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1.
Hydrostatic pressures in the range of hundreds of atmospheres are known to disrupt cytoskeletal organization in tissue culture cells, with profound changes in cell shape. The molecular mechanisms of these effects are poorly understood. To determine the effect of pressure on the cytoskeleton, and thus to provide better indicators of the molecular mechanisms, we used fluorescent antibody staining to compare the organizations of seven different cytoskeletal proteins in HeLa cells and rat osteosarcoma cells (ROS-17/2.8) subjected to different pressures up to 400 atm. Pressures of 300 atm or more caused cells of both lines to “round up” and to withdraw their lamellar extensions. However, this response varied within a population of cells, with some cells remaining spread at pressures that caused their neighbors to round up. The most resistant to rounding were those cells touching other cells, and the occasional giant cells. As expected, the rounded cells showed disruption of actin stress fibers and of vinculin and talin at focal contacts. The unrounded cells showed less disruption in the organization of these same proteins. Microtubules and myosin II filaments appeared resistant to 400 atm pressure in both cell types, whether rounded or unrounded. However, in HeLa cells, the intermediate filaments, vimentin and cytokeratin, depolymerized and formed small vesicles when pressures exceeded 200 atm, and this occurred in rounded as well as unrounded cells. In osteosarcoma cells, which do not have cytokeratin, vimentin did not depolymerize. We discuss different mechanisms that might explain these responses to pressure, including direct effects on the equilibria of protein polymerization and less direct effects on regulatory mechanisms, such as phosphorylation pathways, that control cytoskeletal organization. The latter type of explanation seems more consistent with both the variability of response within cell populations and the difference in vimentin's response in one cell line compared with the other.  相似文献   

2.
The actin cytoskeleton has the unique capability of integrating signaling and structural elements to regulate cell function. We have examined the ability of actin stress fiber disassembly to induce lens cell differentiation and the role of actin filaments in promoting lens cell survival. Three-dimensional mapping of basal actin filaments in the intact lens revealed that stress fibers were disassembled just as lens epithelial cells initiated their differentiation in vivo. Experimental disassembly of actin stress fibers in cultured lens epithelial cells with either the ROCK inhibitor Y-27632, which destabilizes stress fibers, or the actin depolymerizing drug cytochalasin D induced expression of lens cell differentiation markers. Significantly, short-term disassembly of actin stress fibers in lens epithelial cells by cytochalasin D was sufficient to signal lens cell differentiation. As differentiation proceeds, lens fiber cells assemble actin into cortical filaments. Both the actin stress fibers in lens epithelial cells and the cortical actin filaments in lens fiber cells were found to be necessary for cell survival. Sustained cytochalasin D treatment of undifferentiated lens epithelial cells suppressed Bcl-2 expression and the cells ultimately succumbed to apoptotic cell death. Inhibition of Rac-dependent cortical actin organization induced apoptosis of differentiating lens fiber cells. Our results demonstrate that disassembly of actin stress fibers induced lens cell differentiation, and that actin filaments provide an essential survival signal to both lens epithelial cells and differentiating lens fiber cells.  相似文献   

3.
The effects of acrylamide (ACR), nocodazole, and latrunculin were studied on intracellular transport and cytoskeletal morphology in cultured Xenopus laevis melanophores, cells that are specialized for regulated and bidirectional melanosome transport. We used three different methods; light microscopy, fluorescence microscopy, and spectrophotometry. ACR affected the morphology of both microtubules and actin filaments in addition to inhibiting retrograde transport of melanosomes but leaving dispersion unaffected. Using the microtubule-inhibitor nocodazole and the actin filament-inhibitor latrunculin we found that microtubules and actin filaments are highly dependent on each other, and removing either component dramatically changed the organization of the other. Both ACR and latrunculin induced bundling of microtubules, while nocodazole promoted formation of filaments resembling stress fibers organized from the cell center to the periphery. Removal of actin filaments inhibited dispersion of melanosomes, further concentrated the central pigment mass in aggregated cells, and induced aggregation even in the absence of melatonin. Nocodazole, on the other hand, prevented aggregation and caused melanosomes to cluster and slowly disperse. Dispersion of nocodazole-treated cells was induced upon addition of alpha-melanocyte-stimulating hormone (MSH), showing that dispersion can proceed in the absence of microtubules, but the distribution pattern was altered. It is well established that ACR has neurotoxic effects, and based on the results in the present study we suggest that ACR has several cellular targets of which the minus-end microtubule motor dynein and the melatonin receptor might be involved. When combining morphological observations with qualitative and quantitative measurements of intracellular transport, melanophores provide a valuable model system for toxicological studies.  相似文献   

4.
5.
Rho family GTPases have been shown to be involved in the regulation of neuronal cell morphology, including neurite extension and retraction. Rho activation leads to neurite retraction and cell rounding, whereas Rac and Cdc42 are implicated in the promotion of filopodia and lamellipodia formation in growth cones and, therefore, in neurite extension. In this study, we examined the morphological role of Rnd1, a new member of Rho family GTPases, in PC12 cells, and found that expression of Rnd1 by itself caused the formation of many neuritic processes from the cell body with disruption of the cortical actin filaments, the processes having microtubules but few filamentous actin and neurofilaments. Treatment with cytochalasin D, an inhibitor of actin polymerization, could mimic the effects of expression of Rnd1, in that this inhibitor disrupted the cortical actin filaments and induced the formation of many thin processes containing microtubules. The process formation induced by Rnd1 was inhibited by dominant negative Rac1. These results suggest that Rnd1 induces the Rac-dependent neuritic process formation in part by disruption of the cortical actin filaments.  相似文献   

6.
BACKGROUND INFORMATION: C(2) toxin produced by Clostridium botulinum types C and D ADP-ribosylates actin monomers and inactivates their polymerization activities. The disassembly of actin filaments by C(2) toxin induces a polarization of cultured human leukaemia cell lines. RESULTS: The polarization induced by C(2) toxin was temperature dependent and was prevented by nocodazole, a microtubule-disrupting agent, whereas it was promoted by paclitaxel, a microtubule-stabilizing agent. The fluorescence staining of polarized cells indicated an increase in microtubule assembly accompanying disassembly of actin filaments. Furthermore, several actin-filament-disrupting agents, other than C(2) toxin, also induced microtubule assembly and cell polarization, irrespective of their different mechanisms of action. The effects induced by some of the agents, which have lower binding affinities for actin, were reversible in response to the re-assembly of actin filaments. CONCLUSIONS: Thus the disassembly of actin filaments by C(2) toxin and actin-filament-disrupting agents induces assembly of microtubules followed by polarization of human leukaemia cell lines, indicating that the assembly/disassembly equilibrium of actin filaments influences the dynamics of microtubules, which control cell morphology and, in turn, diverse cellular processes.  相似文献   

7.
Adenomatous polyposis coli gene product (APC) is a tumor suppressor linked to familial adenomatous polyposis and is thought to be involved in cellular polarization and migration in moving epithelial cells. APC interacts with the mammalian homolog of Discs large (DLG). DLG is a member of the membrane-associated guanylate kinase superfamily and is thought to function as a scaffolding protein that coordinates the assembly of a lateral plasma membrane-localized protein complex in epithelial cells. We confirmed the suitability of several anti-APC antibodies for immunocytochemical analysis. Using these antibodies, we showed that APC clusters were colocalized with DLG protein at cellular protrusions of subconfluent MDCK cells. A portion of the clusters was found at the tips of microtubules extending into the cellular protrusions. In addition, actin stress fibers converged near the clusters. When microtubules were disrupted by nocodazole, the colocalization of APC and DLG was lost due to the disappearance of APC clusters. However, the coclusters remained after depolymerization of actin filaments with latrunculin A. This is the first report showing colocalization of APC and DLG in non-polarized epithelial cells. This colocalization suggests that DLG functions not only at the lateral cell–cell contact sites of polarized epithelial cells but also at the protrusions of non-polarized epithelial cells through the interaction with APC protein.  相似文献   

8.
The association between intermediate filaments (IF) and microtubules (MT) has been demonstrated by several experiments using MT inhibitors and by microinjecting specific antibodies. The actin cytoskeleton has recently been assigned a role in this process of drug induced IF collapse. However, this was not found to be true in large cells with irregular morphology. For instance, in early passage diploid fibroblasts of human origin and in armadillo cell lines, where the cells are large, irregular in shape and exhibit prominent stress fibers ( SF ), depolymerization of MT with nocodazole did not lead to collapse of IF . Instead, the IF formed bundles of coils that seemed to associate with the SF . Disintegration of the SF with cytochalasin B led to the collapse of the IF . It appears that the actin organization in such large cells with extensive SF , is not as contractile as in typical spindle shaped fibroblasts which have relatively less stable actin organization. The stable SF may actually prevent IF collapse.  相似文献   

9.
The NG2 chondroitin sulfate proteoglycan is a membrane-spanning molecule expressed by immature precursor cells in a variety of developing tissues. In tightly adherent cell lines with a flattened morphology, NG2 is organized on the cell surface in linear arrays that are highly co-localized with actin and myosin-containing stress fibers in the cytoskeleton. In contrast, microtubules and intermediate filaments in the cytoskeleton exhibit completely different patterns of organization, suggesting that NG2 may use microfilamentous stress fibers as a means of cytoskeletal anchorage. Consistent with this is the observation that cytochalasin D disrupts the organization of both stress fibers in the cytoskeleton and NG2 on the cell surface. Very similar linear cell surface arrays are also seen with three other cell surface molecules thought to interact with the actin cytoskeleton: the α5β1 integrin, the CD44 proteoglycan, and the L1 neuronal cell adhesion molecule. Since the cytoplasmic domains of these four molecules are dissimilar, it seems possible that cytoskeletal anchorage in each case may occur via different mechanisms. One indication of such differences can be seen in colchicine-treated cells which have lost their flattened morphology but still retain long actin-positive tendrils as remnants of the actin cytoskeleton. NG2 and α5β1 are associated with these tendrils while CD44 and L1 are not, suggesting that at least two subclasses of cell surface molecules exist which can interact with different subdomains of the actin cytoskeleton. © 1996 Wiley-Liss, Inc.  相似文献   

10.
Sperm from nematodes use a major sperm protein (MSP) cytoskeleton in place of an actin cytoskeleton to drive their ameboid locomotion. Motility is coupled to the assembly of MSP fibers near the leading edge of the pseudopod plasma membrane. This unique motility system has been reconstituted in vitro in cell-free extracts of sperm from Ascaris suum: inside-out vesicles derived from the plasma membrane trigger assembly of meshworks of MSP filaments, called fibers, that push the vesicle forward as they grow (Italiano, J.E., Jr., T.M. Roberts, M. Stewart, and C.A. Fontana. 1996. Cell. 84:105–114). We used changes in hydrostatic pressure within a microscope optical chamber to investigate the mechanism of assembly of the motile apparatus. The effects of pressure on the MSP cytoskeleton in vivo and in vitro were similar: pressures >50 atm slowed and >300 atm stopped fiber growth. We focused on the in vitro system to show that filament assembly occurs in the immediate vicinity of the vesicle. At 300 atm, fibers were stable, but vesicles often detached from the ends of fibers. When the pressure was dropped, normal fiber growth occurred from detached vesicles but the ends of fibers without vesicles did not grow. Below 300 atm, pressure modulates both the number of filaments assembled at the vesicle (proportional to fiber optical density and filament nucleation rate), and their rate of assembly (proportional to the rates of fiber growth and filament elongation). Thus, fiber growth is not simply because of the addition of subunits onto the ends of existing filaments, but rather is regulated by pressure-sensitive factors at or near the vesicle surface. Once a filament is incorporated into a fiber, its rates of addition and loss of subunits are very slow and disassembly occurs by pathways distinct from assembly. The effects of pressure on fiber assembly are sensitive to dilution of the extract but largely independent of MSP concentration, indicating that a cytosolic component other than MSP is required for vesicle-association filament nucleation and elongation. Based on these data we present a model for the mechanism of locomotion-associated MSP polymerization the principles of which may apply generally to the way cells assemble filaments locally to drive protrusion of the leading edge.  相似文献   

11.
Three-dimensional cytoskeletal organization of detergent-treated epithelial African green monkey kidney cells (BSC-1) and chick embryo fibroblasts was studied in whole-mount preparations visualized in a high voltage electron microscope. Stereo images are generated at both low and high magnification to reveal both overall cytoskeletal morphology and details of the structural continuity of different filament types. By the use of an improved extraction procedure in combination with heavy meromyosin subfragment 1 decoration of actin filaments, several new features of filament organization are revealed that suggest that the cytoskeleton is a highly interconnected structural unit. In addition to actin filaments, intermediate filaments, and microtubules, a new class of filaments of 2- to 3-nm diameter and 30- to 300-nm length that do not bind heavy merymyosin is demonstrated. They form end-to-side contacts with other cytoskeletal filaments, thereby acting as linkers between various fibers, both like (e.g., actin- actin) and unlike (e.g., actin-intermediate filament, intermediate filament-microtubule). Their nature is unknown. In addition to 2- to 3-nm filaments, actin filaments are demonstrated to form end-to-side contacts with other filaments. Y-shaped actin filament “branches” are observed both in the cell periphery close to ruffles and in more central cell areas also populated by abundant intermediate filaments and microtubules. Arrowhead complexes formed by subfragment 1 decoration of actin filaments point towards the contact site. Actin filaments also form end-to-side contacts with microtubules and intermediate filaments. Careful inspection of numerous actin-microtubule contacts shows that microtubules frequently change their course at sites of contact. A variety of experimentally induced modifications of the frequency of actin-microtubule contacts can be shown to influence the course of microtubules. We conclude that bends in microtubules are imposed by structural interactions with other cytoskeletal elements. A structural and biochemical comparison of whole cells and cytoskeletons demonstrates that the former show a more inticate three-dimensional network and a more complex biochemical composition than the latter. An analysis of the time course of detergent extraction strongly suggests that the cytoskeleton forms a structural backbone with which a large number of proteins of the cytoplasmic ground substance associate in an ordered fashion to form the characteristic image of the “microtrabecular network” (J.J. Wolosewick and K.R. Porter. 1979. J. Cell Biol. 82: 114-139).  相似文献   

12.
Cultured cells in vitro from estrogen-induced rat prolactin-secreting adenomas (prolactinomas) were examined by indirect immunofluorescence microscopy for the distribution of cytoskeletal proteins and alterations of cytoskeleton after treatment with bromocriptine, colchicine and cytochalasin B (CB). After 8 days in culture, prolactinoma cells were well expanded and developed cytoplasmic processes were seen. The cytoplasmic microtubules were observed as fine reticular networks radiating from perinuclear portions toward the cell periphery when decorated with an antibody against tubulin. On the other hand, the actin filaments showed diffuse and spotty distribution when detected with an anti-actin antibody. Contaminated fibroblasts showed a reticular distribution of microtubules and a parallel array of actin cables which corresponds to "stress fibers" throughout the cytoplasm. After treatment with bromocriptine, the reticular distribution of microtubules in prolactinoma cells changed into a coarse and sparse pattern, which was identical with the changes in the distribution of tubulin after treatment with colchicine. On the other hand, distribution of actin was not affected by bromocriptine. Bromocriptine treatment did not alter the distribution of microtubules and actin filaments in fibroblasts, whereas colchicine changed the distribution of microtubules in both prolactinoma cells and fibroblasts. CB treatment changed the localization of actin filaments in both kinds of cells. These in vitro studies indicated bromocriptine would selectively affect the cytoplasmic microtubular system of prolactinoma cells.  相似文献   

13.
We investigated the pressure tolerance of deep-sea eel (Simenchelys parasiticus; habitat depth, 366–2,630 m) cells, conger eel (Conger myriaster) cells, and mouse 3T3-L1 cells. Although there were no living mouse 3T3-L1 and conger eel cells after 130 MPa (0.1 MPa = 1 bar) hydrostatic pressurization for 20 min, all deep-sea eel cells remained alive after being subjected to pressures up to 150 MPa for 20 min. Pressurization at 40 MPa for 20 min induced disruption of actin and tubulin filaments with profound cell-shape changes in the mouse and conger eel cells. In the deep-sea eel cells, microtubules and some actin filaments were disrupted after being subjected to hydrostatic pressure of 100 MPa and greater for 20 min. Conger eel cells were sensitive to pressure and did not grow at 10 MPa. Mouse 3T3-L1 cells grew faster under pressure of 5 MPa than at atmospheric pressure and stopped growing at 18 MPa. Deep-sea eel cells were capable of growth in pressures up to 25 MPa and stopped growing at 30 MPa. Deep-sea eel cells required 4 h at 20 MPa to finish the M phase, which was approximately fourfold the time required under atmospheric conditions.  相似文献   

14.
Flow cytometry and staining with 7-nitrobenz-2-oxa-1,3-diazole-phallacidin were used to investigate organization of the actin cytoskeleton in rat embryo cells at different stages of normal and adenovirus E1A-induced cell cycles. In uninfected cells in G0-G1 and S phases, actin was predominantly in the form of stress fibers. In G2, this organization changed to peripheral rings of thin filaments, while during mitosis, actin had a diffuse distribution. Infection of quiescent rat cells by adenovirus caused them to enter the cell cycle and replicate DNA and also caused disruption of stress fibers. Rapid disappearance of stress fibers and the appearance of peripheral rings of actin filaments began from 13 h after infection and closely followed synthesis of the E1A proteins. Infected cells began S phase at about 24 h after infection, and cells in G2 and mitosis were seen from 30 to 50 h. Thus, disruption of the actin cytoskeleton is an early effect of E1A and not an indirect consequence of the entry of infected cells into the cell cycle.  相似文献   

15.
The intracellular polymerization of cytoskeletal proteins into their supramolecular assemblies raises many questions regarding the regulatory patterns that control this process. Binding experiments using the ELISA solid phase system, together with protein assembly assays and electron microscopical studies provided clues on the protein-protein associations in the polymerization of tubulin and actin networks. In vitro reconstitution experiments of these cytoskeletal filaments using purified tau, tubulin, and actin proteins were carried out. Tau protein association with tubulin immobilized in a solid phase support system was inhibited by actin monomer, and a higher inhibition was attained in the presence of preassembled actin filaments. Conversely, tubulin and assembled microtubules strongly inhibited tau interaction with actin in the solid phase system. Actin filaments decreased the extent of in vitro tau-induced tubulin assembly. Studies on the morphological aspects of microtubules and actin filaments coexisting in vitro, revealed the association between both cytoskeletal filaments, and in some cases, the presence of fine filamentous structures bridging these polymers. Immunogold studies showed the association of tau along polymerized microtubules and actin filaments, even though a preferential localization of labeled tau with microtubules was revealed. The studies provide further evidence for the involvement of tau protein in modulating the interactions of microtubules and actin polymers in the organization of the cytsokeletal network.  相似文献   

16.
The effect of various drugs affecting the integrity of different components of the cytoskeleton on the elasticity of two fibroblast cell lines was investigated by elasticity measurements with an atomic force microscope (AFM). Disaggregation of actin filaments always resulted in a distinct decrease in the cell's average elastic modulus indicating the crucial importance of the actin network for the mechanical stability of living cells. Disruption or chemical stabilization of microtubules did not affect cell elasticity. For the f-actin-disrupting drugs different mechanisms of drug action were observed. Cytochalasins B and D and Latrunculin A disassembled stress fibers. For Cytochalasin D this was accompanied by an aggregation of actin within the cytosol. Jasplakinolide disaggregated actin filaments but did not disassemble stress fibers. Fibrous structures found in AFM images and elasticity maps of fibroblasts could be identified as stress fibers by correlation of AFM data and fluorescence images.  相似文献   

17.
Ovarian granulosa cells from small antral follicles from immature rats were cultured in a serum-free medium for 1-6 days with or without the presence of 10(-5) M dehydroepiandrosterone (DHEA) or 10(-5) M-androstenedione (delta 4-A). Control cultures reveal that the cells are flattened and contain many filamentous bundles organized as stress fibers, numerous scattered cytoplasmic actin filaments, microtubules and vimentin. Alpha actinin and myosin were shown by immunocytochemistry to have a punctate pattern along the stress fibers. For the most part, cells exposed to androgens did not flatten; however, they assumed a varied shape and contained fewer stress fibers and actin filaments. Many of these cells did not develop stress fibers and those that did develop were fewer in number and displayed--actinin and myosin in a punctate pattern. Microtubules and vimentin filaments remained unaltered when compared to controls. It is believed that the deficiency of actin filaments, coupled with certain other degenerative changes which express themselves in other cellular compartments, leads to an early atresia of the granulosa cell cultured in high concentrations of androgens.  相似文献   

18.
With regard to the fact that, in anchorage-dependent lens epithelial cells, DNA synthesis can be switched on and off by cell flattening and cell rounding, respectively, the state of the microfilaments has been followed by labelling actin with FL-phalloidin during cell-shape alterations. Cell flattening proved to be accompanied by both a structural organization of actin filaments into stress fibres and an enlargement of the area of the cell nucleus. Cell rounding, on the other hand, caused the microfilament bundles to disappear and the area of the nucleus to become smaller. From the time course of the inhibition of DNA synthesis by cytochalasin B, it was inferred that functionally intact microfilaments are required for the entrance of the cells into DNA synthesis but not for the maintenance of ongoing DNA synthesis. The assumption has been made that the tension, generated by microfilaments during cell spreading, will affect the state of the plasma membrane as well as the shape and the structure of the nucleus, which in turn seems to be preparatory for cells to enter the cycle.  相似文献   

19.
Stress fibers are actin bundles encompassing actin filaments, actin-crosslinking, and actin-associated proteins that represent the major contractile system in the cell. Different types of stress fibers assemble in adherent cells, and they are central to diverse cellular processes including establishment of the cell shape, morphogenesis, cell polarization, and migration. Stress fibers display specific cellular organization and localization, with ventral fibers present at the basal side, and dorsal fibers and transverse actin arcs rising at the cell front from the ventral to the dorsal side and toward the nucleus. Perinuclear actin cap fibers are a specific subtype of stress fibers that rise from the leading edge above the nucleus and terminate at the cell rear forming a dome-like structure. Perinuclear actin cap fibers are fixed at three points: both ends are anchored in focal adhesions, while the central part is physically attached to the nucleus and nuclear lamina through the linker of nucleoskeleton and cytoskeleton (LINC) complex. Here, we discuss recent work that provides new insights into the mechanism of assembly and the function of these actin stress fibers that directly link extracellular matrix and focal adhesions with the nuclear envelope.  相似文献   

20.
Shigella invasion into the colonic epithelium involves many steps including the formation of large membrane protrusions by the epithelial cells that facilitate bacterial engulfment. IpaA, a Shigella protein secreted into target cells upon cell contact induces a loss of actin stress fibers in cells and promotes the reorganization of actin at the site of entry. The mechanism for this is not known but is thought to involve recruitment of the focal adhesion protein vinculin to IpaA. Here we have examined the mechanism for the effects of IpaA on the actin cytoskeleton. We show that IpaA-induced loss of actin stress fibers and cell rounding do not require vinculin expression or an intact vinculin binding site on IpaA. Rather, we find that cells expressing IpaA exhibited elevated Rho activity and increased myosin light chain phosphorylation. In addition, IpaA decreases integrin affinity for extracellular matrix ligands by interfering with talin recruitment to the integrin cytoplasmic tail. The combination of these two effects, namely weakened adhesion and increased contractility, account for the loss of actin stress fibers and cell rounding observed in cells exposed to IpaA.  相似文献   

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