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1.
FITC-labeled antibodies raised against chicken myofibrillar I-protein stained chicken myofibrils, which were fixed with formalin immediately after being cut from the sacrificed chicken breast muscle, at the junctional region of A-bands and I-bands. On the other hand, the antibodies stained the glycerinated myofibrils at the region around Z-bands. Aged glycerinated myofibrils stored in a cold room became stained with the same antibodies at the M-line and the A-band region except for the H-zone and the Z-band. I-Protein, which was originally localized at the A-I junctions, moved to the region around Z-bands and A-bands during the process of preparing myofibrils, paralleling the deterioration of myofibrils. Although I-protein is easily released from its original position, it is not a cytoplasmic protein of muscle but an intrinsic myofibrillar component, because immunoblotting tests showed that I-protein is contained in the myofibrillar fraction and not in the muscular cytoplasmic fraction.  相似文献   

2.
Ion-exchange column-purified I-protein was labeled by fluorescein isothiocyanate (FITC) at an equimolar ratio. When FITC-labeled I-protein was reacted with glycerinated myofibrils of chicken breast muscle in a phosphate-buffered saline, fluorescence was observed at the A-band and/or the Z-line of the sarcomere. However, FITC-labeled I-protein did not stain freshly prepared myofibrils. When FITC-I-protein was reacted with a nitrocellulose paper sheet on which muscle proteins were blotted after SDS-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis, some peptide bands, including connectin and nebulin, were fluorescent. These facts can explain why anti-I-protein antibodies stain the A-I junctional region of fresh myofibrils and A-bands and/or Z-lines of glycerinated myofibrils. It is very likely that I-protein is transferred from the A-I junctions of myofibrils and translocates to A-bands and Z-lines, where some components that can bind to I-protein are localized, as myofibrils are degraded during the glycerination.  相似文献   

3.
The body wall muscle cells of the nematode, Caenorhabditis elegans, contain two unique types of myosin heavy chain, A and B. We have utilized an immunochemical approach to define the structural location of these two myosins within body wall muscle thick filaments. By immunofluorescence microscopy, myosin B antibodies label the thick filament-containing A-bands of body wall muscle with the exception of a thin gap at the center of each A-band, and myosin A antibodies react to form a medial fluorescent stripe within each A-band. The complexes of these monoclonal antibodies with isolated thick filaments were negatively stained and studied by electron microscopy. The myosin B antibody reacts with the polar regions of all filaments but does not react with a central 0.9 μm zone. The myosin A antibody reacts with a central 1.8 μm zone in all filaments but does not react with the polar regions.  相似文献   

4.
Cardiac myofibrils were isolated from rabbit ventricular muscle by a method that preserves well the integrity of the A-band structure. For the first time electron microscopic observations using the negative staining method revealed, in cardiac A-bands, a full complement of pronounced transverse stripes which indicate the locations of minor proteins in skeletal muscles. The manifestation of some transverse stripes in the cardiac A-band was shown to depend on the duration of muscle incubation in a Ca2(+)-depleting and ATP-free solution before its homogenization into myofibrils. The clear visibility of fine structural details in electron micrographs allowed us to resolve morphological features specific for cardiac muscle at both the central and end parts of the A-bands. The myofibrils demonstrated here are expected to be useful for elucidating the fine structure of cardiac thick filaments and in particular the locations of minor proteins.  相似文献   

5.
A monoclonal antibody, MF20, which has been shown previously to bind the myosin heavy chain of vertebrate striated muscle, has been proven to bind the light meromyosin (LMM) fragment by solid phase radioimmune assay with alpha-chymotryptic digests of purified myosin. Epitope mapping by electron microscopy of rotary-shadowed, myosin-antibody complexes has localized the antibody binding site to LMM at a point approximately 92 nm from the C-terminus of the myosin heavy chain. Since this epitope in native thick filaments is accessible to monoclonal antibodies, we used this antibody as a high affinity ligand to analyze the packing of LMM along the backbone of the thick filament. By immunofluorescence microscopy, MF20 was shown to bind along the entire A-band of chicken pectoralis myofibrils, although the epitope accessibility was greater near the ends than at the center of the A-bands. Thin-section, transmission electron microscopy of myofibrils decorated with MF20 revealed 50 regularly spaced, cross-striations in each half A-band, with a repeat distance of approximately 13 nm. These were numbered consecutively, 1-50, from the A-band to the last stripe, approximately 68 nm from the filament tips. These same striations could be visualized by negative staining of native thick filaments labeled with MF20. All 50 striations were of a consecutive, uninterrupted repeat which approximated the 14-15-nm axial translation of cross-bridges. Each half M-region contained five MF20 striations (approximately 13 nm apart) with a distance between stripes 1 and 1', on each half of the bare zone, of approximately 18 nm. This is compatible with a packing model with full, antiparallel overlap of the myosin rods in the bare zone region. Differences in the spacings measured with negatively stained myofilaments and thin-sectioned myofibrils have been shown to arise from specimen shrinkage in the fixed and embedded preparations. These observations provide strong support for Huxley's original proposal for myosin packing in thick filaments of vertebrate muscle (Huxley, H. E., 1963, J. Mol. Biol., 7:281-308) and, for the first time, directly demonstrate that the 14-15-nm axial translation of LMM in the thick filament backbone corresponds to the cross-bridge repeat detected with x-ray diffraction of living muscle.  相似文献   

6.
Monoclonal antibodies (McAbs) specific for the C-proteins of chicken pectoralis major and anterior latissimus dorsi (ALD) muscles have been produced and characterized. Antibody specificity was demonstrated by solid phase radioimmunoassay (RIA), immunoblots, and immunofluorescence cytochemistry. Both McAbs MF-1 (or MF-21) and ALD-66 bound to myofibrillar proteins of approximately 150,000 daltons; the former antibody reacted with pectoralis but not ALD myofibrils, whereas the latter recognized ALD but not pectoralis myofibrils. Chromatographic elution of the antigens from DEAE-Sephadex, and their distribution in the A-band, support the conclusion that both of these antibodies recognize variant isoforms of C-protein. Since both McAbs react with a protein of similar molecular weight in the A-band of all myofibrils of the posterior latissimus dorsi (PLD) muscle, we suggest that either another isoform of C-protein exists in the PLD muscle or both pectoralis and ALD-like isoforms coexist in the A-bands of PLD muscle.  相似文献   

7.
Antibodies specific for the novel 86 kd protein purified from chicken pectoralis myofibrils stained by indirect immunofluorescence the middle third of each half A-band of isolated myofibrils and myotubes. Pectoralis muscle 86 kd protein, like pectoralis C-protein, displayed a fibre-type specific distribution by being restricted to fast twitch fibres and absent in slow tonic and heart muscle fibres. This was demonstrated by immunoblotting experiments with tissue extracts and by immunofluorescence labelling of cryosections. In primary cell cultures prepared from embryonic chicken breast muscle, 86 kd protein, C-protein and myomesin were all detected in post-mitotic myoblasts where fluorescence was found in a cross-striated pattern along strands of nascent myofibrils. Fluorescence due to the 86 kd protein was restricted to myofibrils within myotubes and no significant labelling of the sarcoplasm was evident. Glycerinated fast twitch muscle fibres, after incubation with antibodies to 86 kd protein, revealed in each half of the A-band nine distinctly labelled stripes, spaced about 43 nm apart. Simultaneous incubation of fibres with antibodies against 86 kd protein and C-protein showed a co-localization of the seven C-protein stripes (stripes 5 to 11), with seven stripes of 86 kd protein. The two additional stripes (stripes 3 and 4) labelled by anti-86 kd antibody continued towards the M-band at the same periodicity from the last C-protein stripe (stripe 5). Thus, partial co-localization of two different thick filament proteins is demonstrated and the identity of transverse stripes at positions 3 and 4 attributed in part to the presence of the new 86 kd protein.  相似文献   

8.
The events occurring during phorbol ester mediated destruction of myofibrils in differentiated muscle cells were followed at the fluorescence and electron microscope levels using antibodies which bind troponin-T, a newly discovered 185 000 dalton M-line protein called myomesin and muscle type creatine kinase. The following series of events is proposed. Within one day of phorbol ester treatment, Z-bands and thin filaments, including troponin-T, are absent from many myofibrils resulting in the rapid loss of longitudinal and lateral alignment. A-bands become randomly oriented and clustered into ever smaller compartments within the rounding, myosac-like, multinucleated cells until after 3 days of treatment they too disappear. The M-line proteins are always present in existing A-bands. These results suggest that the Z-band and associated structures are responsible for the maintenance of alignment and the lateral register of myofibrils, whereas the M-line is responsible for the structural integrity of the A-band. When phorbol ester is removed, the cells revert to a myotube morphology and within 2 to 3 days are filled with myofibrils. A comparison of the appearance of troponin-T and the 185 000 dalton myomesin in the recovery period to their appearance during normal myofibrillogenesis reveals that these proteins are more temporally co-ordinated during myofibrillogenesis than in the phorbol ester experimental system.  相似文献   

9.
The position of paramyosin in insect flight muscle was determined by labelling myofibrils with antibody to paramyosin and examining them by fluorescent and electron microscopy.Antiserum to dung beetle paramyosin had antibodies to another protein as well as to paramyosin. Specific anti-paramyosin bound to the H-zone of Lethocerus myofibrils showing paramyosin was exposed only in that region. Antibodies to the other protein bound at the ends of the A-band.The exposure of antigenic sites in the two regions of the myofibril depended on the extent of contraction in the myofibril: the sites at the end of the A-band were most exposed in rest-length myofibrils and those at the H-zone in shortened ones.Antibody-labelling in stretched bee muscle showed that the protein at the ends of the sarcomere extended from myosin filaments to Z-line.The high resting elasticity of insect flight muscle and hence its capacity for oscillatory contraction may be due to the protein between myosin filaments and Z-line.  相似文献   

10.
Binding and location of AMP deaminase in rabbit psoas muscle myofibrils   总被引:2,自引:0,他引:2  
It is shown that an interaction exists between AMP deaminase (EC 3.5.4.6) and myofibrils that is sufficiently strong (Kd congruent to 10(-10) M) for more than 99% of the binding sites for the enzyme to be filled in vivo. The binding is not strong enough, however, to stop removal of the enzyme during the extensive washing normally used in the preparation of myofibrils. Fluorescent antibodies to the enzyme label myofibrils close to the junction of the A- and I-bands. The invariance of the position of the antibody stripes at this site, over a range of sarcomere lengths, indicates that the enzyme is attached to the A-band. The intensity of the fluorescence declines in parallel with dissociation of the enzyme. In this muscle, the number of AMP deaminase binding sites per thick filament is approximately six, suggesting that the enzyme is located at a single axial position in each half A-band. Electron microscopy of negatively stained, antibody-labelled myofibrils reveals the distance between the AMP deaminase sites at opposite ends of an A-band to be 1.69(+/- 0.02 micron). Since the length of the A-band is 1.57 micron, the binding site for the enzyme must be significantly beyond where thick filaments have previously been thought to end.  相似文献   

11.
Titin (also called connectin), a major but so far highly elusive myofibrillar component in striated muscle was purified from glycerinated chicken breast muscle in its native state by use of a similar purification procedure as recently introduced for purification of native titin from rabbit psoas muscle. Low-angle rotary shadowing reveals highly convoluted, long and slender strands, sometimes more extended and with nodules, but also an aggregation into filamentous bundles and reticular networks. Antisera were raised against the purified native molecule and monospecific titin antibodies prepared by a rapid nitrocellulose blot immunoaffinity-purification procedure. Titin antibodies bound to the nitrocellulose immobilized native antigen were directly conjugated with fluorescein isothiocyanate. Titin specifity of purified antibodies was checked by immunoblotting. Direct immunofluorescence of glycerinated myofibrils revealed a uniform doublet staining pattern within the sarcomeres by labelling the region of the A-I junctions and some diffuse staining in the region of the myosin filaments. The same myofibrils examined by indirect immunoelectron microscopy revealed the gold particles highly concentrated at the A-I junctions with considerable labelling within the A-bands, except in their centers. Residual I-bands and Z-lines are free of label. In overstretched myofibrils immunogold staining labelled the gap filaments in the space between I- and A-bands. Isolated native thick filaments showed gold labelling of coiled superthin filaments at the ends of the thick filaments (end-filaments) and at their sides, respectively. The colloidal gold technique in combination with an affinity-purified titin antibody raised against the native molecule adds further evidence for the existence and distribution of an endosarcomeric superthin cytoskeletal filament lattice with titin as a major component.  相似文献   

12.
Summary Monoclonal antibodies (mcab) were produced in vitro by fusing mouse X63-Ag8.653 plasmacytoma cells with spleen cells from a Balb/c mouse immunized with primary cultures of chick skeletal muscle (pmcc). After cloning on agar, stable clones were obtained, the antibodies of which stain specifically the I-band of myofibrils in the immunofluorescence (IF) procedure. For further characterization of these mcab their affinities to muscle proteins were tested by immunoblotting and by enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA). Mcab specific for actin were revealed by these criteria. One of the anti-actin antibodies, mcab 647, reveals a variety of IF-staining patterns on myofibrils. On rest-length myofibrils the I-band is labeled only. However, at sarcomere lengths below 2 m, where the thin filaments meet in the middle of the A-band and form a region of double overlap, an additional fluorescent band appears in this position. The fluorescence intensity of this band is increased significantly in shorter sarcomeres. Finally, when the I-band has disappeared at a sarcomere length of 1.5 m, fluorescence is located exclusively in the middle of the A-band. These IF-staining patterns suggest that only those sections of the thin filament are stained that do not participate in actomyosin crossbridges.  相似文献   

13.
P Yang  T Tameyasu    G H Pollack 《Biophysical journal》1998,74(3):1473-1483
Single relaxed myofibrils of bumblebee flight muscle were subjected to motor-imposed ramp-length changes. The image of the striations was projected onto a linear photodiode array, and sarcomere length was computed as the spacing between centroids of contiguous A-bands. Centroid position was determined by integrating the respective A-band intensity peak and computing the location at which the area on one side was equal to the other. The resulting trace of centroid to centroid span versus time was stepwise, with periods of rapid shortening alternating with periods of pause. An alternative nondiscrete sensor gave similar steps. If thick filament length remains constant, stepwise sarcomere length changes imply that length changes in the connecting filament must be stepwise. Thus, shortening of the connecting filament occurs as a sequence of discrete events rather than as a continuous event.  相似文献   

14.
Obscurin is a newly identified giant muscle protein whose functions remain to be elucidated. In this study we used high-resolution confocal microscopy to examine the dynamics of obscurin localization in cultures of rat cardiac myocytes during the assembly and disassembly of myofibrils. Double immunolabeling of neonatal and adult rat cells for obscurin and sarcomeric alpha-actinin, the major protein of Z-lines, demonstrated that, during myofibrillogenesis, obscurin is intensely incorporated into M-band areas of A-bands and, to a lesser extent, in Z-lines of newly formed sarcomeres. Presarcomeric structural precursors of myofibrils were intensely immunopositive for alpha-actinin and, unlike mature myofibrils, weakly immunopositive or immunonegative for obscurin. This indicates that most of the obscurin assembles in developing myofibrils after abundant incorporation of alpha-actinin and that massive integration of obscurin occurs at more advanced stages of sarcomere assembly. Immunoreactivity for obscurin in the middle of A-bands and in Z-lines of sarcomeres bridged the gaps between individual bundles of newly formed myofibrils, suggesting that this protein appears to be directly involved in their primary lateral connection and registered alignment into larger clusters. Close sarcomeric localization of obscurin and titin suggests that they may interact during myofibril assembly. Interestingly, the laterally aligned striated pattern of obscurin formed at a stage when desmin, traditionally considered as a molecular linker responsible for the lateral binding and stabilization of myofibrils at the Z-bands, was still diffusely localized. During the disassembly of the contractile system in adult myocytes, disappearance of the cross-striated pattern of obscurin preceded the disorganization of registered alignment and intense breakdown of myofibrils. The cross-striated pattern of desmin typical of terminally differentiated myocytes disappeared before or simultaneously with obscurin. During redifferentiation, as in neonatal myocytes, sarcomeric incorporation of obscurin closely followed that of alpha-actinin and occurred earlier than the striated arrangement of desmin intermediate filaments. The presence of obscurin in the Z-lines and its later assembly into the A/M-bands indicate that it may serve to stabilize and align sarcomeric structure when myosin filaments are incorporated. Our data suggest that obscurin, interacting with other muscle proteins and possibly with the sarcoplasmic reticulum, may have a role as a flexible structural integrator of myofibrils during assembly and adaptive remodeling of the contractile apparatus.  相似文献   

15.
This study examines the interaction of titin and myosin. In order to analyze the domains of myosin contributing to the binding for titin, we conducted a solid phase binding assay. Different portions of myosin (heavy chains, light chains and myosin fragments) were coated on the microtiter wells and reacted with biotinylated titin. Then the binding of biotinylated titin to these polypeptides was detected by using the avidinbiotin-peroxidase method. The results demonstrated that light meromyosin and subfragment 1 were the major domains of myosin interacting with titin. Titin fragments obtained by trypsin digestion were allowed to react with myosin in an affinity column, and the bound fragments were isolated by an acidic elution. Immunoblot analysis of myosin-bound titin fragments revealed that an A-band domain of titin was responsible for the binding of myosin. In addition, biotinylated titin labelled the outer A-bands and Z-bands in intact myofibrils, thus confirming the in situ binding of titin to myosin.  相似文献   

16.
Electron microscopy was used to study the positional stability of thick filaments in isometrically contracting skinned rabbit psoas muscle as a function of sarcomere length at 7 degrees C. After calcium activation at a sarcomere length of 2.6 micron, where resting stiffness is low, sarcomeres become nonuniform in length. The dispersion in sarcomere length is complete by the time maximum tension is reached. A-bands generally move from their central position and continue moving toward one of the Z-discs after tension has reached a plateau at its maximum level. The lengths of the thick and thin filaments remain constant during this movement. The extent of A-band movement during contraction depends on the final length of the individual sarcomere. After prolonged activation, all sarcomeres between 1.9 and 2.5 micron long exhibit A-bands that are adjacent to a Z-disc, with no intervening I-band. Sarcomeres 2.6 or 2.7 micron long exhibit a partial movement of A-bands. At longer sarcomere lengths, where the resting stiffness exceeds the slope of the active tension-length relation, the A-bands remain perfectly centered during contraction. Sarcomere symmetry and length uniformity are restored upon relaxation. These results indicate that the central position of the thick filaments in the resting sarcomere becomes unstable upon activation. In addition, they provide evidence that the elastic titin filaments, which join thick filaments to Z-discs, produce almost all of the resting tension in skinned rabbit psoas fibers and act to resist the movement of thick filaments away from the center of the sarcomere during contraction.  相似文献   

17.
Newt embryonic myocardial cells can undergo mitosis in culture. The successive changes in the striation pattern of sarcomeres of myofibrils during mitosis were studied by polarization microscopy without fixing or killing the cells. Birefringence of well-organized striation patterns, i.e., bright A-bands and dark I-bands, was clearly visible in interphase cells and did not show any detectable changes during incubation for 3 h or more. Electron microscopy showed the presence of well-organized myofibrils with Z-bands in these interphase cells. When myocardial cells entered the mitotic stage, the birefringence of striation pattern of their myofibrils gradually changed with the pattern in small parts of the myofibrils gradually becoming indistinct (called 'indistinct striation' in this paper). These indistinct regions increased in size during the mitotic stage. In addition, in some regions of the indistinct striation, the birefringence of sarcomeres gradually decreased and finally disappeared (called 'disappearance of sarcomeres' in this paper). No myocardial cells underwent mitosis without these disruptive changes of the myofibril striation patterns. In the post-mitotic stage, the well-organized striation of the myofibrils reappeared. Electron microscopy showed disorganized sarcomeres without Z-bands in the regions of indistinct striation, and no well-organized myofibrils in the regions where the sarcomeres had disappeared. Thus the well-organized myofibrils with Z-bands became transiently disorganized at least in some parts, during mitosis. They were then reorganized into daughter myocardial cells.  相似文献   

18.
Obscurin is a recently identified giant multidomain muscle protein whose functions remain poorly understood. The goal of this study was to investigate the process of assembly of obscurin into nascent sarcomeres during the transition from non-striated myofibril precursors to striated structure of differentiating myofibrils in cell cultures of neonatal rat cardiac myocytes. Double immunofluorescent labeling and high resolution confocal microscopy demonstrated intense incorporation of obscurin in the areas of transition from non-striated to striated regions on the tips of developing myofibrils and at the sites of lateral fusion of nascent sarcomere bundles. We found that obscurin rapidly and precisely accumulated in the middle of the A-band regions of the terminal newly assembled half-sarcomeres in the zones of transition from the continuous, non-striated pattern of sarcomeric α-actinin distribution to cross-striated structure of laterally expanding nascent Z-discs. The striated pattern of obscurin typically ended at these points. This occurred before the assembly of morphologically differentiated terminal Z-discs of the assembling sarcomeres on the tips of growing myofibrils. The presence of obscurin in the areas of the terminal Z-discs of each new sarcomere was detected at the same time or shortly after complete assembly of sarcomeric structure. Many non-striated fibers with very low concentration of obscurin were already immunopositive for sarcomeric actin and myosin. This suggests that obscurin may serve for organization and alignment of myofilaments into the striated pattern. The comparison of obscurin and titin localization in these areas showed that obscurin assembly into the A-bands occurred soon after or concomitantly with incorporation of titin. Electron microscopy of growing myofibrils demonstrated intense formation and integration of myosin filaments into the “open” half-assembled sarcomeres in the areas of the terminal Z–I structures and at the lateral surfaces of newly formed, terminally located nascent sarcomeres. This process progressed before the assembly of the second-formed, terminal Z-discs of new sarcomeres and before the development of ultrastructurally detectable mature M-lines that define the completion of myofibril assembly, which supports the data of immunocytochemical study. Abundant non-aligned sarcomeres in immature myofibrils located on the growing tips were spatially separated and underwent the transition to the registered, aligned pattern. The sarcoplasmic reticulum, the organelle known to interact with obscurin, assembled around each new sarcomere. These results suggest that obscurin is directly involved in the proper positioning and alignment of myofilaments within nascent sarcomeres and in the establishment of the registered pattern of newly assembled myofibrils and the sarcoplasmic reticulum at advanced stages of myofibrillogenesis. This paper is dedicated to the memory of Professor Pavel P. Rumyantsev (1927–1988), a pioneer in studies of cardiac muscle differentiation, who is a lasting inspiration to all who worked with him.  相似文献   

19.
The incorporation of actin into myofibrils has been examined in a cell-free system [Bouché et al.: Journal of Cell Biology 107:587-596, 1988; Goldfine et al.: Cellular and Molecular Biology of Muscle Development, 1989]. Actin was translated in a reticulocyte lysate in the presence of 35S-methionine (35S-actin) or purified from muscle and labeled with fluorescein-5-isothiocyanate (FITC-actin). Myofibrils were incubated with either 35S-actin or FITC-actin and then analyzed by gel electrophoresis or fluorescence microscopy. When myofibrils were incubated with FITC-actin monomer in the reticulocyte lysate buffer, strong fluorescent labeling was observed in Z-band regions and less so in I-bands. No fluorescence was detected in non-overlap regions of A-bands. Confocal microscopic analysis of these myofibrils indicated that FITC-actin was distributed evenly across the diameter of the myofibrils. These observations suggest that actin incorporation in the reticulocyte lysate buffer occurred at sites in the sarcomere which contain actin. In contrast, FITC-actin showed a variety of non-physiological incorporation patterns when incubated with myofibrils in the presence of an isotonic buffer (I-buffer). However, when ATP was added to I-buffer, FITC-actin showed a pattern of incorporation into myofibrils similar to that seen in the reticulocyte lysate buffer. Immunoblots indicated that actin of native size was released from myofibrils during incubation in the reticulocyte lysate buffer. No actin release was detected when the myofibrils were incubated in I-buffer lacking ATP. We used this system to compare the incorporation of actin isoforms into myofibrils. Both alpha- and beta-actins exhibited incorporation into the myofibrils but there was a three-fold greater incorporation of the alpha isoform. We propose that the differential affinities of actin isoforms for myofibrils and other cytoskeletal structures could provide a mechanism for actin isoform targeting within the cytoplasm.  相似文献   

20.
The Localization of Skeletal Light Meromyosin in Cells of Myogenic Cultures   总被引:7,自引:0,他引:7  
Fluorescent antibodies against skeletal light meromyosin were used to study the localization of this muscle-specific antigen in myotubes, myoblasts, presumptive myoblasts and fibroblasts found in six-day myogenic cultures. The labelled antibody bound only to the lateral edges of the A-bands in myofibrils. The antibody did not bind to antigens in the nucleus, cytoplasm or in the microfilaments beneath the plasmalemma in any of the cell types examined. Similarly, the external face of the cell surface of unfixed, living myotubes and mononucleated cells did not bind the antibody. Immunodiffusion tests confirm these results: high salt extracts of myotube-containing cultures reacted against anti-skeletal light meromyosin, whereas extracts of fibroblasts and presumptive myoblast cultures failed to precipitate the antibody. It is proposed that if myosin is present in the plasmalemma of these cells, as is suggested by the work of others, it is immunologically distinct from that present in the myofibrils of definitive muscle.  相似文献   

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