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1.
Summary We constructed a new centrifuge microscope of the stroboscopic type, with which the cytoplasmic streaming inNitella internodal cells under centrifugal acceleration was studied. Under moderate centrifugal acceleration (ca. 50–100×g), the direction of cytoplasmic streaming in an internodal cell ofNitella is parallel to the direction of the subcortical fibrils. The speed of endoplasm flowing contiguous to the subcortical fibrils is neither accelerated nor retarded by moderate centrifugal acceleration. The endoplasmic flow, however, stops suddenly following an electrical stimulus. The endoplasm contiguous to the subcortical fibrils is immobilized transiently at the time of streaming cessation induced by an electrical stimulus under centrifugal acceleration at 50–100×g, even at 900×g. It is suggested that transitory cross bridges between the immobilized endoplasm and the subcortical fibrils are formed at the time of streaming cessation. The bulk endoplasm flows as a whole in the direction parallel to that of the subcortical fibrils and stops promptly upon electrical stimulation. Soon after the stoppage the bulk endoplasm starts to flow passively in the direction parallel to that of the centrifugal acceleration as a result of the centrifugal force.Abbreviations APW artificial pond water - CMS centrifuge microscope  相似文献   

2.
E. Kamitsubo  M. Kikuyama 《Protoplasma》1994,180(3-4):153-157
Summary With an attempt to measure the motive force responsible for cytoplasmic streaming in characean internodal cells, the difference between densities of cytoplasm and vacuolar sap was heightened by about 10 times (density of vacuolar sap was made larger than that of cytoplasm) by replacing the natural vacuolar sap ofChara corallina with an artificial one of higher density. Endoplasmic flow contiguous to the peripheral actin cables (peripheral flow of endoplasm) in the centrifugal direction was not influenced at all by the application of centrifugal acceleration up to 1400 g. We thus concluded that the motive force for the peripheral flow should be much larger than 12dyn/cm2, a figure more than 10 times larger than that for bulk endop lasmic flow so far reported.Dedicated to Emeritus Professor Noburo Kamiya on the occasion of his 80th birthday  相似文献   

3.
Various methods have been used to study cytoplasmic streaming in giant algal cells during the past three decades. Simple techniques can be used with characean internodal cells to modify the cell constitution in various ways to gain insight into the mechanism of cytoplasmic streaming. Another method involves isolatingin vitro a huge drop of uninjured endoplasm, to examine its physical and dynamic properties. The motive force responsible for streaming has been measured by three different techniques with similar results. Subcortical fibrils consisting of bundles of F-actin with the same polarity are indispensable for streaming. Differential treatment of the endoplasm and ectoplasm has shown that putative characean myosin is localized in the endoplasm. Studies of the roles of ATP, Mg2+, Ca2+, H+ etc. in the streaming have been conducted by cellular perfusion, which allows removal of the tonoplast, or by techniques permeabilizing the protoplasmic membrane. A slow version of the movement can even be artificially reproduced by combining characean actinin situ and exogenous myosin in the presence of Mg-ATP. The findings thus far obtained support the hypothesis that cytoplasmic streaming in characean cells is caused by an active shearing force produced by interaction of the actin filament bundles on the cortex with myosin in the endoplasm.  相似文献   

4.
The motility of Amoeba proteus was examined using the technique of passive particle tracking microrheology, with the aid of newly developed particle tracking software, a fast digital camera, and an optical microscope. We tracked large numbers of endogeneous particles in the amoebae, which displayed subdiffusive motion at short timescales, corresponding to thermal motion in a viscoelastic medium, and superdiffusive motion at long timescales due to the convection of the cytoplasm. Subdiffusive motion was characterized by a rheological scaling exponent of 3/4 in the cortex, indicative of the semiflexible dynamics of the actin fibers. We observed shear-thinning in the flowing endoplasm, where exponents increased with increasing flow rate; i.e., the endoplasm became more fluid-like. The rheology of the cortex is found to be isotropic, reflecting an isotropic actin gel. A clear difference was seen between cortical and endoplasmic layers in terms of both viscoelasticity and flow velocity, where the profile of the latter is close to a Poiseuille flow for a Newtonian fluid.  相似文献   

5.
To investigate characteristics of ATP-dependent sliding of a non-muscle cell myosin, obtained from a cellular slime mold Dictyostelium discoideum, on actin filament, we prepared hybrid thick filaments, in which Dictyostelium myosin was regularly arranged around paramyosin filaments obtained from a molluscan smooth muscle. A single to a few hybrid filaments were attached to a polystyrene bead (diameter, 4.5 μm; specific gravity, 1.5), and the filaments were made to slide on actin filament arrays (actin cables) in the internodal cell of an alga Chara corallina, mounted on the rotor of a centrifuge microscope. The filament-attached bead was observed to move with a constant velocity under a constant external load for many seconds. The steady-state force–velocity relation of Dictyostelium myosin sliding on actin cables was hyperbolic in shape except for large loads ≤0.7–0.8 P0, being qualitatively similar to that of skeletal muscle fibres, despite a considerable variation in the number of myosin molecules interacting with actin cables. Comparison of the P–V curves between Dictyostelium myosin and muscle myosins sliding on actin cables suggests that the time of attachment to actin in a single attachment–detachment cycle is much longer in Dictyostelium myosin than in muscle myosins.  相似文献   

6.
Summary The mechanism of the cessation of cytoplasmic streaming upon membrane excitation inCharaceae internodal cells was investigated.Cell fragments containing only cytoplasm were prepared by collecting the endoplasm at one cell end by centrifugation. In such cell fragments lacking the tonoplast, an action potential induced streaming cessation, indicating that an action potential at the plasmalemma alone is enough to stop the streaming.The active rotation of chloroplasts passively flowing together with the endoplasm also stopped simultaneously with the streaming cessation upon excitation. The time lag or interval between the rotation cessation and the electrical stimulation for inducing the action potential increased with the distance of the chloroplasts from the cortex. The time lag was about 1 second/15 m, suggesting that an agent causing the rotation cessation is diffused throughout the endoplasm.Using internodes whose tonoplast was removed by replacing the cell sap with EGTA-containing solution (tonoplast-free cells,Tazawa et al. 1976), we investigated the streaming rate with respect to the internal Ca2+ concentration. The rate was roughly identical to that of normal cells at a Ca2+ concentration of less than 10–7 M. It decreased with an increase in the internal Ca2+ concentration and was zero at 1 mM Ca2+.The above results, together with the two facts that Ca2+ reversibly inhibits chloroplast rotation (Hayama andTazawa, unpublished) and the streaming in tonoplast-free cells does not stop upon excitation (Tazawa et al. 1976), lead us to conclude that a transient increase in the Ca2+ concentration in the cytoplasm directly stops the cytoplasmic streaming. Both Ca influxes across the resting and active membranes were roughly proportional to the external Ca2+ concentration, which did not affect the rate of streaming recovery. Based on these results, several possibilities for the increase in Ca2+ concentration in the cytoplasm causing streaming cessation were discussed.  相似文献   

7.
Synchronized cultures of Dictyostelium discoideum were used to study organizational changes of the cytoskeleton during mitotic cell division. The agar-overlay technique (Yumura et al.: J. Cell Biol. 99:894-899, 1984) was employed for immunofluorescence localization and video microscopic observation of living mitotic cells. The mitotic phase was defined by changes in chromosome configuration by using a double stain with the fluorescent dye DAPI. This study showed that the actin- and myosin-containing cytoskeleton was reversibly redistributed between the cortical ectoplasm and the endoplasm during prophase and telophase. Both actin and myosin filaments were dissociated from the cell cortex in prophase. Most of the actin and myosin was filamentous and remained in the endoplasm until telophase. Saltatory movements of organelles stopped suddenly, coincident with the breakdown of the cytoplasmic microtubule network. This change in the microtubule system was temporally coupled with the disappearance of actomyosin from the cortex. At the same time, the local vibrating movement of particles almost stopped, suggesting that the viscoelastic nature of the endoplasm was altered. In the late anaphase, actin and myosin relocalized to the cortical ectoplasm. Early in this phase, myosin filaments were localized specifically at the anticipated cleavage furrow region of the cleavage furrow, whereas actin filaments were redistributed more uniformly in the cell cortex, with an extremely large accumulation in the polar pseudopods. Subsequently the actin formed an orderly parallel array of cables along with myosin filaments in the contractile ring. The spatial segregation of actin and myosin in late anaphase was clearly demonstrated by multipolar cell division of artificially induced giant cells. Actin was relocalized in both the polar and the proximal constricting regions whereas myosin was only localized in the center of each pair of daughter microtubule networks where the cleavage furrow was formed. This study demonstrates that actin and myosin are reorganized by a temporally coordinated but spatially different mechanism during cytokinesis of Dictyostelium.  相似文献   

8.
R. Nagai  S. Fukui 《Protoplasma》1981,109(1-2):79-89
Summary Cytoplasmic streaming in the stalk ofAcetabularia, ryukyuensis at the vegetative stage was reversibly inhibited by cytochalasin B (cB) of 50 g/ml and irreversibly by N-Ethylmaleimide (NEM) above concentrations of 0.25 mM.After the endoplasm and the chloroplasts were pushed forward one end of the stalk by gentle centrifugation at about 500 × g for 3 minutes, numerous ectoplasmic striations remainedin situ in the stalk cortex. The striations ran in parallel with the longitudinal axis of the stalk at unequal intervals. The endoplasm streamed back only along these striations.By combining centrifugation and a double chamber technique, the endoplasm and the cortex of the stalk were treated separately with CB or NEM. CB treatment of the cortex arrested streaming; when treatment was restricted to the endoplasm, streaming continued at an normal rate. NEM treatment restricted to the cortex permitted normal streaming rates. Treatment restricted to the moving endoplasm inhibited streaming.These results suggest that microfilaments and a moiety, possibly myosin, play an active role in the streaming. Microfilaments must reside in the cortex, especially in the ectoplasmic striations, while the putative myosin must reside in the moving endoplasm.  相似文献   

9.
Lucyna Grębecka 《Protoplasma》1981,106(3-4):343-349
Summary Perforation of peripheral cell layers ofA. proteus in any place provokes immediate endoplasm efflux, what supports the view that the hydrostatic pressure is higher in the cell interior than outside. The local effusion of endoplasm results in the reversal of flow in formerly advancing pseudopodia, in agreement with the pressure gradient theories of protoplasmic streaming. Amoebae with destroyed frontal zones squeeze all their endoplasm out through the breach, what disproves the frontal contraction hypothesis of amoeboid movement, but supports the concept of a general contraction of cell cortex.Study supported by the Research Project II.1 of the Polish Academy of Science.  相似文献   

10.
T M Svitkina 《Tsitologiia》1988,30(7):861-866
Spread fibroblasts contain a dense microfilament sheath under the dorsal cell surface in the endoplasmic region. The formation of the sheath during spreading of mouse embryo fibroblasts was studied using electron microscopy of platinum replicas. At the first stages of spreading the actin meshwork comprising the pseudopodial cytoskeleton arises at the cell edges. The actin of unattached pseudopodia moves centripetally and forms a circular microfilament bundle at the endoplasm periphery. Simultaneously, the microfilament cortex in the endoplasm appears to disassemble. Due to a continuous supply of polymerized actin from the periphery to the circular bundle the latter becomes wider to cover gradually the endoplasm and to form the microfilament sheath. Anchoring of centripetally moving microfilaments at the sites of cellular contacts with the substratum leads to the formation of radial actin bundles.  相似文献   

11.
We present a model of cell motility based on emigration of neural crest cells into the neural tube lumen under in vitro conditions (10% fetal calf serum or YIGSR) that inhibit their normal emigration from the base of the neuroepithelium into surrounding extracellular matrix (ECM). Ultrastructural observations reveal that cells lining the lumen are joined by zonulae adherentes (ZA), which are points of strong intercellular attachment, and thereby serve as markers for fixed regions of plasmalemma and cortical actin. Three major observations of the relationship of cells to the ZA support the "fixed cortex" model of mesenchymal cell migration. First, cells extend apical cell processes past the ZA into the lumen. To do this, they must make new apical plasmalemma and actin cortex that the endoplasm slides into. Second, elongated cells are observed in the lumen that are still attached via ZA to the neuroepithelium. This indicates that all of the endoplasm finally slides past the ZA. Third, numerous cytoplasmic pieces, often attached to each other and to the neuroepithelium via ZA, are found at the site where cells appear to have detached from the epithelium after entering the lumen. Since the ZA is fixed in location, the endoplasm must have slid past it into newly manufactured anterior cortex and plasmalemma, with the trailing end of the cell finally snapping off. The "fixed cortex" theory of cell migration agrees with existing data in that it predicts the polarized insertion of new plasmalemma and actin at the leading end of the cell, but it differs significantly from existing theories of mesenchymal cell migration in that it states that the cell surface remains firmly attached to the substratum while the myosin-rich endoplasm slides past it.  相似文献   

12.
Summary. The morphology of conidiogenesis and associated changes in microtubules, actin distribution and ultrastructure were studied in the basidiomycetous yeast Fellomyces fuzhouensis by phase-contrast, fluorescence, and electron microscopy. The interphase cell showed a central nucleus with randomly distributed bundles of microtubules and actin, and actin patches in the cortex. The conidiogenous mother cell developed a slender projection, or stalk, that contained cytoplasmic microtubules and actin cables stretched parallel to the longitudinal axis and actin patches accumulated in the tip. The conidium was produced on this stalk. It contained dispersed cytoplasmic microtubules, actin cables, and patches concentrated in the cortex. Before mitosis, the nucleus migrated through the stalk into the conidium and cytoplasmic microtubules were replaced by a spindle. Mitosis started in the conidium, and one daughter nucleus then returned to the mother via an eccentrically elongated spindle. The cytoplasmic microtubules reappeared after mitosis. A strong fluorescence indicating accumulated actin appeared at the base of the conidium, where the cytoplasm cleaved eccentrically. Actin patches then moved from the stalk together with the retracting cytoplasm to the mother and conidium. No septum was detected in the long neck by electron microscopy, only a small amount of fine “wall material” between the conidium and mother cell. Both cells developed a new wall layer, separating them from the empty neck. The mature conidium disconnected from the empty neck at the end-break, which remained on the mother as a tubular outgrowth. Asexual reproduction by conidiogenesis in the long-neck yeast F. fuzhouensis has unique features distinguishing it from known asexual forms of reproduction in the budding and fission yeasts. Fellomyces fuzhouensis develops a unique long and narrow neck during conidiogenesis, through which the nucleus must migrate into the conidium for eccentric mitosis. This is followed by eccentric cytokinesis. We found neither an actin cytokinetic ring nor a septum in the long neck, from which cytoplasm retracted back to mother cell after cytokinesis. Both the conidium and mother were separated from the empty neck by the development of a new lateral wall (initiated as a wall plug). The cytoskeleton is clearly involved in all these processes. Correspondence and reprints: Department of Biology, Faculty of Medicine, Masaryk University, Tomešova 12, 602 00 Brno, Czech Republic.  相似文献   

13.
Lucyna Grebecka 《Protoplasma》1980,102(3-4):361-375
Summary When a glass capillary is introduced into the posterior body region ofA. proteus and its orifice is maintained inside the flowing mass of endoplasm, an applied suction force invariably initiates the reversal of streaming direction. This initial effect depends as well on the negative pressure value as on the terminal diameter of the pipette. Further transformations of configuration of pseudopodia are due to mixed effects of the direct application of sucking force and of the active response of amoeba to the new situation. When the sucking pipettes are applied to the outer cell surface, probably only a fraction of the negative pressure may be transmitted to the cell interior. The portion of cell periphery exposed to negative pressure acting from outside is still capable to contract. As a result, when amoeba as a whole is progressively sucked into the capillary, it manifests a clear active escape behaviour.Study supported by the Research Project II. 1 of the Polish Academy of Science.  相似文献   

14.
Summary Dimorphic yeastTrigonopsis variabilis is a unique species that can form either an ellipsoidal or a triangular cell depending upon nutritional conditions. This fluorescence microscopic study was intended to correlate morphological changes of mitochondria in the triangular cells with the distribution of the cytoskeleton. In addition, unique features in the behavior of the cytoskeleton were also examined during triangular cell formation. In log-phase cells stained with 4,6-diamidino-2-phenylindole, mitochondrial nucleoids appeared as a string of beads throughout the vegetative growth. The profile of mitochondria stained by 3,3-dihexyloxacarbocyanine iodide showed a network corresponding to the fluorescence images of mitochondrial nucleoids in both mother and daughter cells. Cell-cycle-dependent fragmentation of mitochondria was not discerned. As the culture reached stationary phase, a network of mitochondria gradually changed to form unique rings that were located near the angles of triangular cells. When examined by immunofluorescence microscopy with anti-tubulin antibody, microtubules were found to be well developed along the sides of cells in the cytoplasm ofT. variabilis interphase cells. Although distributions of microtubules and mitochondria are different during cell cycle as a whole, cytoplasmic microtubules frequently extended along a part of the mitochondria in budded cells, suggesting correlation of microtubules and mitochondria. Rhodamine-phalloidin staining revealed both actin patches and cables. Actin cables elongated from mother cells into the buds and showed close proximity to mitochondria, although complete overlapping of both structures was rare. Moreover, actin patches localized on the mitochondrial network at a frequency of 65%. These results suggested that actin cables and patches, as well as microtubules, participated in the distribution of mitochondria. The localization of actin patches separated towards opposite ends at a bud tip when the bud grew to medium size. The unique localization of actin patches is responsible for bi-directional growth of the bud, forming triangular cells.  相似文献   

15.
The streaming endoplasm of characean cells has been shown to contain previously unreported endoplasmic filaments along which bending waves are observed under the light microscope using special techniques. The bending waves are similar to those propagated along sperm tails causing propulsion of sperm. In Nitella there is reason to believe that nearly all of the filaments are anchored in the cortex and that their beating propels the endoplasm in which they are suspended. This hypothesis is supported by calculations in which typical and average wave parameters have been inserted into the classical hydrodynamic equations derived for sperm tail bending waves. These calculations come within an order of magnitude of predicting the velocity of streaming and they show that waves of the character described, propagated along an estimated 52 m of endoplasmic filaments per cell, must generate a total motive force per cell within less than an order of magnitude of the forces measured experimentally by others. If we assume that undulating filaments produce the force driving the endoplasm, then the method described for measuring the motive force could lead to a lower than actual value for the motive force, since both centrifugation and vacuolar perfusion would reverse the orientation of some filaments. Observations of the initiation of particle translation in association with the filaments suggest that particle transport and wave propagation, which occur at the same velocity, may both be dependent on the same process. The possibility that some form of contractility provides the motive force for filament flection and particle transport is discussed.  相似文献   

16.
In Characean cells endoplasmic streaming stops upon membrane depolarization accompanied by Ca(2+) entry. We investigated the mechanism of this cessation of endoplasmic streaming by reconstituting the vesicle movement in vitro. In a living cell of Chara corallina, there are a number of vesicles moving along actin cables. Vesicles in the endoplasm squeezed out of the cell into a medium containing Mg-ATP showed directional movements under a dark field microscope. When the extracted endoplasm was treated with 20 nM okadaic acid, vesicles showed only movements like the Brownian motion. When it was treated with 50 nM staurosporine, directional movements of vesicles were activated. These movements were analyzed by image processing of videomicroscopic records. Vesicle movements along F-actin filaments were also observed by merging both images of the same field by dark field microscopy and fluorescence microscopy, indicating that myosin on the vesicle surface was responsible for vesicle movements. We also examined the effects of okadaic acid and staurosporine on in vitro sliding of F-actin on Chara myosin. When Chara myosin was treated with 20 nM okadaic acid in the cell extract, the number of sliding F-actin filaments was greatly reduced. In contrast, it increased when Chara myosin was treated with 50 nM staurosporine. In addition, Chara myosin treated with protein kinase C greatly diminished its motility. These results suggest that inactivation of Chara myosin via its phosphorylation is responsible for cessation of endoplasmic streaming.  相似文献   

17.
Summary The behavior of cytoplasmic streaming in plasmodial strand ofPhysarum polycephalum was studied under centrifugal acceleration using a centrifuge microscope of the stroboscopic type. Cytoplasmic streaming in the plasmodium was greatly affected by changes in the acceleration. The endoplasmic flow in the centrifugal direction was accelerated, while that in the centripetal was retarded, by centrifugal acceleration. The centrifugal acceleration required to stop the endoplasmic flow in the centripetal direction did not cause total cessation of streaming but always induced a bidirectional flow of endoplasm in one and the same strand. Each profile of velocity distribution of the bidirectional flow was both parabola with flattened apex. One possible cause of the bidirectional flow is discussed.Dedicated to Emeritus Professor Noburo Kamiya on the occasion of his 80th birthday  相似文献   

18.
We have developed a reconstituted gel-sol and contractile model system that mimics the structure and dynamics found at the ectoplasm/endoplasm interface in the tails of many amoeboid cells. We tested the role of gel-sol transformations of the actin-based cytoskeleton in the regulation of contraction and in the generation of endoplasm from ectoplasm. In a model system with fully phosphorylated myosin II, we demonstrated that either decreasing the actin filament length distribution or decreasing the extent of actin filament cross-linking initiated both a weakening of the gel strength and contraction. However, streaming of the solated gel components occurred only under conditions where the length distribution of actin was decreased, causing a self-destruct process of continued solation and contraction of the gel. These results offer significant support that gel strength plays an important role in the regulation of actin/myosin II-based contractions of the tail cortex in many amoeboid cells as defined by the solation-contraction coupling hypothesis (Taylor, D. L., and M. Fechheimer. 1982. Phil. Trans. Soc. Lond. B. 299:185-197). The competing processes of solation and contraction of the gel would appear to be mutually exclusive. However, it is the temporal-spatial balance of the rate and extent of two stages of solation, coupled to contraction, that can explain the conversion of gelled ectoplasm in the tail to a solated endoplasm within the same small volume, generation of a force for the retraction of tails, maintenance of cell polarity, and creation of a positive hydrostatic pressure to push against the newly formed endoplasm. The mechanism of solation-contraction of cortical cytoplasm may be a general component of the normal movement of a variety of amoeboid cells and may also be a component of other contractile events such as cytokinesis.  相似文献   

19.
Krystyna Golinska 《Protoplasma》1991,162(2-3):160-174
Summary Ciliary complexes termed the kinetids, contain fibres of several kinds attached to the proximal end of a basal body. One of these fibres, the long microtubular fibre running in the endoplasm ofDileptus, is of special interest for this study. The fibres when attached to oral kinetids are orientated towards the cell posterior, and are numerous in the proboscis endoplasm. The fibres anchored at locomotor kinetids are orientated towards the cell anterior and penetrate the endoplasm of the tail. The endoplasm of both proboscis and tail appears transparent when viewed in the light microscope, and is deprived of many organelles: nuclei, lipid droplets, and food vacuoles. During regeneration proboscis and tail reconstitution is simultaneous, with an increase in transparency and in the density of microtubular fibres within the regenerating region. In posterior fragments ofDileptus which contain locomotor kinetids only, oral kinetids form as an offspring of locomotor ones. During differentiation of oral structures oral kinetids rotate until their endoplasmic fibres point posteriorly. It is this rotation that supplies the cell with a posteriorly directed set of endoplasmic fibres. The possibility that the translocation of endoplasmic organelles along the microtubular fibres may be one of mechanisms in shaping cells is discussed. Since the direction of endoplasmic translocation depends upon fibre orientation, the MTOCs which govern this orientation are likely candidates to be bearers of information concerning cell shape inDileptus.  相似文献   

20.
T. Shimmen  M. Yano 《Protoplasma》1986,132(3):129-136
Summary Native tropomyosin from rabbit skeletal muscle introduced by intracellular perfusion intoChara cells inhibited the cytoplasmic streaming irrespective of the Ca2+ concentration. To find the action site of native tropomyosin inChara, the cytoplasmic streaming was reconstituted by introducing isolated endoplasm into actin donorChara cells from which native endoplasm had been removed. The reconstituted streaming was inhibited by pretreatment of the actin donor cells with native tropomyosin but not by that of the endoplasm, suggesting that the native tropomyosin inhibited the cytoplasmic streaming by binding toChara actin bundles. Staining of the actin bundles with FITC-labeled native tropomyosin also showed that the native tropomyosin could bind to the actin bundles. Streaming reconstituted fromChara actin bundles and skeletal muscle myosin was insensitive to Ca2+, but became sensitive on application of the native tropomyosin.Abbrevations APW artificial pond water - ATP adenosine 5-triphosphoric acid - BSA bovine serum albumin - EDTA ethylene diamine tetraacetic acid - EGTA ethyleneglycol-bis-(-aminoethylether) N,N,N,N-tetraacetic acid - FITC fluorescein isothiocyanate - FITC-NTM fluorescein isothiocyanate-labeled native tropomyosin - NTM native tropomyosin  相似文献   

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