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1.
Thyone sperm were induced to undergo the acrosomal reaction with a calcium ionophore A23187 in sea water containing 50 mM excess CaCl2, and the extension of the acrosomal process was recorded with high- resolution, differential interference contrast video microscopy at 60 fields/sec. The length of the acrosomal process was measured at 0.25-s intervals on nine sperm. When the data were plotted as (length)2 vs. time, the points fell exactly on a straight line except for the initial and very final stages of elongation. Cytochalasin B alters the rate of elongation of the acrosomal process in a dose-dependent way, inhibiting the elongation completely at high concentrations (20 micrograms/ml). However, no inhibition was observed unless excess Ca++ was added to sea water. The concentration of actin in the periacrosomal cup of the unreacted sperm is as high as 160 mg/ml; we calculate this concentration from the number and lengths of the actin filaments in a fully reacted sperm, and the volume of the periacrosomal cup in the unreacted sperm. These results are consistent with the hypothesis proposed earlier that monomers add to the ends of the actin filaments situated at the tip of the growing acrosomal process (the preferred end for monomer addition), and that the rate of elongation of the process is limited by diffusion of monomers from the sperm head (periacrosomal cup) to the tip of the elongating process. During the extension of the acrosomal process, a few blebs distributed along its lengths move out with the process. These blebs maintain a constant distance from the tip of the growing process. At maximum length, the straight acrosomal process slackens into a bow, and numerous new blebs appear. A few seconds later, the process suddenly straightens out again and sometimes actually contracts. The behavior of the blebs indicates that membrane is inserted at the base of the growing acrosomal process, and that membrane assembly and water uptake must be coupled to actin assembly during elongation. We discuss how the dynamic balance of forces seems to determine the shape of the growing acrosomal process, and how actin assembly may be controlled during the acrosomal reaction.  相似文献   

2.
The polarity of the actin filaments which assemble from the nucleating body or actomere of Thyone and Pisaster sperm was determined using myosin subfragment 1 decoration. The polarity was found to be unidirectional with the arrowheads pointing towards the cell center. When polymerization is induced at low temperature with concentrations of actin near the critical concentration for polymerization, elongation of filaments occurs preferentially off the apical end. If the sperm are induced to undergo the acrosomal reaction with an ionophore, the polarity of the actin filaments attached to the actomere is the same as that already described, but the filaments which polymerize parallel to, but peripheral to, those extending from the actomere are randomly polarized. These randomly polarized filaments appear to result from spontaneous nucleation. When sperm are induced to undergo the acrosomal reaction with eggs, the polarity of the actin filaments is also unidirectional with the arrowheads pointing towards the cell center. From these results we conclude: (a) that the actomere, by nucleating the polymerization of actin filaments, controls the polarity of the actin filaments in the acrosomal process, (b) that the actomere recognizes a surface of the actin monomer that is different from that surface recognized by the dense material attached to membranes, and (c) that egg myosin could not act to pull the sperm into the egg. Included is a discussion of how the observation that monomers add largely to one end of a decorated filament in vitro relates to these in vivo observations.  相似文献   

3.
The acrosome reaction (AR) of sperm is a prerequisite for fusion with the egg. In sea urchins, the complete AR (CAR) consists of exocytosis of the acrosomal vesicle (AV) and polymerization of acrosomal actin to form the approximately 1 micro m long acrosomal process. The fucose sulfate polymer (FSP) of egg jelly stimulates Ca(2+) entry through two distinct Ca(2+) channels and induces the CAR. Here we report that the second channel is blocked by SKF96365 (SKF), an inhibitor of store-operated channels. SKF also blocks the thapsigargin (TG), trifluoperazine (TFP), and calmidizolium (CMZ) stimulated Ca(2+) entry into sperm. These data indicate that the second Ca(2+) channel is a store-operated channel (SOC) that may be regulated by calmodulin. The TG, TFP, and CMZ-induced intracellular Ca(2+) elevations are similar to those induced by FSP, but the sperm acrosomal process does not polymerize. An antibody to bindin, the major protein of the AV, showed that in a significant percentage of these drug-treated sperm, the AV had undergone exocytosis. When NH(4)Cl was added to increase intracellular pH, the TG-treated sperm polymerized actin to form the acrosomal process. We conclude that the second Ca(2+) channel of sea urchin sperm is a SOC that triggers AV exocytosis.  相似文献   

4.
A sperm penetrates an egg by extending a long, actin-filled tube known as the acrosomal process. This simple example of biomotility is one of the most dramatic. In Thyone, a 90 m process can extend in less than 10 s. Experiments have shown that actin monomers stored in the base of the sperm are transported to the growing tip of the acrosomal process where they add to the ends of the existing filaments.The force that drives the elongation of the acrosomal process has not yet been identified although the most frequently discussed candidate is the actin polymerization reaction. Developing what we believe are realistic moving boundary models of diffusion limited actin fiber polymerization, we show that actin filament growth occurs too slowly to drive acrosomal elongation. We thus believe that other forces, such as osmotically driven water flow, must play an important role in causing the elongation. We conjecture that actin polymerization merely follows to give the appropriate shape to the growing structure and to stabilize the structure once water flow ceases.Work partially supported by the United States Department of Energy  相似文献   

5.
The acrosomal process of the sea cucumber Thyone briareus can extend 90 microm in 10 s, but an epithelial goldfish keratocyte can only glide a few microns in the same time. Both speeds reflect the rate of extension of an actin network. The difference is in the delivery of actin monomers to the polymerization region. Diffusion supplies monomers fast enough to support the observed speed of goldfish keratocytes, but previous models have indicated that the acrosomal process of Thyone extends too rapidly for diffusion to keep up. Here we reexamine the assumptions made in earlier models and present a new model, the Actin Reconcentration Model, that includes more biological detail. Salt and water fluxes during the acrosomal reaction and the nonideality of the cytoplasm are particularly significant for actin delivery. We find that the variability of the acrosomal growth curve can be explained by the salt and water fluxes, and that nonideality magnifies the effect of actin concentration changes. We calculate the speed of process growth using biologically relevant parameters from the literature and find that the predictions of the model fall among the experimental data.  相似文献   

6.
Several factors involved in induction of the acrosomal reaction in sperm of the sea urchin, Arbacia punctulata, have been investigated quantitatively using a simple substrate film technique to monitor extension of the acrosomal process by electron microscopy. Verification of typical acrosomal process formation has been accomplished using thin sections. Sperm were found to undergo the acrosomal reaction in artificial sea water in the absence of egg jelly coat at pH values above 9.6. In the presence of egg jelly a high percentage of sperm react at pH 8.6. At this pH, the fraction of sperm that undergo the acrosomal reaction is directly proportional to the concentration of egg jelly. The Ca2+ ionophore A23187 induces the acrosomal reaction in the absence of egg jelly at pH 8.6. The proportion of sperm that react is dependent on the concentration of ionophore and on the concentration of Ca2+ in the medium. Pretreatment of sperm with low levels of La3+ ion, which is known to be a Ca2+ ion antagonist, results in inhibition of egg jelly induction of the acrosomal reaction. These findings suggest that there are marked similarities between the acrosomal reaction in sea urchin sperm and membrane fusion dependent secretory processes in other cell types.  相似文献   

7.
Thyone sperm were demembranated with Triton X-100 and, after washing, extracted with 30 mM Tris at pH 8.0 and 1 mM MgCl2. After the insoluble contaminants were removed by centrifugation, the sperm extract was warmed to 22 degrees C. Actin filaments rapidly assembled and aggregated into bundles when KCl was added to the extract. When we added preformed actin filaments, i.e., the acrosomal filament bundles of Limulus sperm, to the extract, the actin monomers rapidly assembled on these filaments. What was unexpected was that assembly took place on only one end of the bundle--the end corresponding to the preferred end for monomer addition. We showed that the absence of growth on the nonpreferred end was not due to the presence of a capper because exogenously added actin readily assembled on both ends. We also analyzed the sperm extract by SDS gel electrophoresis. Two major proteins were present in a 1:1 molar ratio: actin and a 12,500-dalton protein whose apparent isoelectric point was 8.4. The 12,500-dalton protein was purified by DEAE chromatography. We concluded that it is profilin because of its size, isoelectric point, molar ratio to actin, inability to bind to DEAE, and its effect on actin assembly. When profilin was added to actin in the presence of Limulus bundles, addition of monomers on the nonpreferred end of the bundle was inhibited, even though actin by itself assembled on both ends. Using the Limulus bundles as nuclei, we determined the critical concentration for assembly off each end of the filament and estimated the Kd for the profilin-actin complex (approximately 10 microM). We present a model to explain how profilin may regulate the extension of the Thyone acrosomal process in vivo: The profilin-actin complex can add to only the preferred end of the filament bundle. Once the actin monomer is bound to the filament, the profilin is released, and is available to bind to additional actin monomers. This mechanism accounts for the rapid rate of filament elongation in the acrosomal process in vivo.  相似文献   

8.
Latrunculin A, a marine toxin from a Red Sea sponge, is a potent inhibitor of the microfilament-mediated processes of fertilization and early development in sea urchins and in mice. Sperm from sea urchins, but not those from Limulus or mice, were affected by latrunculin, and fertilization in both sea urchins and in mice was arrested but at different stages. Sea urchin sperm treated with 2.6 microM latrunculin are unable to assemble acrosomal processes and their ability to fertilize eggs is impaired. The unwinding of the Limulus sperm acrosomal process occurs in the presence of latrunculin. Treated mouse sperm are able to fertilize mouse oocytes in vitro, suggesting that microfilaments may not be required in this mammalian sperm. In sea urchin eggs, sperm incorporation, microvillar elongation and cytokinesis are inhibited. Microtubule-mediated motility occurs normally. 20 nM latrunculin prevents the morphogenetic movements during gastrulation. It reduces the viscosity of actin gels from sea urchin egg homogenates. In unfertilized mouse oocytes, it prevents the colcemid-induced dispersion of the meiotic chromosomes; accumulations of cortical actin are noted adjacent to the scattered chromosomes. Sperm incorporation during mouse fertilization in vitro is unaffected suggesting that sperm entry may occur independent of microfilament activity in mammals. However, the apposition of the pronuclei at the center of the egg cytoplasm does not occur, providing evidence that cytoplasmic microfilaments may be required for the motions leading to pronuclear union during mouse fertilization. It inhibits the second polar body formation and cytokinesis. These results indicate that latrunculin is a potent inhibitor of microfilament-mediated processes in sperm, eggs and embryos, and that it may prove to be a powerful new drug for exploring the cellular behavior of microfilaments in the maintenance of cell shape and during motility.  相似文献   

9.
Structural changes inside the head of Thyone sperm undergoing the acrosomal reaction were followed with a high-resolution, differential interference contrast (DIC) video microscope. The beating sperm, adhering by their midpiece to the cover slip of a wedge perfusion chamber, were activated by a calcium ionophore (20 microM A23187) suspended in sea water containing 50 mM excess CaCl2. Before activation of the sperm, the acrosomal region appears as a 1.1-microM diameter sphere, slightly less dense than the rest of the sperm head. Upon activation, the acrosome pops; the acrosomal region suddenly swells and its refractive index drops. After approximately 1 s, a crescent-shaped periacrosomal cup appears behind the acrosomal vacuole. In the next several seconds, the cup loses more refractive index and expands forward as the acrosomal process extends. The acrosomal vacuole becomes smaller, but without appreciable drop in refractive index. These observations, coupled with the behavior of the extending acrosomal process reported in the companion paper, and in electron microscopy (EM) and early physiological studies, suggest that the acrosomal process is extended by a combination of the explosive polymerization of actin and the osmotic swelling of the periacrosomal cup material. In this paper, we also consider the meaning of the enhanced DIC image seen in the high-resolution video microscope, and discuss the reliability of measurements on small linear dimensions made with the DIC microscope.  相似文献   

10.
When Pisaster, Asterias, or Thyone sperm are treated with the ionophore A23187 or X537A, an acrosomal reaction similar but not identical to a normal acrosomal reaction is induced in all the sperm. Based upon the response of the sperm, the acrosomal reaction consists of a series of temporally related steps. These include the fusion of the acrosomal vacuole with the cell surface, the polymerization of the actin, the alignment of the actin filaments, an increase in volume, an increase in the limiting membrane, and changes in the shape of the nucleus. In this report, we have concentrated on the first two steps in this sequence. Although fusion of the acrosomal vacuole with the cell surface requires Ca++, we found that the polymerization of actin instead appears to be dependent upon an increase in intracellular pH. This conclusion was reached by applying to sperm A23187, X537A, or nigericin, ionophores which all carry H+ at high affinity, yet vary in their affinity for other cations. When sperm are suspended in isotonic NaCl, isotonic KCl, calcium-free seawater, or seawater, all at pH 8.0, and the ionophore is added, the actin polymerizes explosively and an efflux of H+ from the cell occurs. However, if the pH, of the external medium is maintained at 6.5, the presumed intracellular pH, no effect is observed. And, finally, if egg jelly is added to sperm (the natural stimulus for the acrosomal reaction) at pH 8.0, H+ is also released. On the basis of these observations and those presented in earlier papers in this series, we conclude that a rise in intracellular pH induces the actin to disassociate from its binding proteins. Now it can polymerize.  相似文献   

11.
Structure of actin-containing filaments from two types of non-muscle cells   总被引:33,自引:0,他引:33  
Bundles of actin-containing filaments from the acrosomal process of horseshoe crab sperm and from sea urchin egg contain a second protein having a molecular weight of about 55,000. Electron micrographs of these filamentous bundles show features reminiscent of paracrystalline arrays of actin except that bundles from the sea urchin egg have distinctive transverse bands every 110 Å. From optical diffraction patterns of the micrographs, we deduced very similar models for both structures. The models consist of hexagonal arrays of actin filaments cross-linked by the second protein. The pattern of transverse bands in bundles derived from the sea urchin eggs is accounted for by postulating that the second protein is bonded to actin only at positions where cross-linking can occur, rather than being bonded to every actin. The helical symmetry of the actin requires that the bonding contacts involved in the cross-linking be slightly different at different positions along the length of the bundle. The technique of image reconstruction was used to obtain a three-dimensional map of the bundles from the acrosomal process.  相似文献   

12.
A continuum model of protrusion of pseudopod in leukocytes.   总被引:4,自引:3,他引:1       下载免费PDF全文
C Zhu  R Skalak 《Biophysical journal》1988,54(6):1115-1137
The morphology of human leukocytes, the biochemistry of actin polymerization, and the theory of continuum mechanics are used to model the pseudopod protrusion process of leukocytes. In the proposed model, the pseudopod is considered as a porous solid of F-actin network, the pores of which are full of aqueous solution. G-actin is considered as a "solute" transported by convection and diffusion in the fluid phase. The pseudopod grows as actin filaments elongate at their barbed ends at the tip of the pseudopod. The driving force of extension is hypothesized as being provided by the actin polymerization. It is assumed that elongation of actin filaments, powered by chemical energy liberated from the polymerization reaction, does mechanical work against opposing pressure on the membrane. This also gives rise to a pressure drop in the fluid phase at the tip of the pseudopod, which is formulated by an equation relating the work done by actin polymerization to the local state of pressure. The pressure gradient along the pseudopod drives the fluid filtration through the porous pseudopod according to Darcy's Law, which in turn brings more actin monomers to the growing tip. The main cell body serves as a reservoir of G-actin. A modified first-order equation is used to describe the kinetics of polymerization. The rate of pseudopod growth is modulated by regulatory proteins. A one-dimensional moving boundary problem based on the proposed mechanism has been constructed and approximate solutions have been obtained. Comparison of the solutions with experimental data shows that the model is compatible with available observations. The model is also applicable to growth of other cellular systems such as elongation of acrosomal process in sperm cells.  相似文献   

13.
An actin filament bundle approximately 2-5 microns in length is present in the sperm of the blue mussel, Mytilus. In unfired sperm this bundle extends from the midpiece through a canal in the center of the nucleus to terminate on the membrane limiting the inside of the cone-shaped acrosomal vacuole. The bundle is composed of 45-65 actin filaments which are hexagonally packed and regularly cross-bridged together to form an actin paracrystal so well ordered that it has six nearly equal faces. Upon induction of the acrosomal reaction, a needle-like process is formed in a few seconds. Within this process is the actin filament bundle which appears unchanged in filament number and packing as determined by optical diffraction methods. Using fluorescein-conjugated phalloidin we were able to establish that the bundle does not change length but instead is projected anteriorly out of the midpiece and nuclear canal like an arrow. Existing mechanisms to explain this extension cannot apply. Specifically, the bundle does not increase in length (no polymerization), does not change its organization (no change in actin twist), does not change filament number (no filament sliding), and cannot move by myosin (wrong polarity). Thus we are forced to look elsewhere for a mechanism and have postulated that at least a component of this movement, or cell elongation, is the interaction of the actin filament bundle with the plasma membrane.  相似文献   

14.
The classical isoagglutination of sea urchin sperm by egg jelly is not an agglutination of cells, as proposed by the fertilizin-antifertilizin hypothesis. Sperm motility is required to obtain the isoagglutination of Strongylocentrotus purpuratus sperm, and the sperm do not adhere to each other in the isoagglutination clusters, which cannot be fixed for microscopy and which disperse rapidly into individual cells when sperm motility is inhibited. These observations suggest that isoagglutination is the swarming of freely moving sperm to a common focus and is quite distinct from the agglutination of sperm by known crosslinking agents (antibodies or lectins).A previously unrecognized form of sperm agglutination is described which follows induction of an acrosome reaction by egg jelly, ammonia, or the ionophore A23187 in a suspension of sea urchin or sand dollar sperm. The sperm form rosettes of up to 100 cells in which the newly extended acrosomal processes adhere to each other. Rosettes can form containing sperm of different species, in which the acrosomal processes adhere without species preference.As observed by transmission electron microscopy, the acrosomal process of Lytechinus pictus sperm consists of an acrosomal tubule covered by a sheath of extracellular material. Rosette formation results from attachment between the extracellular materials of adjacent sperm.Less frequently, the acrosomal process of one sperm adheres to the midpiece of another by fusion of the acrosomal tubule and midpiece plasma membranes.  相似文献   

15.
When Limulus sperm are induced to undergo the acrosomal reaction, a process, 50 mum in length, is generated in a few seconds. This process rotates as it elongates; thus the acrosomal process literally screws through the jelly of the egg. Within the process is a bundle of filaments which before induction are coiled up inside the sperm. The filament bundle exists in three stable states in the sperm. One of the states can be isolated in pure form. It is composed of only three proteins whose molecular weights (mol wt) are 43,000, 55,000, and 95,000. The 43,000 mol wt protein is actin, based on its molecular weight, net charge, morphology, G-F transformation, and heavy meromyosin (HMM) binding. The 55,000 mol wt protein is in equimolar ratio to actin and is not tubulin, binds tenaciously to actin, and inhibits HMM binding. Evidence is presented that both the 55,000 mol wt protein and the 95,000 mol wt protein (possibly alpha-actinin) are also present in Limulus muscle. Presumably these proteins function in the sperm in holding the actin filaments together. Before the acrosomal reaction, the actin filaments are twisted over one another in a supercoil; when the reaction is completed, the filaments lie parallel to each other and form an actin paracrystal. This change in their packing appears to give rise to the motion of the acrosomal process and is under the control of the 55,000 mol wt protein and the 95,000 mol wt protein.  相似文献   

16.
When Asterias or Thyone sperm come in contact with egg jelly, a long process which in Thyone measures up to 90 µm in length is formed from the acrosomal region. This process can be generated in less than 30 s. Within this process is a bundle of microfilaments. Water extracts prepared from acetone powders of Asterias sperm contain a protein which binds rabbit skeletal muscle myosin forming a complex whose viscosity is reduced by ATP. Within this extract is a protein with the same molecular weight as muscle actin. It can be purified either by collecting the pellet produced after the addition of Mg++ or by reextracting an acetone powder of actomyosin prepared by the addition of highly purified muscle myosin to the extract. The sperm actin can be polymerized and by electron microscopy the polymer is indistinguishable from muscle F-actin. The sperm actin was shown to be localized in the microfilaments in the acrosomal processes by: (a) heavy meromyosin binding in situ, (b) sodium dodecyl sulfate (SDS) gel electrophoresis of the isolated acrosomal processes and a comparison to gels of flagella which contain no band corresponding to the molecular weight of actin, and (c) SDS gel electrophoresis of the extract from isolated acrosomal caps. Since the precursor for the microfilaments in the unreacted sperm appears amorphous, we suspected that the force for the generation of the acrosomal process is brought about by the polymerization of the sperm actin. This supposition was confirmed, for when unreacted sperm were lysed with the detergent Triton X-100 and the state of the actin in the sperm extract was analyzed by centrifugation, we determined that at least 80% of the actin in the unreacted sperm was in the monomeric state.  相似文献   

17.
Spermatozoa of the hagfishes Eptatretus burgeri and Eptatretus stouti, caught in the sea near Japan and North America, respectively, were found to undergo the acrosome reaction, which resulted in the formation of an acrosomal process with a filamentous core. The acrosomal region of spermatozoa of E. stouti exhibited immunofluorescent labeling using an actin antibody. The midpiece also labeled with the antibody. The acrosomal region showed a similar labeling pattern when sperm were probed with tetramethylrhodamine isothyocyanate (TRITC)-phalloidin; the midpiece did not label. Following induction of the acrosome reaction with the calcium (Ca2+) ionophore ionomycin, TRITC-phalloidin labeling was more intense in the acrosomal region, suggesting that the polymerization of actin occurs during formation of the acrosomal process, as seen in many invertebrates. The potential for sperm to undergo acrosomal exocytosis was already acquired by late spermatids. During acrosomal exocytosis, the outer acrosomal membrane and the overlying plasma membrane disappeared and were replaced by an array of vesicles; these resembled an early stage of the acrosome reaction in spermatozoa of higher vertebrates in which no formation of an acrosomal process occurs. It is phylogenetically interesting that such phenomena occur in spermatozoa of hagfish, a primitive vertebrate positioning between invertebrates and high vertebrates.  相似文献   

18.
The spectacular extension of the acrosomal process in Limulus sperm is effected by a bundle of actin-containing filaments with apparently no contribution from myosin. The bundle is coiled about the base of the sperm and, upon reaction, unwinds and extends out of the anterior end of the sperm with a screwing motion. We have analyzed the structure of the bundle in the coil and following its discharge. Optical diffraction studies of electron micrographs show a difference in the twist of the filaments in the two forms. The filaments in the coil have a twist of 0.23 ° per subunit more than that in the true discharge. As the signal to extend moves down the coil, the filaments change their twist and the bundle straightens. The coupling of these two movements produces the screwing motion. In the coil, the filaments wind around the axis of the bundle. As the filaments change their twist, the winding is undone. From freeze-fracture replicas we determined the hand of the winding of filaments in the coil and, in thin sections, we were able to determine the number of turns the filaments make for each loop of the coil. From these data we were able to predict the hand and amount of rotation during the discharge. From movie film sequences we could determine only the amount of rotation and found it to be 0.25 ° ± 0.05 ° per subunit discharged. This is in reasonable agreement with the expected value of 0.23 ° ± 0.05 ° per subunit. We propose that it is the change in twist of the actin filaments themselves that is responsible for the generation of force for the extension of the acrosomal process.  相似文献   

19.
Actin filaments elongate from their membrane-associated ends   总被引:22,自引:19,他引:3       下载免费PDF全文
In limulus sperm an actin filament bundle 55 mum in length extends from the acrosomal vacuole membrane through a canal in the nucleus and then coils in a regular fashion around the base of the nucleus. The bundle expands systematically from 15 filaments near the acrosomal vacuole to 85 filaments at the basal end. Thin sections of sperm fixed during stages in spermatid maturation reveal that the filament bundle begins to assemble on dense material attached to the acrosomal vacuole membrane. In micrographs fo these early stages in maturation, short bundles are seen extending posteriorly from the dense material. The significance is that these short, developing bundles have about 85 filaments, suggesting that the 85-filament end of the bundle is assembled first. By using filament bundles isolated and incubated in vitro with G actin from muscle, we can determine the end “preferred” for addition of actin monomers during polymerization. The end that would be associated with the acrosomal vacuole membrane, a membrane destined to be continuous with the plasma membrane, is preferred about 10 times over the other, thicker end. Decoration of the newly polymerized portions of the filament bundle with subfragment 1 of myosin reveals that the arrowheads point away from the acrosomal vacuole membrane, as is true of other actin filament bundles attached to membranes. From these observations we conclude that the bundle is nucleated from the dense material associated with the acrosomal vacuole and that monomers are added to the membrane-associated end. As monomers are added at the dense material, the thick first-made end of the filament bundle is pushed down through the nucleus where, upon reaching the base of the nucleus, it coils up. Tapering is brought about by the capping of the peripheral filaments in the bundle.  相似文献   

20.
We have re-examined the Ca(++)-dependent interaction of an intestinal microvillar 95- kdalton protein (MV-95K) and actin using the isolated acrosomal process bundles from limulus sperm. Making use of the processes as nuclei for assembling actin filaments, we quantitatively and qualitatively examined MV-95K’s effect on filament assembly and on F- actin, both in the presence and in the absence of Ca(++). The acrosomal processes are particularly advantageous for this approach because they nucleate large numbers of filaments, they are extremely stable, and their morphology can be used to determine the polarity of any nucleated filaments. When filament nucleation was initiated in the presence of MV-95K and the absence of Ca(++), there was biased filament assembly from the bundle ends. The calculated elongation rates from both the barbed and pointed filament ends were virtually indistinguishable from control preparations. In the presence of Ca(++), MV-95K completely inhibited filament assembly from the barbed filament end without affecting the initial rate of assembly from the pointed filament end. The inhibition of assembly results from MV-95K binding to and capping the barbed filament end, thereby preventing monomer addition. This indicates that, while MV-95K is a potent nucleator of actin assembly, it is also a potent inhibitor of actin filament elongation. To examine the effects of MV-95K on F-actin in the presence of Ca(++), we developed an assay where MV-95K is added to filaments previously assembled from acrosomal processes without causing filament breakage during mixing. These results clearly demonstrated that rapid filament shortening by MV-95K results through a mechanism of disrupting intrafilament monomer-monomer interactions. Finally, we show that tropomyosin-containing actin filaments are insensitive to cutting, but not to capping, by MV-95K in the presence of Ca(++).  相似文献   

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