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The expression of villin, an actin-binding protein and major structural component of the brush border of specialized absorptive cells, was studied during mouse embryogenesis. We show that the ontogeny of villin expression is limited to the epithelial cell lineages of the digestive and uro-genital tracts and accounts for the tissue-specific expression observed in adult mice. This spatiotemporal pattern of villin expression is distinctive in sequence, intensity, regional distribution and polarization. During the development of the primitive gut, villin is faintly and discontinuously expressed in the invaginating foregut but it is expressed in every cell bordering the hindgut pocket. Later, villin expression increases along the developing intestine and concentrates in the brush border of the epithelium bordering the villi. In gut derivatives, villin is present in liver and pancreas primordia but only biliary and pancreatic cells maintain a faint villin expression as observed in adults. In the urogenital tract, mesonephric tubules are the first mesodermal derived structures to express villin. This expression is maintained in the ductuli efferents, paradidymis and epo?phoron. Villin then appears in the proximal metanephric tubules and later increases and concentrates in the brush border of the renal proximal tubular epithelial cells. Thus villin expression can be considered as an early marker of the endodermal cell lineage during the development of the digestive system. Conversely, during the development of the excretory and genital system, villin is only expressed after the mesenchyme/epithelium conversion following the appearance of tubular structures. These observations emphasize the multiple levels of regulation of villin gene activity that occur during mouse embryogenesis and account for the strict pattern of tissue-specific expression observed in adults. In the future, regulatory elements of the villin gene may be used to target the early expression of oncogenes to the digestive and urogenital tracts of transgenic mice.  相似文献   

4.
Villin is a calcium-regulated actin-binding protein that caps, severs, and bundles actin filaments in vitro. This 92,500-D protein is a major constituent of the actin bundles within the microvilli of the brush border surface of intestinal and kidney proximal tubule cells. Villin is a very early marker of cells involved in absorption and its expression is highly increased during intestinal cell differentiation. The amino acid sequence deduced from the cDNA sequence revealed that human villin is composed of three domains. The first two domains appear as the result of a duplication: their structural organization is similar. We can then define a basic unit in which a slightly hydrophilic motif is followed by three hydrophobic motifs, similar between themselves and regularly spaced. The duplicated domain is highly homologous to three other actin-severing proteins and this basic structure represents the whole molecule in severin and fragmin, while two basic units compose gelsolin. The third domain which is carboxy terminal is villin specific: it is unique among actin modulating proteins so far known. It could account for its actin-binding properties (dual regulation by calcium of severing and bundling activities). We propose that it may also be related to the subcellular localization of villin in different epithelial cell types.  相似文献   

5.
Summary Brush borders which are localized at the apical face of enterocytes, are composed of thousands of stiff microvilli containing bundles of microfilaments made of actin. Their assembly occurs during terminal differentiation of the enterocytes when these cells migrate along the villus of the intestinal mucosa. The cell line HT 29 derived from a human colonic adenocarcinoma whose differentiation can be induced, can also be used as a model to study in culture the assembly of the intestinal brush border.Villin is one of the actin binding proteins found in microvilli which compose brush borders. Villin is expressed in the adult and in the embryo before the appearance of the brush border. Villin can be used as a tissue-specific marker for normal diffentiated and undifferentiated cells derived from gastrointestinal tractus in the adult as well as in the embryo. Since villin is a good marker for intestinal cells and plays a structural role in the assembly of the brush border we have analysed its expression and its localization in HT 29 cells. In HT 29 cells, as in the tissue, villin is synthesized at low levels before the appearance of the brush border. The high rate of synthesis and the recruitement of villin at the apical pole of the cells can be correlated with the existence of a well developed brush border.  相似文献   

6.
Villin is a major protein of the microfilament bundle which makes up the core of each microvillus of the brush border of the intestinal epithelial cell. Using antibodies to villin in indirect immunofluorescence microscopy on isolated cells and on frozen tissue sections, the protein is readily detectable in the microvilli of the brush border of both intestinal and renal epithelial cells. However, villin could not be detected in tissue culture cells either by immunofluorescence microscopy or by immune replica procedures. When native villin was microinjected into such cells and its distribution visualized by immunofluorescence microscopy, the protein was found to be associated with microfilamentous structures. Moreover, preferential association of the villin into the microfilaments at the leading edges of the living cell was observed. Since villin behaves in vitro as a calcium-regulated F-actin bundling protein, we discuss the possibility that villin is immunologically distinct but functionally related to putative calcium-regulatory factors assumed to be present in cultured cells.  相似文献   

7.
《The Journal of cell biology》1990,111(6):2475-2485
Villin, a Ca2(+)-regulated F-actin bundling, severing, capping, and nucleating protein, is a major component of the core of microvilli of the intestinal brush border. Its actin binding properties, tissue specificity, and expression during cell differentiation suggest that it might be involved in the organization of the microfilaments in intestinal epithelial cells to form a brush border. Recently, Friederich et al., (Friederich, E., C. Huet, M. Arpin, and D. Louvard. 1989. Cell. 59:461-475) showed that villin expression in transiently transfected fibroblasts resulted in the loss of stress fibers and the appearance of large cell surface microvilli on some cells. Here, we describe the effect of villin microinjection into cells that normally lack this protein, which has allowed us to examine the immediate and long-term effects of introducing different concentrations of villin on microfilament organization and function. Microinjected cells rapidly lost their stress fibers and the actin was reorganized into abundant villin containing cortical structures, including microspikes and, in about half the cells, large surface microvilli. This change in actin organization persisted in cells for at least 24 h, during which time they had gone through two or three cell divisions. Microinjection of villin core, that lacks the bundling activity of villin but retains all the Ca2(+)-dependent properties, disrupted the stress fiber system and had no effect on cell surface morphology. Thus, the Ca2(+)-dependent activities of villin are responsible for stress fiber disruption, and the generation of cell surface structures is a consequence of its bundling activity. Microinjection of villin led to the reorganization of myosin, tropomyosin, and alpha-actinin, proteins normally associated with stress fibers, whereas both fimbrin and ezrin, which are also components of microvillar core filaments, were readily recruited into the induced surface structures. Vinculin was also redistributed from its normal location in focal adhesions. Despite these changes in the actin cytoskeleton, cells were able to divide and undergo cytokinesis, move, spread on a substratum, and ruffle. Thus, we show that a single microfilament-associated protein can reorganize the entire microfilament structure of a cell, without interfering with general microfilament-based functions like cytokinesis, cell locomotion, and membrane ruffling.  相似文献   

8.
The intestinal epithelial cell brush border exhibits distinct localizations of the actin-binding protein components of its cytoskeleton. The protein interactions that dictate this subcellular organization are as yet unknown. We report here that tropomyosin, which is found in the rootlet but not in the microvillus core, can bind to and saturate the actin of isolated cores, and can cause the dissociation of up to 30% of the villin and fimbrin from the cores but does not affect actin binding by 110-kD calmodulin. Low speed sedimentation assays and ultrastructural analysis show that the tropomyosin-containing cores remain bundled, and that 110-kD calmodulin remains attached to the core filaments. The effects of tropomyosin on the binding and bundling activities of villin were subsequently determined by sedimentation assays. Villin binds to F-actin with an apparent Ka of 7 X 10(5) M-1 at approximate physiological ionic strength, which is an order of magnitude lower than that of intestinal epithelial cell tropomyosin. Binding of villin to F-actin presaturated with tropomyosin is inhibited relative to that to pure F-actin, although full saturation can be obtained by increasing the villin concentration. Villin also inhibits the binding of tropomyosin to F-actin, although not to the same extent. However, tropomyosin strongly inhibits bundling of F-actin by villin, and bundling is not recovered even at a saturating villin concentration. Since villin has two actin-binding sites, both of which are required for bundling, the fact that tropomyosin inhibits bundling of F-actin under conditions where actin is fully saturated with villin strongly suggests that tropomyosin's and one of villin's F-actin-binding sites overlap. These results indicate that villin and tropomyosin could compete for actin filaments in the intestinal epithelial cell, and that tropomyosin may play a major role in the regulation of microfilament structure in these and other cells.  相似文献   

9.
Villin, a 95,000 dalton polypeptide of intestinal brush border which is known to bundle or sever actin filaments in a Ca++-dependent manner, was localized in rat and chicken intestinal epithelium by means of immunocytochemistry at the light- and electron-microscopic levels. Specific antibodies to villin were raised in rabbits immunized with villin purified from chicken intestinal epithelium. Anti-villin bound selectively to the microvillus filament bundle from its tip down to the rootlets. These findings indicate that the well-known stability of rootlet filaments towards elevated Ca++ ion concentrations cannot be explained by the absence of villin. Therefore additional factors must exist which prevent the rootlets from Ca++-villin mediated disassembly.  相似文献   

10.
Villin, a calcium-regulated actin-binding protein, modulates the structure and assembly of actin filaments in vitro. It is organized into three domains, the first two of which are homologous. Villin is mainly produced in epithelial cells that develop a brush border and which are responsible for nutrient uptake. Expression of the villin structural gene is precisely regulated during mouse embryogenesis and is restricted in adults, to certain epithelia of the gastrointestinal and urogenital tracts. The function of villin has been assessed by transfecting CV1 cells with a human cDNA encoding wild-type villin or mutant villin. Synthesis of large amounts of villin in cells which do not normally produce this protein induces the growth of microvilli on the cell surface and the redistribution of F-actin, concomitant with the disappearance of stress fibers. The complete villin sequence is required for the morphogenic effect. These results suggest that villin plays a key role in the morphogenesis of microvilli.  相似文献   

11.
Villin is a major actin-bundling protein in the brush border of epithelial cells. In this study we demonstrate for the first time that villin can bundle actin filaments using a single F-actin binding site, because it has the ability to self-associate. Using fluorescence resonance energy transfer, we demonstrate villin self-association in living cells in microvilli and in growth factor-stimulated cells in membrane ruffles and lamellipodia. Using sucrose density gradient, size-exclusion chromatography, and matrix-assisted laser desorption ionization time-of-flight, the majority of villin was identified as a monomer or dimer. Villin dimers were also identified in Caco-2 cells, which endogenously express villin and Madin-Darby canine kidney cells that ectopically express villin. Using truncation mutants of villin, site-directed mutagenesis, and fluorescence resonance energy transfer, an amino-terminal dimerization site was identified that regulated villin self-association in parallel conformation as well as actin bundling by villin. This detailed analysis describes for the first time microvillus assembly by villin, redefines the actin-bundling function of villin, and provides a molecular mechanism for actin bundling by villin, which could have wider implications for other actin cross-linking proteins that share a villin-like headpiece domain. Our study also provides a molecular basis to separate the morphologically distinct actin-severing and actin-bundling properties of villin.  相似文献   

12.
The assembly of the intestinal microvillus cytoskeleton was examined during the differentiation of enterocytes along the crypt-villus axis in adult chicken duodenum using light and electron microscopic immunolocalization techniques. Using antibodies reactive with villin, fimbrin, and the heavy chain (hc) of brush border (BB) myosin I (110K-calmodulin complex) and rhodamine-conjugated phalloidin as a probe for F-actin, we determined that while actin, villin, and fimbrin were all localized apically along the entire axis, BB myosin I (hc) did not assume this localization until the crypt-villus transition zone. In addition to their localization at the BB surface, all four proteins were present at significant levels along the lateral margins of enterocytes along the entire crypt-villus axis, suggesting that these proteins may be involved in the organization and function of the basolateral membrane cytoskeleton as well. The pattern of expression of the microvillar core proteins along the crypt-villus axis in the adult was comparable to that seen in the intestine of the late stage chicken embryo and suggests that a common program for brush border assembly may be used in both modes of enterocyte differentiation.  相似文献   

13.
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   

14.
Villin is an actin-binding protein localized in intestinal and kidney brush borders. In vitro, villin has been demonstrated to bundle and sever F-actin in a Ca(2+)-dependent manner. We generated knockout mice to study the role of villin in vivo. In villin-null mice, no noticeable changes were observed in the ultrastructure of the microvilli or in the localization and expression of the actin-binding and membrane proteins of the intestine. Interestingly, the response to elevated intracellular Ca(2+) differed significantly between mutant and normal mice. In wild-type animals, isolated brush borders were disrupted by the addition of Ca(2+), whereas Ca(2+) had no effect in villin-null isolates. Moreover, increase in intracellular Ca(2+) by serosal carbachol or mucosal Ca(2+) ionophore A23187 application abolished the F-actin labeling only in the brush border of wild-type animals. This F-actin disruption was also observed in physiological fasting/refeeding experiments. Oral administration of dextran sulfate sodium, an agent that causes colonic epithelial injury, induced large mucosal lesions resulting in a higher death probability in mice lacking villin, 36 +/- 9.6%, compared with wild-type mice, 70 +/- 8.8%, at day 13. These results suggest that in vivo, villin is not necessary for the bundling of F-actin microfilaments, whereas it is necessary for the reorganization elicited by various signals. We postulate that this property might be involved in cellular plasticity related to cell injury.  相似文献   

15.
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   

16.
The biochemical properties of villin purified from the brush borders of chicken and rat small intestines were compared, with emphasis on their physical properties and their Ca++-dependent interaction with actin. Like chicken villin, rat villin exists as two isoforms present in equimolar concentrations; the rat isoforms are slightly more acidic than those of chicken villin (6.08 and 6.11 versus 6.26 and 6.34). Rabbit antisera raised against either villin crossreacted with the other one. Like the avian protein, rat villin bundled F-actin at calcium concentrations below 0.1 microM. Above approximately 1 microM calcium, it accelerated the rate of actin assembly and restricted filament lengths of F-actin formed either during coassembly with villin or by addition of villin to preformed filaments. The threshold calcium concentration required for effective severing of preformed filaments was approximately tenfold higher than that required for restricting lengths during coassembly. The extent of filament shortening was proportional to the amount of villin present. At a fixed villin concentration, filament length decreased with increasing [Ca++] over a broad range from 10(-7)-10(-4) M. In general, the mean filament lengths and the dispersion about the mean value were lower in samples where filaments were coassembled with villin than when villin was added to preformed filaments.  相似文献   

17.
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   

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19.
Plastin 1 (I-plastin, fimbrin) along with villin and espin is a prominent actin-bundling protein of the intestinal brush border microvilli. We demonstrate here that plastin 1 accumulates in the terminal web and interacts with keratin 19, possibly contributing to anchoring the rootlets to the keratin network. This prompted us to investigate the importance of plastin 1 in brush border assembly. Although in vivo neither villin nor espin is required for brush border structure, plastin 1-deficient mice have conspicuous ultrastructural alterations: microvilli are shorter and constricted at their base, and, strikingly, their core actin bundles lack true rootlets. The composition of the microvilli themselves is apparently normal, whereas that of the terminal web is profoundly altered. Although the plastin 1 knockout mice do not show any overt gross phenotype and present a normal intestinal microanatomy, the alterations result in increased fragility of the epithelium. This is seen as an increased sensitivity of the brush border to biochemical manipulations, decreased transepithelial resistance, and increased sensitivity to dextran sodium sulfate-induced colitis. Plastin 1 thus emerges as an important regulator of brush border morphology and stability through a novel role in the organization of the terminal web, possibly by connecting actin filaments to the underlying intermediate filament network.  相似文献   

20.
To extend our recent observation that villin mRNA, encoding an apical microvillous protein, is dichotomously localized in the basal region of human enterocytes, we examined the localization of mRNAs for brush border myosin I (BBMI) and intestinal fimbrin (I-fim). In situ hybridization indicated that BBMI mRNA localized to the basal region of human enterocytes, whereas the mRNA for I-fim distributed diffusely. To facilitate study of potential mechanisms of mRNA targeting, we cloned a full-length cDNA for BBMI including its 5'- and 3'-untranslated regions (UTRs). This cDNA shares 86% sequence identity with bovine BBMI and 85% with rat BBMI. Sequence analysis revealed no obvious similarity between the 3'-UTRs of BBMI and villin. This study provides evidence of novel sorting pathways for intestinal microvillous cytoskeletal proteins.  相似文献   

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