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Open AccessJournal ArticleDOI

Banding and polarity of actin filaments in interphase and cleaving cells.

Jean M. Sanger, +1 more
- 01 Aug 1980 - 
- Vol. 86, Iss: 2, pp 568-575
TLDR
Heavy meromyosin (HMM) decoration of actin filaments was used to detect the polarity of microfilaments in interphase and cleaving rat kangaroo (PtK2) cells and a model is proposed to explain the arrangement of filaments in stress fibers and cleavage furrows based on the striations observed with tannic acid and thePolarity of the actin Filaments.
Abstract
Heavy meromyosin (HMM) decoration of actin filaments was used to detect the polarity of microfilaments in interphase and cleaving rat kangaroo (PtK2) cells. Ethanol at -20 degrees C was used to make the cells permeable to HMM followed by tannic acid-glutaraldehyde fixation for electron microscopy. Uniform polarity of actin filaments was observed at cell junctions and central attachment plaques with the HMM arrowheads always pointing away from the junction or plaque. Stress fibers were banded in appearance with their component microfilaments exhibiting both parallel and antiparallel orientation with respect to one another. Identical banding of microfilament bundles was also seen in cleavage furrows with the same variation in filament polarity as found in stress fibers. Similarly banded fibers were not seen outside the cleavage furrow in mitotic cells. By the time that a mid-body was present, the actin filaments in the cleavage furrow were no longer in banded fibers. The alternating dark and light bands of both the stress fibers and cleavage furrow fibers are approximately equal in length, each measuring approximately 0.16 micrometer. Actin filaments were present in both bands, and individual decorated filaments could sometimes be traced through four band lengths. Undecorated filaments, 10 nm in diameter, could often be seen within the light bands. A model is proposed to explain the arrangement of filaments in stress fibers and cleavage furrows based on the striations observed with tannic acid and the polarity of the actin filaments.

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Journal ArticleDOI

Cell-sized spherical confinement induces the spontaneous formation of contractile actomyosin rings in vitro

TL;DR: It is demonstrated in vitro that actin polymerization inside cell-sized spherical droplets induced the spontaneous formation of single ring-shaped actin bundles in the presence of bundling factors.
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Myofibrillogenesis in the first cardiomyocytes formed from isolated quail precardiac mesoderm.

TL;DR: The sequential changes in protein composition of the fibrils in the developing muscle cells supports the model of myofibrillogenesis in which assembly begins with premyofibrils and progresses through nascent my ofibrils to mature myOfibrils.
Book ChapterDOI

Organization and function of stress fibers in cells in vitro and in situ. A review.

TL;DR: It is demonstrated that the stress fiber is fundamentally a light microscopic term, and in order to avoid confusion with other microfilament bundle-containing structures seen in the electron microscope, it is necessary to establish criteria for the identification of stress fibers in situ.
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Novel form of actin-based motility transports bacteria on the surfaces of infected cells.

TL;DR: This paper is the first report of a microbe attached to the extracellular surface of an infected cell propelled by an intracellular actin polymerization-dependent mechanism and Epec's movements may be a hybrid of Listeria filopodia and Aplysia inductopodio movements.
Journal ArticleDOI

Polarity sorting of actin filaments in cytochalasin-treated fibroblasts.

TL;DR: The results suggest that the myosin II-actin system of non-muscle cells is organized as a dynamic network where actin filament arrangement is defined in the course of its interaction with myos in II.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Electron microscope studies on the structure of natural and synthetic protein filaments from striated muscle.

TL;DR: The results obtained show that the filaments are structurally polarized, and in muscle are arranged so that all of them attached on one side of a given Z-line point in one direction, whilst those on the other are oppositely oriented.
Journal ArticleDOI

Formation of arrowhead complexes with heavy meromyosin in a variety of cell types.

TL;DR: The significance of HMM-filament binding is discussed in view of the finding that arrowhead complexes form in types of cells not usually thought to contain actin filaments.
Journal ArticleDOI

The locomotion of fibroblasts in culture. IV. Electron microscopy of the leading lamella.

TL;DR: Electron microscopy of vertical longitudinal sections of chick heart fibroblasts moving on an Araldite substratum shows that the cell approaches close to the substratum in localised regions which tend to form electron-dense plaques containing longitudinal filaments, suggesting that the plaques are linked up to the fibrillar system of the cell.
Journal ArticleDOI

Actin antibody: The specific visualization of actin filaments in non-muscle cells

TL;DR: The elicited antibody was shown to be specific for actin as judged by immunodiffusion and complement fixation against partially purified mouse fibroblast actin and highly purified chicken muscle actin.
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