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1.
We studied the binding of actin to the erythrocyte membrane by a novel application of falling ball viscometry. Our approach is based on the notion that if membranes have multiple binding sites for F-actin they will be able to cross-link and increase the viscosity of actin. Spectrin- and actin-depleted inside-out vesicles reconstituted with purified spectrin dimer or tetramer induce large increases in the viscosity of actin. Comparable concentrations of spectrin alone, inside-out vesicles alone, inside-out vesicles plus heat-denatured spectrin dimmer or tetramer induce large increases in the viscosity of actin. Comparable concentrations of spectrin alone, inside-out vesicles alone, inside-out plus heat denatured spectrin, ghosts, or ghosts plus spectrin have no effect on the viscosity of actin. Centrifugation experiments show that the amount of actin bound to the inside-out vesicles is enhanced in the presence of spectrin. The interactions detected by low-shear viscometry reflect actin interaction with membrane- bound spectrin because (a) prior removal of band 4.1 and ankyrin (band 2.1, the high- affinity membrane attachment site for spectrin) reduces both spectrin binding to the inside-out vesicles and their capacity to stimulate increase in viscosity of actin in the presence of spectrin + actin are inhibited by the addition of the water-soluble 72,000- dalton fragment of ankyrin, which is known to inhibit spectrin reassociation to the membrane. The increases in viscosity of actin induced by inside-out vesicles reconstituted with purified spectrin dimer or tetramer are not observed when samples are incubated at 0 degrees C. This temperature dependence may be related to the temperature-dependent associations we observe in solution studies with purified proteins: addition of ankyrin inhibits actin cross-linking by spectrin tetramer plus band 4.1 at 0 degrees C, and enhances it at 32 degrees C. We conclude (a) that falling ball viscometry can be used to assay actin binding to membranes and (b) that spectrin is involved in attaching actin filaments or oligomers to the cytoplasmic surface of the erythrocyte membrane.  相似文献   

2.
The association between murine fibroblast L plasma membranes and actin was studied by means of low-shear viscometry of membrane-actin mixtures. Membrane fractions of 3 genetically related sublines of L cells were used differing in cytoskeleton structural organization. The suspension cell subline LS membranes showed actin gelatin activity. On the contrary, the membranes of monolayer cell sublines L-929 and LSM were seen to bind actin and to cause decrease in viscosity. Possible mechanisms of such interactions are discussed.  相似文献   

3.
A protein with a molecular weight of 80 kDa, which binds Ca2+-dependently to actin, was purified chromatographically from bovine adrenal medulla by using Sephacryl S-300, DEAE-Sepharose, actin-DNase I Sepharose, and Sephacryl S-200. This protein was retained on an actin-DNase I affinity column only in the presence of Ca2+, and could be eluted from this column by EGTA. The 80 kDa protein is a monomer and binds to G-actin in a Ca2+-dependent manner at an equimolar ratio. It caused fragmentation of actin filaments at more than 4 X 10(-7) M free Ca2+ concentration, as determined by low-shear viscometry and electron microscopy. Saturating amounts of tropomyosin showed a slight protective effect on the fragmentation of actin filaments by the 80 kDa protein. Considering the mode of action on actin filaments, the 80 kDa protein reported here seems to be a gelsolin-like protein. Gel electrophoresis of this protein revealed changes in mobility depending upon the concentration of Ca2+. This result also indicates that the 80 kDa protein itself is a Ca2+-binding protein.  相似文献   

4.
Interaction of rat liver lysosomal membranes with actin   总被引:4,自引:3,他引:1       下载免费PDF全文
Membranes were prepared from lysosomes purified 80-fold by centrifugation in a discontinuous metrizamide gradient. When salt- washed membranes were combined with rabbit muscle actin, an increase in viscosity could be measured using a falling ball viscometer. The lysosomal membrane-actin interaction was actin- and membrane- concentration dependent and appeared to be optimal under presumed physiological conditions (2 mM MgCl2, 1 mM MgATP, neutral pH, and free calcium concentration less than 10(-8) M). The actin cross-linking activity of the membrane was optimal at pH 6.4. The interaction was maximal between 10(-7) and 10(-9) M free calcium ions and inhibited by approximately 50% at concentrations of calcium greater than 0.5 x 10(- 7) M. The actin-lysosomal membrane interaction was destroyed if the membranes were pretreated with Pronase, or if the membranes were purified in the absence of protease inhibitors. The interaction was not destroyed if membranes were washed with high salt or extracted with KCl and urea. In addition, a sedimentation assay for the actin-lysosomal membrane interaction was also performed to corroborate the viscometry data. The results suggest the existence of an integral lysosomal membrane actin-binding protein.  相似文献   

5.
Dictyostelium discoideum plasma membranes isolated by each of three procedures bind F-actin. The interactions between these membranes and actin are examined by a novel application of falling ball viscometry. Treating the membranes as multivalent actin-binding particles analogous to divalent actin-gelation factors, we observe large increases in viscosity (actin cross-linking) when membranes of depleted actin and myosin are incubated with rabbit skeletal muscle F-actin. Pre- extraction of peripheral membrane proteins with chaotropes or the inclusion of Triton X-100 during the assay does not appreciably diminish this actin cross-linking activity. Lipid vesicles, heat- denatured membranes, proteolyzed membranes, or membranes containing endogenous actin show minimal actin cross-linking activity. Heat- denatured, but not proteolyzed, membranes regain activity when assayed in the presence of Triton X-100. Thus, integral membrane proteins appear to be responsible for some or all of the actin cross-linking activity of D. discoideum membranes. In the absence of MgATP, Triton X- 100 extraction of isolated D. discoideum membranes results in a Triton- insoluble residue composed of actin, myosin, and associated membrane proteins. The inclusion of MgATP before and during Triton extraction greatly diminishes the amount of protein in the Triton-insoluble residue without appreciably altering its composition. Our results suggest the existence of a protein complex stabilized by actin and/or myosin (membrane cytoskeleton) associated with the D. discoideum plasma membrane.  相似文献   

6.
We have previously shown that microtubule-associated protein 2 (MAP2) and Tau, two major microtubule-associated proteins, interact with actin differently as measured by low-shear viscosity and that their activities are modified by phosphorylation (Nishida, E., Kotani, S., Kuwaki, T., and Sakai, H. (1982 in Biological Functions of Microtubules and Related Structures (Sakai, H., Mohri, H., and Borisy, G. G., eds) pp. 297-309, Academic Press, Japan). In the present study we further examined their interaction using turbidimetry, electron microscopy, low- and high-shear viscometry. MAP2 increased the low-shear viscosity of actin filament but had weaker effect on high-shear viscosity and turbidity of actin filaments. In contrast, Tau reduced high-shear viscosity of actin filaments and enhanced the turbidity which were due to formation of actin filament bundles as shown by electron microscopy. We conclude that MAP2 is a gelation factor, while Tau is a bundling factor. A well-known Ca2+-dependent regulatory protein, calmodulin, inhibited both MAP2-actin and Tau-actin interaction in a Ca2+-dependent manner. The calmodulin-dependent inhibition was canceled by higher concentrations of MAP2 or Tau, and calmodulin had no effect on the viscosity of actin filament alone, indicating that this inhibition is based on the stoichiometric interaction of calmodulin with MAP2 or Tau.  相似文献   

7.
The calspectin/actin complex extracted from the bovine brain membrane crosslinks F-actin, resulting in the increasing viscosity of F-actin determined by low-shear viscometry. We demonstrated the presence of a protein factor in this complex, which regulated the calspectin-F-actin interaction in a Ca2+- and calmodulin-dependent manner. Erythrocyte protein 4.1, but not synapsin I, mimics the function of this brain factor using a reconstitution system including purified calspectin, calmodulin and F-actin. In the brain complex, the Mr 120,000 and the Mr 80,000/77,000 polypeptides were detected to crossreact with anti-protein 4.1 antibody.  相似文献   

8.
Band 4.9 (a 48,000-mol-wt polypeptide) has been partially purified from human erythrocyte membranes. In solution, band 4.9 polypeptides exist as trimers with an apparent molecular weight of 145,000 and a Stokes radius of 50 A. Electron microscopy shows that the protein is a three-lobed structure with a radius slightly greater than 50 A. When gel-filtered rabbit muscle actin is polymerized in the presence of band 4.9, actin bundles are generated that are similar in appearance to those induced by "vinculin" or fimbrin. The bundles appear brittle and when they are centrifuged small pieces of filaments break off and remain in the supernatant. At low band 4.9 to actin molar ratios (1:30), band 4.9 lowers the apparent steady-state low-shear falling ball viscosity by sequestering filaments into thin bundles; at higher ratios, the bundles become thicker and obstruct the ball's movement leading to an apparent increase in steady-state viscosity. Band 4.9 increases the length of the lag phase and decreases the rate of elongation during actin polymerization as measured by high-shear Ostwald viscometry or by the increase in the fluorescence of pyrene-labeled actin. Band 4.9 does not alter the critical actin monomer concentration. We hypothesize that band 4.9, together with actin, erythrocyte tropomyosin, and spectrin, forms structures in erythroid precursor cells analogous to those formed by fimbrin, actin, tropomyosin, and TW 260/240 in epithelial brush borders. During erythroid development and enucleation, the actin filaments may depolymerize up to the membrane, leaving a membrane skeleton with short stubs of actin bundled by band 4.9 and cross-linked by spectrin.  相似文献   

9.
Fibrinogen binding to platelet plasma membranes, which is a prerequisite for platelet aggregation, was determined by incubating 125I-labeled fibrinogen with isolated membranes and measuring the amount of radioactivity sedimenting with the membranes through 15% sucrose. Fibrinogen binding was optimal at 10(-3) M Ca2+. Scatchard analyses of the fibrinogen binding showed that the membrane capacity for fibrinogen was 1.6 X 10(-12) mol/mg of membrane protein, with a dissociation constant (Kd) = 1.2 X 10(-8) M. When Ca2+ levels were manipulated by the addition of varying amounts of EGTA at a fixed Mg2+ concentration of 3 X 10(-3) M, specific binding of fibrinogen to platelet membranes occurred only at Ca2+ concentrations greater than or equal to 10(-6) M. Membranes isolated from platelets of an individual with Glanzmann's thrombasthenia bound only 12% as much fibrinogen as control platelets. The data in the present study suggest that there are two divalent cation binding sites that must be occupied for fibrinogen to bind: one site is specific for calcium and is saturated at 10(-6) M Ca2+; the other site is less specific and is saturated at a 10(-3) M concentration of either Ca2+ or Mg2+. Fibrinogen binding to intact platelets and, consequently, platelet aggregation only required 10(-3) M extracellular divalent cation and was not specific for Ca2+. These data indicate that the cytoplasm is a potential source for the requirement of 10(-6) M Ca2+, and that changes in the intracellular concentration of Ca2+ may cause the expression of fibrinogen receptors during ADP-induced platelet activation.  相似文献   

10.
《The Journal of cell biology》1992,117(5):1067-1076
Capping protein binds the barbed ends of actin filaments and nucleates actin filament assembly in vitro. We purified capping protein from Saccharomyces cervisiae. One of the two subunits is the product of the CAP2 gene, which we previously identified as the gene encoding the beta subunit of capping protein based on its sequence similarity to capping protein beta subunits in chicken and Dictyostelium (Amatruda, J. F., J. F. Cannon, K. Tatchell, C. Hug, and J. A. Cooper. 1990. Nature (Lond.) 344:352-354). Yeast capping protein has activity in critical concentration and low-shear viscometry assays consistent with barbed- end capping activity. Like chicken capping protein, yeast capping protein is inhibited by PIP2. By immunofluorescence microscopy yeast capping protein colocalizes with cortical actin spots at the site of bud emergence and at the tips of growing buds and shmoos. In contrast, capping protein does not colocalize with actin cables or with actin rings at the site of cytokinesis.  相似文献   

11.
Actin-membrane interactions have been studied using purified liver plasma membranes and muscular filamentous actin. Despite the large quantity of endogenous actin present in membranes, exogenous muscular filamentous actin cosediments with membranes after a 30 min centrifugation at 30 000 g. The cosedimentation process is time-dependent and exhibits a complex relationship with actin concentration. The cosedimentation of actin with membranes can be partly explained by gelation as shown by low-shear viscosity and electron microscopy. The characterization of the gelation phenomenon as a function of time, actin and membrane concentrations, ionic strength, temperature and Ca2+ concentration is also presented. Gelation alone cannot however account for the overall cosedimentation data, and a more direct mode of association between actin and the membrane must be envisaged. The analogy that exists between the results obtained with liver plasma membranes and those obtained with other membrane systems suggests that a general mechanism may be involved in the interaction of actin with plasma membranes.  相似文献   

12.
The Ca2(+)-dependent regulation of the erythroid membrane cytoskeleton was investigated. The low-salt extract of erythroid membranes, which is mainly composed of spectrin, protein 4.1, and actin, confers a Ca2+ sensitivity on its interaction with F-actin. This Ca2+ sensitivity is fortified by calmodulin and antagonized by trifluoperazine, a potent calmodulin inhibitor. Additionally, calmodulin is detected in the low-salt extract. These results suggest that calmodulin is the sole Ca2(+)-sensitive factor in the low-salt extract. The main target of calmodulin in the erythroid membrane cytoskeleton was further examined. Under native conditions, calmodulin forms a stable and equivalent complex with protein 4.1 as determined by calmodulin affinity chromatography, cross-linking experiments, and fluorescence binding assays with an apparent Kd of 5.5 x 10(-7) M irrespective of the free Ca2+ concentration. Domain mapping with chymotryptic digestion reveals that the calmodulin-binding site resides within the N-terminal 30-kDa fragment of protein 4.1. In contrast, the interaction of calmodulin with spectrin is unexpectedly weak (Kd = 1.2 x 10(-4) M). Given the content of calmodulin in erythrocytes (2-5 microM), these results imply that the major target for calmodulin in the erythroid membrane cytoskeleton is protein 4.1. Low- and high-shear viscometry and binding assays reveal that an equivalent complex of calmodulin with protein 4.1 regulates the spectrin/actin interaction in a Ca2(+)-dependent manner. At a low Ca2+ concentration, protein 4.1 potentiates the actin cross-linking and the actin binding activities of spectrin. At a high Ca2+ concentration, the protein 4.1-potentiated actin cross-linking activity but not the actin binding activity of spectrin is suppressed by Ca2+/calmodulin. The Ca2(+)-dependent regulation of the spectrin/protein 4.1/calmodulin/actin interaction is discussed.  相似文献   

13.
《Biorheology》1997,34(3):235-247
Low-shear viscometry is one of the methods commonly used to estimate the degree of red blood cell (RBC) aggregation in various bloods and RBC suspensions. However, it has been previously shown that alterations in RBC morphology and mechanical behavior can affect the low-shear apparent viscosity of RBC suspensions; RBC aggregation is also sensitive to these cellular factors. This study used heat treatment (48°C, 5 min), glutaraldehyde (0.005–0.02%) and hydrogen peroxide (1 mM) to modify cell geometry and deformability. Red blood cell aggregation was assessed via a Myrenne Aggregometer (“M” and “Ml” indexes), RBC suspension viscosity was measured using a Contraves LS-30 viscometer, and RBC shape response to fluid shear stresses (i.e., deformability) was determined by ektacytometry (LORCA system). Our results indicate that low-shear apparent viscosity and related indexes may not always reflect changes of RBC aggregation if cellular properties are altered: for situations where RBC aggregation has been only moderately affected, cellular mechanical factors may be the major determinant of low-shear viscosity. These findings thus imply that in situations which may be associated alterations of RBC geometry and/or deformability, low-shear viscometry should not be the sole measurement technique used to assess RBC aggregation.  相似文献   

14.
Effect of plasma membranes of murine fibroblasts cultivated in suspension on actin polymerization was studied. Using low shear viscometry of actin-membrane mixtures together with the number of extractions of membranes with actin depolymerizing buffers it was found that at least two polypeptides 220 and 94 kDa may be involved into the actin filaments-plasma membrane interaction.  相似文献   

15.
The bundle of filaments within microvilli of intestinal epithelial cells contains five major proteins including actin, calmodulin, and subunits of 105-, 95-, and 70-kdaltons. It has been previously shown (Howe, C. L., M. S. Mooseker, and T. A. Graves. 1980. Brush-border calmodulin: a major component of the isolated microvillus core. J. Cell Biol. 85: 916-923) that the addition of Ca++ (> 10(-6) M) to microvillus cores causes a rapid, drastic, but at least partially reversible disruption of this actin filament bundle. High-speed centrifugation of microvillus cores treated with Ca++ indicates that several core proteins are solubilized, including 30-50% of the actin and calmodulin, along with much of the 95- and 70-kdalton subunits. Gel filtration of such Ca++ extracts in the presence and absence of Ca++ indicates that microvillar actin "solated" by Ca++ is in an oligomeric state probably complexed with the 95-kdalton subunit. Removal of Ca++ results in the reassembly of F-actin, probably still complexed with 95- kdalton subunit, as determined by gel filtration, cosedimentation, viscometry, and electron microscopy. The 95-kdalton subunit (95K) was purified from Ca++ extracts by DEAE-Sephadex chromatography and its interaction with actin characterized by viscometry, cosedimentation, and EM in the presence and absence of Ca++. In the presence, but not absence, of Ca++, 95K inhibits actin assembly (50% inhibition at 1:50- 60 95K to actin) and also reduces the viscosity of F-actin solutions. Similarly, sedimentation of actin is inhibited by 95K, but a small, presumably oligomeric actin- 95K complex formed in the presence of Ca++ is pelletable after long-term centrifugation. In the absence of Ca++, 95K cosediments with F-actin. EM of 95K-actin mixtures reveals that 95K "breaks" actin into small, filamentous fragments in the presence of Ca++. Reassembly of filaments occurs once Ca++ is removed. In the absence of Ca++, 95K has no effect on filament structure and, at relatively high ratios (1:2-6) of 95K to actin, this core protein will aggregate actin filaments into bundles.  相似文献   

16.
A new Mr 43,000 tropomyosin-binding protein (TMBP) has been identified in erythrocyte membranes by binding of 125I-labeled Bolton-Hunter tropomyosin to nitrocellulose blots of membrane proteins separated by sodium dodecyl sulfate-gel electrophoresis. This protein is not actin, because 125I-tropomyosin does not bind to purified actin on blots. Binding of 125I-tropomyosin to this protein is specific because it is inhibited by excess unlabeled tropomyosin but not by F-actin or muscle troponins. This protein has been purified to 95% homogeneity from a 1 M Tris extract of tropomyosin-depleted erythrocyte membranes by DEAE-cellulose and hydroxylapatite chromatography, followed by gel filtration on Ultrogel AcA 44. The purified protein has a Stokes radius of 3.9 nm and a sedimentation coefficient of 2.8 S, corresponding to a native molecular weight of 43,000. Binding of 125I-tropomyosin to the purified TMBP saturates at one tropomyosin molecule (Mr 60,000) to two Mr 43,000 TMBPs, with an affinity of about 5 X 10(-7) M. The TMBP is associated with the membrane skeleton after extraction of membranes with the non-ionic detergent, Triton X-100, and is present with respect to tropomyosin at a ratio of about one for every two tropomyosin molecules. Because there is enough tropomyosin for two tropomyosin molecules to be associated with each of the short actin filaments in the membrane skeleton, the erythrocyte membrane TMBP, together with tropomyosin, could function to restrict the number of spectrin molecules attached to each of the short actin filaments and thus specify the hexagonal symmetry of the spectrin-actin lattice. Alternatively, this TMBP could be homologous to one of the muscle troponins and might function with tropomyosin to regulate erythrocyte actomyosin-ATPase activity and influence erythrocyte shape.  相似文献   

17.
The effects of phosphatidyl-L-serine (PS) and/or vinculin on actin polymerization are examined by spectrophotometry, viscometry and electrophoresis. Actin polymerization is inhibited by PS alone and stimulated by PS and vinculin. The results suggest that actin does not directly adhere to cell membrane and that vinculin is a protein which is involved in structures connecting actin microfilaments to cell membranes.  相似文献   

18.
Actin-binding proteins were assayed in various tissues using an 125I-actin overlay procedure. Four major G actin-binding proteins of 90000, 65000, 58000 and 40000 Mr have been identified. The 90K protein is present in all tissues and binds labelled actin in a calcium-sensitive manner with binding increasing 3-4-fold in the presence of Ca2+. The distribution of the 58K and 65K protein which are not Ca2+-sensitive was more variable. These proteins were present in different ratios in different tissues. 125I-actin binding to all four actin-binding proteins is specific and can be displaced by preincubation of the gels with unlabelled actin. The interaction of actin with these proteins does not appear to involve ionic forces, since binding is not diminished by varying the salt concentration. Skeletal muscle glycolytic enzymes, the lens crystallins and the histones also bind 125I-actin. This binding cannot be displaced by preincubation with unlabelled actin and is presumably non-specific. The calcium sensitivity of two highly purified actin-binding proteins, the 90K human platelet protein and villin was compared using 125I-actin. The platelet 90K protein binds actin at less than 10(-7) M free calcium, but detectable binding to villin does not occur below 10(-6) M free calcium. The ubiquity of these actin-binding proteins is clear and we conclude that the calcium-sensitive 90K actin-binding protein in all of these tissues is the same as the platelet protein.  相似文献   

19.
MAP2 (microtubule-associated protein 2) and tau factor are calmodulin-binding and actin filament-interacting proteins, respectively. We have examined the effect of Ca2+ and calmodulin on MAP-induced actin gelation by the low-shear falling-ball method, the high-speed centrifugation method, and electron microscopy using negative staining. Each MAP crosslinks actin filaments to increase the apparent viscosities and finally to form gels. Calmodulin inhibited MAP2- and tau factor-induced actin gelation (MAP2- and tau factor-actin interaction) only in the presence of Ca2+, but not in its absence. There were no differences in actin filament crosslinking activity of respective MAPs with or without Ca2+. MAP2 was not coprecipitated with F-actin only in the presence of Ca2+ and calmodulin determined by the high-speed centrifugation method. But MAP2 was found to bind to F-actin under any other conditions examined. In contrast, the tau factor-actin filament interaction could only be detected by the low-shear viscosity, but not by the high-speed centrifugation method. MAP2 and tau factor aggregated to form actin bundles as shown by electron microscopy. MAP2- or tau factor-induced bundle formation of actin filaments was inhibited only in the presence of Ca2+ and calmodulin, but not in the presence or absence of Ca2+. In conclusion, the interaction of MAP2- and tau factor-actin filaments is regulated by Ca2+ and calmodulin in a flip-flop switch.  相似文献   

20.
The effects of antioxidants (3-hydroxypyridines, 5-hydroxypyrimidines, hindered phenols) on platelet aggregation were studied. All the compounds under study possessed low anti-aggregation activity against indometacin-sensitive aggregation (activation with arachidonic acid, 50 M). Half-maximal inhibition of aggregation was achieved at a concentration similar to that of the compounds used (10(-3) M in cases of indomethacin-insensitive aggregation, platelet activation by thrombine 1.5 mu/ml and Ca2+-ionophore A23187 1.5 g/ml). 4-methyl-2.6-ditretbutyl phenol (BHT) in the concentration range of 10(-5)-4 X 10(-5) M inhibited and in the concentration range of 4 X 10(-5)-10(-4) M activated indomethacin-sensitive aggregation. The latter effect was not observed in the absence of Ca2+ ions in the incubation medium. It is concluded that the effects of the antioxidants studied on platelet aggregation were due to their non-specific action on platelet membranes.  相似文献   

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