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Single microtubules from squid axoplasm support bidirectional movement of organelles
Authors:B J Schnapp  R D Vale  M P Sheetz  T S Reese
Affiliation:1. Laboratory of Neurobiology, NIH, NINCDS at the Marine Biological Laboratory Woods Hole, Massachusetts 02543 USA;2. Neurobiology Department Stanford University Medical School Stanford, California 94305 USA;3. Physiology Department University of Connecticut Health Center Farmington, Connecticut 06032 USA
Abstract:Single filaments, dissociated from the extruded axoplasm of the squid giant axon and visualized by video-enhanced differential interference contrast microscopy, transport organelles bidirectionally. Organelles moving in the same or opposite directions along the same filament can pass each other without colliding, indicating that each transport filament has several tracks for organelle movement. In order to characterize transport filaments, organelle movements were first examined by video microscopy, and then the same filaments were examined by electron microscopy after rapid-freezing, freeze-drying, and rotary-shadowing. Transport filaments that supported bidirectional movement of organelles are 22 nm to 27 nm in diameter and have a substructure indicative of a single microtubule. Immunofluorescence showed that virtually all transport filaments contain tubulin. These results show that single microtubules can serve as a substratum for organelle movement, and suggest that an interaction between organelles and microtubules is the basis of fast axonal transport.
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