution of Golgi apparatus and the reassembly of Golgi apparatus after perturbations by nocodazole or brefeldin A in both Huh7 and OUMS29, but not in HEK293. Our data show that loss of the original intermediate filament network, but not the existence of cytokeratin aggregates, induces redistribution of the Golgi apparatus. The original intact intermediate filament network is necessary for the organization of Golgi apparatus.  相似文献   

10.
The occurrence of intermediate-sized filaments containing prekeratin-like proteins ('cytokeratins') has been examined in various organs of rat and cow by electron microscopy and by immunofluorescence microscopy on frozen sections using antibodies to defined constitutive proteins of various types of intermediate-sized filaments (prekeratin, vimentin, desmin). Positive cytokeratin reaction and tonofilament-like structures have been observed in the following epithelia: epidermis; ductal, secretory, and myoepithelial cells of sweat glands; mammary gland duct; myoepithelial cells of lactating mammary gland; milk secreting cells of cow; ductal, secretory, and myoepithelial cells of various salivary glands; tongue mucosa; bile duct; excretory duct of pancreas; intestinal mucosa; urothelium; trachea; bronchi; thymus reticulum, including Hassall corpuscles; mesothelium; uterus; and ciliated cells of oviduct. None of the epithelial cells mentioned has shown significant reaction with antibodies to vimentin, the major component of the type of intermediate-sized filaments predominant in mesenchymal cells. The widespread, if not general occurrence of cytokeratin filaments in epithelial cells is emphasized, and it is proposed to use this specific structure as a criterion for true epithelial character or origin.  相似文献   

11.
Epithelia-derived tumors (carcinomas) can be distinguished from mesenchymally derived tumors by the presence of intermediate-sized filaments of the cytokeratin type, which usually coincides with the absence of other types of intermediate-sized filaments such as vimentin filaments. In the course of diagnostic examinations of human tumors, using immunofluorescence microscopy, we have come across a case of an unusual carcinoma (Primary tumor and lymph node metastasis) positively stained not only with cytokeratin antibodies but also with immunoglobulins present in vimentin antisera. Therefore, this tumor, a cloacogenic carcinoma apparently derived from the rectal-anal transitional region, has been examined in greater detail using both immunofluorescence microscopy and immuno-electron microscopy as well as gel electrophoretic analysis of cytoskeletal polypeptides from total tumor tissue and from microdissected nodules enriched in carcinoma cells. The unusual reaction of the carcinoma cells with immunoglobulins present in seven different (rabbit or guinea pig) antisera raised against vimentin, has been found to be diminished after absorption on purified cytokeratin or total epidermal cytoskeletal material, but not after absorption on purified vimentin. Gel electrophoretic analysis of tumor cytoskeletons showed an unusual complex pattern of cytokeratin polypeptides containing relatively large (Mr 68,000 and Mr 58,000) neutral-to-slightly basic cytokeratins, as are typically found in epidermis and other stratified squamous epithelia, as well as several smaller acidic cytokeratins, including a Mr 40,000 polypeptide found in certain nonstratified epithelial such as colon and small intestine. Total tumor also showed the inclusion of some vimentin which, however, was significantly decreased in analysis of excised carcinoma nodules. Examining antibody binding to polypeptides separated by gel electrophoresis and blotted on nitrocellulose paper, we have found that antisera raised against vimentin contained not only vimentin antibodies but also immunoglobulins which specifically bound to the largest cytokeratin component. We conclude that the unusual reaction of immunoglobulins present in vimentin antisera with cytokeratin filament bundles does not represent specific binding to vimentin in these carcinoma cells, but is due to a component obviously widespread in vimentin antisera which binds specifically to a cytokeratin present in this type of tumor but not in most other carcinomas. It is proposed that use is made in diagnostic examinations of vimentin antisera or affinity-purified vimentin antibodies that have been pre-absorbed on cytokeratin protein, in order to eliminate such disturbing reactions.  相似文献   

12.
The presence of intermediate filament proteins in vascular tissue cells has been examined by immunofluorescence microscopy on frozen sections of the aortic wall of diverse vertebrates (rat, cow, human and chicken) and by gel electrophoresis of cytoskeletal proteins from whole aortic tissue or from stripped tunica media of cow and man. Most cells of the aortic wall in these species contain vimentin filaments, including smoooth muscle cells of the tunica media. In addition, we have observed aortic cells that are positively stained by antibodies to desmin. The presence of desmin in aortic tissue has also been demonstrated by gel electrophoresis for rat, cow and chicken. In aortic tissue some smooth muscle cells contain both types of intermediate filament proteins, vimentin and desmin. Bovine aorta contains, besides cells in which vimentin and desmin seem to co-exist, distinct bundles of smooth muscle cells, located in outer regions of the tunica media, which contain only desmin. The results suggest that (i) intermediate-sized filaments of both kinds, desmin and vimentin, can occur in vascular smooth muscle in situ and (ii) smooth muscle cells of the vascular system are heterogeneous and can be distinguished by their intermediate filament proteins. The finding of different vascular smooth muscle cells is discussed in relation to development and differentiation of the vascular system.  相似文献   

13.
The intermediate filament systems of the established epithelial cell lines HeLa and PtK2 have been characterized by electron microscopy using indirect immunoferritin labelling. The results provide a direct ultrastructural confirmation of the proposal based on indirect immunofluorescence microscopy, that vimentin and cytokeratin fibrils constitute two distinct 10 nm filament systems in much of the cell body. In agreement both with classical histology and with the finding that cytokeratins are typically present in many epithelial tissues, demosome-attached 10 nm filaments (tonofilaments) were found to be of the cytokeratin type. Vimentin, but not cytokeratin filaments were translocated into juxtanuclear caps after exposure of the cells to colcemid. Regions of the cytoplasm where the two distinct systems form mixed bundles were identified and both side-by-side arrangements and the occurrence of vimentin fibers in a sheath-like structure around a cytokeratin filament core are described. Our results emphasize that the two systems interact but differ in their organization and control.  相似文献   

14.
Changes in cell cytoskeleton are known to play an important role in differentiation and embryogenesis and also in carcinogenesis. Previous studies indicated that neonatal hepatocytes undergo an epithelial–mesenchymal transition when cultured in a serum-free medium for several days. Here we show by Western blotting of neonatal rat liver cells cultured for 3 days that vimentin and cytokeratin were expressed by these cells. Epidermal growth factor treatment induced high coexpression of vimentin and cytokeratin filaments in hepatocytes from neonatal livers, as detected by double immunofluorescence microscopy. Confocal scanning laser microscopy was used to determine the spatial and cell distribution of cytokeratin and vimentin intermediate filament networks. Vimentin-expressing hepatocytes were mainly located on the periphery of epithelial clusters and presented a migratory morphology, suggesting that vimentin expression was related to the loss of cell–cell contact. Short vimentin filaments were mainly located at the cytoplasmic sites behind the extending lamella. Horizontal and vertical dual imaging of double immunofluorescence with anti-vimentin and anti-cytokeratin antibodies indicated that both filaments colocalize strongly. Three-dimensional reconstruction of serial optical sections revealed that newly synthesized vimentin distributed following the preexisting cytokeratin network and, when present, both filament scaffolds codistributed inside cultured hepatocytes. Immunoelectron microscopy performed in whole-mount-extracted cultured cells revealed that both filaments are closely interrelated but independent. However, a high degree of immunogold colocalization was found in the knots of the filament network. Further experiments with colce- mide and cytochalasin treatment indicated that vimentin filament distribution, but not cytokeratin, was dependent on an intact microtubule network. These results are consistent with a mechanism of vimentin assembly, whereby growth of vimentin intermediate filaments is dependent on microtubules in topographically restricted cytoplasmic sites, in close relation to the cytokeratin cytoskeleton and to changes in cell–cell contact and cell shape.  相似文献   

15.
Withaferin A (WFA) is a steroidal lactone present in Withania somnifera which has been shown in vitro to bind to the intermediate filament protein, vimentin. Based upon its affinity for vimentin, it has been proposed that WFA can be used as an anti-tumor agent to target metastatic cells which up-regulate vimentin expression. We show that WFA treatment of human fibroblasts rapidly reorganizes vimentin intermediate filaments (VIF) into a perinuclear aggregate. This reorganization is dose dependent and is accompanied by a change in cell shape, decreased motility and an increase in vimentin phosphorylation at serine-38. Furthermore, vimentin lacking cysteine-328, the proposed WFA binding site, remains sensitive to WFA demonstrating that this site is not required for its cellular effects. Using analytical ultracentrifugation, viscometry, electron microscopy and sedimentation assays we show that WFA has no effect on VIF assembly in vitro. Furthermore, WFA is not specific for vimentin as it disrupts the cellular organization and induces perinuclear aggregates of several other IF networks comprised of peripherin, neurofilament-triplet protein, and keratin. In cells co-expressing keratin IF and VIF, the former are significantly less sensitive to WFA with respect to inducing perinuclear aggregates. The organization of microtubules and actin/microfilaments is also affected by WFA. Microtubules become wavier and sparser and the number of stress fibers appears to increase. Following 24 hrs of exposure to doses of WFA that alter VIF organization and motility, cells undergo apoptosis. Lower doses of the drug do not kill cells but cause them to senesce. In light of our findings that WFA affects multiple IF systems, which are expressed in many tissues of the body, caution is warranted in its use as an anti-cancer agent, since it may have debilitating organism-wide effects.  相似文献   

16.
Induction of cytokeratin expression in human mesenchymal cells   总被引:3,自引:0,他引:3  
We studied the phenotypic features of some typical human mesenchymal cells, including decidual stromal cells and adult and fetal fibroblasts under different cell culture conditions by using antibodies to intermediate filament proteins and desmoplakins. In cell culture, the decidual stromal cells rapidly acquired typical fibroblastoid appearance with abundant arrays of vimentin filaments while the cytokeratin-positive epithelial cells, occasionally found in typical epithelioid colonies, lacked vimentin positivity and showed desmoplakin positivity. Within a few days, many of the stromal cells started to present cytokeratin positivity when cultured either in Condimed or in Chang medium. The cytokeratin positivity was first detected in small, scattered cytoplasmic dotted fibrils or in perinuclear dotlike aggregates with fibrillar projections. Later, denser cytokeratin-positive fibrillar arrays could also be seen in stromal cells, which lacked desmoplakin positivity as judged by two monoclonal antibodies. Decidual stromal cells were also cloned and in five out of ten clones some of the cells acquired a similar cytokeratin positivity when transferred into Chang or Condimed medium. Immunoblotting results indicated that cytokeratins 8, 18, and 19 can be found in these cultures. Similar cytokeratin positivity could also be seen in the same culture conditions in cultured fetal fibroblasts from skin, chorionic villi, and lung but not in young or adult skin fibroblast cultures. The present results suggest that decidual stromal cells as well as some embryonal mesenchymal cells can acquire epithelial differentiation in vitro as judged by the emergence of cytokeratin proteins. This ability appears to be lost in the corresponding adult cell. The results furthermore suggest that cytokeratin fibrils can be organized in the cytoplasm without an apparent organization center and that neither the appearance of desmoplakins nor the formation of cell-to-cell contacts are required for cytokeratin filament assembly.  相似文献   

17.
The murine monoclonal IFA antibody recognizes a conserved sequence present in almost all intermediate filament (IF) proteins. When IFA antibody was injected into 13 different primary or established cell lines, striking differences were detected between epithelial and fibroblastic cell lines. In epithelial cells keratin IFs were broken down within 4 h into numerous spheroid aggregates scattered throughout the cytoplasm. Keratin aggregates were first detected in the cytoplasmic periphery. In contrast, in fibroblastic cells, injection of IFA antibody led to the formation of perinuclear coils of vimentin. IFA antibody at a concentration of greater than 1 mg/ml had to be injected to initiate these transitions. When HeLa cells, which contain separate networks of vimentin and keratin filaments, were injected with IFA antibody, vimentin did not form perinuclear coils but was instead found together with keratin in aggregates. Electron micrographs of HeLa cells injected with IFA antibody showed that the aggregates have diameters between 0.5 and 2.6 microns and resembled the keratin aggregates observed in certain mitotic epithelial cells. Although the ultrastructural studies support an association of some aggregates with desmosomes, aggregates were, however, also induced by injection of IFA antibody into human keratinocytes in low calcium medium under conditions where desmosomes were not present.  相似文献   

18.
Proteins of contractile and cytoskeletal elements have been studied in bovine lens-forming cells growing in culture as well as in bovine and murine lenses grown in situ by immunofluorescence microscopy using antibodies to the following proteins: actin, myosin, tropomyosin, α-actinin, tubulin, prekeratin, vimentin, and desmin. Lens-forming cells contain actin, myosin, tropomyosin, and α-actinin which in cells grown in culture are enriched in typical cable-like structures, i.e. microfilament bundles. Antibodies to tubulin stain normal, predominantly radial arrays of microtubules. In the epithelioid lens-forming cells of both monolayer cultures grown in vitro and lens tissue grown in situ intermediate-sized filaments of the vimentin type are abundant, whereas filaments containing prekeratin-like proteins (‘cytokeratins’) and desmin filaments have not been found. The absence of cytokeratin proteins observed by immunological methods is supported by gel electrophoretic analyses of cytoskeletal proteins, which show the prominence of vimentin and the absence of detectable amounts of cytokeratins and desmin. This also correlates with electron microscopic observations that typical desmosomes and tonofilament bundles are absent in lens-forming cells, as opposed to a high density of vimentin filaments. Our observations show that the epithelioid lens-forming cells have normal arrays of (i) microfilament bundles containing proteins of contractile structures; (ii) microtubules; and (iii) vimentin filaments, but differ from most true epithelial cells by the absence of cytokeratins, tonofilaments and typical desmosomes. The question of their relationship to other epithelial tissues is discussed in relation to lens differentiation during embryogenesis. We conclude that the lens-forming cells either represent an example of cell differentiation of non-epithelial cells to epithelioid morphology, or represent a special pathway of epithelial differentiation characterized by the absence of cytokeratin filaments and desmosomes. Thus two classes of tissue with epithelia-like morphology can be distinguished: those epithelia which contain desmosomes and cytokeratin filaments and those epithelioid tissues which do not contain these structures but are rich in vimentin filaments (lens cells, germ epithelium of testis, endothelium).  相似文献   

19.
Monoclonal antibodies specific for vimentin (V9), keratin 7 (CK 7) and keratin 18 (CK5) have been microinjected into three human epithelial cell lines: HeLa, MCF-7 and RT-4. The effect of the injection on other keratin polypeptides and vimentin filaments has been observed by double label immunofluorescence and in some instances by immunoelectron microscopy using gold labels of different sizes. Microinjection of V9 into HeLa cells causes the vimentin to collapse into a perinuclear cap leaving the keratin filaments unaffected. Injection of CK5 does not affect the vimentin filaments but disrupts the keratin filaments revealing keratin aggregates similar to those seen in some epithelial cell lines during mitosis. The keratin aggregates obtained after microinjection in HeLa contain the keratins 8 and 18 and probably also other keratins, as no residual keratin filaments are observed with a keratin polyclonal antibody of broad specificity. Aggregates in mitotic HeLa cells contain at least the keratins 7, 8, and 18. In MCF-7 cells keratins 8, 18, and 19 are observed in the aggregates seen 3 h after microinjection which, however, show a different morphology from those seen in HeLa cells. In MCF-7 cells a new keratin filament is built within 6 h after the injection which is composed mainly of keratin 8 and 19. The antibody-complexed keratin 18 remains in spherical aggregates of different size. The results suggest that in HeLa cells vimentin and keratin form independent networks, and that individual 10 nm filaments in epithelial cell lines can contain more than two keratins.  相似文献   

20.
A monoclonal antibody specific for vimentin is described which, by immunofluorescence and immunoelectron microscopy, decorates fibrillar and/or granular structures in mitotic and early postmitotic cells but does not react with vimentin filaments of interphase stages of various cultured cells (rat vascular smooth muscle-derived cell line RVF-SM; SV40-transformed human fibroblasts; bovine kidney epithelial cells of line MDBK). These observations indicate that the organization of vimentin filaments varies during the cell cycle, undergoing a perimitotic change of filament organization. These changes of vimentin filaments are described in relation to those reported for cytokeratin filaments of various epithelial and carcinoma cells. The possible functional implications of filament protein rearrangements both during the cell cycle and in cell differentiation processes are discussed.  相似文献   

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