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1.
The dystrophin-glycoprotein complex (DGC) links the cytoskeleton of muscle fibers to their extracellular matrix. Using knockout mice, we show that a cytoplasmic DGC component, alpha-dystrobrevin (alpha-DB), is dispensable for formation of the neuromuscular junction (NMJ) but required for maturation of its postsynaptic apparatus. We also analyzed double and triple mutants lacking other cytoskeletal DGC components (utrophin and dystrophin) and myotubes lacking a alpha-DB or a transmembrane DGC component (dystroglycan). Our results suggest that alpha-DB acts via its linkage to the DGC to enhance the stability of postsynaptic specializations following their DGC-independent formation; dystroglycan may play additional roles in assembling synaptic basal lamina. Together, these results demonstrate involvement of distinct protein complexes in the formation and maintenance of the synapse and implicate the DGC in the latter process.  相似文献   

2.
It has been biochemically shown that dystrophin and alpha- and beta-dystroglycan form an oligomeric complex which links laminin, a component of the basement membrane, to components of the subsarcolemmal cytoskeleton in skeletal muscle fibers. In the present study the dystrophin-glycoprotein complex and its structural relationships to laminin and subsarcolemmal cytoskeleton were ultrastructurally examined in crude surface membranes prepared from rat skeletal muscles. Sarcolemmal vesicles within crude surface membranes were identified and characterized by fine protrusions on their outer surface and electron-dense materials or patches associated with the inner surface. These two components were seen to be in register with each other across the sarcolemma. The fine protrusions were immunolabeled by anti-alpha-dystroglycan and reassociated with exogenous laminin. Immunolabeling in combination with laminin reassociation demonstrated that the electron-dense materials contained dystrophin at laminin-binding domains of the membrane. In addition, they were often associated with very fine filaments. These results provide morphological evidence for the biochemically proposed model of molecular array of dystrophin complex from the basement membrane to the subsarcolemmal cytoskeleton.  相似文献   

3.
Syntrophins are a family of 59 kDa peripheral membrane‐associated adapter proteins, containing multiple protein‐protein and protein‐lipid interaction domains. The syntrophin family consists of five isoforms that exhibit specific tissue distribution, distinct sub‐cellular localization and unique expression patterns implying their diverse functional roles. These syntrophin isoforms form multiple functional protein complexes and ensure proper localization of signalling proteins and their binding partners to specific membrane domains and provide appropriate spatiotemporal regulation of signalling pathways. Syntrophins consist of two PH domains, a PDZ domain and a conserved SU domain. The PH1 domain is split by the PDZ domain. The PH2 and the SU domain are involved in the interaction between syntrophin and the dystrophin‐glycoprotein complex (DGC). Syntrophins recruit various signalling proteins to DGC and link extracellular matrix to internal signalling apparatus via DGC. The different domains of the syntrophin isoforms are responsible for modulation of cytoskeleton. Syntrophins associate with cytoskeletal proteins and lead to various cellular responses by modulating the cytoskeleton. Syntrophins are involved in many physiological processes which involve cytoskeletal reorganization like insulin secretion, blood pressure regulation, myogenesis, cell migration, formation and retraction of focal adhesions. Syntrophins have been implicated in various pathologies like Alzheimer’s disease, muscular dystrophy, cancer. Their role in cytoskeletal organization and modulation makes them perfect candidates for further studies in various cancers and other ailments that involve cytoskeletal modulation. The role of syntrophins in cytoskeletal organization and modulation has not yet been comprehensively reviewed till now. This review focuses on syntrophins and highlights their role in cytoskeletal organization, modulation and dynamics via its involvement in different cell signalling networks.  相似文献   

4.
The NG2 chondroitin sulfate proteoglycan is a membrane-spanning molecule expressed by immature precursor cells in a variety of developing tissues. In tightly adherent cell lines with a flattened morphology, NG2 is organized on the cell surface in linear arrays that are highly co-localized with actin and myosin-containing stress fibers in the cytoskeleton. In contrast, microtubules and intermediate filaments in the cytoskeleton exhibit completely different patterns of organization, suggesting that NG2 may use microfilamentous stress fibers as a means of cytoskeletal anchorage. Consistent with this is the observation that cytochalasin D disrupts the organization of both stress fibers in the cytoskeleton and NG2 on the cell surface. Very similar linear cell surface arrays are also seen with three other cell surface molecules thought to interact with the actin cytoskeleton: the α5β1 integrin, the CD44 proteoglycan, and the L1 neuronal cell adhesion molecule. Since the cytoplasmic domains of these four molecules are dissimilar, it seems possible that cytoskeletal anchorage in each case may occur via different mechanisms. One indication of such differences can be seen in colchicine-treated cells which have lost their flattened morphology but still retain long actin-positive tendrils as remnants of the actin cytoskeleton. NG2 and α5β1 are associated with these tendrils while CD44 and L1 are not, suggesting that at least two subclasses of cell surface molecules exist which can interact with different subdomains of the actin cytoskeleton. © 1996 Wiley-Liss, Inc.  相似文献   

5.
Summary Myotendinous junctions are sites which are morphologically and molecularly specialized for force transmission between intracellular and extracellular structural proteins. In the present investigation, the formation of these specialized junctions is studied in chicken embryos from 9 days following fertilization to 1 day posthatching, using light and electron microscopy. Observations indicate that the first discernible event in myotendinous junction formation is the appearance of basement membrane at the incipient junction at 9–10 days postfertilization, concomitant with the aggregation of fibroblasts at the junctional regions of myogenic cells. Subsequently, subsarcolemmal densities appear at sites opposite basement membrane locations by 13 days postfertilization. Myofibrils insert into subsarcolemmal densities by day 15 and invaginations of the cell membrane are initiated at those insertions. Type I collagen fibers appear at the cell surface at day 17. Junctional structure at day 17 qualitatively resembles that of adult myotendinous junctions. Changes in junctional structure following day 17 are primarily increases in the amount of subsarcolemmal densities, myofibril-membrane associations, and amount of junctional membrane folding.  相似文献   

6.
Summary The fine structure of junctional specializations on the segmental septa in the median and lateral giant fibers of the earthworm (Eisenia foetida) was examined. Eight morphologically different septal domains were identified; a gap junction, a junction with hemispherical hollow structures, a chemical synapse-like junction, intermediate type and punctum adherens type junctions, a junction with adjoining vesicular layers, an area flanked by flattened membranous sacs, a non specialized area, and an area consisting of widely separated membranes with interposed glial processes. The area of each domain was measured by a cytometrical technique using quasi-serial sections. The gap junction occupied 3% and 0.2% of the septal area of the median and lateral giant fibers, respectively. Junctions with hemisperical hollow structures, characteristic of the earthworm giant fibers, occupied 2.5% and 13.9% of the median and lateral giant fibers, respectively. Various membrane domains except the gap junction, the junction with hemispherical hollow structures, and the chemical synapse-like junction accounted for similar proportional areas in both median and lateral giant fibers.The functional implications of these junctional specializations, especially the gap junction, are discussed.  相似文献   

7.
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   

8.
9.
We have studied the structure of developing normal and dysgenic (mdg/mdg) mouse muscle fibers in vivo, with special attention to the components of the junctions between the sarcoplasmic reticulum and either the surface membrane or the transverse tubules. Triads and dyads are rare in dysgenic muscle fibers, but have apparently normal disposition of feet and calsequestrin. Peripheral couplings in normal developing muscle fibers have junctional tetrads in their surface membrane in association with the junctional feet. Muscle fibers in dysgenic mice lack junctional tetrads. This provides indirect evidence for the identification of the components of junctional tetrads with dihydropyridine receptors, which are known to be absent in dysgenic muscle fibers.  相似文献   

10.
11.
Basally located tight junctions between Sertoli cells in the postpubertal testis are the largest and most complex junctional complexes known. They form at puberty and are thought to be the major structural component of the "blood-testis" barrier. We have now examined the development of these structures in the immature mouse testis in conjunction with immunolocalization of the tight-junction-associated protein ZO-1 (zonula occludens 1). In testes from 5-day-old mice, tight junctional complexes are absent and ZO-1 is distributed generally over the apicolateral, but not basal, Sertoli cell membrane. As cytoskeletal and reticular elements characteristic of the mature junction are recruited to the developing junctions, between 7 and 14 days, ZO-1 becomes progressively restricted to tight junctional regions. Immunogold labeling of ZO-1 on Sertoli cell plasma membrane preparations revealed specific localization to the cytoplasmic surface of tight junctional regions. In the mature animal, ZO-1 is similarly associated with tight junctional complexes in the basal aspects of the epithelium. In addition, it is also localized to Sertoli cell ectoplasmic specializations adjacent to early elongating, but not late, spermatids just prior to sperm release. Although these structures are not tight junctions, they do have a similar cytoskeletal arrangement, suggesting that ZO-1 interacts with the submembrane cytoskeleton. These results show that, in the immature mouse testis, ZO-1 is present on the Sertoli cell plasma membrane in the absence of recognizable tight junctions. In the presence of tight junctions, however, ZO-1 is found only at the sites of junctional specializations associated with tight junctions and with elongating spermatids.  相似文献   

12.
Plectin is a versatile cytoskeletal linker protein that preferentially localizes at interfaces between intermediate filaments and the plasma membrane in muscle, epithelial cells, and other tissues. Its deficiency causes muscular dystrophy with epidermolysis bullosa simplex. To better understand the functional roles of plectin beneath the sarcolemma of skeletal muscles and to gain some insights into the underlying mechanism of plectin-deficient muscular dystrophy, we studied in vivo structural and molecular relationships of plectin to subsarcolemmal cytoskeletal components, such as desmin, dystrophin, and vinculin, in rat skeletal muscles. Immunogold electron microscopy revealed that plectin fine threads tethered desmin intermediate filaments onto subsarcolemmal dense plaques overlying Z-lines and I-bands. These dense plaques were found to contain dystrophin and vinculin, and thus may be the structural basis of costameres. The in vivo association of plectin with desmin, (meta-)vinculin, dystrophin, and actin was demonstrated by immunoprecipitation experiments. Treatment of plectin immunoprecipitates with gelsolin reduced actin, dystrophin, and (meta-)vinculin but not desmin, implicating that subsarcolemmal actin could partly mediate the interaction between plectin and dystrophin or (meta-)vinculin. Altogether, our data suggest that plectin, along with desmin intermediate filaments, might serve a vital structural role in the stabilization of the subsarcolemmal cytoskeleton.  相似文献   

13.
The nuclear envelope (NE) is connected to the different types of cytoskeletal elements by linker of nucleoskeleton and cytoskeleton (LINC) complexes. LINC complexes exist from yeast to humans, and have preserved their general architecture throughout evolution. They are composed of SUN and KASH domain proteins of the inner and the outer nuclear membrane, respectively. These SUN–KASH bridges are used for the transmission of forces across the NE and support diverse biological processes. Here, we review the function of SUN and KASH domain proteins in various unicellular and multicellular species. Specifically, we discuss their influence on nuclear morphology and cytoskeletal organization. Further, emphasis is given on the role of LINC complexes in nuclear anchorage and migration as well as in genome organization.  相似文献   

14.
Cell junctions are essential to maintain polarity and tissue integrity. Epithelial cell junctions are composed of distinct sub-compartments that together ensure the strong adhesion between neighboring cells. In Caenorhabditis elegans epithelia, the apical junction (CeAJ) forms a single electron-dense structure, but at the molecular level it is composed of two sub-compartments that function redundantly and localize independently as two distinct but adjacent circumferential rings on the lateral plasma membrane. While investigating the role of the multi PDZ-domain containing protein MAGI-1 during C. elegans epidermal morphogenesis, we found that MAGI-1 localizes apical to both the Cadherin/Catenin (CCC) and AJM-1/DLG-1 (DAC) containing sub-domains. Removal of MAGI-1 function causes a loss of junctional compartmentalization along the lateral membrane and reduces the overall robustness of cell-cell adhesion mediated by either type of cell junctions. Our results suggest that MAGI-1 functions as an “organizer” that ensures the correct segregation of different cell adhesion complexes into distinct domains along the lateral plasma membrane. Thus, the formation of stable junctions requires the proper distribution of the CCC and DAC adhesion protein complexes along the lateral plasma membrane.  相似文献   

15.
Mammalian epithelial cell plasma membrane domains are separated by junctional complexes supported by actin. The extent to which actin acts elsewhere to maintain cell polarity remains poorly understood. Using latrunculin B (Lat B) to depolymerize actin filaments, several basolateral plasma membrane proteins were found to lose their polarized distribution. This loss of polarity did not reflect lateral diffusion through junctional complexes because a low-density lipoprotein receptor mutant lacking a functional endocytosis signal remained basolateral after Lat B treatment. Furthermore, Lat B treatment did not facilitate membrane diffusion across the tight junction as observed with ethylenediaminetetraacetic acid or dimethyl sulfoxide treatment. Detailed analysis of transferrin recycling confirmed Lat B depolarized recycling of transferrin from endosomes to the basolateral surface. Kinetic analysis suggested sorting was compromised at both basolateral early endosomes and perinuclear recycling endosomes. Despite loss of function, these two endosome populations remained distinct from each other and from early endosomes labeled by apically internalized ligand. Furthermore, apical and basolateral early endosomes were functionally distinct populations that directed traffic to a single common recycling endosomal compartment even after Lat B treatment. Thus, filamentous actin may help to guide receptor traffic from endosomes to the basolateral plasma membrane.  相似文献   

16.
The tight junction serves as a paracellular gate to seal the paracellular space of apposing cells and as a molecular fence to prevent diffusion of membrane proteins and lipids in epithelial cells. Although involvement of the actin cytoskeleton has been considered to be important in these two functions, it remains to be elucidated whether both functions are regulated in a coupled manner or differentially by actin. Treatment of highly polarized MDCK cells with mycalolide B (MB), a recently developed actin-depolymerizing reagent, induced a decrease of transepithelial resistance in a dose- and time-dependent manner with reversibility when the reagent was washed out. Changes in cytoskeletal actin, such as a reduction of cortical actin, irregularity of stress fibers, and punctated actin aggregates, were observed after MB treatment. However, the fence function, as studied by diffusion of apically labeled sphingomyelin/BSA complex, remained intact in the MB-treated MDCK cells. Localization of junctional molecules and apical marker proteins such as E-cadherin, ZO-1, and 114-kDa protein was shown to be unaffected. Furthermore, freeze-fracture study showed apparent tight junction strands. Collectively, MB treatment abolished the paracellular gate but not the fence function of MDCK cells, suggesting that cytoskeletal actin may play differential roles in the gate and fence functions of the tight junction.  相似文献   

17.
Cbl-associated protein (CAP) is an adaptor protein that interacts with both signaling and cytoskeletal proteins. Here, we characterize the expression, localization and potential function of CAP in striated muscle. CAP is markedly induced during myoblast differentiation, and colocalizes with vinculin during costamerogenesis. In adult mice, CAP is enriched in oxidative muscle fibers, and it is found in membrane anchorage complexes, including intercalated discs, costameres, and myotendinous junctions. Using both yeast two-hybrid and proteomic approaches, we identified the sarcomeric protein filamin C (FLNc) as a binding partner for CAP. When overexpressed, CAP recruits FLNc to cell-extracellular matrix adhesions, where the two proteins cooperatively regulate actin reorganization. Moreover, overexpression of CAP inhibits FLNc-induced cell spreading on fibronectin. In dystrophin-deficient mdx mice, the expression and membrane localization of CAP is increased, concomitant with the elevated plasma membrane content of FLNc, suggesting that CAP may compensate for the reduced membrane linkage of the myofibrils due to the loss of the dystroglycan-sarcoglycan complex in these mice. Thus, through its interaction with FLNc, CAP provides another link between the myofibril cytoskeleton and the plasma membrane of muscle cells, and it may play a dynamic role in the regulation and maintenance of muscle structural integrity.  相似文献   

18.
《The Journal of cell biology》1993,120(5):1159-1167
The sarcolemma of the smooth muscle cell displays two alternating structural domains in the electron microscope: densely-staining plaques that correspond to the adherens junctions and intervening uncoated regions which are rich in membrane invaginations, or caveolae. The adherens junctions serve as membrane anchorage sites for the actin cytoskeleton and are typically marked by antibodies to vinculin. We show here by immunofluorescence and immunoelectron microscopy that dystrophin is specifically localized in the caveolae-rich domains of the smooth muscle sarcolemma, together with the caveolae-associated molecule caveolin. Additional labeling experiments revealed that beta 1 integrin and fibronectin are confined to the adherens junctions, as indicated by their codistribution with vinculin and tensin. Laminin, on the other hand, is distributed around the entire cell perimeter. The sarcolemma of the smooth muscle cell is thus divided into two distinct domains, featuring different and mutually exclusive components. This simple bipartite domain organization contrasts with the more complex organization of the skeletal muscle sarcolemma: smooth muscle thus offers itself as a useful system for localizing, among other components, potential interacting partners of dystrophin.  相似文献   

19.
Abstract. The spatial relationships between the protein constituents of two junctional structures, adhaerens junctions and desmosomes, were determined by double immunofluorescence microscopy using marker proteins specific for these structures. Adhaerens junctions were visualized by immunofluorescent labeling for the membrane-associated protein vinculin and by their association with actin filaments. Desmosomal components were identified by labeling with anti-bodies to a group of minor desmosomal plaque proteins (DP1 antigens) and their association with filaments stained by cytokeratin antibodies. Double immunofluorescence microscopy of these components was performed in several tissues and cultured cells, including intact intestine, dissociated intestinal cells, and two morphologically different types of epithelial cells, cultured bovine kidney (MDBK), and mammary gland (BMGE) epithelial cells. This allowed the direct demonstration that each filament system is associated exclusively with its specific membrane-bound junctional protein. Vinculin and DP1-protein were found in distinct sites in the subapical intercellular junctional complex of intestinal epithelium and MDBK cells. Cell-substrate focal contacts contained vinculin and actin and showed no apparent relationships to the tonofilament system whereas intercellular contacts of BMGE cells were characterized by positive staining for DP1-protein and associated cytokeratin filaments. Immunolabeling of the cultured cells at different intervals after plating for the cytoskeletal elements and their membrane anchorage proteins was used to determine the temporal sequence of their organization. We propose that this approach may be used for the molecular definition and identification of cellular contacts and junctions as well as for studies of junction topology, dynamics of junction-cytoskeleton interactions, and junction biogenesis.  相似文献   

20.
Desmosomes are major components of the intercellular junctional complex in epithelia. They consist of at least eight different cytoplasmic and integral membrane proteins that are organized into two biochemically and structurally distinct domains: the cytoplasmic plaque and membrane core. We showed previously that in MDCK epithelial cells major components of the cytoplasmic plaque (desmoplakin I and II; DPI/II) and membrane core domains (desmoglein I; DGI) initially enter a pool of proteins that is soluble in buffers containing Triton X-100, and then titrate into an insoluble pool before their arrival at the plasma membrane (Pasdar, M., and W. J. Nelson. 1988. J. Cell Biol. 106:677-685; Pasdar. M., and W. J. Nelson. 1989. J. Cell Biol. 109:163-177). We have now examined whether either the soluble or insoluble pool of these proteins represents an intracellular site for assembly and interactions between the domains before their assembly into desmosomes at the plasma membrane. Interactions between the Triton X-100-soluble pools of DPI/II and DGI were analyzed by sedimentation of extracted proteins in sucrose gradients. Results show distinct differences in the sedimentation profiles of these proteins, suggesting that they are not associated in the Triton X-100-soluble pool of proteins; this was also supported by the observation that DGI and DPI/II could not be coimmunoprecipitated in a complex with each other from sucrose gradient fractions. Immunofluorescence analysis of the insoluble pools of DPI/II and DGI, in cells in which desmosome assembly had been synchronized, showed distinct differences in the spatial distributions of these proteins. Furthermore, DPI/II and DGI were found to be associated with different elements of cytoskeleton; DPI/II were located along cytokeratin intermediate filaments, whereas DGI appeared to be associated with microtubules. The regulatory role of cytoskeletal elements in the intracellular organization and assembly of the cytoplasmic plaque and membrane core domains, and their integration into desmosomes on the plasma membrane is discussed.  相似文献   

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