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1.
The association of actin filaments with membranes is now recognized as an important parameter in the motility of nonmuscle cells. We have investigated the organization of one of the most extensive and highly ordered actin filament-membrane complexes in nature, the brush border of intestinal epithelial cells. Through the analysis of isolated, demembranated brush borders decorated with the myosin subfragment, S1, we have determined that all the microvillar actin filaments have the same polarity. The S1 arrowhead complexes point away from the site of attachment of actin filaments at the apical tip of the microvillar membrane. In addition to the end-on attachment of actin filaments at the tip of the microvillus, these filaments are also connected to the plasma membrane all along their lengths by periodic (33 nm) cross bridges. These bridges were best observed in isolated brush borders incubated in high concentrations of Mg++. Their visibility is attributed to the induction of actin paracrystals in the filament bundles of the microvilli. Finally, we present evidence for the presence of myosinlike filaments in the terminal web region of the brush border. A model for the functional organization of actin and myosin in the brush border is presented.  相似文献   

2.
The organization and polarity of actin filaments in neuronal growth cones was studied with negative stain and freeze-etch EM using a permeabilization protocol that caused little detectable change in morphology when cultured nerve growth cones were observed by video-enhanced differential interference contrast microscopy. The lamellipodial actin cytoskeleton was composed of two distinct subpopulations: a population of 40-100-nm-wide filament bundles radiated from the leading edge, and a second population of branching short filaments filled the volume between the dorsal and ventral membrane surfaces. Together, the two populations formed the three-dimensional structural network seen within expanding lamellipodia. Interaction of the actin filaments with the ventral membrane surface occurred along the length of the filaments via membrane associated proteins. The long bundled filament population was primarily involved in these interactions. The filament tips of either population appeared to interact with the membrane only at the leading edge; this interaction was mediated by a globular Triton-insoluble material. Actin filament polarity was determined by decoration with myosin S1 or heavy meromyosin. Previous reports have suggested that the polarity of the actin filaments in motile cells is uniform, with the barbed ends toward the leading edge. We observed that the actin filament polarity within growth cone lamellipodia is not uniform; although the predominant orientation was with the barbed end toward the leading edge (47-56%), 22-25% of the filaments had the opposite orientation with their pointed ends toward the leading edge, and 19-31% ran parallel to the leading edge. The two actin filament populations display distinct polarity profiles: the longer filaments appear to be oriented predominantly with their barbed ends toward the leading edge, whereas the short filaments appear to be randomly oriented. The different length, organization and polarity of the two filament populations suggest that they differ in stability and function. The population of bundled long filaments, which appeared to be more ventrally located and in contact with membrane proteins, may be more stable than the population of short branched filaments. The location, organization, and polarity of the long bundled filaments suggest that they may be necessary for the expansion of lamellipodia and for the production of tension mediated by receptors to substrate adhesion molecules.  相似文献   

3.
Summary The distribution and polarity of actin in sensory hair cells of the chinchilla cochlea has been determined by decoration of actin filaments with myosin sub fragment S1. Decorated actin filaments of the same polarity were present within the stereocilia above the cuticular plate. However the filaments in the rootlets and the thin filaments projecting laterally from the rootlets into the cuticular plate did not decorate with S1. Decorated actin filaments were present within the cuticular plate, and near the plasma-membrane filaments of opposite polarity were observed. In the cross-striated region at the base of the cuticular plate of inner hair cells, decorated filaments were present in the dense bands of the cross-striations but the thin filaments perpendicular to the dense bands were not decorated. These results are discussed with respect to the two mechanisms that have been suggested for actin-myosin mediated movement of the stereocilia of inner-ear sensory cells.  相似文献   

4.
The phototransductive microvilli of arthropod photoreceptors each contain an axial cytoskeleton. The present study shows that actin filaments are a component of this cytoskeleton in Drosophila. Firstly, actin was detected in the rhabdomeral microvilli and in the subrhabdomeral cytoplasm by immunogold labeling with antiactin. Secondly, the rhabdomeres were labeled with phalloidin, indicating the presence of filamentous actin. Finally, the actin filaments were decorated with myosin subfragment-1. The characteristic arrowhead complex formed by subfragment-1 decoration points towards the base of the microvilli, so that the fast growing end of each filament is at the distal end of the microvillus, where it is embedded in a detergent-resistant cap. Each microvillus contains more than one actin filament. Decorated filaments extend the entire length of each microvillus and project into the subrhabdomeral cytoplasm. This organization is comparable to that of the actin filaments in intestinal brush border microvilli. Similar observations were made with the photoreceptor microvilli of the crayfish, Procambarus. Our results provide an indication as to how any myosin that is associated with the rhabdomeres might function.  相似文献   

5.
Heavy meromyosin (HMM) decoration of actin filaments was used to detect the polarity of microfilaments in interphase and cleaving rat kangaroo (PtK2) cells. Ethanol at -20 degrees C was used to make the cells permeable to HMM followed by tannic acid-glutaraldehyde fixation for electron microscopy. Uniform polarity of actin filaments was observed at cell junctions and central attachment plaques with the HMM arrowheads always pointing away from the junction or plaque. Stress fibers were banded in appearance with their component microfilaments exhibiting both parallel and antiparallel orientation with respect to one another. Identical banding of microfilament bundles was also seen in cleavage furrows with the same variation in filament polarity as found in stress fibers. Similarly banded fibers were not seen outside the cleavage furrow in mitotic cells. By the time that a mid-body was present, the actin filaments in the cleavage furrow were no longer in banded fibers. The alternating dark and light bands of both the stress fibers and cleavage furrow fibers are approximately equal in length, each measuring approximately 0.16 micrometer. Actin filaments were present in both bands, and individual decorated filaments could sometimes be traced through four band lengths. Undecorated filaments, 10 nm in diameter, could often be seen within the light bands. A model is proposed to explain the arrangement of filaments in stress fibers and cleavage furrows based on the striations observed with tannic acid and the polarity of the actin filaments.  相似文献   

6.
We examined the nucleated polymerization of actin from the two ends of filaments that comprise the microvillus (MV) core in intestinal epithelial cells by electron microscopy. Three different in vitro preparations were used to nucleate the polymerization of muscle G- actin: (a) MV core fragments containing "barbed" and "pointed" filament ends exposed by shear during isolation, (b) isolated, membrane-intact brush borders, and (c) brush borders demembranated with Triton-X 100. It has been demonstrated that MV core fragments nucleate filament growth from both ends with a strong bias for one end. Here we identify the barbed end of the core fragment as the fast growing end by decoration with myosin subfragment one. Both cytochalasin B (CB) and Acanthamoeba capping protein block filament growth from the barbed but not the pointed end of MV core fragments. To examine actin assembly from the naturally occurring, membrane-associated ends of MV core filaments, isolated membrane-intact brush borders were used to nucleate the polymerization of G-actin. Addition of salt (75 mM KCl, 1 mM MgSO4) to brush borders preincubated briefly at low ionic strength with G- actin induced the formation of 0.2-0.4 micron "growth zones" at the tips of microvilli. The dense plaque at the tip of the MV core remains associated with the membrane and the presumed growing ends of the filaments. We also observed filament growth from the pointed ends of core filaments in the terminal web. We did not observe filament growth at the membrane-associated ends of core filaments when the latter were in the presence of 2 microM CB or if the low ionic strength incubation step was omitted. Addition of G-actin to demembranated brush borders, which retain the dense plaque on their MV tips, resulted in filament growth from both ends of the MV core. Again, 2 microM CB blocked filament growth from only the barbed (tip) end of the core. The dense plaque remained associated with the tip-end of the core in the presence of CB but usually was dislodged in control preparations where nucleated polymerization from the tip-end of the core occurred. Our results support the notion that microvillar assembly and changes in microvillar length could occur by actin monomer addition/loss at the barbed, membrane-associated ends of MV core filaments.  相似文献   

7.
The polarity of the actin filaments which assemble from the nucleating body or actomere of Thyone and Pisaster sperm was determined using myosin subfragment 1 decoration. The polarity was found to be unidirectional with the arrowheads pointing towards the cell center. When polymerization is induced at low temperature with concentrations of actin near the critical concentration for polymerization, elongation of filaments occurs preferentially off the apical end. If the sperm are induced to undergo the acrosomal reaction with an ionophore, the polarity of the actin filaments attached to the actomere is the same as that already described, but the filaments which polymerize parallel to, but peripheral to, those extending from the actomere are randomly polarized. These randomly polarized filaments appear to result from spontaneous nucleation. When sperm are induced to undergo the acrosomal reaction with eggs, the polarity of the actin filaments is also unidirectional with the arrowheads pointing towards the cell center. From these results we conclude: (a) that the actomere, by nucleating the polymerization of actin filaments, controls the polarity of the actin filaments in the acrosomal process, (b) that the actomere recognizes a surface of the actin monomer that is different from that surface recognized by the dense material attached to membranes, and (c) that egg myosin could not act to pull the sperm into the egg. Included is a discussion of how the observation that monomers add largely to one end of a decorated filament in vitro relates to these in vivo observations.  相似文献   

8.
Etsuo Yokota  Teruo Shimmen 《Planta》1999,209(2):264-266
 A plant 135-kDa actin-bundling protein (P-135-ABP) isolated from pollen tubes of Lilium longiflorum (Thunb.) binds stoichiometrically to F-actin filaments and bundles them in vitro (E. Yokota et al., 1998, Plant Physiol. 116: 1421–1429). To further understand the mechanism of actin-filament bundle formation by P-135-ABP, the polarity of each F-actin filament in bundles was examined using myosin subfragment 1 (S-1). Dissociation of F-actin filaments from bundles organized by P-135-ABP was induced by S-1. However, F-actin filaments that remained in a bundle and decorated by S-1 showed uniform polarity. These results indicate that P-135-ABP arranges F-actin filaments into bundles with uniform polarity and consequently plays a key role in the orientation of cytoplasmic streaming in pollen tubes. Received: 23 February 1999 / Accepted: 22 April 1999  相似文献   

9.
Ovarian granulosa cells grown on glass coverslips were split by a "sandwich" technique. Using this technique we describe a complex filamentous network in the cytoplasm of cultured granulosa cells that was composed of a branching and anastomosing lattice of filaments 20-40 nm in diameter. Since filament identification is impossible on the basis of size, split cells were decorated with S-1 fragments of rabbit skeletal muscle myosin. It was readily apparent that the major constituent of the filamentous lattice was actin. Actin was organized in large bundles in which individual filaments were longitudinally aligned. Actin was also observed organized in a loose network throughout the remainder of the cytoplasm. Actin appeared to be intimately associated with organelle and plasma membranes. Coated pits were also a site of actin-filament interaction. Filament polarity was generally away from the membrane with which filaments were associated.  相似文献   

10.
We have used the method of three-dimensional image reconstruction of electron micrographs to analyse the structure of thin filaments and pure F-actin filaments decorated with myosin subfragment-1. To help improve on the earlier work of Moore et al. (1970), we have obtained all our data using minimal electron dose procedures to reduce radiation damage. Modifications in the specimen preparation have enabled us to process straight stretches of filament twice as long as any used in the earlier work, resulting in a corresponding improvement in the signal-to-noise ratio and the resolution. The results show significant changes in the density distribution in the region near the axis of the structure. Compared with the earlier model, the reconstructions show the presence of extra density close to the axis of the particle. We present a case for identifying actin with the density in this region, rather than with the density at higher radius previously designated as actin. This new assignment for the position of actin within the decorated filament structure leads to a radical change in the geometry of the model for myosin subfragment-lactin interaction. Furthermore, by comparing the features that we identify as actin with the reconstructed images of undecorated thin filaments published by Wakabayashi et al. (1975), we conclude that the polarity that has previously been assumed for the thin filament is incorrect. When the thin filament polarity is reversed, the position that tropomyosin is believed to occupy in the active state coincides with a weakly resolved feature in our reconstructions of decorated thin filaments. These findings, involving a reversal of thin filament polarity combined with the change in the geometry of myosin subfragment-1-actin interaction, allow a revised steric blocking model to be constructed.  相似文献   

11.
The surface of the syncytial trophoblast of the human placenta is covered by a microvillous (brush) border that is in direct contact with maternal blood. Because of this location, it is the site of a variety of transport, enzymatic and receptor activities vital to many placental functions. The organization of the brush border as well as other features of placental villus organization may well be influenced by the distribution of cytoplasmic actin filaments. In order to determine the distribution of actin filaments in human placenta, small pieces of villi were briefly fixed in glutaraldehyde, permeabilized with saponin, and incubated in solutions containing subfragment 1 of myosin (S1). After S1 decoration of actin filaments, tissue was fixed in glutaraldehyde containing tannic acid in order to better visualize the polarity of the filaments, and prepared for electron microscopic examination. The microvilli each contained a core of actin filaments running from the tip of the microvillus to the apical cytoplasm. Most of the actin filaments displayed a distinct polarity, with the S1 arrowheads pointing away from the microvillar tips. These filaments extended only a short distance into the apical cytoplasm. There appeared to be another group of actin filaments in a matlike arrangement in the apical cytoplasm. Coated pits and vesicles were often observed between the microvilli. There appeared to be no clear association between the coated pits and decorated actin filaments, but this was difficult to establish with certainty because of the close proximity of the microvilli. Bundles of actin filaments were sometimes observed near the basal cell surface of the syncytial trophoblast, and in pericytes and capillary endothelial cells in the cores of the villi.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

12.
Microfilament bundles: I. Formation with uniform polarity   总被引:5,自引:0,他引:5  
The coelomocytes of the sea urchin, Strongylocentrotus droebachiensis, have been used as a model system to investigate the relative orientation of single actin-containing filaments to the cell membrane as they are regrouped in multifilament bundles during a cellular morphogenetic event. In detergent-treated, heavy meromyosin (HMM) incubated and negatively stained cells, the polarity of each microfilament, regardless of whether it occurs singly or in a bundle, is such that the arrowhead complexes formed along the length of each filament by the HMM decoration point inward away from the cell membrane and toward the center of the cell. A mechanism is proposed by which the uniformly polar bundles may be formed.  相似文献   

13.
Actin filaments are polar structures that exhibit a fast growing plus end and a slow growing minus end. According to their organization in cells, in parallel or antiparallel arrays, they can serve, respectively, in protrusions or in contractions. The determination of actin filament polarity in subcellular compartments is therefore required to establish their local function. Myosin binding has previously been the sole method of polarity determination. Here, we report the first direct determination of actin filament polarity in the cell without myosin binding. Negatively stained cytoskeletons of lamellipodia were analyzed by adapting electron tomography and a single particle analysis for filamentous complexes. The results of the stained cytoskeletons confirmed that all actin filament ends facing the cell membrane were the barbed ends. In general, this approach should be applicable to the analysis of actin polarity in tomograms of the actin cytoskeleton.  相似文献   

14.
The report that microvillar cores of isolated, demembranated brush borders retract into the terminal web in the presence of Ca(++) and ATP has been widely cited as an example of Ca(++)-regulated nonmuscle cell motility. Because of recent findings that microvillar core actin filaments are cross-linked by villin which, in the presence of micromolar Ca(++), fragments actin filaments, we used the techniques of video enhanced differential interference contrast, immunofluorescence, and phase contrast microscopy and thin-section electron microscopy (EM) to reexamine the question of contraction of isolated intestinal cell brush borders. Analysis of video enhanced light microscopic images of Triton- demembranated brush borders treated with a buffered Ca(++) solution shows the cores disintegrating with the terminal web remaining intact; membranated brush borders show the microvilli to vesiculate with Ca(++). Using Ca(++)/EGTA buffers, it is found that micromolar free Ca(++) causes core filament dissolution in membranated or demembranated brush borders, Ca(++) causes microvillar core solation followed by complete vesiculation of the microvillar membrane. The lengths of microvilli cores and rootlets were measured in thin sections of membranated and demembranated controls, in Ca(++)-, Ca(++) + ATP-, and in ATP-treated brush borders. Results of these measurements show that Ca(++) alone causes the complete solation of the microvillar cores, yet the rootlets in the terminal web region remain of normal length. These results show that microvilli do not retract into the terminal web in response to Ca(++) and ATP but rather that the microvillar cores disintegrate. NBD-phallicidin localization of actin and fluorescent antibodies to myosin reveal a circumferential band of actin and myosin in mildly permeabilized cells in the region of the junctional complex. The presence of these contractile proteins in this region, where other studies have shown a circumferential band of thin filaments, is consistent with the hypothesis that brush borders may be motile through the circumferential constriction of this “contractile ring,” and is also consistent with the observations that ATP-treated brush borders become cup shaped as if there had been a circumferential constriction.  相似文献   

15.
《The Journal of cell biology》1983,96(5):1325-1336
We have analyzed terminal web contraction in sheets of glycerinated chicken small intestine epithelium and in isolated intestinal brush borders using a quick-freeze, deep-etch, rotary shadow replication technique. In the presence of Mg-ATP at 37 degrees C, the terminal web region of each cell in the glycerinated sheet and of each isolated brush border became severely constricted at the level of its zonula adherens (ZA). Consequently, the individual brush borders rounded up, splaying out their microvilli in fanlike patterns. The most prominent ultrastructural changes that occurred during terminal web contraction were a dramatic decrease in the diameter of the circumferential ring composed of a bundle of 8-9-nm filaments adjacent to the zonula adherens and a decrease in the number of cross-linkers between the microvillus rootlets. Microvilli were not retracted into the terminal web. We have used myosin S1 decoration to demonstrate that most of the circumferential bundle filaments are actin and that the actin filaments are arranged in the bundle with mixed polarity. Some filaments within the bundle did not decorate with myosin S1 and had tiny projections that appeared to be attached to adjacent actin filaments. Because of their morphology and immunofluorescent localization of myosin within this region of the terminal web, we propose that these undecorated filaments are myosin. From these results, we conclude that brush border contraction is caused primarily by an active sliding of actin and myosin filaments within the circumferential bundle of filaments associated with the ZA.  相似文献   

16.
Two actin-modulating proteins have been purified from toad oocytes. A high-molecular weight protein, similar in structure and function to macrophage actin-binding protein, accounts for the isotropic actin-crosslinking activity in oocyte homogenates. A calcium-dependent activity in toad oocyte homogenates which shortens actin filaments is accounted for by a 95,000-dalton protein which resembles villin, an actin-severing and -bundling protein of avian epithelial brush borders. In the presence of high (? μM) calcium, this protein shortens actin filaments in a concentration-dependent fashion and stimulates filament assembly when added to monomeric actin. In the absence of calcium the protein promotes the formation of actin filament bundles. Therefore, in the toad oocyte actin can be crosslinked into a network by actin-binding protein. Calcium regulation of the actin network may be mediated by villin. These results are different from those reported in echinoderm eggs.  相似文献   

17.
The role played by Ca2+ in the stability of cytoplasmic actin and myosin filaments was investigated ultrastructurally with negatively stained isolated cytoplasm from Chaos carolinensis. Cytoplasm was incubated in solutions containing 5, 10, 15 and 25 mM EGTA for periods of time varying from 2 to 20 min. As either the EGTA concentration or duration of incubation was increased, the extent of myosin and actin filament depolymerization increased. The actin filaments depolymerized except where they were stabilized by interaction with myosin. With longer incubation times or higher EGTA concentrations complete depolymerization of the actin filaments could be accomplished. Myosin aggregates also disassembled and became shorter, while monomeric myosin labelled adjacent thin filaments to form arrowhead complexes resembling myosin enriched actomyosin [1]. These actomyosin complexes were relatively stable at low Ca2+ concentrations. In addition, the complexes showed a characteristic 35 nm periodicity and were dissociable in the presence of Mg2+-ATP. The actin containing filaments were more labile at low Ca2+ concentrations than the myosin aggregates. These results suggest that in cells capable of regulating their Ca2+ concentrations efficiently, filament polymerization-depolymerization could play a role in the control of cytoplasmic streaming.  相似文献   

18.
We have determined the structural organization and dynamic behavior of actin filaments in entire primary locomoting heart fibroblasts by S1 decoration, serial section EM, and photoactivation of fluorescence. As expected, actin filaments in the lamellipodium of these cells have uniform polarity with barbed ends facing forward. In the lamella, cell body, and tail there are two observable types of actin filament organization. A less abundant type is located on the inner surface of the plasma membrane and is composed of short, overlapping actin bundles (0.25–2.5 μm) that repeatedly alternate in polarity from uniform barbed ends forward to uniform pointed ends forward. This type of organization is similar to the organization we show for actin filament bundles (stress fibers) in nonlocomoting cells (PtK2 cells) and to the known organization of muscle sarcomeres. The more abundant type of actin filament organization in locomoting heart fibroblasts is mostly ventrally located and is composed of long, overlapping bundles (average 13 μm, but can reach up to about 30 μm) which span the length of the cell. This more abundant type has a novel graded polarity organization. In each actin bundle, polarity gradually changes along the length of the bundle. Actual actin filament polarity at any given point in the bundle is determined by position in the cell; the closer to the front of the cell the more barbed ends of actin filaments face forward.

By photoactivation marking in locomoting heart fibroblasts, as expected in the lamellipodium, actin filaments flow rearward with respect to substrate. In the lamella, all marked and observed actin filaments remain stationary with respect to substrate as the fibroblast locomotes. In the cell body of locomoting fibroblasts there are two dynamic populations of actin filaments: one remains stationary and the other moves forward with respect to substrate at the rate of the cell body.

This is the first time that the structural organization and dynamics of actin filaments have been determined in an entire locomoting cell. The organization, dynamics, and relative abundance of graded polarity actin filament bundles have important implications for the generation of motile force during primary heart fibroblast locomotion.

  相似文献   

19.
The three-dimensional structure of the nemaline rod Z-band   总被引:5,自引:1,他引:4       下载免费PDF全文
《The Journal of cell biology》1990,111(6):2961-2978
In nemaline myopathy and some cardiac muscles, the Z-band becomes greatly enlarged and contains multiple layers of a zigzag structure similar to that seen in normal muscle. Because of the additional periodicity in the direction of the filament axis, these structures are particularly favorable for three-dimensional analysis since it becomes possible to average the data in all three dimensions and thus improve the reliability of the reconstruction. Individual views of the structure corresponding to tilted longitudinal and transverse sections were combined by matching the phases of common reflections. Examination of the tilted views strongly suggested that to the available resolution, the structure possesses fourfold screw symmetry along the actin filament axes. This symmetry could be used both in establishing the correct alignment for the combination of individual tilted views and to generate additional views not readily accessible in a single tilt series. The reconstruction shows actin filaments from one sarcomere surrounded by an array of four actin filaments with opposite polarity from the adjacent sacormere. The actin filaments show a right- handed twist and are connected by a structure that links adjacent filaments with the same polarity at the same axial level, then runs parallel to the filaments, and finally forms a link between two actin filaments whose polarity is opposite to that of the first pair. The connecting structure is probably composed of alpha-actinin which is located in Z-bands and cross-links actin filaments. The connecting structure may consist of two alpha-actinin molecules linking actin filaments of opposite polarity.  相似文献   

20.
The spines of Schistosoma mansoni have crystalline structures that have been suggested to consist of actin filaments. In this ultrastructural study, binding of heavy meromyosin to the actin filament spines strongly supports this view. Moreover, we reveal that all the packed actin filaments in the spines have the same polarity pointing away from the apical plasma membrane toward the basal membrane of the surface syncytial epithelium of the parasites and that the spine filaments interact indirectly with both the apical and basal membranes.  相似文献   

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