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1.
Summary— The ultrastructural aspects of the association of microtubules (MTs) with the plasmalemma in epidermal tendon cells of the river crab, Polamon dehaani, were studied by thin-section electron microscopy combined with detergent treatment. In the tendon cell, MTs were linked laterally by anchoring filaments to the plasmalemma via a submembranous electron-dense layer called the plasmalemmal undercoat. To further clarify how such anchoring filaments are spatially related to the plasmalemma through the undercoat, we carefully examined and compared thin-section images obtained from various specimen preparations using saponin and Triton X-100. When the tissues were treated with saponin or Triton, electron-dense materials in the undercoat were extracted in varying degrees to expose internal substructures. The undercoat appeared to show a two-layer organization, the inner and outer layers. In more extracted samples, filamentous networks became prominent in the outer layer. Anchoring filaments were seen to attach to such filamentous networks, which in turn were linked to the plasmalemma proper. Thus, it may be reasonable to consider that the filamentous network constitutes the core structure of the plasmalemmal undercoat which is structurally reinforced by extractable electron-dense materials.  相似文献   

2.
Astrocytic end-feet in the rat CNS were studied by thin-section electron microscopy. Astrocyte processes that enclose neuronal elements extended to blood vessels and the pia mater, where the processes expanded to form end-feet or glial limiting membranes. At the end-feet, cell junctions such as gap junctions and desmosome-like junctions were formed between the astrocyte processes. The end-foot plasma membrane facing the basal lamina was undercoated with electron-dense, layered materials, with an internal substructure of filamentous networks, with which bundles of glial filaments (GFs) appeared to be closely associated via fine filamentous structures, often showing a hemi-desmosome-like appearance. In specimens treated with Triton X-100, the internal substructure of the undercoat was better visualized and the association with GFs was well preserved. At the end-feet, some unique tubular structures were found in spatial relationship to the plasmalemmal undercoat. Plectin visualized by immunofluorescence was localized to astrocytes and their processes, especially at the end-feet facing the pia mater. Immunoelectron microscopy located plectin on fine filamentous structures lying between GFs and the plasmalemmal undercoat. These observations suggest that plasmalemmal undercoats at the astrocyte end-feet may serve as attachment sites of GFs to the plasma membrane and that plectin may be involved in such attachment.  相似文献   

3.
H Ishikawa 《Human cell》1990,3(4):289-293
Functional significances of the cytoskeleton and the plasmalemmal undercoat are discussed with special reference to their ultrastructural aspects. The cytoskeleton is mainly composed of three distinctive cytoplasmic fibrous structures, namely, microtubules, actin filaments and intermediate filaments. Closely associated with such fibrous structures are a variety of proteins, which have been shown not only to control the formation or breakdown of the fibrous structures but also to involve the construction of a higher order of fibrous architectures such as bundles and networks. Thus, these cytoskeletal fibrous components may form the respective systems, though such systems often interact with each other for the cytoplasmic integrity. The fundamental function of the cytoskeleton is to provide structural frameworks for the cytoplasm. Through such frameworks the cytoskeleton is involved in various cellular organizations and activities such as cell shape, distribution of cell organelles, cell motility, membrane phenomena, and metabolism. Much interest has also been drawn to the interaction between the plasmalemma and the cytoskeleton. Part of such interaction can be assigned to the plasmalemmal undercoat, though it indeed constitutes a part of the cytoskeleton. The significance of the plasmalemmal undercoat may be to primarily provide structural supports for the plasmalemma, playing various roles in cell physiology.  相似文献   

4.
Using primary embryonic Drosophila cell cultures, we have investigated the assembly of transcellular microtubule bundles in epidermal tendon cells. Muscles attach to the tendon cells of previously undescribed epidermal balls that form shortly after culture initiation. Basal capture of microtubule ends in cultured tendon cells is confined to discrete sites that occupy a relatively small proportion of the basal cell surface. These capturing sites are associated with hemiadherens junctions that link the ends of muscle cells to tendon cell bases. In vivo, muscle attachment and microtubule capture occur across the entire cell base. The cultured tendon cells reveal that the basal ends of their microtubules can be precisely targeted to small, pre-existing, structurally well-defined cortical capturing sites. However, a search and capture targeting procedure, such as that undertaken by kinetochore microtubules, cannot fully account for the precision of microtubule capture and positioning in tendon cells. We propose that cross-linkage of microtubules is also required to zip them into apicobasally oriented alignment, progressing from captured basal plus ends to apical minus ends. This involves repositioning of apical minus ends before they become anchored to an apical set of hemiadherens junctions. The proposal is consistent with our finding that hemiadherens junctions assemble at tendon cell bases before they do so at cell apices in both cultures and embryos. It is argued that control of microtubule positioning in the challenging spatial situations found in vitro involves the same procedures as those that operate in vivo.  相似文献   

5.
Epidermally derived tendon cells attach the exoskeleton (cuticle) of the Branchiopod crustacean, Artemia franciscana, to underlying muscle in the hindgut, while the structurally similar transalar tendon (epithelial) cells, which also arise from the epidermis and are polarized, connect dorsal and ventral exopodite surfaces. To establish these latter attachments the transalar tendon cells interact with cuticles on opposite sides of the exopodite by way of their apical surfaces and with one another via basal regions, or the cuticle attachments may be mediated through linkages with phagocytic storage cells found in the hemolymph. In some cases, phyllopod tendon cells attach directly to muscle cells. Tendon cells in the hindgut of Artemia possess microtubule bundles, as do the transalar cells, and they extend from the basal myotendinal junction to the apical domain located near the cuticle. The bundled microtubules intermingle with thin filaments reminiscent of microfilaments, but intermediate filament-like structures are absent. Microtubule bundles converging at apical cell surfaces contact structures termed apical invaginations, composed of cytoplasmic membrane infoldings associated with electron-dense material. Intracuticular rods protrude from apical invaginations, either into the cuticle during intermolt or the molting fluid in premolt. Confocal microscopy of immunofluorescently stained samples revealed tyrosinated, detyrosinated, and acetylated tubulins, the first time posttranslationally modified isoforms of this protein have been demonstrated in crustacean tendon cells. Microfilaments, as shown by staining with phalloidin, coincided spatially with microtubule bundles. Artemia tendon cells clearly represent an interesting system for study of cytoskeleton organization within the context of cytoplasmic polarity and the results in this article indicate functional cooperation of microtubules and microfilaments. These cytoskeletal elements, either acting independently or in concert, may transmit tension from muscle to cuticle in the hindgut and resist compression when connecting exopodite cuticular surfaces.  相似文献   

6.
Myofibrils are linked to the cell membrane at myotendinous junctions located at the ends of muscle fibers, and at costameres, sites positioned periodically along lateral surfaces of muscle cells. Both of these sites are enriched in proteins that link active components of myofibrils to the cell membrane. Costameres are also enriched in desmin intermediate filaments that link passive components of myofibrils to the lateral surfaces of muscle cells. In this study, the possibility that desmin is also found between the terminal Z-disk of myofibrils and the myotendinous junction membrane is examined by immunocytochemistry and by KI-extraction procedures. Data presented show that desmin is located in the filamentous core of cellular processes at myotendinous junctions at sites 30 nm or more from the membrane. This core lies deep to subsarcolemmal material previously shown to contain talin, vinculin, and dystrophin. The distance from desmin to the membrane suggests desmin does not interact directly with membrane proteins at the junction. Immunoblots and indirect immunofluorescence of junctional regions of muscle compared to nonjunctional regions show no apparent enrichment of desmin at junctional sites, although vinculin, another costameric and junctional component, is significantly enriched at junctional regions. These findings show that passive elements of myofibrils may be continuous from myotendinous junctions of muscle origin to insertion via desmin filaments located between terminal Z-disks and the junctional membrane. This can provide a system in parallel to that involving thin filaments, vinculin, and talin for linking myofibrils to the cell membrane at myotendinous junctions.  相似文献   

7.
Ectoplasmic specializations are actin filament-endoplasmic reticulum complexes that occur in Sertoli cells at sites of intercellular attachment. At sites between inter-Sertoli cell attachments, near the base of the cells, the sites are also related to tight junctions. We studied the characteristics of ectoplasmic specializations from six species using conventional views in which thin sections were perpendicular to the plane of the membranes, we used rare views in which the sections were in the plane of the membrane (en face views), and we also used the freeze-fracture technique. Tissues postfixed by osmium ferrocyanide showed junctional strands (fusion points between membranes) and actin bundles, actin sheets, or both, which could be visualized simultaneously. En face views demonstrated that the majority of tight junctional strands ran parallel to actin filament bundles. Usually, two tight junctional strands were associated with each actin filament bundle. Parallel tight junctions were occasionally extremely close together ( approximately 12 nm apart). Tight junctional strands were sometimes present without an apparent association with organized actin bundles or they were tangential to actin bundles. En face views showed that gap junctions were commonly observed intercalated with tight junction strands. The results taken together suggest a relationship of organized actin with tight junction complexes. However, the occasional examples of tight junction complexes being not perfectly aligned with actin filament bundles suggest that a precise and rigidly organized actin-tight junction relationship described above is not absolutely mandatory for the presence or maintenance of tight junctions. Species variations in tight junction organization are also presented.  相似文献   

8.
Interactions between microtubules (MTs) and filamentous actin (f-actin) are involved in directed cell locomotion, but are poorly understood. To test the hypothesis that MTs and f-actin associate with one another and affect each other's organization and dynamics, we performed time-lapse dual-wavelength spinning-disk confocal fluorescent speckle microscopy (FSM) of MTs and f-actin in migrating newt lung epithelial cells. F-actin exhibited four zones of dynamic behavior: rapid retrograde flow in the lamellipodium, slow retrograde flow in the lamellum, anterograde flow in the cell body, and no movement in the convergence zone between the lamellum and cell body. Speckle analysis showed that MTs moved at the same trajectory and velocity as f-actin in the cell body and lamellum, but not in the lamellipodium or convergence zone. MTs grew along f-actin bundles, and quiescent MT ends moved in association with f-actin bundles. These results show that the movement and organization of f-actin has a profound effect on the dynamic organization of MTs in migrating cells, and suggest that MTs and f-actin bind to one another in vivo.  相似文献   

9.
The cell-cell adherens junction is a site for cadherin-mediated cell adhesion where actin filaments are densely associated with the plasma membrane through its well-developed plasmalemmal undercoat. Recent research has focused on the molecular linkage between cadherins and actin filaments in the undercoat of adherens junctions in order to understand the functions of these undercoat-constitutive proteins in the regulation and signal transduction of cadherin-based cell adhesion.  相似文献   

10.
Abstract. The anterior median artery is an unpaired vessel that leaves the anterior end of the lobster ( Homarus americanus ) heart and supplies hemolymph to the brain, the antennae, and the eyestalks. This vessel has a trilaminar organization, consisting of a tunica interna with elastic fibrils, a tunica intermedia represented by a bilayered cell mass, and a tunica externa with collagen fibrils. The exposed ends of the medial cells in the tunica intermedia exhibit small, diffuse bundles of microfilaments that are penetrated by microtubules. These bundles have a circumferential or a slightly oblique orientation relative to the lumen of the vessel. The precise role of the microfilaments is unresolved. If the irregularly shaped bundles are static structures, they might contribute to the non-linear elasticity of the artery. Alternatively, if they generate force, a coordinated contraction of the medial cells might reduce the luminal diameter of the artery and, thus, retard hemolymph flow. Microfilaments of the medial cells anchor to subplasmalemmal filamentous mats, some of which are integral to intermediate junctions and some of which are associated with unbounded cell membranes (hemi-intermediate junctions). Contraction of the microfilament-bearing cells would have to occur without the benefit of nervous innervation or the participation of communicating (gap) junctions. If cell contractility is confirmed, a reclassification of the anterior median artery, from capacitance vessel to resistance vessel, is in order, and the bilayered cell mass in the tunica intermedia would likely qualify as the first unstriated muscle found in crustaceans.  相似文献   

11.
《The Journal of cell biology》1989,109(6):2817-2832
Studies of the developing trophectoderm in the mouse embryo have shown that extensive cellular remodeling occurs during epithelial formation. In this investigation, confocal immunofluorescence microscopy is used to examine the three-dimensional changes in cellular architecture that take place during the polarization of a terminally differentiated epithelial cell line. Madin-Darby canine kidney cells were plated at a low density on permeable filter supports. Antibodies that specifically recognize components of the tight junction, adherens junction, microtubules, centrosomes, and the Golgi complex were used to study the spatial remodeling of the cytoarchitecture during the formation of the polarized cell layer. The immunofluorescence data were correlated with establishment of functional tight junctions as measured by transepithelial resistance and back-exchange of the cell surface, labeled with metabolites of the fluorescent lipid analogue N-(7-[4- nitrobenzo-2-oxa-1,3-diazole]) aminocaproyl sphingosine. 1 d after plating, single cells had microtubules, radiating from a broad region, that contained the centrosomes and the Golgi complex. 2 d after plating, the cells had grown to confluence and had formed functional tight junctions close to the substratum. The centrioles had split and no longer organized the microtubules which were running above and below the nucleus. The Golgi complex had spread around the nucleus. By the fifth day after plating, the final polarized state had been achieved. The junctional complex had moved greater than 10 microns upward from its basal location. The centrioles were together below the apical membrane, and the Golgi complex formed a ribbon-like convoluted structure located in the apical region above the nucleus. The microtubules were organized in an apical web and in longitudinal microtubule bundles in the apical-basal axis of the columnar cell. The longitudinal microtubules were arranged with their minus ends spread over the apical region of the cell and their plus ends toward the basal region. These findings show that there is an extensive remodeling of epithelial cytoarchitecture after formation of cell-cell contacts. Reorganization of the microtubule network results in functional polarization of the cytoplasm.  相似文献   

12.
Summary Smooth feather muscles (mm. pennati) consist of bundles of smooth muscle cells which are attached to the feather follicles by short elastic tendons. In addition, some muscle bundles are interrupted by elastic tendons. The elastic tendon is composed of longitudinally arranged elastic fibers which branch and wavy bundles of collagen fibrils. Smooth muscle cells of the muscle bundles are attached to each other by desmosome-like junctions and by fusion of the basal laminae. The cytoplasm of the muscle cells is characterized by conspicuous thick filaments and abundant thin and intermediate filaments. These are attached to band-like dense patches (dense bands) at the plasma membrane which are particularly broad at the tapering end of the muscle cell. The contact surface between smooth muscle cells and their elastic tendon is considerably increased (i) by deep finger-like invaginations and indentations located at the tapering muscle end, and (ii) by branching of the coarse elastic fibers into slender processes, which are attached to the richly folded surface of the muscle cell endings by peripheral microfibrils. This intimate interlocking closely resembles the myotendinous junctions in skeletal muscle. In addition to fibroblasts and fibrocytes, the myotendinous junction of the young growing chicks contains numerous so-called myofibroblasts, which are suggested to represent smooth muscle cells differentiating into fibroblasts of the developing tendon.Dedicated to Professor Dr. Helmut Leonhardt on the occasion of his 60th birthdaySupported by a grant from the Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft (Dr. 91/1)  相似文献   

13.
The organization of the rectal pads is described in cockroaches belonging to the Groups Blattoidea (Periplaneta americana, Blatta orientalis) and Blaberoidea (Supella supellectilium, Blaberus craniifer). In the Blattoidea, each pad is composed of two layers (principal and basal cells) and is surrounded by very narrow junctional cells supporting the sclerotized cuticle of the pad frame; basally, the junctional cells abut on to the basal cells. In the Blaberoidea, the basal cell layer is discontinuous, the basal cells being interspersed between extensions of the junctional cells beneath the pad. The ultrastructural features of each cell type is described, with special reference to the intercellular junctions, which exhibit unusual complexity. Four types of junction are recognized: desmosomes (belt and spot desmosomes), gap junctions, septate junctions and scalariform (ladder-like) junctions. The last are usually closely associated with mitochondria, forming mitochondrial-scalariform junction complexes (MS). The distribution of these junctions is examined in relation to the partitioning of extracellular spaces, and to the problem of fluid transport.  相似文献   

14.
The ability of tendon to transmit forces from muscle to bone is directly attributable to an extracellular matrix (ECM) containing parallel bundles of collagen fibrils. Although the biosynthesis of collagen is well characterized, how cells deposit the fibrils in regular parallel arrays is not understood. Here we show that cells in the tendon mesenchyme are nearly cylindrical and are aligned side by side and end to end along the proximal-distal axis of the limb. Using three-dimensional reconstruction electron microscopy, we show that the cells have deep channels in their plasma membranes and contain bundles of parallel fibrils that are contiguous from one cell to another along the tendon axis. A combination of electron microscopy, microarray analysis, and immunofluorescence suggested that the cells are held together by cadherin-11-containing cell-cell junctions. Using a combination of RNA interference and electron microscopy, we showed that knockdown of cadherin-11 resulted in cell separation, loss of plasma membrane channels, and misalignment of the collagen fibrils in the ECM. Our results show that tendon formation in the developing limb requires precise regulation of cell shape via cadherin-11-mediated cell-cell junctions and coaxial alignment of plasma membrane channels in longitudinally stacked cells.  相似文献   

15.
16.
The existence of one or several systems of microtubules, consisting of a central bundle that branches off towards the basal and distal ends of epidermal cells of Carausius morosus has been shown by indirect immuno-fluorescence microscopy using monospecific anti-tubulin. The pattern of microtubules coincides with the position of the ommochrome granules and their migration path during physiological colour change. The ommochrome granules stick to isolated bundles of microtubules. Small bundles of microtubules extend almost perpendicularly towards the apical cell membrane where they are attached. Distally they are covered by pore channels within the cuticle. Parallel to the basal cell membrane and in close contact with it, there are very small bundles of microtubules. These findings strongly support the idea that during physiological colour change the ommochrome granules migrate along a firmly fixed system of microtubules.  相似文献   

17.
Unusual structures often found in the cytoplasm of tumor cells in a clear-cell sarcoma appeared as multilayered, concentric, oval, spiral, parallel arrays of cisternae in various planes of section. It was demonstrated that the cisternal membrane and cavity were continuous with plasmalemmas of tumor cells and the extracellular space, respectively, suggesting that the structures were formed by the intracytoplasmic infoldings of plasmalemmas. Another characteristic found in the structures was orderly microfilaments with an average diameter of 6.5 nm which were placed between the confronting plasmalemmas in the infoldings. The filaments which underlay the infolded plasmalemmas ran parallel to each other along the cytoplasmic surfaces of plasmalemmas approximately 15 nm apart. The regularly arranged filaments were found in the infolded plasmalemmas, but not beneath any other area of plasmalemmas. The short ends of long filaments appeared to bend toward the inner surfaces of plasmalemma and to be directly connected with the surface proper. These results show that the filaments may be closely associated with the plasmalemmal infoldings and included as the same category of plasmalemmal undercoat. Additionally, the biological significance of the structures is discussed.  相似文献   

18.
BACKGROUND: Shot (previously named Kakapo), is a Drosophila Plakin family member containing both Actin binding and microtubule binding domains. In Drosophila, it is required for a wide range of processes, including axon extension, dendrite formation, axonal terminal arborization at the neuromuscular junction, tendon cell development, and adhesion of wing epithelium. RESULTS: To address how Shot exerts its activity at the molecular level, we investigated the molecular interactions of Shot with candidate proteins in mature larval tendon cells. We show that Shot colocalizes with EB1/APC1 and with a compact microtubule array extending between the muscle-tendon junction and the cuticle. Shot forms a protein complex with EB1 via its C-terminal EF-hands and GAS2-containing domains. In tendon cells with reduced Shot activity, EB1/APC1 dissociate from the muscle-tendon junction, and the microtubule array elongates. The resulting tendon cell, although associated with the muscle and the cuticle ends, loses its stress resistance and elongates. CONCLUSIONS: Our results suggest that Shot mediates tendon stress resistance by the organization of a compact microtubule network at the muscle-tendon junction. This is achieved by Shot association with the cytoplasmic faces of the basal hemiadherens junction and with the EB1/APC1 complex.  相似文献   

19.
Summary The ultrastructure of the follicle cells during previtellogenesis and early vitellogenesis have been studied. In previtellogenesis follicle cells are columnar with numerous bundles of microtubules located along the lateral plasma membranes. Oocyte-follicle cell gap junctions are not found in this stage. At the onset of vitellogenesis, the bundles of microtubules disappear and are replaced by an apically located ring of microtubules. The modification of microtubular cytoskeleton is not followed by the development of intercellular spaces between the follicle cells. Concurrently, numerous gap junctions are formed between specialized follicle cell processes and oocyte microvilli, which are arranged in characteristic cone-shaped aggregations. It is suggested that cytoskeletal changes and formation of heterologous gap junctions, occurring at the onset of vitellogenesis, are induced by juvenile hormone.  相似文献   

20.
The fine structure of the myo-cuticular junction in an acarid mite, Caloglyphus mycophagus, is described. The muscle fibres are attached to the cuticle via flattened, much invaginated, epidermal cells. Unlike the situation described for other arthropods, the stress across these epidermal cells does not appear to be transmitted by microtubules but rather by desmosome-like structures which form intraepidermal cell bridges where invaginations from the outer and inner surfaces of the epidermal cells lie close together. The muscles are attached to the inner surface of this complex desmosome and the outer surface is linked to the cuticle by extracellular fibrils.  相似文献   

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