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1.
AlfA is a recently discovered DNA segregation protein from Bacillus subtilis that is distantly related to actin and the bacterial actin homologues ParM and MreB. Here we show that AlfA mostly forms helical 7/3 filaments, with a repeat of about 180 Å, that are arranged in three-dimensional bundles. Other polymorphic structures in the form of two-dimensional rafts or paracrystalline nets were also observed. Here AlfA adopted a 16/7 helical symmetry, with a repeat of about 387 Å. Thin polymers consisting of several intertwining filaments also formed. Observed helical symmetries of AlfA filaments differed from those of other members of the actin family: F-actin, ParM, or MreB. Both ATP and guanosine 5′-triphosphate are able to promote rapid AlfA filament formation with almost equal efficiencies. The helical structure is only preserved under physiological salt concentrations and at a pH between 6.4 and 7.4, the physiological range of the cytoplasm of B. subtilis. Polymerization kinetics are extremely rapid and compatible with a cooperative assembly mechanism requiring only two steps: monomer activation followed by elongation, making AlfA one of the most efficient polymerizing motors within the actin family. Phosphate release lags behind polymerization, and time-lapse total internal reflection fluorescence images of AlfA bundles are consistent with treadmilling rather than dynamic microtubule-like instability. High-pressure small angle X-ray scattering experiments reveal that the stability of AlfA filaments is intermediate between the stability of ParM and the stability of F-actin. These results emphasize that actin-like polymerizing machineries have diverged to produce a variety of filament geometries with diverse properties that are tailored for specific biological processes.  相似文献   

2.
ParM is a prokaryotic actin homologue, which ensures even plasmid segregation before bacterial cell division. In vivo, ParM forms a labile filament bundle that is reminiscent of the more complex spindle formed by microtubules partitioning chromosomes in eukaryotic cells. However, little is known about the underlying structural mechanism of DNA segregation by ParM filaments and the accompanying dynamic instability. Our biochemical, TIRF microscopy and high-pressure SAX observations indicate that polymerization and disintegration of ParM filaments is driven by GTP rather than ATP and that ParM acts as a GTP-driven molecular switch similar to a G protein. Image analysis of electron micrographs reveals that the ParM filament is a left-handed helix, opposed to the right-handed actin polymer. Nevertheless, the intersubunit contacts are similar to those of actin. Our atomic model of the ParM-GMPPNP filament, which also fits well to X-ray fibre diffraction patterns from oriented gels, can explain why after nucleotide release, large conformational changes of the protomer lead to a breakage of intra- and interstrand interactions, and thus to the observed disintegration of the ParM filament after DNA segregation.  相似文献   

3.
A method is described for forming two-dimensional (2-D) paracrystalline complexes of F-actin and bundling/gelation proteins on positively charged lipid monolayers. These arrays facilitate detailed structural studies of protein interactions with F-actin by eliminating superposition effects present in 3-D bundles. Bundles of F-actin have been produced using the glycolytic enzymes aldolase and glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate dehydrogenase, the cytoskeletal protein erythrocyte adducin as well as smooth muscle alpha-actinin from chicken gizzard. All of the 2-D bundles formed contain F-actin with a 13/6 helical structure. F-actin-aldolase bundles have an interfilament spacing of 12.6 nm and a superlattice arrangement of actin filaments that can be explained by expression of a local twofold axis in the neighborhood of the aldolase. Well ordered F-actin-alpha-actinin 2-D bundles have an interfilament spacing of 36 nm and contain crosslinks 33 nm in length angled approximately 25-35 degrees to the filament axis. Images and optical diffraction patterns of these bundles suggest that they consist of parallel, unipolar arrays of actin filaments. This observation is consistent with an actin crosslinking function at adhesion plaques where actin filaments are bound to the cell membrane with uniform polarity.  相似文献   

4.
In developing Drosophila bristles two species of cross-linker, the forked proteins and fascin, connect adjacent actin filaments into bundles. Bundles form in three phases: (a) tiny bundles appear; (b) these bundles aggregate into larger bundles; and (c) the filaments become maximally cross-linked by fascin. In mutants that completely lack forked, aggregation of the bundles does not occur so that the mature bundles consist of <50 filaments versus ∼700 for wild type. If the forked concentration is genetically reduced to half the wild type, aggregation of the tiny bundles occurs but the filaments are poorly ordered albeit with small patches of fascin cross-linked filaments. In mutants containing an excess of forked, all the bundles tend to aggregate and the filaments are maximally crossbridged by fascin. Alternatively, if fascin is absent, phases 1 and 2 occur normally but the resultant bundles are twisted and the filaments within them are poorly ordered. By extracting fully elongated bristles with potassium iodide which removes fascin but leaves forked, the bundles change from being straight to twisted and the filaments within them become poorly ordered. From these observations we conclude that (a) forked is used early in development to aggregate the tiny bundles into larger bundles; and (b) forked facilitates fascin entry into the bundles to maximally cross-link the actin filaments into straight, compact, rigid bundles. Thus, forked aligns the filaments and then directs fascin binding so that inappropriate cross-linking does not occur.  相似文献   

5.
The cytoskeleton has a key function in the temporal and spatial organization of both prokaryotic and eukaryotic cells. Here, we report the identification of a new class of polymer-forming proteins, termed bactofilins, that are widely conserved among bacteria. In Caulobacter crescentus, two bactofilin paralogues cooperate to form a sheet-like structure lining the cytoplasmic membrane in proximity of the stalked cell pole. These assemblies mediate polar localization of a peptidoglycan synthase involved in stalk morphogenesis, thus complementing the function of the actin-like cytoskeleton and the cell division machinery in the regulation of cell wall biogenesis. In other bacteria, bactofilins can establish rod-shaped filaments or associate with the cell division apparatus, indicating considerable structural and functional flexibility. Bactofilins polymerize spontaneously in the absence of additional cofactors in vitro, forming stable ribbon- or rod-like filament bundles. Our results suggest that these structures have evolved as an alternative to intermediate filaments, serving as versatile molecular scaffolds in a variety of cellular pathways.  相似文献   

6.
Five different fibroblast strains derived from donors of a wide range of ages were used for investigation of senescence-associated changes in the organization of intermediate filaments (IFs) and the activity of cell locomotion. Results of immunofluorescence microscopy demonstrate that, in large and flat in vitro aged fibroblasts, vimentin-containing IFs are distributed as unusually organized large bundles. Electron microscopic examination shows that these large bundles are indeed composed of filaments of 8-10 nm. Such a profile of large bundles is rarely seen in young fibroblasts whose IFs are usually interdispersed among microtubules. Within the large filament bundles of senescent fibroblasts, cross-bridge-like extensions are frequently observed along the individual IFs. Immunogold labeling with antibody to one of the cross-bridging proteins, p50, further illustrates the abundance of interfilament links within the IF bundles. The senescence-related increase in interfilament association was also supported by the results of co-precipitation between vimentin and an associated protein of 50,000 D. Time-lapse cinematographic studies of cell locomotion reveal that accompanying aging, fibroblasts have a significantly reduced ability to translocate across a solid substratum. These results led me to suggest that the increased interfilament links via cross-bridges may in part contribute to the mechanism that orchestrates the formation of large filament bundles. The presence of enormous bundles in the cytoplasm may physically impede the efficiency of locomotion for these nondividing cells.  相似文献   

7.
Myosin X is a molecular motor that is adapted to select bundled actin filaments over single actin filaments for processive motility. Its unique form of motility suggests that myosin X's stepping mechanism takes advantage of the arrangement of actin filaments and the additional target binding sites found within a bundle. Here we use fluorescence imaging with one-nanometer accuracy to show that myosin X takes steps of ∼18 nm along a fascin-actin bundle. This step-size is well short of the 36-nm step-size observed in myosin V and myosin VI that corresponds to the actin pseudohelical repeat distance. Myosin X is able to walk along bundles with this step-size if it straddles two actin filaments, but would be quickly forced to spiral into the constrained interior of the bundle if it were to use only a single actin filament. We also demonstrate that myosin X takes many sideways steps as it walks along a bundle, suggesting that it can switch actin filament pairs within the bundle as it walks. Sideways steps to the left or the right occur on bundles with equal frequency, suggesting a degree of lateral flexibility such that the motor's working stroke does not bias it to the left or to the right. On single actin filaments, we find a broad mixture of 10-20-nm steps, which again falls short of the 36-nm actin repeat. Moreover, the motor leans to the right as it walks along single filaments, which may require myosin X to adopt strained configurations. As a control, we also tracked myosin V stepping along actin filaments and fascin-actin bundles. We find that myosin V follows a narrower path on both structures, walking primarily along one surface of an actin filament and following a single filament within a bundle while occasionally switching to neighboring filaments. Together, these results delineate some of the structural features of the motor and the track that allow myosin X to recognize actin filament bundles.  相似文献   

8.
合浦珠母贝鳃的显微与超微结构   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
合浦珠母贝(Pinctada fucata)是典型的滤食性瓣鳃类动物,也是我国重要的海水珍珠养殖贝类。本研究用光学显微镜、扫描电镜和透射电镜观察了合浦珠母贝鳃的显微和超微结构。结果表明,合浦珠母贝鳃结构属于异丝鳃型,左右两侧各2个鳃瓣,每个鳃瓣由内鳃瓣和外鳃瓣组成。鳃瓣由主鳃丝和普通鳃丝构成,主鳃丝在鳃瓣中主要起支架作用,每2根主鳃丝之间的9~12根普通鳃丝由"簇内连接"(intrabunchial junction)相连成簇。普通鳃丝之间通过"丝间连接"(interfilament junction)相连,丝间连接的上皮细胞与普通鳃丝的扁平细胞结构一样,为鳃的呼吸上皮。丝间连接的存在扩大了鳃的表面积,这种结构有助于进行气体交换。主鳃丝和普通鳃丝表面有前纤毛和侧纤毛,与食物运送和气体交换有关。普通鳃丝表面的纤毛为典型的"9+2"型微管结构。  相似文献   

9.
Drosophila bristle cells are shaped during growth by longitudinal bundles of cross-linked actin filaments attached to the plasma membrane. We used confocal and electron microscopy to examine actin bundle structure and found that during bristle elongation, snarls of uncross-linked actin filaments and small internal bundles also form in the shaft cytoplasm only to disappear within 4 min. Thus, formation and later removal of actin filaments are prominent features of growing bristles. These transient snarls and internal bundles can be stabilized by culturing elongating bristles with jasplakinolide, a membrane-permeant inhibitor of actin filament depolymerization, resulting in enormous numbers of internal bundles and uncross-linked filaments. Examination of bundle disassembly in mutant bristles shows that plasma membrane association and cross-bridging adjacent actin filaments together inhibits depolymerization. Thus, highly cross-bridged and membrane-bound actin filaments turn over slowly and persist, whereas poorly cross-linked filaments turnover more rapidly. We argue that the selection of stable bundles relative to poorly cross-bridged filaments can account for the size, shape, number, and location of the longitudinal actin bundles in bristles. As a result, filament turnover plays an important role in regulating cytoskeleton assembly and consequently cell shape.  相似文献   

10.
The method of Triton X-100 extraction and critical point drying of whole mounts of cultured chick and human myoblasts was used to study the presence of intracellular bundles of filaments within these cells. Observation by means of transmission and scanning electron microscopy demonstrated a complex system of filament bundles which appeared morphologically and spatially heterogeneous. Most obvious were long dense bundles or cables traversing along the ventral surface of developing myoblasts, presumably the ‘stress fibers’ seen in light microscopy. Other bundle types occurred which were composed of loose aggregates of filaments coursing through the remnant cell body. A prominent accumulation of filaments was also seen at the lateral edges of these myoblasts. These lateral edge cables were thicker and denser than any other type of filament bundle observed in the myoblasts. Reaction of unextracted myoblasts directly to human antiplatelet myosin conjugated to rhodamine demonstrated that the most intense reaction also occurred along the lateral edges of both human and chick myoblasts. During development of chick myoblasts the filament bundles became oriented parallel to the cell axis giving the cell a fusiform morphology. It is possible that the various filament bundle structures and their differing structural and spatial dispositions could be related to functional differences among the diverse population of intracellular bundles of filaments.  相似文献   

11.
Salmonella bacteria cause more than three million deaths each year. They hijack cells and inject among other proteins SipA via a "molecular syringe" into the cell, which can tether actin subunits in opposing strands to form mechanically stabilized filaments which rapidly reshape the cells surface into extended ruffles, leading to bacterial internalization. Exactly how these ruffles form at a single filament level remains unknown. Our real time total internal fluorescence microscopy observations show that both bidirectional elongation of actin by SipA as well as end-to-end annealing of SipA-actin filaments are rapid processes. Complementary electron microscopy investigations demonstrate that crowding agents in vitro readily induce stiff bundles of SipA-actin filaments. Taken together these three effects, rapid SipA induced actin polymerization, filament annealing and bundle formation due to molecular crowding can explain how Salmonella invades cells at molecular level.  相似文献   

12.
To investigate the accessibility of interphase nuclei for nuclear body-sized particles, we analyzed in cultured cells from human origin by correlative fluorescence and electron microscopy (EM) the bundle-formation of Xenopus-vimentin targeted to the nucleus via a nuclear localization signal (NLS). Moreover, we investigated the spatial relationship of speckles, Cajal bodies, and crystalline particles formed by Mx1 fused to yellow fluorescent protein (YFP), with respect to these bundle arrays. At 37 degrees C, the nucleus-targeted, temperature-sensitive Xenopus vimentin was deposited in focal accumulations. Upon shift to 28 degrees C, polymerization was induced and filament arrays became visible. Within 2 h after temperature shift, arrays were found to be composed of filaments loosely embedded in the nucleoplasm. The filaments were restricted to limited areas of the nucleus between focal accumulations. Upon incubation at 28 degrees C for several hours, NLS vimentin filaments formed bundles looping throughout the nuclei. Speckles and Cajal bodies frequently localized in direct neighborhood to vimentin bundles. Similarly, small crystalline particles formed by YFP-tagged Mx1 also located next to vimentin bundles. Taking into account that nuclear targeted vimentin locates in the interchromosomal domain (ICD), we conclude that nuclear body-sized particles share a common nuclear space which is controlled by higher order chromatin organization.  相似文献   

13.
Three polycations, polylysine, the polyamine spermine and the polycationic protein lysozyme were used to study the formation, structure, ionic strength sensitivity and dissociation of polycation-induced actin bundles. Bundles form fast, simultaneously with the polymerization of MgATP-G-actins, upon the addition of polycations to solutions of actins at low ionic strength conditions. This indicates that nuclei and/or nascent filaments bundle due to attractive, electrostatic effect of polycations and the neutralization of repulsive interactions of negative charges on actin. The attractive forces between the filaments are strong, as shown by the low (in nanomolar range) critical concentration of their bundling at low ionic strength. These bundles are sensitive to ionic strength and disassemble partially in 100 mM NaCl, but both the dissociation and ionic strength sensitivity can be countered by higher polycation concentrations. Cys374 residues of actin monomers residing on neighboring filaments in the bundles can be cross-linked by the short span (5.4 Å) MTS-1 (1,1-Methanedyl Bismethanethiosulfonate) cross-linker, which indicates a tight packing of filaments in the bundles. The interfilament cross-links, which connect monomers located on oppositely oriented filaments, prevent disassembly of bundles at high ionic strength. Cofilin and the polysaccharide polyanion heparin disassemble lysozyme induced actin bundles more effectively than the polylysine-induced bundles. The actin-lysozyme bundles are pathologically significant as both proteins are found in the pulmonary airways of cystic fibrosis patients. Their bundles contribute to the formation of viscous mucus, which is the main cause of breathing difficulties and eventual death in this disorder.  相似文献   

14.
Summary Crystalloids were found in Sertoli cells of the testis of the three-toed sloth by examination at the lightand electron-microscopic levels. Needle-, or spindle-shaped crystalloids, varying in length, were located in the basal part of the Sertoli cells. They consisted of bundles of filaments each measuring ~ 11 nm in diameter. Several filaments were packed hexagonally to form a bundle. The center-to-center distance between individual filaments of a bundle was ~ 17 nm. Periodical lateral projections emanated from the filaments. Cross sections of crystalloids showed that the projections radiated from each filament in three directions, forming an equilateral triangle with a side length of ~ 15 nm. Scattered polyribosomes were found between and around the bundles.  相似文献   

15.
Bacterial cytoskeletal proteins participate in a variety of processes, including cell division and DNA segregation. Polymerization of one plasmid-encoded, actin-like protein, ParM, segregates DNA by pushing two plasmids in opposite directions and forms the current paradigm for understanding active plasmid segregation. An essential feature of ParM assembly is its dynamically instability, the stochastic switching between growth and disassembly. It is unclear whether dynamic instability is an essential feature of all actin-like protein-based segregation mechanisms or whether bacterial filaments can segregate plasmids by different mechanisms. We expressed and purified AlfA, a plasmid-segregating actin-like protein from Bacillus subtilis, and found that it forms filaments with a unique structure and biochemistry; AlfA nucleates rapidly, polymerizes in the presence of ATP or GTP, and forms highly twisted, ribbon-like, helical filaments with a left-handed pitch and protomer nucleotide binding pockets rotated away from the filament axis. Intriguingly, AlfA filaments spontaneously associate to form uniformly sized, mixed-polarity bundles. Most surprisingly, our biochemical characterization revealed that AlfA does not display dynamic instability and is relatively stable in the presence of diphosphate nucleotides. These results (i) show that there is remarkable structural diversity among bacterial actin filaments and (ii) indicate that AlfA filaments partition DNA by a novel mechanism.Bacteria contain multiple filament-forming proteins related to eukaryotic actin (6). These actin-like proteins have multiple cellular roles, including determination of cell shape (18), arrangement of organelles (20), and segregation of DNA (36). Little is known about the assembly dynamics of most of these proteins or about the identities and activities of the factors that regulate them. The widely expressed actin-like protein MreB, for example, has been purified and studied in vitro, but its assembly appears to be strongly inhibited by physiological concentrations of monovalent cations, suggesting that its assembly in vivo is facilitated by as-yet-unknown factors (23). At present, the best-understood actin-like protein is ParM, a plasmid-encoded protein that constructs a bipolar spindle capable of pushing plasmids to opposite poles of rod-shaped cells (5, 25). In contrast to the eukaryotic actin cytoskeleton, whose assembly and architecture are regulated by a variety of accessory factors, ParM dynamics are regulated by a single factor, a complex composed of multiple copies of the repressor protein ParR bound to a DNA locus, parC (17). The ParR/parC complex binds the ends of ParM filaments and is pushed through the cytoplasm by filament elongation (5, 14, 25). The ability of ParM to function with such minimal regulation appears to be due to its unique assembly dynamics, which are dramatically different from those of eukaryotic actins. One of the most important differences is that ParM filaments are dynamically unstable (13). That is, similar to eukaryotic microtubules, they can exist in one of two states: stably growing or rapidly (catastrophically) shrinking. This property is required for the ability of ParM to segregate DNA in vivo and appears to solve several fundamental problems associated with DNA segregation. First, spontaneous disassembly of the polymer overcomes the need for an accessory factor to take filaments apart. Second, because filaments bound to ParR/parC complexes are selectively stabilized, the catastrophic disassembly of unattached filaments provides excess monomers that can preferentially elongate them. This is significant because, if the stabilities of attached and unattached filaments were similar, the concentration of free ParM monomers would equilibrate at a level not capable of promoting DNA segregation. And finally, pairs of plasmids appear to find each other via a search-and-capture mechanism (5, 14) that is dramatically enhanced by the continual growth and shortening of filaments attached to single plasmids (16).Because we have little information on the dynamics of other actin-like proteins, it is unclear to what extent ParM''s behavior reflects general properties of bacterial actins rather than specific adaptations to its role in DNA segregation. Furthermore, it is unclear whether all plasmid-segregating actins employ the same dynamic instability-based strategy to find and transport DNA molecules. To better understand the structural and functional diversity of bacterial actins, we studied a second, recently discovered plasmid-segregating actin-like protein, AlfA (1). The AlfA gene is part of an operon (alf) that is located close to the origin of replication of a ∼70-kb, low-copy-number plasmid, pLS32. This plasmid was initially isolated from a natto strain of Bacillus subtilis used in soybean fermentation (33), but a similar plasmid with an identical alf operon is also present in a colony-forming laboratory strain of B. subtilis, strain NCIB 3610 (8, 32). The function of these plasmids is cryptic. They are present at levels of only two or three copies per chromosome equivalent (33), and maintenance of their derivatives requires both AlfA and a downstream gene, alfB (1). Becker and coworkers (1) identified AlfA as a member of the actin superfamily based on the presence of a conserved nucleotide binding fold (4), although the sequence of AlfA is as different from the sequences of ParM and MreB as all three are from the sequence of conventional eukaryotic actin (∼20% identity). These authors also showed that fluorescent derivatives of AlfA form a single filamentous structure running along the long axis of the cell. Photobleached filaments recover from both ends in approximately 1 min, indicating that the structures are composed of multiple, dynamic filaments (1). By analogy with the ParR/parC complex, AlfB might be a DNA binding protein that couples AlfA assembly to plasmid movement. To date, no centromeric sequences involved in segregation have been identified in this plasmid.We expressed and purified AlfA and characterized its assembly dynamics by using light scattering, high-speed pelleting, and fluorescence microscopy, and we determined the structure of AlfA polymers by high-resolution electron microscopy (EM). We found that in the presence of ATP and GTP, AlfA forms two-strand helical filaments and filament bundles. Like ParM filaments, AlfA filaments are left-handed two-start helices, but otherwise their filament architecture is quite different. AlfA filaments appear to be more tightly twisted and ribbon-like, and AlfA subunits have a significantly different orientation with respect to the filament axis. Unlike other actin-like proteins described thus far, AlfA spontaneously forms regularly sized, mixed-polarity filament bundles driven by electrostatic interactions between filaments, even in the absence of molecular crowding. Finally, AlfA shows no evidence of the dynamic instability crucial to the function of ParM. Thus, AlfA assembles into a unique structure with a unique set of biochemical and structural properties, suggesting a novel mechanism for DNA segregation.  相似文献   

16.
《The Journal of cell biology》1996,135(5):1291-1308
The actin bundles in Drosophila bristles run the length of the bristle cell and are accordingly 65 microns (microchaetes) or 400 microns (macrochaetes) in length, depending on the bristle type. Shortly after completion of bristle elongation in pupae, the actin bundles break down as the bristle surface becomes chitinized. The bundles break down in a bizarre way; it is as if each bundle is sawed transversely into pieces that average 3 microns in length. Disassembly of the actin filaments proceeds at the "sawed" surfaces. In all cases, the cuts in adjacent bundles appear in transverse register. From these images, we suspected that each actin bundle is made up of a series of shorter bundles or modules that are attached end-to-end. With fluorescent phalloidin staining and serial thin sections, we show that the modular design is present in nondegenerating bundles. Decoration of the actin filaments in adjacent bundles in the same bristle with subfragment 1 of myosin reveals that the actin filaments in every module have the same polarity. To study how modules form developmentally, we sectioned newly formed and elongating bristles. At the bristle tip are numerous tiny clusters of 6-10 filaments. These clusters become connected together more basally to form filament bundles that are poorly organized, initially, but with time become maximally cross-linked. Additional filaments are then added to the periphery of these organized bundle modules. All these observations make us aware of a new mechanism for the formation and elongation of actin filament bundles, one in which short bundles are assembled and attached end-to-end to other short bundles, as are the vertical girders between the floors of a skyscraper.  相似文献   

17.
Drosophila singed mutants were named for their gnarled bristle phenotype but severe alleles are also female sterile. Recently, singed protein was shown to have 35% peptide identity with echinoderm fascin. Fascin is found in actin filament bundles in microvilli of sea urchin eggs and in filopodial extensions in coelomocytes. We show that Drosophila singed is required for actin filament bundle formation in the cytoplasm of nurse cells during oogenesis; in severe mutants, the absence of cytoplasmic actin filament bundles allows nurse cell nuclei to lodge in ring canals and block nurse cell cytoplasm transport. Singed is also required for organized actin filament bundle formation in the cellular extension that forms a bristle; in severe mutants, the small disorganized actin filament bundles lack structural integrity and allow bristles to bend and branch during extension. Singed protein is also expressed in migratory cells of the developing egg chamber and in the socket cell of the developing bristle, but no defect is observed in these cells in singed mutants. Purified, bacterially expressed singed protein bundles actin filaments in vitro with the same stoichiometry reported for purified sea urchin fascin. Singed-saturated actin bundles have a molar ratio of singed/actin of approximately 1:4.3 and a transverse cross-banding pattern of 12 nm seen using electron microscopy. Our results suggest that singed protein is required for actin filament bundle formation and is a Drosophila homolog of echinoderm fascin.  相似文献   

18.
We have used a positively charged lipid monolayer to form two-dimensional bundles of F-actin cross-linked by alpha-actinin to investigate the relative orientation of the actin filaments within them. This method prevents growth of the bundles perpendicular to the monolayer plane, thereby facilitating interpretation of the electron micrographs. Using alpha-actinin isoforms isolated from the three types of vertebrate muscle, i.e., cardiac, skeletal, and smooth, we have observed almost exclusively cross-linking between polar arrays of filaments, i.e., actin filaments with their plus ends oriented in the same direction. One type of bundle can be classified as an Archimedian spiral consisting of a single actin filament that spirals inward as the filament grows and the bundle is formed. These spirals have a consistent hand and grow to a limiting internal diameter of 0.4-0.7 microm, where the filaments appear to break and spiral formation ceases. These results, using isoforms usually characterized as cross-linkers of bipolar actin filament bundles, suggest that alpha-actinin is capable of cross-linking actin filaments in any orientation. Formation of specifically bipolar or polar filament arrays cross-linked by alpha-actinin may require additional factors that either determine the filament orientation or restrict the cross-linking capabilities of alpha-actinin.  相似文献   

19.
Actin polymerization is a fundamental cellular process involved in cell structure maintenance, force generation, and motility. Phosphate release from filament subunits following ATP hydrolysis destabilizes the filament lattice and increases the critical concentration (Cc) for assembly. The structural differences between ATP- and ADP-actin are still debated, as well as the energetic factors that underlie nucleotide-dependent filament stability, particularly under crowded intracellular conditions. Here, we investigate the effect of crowding agents on ATP- and ADP-actin polymerization and find that ATP-actin polymerization is largely unaffected by solution crowding, while crowding agents lower the Cc of ADP-actin in a concentration-dependent manner. The stabilities of ATP- and ADP-actin filaments are comparable in the presence of physiological amounts (∼ 30% w/v) and types (sorbitol) of low molecular weight crowding agents. Crowding agents act to stabilize ADP-F-actin by slowing subunit dissociation. These observations suggest that nucleotide hydrolysis and phosphate release per se do not introduce intrinsic differences in the in vivo filament stability. Rather, the preferential disassembly of ADP-actin filaments in cells is driven through interactions with regulatory proteins. Interpretation of the experimental data according to osmotic stress theory implicates water as an allosteric regulator of actin activity and hydration as the molecular basis for nucleotide-dependent filament stability.  相似文献   

20.
Structure of actin paracrystals induced by nerve growth factor   总被引:2,自引:0,他引:2  
When nerve growth factor is added to F-actin, well-ordered bundles of filaments are formed. These bundles are observed even at low concentrations of NGF21, but when N-bromosuccinimide-treated NGF, a biologically inactive form of the protein is used, a much higher concentration is required to produce aggregation. Moreover, the bundles induced by the modified NGF are not very well ordered and show amorphous aggregates attached at various points.Electron microscopy of paracrystals induced by native NGF shows that, although they resemble pure actin paracrystals induced by Mg2+, the interfilament spacing is larger and bridges connect the filaments. Optical diffraction patterns show, in addition to the off-meridional reflections characteristic of the actin helix, meridional reflections on the first and fourth layer-lines, at axial spacings of 37 and 9 nm. Measurements of the axial positions of the layer-lines show that the actin helical symmetry is not significantly different from that in pure actin paracrystals. The presence of the meridional reflections indicates that groups of two or three bridges with spacing 9 nm or nearly 9 nm are arranged along the bundles at a repeating interval of 37 nm.Actin filament bundles have been observed in several non-muscle cells, and specific actin-binding proteins have been identified as responsible for this aggregation. Our in vitro observations show that the biologically active form of NGF interacts with actin and organizes it into well-ordered paracrystalline arrays. The in vitro formation of NGF-actin complexes may be related to the in vivo mechanism of action of this growth factor.  相似文献   

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