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1.
A monomeric actin bundling protein with a native molecular weight of approximately 50,000 (ABP-50) has been isolated from amoebae of Dictyostelium discoideum. ABP-50 cross-links F-actin to form tightly packed bundles, some of which are highly ordered. It exhibits a Kd of 2.1 microM and a molar ratio to actin of 1:1 in bundles. Calcium and ATP at physiological concentrations have no effect on these activities. ABP-50 is immunologically unrelated to 30-kDa protein, a previously described bundling protein from Dictyostelium. Immunofluorescence with affinity-purified polyclonal antibodies indicates that ABP-50 is localized in regions of the amoeboid cell cortex containing actin bundles. The molar ratio of ABP-50 to actin is approximately 1:5 in vivo. Therefore, the abundance of ABP-50 suggests that it may be responsible for the majority of the bundling activity in these cells.  相似文献   

2.
Supramolecular forms of actin from amoebae of Dictyostelium discoideum.   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
Actin purified from amoebae of Dictyostelium discoideum polymerizes into filaments at 24 degrees upon addition of KCl, as judged by a change in optical density at 232 nm and by electron microscopy. The rate and extent of formation of this supramolecular assembly and the optimal KCl concentrations (0.1 M) for assembly are similar to those of striated muscle actin. The apparent equilibrium constant for the monomer-polymer transition is 1.3 muM for both Dictyostelium and muscle actin. Although assembly of highly purified Dictyostelium actin monomers into individual actin filaments resembles that of muscle actin, Dictyostelium actin but not muscle actin was observed to assemble into two-dimensional nets in 10 mM CaCl2. The Dictyostelium actin also forms filament bundles which are 0.1 mum in diameter and which assemble in the presence of 5 mM MgCl2. These bundles formed from partially purified Dictyostelium actin preparations but not from highly purified preparations, suggesting that their formation may depend on the presence of another component. These actin bundles reconstituted in vitro resemble the actin-containing bundles found in situ by microscopy in many non-muscle cells.  相似文献   

3.
The interaction with actin and intracellular localization of the 30,000-D actin-binding protein from the cellular slime mold Dictyostelium discoideum have been investigated to analyze the potential contributions of this protein to cell structure and movement. The formation of anisotropic cross-linked filament networks (bundles) containing actin and the 30,000-D protein has been observed by electron microscopy, light scattering, viscometry, and polarization microscopy. Cosedimentation experiments indicate that a maximum of one molecule of the 30,000-D protein can bind to 10 actin monomers in filaments with an apparent association constant of 1 X 10(7) liters/mol. Inhibition of the interaction of the 30,000-D protein with actin by either magnesium or calcium was observed by viscometry, light scattering, polarization microscopy, and direct binding assays. However, the concentration of magnesium required to diminish the interaction is greater than 100 times greater than that of calcium. The association constant of the 30,000-D protein for actin is 4.2 X 10(6) liters/mol, or less than 1 X 10(5) liters/mol in the presence of increased concentrations of either Mg2+ or Ca2+, respectively. Enzyme-linked immunoassays indicate that the 30,000-D protein comprises 0.04% of the protein in D. discoideum. Extensive interaction of the 30,000-D protein with actin in cytoplasm is predicted from these measurements of the concentration of this protein and its affinity for actin. The distribution of the 30,000-D protein was analyzed by immunofluorescence microscopy using mono-specific affinity-purified polyclonal antibody. The 30,000-D protein exhibits a diffuse distribution in cytoplasm, is excluded from prominent organelles, and is quite prominent in fine extensions protruding from the cell surface. The number, length, and distribution of these extensions containing the 30,000-D protein are similar to those of filopodia observed by scanning electron microscopy. To analyze the effects of cell thickness and the distribution of organelles on the immunofluorescence localization, fluorescein-labeled BSA was incorporated into the cytoplasm of living cells before fixation and staining using a sonication loading technique. The results indicate that the 30,000-D protein is selectively incorporated into filopodia. These results provide a clear distinction between the multiple actin-cross-linking proteins present in D. discoideum, and suggest that the 30,000-D protein contributes to organization of bundles of actin filaments in filopodia.  相似文献   

4.
An F-actin bundling protein was isolated and purified from plasmodium of Physarum polycephalum. The F-actin bundling protein in Physarum extract was passed through a DEAE-cellulose column. After the protein in the fraction was treated with 6 M urea, it was purified by gel filtration on Sephacryl S-300 HR followed by chromatography on CM-Toyopearl (cation exchange) in the presence of 6 M urea. The purified protein gave a single band on SDS-PAGE, and the molecular weight was estimated to be 52,000. This F-actin bundling protein is referred to as the 52 kDa protein. Interestingly, the 52 kDa protein also induced bundling of microtubules. The formation of F-actin and microtubule bundles was Ca(2+)-insensitive, but depended on the salt concentration. Each bundle formed at NaCl concentrations less than 0.1 M. The 52 kDa protein cross-reacted with monoclonal antibody raised against a HeLa 55 kDa protein (an F-actin bundling protein from HeLa cells) (Yamashiro-Matsumura and Matsumura: J. Biol. Chem. 260:5087-5097, 1985). When the 52 kDa protein was added to a mixture of actin filaments and microtubules, co-bundles composed of both filaments formed. This is the first reported example in which an F-actin bundling protein induced co-bundling of actin filaments and microtubules.  相似文献   

5.
This study describes the effect of actin-binding protein derived from rabbit lung macrophages on the mechanical properties of F-actin. The dynamic storage modulus, G'(omega), and loss modulus, G"(omega) of F-actin, at concentrations from 1 to 4 mg/ml, in the absence or presence of actin-binding protein at molar ratios to actin of 1:1000 to 1:125, were measured at frequencies ranging from 3 X 10(-3) to 0.5 Hz. Actin-binding protein increased the dynamic moduli of F-actin, but this increase was much greater as either the actin-binding protein/actin ratio or the total protein concentration increased. Moreover, there was a convergence of the values of G' and G" at high frequencies for F-actin which became more prominent upon the addition of actin-binding protein. The value of the modulus obtained by an extrapolation of these data to actin concentrations similar to that found in the cell cortex was close to values which have been obtained by direct measurements. The addition of actin-binding protein to an F-actin solution enabled it to reach an equilibrium strain following the application of a stress, in contrast to pure F-actin. These data allow a more rigorous definition of the "sol" to "gel" transition and suggest that the cross-linking of actin filaments by actin-binding protein leads to the formation of a network structure whose underlying mechanism of mechanical behavior is short range intrafilament bending in contrast to the classical rubber network.  相似文献   

6.
Actin-bundling proteins organize actin filaments into densely packed bundles. In Dictyostelium discoideum two abundant proteins display calcium-regulated bundling activity, fimbrin and the 34-kDa protein (ABP34). Using a GFP fusion we observed transient localization of fimbrin at the phagocytic cup and macropinosomes. The distribution of truncated constructs encompassing the EF hands and the first actin-binding domain (EA1) or both actin-binding domains devoid of EF hands (A1A2) was indistinguishable from that of the full length protein. The role of fimbrin and a possible functional overlap with ABP34 was investigated in fim- and double 34-/fim- mutants. Except for a moderate cell size defect, fim- mutants did not show defects in growth, endocytosis, exocytosis, and chemotaxis. Double mutants were characterized by a small cell size and a defect in morphogenesis resulting in small fruiting bodies and a low spore yield. The cell size defect could not be overcome by expression of fimbrin fragments EA1 or A1A2, suggesting that both bundling activity and regulation by calcium are important. Induction of filopod formation in 34-/fim- cells was not impaired, indicating that both proteins are dispensable for this process. We searched in the Dictyostelium genome database for fimbrin-like proteins that could compensate for the fimbrin defect and identified three unconventional fimbrins and two more proteins with actin-binding domains of the type present in fimbrins.  相似文献   

7.
Cofilin is a low molecular weight actin-modulating protein whose structure and function are conserved among eucaryotes. Cofilin exhibits in vitro both a monomeric actin-sequestering activity and a filamentous actin-severing activity. To investigate in vivo functions of cofilin, cofilin was overexpressed in Dictyostelium discoideum cells. An increase in the content of D. discoideum cofilin (d-cofilin) by sevenfold induced a co-overproduction of actin by threefold. In cells over-expressing d-cofilin, the amount of filamentous actin but not that of monomeric actin was increased. Overexpressed d-cofilin co-sedimented with actin filaments, suggesting that the sequestering activity of d- cofilin is weak in vivo. The overexpression of d-cofilin increased actin bundles just beneath ruffling membranes where d-cofilin was co- localized. The overexpression of d-cofilin also stimulated cell movement as well as membrane ruffling. We have demonstrated in vitro that d-cofilin transformed latticework of actin filaments cross-linked by alpha-actinin into bundles probably by severing the filaments. D. discoideum cofilin may sever actin filaments in vivo and induce bundling of the filaments in the presence of cross-linking proteins so as to generate contractile systems involved in membrane ruffling and cell movement.  相似文献   

8.
Actin binding proteins play key roles in cell structure and movement particularly as regulators of the assembly, stability and localization of actin filaments in the cytoplasm. In the present study, a cDNA clone encoding an actin bundling protein named as AhABP was isolated from Acanthamoeba healyi, a causative agent of granulomatous amebic encephalitis. This clone exhibited high similarity with genes of Physarum polycephalum and Dictyostelium discoideum, which encode actin bundling proteins. Domain search analysis revealed the presence of essential conserved regions, i.e., an active actin binding site and 2 putative calcium binding EF-hands. Transfected amoeba cells demonstrated that AhABP is primarily localized in phagocytic cups, peripheral edges, pseudopods, and in cortical cytoplasm where actins are most abundant. Moreover, AhABP after the deletion of essential regions formed ellipsoidal inclusions within transfected cells. High-speed co-sedimentation assays revealed that AhABP directly interacted with actin in the presence of up to 10 microM of calcium. Under the electron microscope, thick parallel bundles were formed by full length AhABP, in contrast to the thin actin bundles formed by constructs with deletion sites. In the light of these results, we conclude that AhABP is a novel actin bundling protein that is importantly associated with actin filaments in the cytoplasm.  相似文献   

9.
Earlier we isolated a 1:1 complex of 90 kD-protein and actin from bovine brain. This complex was able to fragment actin filaments. Effects of this complex on the cytoskeleton of mouse and quail embryo fibroblasts are described. The cells were extracted with Triton X-100, and the resulting cytoskeletons were treated with the complex. Tetramethylrhodaminylphalloin and actin antibody staining failed to detect actin in preparations treated with the 90 kD protein-actin complex. Electrophoretic data confirmed actin solubilization upon this treatment. Immunofluorescent microscopy showed that actin solubilization was accompanied by extraction of vinculin and alpha-actinin from focal contacts and stress-fibers. In contrast, myosin distribution in treated cytoskeletons did not differ significantly from that in control extracted cells: in both the cases myosin was found mainly in the stress-fibers. Thus, myosin localization in stress-fibers does not depend on actin and is probably controlled by some other cytoskeletal component(s).  相似文献   

10.
A high molecular weight actin-binding protein with subunit mass of 240 kilodaltons has been purified from vegetative amoebae of Dictyostelium discoideum. Briefly, a cell extract was prepared by homogenizing vegetative amoebae in 5 mM EGTA, 5 mM 1,4-piperazineethanesulfonic acid, 1 mM dithiothreitol, 0.02% NaN3, pH 7.0, followed by ultracentrifugation at 114,000 X g for 1 h. The 240-kDa protein in this extract was separated from actin by chromatography on ATP-saturated DEAE-cellulose and further purified by chromatography on hydroxylapatite and Sephacryl S-300. The 240-kDa protein increases the low shear viscosity of F-actin. Covalent cross-linking with dimethyl suberimidate demonstrates that the 240-kDa protein can form dimers in high salt (500 mM NaCl). Hydrodynamic studies in high salt demonstrate the presence of an asymmetric dimer (Stokes' radius = 8.6 nm, sedimentation coefficient = 12 S, native molecular weight = 434,000, and frictional ratio = 1.7). Rotary shadowing demonstrates that the monomer is a flexible rod of approximately 70 nm in length that can associate end to end to form a dimer of approximately 140 nm in length. The 240-kDa protein cross-reacts with antibodies to chicken gizzard filamin. The properties of the 240-kDa protein suggest that it is a member of the filamin class of actin-associated proteins.  相似文献   

11.
Cytoimmunofluorescent localization of severin in Dictyostelium amoebae   总被引:3,自引:0,他引:3  
Severin is a 40-kDa Ca2+-activated protein from Dictyostelium that rapidly fragments and disassembles actin filaments in vitro (S.S. Brown, K. Yamamoto, and J.A. Spudich, J. Cell Biol. 93, 205-210, 1982; and K. Yamamoto, J.D. Pardee, J. Reidler, L. Stryer, and J.A. Spudich. J. Cell Biol. 95, 711-719, 1982). To determine if severin is colocalized with actin filaments in vivo, we have used the agar-overlay technique of S. Yumura, H. Mori, and Y. Fukui (J. Cell Biol. 99, 894-899, 1984) to examine the intracellular locations of severin and F-actin in vegetative Dictyostelium amoebae. In rounded cells taken from suspension culture severin colocalized with F-actin at cortical edges while maintaining an endoplasmic presence. Both severin and F-actin were present throughout nascent pseudopods of motile cells, while severin appeared concentrated at the leading edge of fully developed pseudopods. Amoebae feeding on a bacterial lawn formed large phagocytic vesicles that were surrounded by an extensive cell cortex rich in severin. Streaming cells entering aggregates during the Dictyostelium developmental cycle showed severin staining throughout the cytoplasm with F-actin at the cortex. The preferential localization of severin in cytoplasmic regions of vegetative cells undergoing extensive actin cytoskeletal rearrangement prompts consideration of a role for severin-mediated disruption of actin filament networks during pseudopod extension and phagocytosis.  相似文献   

12.
13.
Myosin filaments in cytoskeletons of Dictyostelium amoebae   总被引:2,自引:0,他引:2  
Cytoskeletons were prepared from vegetative amoebae of Dictyostelium discoideum by extraction with Triton X-100. The cytoskeletons were suspended in buffers known to induce the assembly or disassembly of myosin filaments. The samples were fixed, and thin sections were examined by transmission electron microscopy. In both types of buffers, myosin-containing cytoskeletons exhibited a ring of densely staining proteinaceous material within the cortical filament matrix; this ring was not observed in myosin-free cytoskeletons. When myosin-containing cytoskeletons were placed in buffers that induced myosin polymerization, the ring appeared as an array of rodlike filaments approximately 13 nm wide and up to 0.5 micron in length--dimensions appropriate for myosin thick filaments. If ATP was added to cytoskeletons containing such filaments, the cytoskeletons contracted and the ring of filaments disappeared. ATP-induced contraction of cytoskeletons was also visualized by indirect immunofluorescence by using monoclonal antibodies to Dictyostelium myosin. All data were consistent with the identification of the protein ring seen by electron microscopy as cortical myosin. Its location and organization were appropriate for the production of cortical contraction through a sliding filament mechanism.  相似文献   

14.
Mouse and quail embryo fibroblasts were extracted with Triton X-100 and the resulting cytoskeletons were treated with gelsolin-like actin-capping protein (the 90-kDa protein-actin complex isolated from bovine brain). Staining of cells with rhodamine-conjugated phalloin or an antibody to actin did not reveal any actin-containing structures after treatment with the 90-kDa protein-actin complex. Extraction of actin was confirmed by SDS-gel electrophoresis. Immunofluorescence microscopy showed that vinculin and α-actinin were released from the cytoskeletons together with actin. However, myosin remained associated with the cytoskeleton after treatment with the 90-kDa protein-actin complex. The distribution of myosin in treated cells showed no significant difference from that in control cells: in both cases myosin was localized mainly in the stress fibers. Double-fluorescence staining showed the absence of actin in myosin-containing stress fibers of treated cells. The ultrastructural organization of actin-depleted stress fibers was studied by transmission electron microscopy of platinum replicas. On electron micrographs these fibers appeared as bundles of filaments containing clusters of globular material. It is concluded that myosin localization in stress fibers does not depend on actin.  相似文献   

15.
Length distribution of F-actin in Dictyostelium discoideum   总被引:9,自引:0,他引:9  
Inhibition of deoxyribonuclease I activity was used to assay the actin monomers and the pointed ends of actin filaments in lysates of Dictyostelium discoideum. The KD for the binding reaction was 0.2-0.3 nM. Total cellular actin was 93 microM in monomers (approximately 0.1 fmol/cell) of which roughly half was initially polymeric. Essentially all of the filamentous actin (F-actin) was readily pelleted in the microcentrifuge and was therefore presumed to be in the cytoskeleton. Free F-actin barbed ends, measured as pelletable [3H]cytochalasin B, numbered 1.8 x 10(5)/cell; nuclei for the polymerization of rabbit muscle globular (monomeric) actin numbered 2.0 x 10(5)/cell; and pointed ends, determined by their inhibition of deoxyribonuclease I, numbered 3.6 x 10(5)/cell. These values suggest that half the barbed ends might be occluded. On average, the filaments contained approximately 76 subunits and were therefore about 0.2 micron long. The distribution of their lengths was estimated from the time course of depolymerization following vast dilution. Three populations were defined. In one experiment, the smallest population contained 71% of the F-actin mass and 96% of the pointed ends; these filaments averaged 80 subunits or 0.22 microns in length. An intermediate population contained 14% of the F-actin mass and 3% of the filaments; these were roughly 460 subunits (1.3 microns) long. The largest population contained 15% of the F-actin mass in about 0.3% of the filaments; these were 13 microns in length, about the diameter of the cell. The numerous short filaments might populate a cortical mesh, while the long filaments might constitute endoplasmic bundles.  相似文献   

16.
《The Journal of cell biology》1993,120(5):1169-1176
Actin cross-linking proteins are important for formation of isotropic F- actin networks and anisotropic bundles of filaments in the cytoplasm of eucaryotic cells. A 34,000-D protein from the cellular slime mold Dictyostelium discoideum mediates formation of actin bundles in vitro, and is specifically incorporated into filopodia. The actin cross- linking activity of this protein is inhibited by the presence of micromolar calcium. A 27,000-D fragment obtained by digestion with alpha-chymotrypsin lacks the amino-terminal six amino acids and the carboxyl-terminal 7,000 D of the intact polypeptide. The 27,000-D fragment retains F-actin binding activity assessed by cosedimentation assays and by 125I-[F-actin] blot overlay technique, F-actin cross- linking activity as assessed by viscometry, and calcium binding activity. Ultrastructural analyses indicate that the 27,000-D fragment is deficient in the bundling activity characteristic of the intact 34,000-D protein. Actin filaments are aggregated into microdomains but not bundle in the presence of the 27,000-D fragment. A polarized light scattering assay was used to demonstrate that the 34,000-D protein increases the orientational correlation among F-actin filaments. The 27,000-D fragment does not increase the orientation of the actin filaments as assessed by this technique. A terminal segment(s) of the 34,000-D protein, lacking in the 27,000-D fragment, contributes significantly to the ability to cross-link actin filaments into bundles.  相似文献   

17.
Fimbrin, previously recognized as a major structural protein of the microfilament core bundles of intestinal epithelial cell microvilli, has been purified to homogeneity and characterized. It is a nearly globular monomeric protein of apparent molecular weight 68,000 and has a single calcium binding site (Kd = 9 microM), for which magnesium ions compete. Fimbrin binds to F-actin and this interaction is characterized in detail. Under our optimal binding of conditions, fimbrin induces tightly packed F-actin bundles, similar to the bundles induced by villin, another microvillus structural protein. The formation of mixed fimbrin-villin-actin bundles provides a further step toward the full in vitro reconstitution of microvillus core filaments from its purified individual components. The reconstituted fimbrin-villin-actin bundles do not display the side arms characteristic of isolated microvillus cores. These results are discussed in terms of our current understanding of the organization of the microvillus core filaments and indicate that this structure contains two bundling proteins, villin and fimbrin. The results complement previous studies and now provide a minimal biochemical characterization of all four major actin-associated structural proteins so far identified in core filaments. Three of these (villin, fimbrin, and calmodulin) are calcium-binding proteins, emphasizing the concept of calcium control over submembranous microfilament organization.  相似文献   

18.
The natural hosts of the bacterial pathogen Legionella pneumophila are amoebae and protozoa. In these hosts, as in human macrophages, the pathogen enters the cell through phagocytosis, then rapidly modifies the phagosome to create a compartment that supports its replication. We have examined L. pneumophila entry and behaviour during early stages of the infection of Dictyostelium discoideum amoebae. Bacteria were labelled with a red fluorescent marker, and selected proteins and organelles in the host were labelled with GFP, allowing the dynamics and interactions of L. pneumophila -containing phagosomes to be tracked in living cells. These studies demonstrated that entry of L. pneumophila is an actin-mediated process, that the actin-binding protein coronin surrounds the nascent phagosome but dissociates immediately after internalization, that ER membrane is not incorporated into a phagosome during uptake, that the newly internalized phagosome is rapidly transported about the cell on microtubules, that association of ER markers with the phagosome occurs in two steps that correlate with distinct changes in phagosome movement, and that the vacuolar H(+)-ATPase does not associate with mature replication vacuoles. These studies have clarified certain aspects of the infection process and provided new insights into the dynamic interactions between the pathogen and its host.  相似文献   

19.
During isolation of the F-actin capping protein cap32/34 from Dictyostelium discoideum, a 70 kDa protein was copurified which by cloning and sequencing was identified as a heat shock cognate protein (hsc70). This protein exhibited a specific and MgATP-dependent interaction with the heterodimeric capping protein. To investigate the protein-protein interaction in vitro, we expressed all three polypeptides separately in Escherichia coli and performed reconstitution experiments of complete or truncated hsc70 with the 32 and 34 kDa subunits of the capping protein. Viscosity measurements and studies on the polymerization kinetics of pyrene-labeled actin showed that hsc70 increased the capping activity of cap32/34 up to 10-fold, whereas hsc70 alone had no effect on actin polymerization. In addition, hsc70 acted as a molecular chaperone by stimulating the refolding of the denatured 32 and 34 kDa subunits of the capping protein. To study the interaction of the two domains of hsc70 with cap32/34, the N-terminal 42 kDa ATPase region and the C-terminal 30 kDa tail of hsc70 were expressed separately in E. coli. The 32 and 34 kDa subunits were capable of associating with both domains of hsc70. The ATPase domain of hsc70, which is structurally related to actin, proved to be responsible for the increased capping activity of cap32/34, whereas the C-terminal tail of hsc70 was involved in folding of the subunits of cap32/34. Our data indicate a novel linkage between 70 kDa heat shock proteins and the actin cytoskeleton.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

20.
Kinetics of fluid-phase pinocytosis in Dictyostelium discoideum amoebae   总被引:2,自引:0,他引:2  
Kinetics of pinocytosis in Dictyostelium discoideum were investigated over an extended period of time (up to 6 hours) using fluorescein isothiocyanate (FITC)-dextran as a fluid-phase marker. FITC-dextran added to the medium accumulated rapidly inside the cells with a rate of influx equivalent to 9 microns3 of fluid/cell x min. After a period of about 90 min of uptake, the intracellular FITC-dextran level reached a plateau which corresponded to a strict balance between pinocytosis and exocytosis as shown both by efflux measurements and pulse experiments with (3H) dextran. At equilibrium, the amount of internalized marker reached a value equivalent to 790 microns3 of fluid taken up per amoeba, i.e. a volume paradoxically higher than the total aqueous space of the cell (520 microns3 ). FITC-dextran was thus markedly concentrated intracellularly. The endocytic compartment in which the intracellular FITC-dextran was concentrated could be completely washed out when FITC-dextran was removed from the external medium.  相似文献   

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