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1.
Extraction of glycerinated chicken skeletal muscle with 0.6 M potassium iodide leaves a framework of insoluble components within each muscle fiber. This framework is composed primarily of planes of in-register Z discs that have been thickened by the accumulation of material on both sides of each disc during extraction. Membrane vesicles, presumably remnants of the T system, remain surrounding the Z discs. When the framework is sheared in a blender, it is preferentially cleaved between Z planes, resulting in the formation of large sheets of interconnected, closely packed Z discs in a honeycomb-like array. Cleavage occurs in regions formerly occupied by the A bands, which have been weakened by the removal of myosin. The existence and stability of these planar Z disc arrays demonstrate the presence and strength of connections between adjacent myofibrils.SDS-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis reveals that this framework consists primarily of actin and desmin, with lesser amounts of a few proteins including α-actinin, myosin and tropomyosin. Z disc sheets and KI-extracted myofibrils provide a distinct face-on view and side view, respectively, of the Z disc. In indirect immunofluorescence, these two views have revealed that desmin is present at the periphery of each Z disc, forming a network of proteinaceous collars within the Z plane. α-Actinin is localized within each disc, giving a face-on fluorescence pattern that is complementary to that of desmin. Actin is present throughout the thickened Z plane, while myosin and tropomyosin exist only in the insoluble residue that coalesces on both faces of each disc.We conclude that desmin, perhaps in conjunction with actin, is responsible for interlinking Z discs of adjacent myofibrils, and may thus serve as a mechanical and structural integrator of muscle fibers. Its hydrophobic nature and coincident distribution with the T system suggest that it may also be responsible for mediating filament-membrane interactions and anchoring the triad to the Z disc. Its collar-like distribution suggests that it may aid in maintaining the structural integrity of the Z disc and the actin filaments inserted into it.  相似文献   

2.
The distribution of the intermediate filament proteins vimentin and desmin in developing and mature myotubes in vivo was studied by single and double immunoelectron microscopic labeling of ultrathin frozen sections of iliotibialis muscle in 7-21-d-old chick embryos, and neonatal and 1-d-old postnatal chicks. This work is an extension of our previous immunofluorescence studies of the same system (Tokuyasu, K. T., P. A. Maher and S. J. Singer, 1984, J. Cell Biol., 98:1961-1972). In immature myotubes of 7-11-d embryos, significant labeling for desmin and vimentin was found only in intermediate filaments, and these proteins coexisted in the same individual filaments. Each of the two proteins was present in irregular clusters along the entire length of a filament. No exclusively vimentin- or desmin-containing filaments were observed at this stage. In the early myotubes, the intermediate filaments were essentially all longitudinally oriented, even when they contained three times as much desmin as vimentin. No special relationship was recognized between the dispositions of the filaments and the organization of the myofibrils. Occasionally, several myofibrils were already aligned in lateral registry at this early stage, but labeling for desmin and vimentin was largely absent at the level of the Z bands. Instead, the Z bands appeared to be covered by elements of the sarcoplasmic reticulum. The confinement of intermediate filaments to the level of the Z bands occurred in the myotubes of later embryos after the extensive lateral registry of the Z bands. Thus, intermediate filaments are unlikely to play a primary role in producing the lateral registration of myofibrils during myogenesis, but may be important in determining the polarization of the early myotube and the alignment of its organelles. Throughout the development of myotubes, desmin and vimentin remained in the form of intermediate filaments, although the number of filaments per unit volume of myotube appeared to be reduced as myofibrils increased in number in maturing myotubes. This observation indicated that the transverse orientation of intermediate filaments in mature myotubes does not result from the de novo polymerization of subunits from Z band to Z band, but a continuous shifting of the positions and directions of intact filaments.  相似文献   

3.
During myogenesis in vitro the actin-binding protein filamin is present in myoblasts and early fused cells and is associated with α-actinin-containing filament bundles, as judged by double immunofluorescence using antibodies specific for these two proteins. Approximately one day after cell fusion, yet before the development of a-actinin-containing Z line striations, filamin disappears from the cells. Later in myogenesis, several days after the appearance of α-actinin-containing Z line striations, filamin reappears and accumulates in the cells. Double immunofluorescence with antibodies to filamin and vimentin (or desmin) reveals that the newly appearing filamin localizes now to the myofibril Z line and is visible there shortly before vimentin or desmin becomes associated with the Z line. Immunofluorescent localization of filamin in isolated chicken skeletal myofibrils and Z disc sheets indicates that filamin has the same distribution as desmin and vimentin; it surrounds each myofibril Z disc and forms honeycomb-like networks within each Z plane of the muscle fiber. Filamin may thus be involved in the transition of desmin and vimentin to the Z disc. Analysis of whole-cell extracts by SDS-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis and by immunoautoradiography shows that filamin is present in myoblasts and in myotubes early after cell fusion. Concomitant with the absence of filamin fluorescence during the subsequent few days of myogenesis, the quantity of filamin is markedly reduced. During this time, metabolic pulse-labeling with 35S-methionine reveals that the synthetic rate of filamin is also markedly reduced. As filamin fluorescence appears at the Z line, the quantity of filamin and its synthetic rate both increase. The removal of filamin from the cells suggests that filamin either may not be required, or may actually interfere with a necessary process, during the early stages of sarcomere morphogenesis. These results also indicate that the periphery of the Z disc is assembled in at least two distinct steps during myogenesis.  相似文献   

4.
《The Journal of cell biology》1983,96(6):1727-1735
We studied the localization of desmin (skeletin), the major subunit of muscle-type intermediate filaments, by high resolution immunoelectron microscopy in adult chicken skeletal muscle. Immunoferritin labeling of ultrathin frozen sections of intact fixed sartorius muscle showed the presence of desmin between adjacent Z-bands and as strands peripheral to Z-bands, forming apparent connections between the Z-bands with adjacent sarcolemma, mitochondria, and nuclei. We observed no desmin labeling, however, in the vicinity of the T-tubules. In addition, intermediate filaments were morphologically discernible at the level of the Z-bands in plastic sections of glycerol-extracted muscle that had been infused with unlabeled antidesmin antibodies. Our results indicate that the desmin present in adult skeletal muscle, that had previously been detected by immunofluorescence light microscopy, is largely if not entirely in the form of intermediate filaments. The results provide evidence that these filaments serve to interconnect myofibrils at the level of their Z-bands, and to connect Z-bands with other specific structures and organelles in the myotube, but not with the T-tubule system.  相似文献   

5.
The expression of two intermediate filament-associated proteins, paranemin (280,000 mol wt) and synemin (230,000 mol wt), was investigated with respect to the expression of two core intermediate filament proteins, desmin and vimentin, in various embryonic and adult chicken muscle and nonmuscle cells. All developing muscle cells, regardless of their type, simultaneously express desmin, vimentin, paranemin, and synemin. However, a difference is observed in the expression of paranemin in adult muscle. This protein is removed during differentiation of both fast and slow skeletal muscle, visceral smooth muscle, and the smooth muscle of muscular arteries, but remains in mature myocardial cells, cardiac conducting fibers, and the smooth muscle cells of elastic arteries. Some of these cells express vimentin, others desmin, and still others a mixture of the two. On the other hand, synemin is expressed in all the above types of adult muscle cells except myocardial cells. Adult myocardial cells also lack vimentin, and its presence is gradually reduced after hatching. Since in adult striated muscle all expressed intermediate filament proteins are found predominantly in association with the peripheries of myofibrillar Z discs, these results suggest that a change in the composition of skeletal and cardiac muscle Z discs occurs during chicken development and maturation. Erythrocytes that express synemin and vimentin do not express paranemin, while both embryonic and adult Schwann cells co- express paranemin and vimentin, but not synemin. Endothelial cells of muscular vessels express paranemin, while those of elastic vessels do not, and neither contains synemin. Paranemin and synemin are not expressed in neurons, epithelial, and most glial cells, suggesting that these two polypeptides are expressed only in conjunction with desmin or vimentin. These results suggest that the composition of intermediate filaments changes during chicken development, not only with respect to their core subunit proteins but also with respect to two associated polypeptides, particularly in muscle cells.  相似文献   

6.
Joseph A. DiPaolo 《Cell》1980,20(1):263-265
Electrophoretic and autoradiographic analyses of the incorporation of 35S-methionine into newly synthesized proteins during myogenesis reveal that presumptive chicken myoblasts synthesize primarily one intermediate filament protein: vimentin. Desmin synthesis is initiated at the onset of fusion. Synthesis rates of both filament subunits increase during the first three days in culture, relative to the total protein synthesis rate. The observed increase in the rate of desmin synthesis (at least 10 fold) is significantly greater than that observed for vimentin, and is responsible for a net increase in the cellular desmin content relative to vimentin. Both filament subunits continue to be synthesized through at least 20 days in culture. Immunofluorescent staining using desmin- and vimentin-specific antisera supports the conclusion that desmin is synthesized only in fusing or multinucleate cells. These results indicate that the synthesis of the two filament subunits is not coordinately regulated during myogenesis. The distributions of desmin and vimentin in multinucleate chicken myotubes are indistinguishable, as determined by double immunofluorescence techniques. In early myotubes, both proteins are found in an intricate network of free cytoplasmic filaments. Later in myogenesis, several days after the appearance of α-actinin-containing Z line striations, both filament proteins become associated with the Z lines of newly assembled myofibrils, with a corresponding decrease in the number of cytoplasmic filaments. This transition corresponds to the time when the a-actinin-containing Z lines become aligned laterally. These data suggest that the two intermediate filament systems, desmin and vimentin, have an important role in the lateral organization and registration of myofibrils and that the synthesis of desmin and assembly of desmin-containing intermediate filaments during myogenesis is directly related to these functions. These results also indicate that the Z disc is assembled in at least two distinct steps during myogenesis.  相似文献   

7.
Desmin is an intermediate filament protein in skeletal muscle that forms a meshlike network around Z-disks. A model of a muscle fiber was developed to investigate the mechanical role of desmin. A two-dimensional mesh of viscoelastic sarcomere elements was connected laterally by elastic elements representing desmin. The equations of motion for each sarcomere boundary were evaluated at quasiequilibrium to determine sarcomere stresses and strains. Simulations of passive stretch and fixed-end contractions yielded values for sarcomere misalignment and stress in wild-type and desmin null fibers. Passive sarcomere misalignment increased nonlinearly with fiber strain in both wild-type and desmin null simulations and was significantly larger without desmin. During fixed-end contraction, desmin null simulations also demonstrated greater sarcomere misalignment and reduced stress production compared with wild-type. In simulations with only a fraction of wild-type desmin present, fixed-end stress increased as a function of desmin concentration and this relationship was influenced by the cellular location of the desmin filaments. This model suggests that desmin stabilizes Z-disks and enables greater stress production by providing a mechanical tether between adjacent myofibrils and to the extracellular matrix and that the significance of the tether is a function of its location within the cell.  相似文献   

8.
Synemin, a high-molecular-weight protein associated with intermediate filaments in muscle, and vimentin, an intermediate-filament subunit found in many different cell types, have been identified by immunologic and electrophoretic criteria as components of intermediate filaments in mature avian erythrocytes. Desmin, the predominant subunit of intermediate filaments in muscle, has not been detected in these cells. Two dimensional immunoautoradiography of proteolytic fragments of synemin and vimentin demonstates that the erythrocyte proteins are highly homologous, if not identical, to their muscle counterparts. Double immunoflurorescence reaveals that erythrocyte synemin and vimentin co-localize in a cytoplasmic network of sinuous filaments that extends from the nucleus to the plasma membrane and resists aggregation by colcemid. Erythrocytes that are attached to glass cover slips can be sonicated to remove nuclei and nonadherent regions of the plasma membrane; this leaves elliptical patches of adherent membrane that retain mats of vimentin- and synemin-containing intermediate filaments, as seen by immunofluorescence and rotary shadowing. Similarly, mechanical enucleation of erythrocyte ghosts in suspension allows isolation of plasma membranes that retain a significant fraction of the synemin and vimentin, as assayed by electrophoresis, and intermediate filaments, as seen in thin sections. Both synemin and vimentin remain insoluble along with spectrin and actin, in solutions containing nonionic detergent and high salt. However, brief exposure of isolated membrane to distilled water releases the synemin and vimentin together in nearly pure form, before the release of significant amounts of spectrin and actin. These data suggest that avian erythrocyte intermeditate filaments are somehow anchored to the plasma membrane; erythrocytes may thus provide a simple system for the study of intermediate filaments and their mode of interaction with membranes. In addition, these data, in conjunction with previous data from muscle, indicate that synemin is capable of associating with either desmin or vimentin and may thus perform a special role in the structure or function of intermediate filaments in erythrocytes as well as muscle.  相似文献   

9.
When ultrathin frozen sections of chicken cardiac muscle were osmicated, dehydrated in ethanol, embedded in ethyl cellulose, and stained with acidic uranyl acetate, filaments of 10-12 nm width were visualized in wide interfibrillar spaces. Immunostaining of the frozen sections for desmin resulted in exclusive labeling of such filaments. These observations indicated that longitudinally oriented networks of intermediate filaments were present in the interfibrillar spaces, in addition to the transversely oriented networks that surround myofibrils at the level of Z band. As in skeletal muscle (Tokuyasu, K. T., A. H. Dutton, and S. J. Singer, 1983, J. Cell Biol. 97:1727-1735), desmin in chicken cardiac muscle is believed to be largely, if not entirely, in the form of intermediate filaments.  相似文献   

10.
Chicken skeletal muscle taken from embryos in ovo was examined by thin-section electron microscopy. Measurements of filament diameters reveal three nonoverlapping groups of filaments: thin (actin myofibrillar) filaments with mean diameters of 5.3 +/- 0.6 nm (S.D.), thick (myosin myofibrillar) filaments with mean diameters of 15 +/- 1.4 nm, and intermediate filaments with mean diameters of 9.3 +/- 0.9 nm. During muscle development these diameters do not change. By counting the number of filaments observed in the sarcoplasm at different stages, we find that the spatial density of intermediate filaments decreases during avian myogenesis in ovo, from 91 intermediate filaments/micron 2 at 6 days to 43 intermediate filaments/micron 2 at 17 days in ovo. Initially randomly arranged, some intermediate filaments become associated with Z discs, sarcoplasmic reticulum, nuclear membrane, and the sarcolemma between 6 and 10 days in ovo. These associated intermediate filaments course both parallel and transverse to myofibrils, forming lateral connections between myofibrillar Z discs and longitudinal connections from Z disc to Z disc within myofibrils. Intermediate filaments also appear to connect Z discs with the nuclear membrane. The intermediate filament associations persist through day 17 of development, after which the presence of cytoskeletal filaments is obscured by the densely packed myofibrils and membranes. Intermediate filament distribution becomes anisotropic during development. A greater proportion of intermediate filaments in the immediate perimyofibrillar area are oriented parallel to myofibrils than in other areas, so that the majority of the intermediate filaments nearest the myofibrils course parallel to them. The longitudinal intramyofibrillar intermediate filaments persist throughout development, as shown by their existence in KI-extracted adult myofibrils.  相似文献   

11.
Cytoskeletal intermediate filaments were studied in muscular dysgenesis (mdg) and tetrodotoxin-treated inactive mouse embryo muscle cultures during myofibrillogenesis. Both muscular dysgenesis and tetrodotoxin-treated muscles are characterized in vitro by a total lack of contractile activity and an abnormal development of myofibrils. We studied the organization of the microtubule and intermediate filament networks with immunofluorescence, using anti-tubulin, anti-vimentin, and anti-desmin antibodies during normal and mdg/mdg myogenesis in vitro. Mdg/mdg myotubes present a heterogeneous microtubule network with scattered areas of decreased microtubule density. At the myoblast stage, cells expressed both vimentin and desmin. After fusion only desmin expression is revealed. In mutant myotubes the desmin network remains in a diffuse position and does not reorganize itself transversely, as it does during normal myogenesis. The absence of a mature organization of the desmin network in mdg/mdg myotubes is accompanied by a lack of organization of myofibrils. The role of muscle activity in the organization of myofibrils and desmin filaments was tested in two ways: (i) mdg/mdg myotubes were rendered active by coculturing with normal spinal cord cells, and (ii) normal myotubes were treated with tetrodotoxin (TTX) to suppress contractions. Mdg/mdg innervated myotubes showed cross-striated myofibrils, whereas desmin filaments remained diffuse. TTX-treated myotubes possessed disorganized myofibrils and a very unusual pattern of distribution of desmin: intensively stained desmin aggregates were superimposed upon the diffuse network. We conclude, on the basis of these results, that myofibrillar organization does not directly involve intermediate filaments but does need contractile activity.  相似文献   

12.
Abstract. A light and electron immunohistochemical study was carried out on the body wall muscles of the chaetognath Sagitta friderici for the presence of a variety of contractile proteins (myosin, paramyosin, actin), regulatory proteins (tropomyosin, troponin), and structural proteins (α‐actinin, desmin, vimentin). The primary muscle (~80% of body wall volume) showed the characteristic structure of transversely striated muscles, and was comparable to that of insect asynchronous flight muscles. In addition, the body wall had a secondary muscle with a peculiar structure, displaying two sarcomere types (S1 and S2), which alternated along the myofibrils. S1 sarcomeres were similar to those in the slow striated fibers of many invertebrates. In contrast, S2 sarcomeres did not show a regular sarcomeric pattern, but instead exhibited parallel arrays of 2 filament types. The thickest filaments (~10–15 nm) were arranged to form lamellar structures, surrounded by the thinnest filaments (~6 nm). Immunoreactions to desmin and vimentin were negative in both muscle types. The primary muscle exhibited the classical distribution of muscle proteins: actin, tropomyosin, and troponin were detected along the thin filaments, whereas myosin and paramyosin were localized along the thick filaments; immunolabeling of α‐actinin was found at Z‐bands. Immunoreactions in the S1 sarcomeres of the secondary muscle were very similar to those found in the primary muscle. Interestingly, the S2 sarcomeres of this muscle were labeled with actin and tropomyosin antibodies, and presented no immunore‐actions to both myosin and paramyosin. α‐Actinin in the secondary muscle was only detected at the Z‐lines that separate S1 from S2. These findings suggest that S2 are not true sarcomeres. Although they contain actin and tropomyosin in their thinnest filaments, their thickest filaments do not show myosin or paramyosin, as the striated muscle thick myofilaments do. These peculiar S2 thick filaments might be an uncommon type of intermediate filament, which were labeled neither with desmin or vimentin antibodies.  相似文献   

13.
Antibodies to muscle-specific proteins were used in immunofluorescence to monitor the development of skeletal muscle during mouse embryogenesis. At gestation day (g.d.) 9 a single layer of vimentin filament containing cells in the myotome domain of cervical somites begins to stain positively for myogenic proteins. The muscle-specific proteins are expressed in a specific order between g.d. 9 and 9.5. Desmin is detected first, then titin, then the muscle specific actin and myosin heavy chains, and finally nebulin. At g.d. 9.5 fibrous desmin structures are already present, while for the other myogenic proteins no structure can be detected. Some prefusion myoblasts display at g.d. 11 and 12 tiny and immature myofibrils. These reveal a periodic pattern of myosin, nebulin, and those titin epitopes known to occur at and close to the Z line. In contrast titin epitopes, which are present in mature myofibrils along the A band and at the A-I junction, are still randomly distributed. We propose, that the Z line connected structures and the A bands (myosin filaments) assemble independently, and that the known interaction of the I-Z-I brushes with the A bands occurs at a later developmental stage. After fusion of myoblasts to myotubes at g.d. 13 and 14 all titin epitopes show the myofibrillar banding pattern. The predominantly longitudinal orientation of desmin filaments seen in myoblasts and in early myotubes is transformed at g.d. 17 and 18 to distinct Z line connected striations. Vimentin, still present together with desmin in the myoblasts, is lost from the myotubes. Our results indicate that the putative elastic titin filaments act as integrators during skeletal muscle development. Some developmental aspects of eye and limb muscles are also described.  相似文献   

14.
Filaments with a diameter of 80-120 A have been prepared from 14-d-old chick embryonic skeletal muscle, using a physiological salt solution and gel filtration chromatography. The filaments obtained are composed of the two known muscle intermediate-filament proteins, vimentin and desmin, as well as the vimentin- and desmin-associated high molecular weight protein, synemin (230,000 mol. wt). In addition, they contain a previously unidentified high molecular weight protein (280,000 mol wt) which differs from synemin by isoelectric point, molecular weight, and immunological reactivity. Immunofluorescence on cultured myogenic cells,using antisera to the 280,000-dalton polypeptide, has revealed that this protein has the same spatial distribution as desmin, vimentin, and synemin in both early myotubes, where it associates with cytoplasmic filaments, and late in myotubes, where it is associated with myofibril Z lines. Examination by immunofluorescence of frozen sections of developing embryonic skeletal muscle reveals a gradual diminution in the presence of the 280,000-dalton protein. The 280,000-dalton protein is undetectable in adult skeletal and smooth muscle, as shown by immunofluorescence and immunoautoradiography. In chick embryonic fibroblasts grown in tissue culture, only a subpopulation of the cells is reactive with antibodies to the 280,000-dalton protein even though all these cells contain vimentin. In the reactive cells, vimentin and the 280,000-dalton polypeptide exhibit an indistinguishable cytoplasmic filamentous network, which aggregates into filamentious bundles when the cells are exposed to colcemid. These results suggest that this newly identified high molecular weight protein is closely associated with intermediate filaments containing either vimentin alone or vimentin, desmin and synemin. The expression of this protein appears to be developmentally regulated and does not appear to parallel the expression of any of the other three intermediate-filament proteins. The absence of the 280,000-dalton polypeptide in adult muscle cells and its gradual reduction during development implies that is probably not required for the maintenance of Z-disk structure after the assembly of the sarcomere.  相似文献   

15.
We studied the localization of desmin (skeletin), the major protein subunit of muscle-type intermediate filaments, in adult chicken cardiac muscle by high resolution immunoelectron microscopic labeling of ultrathin frozen sections of the intact fixed tissues. We carried out single labeling for desmin and double labeling for both desmin and either vinculin or alpha-actinin. In areas removed from the intercalated disk membranes, we observed desmin labeling between adjacent Z-bands in every interfibrillar space. Where these spaces were wide and contained mitochondria, convoluted strands of desmin labeling bridged between the periphery of neighboring Z-bands and the mitochondria. The intermediate filaments appeared to be organized in a more three-dimensional manner within the interfibrillar spaces of cardiac as compared to skeletal muscle. Near the intercalated disks, desmin labeling was intense within the interfibrillar spaces, but was completely segregated from the microfilament attachment sites (fascia adherens) where vinculin and alpha-actinin were localized. Desmin therefore appears to play no role in the attachment of microfilaments to the intercalated disk membrane. We discuss the role of intermediate filaments in the organization of cardiac and skeletal striated muscle in the light of these and other results.  相似文献   

16.
The association of desmin, a 55,000-dalton intermediate-filament protein, with the developing cardiac myofibril was studied by immunocytochemical methods in primary cultured myocytes isolated from embyronic rat hearts at different ages. In the earliest contractile myocytes obtained from 10-day-old embryonic hearts, desmin exists as an extensive cytoskeletal network with little or no association with the myofibrils. As the heart develops the cytoskeletal desmin undergoes the myofibrils. Initially, the cytoskeletal desmin appears to outline the developing myofibril as short, discontinuous filaments. At intermediate stages of heart development, desmin filaments in 12- to 16-day-old embryonic myocytes continue to outline the forming myofibrils. Associated with these filaments are crossbridges and foci of desmin spaced at a frequency equal to that of the Z-line spacing. Desmin becomes progressively associated with the myofibril from the central region of the cell toward the cell margin. Desmin filaments at this stage begin to coalesce in the region of the intercalated disk. In the early neonatal heart, desmin of the Z lines becomes continuous across the sarcomere and appears to integrate the myofibrils into a unit. These observations suggest that desmin is not required in the early stages of mammalian heart development for the initial assembly of cardiac sarcomeres or the initiation of cardiac myofibrillar contractions. In later stages of mammalian heart development, desmin is found associated with the cardiac myofibrils in such a manner as to stably integrate these elements into the cytoplasm. Additionally, desmin, in the Z lines of the more mature myocytes appears to maintain the myofibrils in close registry to each other and to the intercalated disk.  相似文献   

17.
Type I male midshipman fish produce high-frequency hums for prolonged durations using sonic muscle fibers, each of which contains a hollow tube of radially oriented thin and flat myofibrils that display extraordinarily wide ( approximately 1.2 microm) Z bands. We have revealed an elaborate cytoskeletal network of desmin filaments associated with the contractile cylinder that form interconnected concentric ring structures in the core and periphery at the level of the Z bands. Stretch and release of single fibers revealed reversible length changes in the elastic desmin lattice. This lattice is linked to Z bands via novel intracellular desmosome-like junctional complexes that collectively form a ring, termed the "Z corset," around the periphery and within the core of the cylinder. The junctional complex consists of regularly spaced parallel approximately 900-nm-long cytoskeletal rods, or "Z bars," interconnected with slender (3-4 nm) plectin-positive filaments. Z bars are linked to the Z band by plectin filaments and on the opposite side to a dense mesh of desmin filaments. Adjacent Z bands are linked by slender filaments that appear to suspend sarcotubules. We propose that the highly reinforced elastic desmin cytoskeleton and the unique Z band junctions are structural adaptations that enable the muscles' high-frequency and high-endurance activity.  相似文献   

18.
Two monoclonal antibodies, FIFI and PHIL, have been prepared using detergent-washed myogenic cells as immunogen. On Western blots of total protein extracts of muscle cells, both antibodies bind to vimentin (52 kD) and its degradation products (major band at 42 kD), but do not bind to mouse proteins or to actin (42 kD). Specificity for a determinant common to vimentin and desmin was confirmed by 2-D gel electrophoresis of muscle cell extracts and purified desmin. Western blots with FIFI reveal particularly well the extreme sensitivity of intermediate filaments (IFs) to proteolysis, which was preventable in brain tissue only by boiling in 1% SDS, although it could be reduced in both brain and muscle by less extreme methods. Western blots suggest a large increase in IF content of differentiating myoblast cell cultures at the time of cell fusion and an increase of at least 4-fold is confirmed by a quantitative immunoassay using a direct ELISA method. Immunofluorescence microscopy shows that this increase is due to the appearance of high concentrations of the intermediate filament antigen at the ends of early myotubes, preceding the appearance of cross-striations in myofibrils. Furthermore, whereas the polar filaments detected by FIFI run right to the ends of the early myotubes and only sparingly penetrate the central area, cross-striated myofibrils (as detected by the monoclonal antibody, SAM) run the length of the myotube but do not reach the ends. Colcemid and colchicine cause the vimentin filaments in fibroblasts to collapse into perinuclear rings or caps, but do not have this effect on the polar fluorescence in early myotubes. Heat shock (2 h at 45 degrees C) has a similar differential effect. The results suggest that early in muscle differentiation intermediate filament proteins accumulate rapidly at myotube ends, where they are organized differently from those in fibroblasts.  相似文献   

19.
Fluorescently labeled desmin was incorporated into intermediate filaments when microinjected into living tissue culture cells. The desmin, purified from chicken gizzard smooth muscle and labeled with the fluorescent dye iodoacetamido rhodamine, was capable of forming a network of 10-nm filaments in solution. The labeled protein associated specifically with the native vimentin filaments in permeabilized, unfixed interphase and mitotic PtK2 cells. The labeled desmin was microinjected into living, cultured embryonic skeletal myotubes, where it became incorporated in straight fibers aligned along the long axis of the myotubes. Upon exposure to nocodazole, microinjected myotubes exhibited wavy, fluorescent filament bundles around the muscle nuclei. In PtK2 cells, an epithelial cell line, injected desmin formed a filamentous network, which colocalized with the native vimentin intermediate filaments but not with the cytokeratin networks and microtubular arrays. Exposure of the injected cells to nocadazole or acrylamide caused the desmin network to collapse and form a perinuclear cap that was indistinguishable from vimentin caps in the same cells. During mitosis, labeled desmin filaments were excluded from the spindle area, forming a cage around it. The filaments were partitioned into two groups either during anaphase or at the completion of cytokinesis. In the former case, the perispindle desmin filaments appeared to be stretched into two parts by the elongating spindle. In the latter case, a continuous bundle of filaments extended along the length of the spindle and appeared to be pinched in two by the contracting cleavage furrow. In these cells, desmin filaments were present in the midbody where they gradually were removed as the desmin filament network became redistributed throughout the cytoplasm of the spreading daughter cells.  相似文献   

20.
Polyadenylated ribonucleic acid (RNA) was isolated from chicken skeletal and smooth muscle and translated in a cell-free rabbit reticulocyte system. Both types of muscle tissue contain messenger RNAs that code for the intermediate filament proteins desmin and vimentin, and the relative concentrations of the two translation products reflect the prevalence of the two proteins in vivo. Desmin synthesis represents a greater proportion of the total protein synthesis from smooth muscle RNA than from skeletal muscle RNA, whereas the converse is true of vimentin synthesis. Fractionation of the RNA on formamide-containing sucrose gradients before translation indicates that the desmin messenger RNA is larger than the vimentin messenger RNA and contains an extensive noncoding segment. The desmin and vimentin messages code predominantly for the non-phosphorylated forms of desmin and vimentin. However, the ratio of phosphorylated to unphosphorylated forms of the proteins could be increased by adding cyclic adenosine monophosphate-dependent kinase activity to the translation mixtures. These results suggest that desmin and vimentin are each synthesized from a single messenger RNA species and that posttranslational phosphorylation generates the additional isoelectric variants of each which are observed in vivo.  相似文献   

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