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1.
Caldesmon is an F-actin cross-linking protein of chicken gizzard smooth muscle whose F-actin binding activity can be regulated in vitro by Ca2+-calmodulin (Sobue, K., Y. Muramoto, M. Fujita, and S. Kakiuchi, 1981, Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. USA, 78:5652-5655). It is a rod-shaped, heat-stable, F-actin bundling protein and is the most abundant F-actin cross-linking protein of chicken gizzard smooth muscle presently known (Bretscher, A., 1984, J. Biol. Chem., 259:12873-12880). We report the use of polyclonal antibodies to caldesmon to investigate its distribution and localization in other cells. Using immune blotting procedures, we have detected immunoreactive, heat-stable forms of caldesmon in cultured cells having either approximately the same apparent polypeptide molecular weight as gizzard caldesmon (120,000-140,000) or a substantially lower molecular weight (71,000-77,000). Through use of affinity-purified antibodies in indirect immunofluorescence microscopy, we have localized the immunoreactive forms to the terminal web of the brush border of intestinal epithelial cells and to the stress fibers and ruffling membranes of cultured cells. At the light microscope level caldesmon is distributed in a periodic fashion along stress fibers that is coincident with the distribution of tropomyosin and complementary to the distribution of alpha-actinin.  相似文献   

2.
Formins are multidomain proteins that regulate actin filament dynamics and are defined by the formin homology 2 domain. Biochemical assays suggest that mammalian formins display actin-filament nucleation, severing, and bundling activities. Whether formins can cross-link actin filaments into viscoelastic arrays and the effectiveness of formins' bundling activity compared with that of important filamentous actin (F-actin) cross-linking/bundling proteins are unknown. Here, we used rigorous in vitro rheologic assays to deconvolve the dynamic cross-linking activity from the bundling activity of formin FRL1 and the closely related mDia1 and mDia2. In addition, we compared these formins with the canonical F-actin bundling protein fascin and cross-linking/bundling proteins alpha-actinin and filamin. We found that FRL1 and mDia2, but not mDia1, can help F-actin form highly elastic networks. FRL1 and mDia2 mediate the formation of highly elastic F-actin networks as effectively and rapidly as alpha-actinin and filamin but only past a relatively high actin-to-formin molar ratio of 50:1. Past that threshold molar ratio, the mechanical properties of F-actin/formin networks are independent of formin concentration, similar to fascin. Moreover, unlike those for alpha-actinin and filamin but similar to those for fascin, F-actin/formin networks show no strain-induced hardening. mDia1 cannot bundle F-actin but can weakly cross-link filaments at high concentrations. Point mutagenesis reveals that reducing the barbed-end binding activity of FRL1 and mDia2 greatly enhances the rate of formation of F-actin gels but does not significantly affect the mechanical properties of the resulting networks at steady state. Together, these results suggest that the mechanical behaviors of FRL1 and mDia2 are fundamentally different from those of cross-linking/bundling proteins alpha-actinin and filamin but qualitatively similar to the mechanical behavior of the bundling protein fascin, albeit with a dramatically increased (>10-fold) threshold concentration for transition to bundling, which nevertheless leads to much stiffer F-actin networks than fascin.  相似文献   

3.
The organization of filamentous actin (F-actin) in resilient networks is coordinated by various F-actin cross-linking proteins. The relative tolerance of cells to null mutations of genes that code for a single actin cross-linking protein suggests that the functions of those proteins are highly redundant. This apparent functional redundancy may, however, reflect the limited resolution of available assays in assessing the mechanical role of F-actin cross-linking/bundling proteins. Using reconstituted F-actin networks and rheological methods, we demonstrate how alpha-actinin and fascin, two F-actin cross-linking/bundling proteins that co-localize along stress fibers and in lamellipodia, could synergistically enhance the resilience of F-actin networks in vitro. These two proteins can generate microfilament arrays that "yield" at a strain amplitude that is much larger than each one of the proteins separately. F-actin/alpha-actinin/fascin networks display strain-induced hardening, whereby the network "stiffens" under shear deformations, a phenomenon that is non-existent in F-actin/fascin networks and much weaker in F-actin/alpha-actinin networks. Strain-hardening is further enhanced at high rates of deformation and high concentrations of actin cross-linking proteins. A simplified model suggests that the optimum results of the competition between the increased stiffness of bundles and their decreased density of cross-links. Our studies support a re-evaluation of the notion of functional redundancy among cytoskeletal regulatory proteins.  相似文献   

4.
The cross-linking of the F-actin-caldesmon complex with 1-ethyl-3-[3-(dimethylamino)propyl]carbodiimide in the presence of N-hydroxysuccinimide generated four major adducts which were identified on polyacrylamide gels. By cross-linking 3H-actin to 14C-caldesmon, these were found to represent 1:1 cross-linked complexes of actin and caldesmon displaying different electrophoretic mobilities. Tropomyosin did not noticeably affect the cross-linking process. The same four fluorescent species resulting from the cross-linking of caldesmon to F-actin labeled with N-[7-(dimethylamino)-4-methyl-3-coumarinyl]maleimide were subjected separately to partial cleavages with hydroxylamine or cyanogen bromide. These treatments yielded fluorescent 41- and 37-kDa fragments, respectively, from each cross-linked entity indicating unambiguously that caldesmon was cross-linked only to the NH2-terminal actin stretch of residues 1-12. This region is also known to serve for the carbodiimide-mediated cross-linking of the myosin subfragment-1 heavy chain (Sutoh, K. (1982) Biochemistry 21, 3654-3661). A covalent caldesmon-F-actin conjugate containing a protein molar ratio close to 1:19 was isolated following dissociation of uncross-linked caldesmon. It showed a low level of activation of the ATPase activity of skeletal myosin subfragment-1, and the binding of Ca2(+)-calmodulin to the derivative did not cause the reversal of the ATPase inhibition. In contrast, the reversible binding of caldesmon to F-actin cross-linked to myosin subfragment-1 did not inhibit the accelerated ATPase of the complex. The overall data point to the dual involvement of the actin's NH2 terminus in the inhibitory binding of caldesmon and in actomyosin interactions in the presence of ATP.  相似文献   

5.
We have determined diffusion coefficients for small (50- to 70-nm diameter) fluorescein-thiocarbamoyl-labeled Ficoll tracers through F-actin as a function of filament length and cross-linking. fx45 was used to regulate filament length and avidin/biotinylated actin or ABP-280 was used to prepare cross-linked actin gels. We found that tracer diffusion was generally independent of filament length in agreement with theoretical predictions for diffusion through solutions of rods. However, in some experiments diffusion was slower through short (< or = 1.0 micron) filaments, although this result was not consistently reproducible. Measured diffusion coefficients through unregulated F-actin and filaments of lengths > 1.0 micron were more rapid than predicted by theory for tracer diffusion through rigid, random networks, which was consistent with some degree of actin bundling. Avidin-induced cross-linking of biotinylated F-actin did not affect diffusion through unregulated F-actin, but in cases where diffusion was slower through short filaments this cross-linking method resulted in enhanced tracer diffusion rates indistinguishable from unregulated F-actin. This finding, in conjunction with increased turbidity of 1.0-micron filaments upon avidin cross-linking, indicated that this cross-linking method induces F-actin bundling. By contrast, ABP-280 cross-linking retarded diffusion through unregulated F-actin and decreased turbidity. Tracer diffusion under these conditions was well approximated by the diffusion theory. Both cross-linking procedures resulted in gel formation as determined by falling ball viscometry. These results demonstrate that network microscopic geometry is dependent on the cross-linking method, although both methods markedly increase F-actin macroscopic viscosity.  相似文献   

6.
Dystrophin has been shown to be associated in cells with actin bundles. Dys-246, an N-terminal recombinant protein encoding the first 246 residues of dystrophin, includes two calponin-homology (CH) domains, and is similar to a large class of F-actin cross-linking proteins including alpha-actinin, fimbrin, and spectrin. It has been shown that expression or microinjection of amino-terminal fragments of dystrophin or the closely related utrophin resulted in the localization of these protein domains to actin bundles. However, in vitro studies have failed to detect any bundling of actin by either intact dystrophin or Dys-246. We show here that the structure of F-actin can be modulated so that there are two modes of Dys-246 binding, from bundling actin filaments to only binding to single filaments. The changes in F-actin structure that allow Dys-246 to bundle filaments are induced by covalent modification of Cys-374, proteolytic cleavage of F-actin's C-terminus, mutation of yeast actin's N-terminus, and different buffers. The present results suggest that F-actin's structural state can have a large influence on the nature of actin's interaction with other proteins, and these different states need to be considered when conducting in vitro assays.  相似文献   

7.
TRITC-phalloidin or FITC-labeled F-actin of ghost muscle fibers was bound to tropomyosin and C-terminal recombinant fragments of caldesmon CaDH1 (residues 506-793) or CaDH2 (residues 683-767). After that the fibers were decorated with myosin subfragment 1. In the absence of caldesmon fragments, subfragment 1 interaction with F-actin caused changes in parameters of polarized fluorescence, that were typical of "strong" binding of myosin heads to F-actin and of the "switched on" conformational state of actin. CaDH1 inhibited, whereas CaDH2 activated the effect of subfragment 1. It is suggested that C-terminal part of caldesmon may modulate the transition of F-actin subunits from the "switched on" to the "switched off" state.  相似文献   

8.
The two sulfhydryl groups of chicken gizzard caldesmon were specifically labeled with a photoreactive crosslinker, benzophenone-maleimide, to study its interactions with calmodulin and/or actin. When incubated with F-actin caldesmon crosslinks to a single actin monomer; it can, however, crosslink to up to two calmodulin molecules in the presence, but not in the absence, of Ca2+. Thus caldesmon may have two calmodulin-binding sites, each containing, or being near, one of the two thiol residues. One of these two sites may also be adjacent to the actin-binding site. A calmodulin-binding fragment of caldesmon resulting from cyanogen bromide digestion crosslinks to a single calmodulin molecule, also in a Ca2+-dependent manner. Crosslinking of calmodulin to caldesmon does not prevent the latter from binding F-actin, suggesting that calmodulin and actin do not compete with each other for the same binding site(s) on the caldesmon molecule.  相似文献   

9.
We have developed a simple and conventional purification method for caldesmon and MLC kinase from bovine arterial smooth muscle, and compared the arterial and gizzard proteins. Arterial caldesmon shares the alternative binding to calmodulin or F-actin in a Ca2+-dependent manner and the antigenic determinants with the gizzard protein. Both caldesmons have the same association constant with F-actin (1.3-1.7 X 10(7) M-1) and the same maximum binding (1 caldesmon per 12-14 actins). However, the molecular weight of arterial caldesmon (dimer of a 148 kDa polypeptides) was slightly different from that of gizzard caldesmon (heterodimer of 150/147 kDa polypeptides). The molecular weight of arterial MLC kinase (160 kDa) was much larger than that of the gizzard enzyme (135 kDa). The enzyme activities of both MLC kinases were comparable (Km = 9.5 microM, Vmax = 12.5 mumol/min X mg). The association constant of the arterial enzyme to F-actin (5.1 X 10(6) M-1) was much larger than that of the gizzard enzyme (9.0 X 10(5) M-1) but the maximum binding was the same (1 enzyme per 12-13 actins). Immunocytochemical examinations showed that caldesmon and MLC kinase in cultured arterial cells have a restricted localization along the stress fibers, suggesting functional linkages between both proteins and actin filaments in vivo.  相似文献   

10.
Incubation of bovine adrenal medullary cytoplasmic extracts results in the formation of three-dimensional supramolecular gels. Ultrastructurally, the gels display a network of fibres similar in appearance to the cytoskeleton within intact chromaffin cells. Analysis of the protein composition using both electrophoretic and immunoblotting techniques indicates that the gels are composed exclusively of cytoskeletal elements; microfilaments, microtubules and intermediate filament proteins have been identified as having a number of actin-associated proteins. Among the latter class of components the following polypeptides have been identified: filamin (300 kDa), fodrin (240 kDa), a 235 kDa polypeptide, myosin (200 kDa), caldesmon (70 kDa) and tropomyosins (39 kDa). All of these polypeptides co-sedimented with F-actin when gels were assembled in the absence of Ca2+. When gelation was performed in the presence of 10 microM Ca2+ actin, the 235 kDa polypeptide, 70 kDa caldesmon and tropomyosin were all absent from the gels. These results may suggest that the 235 kDa polypeptide, 70 kDa caldesmon and tropomyosins could act either individually or as a functional regulatory unit in controlling the Ca2+-activated reorganisation of the actin network in the cytoplasmic gels.  相似文献   

11.
The Arp2/3 complex greatly accelerates actin polymerization, which is thought to play a major role in cell motility by inducing membrane protrusions including ruffling movements. Membrane ruffles contain a variety of actin-binding proteins, which would modulate Arp2/3-dependent actin polymerization. However, their exact roles in actin polymerization remain to be established. Because caldesmon is present in membrane ruffles, as well as in stress fibers, it may alter Arp2/3-mediated actin polymerization. We have found that caldesmon greatly retards Arp2/3-induced actin polymerization. Kinetic analyses have revealed that caldesmon inhibits the nucleation process, whereas it does not largely reduce elongation. Caldesmon is found to inhibit binding of Arp2/3 to F-actin, which apparently reduces the ability of F-actin as a secondary activator of Arp2/3-mediated nucleation. We also have found that the inhibition of the binding between actin and caldesmon either by Ca(2+)/calmodulin or by phosphorylation with cdc2 kinase reverses the inhibitory effect of caldesmon on Arp2/3-induced actin polymerization. Our results suggest that caldesmon may be a key protein that modulates membrane ruffling and that this may involve changes in caldesmon phosphorylation and/or intracellular calcium concentrations during signal transduction.  相似文献   

12.
Domain mapping of chicken gizzard caldesmon   总被引:5,自引:0,他引:5  
Limited proteolysis, affinity chromatography, and immunoblotting have been used to define the domains of chicken gizzard caldesmon, caldesmon120, that interact with calmodulin, F-actin, and a monoclonal antibody prepared using human platelet caldesmon. Treatment of caldesmon120 with chymotrypsin produces groups of fragments near 100, 80, 60, 38, and 20 kDa. Further digestion produces peptides between 40 and 50 kDa. The 100- and 80-kDa peptides cross-react with the monoclonal antibody; the smaller polypeptides do not. The kinetics of cleavage and the antibody studies indicate that the 38- and 80-kDa fragments are the two major pieces of the 120-kDa protein. The 38-kDa fragment, purified by high performance liquid chromatography, and several of its subfragments at 21 and 25 kDa sediment with F-actin, bind to calmodulin-Sepharose in the presence of Ca2+, and are displaced from F-actin by Ca2+-calmodulin. The 80-kDa fragments did not interact with F-actin or calmodulin. We have tentatively placed the 38-kDa fragment at the C-terminal using polyclonal antibodies selected against a beta-galactosidase-caldesmon120 fusion protein produced by a lambda gt11 lysogen. The 38-, 25-, and 21-kDa fragments cross-react with these antibodies; the 80- and 60-kDa fragments do not. Caldesmon77 from human platelets also cross-reacts with these selected antibodies. The results suggest that interacting calmodulin and F-actin binding sites are localized on a 38-kDa C-terminal fragment of caldesmon. The smallest subfragment of this peptide that binds to both F-actin and calmodulin-Sepharose is about 21 kDa. The monoclonal antibody epitope is tentatively localized near the N-terminal of caldesmon77 and must be within 50 kDa of the N-terminal on caldesmon120.  相似文献   

13.
Reconstituted actin filament networks have been used extensively to understand the mechanics of the actin cortex and decipher the role of actin cross-linking proteins in the maintenance and deformation of cell shape. However, studies of the mechanical role of the F-actin cross-linking protein filamin have led to seemingly contradictory conclusions, in part due to the use of ill-defined mechanical assays. Using quantitative rheological methods that avoid the pitfalls of previous studies, we systematically tested the complex mechanical response of reconstituted actin filament networks containing a wide range of filamin concentrations and compared the mechanical function of filamin with that of the cross-linking/bundling proteins alpha-actinin and fascin. At steady state and within a well defined linear regime of small non-destructive deformations, F-actin solutions behave as highly dynamic networks (actin polymers are still sufficiently mobile to relax the stress) below the cross-linking-to-bundling threshold filamin concentration, and they behave as covalently cross-linked gels above that threshold. Under large deformations, F-actin networks soften at low filamin concentrations and strain-harden at high filamin concentrations. Filamin cross-links F-actin into networks that are more resilient, stiffer, more solid-like, and less dynamic than alpha-actinin and fascin. These results resolve the controversy by showing that F-actin/filamin networks can adopt diametrically opposed rheological behaviors depending on the concentration in cross-linking proteins.  相似文献   

14.
A synthetic nonapeptide, Val-Leu-Ile-Arg-Ile-Met-Val-Ser-Arg, corresponding to residues 286-294 of annexin-II tetramer (A-IIt), was shown to completely inhibit the Ca(2+)-dependent bundling of F-actin by this protein. The inhibitory effect of the nonapeptide required preincubation with F-actin and was reversed by the addition of excess A-IIt. Kinetic analysis suggested that the nonapeptide reduced the K(0.5) but not the Vmax of F-actin bundling. In contrast, addition of excess nonapeptide to A-IIt-bundled F-actin did not reverse F-actin bundle formation. Although the nonapeptide produced a dose-dependent inhibition of A-IIt-dependent F-actin bundling, the binding of A-IIt to F-actin was not affected. These results identify a domain of A-IIt that is involved in the bundling activity of the protein and suggest that this domain binds transiently with F-actin, resulting in activation of the bundling activity of A-IIt.  相似文献   

15.
Recent studies showed that the actin cross-linking protein, fascin, undergoes rapid cycling between filopodial filaments. Here, we used an experimental and computational approach to dissect features of fascin exchange and incorporation in filopodia. Using expression of phosphomimetic fascin mutants, we determined that fascin in the phosphorylated state is primarily freely diffusing, whereas actin bundling in filopodia is accomplished by fascin dephosphorylated at serine 39. Fluorescence recovery after photobleaching analysis revealed that fascin rapidly dissociates from filopodial filaments with a kinetic off-rate of 0.12 s(-1) and that it undergoes diffusion at moderate rates with a coefficient of 6 microm(2)s(-1). This kinetic off-rate was recapitulated in vitro, indicating that dynamic behavior is intrinsic to the fascin cross-linker. A computational reaction-diffusion model showed that reversible cross-linking is required for the delivery of fascin to growing filopodial tips at sufficient rates. Analysis of fascin bundling indicated that filopodia are semiordered bundles with one bound fascin per 25-60 actin monomers.  相似文献   

16.
Caldesmons are major Ca2+-calmodulin regulated F-actin binding proteins of smooth and non-muscle cells that have been implicated as components of a thin filament regulatory system. Chicken gizzard caldesmons are monomeric proteins of Mr 140,000 and 135,000. We have employed enzymatic and chemical cleavage methods in order to dissect the protein to locate the Ca2+-calmodulin and F-actin binding domain and the site of molecular weight heterogeneity. Using a novel mapping procedure that employs partial chemical cleavage at cysteine residues, we show that both caldesmon polypeptides contain 2 cysteine residues located approximately 28,000 from the protein's amino terminus and the second approximately 25,000 from the carboxyl terminus. Identification of the composition of partial cleavage products with region-specific antibodies is consistent with this derived map. The apparent molecular weight heterogeneity was found to lie in the approximately 80,000 region between the 2 cysteine residues and therefore is not due to proteolytic processing. Digestion with alpha-chymotrypsin yields a relatively stable basic Mr 40,000 Ca2+-calmodulin and F-actin binding fragment that we have purified and characterized. The chymotryptic 40,000 fragment contains the 25,000 carboxyl-terminal fragment and therefore is derived from the carboxyl-terminal region of caldesmon. The 25,000 fragment obtained after chemical cleavage at cysteine under native conditions has also been purified and shown to bind F-actin and Ca2+-calmodulin. Surprisingly, the purified carboxyl 25,000 fragment, unlike the reduced intact monomer, cross-links F-actin into tightly ordered bundles in which the filaments are in register.  相似文献   

17.
A method for the rapid purification of caldesmon, an F-actin binding protein of smooth muscle, has been developed. Caldesmon remains native after heating at 90 degrees C, a property that provides the basis for the purification in high yield of both caldesmon and tropomyosin, another heat-stable protein of smooth muscle. Caldesmon purified by this procedure is a highly asymmetric protein with a sedimentation coefficient of approximately 2.7 S and a Stokes radius of about 91 A. The protein exists as two polypeptide chains of Mr = 135,000 and 140,000, with each Mr polypeptide being resolvable into several isoelectric species. Estimates based on densitometry of stained gels suggest that caldesmon is more abundant in smooth muscle than filamin or alpha-actinin. Purified caldesmon bound to F-actin in the pH range 6-8. Binding was unaffected by Ca2+ or Mg2+ at up to millimolar levels. Binding was saturable, with a polypeptide molar ratio of about one caldesmon to six actins at saturation. F-actin binding was not inhibited by saturating levels of tropomyosin. Caldesmon dramatically increased the viscosity of F-actin. Light microscopy and electron microscopy of negatively stained material revealed that caldesmon induced the formation of massive F-actin bundles which contained up to hundreds of filaments. Electron microscopy of sectioned caldesmon-saturated F-actin mixtures revealed large bundles which appeared to include linear arrays of regularly spaced actin filaments cut transversely, exhibiting a center to center spacing of 15 nm. Possible structural implications based on the existence of these structures is presented.  相似文献   

18.
Water soluble 1-ethyl-3-(3-dimethylaminopropyl)carbodiimide was used to internally cross-link carboxyl and lysyl groups of caldesmon. The modification did not involve the two cysteines of the molecule which were previously labelled with N-iodoacetyl-N'-(5-sulfo-1-naphthyl)ethylenediamine. The modified caldesmon exhibited a smaller Stokes radius (4.0 nm instead of 6.3 nm) and its electrophoretic mobility corresponded to an apparent molecular mass of approximately 82 kDa, appreciably lower than that of the native molecule (120 kDa), but more similar to the reported true molecular mass of 86,974 Da of chicken-gizzard caldesmon (Bryan, J., Imai, M., Lee, R., Moore, P., Cook. R. G. & Lin, W. (1989) J. Biol. Chem. 264, 13,873-13,879). Comparative circular dichroism analysis indicated a decrease of the alpha-helix content from 43% to 36% resulting from the chemical modification. The 1H-NMR spectra of the native and modified caldesmon showed that the covalent cross-linking affected mainly the central and N-terminal parts of the molecule. The C-terminal part, rich in aromatic amino acids, was unmodified by the carbodiimide treatment. This was also corroborated by the continued ability of the modified caldesmon to bind to actin and calmodulin, and by the property of the 90-kDa proteolytic N-terminal fragment to give an internally cross-linked species of 60 kDa. Using electron microscopy, the modified protein was shown to have a more compact shape and a reduced capacity to induce tight and long F-actin bundles. These conformational changes were obtained when the carbodiimide reaction was conducted at pH 6.0 and were not observed at pH 8.0. This suggests that local variation of the pH might affect the conformation of caldesmon which changes from an elongated to more compact shape, stabilized by electrostatic interactions. It is proposed that the flexibility of caldesmon might be involved in the regulatory function of this protein in the smooth muscle and might favour tightly packed F-actin bundles or weaker interactions between actin filaments.  相似文献   

19.
The Caenorhabditis elegans unc-87 gene product is essential for the maintenance of the nematode body wall muscle where it is found colocalized with actin in the I band. The molecular domain structure of the protein reveals similarity to the C-terminal repeat region of the smooth muscle actin-binding protein calponin. In this study we investigated the in vitro function of UNC-87 using both the full-length recombinant molecule and several truncated mutants. According to analytical ultracentrifugation UNC-87 occurs as a monomer in solution. UNC-87 cosedimented with both smooth and skeletal muscle F-actin, but not with monomeric G-actin, and exhibited potent actin filament bundling activity. Actin binding was independent of the presence of tropomyosin and the actin cross-linking proteins filamin and alpha-actinin. Consistent with its actin bundling activity in vitro, UNC-87 tagged with green fluorescent protein associated with and promoted the formation of actin stress fiber bundles in living cells. These data identify UNC-87 as an actin-bundling protein and highlight the calponin-like repeats as a novel actin-binding module.  相似文献   

20.
A recent report by Bretscher [(1984) J. Biol. Chem. 259, 12873-12880] showed that caldesmon prepared by his method crosslinks actin filaments to form thick bundles. This is in contrast to the results of previous work that caldesmon binds to F-actin but does not cause any gelation [(1981) Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. USA 78, 5652-5655]. The present work clearly showed that caldesmon purified according to Bretscher does not cause any gelation of F-actin. However, caldesmon aggregates formed by concentration or by freeze-thawing gelated F-actin to form bundles.  相似文献   

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