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1.
Locomotion of sponges and its physical mechanism   总被引:6,自引:0,他引:6  
Active locomotion by individual marine and freshwater sponges across glass, plastic and rubber substrata has been studied in relation to the behavior of the sponges' component cells. Sequential tracing of sponge outlines on aquarium walls shows that sponges can crawl up to 160 microns/hr (4 mm/day). Time-lapse cinemicrography and scanning electron microscopy reveal that moving sponges possess distinctive leading edges composed of motile cells. Sponge locomotion was found to be mechanically similar to the spreading of cell sheets in tissue culture both with respect to exertion of traction (which causes the wrinkling of rubber substrata) and with respect to the patterns of adhesive contacts formed with the substratum (as observed by interference reflection microscopy). Other similarities include the orientation of sponge locomotion along grooves and the preferential extension onto more adhesive substrata. Neither the patterns of wrinkling produced in rubber substrata nor the distributions of adhesive contacts seen by interference reflection microscopy show evidence of periodic, propagating waves of surface contractions, such as would be expected if the sponges' mechanism of locomotion were by peristalsis or locomotory waves. Our observations suggest that the displacement of sponges is achieved by the cumulative crawling locomotion of the cells that compose the sponge's lower surface. This mode of organismal locomotion suggests new explanations for the plasticity of sponge morphology, seems not to have been reported from other metazoans, and has significant ecological implications.  相似文献   

2.
The movement of cells along substrata is a complex phenomenon involving cell extension and retraction, and cell-substratum adhesion. Knowledge is beginning to accumulate about the forces required for cell protrusion and retraction. Both of these processes also require traction to be exerted on the substratum, and new assays for these forces are under development. This review briefly discusses the forces that locomotory cells exert, in terms of both recent force measurements and possible mechanisms for their generation.  相似文献   

3.
The expression of intracellular and surface polarity in animal pole cells of Xenopus embryos (stage 10) cultured on various substrata was studied by electron microscopy. When animal pole cells of Xenopus embryos were cultured on type I collagen- or gelatin-coated dishes until control embryos reached stage 23, the cells in confluent layers expressed an apical-basal polarity so that the apical surface membrane domain faced the culture medium. However, the cells in confluent layers cultured on naked plastic dishes were suppressed to express intracellular and surface polarity. In addition, single attached cells which were formed by being sparsely plated neither spread on any substrata nor displayed the apical-basal polarity perpendicular to the dishes. These results indicate that the expression of intracellular and surface polarity in cultured animal pole cells of Xenopus embryos requires not only cell-cell contact but also an adhesive substrata such as type I collagen or gelatin.  相似文献   

4.
We studied the effects of different lectins on the adhesive properties of baby hamster kidney (BHK) cells. The purpose of these studies was to learn more about the cell surface receptors involved in cell adhesion. Three adhesive phenomena were analyzed: 1) the adhesion of BHK cells to lectin-coated substrata; 2) the effects of lectins on the adhesion of cells to substrata coated by plasma fibronectin (pFN); and 3) the effects of lectins on the binding of pFN-coated beads to cells. Initial experiments with fluorescein-conjugated lectins indicated that concanavalin A (Con A), ricinus communis agglutinin I (RCA I), and wheat germ agglutinin (WGA) bound to BHK cells but peanut agglutinin (PNA), soybean agglutinin (SBA), and ulex europaeus agglutinin I (UEA I) dod not bind. All three of the lectins which bound to the cells promoted cell spreading on lectin substrata, and the morphology of the spread cells was similar to that observed with cells spread on pFN substrata. Protease treatment of the cells, however, was found to inhibit cell spreading on pFN substrata or WGA substrata more than on Con A substrata or RCA I substrata. In the experiment of cells with Con A or WGA inhibited cell spreading on pFN substrata, but RCA I treatment had no effect. Finally, treatment of cells with WGA inhibited binding to cells of pFN beads, but neither Con A nor RCA I affected this interaction. These results indicate that the lectins modify cellular adhesion in different ways, probably by interacting with different surface receptors. The possibility that the pFN receptor is a WGA receptor is discussed.  相似文献   

5.
The role of cell-to-substratum adhesion in the initiation, elongation, and branching of axons from embryonic sensory neurons was investigated. Cells from sensory ganglia of 4–8-day-old chicken embryos were cultured on several substrata: including collagen; polyornithine-, polylysine-, and polyglutamate-coated surfaces, and tissue culture dishes. The air-blaster method was used to measure growth cone-substratum adhesion.Growth cones adhere much more strongly to polyornithine- or polylysine-coated surfaces and to the upper surfaces of glial cells than to tissue culture plastic. Axons, too, adhere tightly to these substrata, and are crooked, whereas on tissue culture plastic, axons are not adherent and are straight. The fraction of neurons that form axons and the rates of axonal elongation and branching are markedly increased when cells are cultured on polyornithine-coated dishes as compared to tissue culture dishes.This correlation of strong adhesion and enhanced neuronal morphogenesis suggests that adhesive interactions between the growth cone and the microenvironment in an embryo are crucial parts of the initiation and elongation of neuronal processes. Regulation of neuronal morphogenesis may be expressed through the physicochemical properties of the interacting cell surfaces and extracellular environment.  相似文献   

6.
Iu A Rovenski? 《Tsitologiia》1983,25(3):290-296
Quantitative ratio of various types of cell surface microrelief was determined in suspensions prepared from mouse monolayer cultures of embryo fibroblasts grown on different solid substrates: with high (Falcon) or low poly(2-hydroxyethylmethacrylate) adhesiveness; with flat or cylindrical (53-mu curvature radius) surfaces (polyvinylchloride). The electron microscopy revealed that poorly spread cells (on low adhesive or cylindrical substrata) in suspensions had the microvillous surface relief much more often than the cells brought to suspension from highly adhesive or flat substrata. Thus, the lower the degree of cell spreading on the substratum, the higher the probability for the cell to acquire the microvillous relief in suspended state. The microvillous relief of transformed cells in suspensions is, probably, due to their poor spreading on substrata in the monolayer cultures.  相似文献   

7.
Spreading and orientation of epithelial cells on grooved substrata   总被引:4,自引:1,他引:3  
The spreading and orientation of epithelial (E) cells was studied on titanium-coated grooved substrata by light, transmission (TEM) and scanning electron microscopy (SEM). Vertical-walled grooves and V-shaped grooves, 3-60 microns deep, were produced in silicon wafers by micromachining, a process which was developed for the fabrication of micro-electronic components, and the grooved substrata were replicated in Epon. Photolithography was used to prepare photoresist-based and silicon dioxide-silicon substrata with grooves of approximately 2 and approximately 0.5 micron deep, respectively. Cell clusters were markedly oriented by all the grooved substrata examined, with the orientation index being highest for substrata with grooves of the smallest repeat spacing. Time-lapse cinemicrography showed that the grooves directed the migration of E cells, but the control was not absolute, as some cells crossed over the ridges and descended into the grooves. The 0.5 micron grooves appeared less effective than the deeper grooves in directing cell locomotion. SEM and TEM of E cells spreading on the grooved substrata demonstrated that cell processes, including lamellae and filopodia, were capable of bending around and closely adapting to groove edges. E cells did not flatten as extensively on a substratum with 22 microns deep V-shaped grooves as on a smooth surface, although some cells were markedly elongated. One mechanism proposed to explain contact guidance of fibroblasts is that linear elements of the locomotory system, such as microfilament bundles, are unable to operate when bent. The observed flexibility of epithelial cell processes and the ability of substrata with shallow grooves to orient E cells indicate that contact guidance of E cells on micromachined substrata cannot be explained by the mechanical stiffness of long linear cytoskeletal elements.  相似文献   

8.
Collagen metabolism was compared in cultures of mouse mammary epithelial cells maintained on plastic or fibrillar type I collagen gel substrata. The accumulation of dialysable and non-dialysable [3H]hydroxyproline and the identification of the collagens produced suggest no difference between substrata in the all over rates of collagen synthesis and degradation. The proportion of the [3H]collagen which accumulates in the monolayers of cultures on collagen, however, markedly exceeds that of cultures on plastic. Cultures on collagen deposit a sheet-like layer of extracellular matrix materials on the surface of the collagen fibres. Immunoprecipitation of the labelled extracts, electrophoresis, indirect immunofluorescence and immunoperoxidase techniques reveal the presence of type IV collagen, along with laminin and heparan sulfate proteoglycan in this layer, in excess over the amounts detectable on cells cultured on plastic. Transformed cells on collagen produce and accumulate more [3H]collagen, yet are less effective in basement membrane formation than normal cells, indicating that the accumulation of collagen alone and the effect of interstitial collagen thereupon do not suffice. Thus, exogenous fibrillar collagen appears to enhance, but is not sufficient for proper assembly of collagenous basement membrane components near the basal epithelial cell surface.  相似文献   

9.
According to the adhesive "guidepost" hypothesis, pioneer axons follow pathways marked by specific nonadjacent cells (guidepost cells). The hypothesis implies that high adhesivity between extending axons and guidepost cells facilitates axon extension across low-adhesivity tissues or spaces between guidepost cells. This study investigates the ability of a high-adhesivity substratum to promote axonal extension across a low-adhesivity substratum in vitro. Dissociated chick embryo dorsal root ganglion neurons are cultured on a substratum consisting of areas of high-adhesivity substratum-bound laminin (i.e., model adhesive guideposts) separated by a low-adhesivity agarose substratum. Increasing the cell-substratum adhesivity of these guideposts results in an increase in the percentage of neurites spanning a given width of the low-adhesivity substratum. Filopodial processes at the tips of neurites can extend over the low-adhesivity substratum. Apparently, filopodial contact with high-adhesivity guideposts enables neurites to extend across intervening low-adhesivity substrata. The maximum width of low-adhesivity substratum discontinuities spanned by some neurites in vitro is comparable to the distance between some putative guidepost cells in insects. Consistent with the adhesive guidepost hypothesis, these findings demonstrate neurite extension on a substratum of discontinuous cell-substratum adhesivity.  相似文献   

10.
The adherence of peripheral blood monocytes to adult bovine endothelial cells grown to confluence in the microplates was studied. The microplates were coated with different proteins or used without special treatment. It was shown that endothelial cells seeded on immobilized glycosylated proteins (serum albumin or skin gelatin) adhered more monocytes than the cells grown on non-modified proteins. Endothelial cells grown in lipoprotein(a) coated wells bound more monocytes than the cells grown in non-treated microplates or in wells coated with low density lipoproteins (LDL). The effect of lipoprotein(a) coating could not be reproduced by treating the plates with plasminogen (as a homolog of apo(a)) or with a mixture of LDL and plasminogen. These results indicate that the composition of extracellular substrata has a profound effect on adhesive properties of cultured endothelial cells. The implications of these findings for atherogenesis and for the general aspects of regulation of cell adhesion are discussed.  相似文献   

11.
E J Sanders 《In vitro》1984,20(7):521-527
The cell-substratum adhesive characteristics of cultured chick embryo primary mesoderm cells have been examined by interference reflection microscopy and transmission electron microscopy under various conditions. Correlations were drawn between the type of adhesion and the degree of motility shown by the cells. During the rapid spreading and motility of cells cultured on fibronectin-containing substrata, focal contacts (10 to 15-nm gap) were rare and close contacts (about 30-nm gap) were predominant. By contrast, when the cells were immobile, after 5 d in culture, extensive focal contacts were present, together with stress fibers. The results indicate that tight cell-substratum contact is incompatible with rapid cell motility and that fibronectin acts by inducing the formation of close contacts rather than focal contacts.  相似文献   

12.
Regulation by the extracellular matrix (ECM) of migration, motility, and adhesion of olfactory neurons and their precursors was studied in vitro. Neuronal cells of the embryonic olfactory epithelium (OE), which undergo extensive migration in the central nervous system during normal development, were shown to be highly migratory in culture as well. Migration of OE neuronal cells was strongly dependent on substratum- bound ECM molecules, being specifically stimulated and guided by laminin (or the laminin-related molecule merosin) in preference to fibronectin, type I collagen, or type IV collagen. Motility of OE neuronal cells, examined by time-lapse video microscopy, was high on laminin-containing substrata, but negligible on fibronectin substrata. Quantitative assays of adhesion of OE neuronal cells to substrata treated with different ECM molecules demonstrated no correlation, either positive or negative, between the migratory preferences of cells and the strength of cell-substratum adhesion. Moreover, measurements of cell adhesion to substrata containing combinations of ECM proteins revealed that laminin and merosin are anti-adhesive for OE neuronal cells, i.e., cause these cells to adhere poorly to substrata that would otherwise be strongly adhesive. The evidence suggests that the anti- adhesive effect of laminin is not the result of interactions between laminin and other ECM molecules, but rather an effect of laminin on cells, which alters the way in which cells adhere. Consistent with this view, laminin was found to interfere strongly with the formation of focal contacts by OE neuronal cells.  相似文献   

13.
1. Cultured neurons from embryonic chick sympathetic ganglia or dorsal root ganglia grow nerve fibers extensively on simple substrata containing fibronectin, collagens (types I, III, IV), and especially laminin. 2. The same neurons cultured on substrata containing glycosaminoglycans grow poorly. Glycosaminoglycans (heparin) inhibit nerve fiber growth on fibronectin substrata. 3. Proteolytic fragments of fibronectin support nerve fiber growth only when the cell attachment region is intact. For example, a 105 kD fragment, encompassing the cell attachment region, supports growth when immobilized in a substratum, but a 93 kD subfragment, lacking the cell attachment region, is unable to support fiber growth. When it is added to the culture medium, the 105 kD fragment inhibits fiber growth on substrata containing native fibronectin. 4. In culture medium lacking NGF, DRG neurons extend nerve fibers only on laminin and not on fibronectin, collagen or polylysine. Studies with radioiodinated laminin indicate that laminin binds with a relatively high affinity (kd approximately equal to 10(-9) M) to DRG neurons, and to a variety of other neural cells (NG108 cells, PC12 cells, rat astrocytes, chick optic lobe cells). We have isolated a membrane protein (67 kD) by affinity chromatography on laminin columns and are characterizing this putative laminin receptor. 5. Dissociated DRG neurons or ganglionic explants cultured on complex substrata consisting of tissue sections of CNS or PNS tissues extend nerve fibers onto the PNS (adult rat sciatic nerve) but not CNS (adult rat optic nerve) substrata. Other tissue substrata which support fiber growth in vivo (embryonic rat spinal cord, goldfish optic nerve) support growth in culture. While substrata from adult CNS, which support meager regeneration in vivo (adult rat spinal cord) support little fiber growth in culture. 6. Ganglionic explants cultured in a narrow space between a section of rat sciatic nerve and optic nerve grow preferentially onto the sciatic nerve suggesting that diffusible growth factors are not responsible for the differential growth on the two types of tissues. 7. Dissociated neurons adhere better to sections of sciatic nerve than optic nerve. Laminin, rather than fibronectin or heparan sulfate proteoglycan, is most consistently identifiable by immunocytochemistry in tissues (sciatic nerve, embryonic spinal cord, goldfish optic nerve) which support nerve fiber growth. Taken together, these data suggest that ECM adhesive proteins are important determinants of nerve regeneration.  相似文献   

14.
To examine the role in neurite growth of actin-mediated tensions within growth cones, we cultured chick embryo dorsal root ganglion cells on various substrata in the presence of cytochalasin B. Time-lapse video recording was used to monitor behaviors of living cells, and cytoskeletal arrangements in neurites were assessed via immunofluorescence and electron microscopic observations of thin sections and whole, detergent-extracted cells decorated with the S1 fragment of myosin. On highly adhesive substrata, nerve cells were observed to extend numerous (though peculiarly oriented) neurites in the presence of cytochalasin, despite their lack of both filopodia and lamellipodia or the orderly actin networks characteristic of typical growth cones. We concluded that growth cone activity is not necessary for neurite elongation, although actin arrays seem important in mediating characteristics of substratum selectivity and neurite shape.  相似文献   

15.
The effect of low-density lipoprotein (LDL) on accumulation of glycosaminoglycans (GAG) was compared in cultures of human skin fibroblasts on a conventional plastic substratum and in a native type I collagen gel. The 24-h incorporation of [3H]glucosamine and Na2(35)SO4 into GAG secreted into the medium or associated with the substratum and cell surface (SCA) was measured in cells at subconfluent densities. When cells were grown on plastic, 13-25% of the labeled GAG was in the SCA pool. Cells cultured within a collagen gel matrix incorporated three times more [3H]glucosamine and up to five times more [35S]sulfate into this pool. The addition of LDL (300 micrograms protein/mL) to the medium increased the level of total GAG incorporation of [3H]glucosamine by 40-50% and of [35S]sulfate by 15-20% on both substrata. For cells on plastic the relative increase in the medium and SCA pool was similar, whereas for cells in collagen gel the response to LDL was twice as great in the SCA pool as in the medium. The distribution of GAG types was unaffected by LDL; hyaluronic acid remained the principal GAG in the media pools of both substrata, heparan sulfate remained the main SCA GAG in cultures on plastic, and dermatan sulfate remained the dominant GAG in the SCA pool of collagen gel cultures. LDL degradation was measured at intervals up to 48 h after the addition of 125I-labeled LDL. The rate of accumulation of degraded LDL products was lower in collagen gel cultures, but the final levels achieved were the same in the two substrata. Concentrations of total cell cholesterol were similar, although the increases in free cholesterol induced by LDL were 26% greater in cells within collagen gel than in those on plastic. We conclude that fibroblasts grown within a collagen gel, as compared with those on a plastic substratum, (i) accumulate more GAG that remain attached to the substratum and cell surface; (ii) respond to LDL with a similar degree of increase in GAG accumulation, but more of the increase is found in the substratum and cell surface compartment; and (iii) accumulate more intracellular free cholesterol in response to LDL.  相似文献   

16.
We apply a recently developed method for controlling the spreading of cultured cells using electron beam lithography (EBL) to create polymethylmethacrylate (PMMA) substrata with repeating nanostructures. There are indications that the reduced cell spreading on these substrata, compared with planar PMMA, results from a reduced adhesivity since there are fewer adhesive structures and fewer of their associated stress fibres. The reduced cell spreading also results in a reduced nuclear area and a closer spacing of centrosomes within the nucleus, suggesting that the tension applied to the nucleus is reduced as would be expected from the reduction in stress fibres. In order to obtain further evidence for this, we have used specific inhibitors of components of the cytoskeleton and have found effects comparable with those induced by the new substrata. We have also obtained evidence that these subtrata result in downregulation of gene expression which suggests that this may be due to the changed tension on the nucleus: an intriguing possibility that merits further investigation.  相似文献   

17.
A developmentally homogeneous neural crest cell population has been used to assay the role of environmental factors in regulating crest cell differentiation. If cultured on tissue culture plastic, virtually all of the cells of this population differentiate into melanocytes. In contrast, when these cells are cultured for 3 or more days on substrata “conditioned” by somite fibroblasts, the proportion of cells undergoing melanogenesis decreased and the proportion expressing formaldehyde-induced fluorescence (FIF), characteristic of catecholamine-containing cells, increased. For a limited period of culture on somite-conditioned substrata, some cells in the population exhibit both pigment granules and fluorescence. Collagen-coated substrata decreased the number of cells that formed pigment but did not stimulate FIF. In contrast, optimum doses of exogenous cellular fibronectin mimicked the effect of somite-conditioned substrata, suppressing melanogenesis and promoting FIF. Glycosaminoglycan-derivatized substrata (i.e., hyaluronic acid, various chondroitin sulfate preparations, and heparin) did not alter the differentiative homogeneity of the cultured crest cell populations. The choice and expression of phenotype by some members of a cultured crest cell population can, therefore, be affected by environmental stimuli provided in the form of certain substrate-attached macromolecules. We suggest that optimal concentrations of some extracellular matrix components produced by embryonic tissue and normally encountered by migrating crest cells may elicit the expression of FIF in crest cells that would otherwise follow a different developmental pathway.  相似文献   

18.
Both polyvalent and hybridoma-produced antibodies to fibronectin (Fn) were used to ‘map’ the immunoaccessible subsets of cell surface fibronectin on virus-transformed murine fibroblast SVT2 and rat neuroblastoma B104 cells. As one approach to this end, attachment and spreading responses of cells were measured on tissue culture substrata coated with antibody or with plasma fibronectin to compare their adhesive responses. Both SVT2 and B104 cells adhere poorly to polyvalent anti-Fn-coated substrata over short time intervals, but within several hours changes occur which permit cells to attach and spread as well on anti-Fn as on Fn (post-adsorption of the anti-Fn with Fn also generates a maximal response). This adhesive response could be completely prevented by predigesting the cells with Flavobacterium heparanase, but not with chondroitinase ABC, indicating that the cell surface Fn responsible for antibody-mediated adhesion is associated with heparan sulfate proteoglycans on the cell surface. The compositions of the substratum-attached material (left bound after EGTA-mediated detachment of cells) from cells attaching to anti-Fn or Fn were analysed by SDS-PAGE and found to be identical within the same cell type for the two different substrata. Three hybridoma-produced antibodies, which recognize different determinants on Fn, generated different adhesive responses for SVT2 or B104 cells when adsorbed to the substratum. SVT2 cells adhered well to antibody no. 32-coated substrata but poorly to antibodies 92 or 136; on the other hand, B104 cells responded similarly to all three antibodies over short times of attachment but much better to no. 32 after a several hour incubation. These experiments indicate that (1) much of the cell surface fibronectin is complexed with heparan sulfate proteoglycan and is initially inaccessible to bind to polyvalent antibody on the substratum to promote adhesion; (2) the surface of neuroblastoma cells contains a fibronectin-like molecule which is important in their substratum adhesion; and (3) monoclonal antibodies are valuable tools in ‘mapping’ the orientation of cell surface molecules like fibronectin by measuring adhesive responses to antibody-coated substrata.  相似文献   

19.
Summary The ventral surface ofHolothuria forskali (Holothuroida, Aspidochirotida) is almost completely covered by small-sized podia that are locomotory. Each podium consists of a stem that allows the podium to lengthen, to flex, and to retract, and this is topped by a disc that allows the podium to adhere to the substratum during locomotion. Podia ofH. forskali do not end in a sucker and their adhesion to the substratum thus relies entirely on the disc epidermal secretions. The disc epidermis is made of five cell types: non-ciliated secretory cells of two different types that contain granules whose content is either mucopolysaccharidic (NCS1 cells) or mucopolysaccharidic and proteinic in nature (NCS2 cells), ciliated secretory cells containing small granules of unknown nature (CS cells), cilitated nonsecretory cells (CNS cells), and support cells. The cilia ofCS cells are subcuticular whereas those ofCNS cells, although also short and rigid, traverse the cuticle and protrude in the outer medium. During locomotion, epidermal cells of the podial disc are presumably involved in an adhesive/de-adhesive process functioning as a duogland adhesive system. Adhesive secretions would be produced byNCS1 andNCS2 cells and de-adhesive secretion byCS cells. All these secretions would be controlled by stimulations of the two types of ciliated cells (receptor cells) which presumably interact with the secretory cells by way of the nerve plexus. The lack of suckers and the coexistence of two adhesive cell types in the disc epidermis give the locomotory podia ofH. forskali a compromise structure which would perhaps explain their ability to move as efficiently along soft and hard substrata.  相似文献   

20.
This paper reports experiments to determine the effects of electrostatic repulsion on cell adhesion and locomotion, and to demonstrate quantitative differences in adhesiveness among cell populations of the amphibian gastrula, where it may be a factor controlling morphogenesis. Rana pipiens gastrula presumptive germ layer cells and neural crest were cultured on substrata of known surface charge and composition; cell-substratum adhesion assayed, and locomotory rate measured. Because electrokinetic mobilities of R. pipiens gastrula cells are known and that of neural crest has been measured here, various cell-substratum combinations have been ranked in order of the electrostatic force between them. Experimental methods include time-lapse cinematography and single-cell electrophoresis. The results indicate differential cell-substratum adhesion for R. pipiens inner neural ectoderm (INE), chordamesoderm (CHM) and neural crest (NC). In addition, it was found that increase in electrostatic repulsion decreases cell-substratum adhesion, and at first increases rate of locomotion, but then, as repulsion continues to increase, locomotor rate decreases. Increase in the surface potential of presumptive pharyngeal endoderm and chordamesoderm may bring about a decrease in cohesiveness thought to be necessary for the beginning of amphibian gastrulation.  相似文献   

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