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1.
The epithelial derived cell lines PtK2 and HeLa were characterized by double immunofluorescence microscopy using purified antibodies against vimentin and prekeratin. The results show that both cell types express simultaneously two immunologically distinct intermediate-sized filaments. Use of colcemid-treated cells confirms that the vimentin fibers and not the keratin-related fibers are rearranged into coils around the nucleus. In some cells staining of fibrous fragments is observed, which are perhaps involved in the synthesis or breakdown of this class of filaments. The concept that growing cells derived from differentiated cell types express not only the intermediate-sized filament system typical of the differentiated cell type but in addition contain intermediate-sized filaments of the vimentin type is discussed.  相似文献   

2.
Certain epithelial cells in culture such as the established rat kangaroo cell lines PtK1 and PtK2, mammary gland epithelial cells from cow udder, and human kidney epithelial cells are characterized by a system of wavy, branching and aggregating arrays of filaments of diameters 6–11 nm which are often desmosome-associated. Antibodies raised in guinea pigs against purified bovine prekeratin specifically decorate this system of tonofilament bundles in indirect immunofluorescence microscopy. In agreement with these results we show that preparations of these filaments isolated from such epithelial cells contain some proteins similar in polypeptide size and behaviour to components of bovine hoof prekeratin and to bovine muzzle tonofilaments. We therefore conclude that several epithelial cells which are capable of continuous division in culture continuously produce large, balanced amounts of prekeratin-like material which is assembled in tonofilament-like structures.  相似文献   

3.
Myoepithelial cells from mammary glands, the modified sweat glands of bovine muzzle, and salivary glands have been studied by electron microscopy and by immunofluorescence microscopy in frozen sections in an attempt to further characterize the type of intermediate-sized filaments present in these cells. Electron microscopy has shown that all myoepithelial cells contain extensive meshworks of intermediate-sized (7--11-nm) filaments, many of which are anchored at typical desmosomes or hemidesmosomes. The intermediate-sized filaments are also intimately associated with masses of contractile elements, identified as bundles of typical 5--6-nm microfilaments and with characteristically spaced dense bodies. This organization resembles that described for various smooth muscle cells. In immunofluorescence microscopy, using antibodies specific for the various classes of intermediate-sized filaments, the myoepithelial cells are strongly decorated by antibodies to prekeratin. They are not specifically stained by antibodies to vimentin, which stain mesenchymal cells, nor by antibodies to chick gizzard desmin, which decorate fibrils in smooth muscle Z bands and intercalated disks in skeletal and cardiac muscle of mammals. Myoepithelial cells are also strongly stained by antibodies to actin. The observations show (a) that the epithelial character, as indicated by the presence of intermediate-sized filaments of the prekeratin type, is maintained in the differentiated contractile myoepithelial cell, and (b) that desmin and desmin-containing filaments are not generally associated with musclelike cell specialization for contraction but are specific to myogenic differentiation. The data also suggest that in myoepithelial cells prekeratin filaments are arranged--and might function--in a manner similar to the desmin filaments in smooth muscle cells.  相似文献   

4.
When cultured cells of the rat kangaroo cell line PtK2 grown on plastic or glass surfaces are lysed and extracted with combinations of low and high salt buffers and the non-ionic detergent Triton X-100 cytoskeletal preparations are obtained that show an enrichment of 6 to 11 nm thick filaments. The arrays of these filaments have been examined by various light and electron microscopic techniques, including ultrathin sectioning, whole mount transmission electron microscopy, negative staining, and indirect immunofluorescence microscopy. In addition, 6 to 11 nm filaments isolated from these cells with similar extraction procedures and with centrifugation techniques have been examined by electron microscopy. The arrays of these isolated intermediate-sized filaments, their ultrastructure and their specific decoration by certain antibodies present in normal rabbit sera as well as by guinea pig antibodies against purified bovine prekeratin is demonstrated. When preparations enriched in these intermediate-sized filaments are examined by SDS-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis a corresponding enrichment of three polypeptide bands with apparent molecular weights of about 45 000, 52 000 and 58 000 (the latter component sometimes appears split into two bands) is observed, besides some residual actin and a few high molecular weight bands. The morphology of the isolated filaments, their immunological reaction with antibodies decorating prekeratin-containing structures, and the sizes of their constitutive polypeptides suggest that these filaments are closely related to prekeratin-containing filaments observed in a variety of epithelial cells.  相似文献   

5.
Intermediate-sized filaments of human endothelial cells.   总被引:15,自引:0,他引:15       下载免费PDF全文
Human endothelial cells prepared from unbilical cords are characterized in parallel by electron microscopy and indirect immunofluorescence microscopy using specific antibodies against different classes of intermediate-sized filaments. The strongly developed, loose bundles of intermediate-sized filaments typically found in these cells are not decorated by antibodies against prekeratin or antibodies against smooth muscle desmin. They are, however, strongly decorated by antibodies directed against murine "vimentin," i.e., the 57,000 mol wt polypeptide which is the major protein of the intermediate-sized filaments predominant in various cells of mesenchymal origin. Cytoskeletal preparations greatly enriched in intermediate-sized filaments show the enrichment of a polypeptide band comigrating with murine vimentin. This shows that the intermediate-sized filaments that are abundant in human endothelial cells are predominantly of the vimentin type and can be demonstrated by their cross-reaction with the vimentin of rodents. These data also strengthen the evidence for several subclasses of intermediate-sized filaments, which can be distinguished by immunological procedures.  相似文献   

6.
The organization of intermediate-sized filaments (IF) of the cytokeratin type was studied in cultures of PtK2 cells in which typical IF structures are maintained during mitosis, using a monoclonal antibody (KG 8.13). This antibody reacts, in immunoblotting experiments, with the larger of the two major cytokeratin polypeptides present in these cells but, using standard immunofluorescence microscopy procedures, does not react with the cytokeratin filaments abundant in interphase cells, in striking contrast to various antisera and other monoclonal cytokeratin antibodies. In the same cell cultures, however, the antibody does react with cytokeratin filaments of mitotic and early postmitotic cells. The specific reaction with cytokeratin filaments of mitotic cells only is due to the exposure of the specific immunologic determinant in mitosis and its masking in interphase cells. Treatment of interphase cells with both Triton X-100 as well as with methanol and acetone alters the cytokeratin filaments and allows them to react with this monoclonal antibody. A similar unmasking was noted after treatment with buffer containing 2 M urea or low concentrations of trypsin. We conclude that the organization of cytokeratin, albeit still arranged in typical IF, is altered during mitosis of PtK2 cells.  相似文献   

7.
The intermediate-sized filaments present in epidermal keratinocytes derived from mouse skin and in an established cell line (HEL) derived from spontaneous transformation of murine keratinocytes grown in vitro, have been examined by immunofluorescence microscopy, using antibodies directed against subunit proteins of different classes of intermediate-sized filaments, as well as by electron microscopy and gel electrophoresis of cytoskeletal preparations highly enriched in intermediate-sized filaments. The keratinocytes derived from neonatal skin, which are capable of only limited replication in vitro, show only a single type of intermediate-sized filaments, i.e., the tonofibril-like arrays of filaments containing prekeratin. HEL cells, which proliferate indefinitely in vitro, retain the tonofilament-like structures typical of differentiated epidermal cells but in addition display intermediate-sized filaments of the vimentin type, i.e., the filament system typically found in mesenchymal and mesenchyme-derived cells. We discuss the possibility that (i) the advent of vimentin-type filaments in epidermal cells in culture is related either to the transformed state or the in vitro growth conditions as such and (ii) other differentiated epithelial cells proliferating in vitro may have more than one system of intermediate-sized filaments.  相似文献   

8.
The intermediate-sized filaments present in epidermal keratinocytes derived from mouse skin and in an established cell line (HEL) derived from spontaneous transformation of murine keratinocytes grown in vitro, have been examined by immunofluorescence microscopy, using antibodies directed against subunit proteins of different classes of intermediate-sized filaments, as well as by electron microscopy and gel electrophoresis of cytoskeletal preparations highly enriched in intermediate-sized filaments. The keratinocytes derived from neonatal skin, which are capable of only limited replication in vitro, show only a single type of intermediate-sized filaments, i.e., the tonofibril-like arrays of filaments containing prekeratin. HEL cells, which proliferate indefinitely in vitro, retain the tonofilament-like structures typical of differentiated epidermal cells but in addition display intermediate-sized filaments of the vimentin type, i.e., the filament system typically found in mesenchymal and mesenchyme-derived cells. We discuss the possibility that (i) the advent of vimentin-type filaments in epidermal cells in culture is related either to the transformed state or the in vitro growth conditions as such and (ii) other differentiated epithelial cells proliferating in vitro may have more than one system of intermediate-sized filaments.  相似文献   

9.
Specific antibodies against vimentin, the major constitutive protein of intermediate-sized filaments present in cytoskeletons of mesenchymal cells of vertebrates, have been raised in guinea pigs. Antibodies to murine and human vimentin are of three types. The first two types produced against murine vimentin show an exclusive or preferential reaction with vimentin filaments of rodents. The third type raised against murine or human vimentin reacts with intermediate-sized filaments in species as diverse as mammals, birds and amphibia. This latter type is used here to show, both by immunoreplica techniques and by immunofluorescence microscopy, that almost all vertebrate cells growing in culture contain filaments of the vimentin type which are usually present in extended arrays. These immunological findings also suggest that the vimentin molecule contains both sequences conserved during evolution and regions different in different vertebrate species. The cells studied include not only cells of mesenchymal origin, but also cells derived from epithelia, in which it is now possible to demonstrate extensive arrays of vimentin filaments in interphase cells as well as intermediate-sized filaments of the prekeratin type. The data are consistent with the idea that most cells grown in culture contain intermediate-sized filaments of the vimentin type, irrespective of the state of differentiation of the cells from which they are derived.  相似文献   

10.
The cytoplasmic structure of Sertoli cells of rat testes has been studied by electron microscopy of ultrathin sections. Sertoli cells contain numerous intermediate-sized (7-11 nm) filaments which form a meshwork extending throughout the whole cytoplasm. Often the frequency of such filaments appears especially high in juxtanuclear and cortical regions, including the apical recesses containing the spermatids. Examination of frozen sections of testes by indirect immunofluorescence microscopy using guinea pig antibodies to prekeratin and vimentin has shown the absence of intermediate-sized filaments of the cytokeratin type in all cells of the testes but the presence of filaments of the vimentin type in Sertoli cells as well as in cells of the interstitial space. These results show that the intermediate-sized filaments, abundant in Sertoli cells, are of the vimentin type. In addition we conclude that the "germ epithelium" differs from others true epithelia by the absence of cytokeratin filaments and typical desmosomes and, in Sertoli cells, the presence of vimentin filaments, suggestive of a mesenchymal character or derivation.  相似文献   

11.
Hepatocytes of mammalian liver are known to contain intermediate-sized filaments of tonofilament morphology. Unlike many other epithelial cells, including cultured hepatocytes and hepatoma cells, hepatocytes present in normal liver tissue have been reported not to react, in significant intensity, with various preparations of antibodies to human and bovine epidermal prekeratin [2,6]. We have therefore examined, by biochemical and immunological methods, the cytoskeletal composition of hepatocytes grown in the body.Cytoskeletal preparations from hepatocytes of mouse and rat liver tissue resistant to high salt buffer and Triton X-100 are enriched in tangles of intermediate filaments and contain, besides some residual microfilamentous actin, a characteristic set of polypeptides. One- and two-dimensional gel electrophoresis reveals the presence of two major cytokeratin components, which appear as ‘pairs’ of isoelectric variants (component A, Mr 55 000, apparent pI values, 6.40 and 6.45; component D, Mr 49000, apparent pI values 5.43 and 5.38), and five minor components (Mr range from 41000 to 53 000), most of them also as ‘pairs’ of polypeptides slightly different in isoelectric pH value. These polypeptide patterns are very similar in mouse and rat liver although some minor but significant differences have been noted between the two species. The polypeptide patterns of liver cytoskeletons are also similar to—but clearly not identical with—the cytoskeletal protein patterns observed in other epithelial tissues and cells, including various lines of cultured rat hepatocytes and hepatoma cells.Guinea pig antibodies raised against individual cytokeratin proteins of mouse liver and against certain prekeratin polypeptides present in desmosome-attached tonofilaments of bovine muzzle are described which differ from previously described prekeratin antibodies. These prekeratin antibodies not only react with filament bundles of the prekeratin type present in many cultured epithelial cells (e.g. murine HEL, human HeLa, rat kangaroo PtK2) and various epithelial tissues, but also allow the detection of the cytokeratin components present in parenchymal cells of liver and pancreas of various species, man included. Immunofluorescence microscopy on frozen sections of liver using these antibodies reveals a novel structure, i.e. a three-dimensional filament meshwork extending throughout the whole cytoplasm of the hepatocyte, with higher intensity of staining in pericanalicular regions.The results show that parenchymal cells of normal liver and pancreas contain filaments of the cytokeratin type that are related to but not identical with epidermal prekeratin. The hepatocyte filaments appear to be different from prekeratin-type filaments present in epidermis and several other epithelial cells, both in some antigenic determinants exposed and in polypeptide composition. Our findings support the concept of the existence of a family of intermediate filament proteins, cytokeratins, containing many different polypeptides that are expressed in different epithelial cells in certain characteristic subsets in a cell type-specific mode.  相似文献   

12.
Proteins of contractile and cytoskeletal elements have been studied in bovine lens-forming cells growing in culture as well as in bovine and murine lenses grown in situ by immunofluorescence microscopy using antibodies to the following proteins: actin, myosin, tropomyosin, α-actinin, tubulin, prekeratin, vimentin, and desmin. Lens-forming cells contain actin, myosin, tropomyosin, and α-actinin which in cells grown in culture are enriched in typical cable-like structures, i.e. microfilament bundles. Antibodies to tubulin stain normal, predominantly radial arrays of microtubules. In the epithelioid lens-forming cells of both monolayer cultures grown in vitro and lens tissue grown in situ intermediate-sized filaments of the vimentin type are abundant, whereas filaments containing prekeratin-like proteins (‘cytokeratins’) and desmin filaments have not been found. The absence of cytokeratin proteins observed by immunological methods is supported by gel electrophoretic analyses of cytoskeletal proteins, which show the prominence of vimentin and the absence of detectable amounts of cytokeratins and desmin. This also correlates with electron microscopic observations that typical desmosomes and tonofilament bundles are absent in lens-forming cells, as opposed to a high density of vimentin filaments. Our observations show that the epithelioid lens-forming cells have normal arrays of (i) microfilament bundles containing proteins of contractile structures; (ii) microtubules; and (iii) vimentin filaments, but differ from most true epithelial cells by the absence of cytokeratins, tonofilaments and typical desmosomes. The question of their relationship to other epithelial tissues is discussed in relation to lens differentiation during embryogenesis. We conclude that the lens-forming cells either represent an example of cell differentiation of non-epithelial cells to epithelioid morphology, or represent a special pathway of epithelial differentiation characterized by the absence of cytokeratin filaments and desmosomes. Thus two classes of tissue with epithelia-like morphology can be distinguished: those epithelia which contain desmosomes and cytokeratin filaments and those epithelioid tissues which do not contain these structures but are rich in vimentin filaments (lens cells, germ epithelium of testis, endothelium).  相似文献   

13.
Summary Antibodies against intermediate-sized filaments, of the prekeratin or vimentin type, were used to investigate the presence of these filaments by indirect immunofluorescence microscopy in cultured and non-cultured amniotic fluid cells, in frozen sections of the placenta and in isolated cells of the amniotic epithelium. Two major classes of cells can be cultured from amniotic fluids, namely cells of epithelial origin containing filaments of the prekeratin type and cells of different origin which contain filaments of the vimentin type but are negative when tested with antibodies to epidermal prekeratin. The presence of prekeratin type filaments correlates with the morphology of colonies of amniotic fluid cell cultures in vitro as classified by Hoehn et al. (1974). Cells of E-type colonies are shown to be of epithelial origin. In contrast our data indicate a different origin of almost all cells of F-type colonies and of the large majority of cells of AF-type colonies. Cells of epithelial origin and positively stained with antibodies to epidermal prekeratin are occasionally scattered in F-type colonies and in variable percentages (up to 30%) in AF-type colonies. Surprisingly, cryostat sections of the amniotic epithelium and isolated groups of amniotic cells showed positive reactions with both antibodies to vimentin and prekeratin. The possibility that amniotic cells may be different from other epithelial cells in that they contain both types of filaments simultaneously already in situ is presently under investigation.Part of this work is included in the doctoral thesis of Irmgard Treiss to be submitted to the Faculty of Medicine of the University of Heidelberg  相似文献   

14.
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   

15.
Immunofluorescence microscopy has been used to follow the rearrangement of intermediate-sized filaments during mitosis in rat kangaroo PtK2 cells. These epithelial cells express two different intermediate filament systems: the keratin-related tonofilament-like arrays typical of epithelial cells, and the vimentin-type filaments characteristic of mesenchymal cells in vivo, and of many established cell lines. The two filament systems do not appear to depolymerize extensively during mitosis, but show differences in their organization and display which may indicate different functions. The most striking rearrangements have been seen with the vimentin filaments, and in particular in prometaphase a transient cage-like structure of vimentin fibers surrounding the developing spindle is formed. In metaphase, this cage disappears, and vimentin fibers are found in an elliptical band surrounding the chromosomes and the interzone. In telophase, these bands separate, usually breaking first on the side closest to where the cleavage furrow has started to form. Double label experiments with tubulin and vimentin antibodies have indicated that the microtubules and the chromosomes are contained within the thick crescents of vimentin filaments and suggest that the vimentin intermediate filaments may be involved in the orientation of the spindle and/or the chromosomes during mitosis. In contrast, extensive arrays of cytokeratin filaments are present throughout mitosis on the substrate-attached side of the cell and also in other cellular areas, although they are usually not present in the spindle region. Thus the cytokeratin filaments probably continue to play a cytoskeletal role during mitosis and may be responsible for the flat shape that certain epithelial cells such as PtK2 cells continue to maintain during mitosis.  相似文献   

16.
The occurrence of intermediate-sized filaments containing prekeratin-like proteins ('cytokeratins') has been examined in various organs of rat and cow by electron microscopy and by immunofluorescence microscopy on frozen sections using antibodies to defined constitutive proteins of various types of intermediate-sized filaments (prekeratin, vimentin, desmin). Positive cytokeratin reaction and tonofilament-like structures have been observed in the following epithelia: epidermis; ductal, secretory, and myoepithelial cells of sweat glands; mammary gland duct; myoepithelial cells of lactating mammary gland; milk secreting cells of cow; ductal, secretory, and myoepithelial cells of various salivary glands; tongue mucosa; bile duct; excretory duct of pancreas; intestinal mucosa; urothelium; trachea; bronchi; thymus reticulum, including Hassall corpuscles; mesothelium; uterus; and ciliated cells of oviduct. None of the epithelial cells mentioned has shown significant reaction with antibodies to vimentin, the major component of the type of intermediate-sized filaments predominant in mesenchymal cells. The widespread, if not general occurrence of cytokeratin filaments in epithelial cells is emphasized, and it is proposed to use this specific structure as a criterion for true epithelial character or origin.  相似文献   

17.
The cytoskeleton of the rat cultured cell line PC12, which is widely used in cell biology as a model system for neuron-like differentiation, displays an unusual combination of intermediate-sized filaments (IFs). As determined by electron microscopy, immunolocalization, and biochemical analyses, these cells contain, in addition to neurofilaments, an extended meshwork of bundles of cytokeratin IFs comprising cytokeratins A and D, equivalent to human cytokeratin polypeptides Nos. 8 and 18, irrespective of whether they are grown in the presence or absence of nerve growth factor. The two IF systems differ in their fibrillar arrays, the neurofilaments being concentrated in perinuclear aggregates similar to those found in certain neuroendocrine tumors of epithelial origin. We conclude that PC12 cells permanently co-express IFs of both the epithelial and the neuronal type and thus present an IF combination different from those of adrenal medulla cells and pheochromocytomas, i.e., the putative cells of origin of the line PC12. The IF cytoskeleton of PC12 cells resembles that of various neuroendocrine tumors derived from epithelial cells. The results show that the development of a number of typical neuronal differentiation features is compatible with the existence of an epithelial type IF cytoskeleton, i.e., cytokeratins. The implications of these findings concerning the validity of the PC12 cell line as a model for neuronal differentiation and possible explanations of the origin of cells with this type of IF co-expression are discussed.  相似文献   

18.
A procedure is described which allows the examination of the cytoskeleton of a single PtK2 cell first by immunofluorescence and then by electron microscopy after staining with uranyl acetate. The immunofluorescent patterns of these detergent resistant cytoskeletons elicited with various monospecific antibodies closely resemble the patterns found in whole cells. Comparison of the immunofluorescence and electron micrographs directly supports the previous assignments of actin, myosin, filamin, α-actinin and tropomyosin as proteins associated with microfilament bundles in non-muscle cells. Actin is also found associated with a fine lattice-like structure present both in the ruffles and lying above the microfilament bundles in the cell body. The tonofilament bundles present in PtK2 cytoskeletons are not decorated by antibodies directed against the proteins associated with microfilament bundles. Antibodies directed against tonofilaments decorate specifically this system and not the microfilament bundles.  相似文献   

19.
Indirect immunofluorescent labelling of different epithelial cell lines for intermediate filaments of the prekeratin type revealed prominent changes in the organization of prekeratin during mitosis. In three out of four cell lines tested (Henle-407, A-431 and HeLa cells) the filamentous prekeratin networks disappeared at the initiation of mitosis and the immunofluorescent labelling was concentrated in small cytoplasmic bodies. This observation was obtained with both polyspecific rabbit anti-bovine prekeratin antibodies and with monospecific antibodies produced by mouse hybridomas. In a fourth cell line, PtK2, prekeratin filaments were retained throughout mitosis, mainly in the mitotic poles, whereas the central areas of the cells were apparently devoid of filaments. The addition of colchicine to the different cultured cells induced alterations in the organization of prekeratin filaments which were usually manifested by the formation of thicker filament bundles. It did not induce the formation of the prekeratin-cytoplasmic bodies in interphase cells. However, upon prolonged incubation in the presence of colchicine, there was an increase in the number of mitotically arrested cells and a parallel increase in the number of cells containing prekeratin cytoplasmic bodies. It is thus proposed that the state of organization of prekeratin in these cells is cell-cycle-dependent and may be modulated to permit radical shape changes as those occurring during mitosis.  相似文献   

20.
Keratin intermediate filaments (IF) are obligate heteropolymers containing equal amounts of type I and type II keratin. We have previously shown that microinjected biotinylated type I keratin is rapidly incorporated into endogenous bundles of keratin IF (tonofilaments) of PtK2 cells. In this study we show that the earliest steps in the assembly of keratin subunits into tonofilaments involve the extremely rapid formation of discrete aggregates of microinjected keratin. These are seen as fluorescent spots containing both type I and type II keratins within 1 min post-injection as determined by double label immunofluorescence. These observations suggest that endogenous type II keratin subunits can be rapidly mobilized from their endogenous state to form complexes with the injected type I protein. Furthermore, confocal microscopy and immunogold electron microscopy suggest that the type I-type II keratin spots from in close association with the endogenous keratin IF network. When the biotinylated protein is injected at concentrations of 0.3-0.5 mg/ml, the organization of the endogenous network of tonofilaments remains undisturbed during incorporation into tonofilaments. However, microinjection of 1.5-2.0 mg/ml of biotinylated type I results in significant alterations in the organization and assembly state of the endogenous keratin IF network soon after microinjection. The results of this study are consistent with the existence of a state of equilibrium between keratin subunits and polymerized keratin IF in epithelial cells, and provide further proof that IF are dynamic elements of the cytoskeleton of mammalian cells.  相似文献   

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