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1.
Summary Reorganization of the actin cytoskeleton following cell wall puncturing of characean internodal cells was studied by immunofluorescence and confocal laser scanning microscopy. Injury locally destroyed the parallel subcortical actin filament bundles and cortical actin strands that are characteristic of unwounded regions. At wounds, a delicate three-dimensional interlaced structure of actin strands, with meshes up to 5 m wide, formed by de novo assembly of isolated filaments and by the elongation of residual subcortical actin bundles and cortical actin strands. The actin meshwork persisted for up to 2 h, corresponding to the duration of intense wound wall secretion. Actin filament bundles continuous with the subcortical bundles outside the wound then regenerated, their parallel alignment probably assisted by endoplasmic flow. Cytochalasin D concentrations that arrested cytoplasmic streaming completely inhibited the formation of the actin meshwork, wound wall deposition and recovery of actin bundles. Concentrations that only reduced streaming velocity delayed meshwork formation and wound walls were thinner than in controls. The actual amount of F-actin within the meshwork, however, was clearly greater in the presence of low cytochalasin concentrations. In late stages of recovery, the actin bundles became very thick and intervening spaces became wider thereby forming a conspicuous, three-dimensional lattice that was continuous with interwebbing subcortical bundles and cortical actin around the periphery of the wound. Our experiments suggest that actin meshwork formation is a prerequisite for plasma membrane-directed transport of vesicles involved in wounding-induced exocytosis in characean internodes. Stabilization of the meshwork by subinhibitory concentrations of cytochalasin D is probably caused by actinbinding properties of the drug that either induce bundling or impede function of associated proteins.Abbreviations AFW artificial fresh water - BSA bovine serum albumin - CLSM confocal laser scanning microscope (microscopy) - DIC differential interference contrast - DMSO dimethyl sulfoxide - FITC fluorescein isothiocyanate - MBS m-maleimidobenzoyl N-hydroxy-succinimide ester - PBS phosphate-buffered saline - SCAB subcortical actin bundle  相似文献   

2.
The organization of the microtubule (MT) and actin microfilament (MF) cytoskeleton of tip-growing rhizoids and protonemata of characean green algae was examined by confocal laser scanning microscopy. This analysis included microinjection of fluorescent tubulin and phallotoxins into living cells, as well as immunofluorescence labeling of fixed material and fluorescent phallotoxin labeling of unfixed material. Although the morphologically very similar positively gravitropic (downward growing) rhizoids and negatively gravitropic (upward growing) protonemata show opposite gravitropic responses, no differences were detected in the extensive three-dimensional distribution of actin MFs and MTs in both cell types. Tubulin microinjection revealed that in contrast to internodal cells, fluorescent tubulin incorporated very slowly into the MT arrays of rhizoids, suggesting that MT dynamics are very different in tip-growing and diffusely expanding cells. Microtubules assembled from multiple sites at the plasma membrane in the basal zone, and a dense subapical array emerged from a diffuse nucleation centre on the basal side of the nuclear envelope. Immunofluorescence confirmed these distribution patterns but revealed more extensive MT arrays. In the basal zone, short branching clusters of MTs form two cortical hemicylinders. Subapical, axially oriented MTs are distributed in equal density throughout the peripheral and inner cytoplasm and are closely associated with subapical organelles. Microtubules, however, are completely absent from the apical zones of rhizoids and protonemata. Actin MFs were found in all zones of rhizoids and protonemata including the apex. Two files of axially oriented bundles of subcortical actin MFs and ring-like actin structures in the streaming endoplasm of rhizoids were detected in the basal zones by microinjection or rhodamine-phalloidin labeling. The subapical zone contains a dense array of mainly axially oriented actin MFs that co-distribute with the subapical MT array. In the apex, actin MFs form thicker bundles that converge into a remarkably distinct actin patch in the apical dome, whose position coincides with the position of the endoplasmic reticulum aggregate in the centre of the Spitzenk?rper. Actin MFs radiate from the actin patch towards the apical membrane. Together with results from previous inhibitor studies (Braun and Sievers, 1994, Eur J Cell Biol 63: 289–298), these results suggest that MTs have a stabilizing function in maintaining the polar cytoplasmic and cytoskeletal organization. The motile processes, however, are mediated by actin. In particular, the actin cytoskeleton appears to be involved in the structural and functional organization of the Spitzenk?rper and thus is responsible for controlling cell shape and growth direction. Despite the similar structural arrangements of the actin cytoskeleton, major differences in the function of actin MFs have been observed in rhizoids and protonemata. Since actin MFs are more directly involved in the gravitropic response of protonemata than of rhizoids, the opposite gravitropism in the two cell types seems to be based mainly on different properties and activities of the actin cytoskeleton. Received: 14 September 1997 / Accepted: 16 October 1997  相似文献   

3.
Summary Parallel bundles of actin filaments at the cortex-endoplasm interface provide tracks for myosin-generated cytoplasmic streaming in characean internodes. These bundles resist disassembly or structural modification when exposed to 10 μM cytochalasin D (CD) even though this concentration of CD rapidly (within minutes) but reversibly arrests streaming. Unexpectedly, we discovered that prolonged treatment with lower concentrations of CD could partially disassemble the subcortical actin bundles. Actin bundles became discontinuous following one- to several-day treatment with concentrations (6 μM) that reduced but did not arrest streaming, and the residual fragments mostly remained parallel to the chloroplast files. When microtubules were concurrently disassembled with tubulin-specific drugs, however, low CD concentrations (2.5–3 μM) completely arrested bulk streaming, disrupted the largely 2-dimensional actin bundle array and caused the formation of a coarse, thick-meshed actin network that extended from the cortex to the endoplasm. Despite such massive reconstruction, drug removal enabled cells to recover continuous parallel bundles and streaming. Recovery was possible if both or just one of the drugs were removed. In recovered cells, the streaming pattern frequently redeveloped in new directions that did not follow the chloroplast files, and later, chloroplast files readjusted to the new polarity established by the actin bundles. This first report on the complete and reversible disassembly of characean actin bundles provides new insights into the mechanism of actin bundle assembly and organization and supports the idea of indirect interactions between actin filaments and microtubules.  相似文献   

4.
Numerous forms of cytochalasins have been identified and, although they share common biological activity, they may differ considerably in potency. We investigated the effects of cytochalasins A, B, C, D, E, H and J and dihydrocytochalasin B in an ideal experimental system for cell motility, the giant internodal cells of the characean alga Nitella pseudoflabellata. Cytochalasins D (60 microM) and H (30 microM) were found to be most suited for fast and reversible inhibition of actin-based motility, while cytochalasins A and E arrested streaming at lower concentrations but irreversibly. We observed no clear correlation between the ability of cytochalasins to inhibit motility and the actual disruption of the subcortical actin bundle tracks on which myosin-dependent motility occurs. Indeed, the actin bundles remained intact at the time of streaming cessation and disassembled only after one to several days' treatment. Even when applied at concentrations lower than that required to inhibit cytoplasmic streaming, all of the cytochalasins induced reorganization of the more labile cortical actin filaments into actin patches, swirling clusters or short rods. Latrunculins A and B arrested streaming only after disrupting the subcortical actin bundles, a process requiring relatively high concentrations (200 microM) and very long treatment periods of >1 d. Latrunculins, however, worked synergistically with cytochalasins. A 1 h treatment with 15 nM latrunculin A and 4 microM cytochalasin D induced reversible fragmentation of subcortical actin bundles and arrested cytoplasmic streaming. Our findings provide insights into the mechanisms by which cytochalasins and latrunculins interfere with characean actin to inhibit motility.  相似文献   

5.
Various methods have been used to study cytoplasmic streaming in giant algal cells during the past three decades. Simple techniques can be used with characean internodal cells to modify the cell constitution in various ways to gain insight into the mechanism of cytoplasmic streaming. Another method involves isolatingin vitro a huge drop of uninjured endoplasm, to examine its physical and dynamic properties. The motive force responsible for streaming has been measured by three different techniques with similar results. Subcortical fibrils consisting of bundles of F-actin with the same polarity are indispensable for streaming. Differential treatment of the endoplasm and ectoplasm has shown that putative characean myosin is localized in the endoplasm. Studies of the roles of ATP, Mg2+, Ca2+, H+ etc. in the streaming have been conducted by cellular perfusion, which allows removal of the tonoplast, or by techniques permeabilizing the protoplasmic membrane. A slow version of the movement can even be artificially reproduced by combining characean actinin situ and exogenous myosin in the presence of Mg-ATP. The findings thus far obtained support the hypothesis that cytoplasmic streaming in characean cells is caused by an active shearing force produced by interaction of the actin filament bundles on the cortex with myosin in the endoplasm.  相似文献   

6.
New methods of visualizing subcortical actin filament bundles, or fibrils, in Characean internodes confirm that they are associated with chloroplasts at the surface facing the streaming endoplasm, and reveal that they are continuous over long distances. With the scanning electron microscope, an average of four to six fibrils are seen bridging a file of chloroplasts. The same configuration appears in negatively stained preparations of large blocks of chloroplast files connected by actin fibrils. Few branches of the subcortical fibrils are evident. These findings are discussed with respect to the mechanism of cytoplasmic streaming in Characeae.  相似文献   

7.
The mechanism by which sub-cortical actin bundles and membranous organelles are immobilised in the cortical cytoplasm of the alga Chara was studied by perfusing cells with a solution containing 1% Triton X-100. Light and scanning electron microscopy and the release of starch grains and chlorophyll-protein complexes indicated that the detergent extensively solubilised the chloroplasts. However, the sub-cortical actin bundles remained in situ even though they were originally separated from the plasma membrane by the chloroplasts. A fibrous layer between chloroplasts and plasma membrane became readily visible after detergent extraction of the cells and could be released by low-ionic-strength ethylenediaminetetraacetic acid, thioglycollate and trypsin. The same treatments applied to cells not subject to detergent extraction released the membrane-bound organelles and actin bundles and no fibrous meshwork was visible on subsequent extraction with Triton. It is, therefore, concluded that a detergent-insoluble cortical cytoskeleton exists and contributes to the immobility of the actin and cortical organelles in the cells.Abbreviation EDTA ethylenediaminetetraacetic acid  相似文献   

8.
Sakai Y  Takagi S 《Planta》2005,221(6):823-830
In epidermal cells of the aquatic angiosperm Vallisneria gigantea Graebner, high-intensity blue light (BL) induces the avoidance response of chloroplasts. We examined simultaneous BL-induced changes in the configuration of actin filaments in the cytoplasmic layers that face the outer periclinal wall (P side) and the anticlinal wall (A side). The results clearly showed that dynamic reorganization of the actin cytoskeleton occurs on both sides. Upon BL irradiation, thick, long bundles of actin filaments appeared, concomitant with the directed migration of chloroplasts from the P side to the A side. After 15–20 min of BL irradiation, fine actin bundles on only the A side appeared to associate with chloroplasts that had migrated from the P side. To examine the role of the fine actin bundles, we evaluated the anchorage of chloroplasts by centrifuging living cells. Upon BL irradiation, the resistance of chloroplasts on both the P and A sides to the centrifugal force decreased remarkably. After 20 min of BL irradiation, the resistance of chloroplasts on the A side increased again, but chloroplasts on the P side could still be displaced. The BL-induced recovery of resistance of chloroplasts on the A side was sensitive to photosynthesis inhibitors but insensitive to an inhibitor of flavoproteins. The photosynthesis inhibitors also prevented the fine actin bundles from appearing on the A side under BL irradiation. These results strongly suggest that the BL-induced avoidance response of chloroplasts includes photosynthesis-dependent and actin-dependent anchorage of chloroplasts on the A side of epidermal cells.  相似文献   

9.
Summary Fluorescent phallotoxins and heavy meromyosin were used to reveal the organization of the actin cytoskeleton in honeybee photoreceptor cells, and the relationship of actin filaments to the submicrovillar, palisade-like cisternae of the endoplasmic reticulum (ER). Bundles of unipolar actin filaments (pointed end towards the cell center) protrude from the microvillar bases and extend through cytoplasmic bridges that traverse the submicrovillar ER. Within the cytoplasmic bridges, the filaments are regularly spaced and tightly apposed to the ER membrane. In addition, actin filaments are deployed close to the microvillar bases to form a loose web. Actin filaments are scarce in cell areas remote from the rhabdom; these areas contain microtubule-associated ER domains. The results suggest that the actin system of the submicrovillar cytoplasm shapes the submicrovillar ER cisternae, and that the distinct ER domains interact with different cytoskeletal elements.  相似文献   

10.
Summary The reorganization of the actin and microtubule (MT) cytoskeleton was immunocytochemically visualized by confocal laser scanning microscopy throughout the photomorphogenetic differentiation of tip-growing characean protonemata into multicellular green thalli. After irradiating dark-grown protonemata with blue or white light, decreasing rates of gravitropic tip-growth were accompanied by a series of events leading to the first cell division: the nucleus migrated towards the tip; MTs and plastids invaded the apical cytoplasm; the polar zonation of cytoplasmic organelles and the prominent actin patch at the cell tip disappeared and the tip-focused actin microfilaments (MFs) were reorganized into a homogeneous network. During prometaphase and metaphase, extranuclear spindle microtubules formed between the two spindle poles. Cytoplasmic MTs associated with the apical spindle pole decreased in number but did not disappear completely during mitosis. The basal cortical MTs represent a discrete MT population that is independent from the basal spindle poles and did not redistribute during mitosis and cytokinesis. Preprophase MT bands were never detected but cytokinesis was characterized by higher-plant-like phragmoplast MT arrays. Cytoplasmic actin MFs persisted as a dense network in the apical cytoplasm throughout the first cell division. They were not found in close contact with spindle MTs, but actin MFs were clearly coaligned along the MTs of the early phragmoplast. The later belt-like phragmoplast was completely depleted of MFs close to the time of cell plate fusion except for a few actin MF bundles that extended to the margin of the growing cell plate. The cell plate itself and young anticlinal cell walls showed strong actin immunofluorescence. After several anticlinal cell divisions, basal cells of the multicellular protonema produced nodal cell complexes by multiple periclinal divisions. The apical-dome cell of the new shoot which originated from a nodal cell becomes the meristem initial that regularly divides to produce a segment cell. The segment cell subsequently divides to produce a single file of alternating internodal cells and multicellular nodes which together form the complexly organized characean thallus. The actin and MT distribution of nodal cells resembles that of higherplant meristem cells, whereas the internodal cells exhibit a highly specialized cortical system of MTs and streaming-generating actin bundles, typical of highly vacuolated plant cells. The transformation from the asymmetric mitotic spindle of the polarized tip-growing protonema cell to the symmetric, higher-plant-like spindle of nodal thallus cells recapitulates the evolutionary steps from the more primitive organisms to higher plants.Abbreviations FITC fluorescein isothiocyanate - MF microfilament - MT microtubule - MSB microtubule-stabilizing buffer - PBS phosphate-buffered saline  相似文献   

11.
The organization of cortical microtubules at wound sites in Nitella pseudoflabellata(A. Br. & Nordst.) em. R.D.W. and N. flexilis(L.) Ag. internodal cells was examined in relation to the regeneration of actin filament bundles in order to identify the mechanisms by which microtubules are oriented. Actin bundle regrowth occurs prior to that of microtubules, so it was considered possible that microtubule alignment is actin-dependent, perhaps mediated by cross-linking proteins. In all types of wounds investigated, subcortical actin bundles regenerated parallel to the direction of cytoplasmic streaming. Microtubule orientation patterns, however, varied according to the nature of wound formation and the type of wound wall eventually produced. In chloroplast-free windows induced by blue light irradiation, microtubule orientation varied according to the size of the window. Microtubules were randomized in 10- to 30-μm-wide windows where exposure to cytoplasmic flow is minimal, but were aligned more or less parallel to regenerated actin bundles in 80- to 100-μm-wide windows. Where co-alignment between microtubules and actin bundles was obvious after fluorescence labelling, electron micrographs revealed that microtubules and actin bundles were too widely spaced to account for any cross-linkages. Furthermore, treatments that inhibited or reduced cytoplasmic streaming without altering the direction of actin bundles caused randomization of microtubules previously oriented in the streaming direction, even in the presence of taxol. When evenly flat wound walls were induced by 10−4 M chlortetracycline, microtubules were co-aligned with nearby actin bundles at the surface of the wound wall. At wounds induced by treatment with 5 × 10−2 M CaCl2, however, microtubules were randomly oriented and preferentially located in the narrow clefts between the wound-wall protuberances, up to several micrometers away from the actin bundles near the wound-wall tips. These results indicate that microtubules regenerated in wounds are merely co-aligned with actin filament bundles because they are passively aligned by the hydrodynamic forces created by cytoplasmic flow. Received: 4 August 1998 / Accepted: 30 January 1999  相似文献   

12.
The distribution of actin in wild-type cells and in morphogenetic mutants of the budding yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae was explored by staining cells with fluorochrome-labeled phallotoxins after fixing and permeabilizing the cells by several methods. The actin appeared to be localized in a set of cortical spots or patches, as well as in a network of cytoplasmic fibers. Bundles of filaments that may possibly correspond to the fibers visualized by fluorescence were observed with the electron microscope. The putative actin spots were concentrated in small and medium-sized buds and at what were apparently the sites of incipient bud formation on unbudded cells, whereas the putative actin fibers were generally oriented along the long axes of the mother-bud pairs. In several morphogenetic mutants that form multiple, abnormally elongated buds, the actin patches were conspicuously clustered at the tips of most buds, and actin fibers were clearly oriented along the long axes of the buds. There was a strong correlation between the occurrence of active growth at particular bud tips and clustering of actin spots at those same tips. Near the end of the cell cycle in wild- type cells, actin appeared to concentrate (as a cluster of spots or a band) in the neck region connecting the mother cell to its bud. Observations made using indirect immunofluorescence with a monoclonal anti-yeast-tubulin antibody on the morphogenetic mutant cdc4 (which forms multiple, abnormally elongated buds while the nuclear cycle is arrested) revealed the surprising occurrence of multiple bundles of cytoplasmic microtubules emanating from the one duplicated spindle-pole body per cell. It seems that most or all of the buds contain one or more of these bundles of microtubules, which often can be seen to extend to the very tips of the buds. These observations are consistent with the hypotheses that actin, tubulin, or both may be involved in the polarization of growth and localization of cell-wall deposition that occurs during the yeast cell cycle.  相似文献   

13.
In this study I describe the ultrastructural distribution of myosin in cortical and subcortical areas of antibody-labelled, quick-frozen fibroblasts. In many cells myosin was present in small variably spaced and sized (0.23-0.39 micron long), nonaligned patches, while in other cells much larger periodically spaced patches of more uniform length (0.27 micron) were found. In all regions of the cytoskeleton myosin was found, primarily on linear bundles of actin filaments running parallel to the cell's long axis. Myosin was absent from single actin filaments, actin filaments perpendicular to actin bundles aligned with the cell's long axis, and actin filaments, such as geodome vertices and parts of the cortex, which had a complex interwoven appearance. These data indicate that in motile non-muscle cells myosin exerts force only in a unidirectional manner. Recognisable myosin filaments were never observed even in cells incubated either in N-ethylmaleimide or sodium azide. The presence of myosin in, and almost to the very edge of, the cortex suggests that the cellular control of actomyosin based movement is direct and over short-range distances. Large numbers of small cross-linking filaments were found in association with cortical and subcortical actin. Their relationship to myosin and overall actin geometry is discussed.  相似文献   

14.
We have investigated constitutive endocytosis in internodal cells of the characean green algae. The endocytic tracer FM1-43 accumulated in distinct plasma membrane domains that are probably enriched in sterol-like substances. Internalization of the dye was active but independent of an intact actin or microtubule cytoskeleton.  相似文献   

15.
Various investigations have suggested that cytoplasmic streaming in characean algae is driven by interaction between subcortical actin bundles and endoplasmic myosin. To further test this hypothesis, we have perfused cytotoxic actin-binding drugs and fluorescent actin labels into the cytoplasm of streaming Chara cells. Confirming earlier work, we find that cytochalasin B (CB) reversibly inhibits streaming. In direct contrast to earlier investigators, who have found phalloidin to be a potent inhibitor of movement in amoeba, slime mold, and fibroblastic cells, we find that phalloidin does not inhibit streaming in Chara but does modify the inhibitory effect of CB. Use of two fluorescent actin probes, fluorescein, isothiocyanate-heavy meromyosin (FITC-HMM) and nitrobenzoxadiazole-phallacidin (NBD-Ph), has permitted visualization of the effects of CB and phalloidin on the actin bundles. FITC-HMM labeling in perfused but nonstreaming cells has revealed a previously unobserved alteration of the actin bundles by CB. Phalloidin alone does not perceptibly alter the actin bundles but does block the alteration by CB if applied as a pretreatment, NBD-Ph perfused into the cytoplasm of streaming cells stains actin bundles without inhibiting streaming. NBD-Ph staining of actin bundles is not initially observed in cells inhibited by CB but does appear simultaneously with the recovery of streaming as CB leaks from the cells. The observations reported here are consistent with the established effects of phallotoxins and CB on actin in vitro and support the hypothesis that streaming is generated by actin-myosin interactions.  相似文献   

16.
Summary In the characean algaNitella, depolymerization of microtubules potentiates the inhibitory effects of cytochalasins on cytoplasmic streaming. Microtubule depolymerization lowers the cytochalasin B and D concentrations required to inhibit streaming, accelerates inhibition and delays streaming recovery. Because microtubule depolymerization does not significantly alter3H-cytochalasin B uptake and release, elevated intracellular cytochalasin concentrations are not the basis for potentiation. Instead, microtubule depolymerization causes actin to become more sensitive to cytochalasin. This increased sensitivity of actin is unlikely to be due to direct stabilization of actin by microtubules, however, because very few microtubules colocalize with the subcortical actin bundles that generate streaming. Furthermore, microtubule reassembly, but not recovery of former transverse alignment, is sufficient for restoring the normal cellular responses to cytochalasin D. We hypothesize that either tubulin or microtubule-associated proteins, released when microtubules depolymerize, interact with the actin cytoskeleton and sensitize it to cytochalasin.Abbreviations APW artificial pond water - Cac cytoplasraic free calcium concentration - DMSO dimethyl sulfoxide - MT microtubule-minus - MT+ microtubule-plus.  相似文献   

17.
18.
Summary The effects of a protein phosphatase inhibitor, calyculin A (CA), on cytoplasmic streaming and cytoplasmic organization were examined in root hair cells ofLimnobium stoloniferum. CA at concentrations higher than 50 nM inhibited cytoplasmic streaming and also induced remarkable morphological changes in the cytoplasm. The transvacuolar strands, in which actin filament bundles were oriented parallel to the long axis, disappeared and spherical cytoplasmic bodies emerged in the CA-treated cells. In these spherical bodies, actin filaments were present and the spherical bodies were connected to each other by thin strands of actin filaments. Upon CA removal, transvacuolar strands, in which actin filament bundles were aligned, and cytoplasmic streaming reappeared. A nonselective inhibitor for protein kinases, K-252a, delayed the inhibitory effect of CA on cytoplasmic streaming and suppressed the CA-induced formation of the spherical bodies. From these results, it is suggested that phosphatases sensitive to CA regulate cytoplasmic streaming and are involved in the organization of the cytoplasm in root hair cells.Abbreviations APW artificial pond water - CA calyculin A  相似文献   

19.
Summary Indirect immunofluorescence, using monoclonal antibodies to actin and tubulin, applied to sections of root tips ofLepidium, Lycopersicon, Phleum, andZea, revealed features of the cytoskeleton that were unique to the statocytes of their root caps. Although the cortical microtubules (CMTs) lay in dense arrays against the periphery of the statocytes, these same cells showed depleted complements of endoplasmic microtubules (EMTs) and of actin microfilament (AMF) bundles, both of which are characteristic of the cytoskeleton of other post-mitotic cells in the proximal portion of the root apex. The scarcity of the usual cytoskeletal components within the statocytes is considered responsible for the exclusion of the larger organelles (e.g., nucleus, plastids, ER elements) from the interior of the cell and for the absence of cytoplasmic streaming. Furthermore, the depletion of dense EMT networks and AMF bundles in statocyte cytoplasm is suggested as being closely related to the elevated cytoplasmic calcium content of these cells which, in turn, may also favour the formation of the large sedimentable amyloplasts by not permitting plastid divisions. These latter organelles are proposed to act as statoliths due to their dynamic interactions with very fine and highly unstable AMFs which enmesh the statoliths and merge into peripheral AMFs-CMTs-ER-plasma membrane complexes. Rather indirect evidence for these interactions was provided by showing enhanced rates of statolith sedimentation after chemically-induced disintegration of CMTs. All these unique properties of the root cap statocytes are supposed to effectively enhance the gravity-perceptive function of these highly specialized cells.Dedicated to Prof. Dr. Benno Parthier on the occasion of his retirement  相似文献   

20.
Summary. In palisade mesophyll cells of spinach (Spinacia oleracea L.) kept under low-intensity white light, chloroplasts were apparently immobile and seemed to be surrounded by fine bundles of actin filaments. High-intensity blue light induced actin-dependent chloroplast movement concomitant with the appearance of a couple of long, straight bundles of actin filaments in each cell, whereas high-intensity red light was essentially ineffective in inducing these responses. The actin organization observed under low-intensity white light has been postulated to function in anchoring chloroplasts at proper intracellular positions through direct interaction with the chloroplasts. Intact chloroplasts, which retained their outer envelopes, were isolated after homogenization of leaves and Percoll centrifugation. No endogenous actin was detected by immunoblotting in the final intact-chloroplast fraction prepared from the leaves kept under low-intensity white light or in darkness. In cosedimentation assays with exogenously added skeletal muscle filamentous actin, however, actin was detected in the intact-chloroplast fraction precipitated after low-speed centrifugation. The association of actin with chloroplasts was apparently dependent on incubation time and chloroplast density. After partial disruption of the outer envelope of isolated chloroplasts by treatment with trypsin, actin was no longer coprecipitated. The results suggest that chloroplasts in spinach leaves can directly interact with actin, and that this interaction may be involved in the regulation of intracellular positioning of chloroplasts. Correspondence and reprints: Department of Biology, Graduate School of Science, Osaka University, Machikaneyama 1-1, Toyonaka, Osaka 560-0043, Japan. Present address: Tsukuba Research and Development Center, Fuji Oil Co., Ltd., Tsukuba-gun, Ibaraki, Japan.  相似文献   

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