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1.
Stereo-electron microscopy has been combined with indirect immunoperoxidase labelling to describe the three-dimensional organization of microfilaments and microtubules in spreading cells of a cultured cell line with fibroblastic morphology. Labelling was carried out after extraction of the cells with a non-ionic detergent in a buffer system allowing retention of many of the cytoskeletal elements. Preservation of the three-dimensional organization was ensured by critical point drying. The peroxidase reaction product is readily detectable in electron micrographs both at high and low magnification. Thus, visualization of the three-dimensional organization of the labelled cytoskeletal elements is possible at a magnification where entire cells or large parts of them can be examined in whole mounts. The microfilament system is shown to constitute a continuous, three-dimensional sheath enclosing the bulk of the cytoplasm and most of the microtubular system. In cytoskeletons labelled with actin antibodies, the unlabelled intermediate filaments (10 nm filaments) can be identified by their size and morphology. They constitute a network throughout the cytoplasm which is in part interwoven with the large actin cables located near the lower surface of the cell.  相似文献   

2.
T M Svitkina 《Tsitologiia》1989,31(12):1435-1440
Cytoskeleton organization of cultured normal epithelial cells (epithelium of newborn mouse kidney, mouse and rat hepatocytes) was studied using electron microscopy of platinum replicas. These cells in culture were firmly connected with each other and formed multicellular islands. Pseudopodial activity was observed only at the free edges of marginal cells of the islands. Cytoskeleton in the vicinity of such active edges included several structurally different zones. The most peripheral zone contained dense actin meshwork. More inner "sparse" zone contained loose actin filament network. Next zone in the same direction was the lamella proper. It contained individual microfilaments and their bundles or meshwork patches. Microtubules and intermediate filaments were also present in the lamella proper. The characteristic feature of the central (endoplasmic) region of the marginal cells of the islands was the presence of the submembranous microfilament sheath. Microfilaments in the sheath were densely packed. Individual fibers were visible along a significant distance. The inner cells in the epithelial islands had no zonal organization of the cytoskeleton. The endoplasmic microfilament sheath occupied the whole dorsal cell surface in these cells. Different epithelia studied here had some variations in the relative width of cytoskeletal zones. The organization of cytoskeleton in the epithelial cells has many features in common with that in fibroblasts. Possible mechanisms of establishment of the zonal cytoskeletal organization in both the cell types are discussed.  相似文献   

3.
The involvement of the cytoskeleton in symbiotic interactions such as arbuscular mycorrhizas has received little attention. In this paper, we examine the organization of actin in tobacco mycorrhizal roots and compare actin and tubulin patterns within arbuscule-containing cells.
Our results show drastic reorganization of microfilaments and microtubules upon fungal infection and how those new cytoskeletal patterns relate to the host cytoplasm rearrangement and the intracellular fungal structures. Whereas in uninfected cells a network of cortical and perinuclear actin filaments was observed, in infected cells actin filaments closely follow the fungal branches and envelop the whole arbuscule in a dense coating network. Microtubules are less closely connected with the fungus surface. They run across the whole arbuscule mass, linking branches to each other and to the host cell cortex and nucleus.
These major differences between the two cytoskeletal components are used to advance some suggestions concerning their contribution to structural functions in the plant–fungus interactions during the mycorrhizal symbiosis.  相似文献   

4.
Indirect immunofluorescent microscopy was used to study the distribution of eukaryotic elongation factor 2 (EF-2) in cultured mouse embryo fibroblasts. The perinuclear area (endoplasm) of all the cells and many straight cables running along the whole cytoplasm were stained with monospecific goat or rabbit antibodies to rat liver EF-2. Double staining of the cells with antibodies to EF-2 and rhodaminyl-phalloidin (used for actin microfilament detection) showed that EF-2 containing cables coincided with bundles of actin microfilaments. Not all actin microfilament bundles contained EF-2: sometimes EF-2 was not observed in bundles running along the cell edges or in actin microfilament junctions. Triton X-100 extracted most of EF-2 from the cells and no actin microfilament bundles were stained with the EF-2 antibodies in the Triton-extracted cells. Thus, in mouse embryo fibroblasts EF-2 can be found along actin microfilament bundles, but it is unlikely to be their integral protein.  相似文献   

5.
Actin microfilaments were localized in quail oviduct ciliated cells using decoration with myosin subfragment S1 and immunogold labeling. These polarized epithelial cells show a well developed cytoskeleton due to the presence of numerous cilia and microvilli at their apical pole. Most S1-decorated microfilaments extend from the microvilli downward towards the upper part of the ciliary striated rootlets with which they are connected. From the microvillous roots, a few microfilaments connect the proximal part of the basal body or the basal foot associated with the basal body. Microfilament polarity is shown by S1 arrowheads pointing away from the microvillous tip to the cell body. Furthermore, short microfilaments are attached to the plasma membrane at the anchoring sites of basal bodies and run along the basal body. The polarity of these short microfilaments is directed from the basal body anchoring fibers downward to the cytoplasm. At the cell periphery, microfilaments from microvillous roots and ciliary apparatus are connected with those of the circumferential actin belt which is associated with the apical zonula adhaerens. Together with the other cytoskeletal elements, the microfilaments increase ciliary anchorage and could be involved in the coordination of ciliary beating. Moreover, microvilli surrounding the cilia probably modify ciliary beating by offering resistance to cilium bending. The presence of microvilli could explain the fact that mainly the upper part of the cilia appanars to be involved in the axonemal bending in metazoan ciliated cells.  相似文献   

6.
The in vivo site of influenza virus infection is a polarized epithelium, and it is well established that the virus preferentially enters from the apical surface of polarized epithelial cells; however, many of the molecular events involved during the endocytosis of the virus into polarized epithelia remain unclear. Here we examined the role of actin microfilaments and the myosin VI motor protein during influenza entry into a panel of polarized and non-polarized cells. By treatment of cells with cytochalasin D and jasplakinolide, we show that influenza virus entry into all the polarized epithelial cells tested requires actin dynamics, with a specific role for the actin cytoskeleton in the process of virus internalization from the plasma membrane. In contrast, influenza could still could efficiently enter and infect all non-polarized cells tested after disruption or stabilization of the actin cytoskeleton. To examine the role of the actin motor protein, myosin VI, we expressed a dominant-negative construct in both polarized and non-polarized cells. Influenza virus infectivity in myosin VI tail mutant-transfected cells was significantly decreased in polarized epithelial cells, but not in non-polarized cells. As a whole, our data suggest indispensable roles of a dynamic actin cytoskeleton for influenza virus entry into polarized epithelial cells, a feature not shared with non-polarized cells.  相似文献   

7.
Cultured osteoblasts express three major types of cytoskeleton: actin microfilaments, microtubules, and intermediate filaments. The cytoskeletal network is thought to play an important role in the transmission and conversion of a mechanical stimulus into a biochemical response. To examine a role for the three different cytoskeletal networks in fluid shear stress-induced signaling in osteoblasts, we individually disrupted actin microfilaments, micro-tubules, and intermediate filaments in MC3T3-E1 osteoblasts with multiple pharmacological agents. We subjected these cells to 90 min of laminar fluid shear stress (10 dyn/cm(2)) and compared the PGE(2) and PGI(2) release and induction of cyclooxygenase-2 protein to control cells with intact cytoskeletons. Disruption of actin microfilaments, microtubules, or intermediate filaments in MC3T3-E1 cells did not prevent a significant fluid shear stress-induced release of PGE(2) or PGI(2). Furthermore, disruption of actin microfilaments or microtubules did not prevent a significant fluid shear stress-induced increase in cyclooxygenase-2 protein levels. Disruption of intermediate filaments with acrylamide did prevent the fluid shear stress-induced increase in cyclooxygenase-2 but also prevented a PGE(2)-induced increase in cyclooxygenase-2. Thus none of the three major cytoskeletal networks are required for fluid shear stress-induced prostaglandin release. Furthermore, although neither actin microfilaments nor microtubules are required for fluid shear stress-induced increase in cyclooxygenase-2 levels, the role of intermediate filaments in regulation of cyclooxygenase-2 expression is less clear.  相似文献   

8.
Microscopic studies were made on the localizations of three different cytoskeletal proteins, actin, vinculin and fibronectin, in the duodenum of developing chick embryos and chicks by an indirect immuno-fluorescent staining method with specific antibodies.
Topographical changes in the distributions of these three proteins seemed to be related to stages in morphogenesis of the duodenum. In early stages of embryonic development, findings suggested interaction between actin and vinculin in the apical region of epithelial cells and between actin and fibronectin in the basal region of these cells. From this stage, vinculin and fibronectin seemed to be of importance in determination and continuity of the polarity of the duodenal epithelium, and in control of the intracellular arrangement of actin. This relation between actin and vinculin seemed to continue throughout embryogenesis.
The main role of actin in epithelial cells seemed to change on day 12 from that of forming constricting bundles for morphogenesis of previllous ridges to that of microfilaments in the microvilli and the terminal web.  相似文献   

9.
Matrix-cytoskeletal interactions in the developing eye   总被引:5,自引:0,他引:5  
The embryonic avian corneal epithelium in vitro responds to extracellular matrix (ECM) molecules in either soluble or polymerized form by flattening its basal surface, organizing the basal cortical actin cytoskeleton, and stepping up its production of corneal stroma twofold. Embryonic corneal epithelia, like hepatocytes and mammary gland cells, seem to contain heparan sulfate proteoglycan (HSPG) in their plasmalemma, which may interact with actin on the one hand or underlying collagen on the other. Work on the corneal epithelium suggests that, in addition to HSPG, specific glycoprotein receptors for laminin and collagen exist in the basal plasmalemma and play the critical role in actually organizing the basal epithelial cytoskeleton. As yet, uncharacterized proteins may link such receptors to actin. We suggest that ECM-dependent organization of the cytoskeleton is responsible for ECM enhancement of corneal epithelial differentiation. Cell shape and exogenous ECM also affect mesenchymal cell differentiation. In the case of the corneal fibroblast migrating in collagen gels, an actin cortex present around the elongate cell seems to interact with myosin in the cytosol to bring about pseudopodial extension. Both microtubules and actin microfilaments are involved in fibroblast elongation in collagen gels. It follows from the rules presented in this review that the mesenchymal cell surface is quite different from the epithelial cell surface in its organization. Nevertheless, epithelial cell surface-ECM interaction can be modified in the embryo at particular times to permit predesignated epithelial-mesenchymal transformations, as for example at the primitive streak. Though basal surfaces of definitive, nonmalignant epithelia adhere rather strictly to the rules of epithelium-ECM interaction and do not invade underlying ECM, the environment can be manipulated in vitro to cause these epithelia to send out pseudopodia and give rise aberrantly to mesenchymal cells in collagen gels. Further study of this phenomenon should cast light on the manner in which epithelial and mesenchymal cells organize receptors for matrix molecules on their cell surfaces and develop appropriate cytoskeletal responses to the extracellular matrix.  相似文献   

10.
Summary Retinal pigmented epithelial cells of chicken have circumferential microfilament bundles (CMBs) at the zonula adherens region. Isolated CMBs are polygons filled with a meshwork composed primarily of intermediate filaments; they show three major components of 200000, 55000, and 42000 daltons in SDS-gel electrophoresis. Here we have characterized the 55000-dalton protein immunochemically and ultrastructurally. Immunoblotting and immunofluorescence microscopy have shown that the 55000-dalton protein is an intermediate filament protein, vimentin.Vimentin filaments changed their distribution during differentiation of pigmented epithelial cells in culture. The protein in the elongated cells showed a fibroblast-type pattern of intermediate filaments. During epithelium formation, the filaments were uniformly distributed and formed a finer meshwork at the apical level. In pigmented epithelial cells that differentiated and matured in culture, vimentin and actin exhibited their characteristic behavior after treatment with colcemid. In the central to basal region of the cell, intermediate filaments formed thick perinuclear bundles. In the apical region, however, intermediate filaments changed in organization from a nonpolarized meshwork to a polarized bundle-like structure. Simultaneously, new actin bundles were formed, running parallel to the intermediate filaments. This suggests that there is some interaction between microfilaments and intermediate filaments in the apical region of these cells.  相似文献   

11.
Indirect immunofluorescence microscopy has been used to detect cytoskeletal proteins, which allow a distinction between the two cell types present in the mouse blastocyst: i.e. the cells of the inner cell mass (ICM) and the outer trophoblastic cells. Antibodies against three classes of intermediate-sized filaments (cytokeratins, desmin and vimentin), as well as antibodies against actin and tubulin were studied. Antibodies against prekeratin stain the outer trophoblastic cells but not the ICM in agreement with the findings on adult tissues that cytokeratins are a marker for various epithelial cells. Interestingly, vimentin filaments typical of mesenchymal cells as well as of cells growing in culture seem to be absent in both cell types of the blastocyst. Thus, the cytokeratins of the trophoblastic cells seem to be the first intermediate-sized filaments expressed in embryogenesis. Antibodies to tubulin and actin show that microtubules and microfilaments are ubiquitous structures, although microfilaments have a noticeably different organization in the two cell types. In addition, since early embryogenic multipotential cells show close similarities to teratocarcinomic cells, a comparison is made between the cells of the blastocyst, embryonal carcinoma cells (EC cells) and an epithelial endodermal cell line (PYS2 cells) derived from EC cells. EC cells display vimentin filaments whereas PYS2 cells show both vimentin and cytokeratin filaments. The results emphasize the usefulness of antibodies specific for different classes of intermediate filaments in further embryological studies, and suggest that cells of the blastocyst and EC cells differ with respect to vimentin filaments.  相似文献   

12.
The overall coordination of cell structure and function that results in gene expression requires a spatial and temporal precision that would be unobtainable in the absence of structural order within the cell. Cells contain extensive and elaborate three-dimensional skeletal networks that form integral structural components of the plasma membrane, cytoplasm, and nucleus. These skeletal networks form a dynamic tissue matrix are composed of the nuclear matrix, cytoskeleton, and extracellular matrix. The tissue matrix is an interactive network which undergoes dynamic changes as cells move and change shape. Pathologists have long recognized cancer in pathologic specimens based on the altered morphology of tumor cells compared to their normal counterparts. The structural order of cells appears to be altered in transformed cells. This structural order is reflected in the altered morphology and motility observed in transformed cells compared to their normal counterparts, however, it is unclear whether the structural changes observed in cancer cells have any functional significance. We report here on the nature of the physical connections between the nucleus and cell periphery in nontransformed cells and demonstrate that the nucleus is dynamically coupled to the cell periphery via actin microfilaments. We also demonstrate that the dynamic coupling of the nucleus to the cell periphery via actin microfilaments is altered in Kirsten-ras transformed rat kidney epithelial cells. This loss of structure-function relationship may be an important factor in the process of cell transformation.  相似文献   

13.
Mechanical tension influences tissue morphogenesis and the synthetic, mitotic, and motile behavior of cells. To determine the effects of tension on epithelial motility and cytoskeletal organization, small, motile clusters of epidermal cells were artificially extended with a micromanipulated needle. Protrusive activity perpendicular to the axis of tension was dramatically suppressed. To determine the ultrastructural basis for this phenomenon, cells whose exact locomotive behavior was recorded cinemicrographically were examined by transmission electron microscopy. In untensed, forward-moving lamellar protrusions, microfilaments appear disorganized and anisotropically oriented. But in cytoplasm held under tension by micromanipulation or by the locomotive activity of other cells within the epithelium, microfilaments are aligned parallel to the tension. In non-spreading regions of the epithelial margin, microfilaments lie in tight bundles parallel to apparent lines of tension. Thus, it appears that tension causes alignment of microfilaments. In contrast, intermediate filaments are excluded from motile protrusions, being confined to the thicker, more central part of the cell. They roughly follow the contours of the cell, but are not aligned relative to tension even when microfilaments in the same cell are. This suggests that the organization of intermediate filaments is relatively resistant to physical distortion and the intermediate filaments may act as passive structural support within the cell. The alignment of microfilaments under tension suggests a mechanism by which tension suppresses protrusive activity: microfilaments aligned by forces exerted through filament-surface or filament-filament interconnections cannot reorient against such force and so cannot easily extend protrusions in directions not parallel to tension.  相似文献   

14.
Rhodamine-phalloidin staining of winter oilseed rape suspension cells revealed that the structure of actin cytoskeleton changes with the phase of cell growth. In small, 4-day-old cells, entering the exponential phase of growth, a dense and uniformly distributed cortical microfilament networks was seen. In six-day-old vacuolated cells, which reached the stationary phase of growth, the actin cytoskeleton was composed of thicker microfilament cables in irregular arrangements. In cells acclimated in cold for 7 days a dense, uniformly distributed and cortical microfilament network was still seen. The fine microfilament network was sensitive to extracellular freezing since the structures underwent depolymerization at −3 °C (in the presence of extracellular ice), both in non-acclimated and cold-acclimated cells. The thicker transvacuolar cables in cells of the stationary growth phase resisted freezing to −7 °C. Acclimation of suspensions at 2 °C resulted in slowing down growth of cells and in the increased freezing tolerance of cells as indicated by a decrease of LT50 from −11 °C to −17.5o or to −25 °C when determined 7 or 20 days after the beginning of the cold treatment, respectively. Freezing tolerance of non-acclimated cells decreased from −11 °C to −8 °C during subculture, showing a transient increase to −17 °C on the day 6. Results indicate that the arrangement of actin microfilaments and their sensitivity to freezing-induced depolymerization depends on the phase of cell growth rather than on cell acclimation status. Possible mechanisms involved in the freezing-induced depolymerization of actin microfilaments are discussed. This revised version was published online in June 2006 with corrections to the Cover Date.  相似文献   

15.
A. H. Valster  P. K. Hepler 《Protoplasma》1997,196(3-4):155-166
Summary The distribution of microtubules and actin microfilaments during caffeine-induced inhibition of cell plate formation has been studied in livingTradescantia stamen hair cells. Previous studies have shown that caffeine allows cell plate initiation but prevents its completion, resulting in binucleate cells. In the present study, confocal microscopy of cells microinjected with fluorescent brain tubulin or phalloidin, and cultured in the presence 5 mM caffeine, revealed that the initiation and early lateral expansion phase of the phragmoplast occur normally. However, caffeine completely inhibits the formation of the cytoskeletal torus which occurs in untreated cells during the late stages of cell plate and phragmoplast expansion. Caffeine further causes the disintegration of the incomplete cell plate. The results allow us to distinguish two phases in cell plate and phragmoplast growth: the initiation and early expansion phase, which is not affected by caffeine, and the late lateral expansion phase, which is completely inhibited in the presence of caffeine. Also in this study, the use of a high phalloidin concentration has revealed structural detail about the actin microfilaments involved in cell plate formation: microfilaments are observed that link the expanding edge of the phragmoplast with the cortical division site. In addition, cortical actin patches are observed within the actin depleted zone that might play a role in guidance of phragmoplast and cell plate expansion.  相似文献   

16.
In this study isolated cortical regions of both penetrated and nonpenetrated Syrian hamster eggs were examined in whole mounts and platinum replicas of detergent-extracted cortical patches. Two types of cytoskeletal organization were observed in the egg cortex: Loose networks (LN regions) with integrated localized dense networks (LDN regions). Decoration with heavy meromyosin and labeling with antiactin/protein G gold both indicate that the cortical cytoskeleton consists mainly of a LN of actin microfilaments and several types of nonactin filaments, whereas LDN regions dispersed within the LN were comprised of nonactin filaments. Cortical patches and replicas of eggs incubated with sperm for 10-15 min provide evidence that cortical microfilaments may be intimately associated with penetrating spermatozoa. The results of this investigation provide the first high resolution view of the cortical cytoskeletal domain of a mammalian egg and suggest that actin microfilaments might play a role in sperm penetration of the egg cortex.  相似文献   

17.
An abnormal increase in intestinal paracellular permeability may be an important pathogenic factor in various intestinal diseases. The intracellular factors and processes that regulate and cause alteration of intestinal paracellular permeability are not well understood. The purpose of this study was to examine some of the intracellular processes involved in cytoskeletal regulation of intestinal epithelial paracellular permeability using the filter-grown Caco-2 intestinal epithelial monolayers. Cytochalasin-b and colchicine were used to disrupt the cytoskeletal elements, actin microfilaments, and microtubules. Cytochalasin-b (5 m?g/ml) and colchicine (2 × 10?5M) at the doses used caused marked depolymerization and disruption of actin microfilaments and microtubules, respectively. Cytochalasin-b-induced disruption of actin microfilaments resulted in perturbation of tight junctions and desmosomes and an increase in Caco-2 monolayer paracellular permeability. The cytochalasin-b-induced disruption of actin microfilaments and subsequent changes in intercellular junctional complexes and paracellular permeability were not affected by inhibitors of protein synthesis (actinomycin-D or cycloheximide) or microtubule function (colchicine), but were inhibited by metabolic energy inhibitors (2,4-dinitrophenol or sodium azide). The cytochalasin-b-induced disturbance in Caco-2 actin microfilaments and intercellular junctional complexes and increase in paracellular permeability were rapidly reversed. The paracellular pathway “re-tightening” following cytochalasin-b removal was not affected by actinomycin-D, cycloheximide, or colchicine, but was inhibited by 2,4-dinitrophenol and sodium azide. The colchicine-induced disruption of microtubules did not have significant effect on actin microfilaments, intercellular junctions, or paracellular permeability. These findings suggest that cytochalasin-b-induced increase in Caco-2 monolayer paracellular permeability was due to actin microfilament mediated perturbation of intercellular junctional complexes. The re-tightening of paracellular pathways (following removal of cytochalasin-b) resulted from energy-mediated re-assembly of pre-existing actin microfilaments and intercellular junctional complexes. This re-closure process did not require protein synthesis or microtubule-mediated shuttling process. © 1995 Wiley-Liss, Inc.  相似文献   

18.
19.
Suicide behavior of target cells after binding with natural killer cells   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
G Arancia  M C Sirianni  W Malorni  S Soddu  P Crateri  C Fiorentini  F Aiuti  G Donelli 《Blood cells》1991,17(1):159-72; discussion 173-5
Human natural killer (NK) cell activity seems to be related to the integrity and function of the cytoskeletal apparatus. It has been hypothesized that microfilaments and microtubules play a pivotal role. In particular, the binding of the NK cell to the target cell requires microfilament integrity, and the lysis of bound targets seems to depend on microtubule assembly. We focused on the changes occurring in cytoskeletal elements and surface structures of NK cells and of target cells highly sensitive to NK activity (K562). Our observations, performed by fluorescence and scanning electron microscopy, besides confirming a rearrangement of the cytoskeletal apparatus in the effector cell, provide evidence that target cell cytoskeletal elements are involved in NK cell function. In K562 cells, after binding with NK cells, there is marginal rearrangement of actin and polarization of tubulin and vimentin in the contact regions, accompanied by modification of surface structures. These findings suggest that the target cell plays an active role in its own death by participating in the formation of an extended area of intimate contact with the killer cell. In addition, they lend credence to the surprising proposal that NK cells may induce a suicide mechanism in target cells.  相似文献   

20.
Summary Two new lines of human endometrial carcinoma (HEC) cells, one from an adenocarcinoma and one from a highly metastatic serous papillary carcinoma, were established in culture. Structural and morphologic properties of these cells at early passage were compared with those of cultured normal human endometrial epithelial (NHEE) cells. For these studies, cells were grown on a conventional plastic surface or on an extracellular matrix substrate (Matrigel), and examined by transmission electron microscopy and immunofluorescent light microscopy. The HEC cells appeared morphologically similar on plastic and Matrigel, whereas the NHEE cells showed significantly greater epithelial morphologic differentiation on Matrigel than on plastic. On extracellular matrix, the morphologic differences observed between HEC cells and NHEE cells were primarily of an architectural nature, which may be in part explained by differences between NHEE and HEC cells in the arrangement of actin microfilaments and cytokeratin intermediate filaments. Furthermore, HEC cells displayed extensive networks of vimentin intermediate filaments, which were absent from the NHEE cells. These observations support the hypothesis that architectural deregulation is a prominent feature of endometrial carcinoma, and that cytoskeletal alterations may uncouple HEC cell ultrastructural morphology from the influence of extracellular matrix. This research was supported by research grants CA31733, CA45727, and ES07017, from the National Institutes of Health, Bethesda, MD. G. P. S. is a Jefferson Pilot Fellow in Academic Medicine. A preliminary account of this work was presented at the 1988 U.S.-Canadian Academy of Pathology Annual Meeting (Lab. Inves. 58:12a, 1988).  相似文献   

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