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1.
The acetylcholine receptor (AChR) clusters of cultured rat myotubes contain two distinct, interdigitating, membrane domains, one enriched in AChR, the other poor in AChR but associated with sites of myotube- substrate contact (Bloch, R.J., and B. Geiger, 1980, Cell, 21:25-35). We have used two cholesterol-specific cytochemical probes, saponin and filipin, to investigate the lipid nature of these membrane domains. When studied with freeze-fracture electron microscopy or fluorescence microscopy, these reagents reacted moderately and preferentially with the AChR-rich domains of AChR clusters. Little or no reaction with the membrane in "contact" domains was seen. In contrast, membrane regions surrounding the AChR clusters reacted extensively with filipin. These results suggest that, in rat myotubes, the composition or the state of the lipids differs between the two membrane domains of the AChR clusters, and between clusters and surrounding membrane. In chick myotubes, AChR clusters do not appear to react with filipin or saponin, although surrounding membrane reacts extensively with these reagents.  相似文献   

2.
Cultured rat myotubes develop high concentrations of acetylcholine receptors (AChR) in specialized areas of attachment to their substrate. We examined the ultrastructure of identified AChR clusters by quick-freeze, deep-etch, rotary replication or by thin sectioning of whole myotubes fixed in the presence of saponin and tannic acid to preserve the cytoskeleton. Our findings show that AChR clusters are composed of at least three distinct domains, differing in their cytoskeletal, intramembrane, and external components. At contact domains, the myotube's ventral membrane lacked AChR and lay within 10-15 nm of the substrate; electron-dense strands connected the two. The overlying cytoplasm contained bundles of parallel microfilaments passing above and through an irregular network of globular material, resembling the relationship of microfilament bundles to focal contacts already described in fibroblasts. Coated-membrane domains lay between the microfilament bundles and were overlain by cytoplasmic plaques of a regular network of polygons having associated coated pits. These plaques closely resembled the network of polymerized clathrin described in fibroblasts and macrophages. Coated membrane also lacked AChR and adhered to the substrate by electron-dense strands, but did not anchor microfilament bundles. The cytoplasm overlying AChR domains contained a complex network composed of at least two layers. The layer closest to the membrane consisted of protrusions from the cytoplasmic surface, some connected by fine filaments less than 5 nm in diameter. An overlying layer contained larger diameter filaments, some forming an anastomotic network reminiscent of the cortical cytoskeleton of erythrocytes. Longer filaments inserting into this network appeared identical to members of nearby microfilament bundles. The morphology of AChR domains supports the idea that AChR are immobilized by a network containing actin and spectrin.  相似文献   

3.
A 58-kD protein, identified in extracts of postsynaptic membrane from Torpedo electric organ, is enriched at sites where acetylcholine receptors (AChR) are concentrated in vertebrate muscle (Froehner, S. C., A. A. Murnane, M. Tobler, H. B. Peng, and R. Sealock. 1987. J. Cell Biol. 104:1633-1646). We have studied the 58-kD protein in AChR clusters isolated from cultured rat myotubes. Using immunofluorescence microscopy we show that the 58-kD protein is highly enriched at AChR clusters, but is also present in regions of the myotube membrane lacking AChR. Within clusters, the 58-kD protein codistributes with AChR, and is absent from adjacent membrane domains involved in myotube-substrate contact. Semiquantitative fluorescence measurements suggest that molecules of the 58-kD protein and AChR are present in approximately equal numbers. Differential extraction of peripheral membrane proteins from isolated AChR clusters suggests that the 58-kD protein is more tightly bound to cluster membrane than is actin or spectrin, but less tightly bound than the receptor-associated 43-kD protein. When AChR clusters are disrupted either in intact cells or after isolation, the 58-kD protein still codistributes with AChR. Clusters visualized by electron microscopy after immunogold labeling and quick-freeze, deep-etch replication show that, within AChR clusters, the 58-kD protein is sharply confined to AChR-rich domains, where it is present in a network of filaments lying on the cytoplasmic surface of the membrane. Additional actin filaments overlie, and are attached to, this network. Our results suggest that within AChR domains of clusters, the 58-kD protein lies between AChR and the receptor-associated 43-kD protein, and the membrane-skeletal proteins, beta-spectrin, and actin.  相似文献   

4.
Agrin induces the formation of highly localized specializations on myotubes at which nicotinic acetylcholine receptors (AChRs) and many other components of the postsynaptic apparatus at the vertebrate skeletal neuromuscular junction accumulate. Agrin also induces AChR tyrosine phosphorylation. Treatments that inhibit tyrosine phosphorylation prevent AChR aggregation. To examine further the relationship between tyrosine phosphorylation and receptor aggregation, we have used the technique of fluorescence recovery after photobleaching to assess the lateral mobility of AChRs and other surface proteins in mouse C2 myotubes treated with agrin or with pervanadate, a protein tyrosine phosphatase inhibitor. Agrin induced the formation of patches in C2 myotubes that stained intensely with anti-phosphotyrosine antibodies and within which AChRs were relatively immobile. Pervanadate, on the other hand, increased protein tyrosine phosphorylation throughout the myotube and caused a reduction in the mobility of diffusely distributed AChRs, without affecting the mobility of other membrane proteins. Pervanadate, like agrin, caused an increase in AChR tyrosine phosphorylation and a decrease in the rate at which AChRs could be extracted from intact myotubes by mild detergent treatment, suggesting that immobilized receptors were phosphorylated and therefore less extractable. Indeed, phosphorylated receptors were extracted from agrin-treated myotubes more slowly than nonphosphorylated receptors. AChR aggregates at developing neuromuscular junctions in embryonic rat muscles also labeled with anti- phosphotyrosine antibodies, suggesting that tyrosine phosphorylation could mediate AChR aggregation in vivo as well. Thus, agrin appears to induce AChR aggregation by creating circumscribed domains of increased protein tyrosine phosphorylation within which receptors become phosphorylated and immobilized.  相似文献   

5.
We have used antibodies to clathrin light chains in immunocytochemical studies of acetylcholine receptor (AChR) clusters of cultured rat myotubes. Immunofluorescence and ultrastructural experiments show that clathrin is present in coated pits and in large plaques of coated membrane. Coated membrane plaques are spatially and structurally distinct from AChR-rich membrane domains and the bundles of microfilaments that are also present in AChR clusters. Clusters contain a relatively constant amount of clathrin light chain protein, which is not dependent on the amount of AChR. Clathrin plaques remain after AChR domains are disrupted by azide, or after microfilament bundles are destabilized by cytochalasin D. Extraction of myotubes with saponin removes clathrin without disrupting AChR domains. Thus, clathrin plaques, microfilament bundles, and AChR-rich domains are independently stabilized.  相似文献   

6.
Affinity-purified antibodies to the serum glycoprotein, vitronectin, were used to study sites of cell-substrate contact in cultures of rat myotubes and fibroblasts. Cells were removed from the substrate by treatment with saponin, leaving fragments of plasma membrane attached to the glass coverslip. When stained for vitronectin by indirect immunofluorescence, large areas of the substrate were brightly labeled. The focal contacts of fibroblasts and the broad adhesion plaques of myotubes appeared black, however, indicating that the antibodies had failed to react with those areas. Contact sites within the adhesion plaque remained unlabeled after saponin-treated samples were extracted with Triton X-100, or after intact cultures were sheared with a stream of fixative. These procedures expose extracellular macromolecules at the cell-substrate interface, which can then be labeled with concanavalin A. In contrast, when samples were sheared and then sonicated to remove all the cellular material from the coverslip, the entire substrate labeled extensively and almost uniformly with anti-vitronectin. Extracellular molecules associated with substrate contacts were also studied after freeze-fracture, using a technique we term "post-release fracture labeling." Platinum replicas of the external membrane were removed from the glass with hydrofluoric acid to expose the extracellular material. Anti-vitronectin, bound to the replicas and visualized by a second antibody conjugated to colloidal gold, labeled the broad areas of close myotube-substrate attachment and the nearby glass equally well. Our results are consistent with the hypothesis that vitronectin is present at all sites of cell-substrate contact, but that its antigenic sites are obscured by material deposited by both myotube and fibroblast cells.  相似文献   

7.
The rotational mobility of acetylcholine receptors (AChR) in the plasma membrane of living rat myotubes in culture is measured in this study by polarized fluorescence recovery after photobleaching (PFRAP). These AChR are known to exist in two distinct classes, evident by labeling with rhodamine alpha-bungarotoxin; clustered AChR that are aggregated in a pattern of highly concentrated speckles and streaks, with each cluster occupying an area of approximately 1,000 microns 2; and nonclustered AChR that appear as diffuse labeling. PFRAP results reported here show that: (a) most clustered AChR (approximately 86%) are rotationally immobile within a time scale of at least several seconds; and (b) most nonclustered AChR (approximately 76%) are rotationally mobile with characteristic times ranging from less than 50 ms to 0.1 s. External cross-linking with the tetravalent lectin concanavalin A immobilizes many nonclustered AChR. PFRAP experiments in the presence of carbachol or cytochalasin D show that the restraints to rotational motion in clusters are remarkably immune to treatments that disperse clusters or disrupt cytoplasmic actin. The experiments also demonstrate the feasibility of using PFRAP to measure rotational diffusion on selected microscopic areas of living nondeoxygenated cells labeled with standard fluorescence probes over a very wide range of time scales, and they also indicate what technical improvements would make PFRAP even more practicable.  相似文献   

8.
Acetylcholine receptor (AChR) clusters of cultured rat myotubes, isolated by extraction with saponin (Bloch, R. J., 1984, J. Cell Biol. 99:984-993), contain a polypeptide that co-electrophoreses with purified muscle actins. A monoclonal antibody against actin reacts in immunoblots with this polypeptide and with purified actins. In indirect immunofluorescence, the antibody stains isolated AChR clusters only at AChR domains, strips of membrane within clusters that are rich in receptor. It also stains the postsynaptic region of the neuromuscular junction of adult rat skeletal muscle. Semiquantitative immunofluorescence analyses show that labeling by antiactin of isolated analyses show that labeling by antiactin of isolated AChR clusters is specific and saturable and that it varies linearly with the amount of AChR in the cluster. Filaments of purified gizzard myosin also bind preferentially at AChR-rich regions, and this binding is inhibited by MgATP. These experiments suggest that actin is associated with AChR-rich regions of receptor clusters. Depletion of actin by extraction of isolated clusters at low ionic strength selectively releases the actin-like polypeptide from the preparation. Simultaneously, AChRs redistribute within the plane of the membrane of the isolated clusters. Similarly, brief digestion with chymotrypsin reduces immunofluorescence staining and causes AChR redistribution. Treatments that deplete AChR from clusters in intact cells also reduce immunofluorescent staining for actin in isolated muscle membrane fragments. Upon reversal of these treatments, cluster reformation occurs in regions of the membrane that also stain for actin. I conclude that actin is associated with AChR domains and that changes in this association are accompanied by changes in the organization of isolated AChR clusters.  相似文献   

9.
The nicotinic acetylcholine receptor (AChR) is in intimate contact with the lipids in its native membrane. Here we analyze the possibility that it is the intrinsic properties of the AChR that determine its partition into a given lipid domain. Torpedo AChR or a synthetic peptide corresponding to the AChR γM4 segment (the one in closer contact with lipids) was reconstituted into “raft”-containing model membranes. The distribution of the AChR was assessed by Triton X-100 extraction in combination with fluorescence studies, and lipid analyses were performed on each sample. The influence of rapsyn, a peripheral protein involved in AChR aggregation, was studied. Raft-like domain aggregation was also studied using membranes containing the ganglioside GM1 followed by GM1 crosslinking. The γM4 peptide displays a marked preference for raft-like domains. In contrast, AChR alone or in the presence of rapsyn or ganglioside aggregation exhibits no such preference for raft-like domains, but it does cause a significant reduction in the total amount of these domains. The results indicate that the distribution of the AChR in lipid domains cannot be due exclusively to the intrinsic physicochemical properties of the protein and that there must be an external signal in native cell membranes that directs the AChR to a specific membrane domain.  相似文献   

10.
Emerging concepts of membrane organization point to the compartmentalization of the plasma membrane into distinct lipid microdomains. This lateral segregation within cellular membranes is based on cholesterol-sphingolipid-enriched microdomains or lipid rafts which can move laterally and assemble into large-scale domains to create plasma membrane specialized cellular structures at specific cell locations. Such domains are likely involved in the genesis of the postsynaptic specialization at the neuromuscular junction, which requires the accumulation of acetylcholine receptors (AChRs), through activation of the muscle specific kinase MuSK by the neurotropic factor agrin and the reorganization of the actin cytoskeleton. We used C2C12 myotubes as a model system to investigate whether agrin-elicited AChR clustering correlated with lipid rafts. In a previous study, using two-photon Laurdan confocal imaging, we showed that agrin-induced AChR clusters corresponded to condensed membrane domains: the biophysical hallmark of lipid rafts [F. Stetzkowski-Marden, K. Gaus, M. Recouvreur, A. Cartaud, J. Cartaud, Agrin elicits membrane condensation at sites of acetylcholine receptor clusters in C2C12 myotubes, J. Lipid Res. 47 (2006) 2121-2133]. We further demonstrated that formation and stability of AChR clusters depend on cholesterol. We also reported that three different extraction procedures (Triton X-100, pH 11 or isotonic Ca++, Mg++ buffer) generated detergent resistant membranes (DRMs) with similar cholesterol/GM1 ganglioside content, which are enriched in several signalling postsynaptic components, notably AChR, the agrin receptor MuSK, rapsyn and syntrophin. Upon agrin engagement, actin and actin-nucleation factors such as Arp2/3 and N-WASP were transiently recovered within raft fractions suggesting that the activation by agrin can trigger actin polymerization. Taken together, the present data suggest that AChR clustering at the neuromuscular junction relies upon a mechanism of raft coalescence driven by agrin-elicited actin polymerization.  相似文献   

11.
We have used interference reflection and fluorescence microscopy to investigate the relationship between cell-substrate contact and the location of clusters of acetylcholine receptors (AChRs) in cultures of rat myotubes. We have found that AChR clusters on the ventral myotube surfaces are always located within broad regions of close cell-substrate contact. Detailed analysis of the fine structure of the AChR cluster and its associated contact region showed that AChRs within a cluster are concentrated between the points of closest cell-substrate apposition. Vinculin, a recently discovered intracellular smooth muscle protein, is also concentrated in broad regions of close contact, interdigitating with AChRs within the clusters.  相似文献   

12.
The distribution of nicotinic acetylcholine receptor (AChR) clusters at the cell membrane was studied in CHO-K1/A5 cells using fluorescence microscopy. Di-4-ANEPPDHQ, a fluorescent probe that differentiates between liquid-ordered (Lo) and liquid-disordered (Ld) phases in model membranes, was used in combination with monoclonal anti-AChR antibody labeling of live cells, which induces AChR clustering. The so-called generalized polarization (GP) of di-4-ANEPPDHQ was measured in regions of the cell-surface membrane associated with or devoid of antibody-induced AChR clusters, respectively. AChR clusters were almost equally distributed between Lo and Ld domains, independently of receptor surface levels and agonist (carbamoylcholine and nicotine) or antagonist (α-bungarotoxin) binding. Cholesterol depletion diminished the cell membrane mean di-4-ANEPPDHQ GP and the number of AChR clusters associated with Ld membrane domains increased concomitantly. Depolymerization of the filamentous actin cytoskeleton by Latrunculin A had the opposite effect, with more AChR clusters associated with Lo domains. AChR internalized via small vesicles having lower GP and lower cholesterol content than the surface membrane. Upon cholesterol depletion, only 12% of the AChR-containing vesicles costained with the fluorescent cholesterol analog fPEG-cholesterol, i.e., AChR endocytosis was essentially dissociated from that of cholesterol. In conclusion, the distribution of AChR submicron-sized clusters at the cell membrane appears to be regulated by cholesterol content and cytoskeleton integrity.  相似文献   

13.
We have examined the relationship of acetylcholine receptors (AChR) to the Mr 43,000 receptor-associated protein (43K) in the AChR clusters of cultured rat myotubes. Indirect immunofluorescence revealed that the 43K protein was concentrated at the AChR domains of the receptor clusters in intact rat myotubes, in myotube fragments, and in clusters that had been purified approximately 100-fold by extraction with saponin. The association of the 43K protein with clustered AChR was not affected by buffers of high or low ionic strength, by alkaline pHs up to 10, or by chymotrypsin at 10 micrograms/ml. However, the 43K protein was removed from clusters with lithium diiodosalicylate or at alkaline pH (greater than 10). Upon extraction of 43K, several changes were observed in the AChR population. Receptors redistributed in the plane of the muscle membrane in alkali-extracted samples. The number of binding sites accessible to an anti-AChR monoclonal antibody directed against cytoplasmic epitopes (88B) doubled. Receptors became more susceptible to digestion by chymotrypsin, which destroyed the binding sites for the 88B antibody only after 43K was extracted. These results suggest that in isolated AChR clusters the 43K protein covers part of the cytoplasmic domain of AChR and may contribute to the unique distribution of this membrane protein.  相似文献   

14.
The distribution of nicotinic acetylcholine receptor (AChR) clusters at the cell membrane was studied in CHO-K1/A5 cells using fluorescence microscopy. Di-4-ANEPPDHQ, a fluorescent probe that differentiates between liquid-ordered (Lo) and liquid-disordered (Ld) phases in model membranes, was used in combination with monoclonal anti-AChR antibody labeling of live cells, which induces AChR clustering. The so-called generalized polarization (GP) of di-4-ANEPPDHQ was measured in regions of the cell-surface membrane associated with or devoid of antibody-induced AChR clusters, respectively. AChR clusters were almost equally distributed between Lo and Ld domains, independently of receptor surface levels and agonist (carbamoylcholine and nicotine) or antagonist (α-bungarotoxin) binding. Cholesterol depletion diminished the cell membrane mean di-4-ANEPPDHQ GP and the number of AChR clusters associated with Ld membrane domains increased concomitantly. Depolymerization of the filamentous actin cytoskeleton by Latrunculin A had the opposite effect, with more AChR clusters associated with Lo domains. AChR internalized via small vesicles having lower GP and lower cholesterol content than the surface membrane. Upon cholesterol depletion, only 12% of the AChR-containing vesicles costained with the fluorescent cholesterol analog fPEG-cholesterol, i.e., AChR endocytosis was essentially dissociated from that of cholesterol. In conclusion, the distribution of AChR submicron-sized clusters at the cell membrane appears to be regulated by cholesterol content and cytoskeleton integrity.  相似文献   

15.
We have studied the composition and organization of the lipid bilayer at the large, substrate-associated clusters of acetylcholine receptors (AChR) that form in cultured rat myotubes. These clusters have a characteristic morphology consisting of alternating linear domains of AChR-rich and AChR-poor membrane, the latter involved in attaching the myotube to the substrate. We partially purified AChR clusters by extracting cultured rat myotubes with the cholesterol-specific detergent, saponin. The lipid bilayer of the cluster preparation was analyzed biochemically and the substructure of the bilayers was studied morphologically using the fluorescent probes, dansyl polymyxin B, and 3,3'-di(C12H25 and C18H37) indocarbocyanine iodide (C12- and C18-diI). Our results demonstrate that preparations of AChR clusters have a lipid composition biochemically similar to that of the surrounding plasma membrane. Morphologically, however, the lipid bilayer appears to be arranged into domains that resemble the interdigitating pattern seen for the AChR. This distinctive lipid organization is not due to the use of saponin to purify clusters, as we obtained similar results with clusters isolated by physically shearing myotube cultures. The domain-like organization of the bilayer at clusters is disrupted by treatments that disperse AChR clusters in intact myotubes or that remove peripheral membrane proteins from isolated clusters. This suggests that such proteins may contribute to the organization of the bilayer. Two additional factors may also contribute to the organization of the bilayer: physical constraints imposed by sites of substrate attachment and, to a lesser extent, "boundary" lipid associated with AChR.  相似文献   

16.
Summary In order to define cytoskeletal domains of the mammalian photoreceptor, actin and tubulin were localized in adult retinae of mouse and human. For light-microscopic localization, actin was labeled using fluorescent phalloidin or monoclonal antibodies against actin, and tubulin was labeled using monoclonal antibodies against alpha- and beta-tubulin in an immunocytochemical method. Actin and tubulin were also localized by ultrastructural immunocytochemistry in the mouse. Filamentous actin was present in the retina at the outer limiting membrane and in synaptic terminals, especially of the cones, while globular actin was observed additionally in the inner segments. Müller cell cytoplasm and apical microvilli at the outer limiting membrane were also labeled for filamentous actin. Alpha- and beta-tubulin were evident throughout the photoreceptors, including the inner segments, but not in the synaptic terminals or at the outer limiting membrane. In the early postnatal retina of mouse, actin and tubulin were present at the ventricular surface. This pattern changed as photoreceptors fully elongated and as synaptogenesis occurred in the outer plexiform layer.  相似文献   

17.
Background information. Cholesterol/sphingolipid‐rich membrane microdomains or membrane rafts have been implicated in various aspects of receptor function such as activation, trafficking and synapse localization. More specifically in muscle, membrane rafts are involved in AChR (acetylcholine receptor) clustering triggered by the neural factor agrin, a mechanism considered integral to NMJ (neuromuscular junction) formation. In addition, actin polymerization is required for the formation and stabilization of AChR clusters in muscle fibres. Since membrane rafts are platforms sustaining actin nucleation, we hypothesize that these microdomains provide the suitable microenvironment favouring agrin/MuSK (mu scle‐s pecific k inase) signalling, eliciting in turn actin cytoskeleton reorganization and AChR clustering. However, the identity of the signalling pathways operating through these microdomains still remains unclear. Results. In this work, we attempted to identify the interactions between membrane raft components and cortical skeleton that regulate, upon signalling by agrin, the assembly and stabilization of synaptic proteins of the postsynaptic membrane domain at the NMJ. We provide evidence that in C2C12 myotubes, agrin triggers the association of a subset of membrane rafts enriched in AChR, the ‐MuSK and Cdc42 (cell division cycle 42) to the actin cytoskeleton. Disruption of the liquid‐ordered phase by methyl‐β‐cyclodextrin abolished this association. We further show that actin and the actin‐nucleation factors, N‐WASP (neuronal Wiscott—Aldrich syndrome protein) and Arp2/3 (actin‐related protein 2/3) are transiently associated with rafts on agrin engagement. Consistent with these observations, pharmacological inhibition of N‐WASP activity perturbed agrin‐elicited AChR clustering. Finally, immunoelectron microscopic analyses of myotube membrane uncovered that AChRs were constitutively associated with raft nanodomains at steady state that progressively coalesced on agrin activation. These rearrangements of membrane domains correlated with the reorganization of cortical actin cytoskeleton through concomitant and transient recruitment of the Arp2/3 complex to AChR‐enriched rafts. Conclusions. The present observations support the notion that membrane rafts are involved in AChR clustering by promoting local actin cytoskeleton reorganization through the recruitment of effectors of the agrin/MuSK signalling cascade. These mechanisms are believed to play an important role in vivo in the formation of the NMJ.  相似文献   

18.
Aggregates of acetylcholine receptors (AChR) in muscle cell membranes are associated with accumulations of certain cytoskeletal and peripheral membrane proteins. We treated cultured rat myotubes briefly with embryonic brain extract (EBX) to promote AChR aggregation and determined the distribution of several of these proteins at early stages of aggregation. EBX-treated and control cultures were stained with tetramethylrhodamine-alpha-bungarotoxin to identify AChR aggregates and were then frozen and sectioned on a cryostat. These sections were stained with primary antibodies and fluoresceinated secondary antibodies to localize cytoskeletal proteins. The distributions of AChRs and cytoskeletal proteins was examined qualitatively and analyzed by a semiquantitative assay. Qualitatively, the 43K protein had a distribution that was virtually identical to that of AChR in both control and EBX-treated cultures, and it always colocalized with early AChR aggregates. The 58K protein similarly colocalized with early AChR aggregates, but it was also in aggregate-free areas of muscle membrane. The association of vinculin with the aggregates was quantitatively similar to that of the 43K and 58K proteins, but, qualitatively, its distribution did not follow that of the AChR as closely. Like the 58K protein and vinculin, alpha-actinin, filamin, and actin were concentrated in AChR aggregates and were also enriched elsewhere. However, they were less closely associated with the aggregates, both quantitatively and qualitatively. These results show that AChR aggregates induced by EBX tend to be enriched in the same cytoskeletal proteins that are present at the neuromuscular junction in vivo and at AChR clusters formed at sites of cell-substrate adhesion in vitro. Semiquantitative analysis also revealed that the fractional area of the cell surface associated with vinculin, alpha-actinin, and the 58K protein was the same in controls and EBX-treated myotubes, although the area enriched in AChR and the 43K protein increased about three-fold upon EBX treatment. These results suggest that AChR aggregates may form preferentially in membrane regions that are already enriched in these proteins.  相似文献   

19.
The formation of the neuromuscular junction is characterized by the progressive accumulation of nicotinic acetylcholine receptors (AChRs) in the postsynaptic membrane facing the nerve terminal, induced predominantly through the agrin/muscle-specific kinase (MuSK) signaling cascade. However, the cellular mechanisms linking MuSK activation to AChR clustering are still poorly understood. Here, we investigate whether lipid rafts are involved in agrin-elicited AChR clustering in a mouse C2C12 cell line. We observed that in C2C12 myotubes, both AChR clustering and cluster stability were dependent on cholesterol, because depletion by methyl-beta-cyclodextrin inhibited cluster formation or dispersed established clusters. Importantly, AChR clusters resided in ordered membrane domains, a biophysical property of rafts, as probed by Laurdan two-photon fluorescence microscopy. We isolated detergent-resistant membranes (DRMs) by three different biochemical procedures, all of which generate membranes with similar cholesterol/GM1 ganglioside contents, and these were enriched in several postsynaptic components, notably AChR, syntrophin, and raft markers flotillin-2 and caveolin-3. Agrin did not recruit AChRs into DRMs, suggesting that they are present in rafts independently of agrin activation. Consequently, in C2C12 myotubes, agrin likely triggers AChR clustering or maintains clusters through the coalescence of lipid rafts. These data led us to propose a model in which lipid rafts play a pivotal role in the assembly of the postsynaptic membrane at the neuromuscular junction upon agrin signaling.  相似文献   

20.
The nicotinic acetylcholine receptor (AChR) of Torpedo electric organ and vertebrate skeletal muscle is closely associated with a Mr 43,000 protein (43K). In this study, we have examined the effects on the AChR of treatments which remove the 43K protein. We used semiquantitative fluorescence techniques to measure the binding of antibodies to clustered AChR in cultured rat myotubes. We found that labeling by antibodies to the cytoplasmic portions of each of the four receptor polypeptides increased significantly upon extraction of the 43K protein. Labeling by an antibody to an extracellular epitope of the alpha subunits was not affected by removal of the 43K protein, suggesting that changes were restricted to the cytoplasmic domains of the AChR. Increases in labeling by antibodies were more limited following protease treatment, which removes most cytoskeletal structures but leaves the 43K protein bound to the membrane. Competition between an antibody to the beta subunit and an antibody to the gamma and delta subunits suggests that the cytoplasmic portion of the AChR still retains a degree of native structure in the absence of the 43K protein. Our results suggest that, although some of these changes may be due to simply exposing additional epitopes on the AChR, the cytoplasmic portions of all the subunits of the AChR undergo significant conformational changes upon extraction of the 43K protein.  相似文献   

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