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1.
We have reinvestigated the effects of Ca++ and ATP on brush borders isolated from intestinal epithelial cells. At 37 degrees C, Ca++ (1 microM) and ATP cause a dramatic contraction of brush border terminal webs, not a retraction of microvilli as previously reported (M. S. Mooseker, 1976, J. Cell Biol. 71:417-433). Terminal web contraction, which occurs over the course of 1-5 min at 37 degrees C, actively constricts brush borders at the level of their zonula adherens. Contraction requires ATP, is stimulated by Ca++ (1 microM), and occurs in both membrane-intact and demembranated brush borders. Ca++ - dependent-solation of microvillus cores requires a concentration of Ca++ slightly greater (10 microM) than that required for contraction. Under conditions in which brush borders contract, many proteins in the isolated brush borders become phosphorylated. However, the phosphorylation of only one of the brush border proteins, the 20,000 dalton (20-kdalton) light chain of brush border myosin (BBMLC20), is stimulated by Ca++. At 37 degrees C, BBMLC20 phosphorylation correlates directly with brush border contraction. Furthermore, both BBMLC20 phosphorylation and brush border contraction are inhibited by trifluoperazine, an anti-psychotic phenothiazine that inhibits calmodulin activity. These results indicate that Ca++ regulates brush border contractility in vitro by stimulating cytoskeleton-associated, Ca++- and calmodulin-dependent brush border myosin light chain kinase.  相似文献   

2.
《The Journal of cell biology》1983,96(5):1325-1336
We have analyzed terminal web contraction in sheets of glycerinated chicken small intestine epithelium and in isolated intestinal brush borders using a quick-freeze, deep-etch, rotary shadow replication technique. In the presence of Mg-ATP at 37 degrees C, the terminal web region of each cell in the glycerinated sheet and of each isolated brush border became severely constricted at the level of its zonula adherens (ZA). Consequently, the individual brush borders rounded up, splaying out their microvilli in fanlike patterns. The most prominent ultrastructural changes that occurred during terminal web contraction were a dramatic decrease in the diameter of the circumferential ring composed of a bundle of 8-9-nm filaments adjacent to the zonula adherens and a decrease in the number of cross-linkers between the microvillus rootlets. Microvilli were not retracted into the terminal web. We have used myosin S1 decoration to demonstrate that most of the circumferential bundle filaments are actin and that the actin filaments are arranged in the bundle with mixed polarity. Some filaments within the bundle did not decorate with myosin S1 and had tiny projections that appeared to be attached to adjacent actin filaments. Because of their morphology and immunofluorescent localization of myosin within this region of the terminal web, we propose that these undecorated filaments are myosin. From these results, we conclude that brush border contraction is caused primarily by an active sliding of actin and myosin filaments within the circumferential bundle of filaments associated with the ZA.  相似文献   

3.
The B-CK isozyme of cytoplasmic creatine kinase is localized distinctly in the terminal web region of the intestinal epithelial cell brush border (Keller and Gordon: Cell Motil. Cytoskeleton 19:169-179, 1991). Experiments were performed to determine whether this CK is energetically coupled to the myosin II that is present in the circumferential ring and interrootlet structural domains of the brush border terminal web. In isolated brush borders, ATP-dependent circumferential ring contraction and interrootlet myosin solubilization were supported either by an exogenous PEP-pyruvate kinase-based ATP-regeneration system (PEP-PK) or by the addition of phosphocreatine to the endogenous B-CK-based ATP-regeneration system (PCr-B-CK). Addition of an exogenous hexokinase-glucose ATP-hydrolysis system (HK-G) effectively blocked both contraction and myosin solubilization in the PEP-PK assay. In contrast, HK-G had no significant effect on PCr-B-CK-supported brush border contraction, although it did inhibit interrootlet myosin solubilization. Thus, when high-energy phosphate is supplied as phosphocreatine, brush border B-CK imparts to the circumferential ring myosin a selective energetic advantage over other ATPases. These results suggest that myosin and B-CK are functionally coupled in the brush border circumferential ring, where they might comprise one end of an energy circuit that supplies energy for contraction, but that colocalization of CK with myosin in the brush border interrootlet domain is insufficient to establish functional coupling.  相似文献   

4.
Various models have been put forward suggesting ways in which brush borders from intestinal epithelial cells may be motile. Experiments documenting putative brush border motility have been performed on isolated brush borders and have generated models suggesting microvillar retraction or microvillar rootlet interactions. The reported Ca++ ATP- induced retraction of microvilli has been shown, instead, to be microvillar dissolution in response to Ca++ and not active brush border motility. I report here studies on the reactivation of motility in intact sheets of isolated intestinal epithelium. Whole epithelial sheets were glycerinated, which leaves the brush border and intercellular junctions intact, and then treated with ATP, PPi, ITP, ADP, GTP, or delta S-ATP. Analysis by video enhanced differential interference-contrast microscopy and thin-section transmission electron microscopy reveals contractions in the terminal web region causing microvilli to be fanned apart in response to ATP and delta S-ATP but not in response to ADP, PPi, ITP, or GTP. Electron microscopy reveals that the contractions occur at the level of the intermediate junction in a circumferential constriction which can pull cells completely apart. This constriction occurs in a location occupied by an actin- containing circumferential band of filaments, as demonstrated by S-1 binding, which completely encircles the terminal web at the level of the intermediate junction. Upon contraction, this band becomes denser and thicker. Since myosin, alpha-actinin and tropomyosin, in addition to actin, have been localized to this region of the terminal web, it is proposed that the intestinal epithelial cell can be motile via a circumferential terminal web contractile ring analogous to the contractile ring of dividing cells.  相似文献   

5.
The brush border of intestinal epithelial cells consists of a tightly packed array of microvilli, each of which contains a core of actin filaments. It has been postulated that microvillar movements are mediated by myosin interactions in the terminal web with the basal ends of these actin cores (Mooseker, M.S. 1976. J. Cell. Biol. 71:417-433). We report here that two predictions of this model are correct: (a) The brush border contains myosin, and (b) myosin is located in the terminal web. Myosin is isolated in 70 percent purity by solubilization of Triton-treated brush borders in 0.6 M KI, and separation of the components by gel filtration. Most of the remaining contaminants can be removed by precipitation of the myosin at low ionic strength. This yield is approximately 1 mg of myosin/30 mg of solubilized brush border protein. The molecule consists of three subunits with molecular weights of 200,000, 19,000, and 17,000 daltons in a 1:1:1 M ratio. At low ionic strength, the myosin forms small, bipolar filaments with dimensions of 300 X 11nm, that are similar to filaments seen previously in the terminal web of isolated brush borders. Like that of other vertebrate, nonmuscle myosins, the ATPase activity of isolated brush border myosin in 0.6 M KCI is highest with EDTA (1 μmol P(i)/mg-min; 37 degrees C), intermediate with Ca++ (0.4 μmol P(i)/mg-min), and low with Mg++ (0.01 μmol P(i)/mg-min). Actin does not stimulate the Mg-ATPase activity of the isolated enzyme. Antibodies against the rod fragment of human platelet myosin cross-react by immunodiffusion with brush border myosin. Staining of isolated mouse or chicken brush borders with rhodamine-antimyosin demonstrates that myosin is localized exclusively in the terminal web.  相似文献   

6.
The brush border of intestinal epithelial cells consists of an array of tightly packed microvilli. Within each microvillus is a bundle of 20-30 actin filaments. The basal ends of the filament bundles are embedded in and interconected by a filamentous meshwork, the terminal web, which lies directly beneath the microvilli. When calcium and ATP are added to isolated brush borders that have been treated with the detergent, Triton X-100, the microvillar filament bundles rapidly retract into and through the terminal web region. Biochemical studies of brush border contractile proteins suggest that the observed microvillar contraction is actomyosin mediated. We have shown previously that the major protein of the brush border's actin (Tilney, L. G., and M. S. Mooseker. 1971. Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U. S. A. 68:2611-2615). The brush border also contains a protein with the same molecular weight as the heavy chain subunit of myosin (200, 000 daltons). In addition, preparations of demembranated brush borders exhibit potassium-EDTA ATPase activity of 0.02 mumol phosphate/mg-min (22 degrees C); this assay is diagnostic for myosin-like ATPase isolated from vertebrate sources. Other proteins of the brush border include a 30,000 dalton protein with properties similar to those of tropomyosin, and a protein with the same molecular weight as the Z band protein, alpha-actinin (95,000 daltons). How these observations bear on the basis for microvillar movements in vivo is discussed within the framework of our recent model for the organization of actin and myosin in the brush border (Mooseker, M. S., and L. G. Tilney. 1975. J. Cell Biol. 67:725-743).  相似文献   

7.
The report that microvillar cores of isolated, demembranated brush borders retract into the terminal web in the presence of Ca(++) and ATP has been widely cited as an example of Ca(++)-regulated nonmuscle cell motility. Because of recent findings that microvillar core actin filaments are cross-linked by villin which, in the presence of micromolar Ca(++), fragments actin filaments, we used the techniques of video enhanced differential interference contrast, immunofluorescence, and phase contrast microscopy and thin-section electron microscopy (EM) to reexamine the question of contraction of isolated intestinal cell brush borders. Analysis of video enhanced light microscopic images of Triton- demembranated brush borders treated with a buffered Ca(++) solution shows the cores disintegrating with the terminal web remaining intact; membranated brush borders show the microvilli to vesiculate with Ca(++). Using Ca(++)/EGTA buffers, it is found that micromolar free Ca(++) causes core filament dissolution in membranated or demembranated brush borders, Ca(++) causes microvillar core solation followed by complete vesiculation of the microvillar membrane. The lengths of microvilli cores and rootlets were measured in thin sections of membranated and demembranated controls, in Ca(++)-, Ca(++) + ATP-, and in ATP-treated brush borders. Results of these measurements show that Ca(++) alone causes the complete solation of the microvillar cores, yet the rootlets in the terminal web region remain of normal length. These results show that microvilli do not retract into the terminal web in response to Ca(++) and ATP but rather that the microvillar cores disintegrate. NBD-phallicidin localization of actin and fluorescent antibodies to myosin reveal a circumferential band of actin and myosin in mildly permeabilized cells in the region of the junctional complex. The presence of these contractile proteins in this region, where other studies have shown a circumferential band of thin filaments, is consistent with the hypothesis that brush borders may be motile through the circumferential constriction of this “contractile ring,” and is also consistent with the observations that ATP-treated brush borders become cup shaped as if there had been a circumferential constriction.  相似文献   

8.
Cytoskeletal proteins of the rat kidney proximal tubule brush border   总被引:3,自引:0,他引:3  
Cytoskeletal components backing the brush border of the rat kidney proximal tubule cell were identified and compared with those of the well characterized intestinal brush border by immuneoverlay and immunocytochemistry. Antibodies reactive against the intestinal microvillus core components, villin and fimbrin, as well as against the terminal web components, spectrin (fodrin) and myosin, were used. Proteins of similar molecular weight to these intestinal brush border cytoskeletal components were identified in isolated kidney brush borders by immuneoverlay. Spectrin, a major component of the terminal web region of both cell types, was more concentrated in the kidney brush border relative to both actin and myosin. By immunofluorescence, villin and fimbrin were localized in the microvilli, and spectrin and myosin were localized to the terminal web region of the brush border. In addition, spectrin was found along the basolateral membranes of the proximal tubule cell, and myosin was detected in a punctate staining pattern throughout its cytoplasm. By immunoelectron microscopy using immunogold labeling procedures, fimbrin and villin were localized in the terminal web as well as in microvilli, and spectrin and myosin were localized to fibrils in the terminal web. A key difference between the epithelia of the two organs is the extensive network of clathrin coated pits found in the terminal web region of the kidney but not the intestinal brush border. The clathrin-rich terminal web region of the kidney, like the intestinal brush border, proved to be quite stable and resistant to disruption by non-ionic detergents and harsh mechanical treatment.  相似文献   

9.
Terminal webs prepared from mouse intestinal epithelial cells were examined by the quick-freeze, deep-etch, and rotary-replication method. The microvilli of these cells contain actin filaments that extend into the terminal web in compact bundles. Within the terminal web these bundles remain compact; few filaments are separated from the bundles and fewer still bend towards the lateral margins of the cell. Decoration with subfragment 1 (S1) of myosin confirmed that relatively few actin filaments travel horizontally in the web. Instead, between actin bundles there are complicated networks of the fibrils. Here we present two lines of evidence which suggest that myosin is one of the major cross-linkers in the terminal web. First, when brush borders are exposed to 1 mM ATP in 0.3 M KCl, they lose their normal ability to bind antimyosin antibodies as judged by immunofluorescence, and they lose the thin fibrils normally found in deep-etch replicas. Correspondingly, myosin is released into the supernatant as judged by SDS gel electrophoresis. Second, electron microscope immunocytochemistry with antimyosin antibodies followed by ferritin- conjugated second antibodies leads to ferritin deposition mainly on the fibrils at the basal part of rootlets. Deep-etching also reveals that the actin filament bundles are connected to intermediate filaments by another population of cross-linkers that are not extracted by ATP in 0.3 M KCl. From these results we conclude that myosin in the intestinal cell may not only be involved in a short range sliding-filament type of motility, but may also play a purely structural role as a long range cross-linker between microvillar rootlets.  相似文献   

10.
The association of actin filaments with membranes is now recognized as an important parameter in the motility of nonmuscle cells. We have investigated the organization of one of the most extensive and highly ordered actin filament-membrane complexes in nature, the brush border of intestinal epithelial cells. Through the analysis of isolated, demembranated brush borders decorated with the myosin subfragment, S1, we have determined that all the microvillar actin filaments have the same polarity. The S1 arrowhead complexes point away from the site of attachment of actin filaments at the apical tip of the microvillar membrane. In addition to the end-on attachment of actin filaments at the tip of the microvillus, these filaments are also connected to the plasma membrane all along their lengths by periodic (33 nm) cross bridges. These bridges were best observed in isolated brush borders incubated in high concentrations of Mg++. Their visibility is attributed to the induction of actin paracrystals in the filament bundles of the microvilli. Finally, we present evidence for the presence of myosinlike filaments in the terminal web region of the brush border. A model for the functional organization of actin and myosin in the brush border is presented.  相似文献   

11.
《The Journal of cell biology》1994,126(5):1201-1210
We previously discovered a cellular isoform of titin (originally named T-protein) colocalized with myosin II in the terminal web domain of the chicken intestinal epithelial cell brush border cytoskeleton (Eilertsen, K.J., and T.C.S. Keller. 1992. J. Cell Biol. 119:549-557). Here, we demonstrate that cellular titin also colocalizes with myosin II filaments in stress fibers and organizes a similar array of myosin II filaments in vitro. To investigate interactions between cellular titin and myosin in vitro, we purified both proteins from isolated intestinal epithelial cell brush borders by a combination of gel filtration and hydroxyapatite column chromatography. Electron microscopy of brush border myosin bipolar filaments assembled in the presence and absence of cellular titin revealed a cellular titin- dependent side-by-side and end-to-end alignment of the filaments into highly ordered arrays. Immunogold labeling confirmed cellular titin association with the filament arrays. Under similar assembly conditions, purified chicken pectoralis muscle titin formed much less regular aggregates of muscle myosin bipolar filaments. Sucrose density gradient analyses of both cellular and muscle titin-myosin supramolecular arrays demonstrated that the cellular titin and myosin isoforms coassembled with a myosin/titin ratio of approximately 25:1, whereas the muscle isoforms coassembled with a myosin:titin ratio of approximately 38:1. No coassembly aggregates were found when cellular myosin was assembled in the presence of muscle titin or when muscle myosin was assembled in the presence of cellular titin. Our results demonstrate that cellular titin can organize an isoform-specific association of myosin II bipolar filaments and support the possibility that cellular titin is a key organizing component of the brush border and other myosin II-containing cytoskeletal structures including stress fibers.  相似文献   

12.
Contraction of isolated brush borders from the intestinal epithelium   总被引:31,自引:22,他引:9       下载免费PDF全文
Brush borders isolated from epithelial cells from the small intestine of neonatal rats are able to contract in the presence of ATP and Mg2+; Ca2+ is not required. Contraction is characterized by a pinching-in of the plasma membrane in the region of the zonula adherens and a subsequent rounding of the brush borders. No movement or consistent shortening of the microvilli is observed. The contraction appears to involve the 5- to 7-nm diameter microfilaments in the terminal web which associate with the zonula adherens. These filaments bind heavy meromyosin as do the actin core filaments of the microvilli. A model for contraction is presented in which, in the intact cell, terminal web filaments and core filaments interact to produce shortening of the microvilli.  相似文献   

13.
Monoclonal antibodies binding to the rod portion of brush border myosin were used to localize myosin in chicken intestinal brush border cells by indirect immunofluorescence. Isolated cells, or cells still attached in a sheet, were analyzed by conventional epifluorescence microscopy, which showed that most of the immunoreactive myosin is localized in the apical brush border (terminal web), and in a basal region. In addition, a weak, diffuse granular and rod-like labeling was detected throughout the cell body. Using the laser-scanning confocal microscope (White et al., 1987), a more precise localization of the myosin within the terminal web and the cell body was obtained. In the terminal web, most of the myosin was concentrated in a circumferential ring, below the plasma membrane, and the remaining myosin was found in the inter-rootlet area. These two populations of myosin were topologically strictly related, since they were found in the same optical sections. In the cell body, as well as in the basal region, the myosin was found to be associated with the outer limiting membrane of the cell, in a cortical location, whereas essentially no myosin was detected in the cytoplasm.  相似文献   

14.
Epithelial cells lining the intestinal tract build an apical array of microvilli known as the brush border. Each microvillus is a cylindrical membrane protrusion that is linked to a supporting actin bundle by myosin-1a (Myo1a). Mice lacking Myo1a demonstrate no overt physiological symptoms, suggesting that other myosins may compensate for the loss of Myo1a in these animals. To investigate changes in the microvillar myosin population that may limit the Myo1a KO phenotype, we performed proteomic analysis on WT and Myo1a KO brush borders. These studies revealed that WT brush borders also contain the short-tailed class I myosin, myosin-1d (Myo1d). Myo1d localizes to the terminal web and striking puncta at the tips of microvilli. In the absence of Myo1a, Myo1d peptide counts increase twofold; this motor also redistributes along the length of microvilli, into compartments normally occupied by Myo1a. FRAP studies demonstrate that Myo1a is less dynamic than Myo1d, providing a mechanistic explanation for the observed differential localization. These data suggest that Myo1d may be the primary compensating class I myosin in the Myo1a KO model; they also suggest that dynamics govern the localization and function of different yet closely related myosins that target common actin structures.  相似文献   

15.
Two extremely high molecular weight proteins were found to be components of the intestinal epithelial cell brush border cytoskeleton. The largest brush border protein, designated T-protein, migrated on SDS gels as a doublet of polypeptides with molecular weights similar to muscle titin T I and T II. The other large brush border protein, designated N-protein, was found to have a polypeptide molecular weight similar to muscle nebulin. In Western analysis, a polyclonal antibody raised against brush border T-protein reacted specifically with T-protein in isolated brush borders and cross-reacted with titin in pectoralis and cardiac muscle samples. T-protein was distinguished from the muscle titins by an anti-cardiac titin mAb. A polyclonal antibody raised against N-protein was specific for N-protein in brush borders and cross-reacted with nothing in pectoralis muscle. Immunolocalization in cryosections of intestinal epithelia and SDS-PAGE analysis of fractionated brush borders revealed that both T-protein and N-protein are concentrated distinctly in the brush border terminal web region subjacent to the microvilli, but absent from the microvilli. EM of rotary-replicated T-protein samples revealed many of the molecules to be long (912 +/- 40 nm) and fibrous with a globular head on one end. In some of the molecules, the head domain appeared to be extended in a fibrous conformation yielding T-protein up to 1,700-nm long. The brush border N-protein was found as long polymers with a repeating structural unit of approximately 450 nm. Our findings indicate that brush border T-protein is a cellular isoform of titin and suggest that both T-protein and N-protein play structural roles in the brush border terminal web.  相似文献   

16.
Two isozymes of creatine kinase have been purified differentially from mitochondrial and cytoplasmic subfractions of intestinal epithelial cells. These intestinal epithelial cell creatine kinases were indistinguishable from the cytoplasmic (B-CK) and mitochondrial (Mi-CK) creatine kinase isozymes of brain when compared by SDS-PAGE, cellulose polyacetate electrophoresis, and peptide mapping. In intestinal epithelial cells, immunolocalization of the Mi-CK isozyme indicates that it is associated with long, thin mitochondria, which are excluded from the brush border at the apical end of each cell. In contrast, immunolocalization of the B-CK isozyme indicates that it is concentrated distinctly in the brush border terminal web domain. Although absent from the microvilli, B-CK also is distributed diffusely throughout the cytoplasm. Terminal web localization of B-CK was maintained in glycerol-permeabilized cells and in isolated brush borders, indicating that B-CK binds to the brush border structure. The abundance and localization of the mitochondrial and cytoplasmic creatine kinase isozymes suggest that they are part of a system that temporally and/or spatially buffers dynamic energy requirements of intestinal epithelial cells.  相似文献   

17.
Indirect immunofluorescence microscopy was used to localize microfilament-associated proteins in the brush border of mouse intestinal epithelial cells. As expected, antibodies to actin decorated the microfilaments of the microvilli, giving rise to a very intense fluorescence. By contrast, antibodies to myosin, tropomyosin, filamin, and alpha-actinin did not decorate the microvilli. All these antibodies, however, decorated the terminal web region of the brush border. Myosin, tropomyosin, and alpha-actinin, although present throughout the terminal web, were found to be preferentially located around the periphery of the organelle. Therefore, two classes of microfilamentous structures can be documented in the brush border. First, the highly ordered microfilaments which make up the cores of the microvilli apparently lack the associated proteins. Second, seemingly less-ordered microfilaments are found in the terminal web, in which region the myosin, tropomyosin, filamin and alpha-actinin are located.  相似文献   

18.
Actin, myosin, and the actin-associated proteins tropomyosin, alpha-actinin, vinculin, and villin were localized in acinar cells of rat and bovine pancreas, parotid, and prostate glands by means of immunofluorescent staining of both frozen tissue sections and semithin sections of quick-frozen, freeze-dried, and plastic-embedded tissues. Antibodies to actin, myosin, tropomyosin, alpha-actinin, and villin reacted strongly with a narrow cytoplasmic band extending beneath the luminal border of acinar cells. The presence of villin, which has so far been demonstrated only in intestinal and kidney brush border, was further confirmed by antibody staining of blotted electrophoresis gels of whole acinar cell extracts. Fluorescently labelled phalloidin, which reacts specifically with F-actin, gave similar staining, within the cell apex to that obtained with antibodies to actin, myosin, tropomyosin, alpha-actinin, and villin. In contrast, immunostaining with antibodies to vinculin was restricted to the area of the junctional complex. Ultrastructurally, the apical immunoreactive band corresponded to a dense web composed of interwoven microfilaments, which could be decorated with heavy meromyosin. Outside this apical terminal web, antibodies to myosin and tropomyosin gave only a weak immunostaining (confined to the lateral cell borders) whereas antibodies to actin and alpha-actinin led to a rather strong bead-like staining along the lateral and basal cell membrane most probably marking microfilament-associated desmosomes. Anti-villin immunofluorescence was confined to the apical terminal web. It is suggested that the apical terminal web is important for the control of transport and access of secretory granules to the luminal plasma membrane and that villin, which is known to bundle or sever actin filaments in a Ca(++)-dependent manner, might participate in the regulation of actin polymerization within this strategically located network of contractile proteins.  相似文献   

19.
We have explored the development of the brush border in adult chicken enterocytes by analyzing the cytoskeletal protein and mRNA levels as enterocytes arise from crypt stem cells and differentiate as they move toward the villus. At the base of the crypt, a small population of cells contain a rudimentary terminal web and a few short microvilli with long rootlets. These microvilli appear to arise from bundles of actin filaments which nucleate on the plasma membrane. The microvilli apparently elongate via the addition of membrane supplied by vesicles that fuse with the microvillus and extend the membrane around the actin core. Actin, villin, myosin, tropomyosin and spectrin, but not myosin I (previously called 110 kD; see Mooseker and Coleman, J. Cell Biol. 108, 2395-2400, 1989) are already concentrated in the luminal cytoplasm of crypt cells, as seen by immunofluorescence. Using quantitative densitometry of cDNA-hybridized RNA blots from cells isolated from crypts, villus middle (mid), or villus tip (tip), we found a 2- to 3-fold increase in villin, calmodulin and tropomyosin steady-state mRNA levels; an increase parallel to morphological brush border development. Actin, spectrin and myosin mRNA levels did not change significantly. ELISA of total crypt, mid and tip cell lysates show that there are no significant changes in actin, myosin, spectrin, tropomyosin, myosin I, villin or alpha-actinin protein levels as the brush border develops. The G-/F-actin ratio also did not change with brush border assembly. We conclude that, although the brush border is not fully assembled in immature enterocytes, the major cytoskeletal proteins are present in their full concentration and already localized within the apical cytoplasm. Therefore brush border formation may involve reorganization of a pool of existing cytoskeletal proteins mediated by the expression or regulation of an unidentified key protein(s).  相似文献   

20.
The epithelial layer lining the proximal convoluted tubule of mammalian kidney contains a brush border of numerous microvilli. These microvilli appear in structure to be very similar to the microvilli on epithelial cells of the small intestine. Microvilli found in both the small intestine and the proximal convoluted tubules in kidney have a core bundle of actin filaments bundled by the accessory proteins villin and fimbrin. Along the length of intestinal microvilli, lateral links can be observed to connect the core bundle of actin filaments to the membrane. These cross-bridges are comprised of a 110-kDa calmodulin complex which belongs to a class of single-headed myosin molecules, collectively referred to as myosin-1. We now report that an analogous calmodulin-binding polypeptide of 105 kDa has been identified in rat kidney cortex. The 105-kDa polypeptide is preferentially found in purified kidney brush borders, can be extracted with ATP, and co-elutes with calmodulin on gel filtration and anion exchange chromatography. Fractions containing the 105-kDa polypeptide exhibit a modest ATPase activity in buffer containing CaCl2. The partially purified 105-kDa polypeptide will bind iodinated calmodulin and will sediment with F-actin in buffer containing ethylene glycol-bis-(beta-aminoethyl ether)-N,N,N',N'-tetraacetic acid (EGTA) or Ca2+. The addition of ATP partially reverses this association with F-actin. These results indicate that myosin-1, in addition to its presence in intestinal brush borders, is present in the brush border of kidney. We also provide preliminary evidence to indicate that the 105-kDa polypeptide is not restricted to tissues possessing a brush border.  相似文献   

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