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1.
Cultures of embryonic mouse spinal cord explants, alone or in combination with rat myotubes, were stained by indirect immunofluorescence using antibodies against three structural proteins to: (a) reveal the distribution of these proteins among different cell types, and (b) test the usefulness of antibody staining to reveal the gross morphology of the neurite network in complex cultures. Affinity column purified antibodies were used against chicken gizzard actin, porcine brain tubulin, and skeletal muscle alpha-actinin. Neurites were stained intensely by anti-actin as was the stress fiber pattern of underlying fibroblasts. With anti-tubulin, the staining of neurites was an order of magnitude more intense than the staining of the microtubule pattern of background fibroblasts. Neurite cell bodies and astrocyte-like glia cells were stained with anti-tubulin and their nuclei remained unstained. Anti-tubulin could thus be used to trace even the finest extensions of nerve processes in spinal cord and spinal cord-muscle cultures. Furthermore, it could be combined with the histochemical reaction for acetylcholinesterase (AChE, EC 3.1.1.7) to demonstrate AChE-positive neurons and specialized nerve-muscle contact sites. The staining of neural elements with anti-alpha-actinin was generally much weaker than with anti-actin and anti-tubulin. Neurites were stained only moderately in comparison to myotube Z lines in the same culture. However, a distinct staining of the periphery of dorsal root ganglion cells was observed. Thus, a protein immunologically related to muscle alpha-actinin is present in the nervous system. In myotubes, Z lines were stained intensely with anti-alpha-actinin while I bands were only faintly stained with anti-actin. In isolated myofibrils, both structures were stained intensely with the same antibody preparations.  相似文献   

2.
Alpha-actinin localization in the cleavage furrow during cytokinesis   总被引:24,自引:18,他引:6  
We used antibodies against alpha-actinin and myosin labeled directly with contrasting fluorochromes to localize these contractile proteins simultaneously in dividing chick embryo cells. During mitosis anti-alpha-actinin stains diffusely the entire cytoplasm including the mitotic spindle, while in the same cells intense antimyosin staining delineates the spindle. During cytokinesis both antibodies stain the cleavage furrow intensely, and until the midbody forms the two staining patterns in the same cell are identical at the resolution of the light microscope. Thereafter the anti-alpha-actinin staining of the furrow remains strong, but the antimyosin staining diminishes. These observations suggest that alpha-actinin participates along with actin and myosin in the membrane movements associated with cytokinesis.  相似文献   

3.
The presence and distribution of alpha-actinin, an actin-bundling protein, was investigated at sites where frog skeletal muscle forms junctions with tendon collagen fibers. These sites, called myotendinous junctions, are regions where myofibrils terminate and where the force of muscular contraction is transmitted from muscle cells to the substratum. An antibody manufactured to chicken smooth muscle alpha-actinin was used as a probe for alpha-actinin localization in this study. The cross-reactivity of this antibody with frog skeletal muscle alpha-actinin is demonstrated in immunoblots of one-dimensional (1D) electrophoretic separations of muscle proteins. Immunofluorescent localization of anti-alpha-actinin and electron microscopic immunolabelling confirms that the antibody binds to Z-discs with high affinity. However, in sections treated for electron microscopy with affinity-purified anti-alpha-actinin and a ferritin-conjugated, second antibody, there was no significant difference between experimental or control preparations in the number of ferritin grains overlying dense, subsarcolemmal material at junctional or non-junctional regions. Furthermore, Z-discs near myotendinous junctions displayed less binding of anti-alpha-actinin than Z-discs located several micrometers or more from the cells' termini. These findings indicate that thin filaments are not bundled by alpha-actinin near the sarcolemma. The results also provide evidence for molecular heterogeneity between Z-discs at the ends of muscle cells compared with other regions of the cell in that the terminal Z-discs of myofibrils contain very little or no alpha-actinin relative to non-terminal Z-discs.  相似文献   

4.
In this paper, a new type of spot desmosome-like junction (type II plaque) is described that is scattered along the entire lateral plasma membrane of rat and human intestinal epithelium. Ultrastructurally type II plaques differed from the classical type of epithelial spot desmosome ("macula adherens", further denoted as type I desmosome) by weak electron density of the membrane-associated plaque material, association of the plaques with microfilaments rather than intermediate filaments, and poorly visible material across the intercellular space. Thus, type II plaques resemble cross-sections of the zonula adherens. Immunofluorescence-microscopic studies were done using antibodies to a main protein associated with the plaques of type I desmosomes (desmoplakin I) and to the three major proteins located at the plaques of the zonula adherens (actin, alpha-actinin, and vinculin). Two types of plaques were visualized along the lateral surface of intestinal and prostatic epithelium: (a) the type I desmosomes, which were labeled with anti-desmoplakin but did not bind antibodies to actin, alpha-actinin, and vinculin, and (b) a further set of similarly sized plaques, which bound antibodies to actin, alpha-actinin, and vinculin but were not stained with anti-desmoplakin. Three-dimensional computer reconstruction of serial sections double-labeled with anti-desmoplakin and anti-alpha-actinin further confirmed that both types of plaques are spatially completely separated from each other along the lateral plasma membrane. The computer graphs further revealed that the actin-, alpha-actinin-, and vinculin-containing plaques have the tendency to form clusters, a feature also typical of type II plaques. It is suggested that the type II plaques represent spot desmosome-like intercellular junctions, which, like the zonula adherens, appear to be linked to the actin filament system. As the type II plaques cover a considerable part of the lateral cell surface, they might play a particular role in controlling cellular shape and intercellular adhesion.  相似文献   

5.
Immunoblotting studies with antisera against Z-protein, desmin, and alpha-actinin showed that Z-protein is clearly distinguishable from desmin and alpha-actinin. Z-protein is not a proteolytic product of another protein but is an intrinsic component of chicken breast muscle myofibrils. In these experiments, an SDS extract of intact muscle was first electrophoresed in a polyacrylamide gel, and then proteins were transferred to a nitrocellulose paper sheet. Detection of each protein on the sheet was made possible by the application of the indirect immunofluorescence technique with the respective antiserum. Immunofluorescence microscope studies using these antisera revealed that Z-protein has the same distribution as alpha-actinin in isolated Z- disk sheets. Anti-Z-protein antiserum and anti-alpha-actinin antiserum stained the interior of Z-disks. On the other hand, antiserum against desmin stained the periphery of Z-disks in isolated Z-disk sheets.  相似文献   

6.
《The Journal of cell biology》1990,111(6):2463-2473
Confocal laser scanning microscopy of isolated and antibody-labeled avian gizzard smooth muscle cells has revealed the global organization of the contractile and cytoskeletal elements. The cytoskeleton, marked by antibodies to desmin and filamin is composed of a mainly longitudinal, meandering and branched system of fibrils that contrasts with the plait-like, interdigitating arrangement of linear fibrils of the contractile apparatus, labeled with antibodies to myosin and tropomyosin. Although desmin and filamin were colocalized in the body of the cell, filamin antibodies labeled additionally the vinculin- containing surface plaques. In confocal optical sections the contractile fibrils showed a continuous label for myosin for at least 5 microns along their length: there was no obvious or regular interruption of label as might be expected for registered myosin filaments. The cytoplasmic dense bodies, labeled with antibodies to alpha-actinin exhibited a regular, diagonal arrangement in both extended cells and in cells shortened in solution to one-fifth of their extended length: after the same shortening, the fibrils of the cytoskeleton that showed colocalization with the dense bodies in extended cells became crumpled and disordered. It is concluded that the dense bodies serve as coupling elements between the cytoskeletal and contractile systems. After extraction with Triton X-100, isolated cells bound so firmly to a glass substrate that they were unable to shorten as a whole when exposed to exogenous Mg ATP. Instead, they contracted internally, producing integral of 10 regularly spaced contraction nodes along their length. On the basis of differences of actin distribution two types of nodes could be distinguished: actin-positive nodes, in which actin straddled the node, and actin-negative nodes, characterized by an actin-free center flanked by actin fringes of 4.5 microns minimum length on either side. Myosin was concentrated in the center of the node in both cases. The differences in node morphology could be correlated with different degrees of coupling of the contractile with the cytoskeletal elements, effected by a preparation-dependent variability of proteolysis of the cells. The nodes were shown to be closely related to the supercontracted cell fragments shown in the accompanying paper (Small et al., 1990) and furnished further evidence for long actin filaments in smooth muscle. Further, the segmentation of the contractile elements pointed to a hierarchial organization of the myofilaments governed by as yet undetected elements.  相似文献   

7.
To determine if a living cell is necessary for the incorporation of actin, alpha-actinin, and tropomyosin into the cytoskeleton, we have exposed cell models to fluorescently labeled contractile proteins. In this in vitro system, lissamine rhodamine-labeled actin bound to attachment plaques, ruffles, cleavage furrows and stress fibers, and the binding could not be blocked by prior exposure to unlabeled actin. Fluorescently labeled alpha-actinin also bound to ruffles, attachment plaques, cleavage furrows, and stress fibers. The periodicity of fluorescent alpha-actinin along stress fibers was wider in gerbil fibroma cells than it was in PtK2 cells. The fluorescent alpha-actinin binding in cell models could not be blocked by the prior addition of unlabeled alpha-actinin suggesting that alpha-actinin was binding to itself. While there was only slight binding of fluorescent tropomyosin to the cytoskeleton of interphase cells, there was stronger binding in furrow regions of models of dividing cells. The binding of fluorescently labeled tropomyosin could be blocked by prior exposure of the cell models to unlabeled tropomyosin. If unlabeled actin was permitted to polymerize in the stress fibers in cell models, fluorescently labeled tropomyosin stained the fibers. In contrast to the labeled contractile proteins, fluorescently labeled ovalbumin and BSA did not stain any elements of the cytoskeleton. Our results are discussed in terms of the structure and assembly of stress fibers and cleavage furrows.  相似文献   

8.
We introduce two new, rapid procedures. One is specifically designed for isolating alpha-actinin from skeletal and the other for isolating alpha-actinin from smooth muscle. Approximately 20 mg of greater than 95% pure alpha-actinin can be obtained/100 g of ground chicken pectoral muscle in just 4 days. The smooth muscle protocol yields 2.7 mg of greater than 99% pure alpha-actinin/100 g of ground gizzard after just 5 days. Differences in protein contaminants and in the extractability of alpha-actinin necessitated the development of separate isolation procedures for the two muscle types. Antibody prepared against the purified gizzard alpha-actinin reacted with alpha-actinin from skeletal, cardiac, and smooth muscle in immunodiffusion. Anti-alpha-actinin reacted only with alpha-actinin from crude extracts of skeletal and smooth muscle on Staph A gels. Anti-alpha-actinin stained Z-bands from skeletal muscle in indirect immunofluorescence microscopy and stress fibers from baby hamster kidney fibroblasts and mouse mammary epithelial cells in the characteristic punctate pattern observed by other workers (Lazarides, E., and Burridge, K. (1975) Cell 6, 289-298). These two methods for purifying alpha-actinin from skeletal and smooth muscle represent a significant improvement over that published previously.  相似文献   

9.
The localization of actin, myosin, tropomyosin, alpha-actinin, vinculin, and desmoplakin I/II was visualized by immunofluorescence microscopy. Antibodies against myosin, tropomyosin, and alpha-actinin and rhodamine-phalloidin labeled strongly the proximal and distal terminal webs which ultrastructurally consist of dense microfilament bundles. In the distal terminal web, the staining by these reagents occurred mostly perpendicular to the long axis of the incisor. Antivinculin stained the general area where the distal terminal web is located in the ameloblast. Anti-desmoplakin I/II labeled the junctional area associated with the proximal and distal terminal webs. The anti-desmoplakin staining was stronger along the cell border perpendicular to the long axis of the incisor. Comparison of the rhodamine-phalloidin staining pattern of the distal terminal web and the enamel secretion pattern by ameloblasts revealed that a change in the distal terminal web staining pattern preceded a change in the secretion pattern. These observations suggest that the cytoskeletal organization in the ameloblast is involved in the formation of the enamel matrix pattern in the rat incisor.  相似文献   

10.
T Fujimoto  K Ogawa 《Histochemistry》1988,88(3-6):525-532
The distribution of F-actin, alpha-actinin and filamin in smooth muscle cells of the chicken was examined by immunofluorescent and immunoelectron microscopy. Those from the gizzard, the femoral artery and the aortic arch were compared. F-Actin labeled by NBD-phallacidin was seen diffusely distributed in the sarcoplasm in the gizzard and the femoral artery, but in the aorta it was observed as streaks and spots, with unstained areas in between. Epon sections of the aortic arch showed that bundles of thin myofilaments run in various directions interspersed with areas mostly occupied by intermediate filaments. alpha-Actinin labelling occurred in dense plaques along the sarcolemma in all the muscles examined. While dense bodies in the sarcoplasm were common and labelled for alpha-actinin in the gizzard and the femoral artery, hardly any were seen in the aortic arch and little labelling for alpha-actinin was observed in the sarcoplasm. Filamin was concentrated along the periphery of dense bodies and plaques in the gizzard and the femoral artery, but it was seen diffusely in the sarcoplasm of the aortic muscle. After chemical skinning of the latter, filamin labelling persisted only in the F-actin bundles, and other areas became negative. The present results show that smooth muscle cells of the aortic arch contrast with those of the gizzard and even with those of the femoral artery in the distribution of F-actin, alpha-actinin and filamin. The mechanisms of contraction and/or stress maintenance in the aortic smooth muscle may be different from those in other smooth muscles.  相似文献   

11.
《The Journal of cell biology》1984,99(4):1324-1334
Monospecific antibodies to chicken gizzard actin, alpha-actinin, and filamin have been used to localize these proteins at the ultrastructural level: secondary cultures of 14-d-old chicken embryo lung epithelial cells and chicken heart fibroblasts were briefly lysed with either a 0.5% Triton X-100/0.25% glutaraldehyde mixture, or 0.1% Triton X-100, fixed with 0.5% glutaraldehyde, and further permeabilized with 0.5% Triton X-100, to allow penetration of the gold-conjugated antibodies. After immunogold staining (De Mey, J., M. Moeremans, G. Geuens, R. Nuydens, and M. De Brabander, 1981, Cell Biol. Int. Rep. 5:889-899), the cells were postfixed in glutaraldehyde-tannic acid and further processed for embedding and thin sectioning. This approach enabled us to document the distribution of alpha-actinin and filamin either on the delicate cortical networks of the cell periphery or in the densely bundled stress fibers and polygonal nets. By using antiactin immunogold staining as a control, we were able to demonstrate the applicability of the method to the microfilament system: the label was distributed homogeneously over all areas containing recognizable microfilaments, except within very thick stress fibers, where the marker did not penetrate completely. Although alpha-actinin specific staining was homogeneously localized along loosely-organized microfilaments, it was concentrated in the dense bodies of stress fibers. The antifilamin-specific staining showed a typically spotty or patchy pattern associated with the fine cortical networks and stress fibers. This pattern occurred along all actin filaments, including the dense bodies also marked by anti-alpha-actinin antibodies. The results confirm and extend the data from light microscopic investigations and provide more information on the structural basis of the microfilament system.  相似文献   

12.
We investigated the location of actin isoforms in relation to each other and to filament attachment sites by studying the edge-to-edge distribution of both immunofluorescence and immunogold probes in smooth muscle cells from three sources. Antibodies to alpha- or alpha,gamma-actin labeled uniformly across smooth muscle cells from each source. Antibodies to beta-cytoplasmic actin were concentrated on and near dense bodies, especially in gizzard smooth muscle, but were also located throughout the filament compartment. Double immunofluorescent labeling with antibodies to alpha- or alpha/gamma- and to beta-actin shows overlap of label at dense bodies and attachment plaques. Double immunofluorescent labeling with antibodies to alpha-actinin and to beta-actin identified dense bodies and attachment plaques as sites of colocalization. Immunogold labeling with anti-desmin was most prominent near dense bodies in the gizzard and was widely dispersed in vas deferens and arterial smooth muscle cells. Our results indicate that there is extensive overlap between the locations of contractile and cytoskeletal elements and, thus, do not support the two-domain model of smooth muscle structure. Tissue-specific organizational motif differences were seen when gizzard, vas deferens, and artery were compared and suggest that one model may not apply to these three smooth muscles.  相似文献   

13.
《The Journal of cell biology》1985,101(5):1871-1883
Monoclonal antibodies were generated to a purified preparation of the fascia adherens domains of the intercalated discs of chicken cardiac cell membranes. One of these antibodies, McAb 20, immunofluorescently labeled the Z lines of adult skeletal muscle, the Z lines and intercalated discs of adult cardiac muscle, and the dense bodies and dense plaques of adult gizzard smooth muscle. In addition, McAb 20 was found to label regenerating muscle cells in a cross-striated pattern much like that of Z lines in 24-h muscle cell cultures before the appearance of Z lines was detectable by phase or Nomarski optics and before the concentration of alpha-actinin occurred at the Z lines. Thus, McAb 20 appears to be directed against an antigen involved in early myofibrillar organization. Preliminary biochemical characterization of the antigen recognized by McAb 20 indicates that it is a high molecular weight doublet of over 5 X 10(5) kD that is highly susceptible to proteolysis. By virtue of its presence in Z lines, and its possible role in the end-on attachment of microfilaments to Z lines and membranes, we have named this protein zeugmatin (xi epsilon nu gamma mu alpha identical to yoking).  相似文献   

14.
Affinity chromatography and immunolocalization techniques were used to investigate the mechanism(s) by which endothelial cells interact with the basement membrane component laminin. Bovine aortic endothelial cells (BAEC) membranes were solubilized and incubated with a laminin-Sepharose affinity column. SDS-PAGE analysis of the eluted proteins identified a 69-kD band as the major binding protein, along with minor components migrating at 125, 110, 92, 85, 75, 55, and 30 kD. Polyclonal antibodies directed against a peptide sequence of the 69-kD laminin-binding protein isolated from human tumor cells identified this protein in BAEC lysates. In frozen sections, these polyclonal antibodies and monoclonal antibodies raised against human tumor 69-kD stained the endothelium of bovine aorta and the medial smooth muscle cells, but not surrounding connective tissue or elastin fibers. When nonpermeabilized BAEC were stained in an in vitro migration assay, there appeared to be apical patches of 69 kD staining in stationary cells. However, when released from contact inhibition, 69 kD was localized to ruffling membranes on cells at the migrating front. Permeabilized BAEC stained for 69 kD diffusely, with a granular perinuclear distribution and in linear arrays throughout the cell. During migration a redistribution from diffuse to predominanately linear arrays that co-distributed with actin microfilaments was noted in double-label experiments. The 69-kD laminin-binding protein colocalized with actin filaments in permeabilized cultured microvascular endothelial cells in a continuous staining pattern at 6 h postplating which redistributed to punctate patches along the length of the filaments at confluence (96 h). In addition, 69 kD co-distribution with laminin could also be demonstrated in cultured subconfluent cells actively synthesizing matrix. Endothelial cells express a 69-kD laminin-binding protein that is membrane associated and appears to colocalize with actin microfilaments. The topological distribution of 69 kD and its cytoskeletal associations can be modulated by the cell during cell migration and growth suggesting that 69 kD may be a candidate for a membrane protein involved in signal transduction from extracellular matrix to cell via cytoskeletal connections.  相似文献   

15.
Nebulette, a cardiac homologue of nebulin, colocalizes with alpha-actinin in the pre-myofibrils of spreading cardiomyocytes and has been hypothesized to play a critical role in the formation of the thin-filament-Z-line complex early during myofibrillogenesis. Data from mesodermal explants or whole tissue mounts of developing hearts suggest that the pattern of myofibrillogenesis in situ may differ from observations of spreading cardiomyocytes. To evaluate the role of nebulette in myofibrillogenesis, we have analyzed the expression of nebulette in chicken heart rudiments by immunoblots and immunofluorescence. We detect the 110 kDa nebulette in heart rudiments derived from stage 9-10 using the anti-nebulin mAb, N114, or polyclonal anti-nebulette Abs by immunoblotting. Immunofluorescence analysis of explants stained with anti-nebulette and anti-alpha-actinin Abs demonstrates that both proteins localize along actin filaments in punctate to continuous manner at early stages of cardiac development and later give rise to striations. In both cases, the punctate staining had a periodicity of approximately 1.0 microm indicating a pre-myofibrils distribution at the earliest time points examined. We demonstrate that nebulette is indeed associated with premyofibrils in very early stages of myofibrillogenesis and suggest that nebulette may play an important role in the formation of these structures.  相似文献   

16.
The expression of cell cytoskeleton proteins in atheromatous plaques of human aorta was investigated using double immunofluorescence technique and a set of antibodies. It was found that in 4 out of 12 plaques some smooth muscle cells (SMC) were stained by monoclonal antibodies to desmin. No such cells were detected in apparently unaffected aortic intima. In addition to typical SMC and these cells, the cells unstained by antisera to smooth muscle myosin but reacting with monoclonal antibodies to vimentin and SMC surface were revealed in all plaques adjacent to the central fatty mass.  相似文献   

17.
We have previously demonstrated that alpha-smooth muscle (alpha-SM) actin is predominantly distributed in the central region and beta-non-muscle (beta-NM) actin in the periphery of cultured rabbit aortic smooth muscle cells (SMCs). To determine whether this reflects a special form of segregation of contractile and cytoskeletal components in SMCs, this study systematically investigated the distribution relationship of structural proteins using high-resolution confocal laser scanning fluorescent microscopy. Not only isoactins but also smooth muscle myosin heavy chain, alpha-actinin, vinculin, and vimentin were heterogeneously distributed in the cultured SMCs. The predominant distribution of beta-NM actin in the cell periphery was associated with densely distributed vinculin plaques and disrupted or striated myosin and alpha-actinin aggregates, which may reflect a process of stress fiber assembly during cell spreading and focal adhesion formation. The high-level labeling of alpha-SM actin in the central portion of stress fibers was related to continuous myosin and punctate alpha-actinin distribution, which may represent the maturation of the fibrillar structures. The findings also suggest that the stress fibers, in which actin and myosin filaments organize into sarcomere-like units with alpha-actinin-rich dense bodies analogous to Z-lines, are the contractile structures of cultured SMCs that link to the network of vimentin-containing intermediate filaments through the dense bodies and dense plaques.  相似文献   

18.
Actin-myosin II filament-based contractile structures in striated muscle, smooth muscle, and nonmuscle cells also contain the actin filament-crosslinking protein alpha-actinin. In striated muscle sarcomeres, interactions between the myosin-binding protein titin and alpha-actinin in the Z-line provide an important structural linkage. We previously discovered a titin-like protein, smitin, associated with the contractile apparatus of smooth muscle cells. Purified native smooth muscle alpha-actinin binds with nanomolar affinity to smitin in smitin-myosin coassemblies in vitro. Smooth muscle alpha-actinin also interacts with striated muscle titin. In contrast to striated muscle alpha-actinin interaction with titin and smitin, which is significantly enhanced by PIP2, smooth muscle alpha-actinin interacts with smitin and titin equally well in the presence and absence of PIP2. Using expressed regions of smooth muscle alpha-actinin, we have demonstrated smitin-binding sites in the smooth muscle alpha-actinin R2-R3 spectrin-like repeat rod domain and a C-terminal domain formed by cryptic EF-hand structures. These smitin-binding sites are highly homologous to the titin-binding sites of striated muscle alpha-actinin. Our results suggest that direct interaction between alpha-actinin and titin or titin-like proteins is a common feature of actin-myosin II contractile structures in striated muscle and smooth muscle cells and that the molecular bases for alpha-actinin interaction with these proteins are similar, although regulation of these interactions may differ according to tissue.  相似文献   

19.
The pericytes of capillaries are interesting cells which resemble the smooth muscle cells of larger vessels in some aspects of their morphology and behavior. In this report, their relationship to the underlying endothelium has been investigated in some detail. Using indirect, fluorescent immunocytochemical techniques on fresh and fixed tissues, it was found that fibronectin (an adhesive protein in many tissue culture systems) is concentrated in spots along vessels and is only faintly visible in the basement membranes of exhaustively perfused preparations. By electron microscopy, using a peroxidase immunocytochemical marker, these concentrations of fibronectin were seen to be localized to the pericyte-endothelial interstitia. Examination by TEM using a new fixation procedure demonstrated the organization of microfilaments and dense plaques along the pericyte membrane with fibrous and basement membrane-like material within this interstitial space. The arrangements of these elements suggest a mechanical linkage between the two cells. Such a linkage would allow contractions or relaxation of the pericyte to affect vessel diameter.  相似文献   

20.
Fluorescently labeled alpha-actinin, isolated from chicken gizzards, breast muscle, or calf brains, was microinjected into cultured embryonic myotubes and cardiac myocytes where it was incorporated into the Z-bands of myofibrils. The localization in injected, living cells was confirmed by reacting permeabilized myotubes and cardiac myocytes with fluorescent alpha-actinin. Both living and permeabilized cells incorporated the alpha-actinin regardless of whether the alpha-actinin was isolated from nonmuscle, skeletal, or smooth muscle, or whether it was labeled with different fluorescent dyes. The living muscle cells could beat up to 5 d after injection. Rest-length sarcomeres in beating myotubes and cardiac myocytes were approximately 1.9-2.4 microns long, as measured by the separation of fluorescent bands of alpha-actinin. There were areas in nearly all beating cells, however, where narrow bands of alpha-actinin, spaced 0.3-1.5 micron apart, were arranged in linear arrays giving the appearance of minisarcomeres. In myotubes, alpha-actinin was found exclusively in these closely spaced arrays for the first 2-3 d in culture. When the myotubes became contraction-competent, at approximately day 4 to day 5 in culture, alpha-actinin was localized in Z-bands of fully formed sarcomeres, as well as in minisarcomeres. Video recordings of injected, spontaneously beating myotubes showed contracting myofibrils with 2.3 microns sarcomeres adjacent to noncontracting fibers with finely spaced periodicities of alpha-actinin. Time sequences of the same living myotube over a 24-h period revealed that the spacings between the minisarcomeres increased from 0.9-1.3 to 1.6-2.3 microns. Embryonic cardiac myocytes usually contained contractile networks of fully formed sarcomeres together with noncontractile minisarcomeres in peripheral areas of the cytoplasm. In some cells, individual myofibrils with 1.9-2.3 microns sarcomeres were connected in series with minisarcomeres. Double labeling of cardiac myocytes and myotubes with alpha-actinin and a monoclonal antibody directed against adult chicken skeletal myosin showed that all fibers that contained alpha-actinin also contained skeletal muscle myosin. This was true whether alpha-actinin was present in Z-bands of fully formed sarcomeres or present in the closely spaced beads of minisarcomeres. We propose that the closely spaced beads containing alpha-actinin are nascent Z-bands that grow apart and associate laterally with neighboring arrays containing alpha-actinin to form sarcomeres during myofibrillogenesis.  相似文献   

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