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1.
Effects of the substratum on the migration of primordial germ cells   总被引:3,自引:0,他引:3  
It is now clear from work on defined cell types on artificial substrates that various chemical and physical inhomogeneities in the substrates can guide cell locomotion. It is also becoming clear that less well defined inhomogeneities in living cell substrates can guide the normal locomotion of embryonic migratory cells in vivo. The primordial germ cells (p.g.cs) of early anuran amphibian embryos are proving a useful model for the study of cell migration. When isolated from the embryo and cultured on living cellular substrate, p.g.cs become oriented by the shapes of the underlying cells or by their stress fibre cytoskeleton, or both. A combination of scanning and transmission electron microscopy in vivo shows a clearly aligned cellular substrate for p.g.c. migration along part of their route. Furthermore, we find that the glycoprotein fibronectin is involved in p.g.c. adhesion, which suggests a link between orientation of the substrate cells and p.g.c. guidance.  相似文献   

2.
Primordial germ cells (PGCs) have been removed from their normal migratory route in early embryos of Xenopus laevis, and their behaviour studied in vitro. They adhere to, and move over the upper surface of, layers of outgrowing cells from expiants of adult Xenopus mesentery. They move by the extrusion of single filopodia, elongation, forward streaming of the yolky cytoplasm and retraction of their trailing ends. When the underlying cells are polarized in one direction only, PGCs always elongate and move along the same direction. Furthermore, when PGCs elongate and move over less obviously polarized cells, they always do so in the direction of ‘stress fibres’ (actin bundles) in the underlying cells. A substrate-guidance hypothesis for PGC migration is only tenable if there is some orientation in their natural substrate in vivo. Using the scanning electron microscope, we demonstrate that the coelpmic lining cells, beneath which PGCs migrate up the dorsal mesentery of the gut, are orientated in the direction of travel. Furthermore, this orientation changes at the time of gonadal ridge formation. This raises the intriguing possibility that PGCs are guided for at least part of their migration in Xenopus laevis embryos by a substrate-guidance mechanism.  相似文献   

3.
Mechanotransduction in root gravity sensing cells   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
The analysis of the dose-response curve of the gravitropic reaction of lentil seedling roots has shown that these organs are more sensitive when they have been grown in microgravity than when they have been grown on a 1 g centrifuge in space before gravistimulation. This difference of gravisensitivity is not due to the volume or the density of starch grains of statoliths, which are about the same in both conditions (1 g or microgravity). However, the distribution of statoliths within the statocyte may be responsible for this differential sensitivity, since the dispersion of these organelles is greater in microgravity than in 1 g. When lentil roots grown in microgravity or in 1 g are stimulated at 0.93 g for 22 min, the amyloplasts sediment following two different trajectories. They move from the proximal half of the statocytes toward the lower longitudinal wall in the microgravity grown sample and from the distal half toward the longitudinal wall in the 1 g grown sample. At the end of the stimulation, they reach a similar position within the statocytes. If the roots of both samples are left in microgravity for 3 h, the amyloplasts move toward the cell centre in a direction that makes an average angle of 40 degrees with respect to the lower longitudinal wall. The actin filaments, which are responsible for this movement, may have an overall orientation of 40 degrees with respect to this wall. Thus, when roots grown in microgravity are stimulated on the minicentrifuge the amyloplasts slide on the actin filaments, whereas they move perpendicular to them in 1 g grown roots. Our results suggest that greater sensitivity of seedling roots grown in microgravity should be due to greater dispersion of statoliths, to better contacts between statoliths and the actin network and to greater number of activated mechanoreceptors. One can hypothesize that stretch activated ion channels (SACs) located in the plasma membrane are responsible for the transduction of gravistimulus. These SACs may be connected together by elements of the cytoskeleton lining the plasma membrane and to the actin filaments. They could be stimulated by the action of statoliths on the actin network and/or on these elements of the cytoskeleton which link the mechanoreceptors (SACs).  相似文献   

4.
The organization of the cytoskeleton in the podosomes of osteoclasts was studied by use of cell shearing, rotary replication, and fluorescence cytochemical techniques. After shearing, clathrin plaques and particles associated with the cytoskeleton were left behind on the exposed cytoplasmic side of the membrane. The cytoskeleton of the podosomes was characterized by two types of actin filaments: relatively long filaments in the portion surrounding the podosome core, and highly branched short filaments in the core. Individual actin filaments radiating from the podosomes interacted with several membrane particles along the length of the filaments. Many lateral contacts with the membrane surface by the particles were made along the length of individual actin filaments. The polarity of actin filaments in podosomes became oriented such that their barbed ends were directed toward the core of podosomes. The actin cytoskeletons terminated or branched at the podosomes, where the membrane tightly adhered to the substratum. Microtubules were not usually present in the podosome structures; however, certain microtubules appeared to be morphologically in direct contact with the podosome core. Most of the larger clathrin plaques consisted of flat sheets of clathrin lattices that interconnected neighboring clathrin lattices to form an extensive clathrin area. However, the small deeply invaginated clathrin plaques and the podosomal cytoskeleton were located close together. Thus, the clathrin plaques on the ventral membrane of osteoclasts might be involved in both cell adhesion and the formation of receptor-ligand complexes, i.e., endocytosis. This work was supported by the following grants to T.A.: Grants-in-Aid for Scientific Research (C) (18592020) from the Ministry of Education, Science, and Culture of Japan and the Miyata Research Fund of Asahi University.  相似文献   

5.
The cytoskeleton and the adhesion complex of chick embryo chondrocytes maintained in vitro have been studied by fluorescence and interference reflection microscopy during the process of cell spreading. The pattern of actin-containing microfilaments and the distribution of vinculin speckles on adhesion plaques have been found to change as a function of the culture time. Newly plated chondrocytes adhere to the substratum mostly around a peripheral ring-like region and show a complex tridimensional array of microfilaments. When chondrocytes flatten, they develop stress fibres and show a diffuse system of vinculin-containing adhesion plaques scattered over the entire ventral side of the cells. Upon infection with Rous sarcoma virus (RSV) chondrocytes display one or more actin-containing ruffles located on the dorsal side similar to the 'actin flowers' earlier described in other cell types. These structures have been found to accumulate vinculin too. In chondrocytes infected with two td-ts mutants of RSV, 'actin flowers' have been found to persist at the restrictive temperature. At this temperature, however, in the majority of cells, stress fibres and adhesion plaques reappear.  相似文献   

6.
Summary The primordial germ cells (PGCs) of Oryzias latipes in migration to the gonadal anlage have been investigated by light and electron microscopy. The ultrastructure of the PGCs, which occur in the subendodermal space on the syncytial periblast, differ conspicuously from that of the surrounding endodermal cells. After the PGCs move to the cavity between lateral plate and ectoderm, they are taken into the somatomesodermal layer and transferred to the dorsal mesentery where they form gonadal anlage with mesodermal cells. During their translocation to the dorsal mesentery through the somatic mesoderm, apparently without formation of pseudopods, the PGCs are completely surrounded by mesodermal cells. Since these conditions seem unfavorable to the active translocation of the PGCs to the dorsal mesentery, it is more likely that the PGCs are transferred passively by the morphogenic activity of the lateral-plate mesoderm.Counts of the number of the PGCs revealed that they are mitotically dormant during the migratory period. After the completion of the migration, they regain their proliferative activity. The PGCs in the female proliferate more actively than those in the male, which provides the first morphological indication of sex differentiation in this species of fish.  相似文献   

7.
Actin-based structures play fundamental roles in cellular functions. However it remains controversial how cells cope with the absence of F-actin structures. This report focuses on short- and long-term effects of cytochalasin B (CB) on actin-complexes in fibroblasts and myoblasts. Thirty min of CB treatment dispersed subplasma actin cortices, lamellipodia, ruffled membranes, stress fibers and adhesion plaques into actin patches in fibroblasts and muscle cells. In contrast, 72 hrs CB treatment showed distinct morphological effects. Fibroblasts became giant multinucleated-finger shaped with 5 to 10 protrusions, 3–8 μm in width, and >200 μm in length. They lacked cortical actin, stress fibers, adhesion plaques and ruffled membranes but contained immense lamelliopodia with abnormal adhesion plaque protein complexes. Muscle cells transformed into multinucleated globular-shaped but contained normal I-Z-I and A-bands, indicating that CB did not interfere with the assembly of myofibrils. Within 30 min after CB removal, finger-shaped fibroblasts returned to their original shape and actin-containing structures rapidly reappeared, whereas muscle cells respond slowly to form elongated myotubes following CB washout. The capacity to grow, complete several nuclear cycles, assemble intermediate filaments and microtubules without a morphologically recognizable actin cytoskeleton raises interesting issues related to the role of the actin compartments in eukaryotic cells.  相似文献   

8.
We have studied the distribution of cytoskeletal elements in detergent-extracted mouse embryo fibroblasts using the platinum replica technique. It was shown that lamelloplasm can be subdivided into three zones: 1) the ruffle edge with dense microfilament meshwork; 2) the sparse zone adjacent to the ruffle edge and containing relatively few cytoskeletal elements; 3) the lamella proper occupied with a three-dimensional network of microfilaments, microtubules, intermediate filaments; this zone contained adhesion plaques corresponding to cell-substrate focal contacts and associated with the microfilament bundle ends. The cytoskeleton structure of the central (endoplasm) region of the cell was markedly different from that of the lamelloplasm. Its main feature was a dense microfilament sheath at the dorsal cell surface. Sites of microfilament bundle convergence can be visualized near the nucleus after partial removal of the sheath by more complete detergent extraction.  相似文献   

9.
The movement of a metazoan cell entails the regulated creation and turnover of adhesions with the surface on which it moves. Adhesion sites form as a result of signaling between the extracellular matrix on the outside and the actin cytoskeleton on the inside, and they are associated with specific assembles of actin filaments. Two broad categories of adhesion sites can be distinguished: (1) "focal complexes" associated with lamellipodia and filopodia that support protrusion and traction at the cell front; and (2) "focal adhesions" at the termini of stress fibre bundles that serve in longer term anchorage. Focal complexes are signaled via Rac1 or Cdc42 and can either turnover on a minute scale or differentiate, via intervention of the RhoA pathway, into longer-lived focal adhesions. All classes of adhesion sites depend on the stress in the actin cytoskeleton for their formation and maintenance. Different cell types use different adhesion strategies to move, in terms of the relative engagement of filopodia and lamellipodia in focal complex formation and protrusion and the extent of focal adhesion formation. These differences can be attributed to variations in the relative activities of Rho family members. However, the Rho GTPases alone are unable to signal asymmetry in the actin cytoskeleton, necessary for polarisation and movement. Polarisation requires the collaboration of the microtubule cytoskeleton. Changes in the polymerisation state of microtubules influences the activities of both Rac1 and RhoA and microtubules interact directly with adhesion foci and promote their turnover. Possible mechanisms of cross-talk between the microtubule and actin cytoskeletons in determining polarity are discussed.  相似文献   

10.
Ausmees N  Kuhn JR  Jacobs-Wagner C 《Cell》2003,115(6):705-713
Various cell shapes are encountered in the prokaryotic world, but how they are achieved is poorly understood. Intermediate filaments (IFs) of the eukaryotic cytoskeleton play an important role in cell shape in higher organisms. No such filaments have been found in prokaryotes. Here, we describe a bacterial equivalent to IF proteins, named crescentin, whose cytoskeletal function is required for the vibrioid and helical shapes of Caulobacter crescentus. Without crescentin, the cells adopt a straight-rod morphology. Crescentin has characteristic features of IF proteins including the ability to assemble into filaments in vitro without energy or cofactor requirements. In vivo, crescentin forms a helical structure that colocalizes with the inner cell curvatures beneath the cytoplasmic membrane. We propose that IF-like filaments of crescentin assemble into a helical structure, which by applying its geometry to the cell, generates a vibrioid or helical cell shape depending on the length of the cell.  相似文献   

11.
Cytoskeletal network in colon cancer: from genes to clinical application   总被引:2,自引:0,他引:2  
Colorectal cancer arises from well-defined sequential steps characterised by distinct genetic events. Abnormalities in the expression and functional activity of cell adhesion molecules are implicated in the development and progression of the majority of colorectal cancers. Intercellular (e.g. E-cadherin/catenin complex) and cell-matrix (e.g. integrins) adhesion molecules are more than just cementing substances but regulate cell polarity, differentiation, proliferation, migration and invasion. Many of these cellular events are mediated through their intimate association with the actin cytoskeletal network. A dynamic actin cytoskeleton characterises normal epithelial cells and polymerisation and depolymerisation of actin filaments enables cell shape to change during migration and mitosis. In colorectal cancer, cells lose actin cytoskeletal organisation and normal cell adhesion when they become invasive. Future investigations should allow the unravelling of new cytoskeletal network functions in tumour biology and may lead to the development of novel therapeutic strategies based on the manipulation of its associated molecules.  相似文献   

12.
The actin cytoskeleton plays a fundamental role in all eukaryotic cells it is a major determinant of cell morphology and polarity and the assembly and disassembly of filamentous actin structures provides a driving force for dynamic processes such as cell motility, phagocytosis, growth cone guidance and cytokinesis. The ability to reorganize actin filaments is a fundamental property of embryonic cells during development; the shape changes accompanying gastrulation and dorsal closure, for example, are dependent on the plasticity of the actin cytoskeleton, while the ability of cells or cell extensions, such as axons, to migrate within the developing embryo requires rapid and spatially organized changes to the actin cytoskeleton in response to the external environment. Work in mammalian cells over the last decade has demonstrated the central role played by the highly conserved Rho family of small GTPases in signal transduction pathways that link plasma membrane receptors to the organization of the actin cytoskeleton.  相似文献   

13.
The role of microtubules and actin filaments in spreading of the IAR-2 cells isolated from the rat liver was studied. At the glass surface in the standard medium the cells rapidly assumed a discoidal form soon after inoculation. In the colcemid-containing medium the spreading is disturbed and delayed. In the cytochalasin D-containing medium the cells form two or more long processes. The effects of these drugs are reversible. It is supposed that microtubules are essential for sending cytoplasmic processes and stabilizing those processes and lamellae which have no numerous and stable contacts with the substrate, e.g., the processes which form at the early stages of spreading or the elongated processes of polarized cells. Bundles of actin microfilaments are essential, in particular, to ensure the discoidal form of epithelial cells. Microtubules appear to prevent the actin cytoskeleton contraction.  相似文献   

14.
Comparison of actin and cell surface dynamics in motile fibroblasts   总被引:7,自引:0,他引:7       下载免费PDF全文
We have investigated the dynamic behavior of actin in fibroblast lamellipodia using photoactivation of fluorescence. Activated regions of caged resorufin (CR)-labeled actin in lamellipodia of IMR 90 and MC7 3T3 fibroblasts were observed to move centripetally over time. Thus in these cells, actin filaments move centripetally relative to the substrate. Rates were characteristic for each cell type; 0.66 +/- 0.27 microns/min in IMR 90 and 0.36 +/- 0.16 microns/min in MC7 3T3 cells. In neither case was there any correlation between the rate of actin movement and the rate of lamellipodial protrusion. The half-life of the activated CR-actin filaments was approximately 1 min in IMR 90 lamellipodia, and approximately 3 min in MC7 3T3 lamellipodia. Thus continuous filament turnover accompanies centripetal movement. In both cell types, the length of time required for a section of the actin meshwork to traverse the lamellipodium was several times longer than the filament half-life. The dynamic behavior of the dorsal surface of the cell was also observed by tracking lectin-coated beads on the surface and phase-dense features within lamellipodia of MC7 3T3 cells. The movement of these dorsal features occurred at rates approximately three times faster than the rate of movement of the underlying bulk actin cytoskeleton, even when measured in the same individual cells. Thus the transport of these dorsal features must occur by some mechanism other than simple attachment to the moving bulk actin cytoskeleton.  相似文献   

15.
Desmosomes are junctions involved in intercellular adhesion of epithelial cells and hemidesmosomes are junctions involved in adhesion of epithelia to basement membranes. Both are characterised at the ultrastructural level by dense cytoplasmic plaques which are linked to the intermediate filament cytoskeleton of the cells. The plaques strongly resemble each other suggesting a relationship between the two kinds of junctions, as implied by their names. Recent characterisation of the molecular components of the junctions shows they are, in fact, quite unrelated implying that structural similarity is fortuitous. The molecular biology raises many fascinating problems relating to their structure and function.  相似文献   

16.
17.
At higher doses of cytochalasin (e.g. 3 micrograms/ml for 3-20 hr), cells of the rat fibroblastoid line, Hmf, undergo extreme retraction, arborization, and subsequent rounding, and develop big cystic vacuoles. These vacuoles are always closely invested by microfilamentous masses, the CD-induced derivatives of the actin-based cytoskeleton, which aggregate in the endoplasm. Vacuolation is progressive (e.g. 12% cells at 6 hr; greater than 80% at 18 hr), related to total dose (concentration X time); and to congener (CD greater than CB). Vacuole membranes have the same dimension (85 A), surface marker 5'-nucleotidase, and junctional specializations as those found at the cell surface; they lack the membrane markers associated with endomembrane systems (e.g. AcPase, TPPase, IDPase) and are not lysosomal. Vacuoles represent internalized plasma membrane; they apparently result from retention in the endoplasm, and fusion, of pinocytotic vesicles originating at the cell surface. Vacuole membrane is always in intimate relation to the actin-based microfilament aggregates that surround the vacuoles, and actin-membrane linker proteins fodrin and vinculin are localized at the vacuole boundaries. Vacuoles and their enveloping actin-filament aggregates are surrounded by arrays of vimentin-based intermediate filaments. A new membranous compartment with characteristics of plasma membrane is thus formed within the cell under the influence of CD. Rounding brought about by other means causes no vacuolization. Macrovacuolation, like the other changes caused by CD, is completely reversible on restoration of cells to normal medium.  相似文献   

18.
Studies of the living embryo sacs of Torenia fournieri reveal that the actin cytoskeleton undergoes dramatic changes that correlate with nuclear migration within the central cell and the primary endosperm. Before pollination, actin filaments appear as short bundles randomly distributed in the cortex of the central cell. Two days after anthesis, they become organized into a distinct actin network. At this stage the secondary nucleus, which is located in the central region of the central cell, possesses an associated array of short actin filaments. Soon after pollination, the actin filaments become fragmented in the micropylar end and the secondary nucleus is located next to the egg apparatus. After fertilization, the primary endosperm nucleus moves away from the egg cell and actin filaments reorganize into a prominent network in the cytoplasm of the primary endosperm. Disruption of the actin cytoskeleton with latrunculin A and cytochalasin B indicates that actin is involved in the migration of the nucleus in the central cell. Our data also suggest that the dynamics of actin cytoskeleton may be responsible for the reorganization of the central cell and primary endosperm cytoplasm during fertilization.  相似文献   

19.
Whole mounts and cross-sections of embryos from three species of teleost fish were immunostained with the HNK-1 monoclonal antibody, which recognizes an epitope on migrating neural crest cells. A similar distribution and migration was found in all three species. The crest cells in the head express the HNK-1 epitope after they have segregated from the neural keel. The truncal neural crest cells begin to express the epitope while they still reside in the dorsal region of the neural keel; this has not been observed in other vertebrates. The cephalic and anterior truncal neural crest cells migrate under the ectoderm; the cephalic cells then enter into the gill arches and the anterior truncal cells into the mesentery of the digestive tract where they cease migration. These cephalic and anterior trunk pathways are similar to those described in Xenopus and chick. The neural crest cells of the trunk, after segregation, accumulate in the dorsal wedges between the somites, however, unlike in chick and rat, they do not migrate in the anterior halves of the somites but predominantly between the neural tube and the somites, the major pathway observed in carp and amphibians; some cells migrate over the somites. The HNK-1 staining of whole-mount embryos revealed a structure resembling the Rohon-Beard and extramedullary cells, the primary sensory system in amphibians. Such a system has not been described in fish.  相似文献   

20.
Molecular mechanisms underlying migration of vascular smooth muscle cells (VSMCs) toward sphingosylphosphorylcholine (SPC) were analyzed in light of the hypothesis that remodeling of the actin cytoskeleton should be involved. After SPC stimulation, mitogen-activated protein kinases (MAPKs), including p38 MAPK (p38) and p42/44 MAPK (p42/44), were found to be phosphorylated. Migration of cells toward SPC was reduced in the presence of SB-203580, an inhibitor of p38, but not PD-98059, an inhibitor of p42/44. Pertussis toxin (PTX), a Gi protein inhibitor, induced an inhibitory effect on p38 phosphorylation and VSMC migration. Myosin light chain (MLC) phosphorylation occurred after SPC stimulation with or without pretreatment with SB-203580 or PTX. The MLC kinase inhibitor ML-7 and the Rho kinase inhibitor Y-27632 inhibited MLC phosphorylation but only partially inhibited SPC-directed migration. Complete inhibition was achieved with the addition of SB-203580. After SPC stimulation, the actin cytoskeleton formed thick bundles of actin filaments around the periphery of cells, and the cells were surrounded by elongated filopodia, i.e., magunapodia. The peripheral actin bundles consisted of alpha- and beta-actin, but magunapodia consisted exclusively of beta-actin. Such a remodeling of actin was reversed by addition of SB-203580 and PTX, but not ML-7 or Y-27632. Taken together, our biochemical and morphological data confirmed the regulation of actin remodeling and suggest that VSMCs migrate toward SPC, not only by an MLC phosphorylation-dependent pathway, but also by an MLC phosphorylation-independent pathway.  相似文献   

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