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1.
Nat Cell Biol ; 3(6): E140-2, 2001 Jun.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-11389453

RESUMO

The recent Airlie House meeting on 'Cytoplasmic Organization and Membrane Traffic' (22-25 March 2001), sponsored by the Keith Porter Endowment, proved not to be the typical exchange of advances among specialists familiar with each other's work, but rather a series of interesting and diverse presentations that together illuminated the pace and pattern of membrane and cytoskeletal interactions in living cells.


Assuntos
Citoesqueleto/fisiologia , Hepatócitos/fisiologia , Animais , Membrana Celular/fisiologia , Congressos como Assunto , Citoplasma/fisiologia , Ratos
2.
Nat Cell Biol ; 2(6): 365-70, 2000 Jun.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-10854328

RESUMO

The gamma-tubulin ring complex (gammaTuRC) is a protein complex of relative molecular mass approximately 2.2 x 10(6) that nucleates microtubules at the centrosome. Here we use electron-microscopic tomography and metal shadowing to examine the structure of isolated Drosophila gammaTuRCs and the ends of microtubules nucleated by gammaTuRCs and by centrosomes. We show that the gammaTuRC is a lockwasher-like structure made up of repeating subunits, topped asymmetrically with a cap. A similar capped ring is also visible at one end of microtubules grown from isolated gammaTuRCs and from centrosomes. Antibodies against gamma-tubulin label microtubule ends, but not walls, in centrosomes. These data are consistent with a template-mediated mechanism for microtubule nucleation by the gammaTuRC.


Assuntos
Microtúbulos/metabolismo , Microtúbulos/ultraestrutura , Tubulina (Proteína)/metabolismo , Tubulina (Proteína)/ultraestrutura , Animais , Anticorpos/imunologia , Biopolímeros/química , Biopolímeros/imunologia , Biopolímeros/metabolismo , Centrossomo/química , Centrossomo/imunologia , Centrossomo/metabolismo , Centrossomo/ultraestrutura , Drosophila melanogaster , Microscopia Eletrônica , Microtúbulos/química , Microtúbulos/imunologia , Modelos Biológicos , Peso Molecular , Platina , Testes de Precipitina , Estrutura Quaternária de Proteína , Técnicas de Réplica , Técnica Histológica de Sombreamento , Tubulina (Proteína)/química , Tubulina (Proteína)/imunologia
3.
J Cell Biol ; 84(3): 560-83, 1980 Mar.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-6987244

RESUMO

Fibroblasts apparently ingest low density lipoproteins (LDL) by a selective mechanism of receptor-mediated endocytosis involving the formation of coated vesicles from the plasma membrane. However, it is not known exactly how coated vesicles collect LDL receptors and pinch off from the plasma membrane. In this report, the quick-freeze, deep-etch, rotary-replication method has been applied to fibroblasts; it displays with unusual clarity the coats that appear under the plasma membrane at the start of receptor-mediated endocytosis. These coats appear to be polygonal networks of 7-nm strands or struts arranged into 30-nm polygons, most of which are hexagons but some of which are 5- and 7-sided rings. The proportion of pentagons in each network increases as the coated area of the plasma membrane puckers up from its planar configuration (where the network is mostly hexagons) to its most sharply curved condition as a pinched-off coated vesicle. Coats around the smallest vesicles (which are icosahedrons of hexagons and pentagons) appear only slightly different from "empty coats" purified from homogenized brain, which are less symmetrical baskets containing more pentagons than hexagons. A search for structural intermediates in this coat transformation allows a test of T. Kanaseki and K. Kadota's (1969. J. Cell Biol. 42:202--220.) original idea that an internal rearrangement in this basketwork from hexagons to pentagons could "power" coated vesicle formation. The most noteworthy variations in the typical hexagonal honeycomb are focal juxtapositions of 5- and 7-sided polygons at points of partial contraction and curvature in the basketwork. These appear to precede complete contraction into individual pentagons completely surrounded by hexagons, which is the pattern that characterizes the final spherical baskets around coated vesicles.


Assuntos
Membrana Celular/ultraestrutura , Endocitose , Organoides/ultraestrutura , Animais , Técnicas Citológicas , Citoesqueleto/ultraestrutura , Fibroblastos , Técnica de Congelamento e Réplica , Técnica de Fratura por Congelamento , Lipoproteínas LDL/metabolismo , Camundongos , Modelos Biológicos , Receptores de Droga/metabolismo
4.
J Cell Biol ; 108(3): 855-64, 1989 Mar.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-2921284

RESUMO

Lysosomes labeled by uptake of extracellular horseradish peroxidase display remarkable changes in shape and cellular distribution when cytoplasmic pH is experimentally altered. Normally, lysosomes in macrophages and fibroblasts cluster around the cell center. However, when the cytoplasmic pH is lowered to approximately pH 6.5 by applying acetate or by various other means, lysosomes promptly move outward and accumulate in tight clusters at the very edge of the cell, particularly in regions that are actively ruffling before acidification but become quiescent. This movement follows the distribution of microtubules in these cells, and does not occur if microtubules are depolymerized with nocodazole before acidification. Subsequent removal of acetate or the other stimuli to acidification results in prompt resumption of ruffling activity and return of lysosomes into a tight cluster at the cell center. This is correlated with a rebound alkalinization of the cytoplasm. Correspondingly, direct application of weak bases also causes hyperruffling and unusually complete withdrawal of lysosomes to the cell center. Thus, lysosomes appear to be acted upon by microtubule-based motors of both the anterograde (kinesin) type as well as the retrograde (dynein) type, or else they possess bidirectional motors that are reversed by changes in cytoplasmic pH. During the outward movements induced by acidification, lysosomes also appear to be smaller and more predominantly vesicular than normal, while during inward movements they appear to be more confluent and elongated than normal, often becoming even more tubular than in phorbol-treated macrophages (Phaire-Washington, L., S. C. Silverstein, and E. Wang. 1980. J. Cell Biol. 86:641-655). These size and shape changes suggest that cytoplasmic pH also affects the fusion/fission properties of lysosomes. Combined with pH effects on their movement, the net result during recovery from acidification is a stretching of lysosomes into tubular forms along microtubules.


Assuntos
Citoplasma/metabolismo , Lisossomos/ultraestrutura , Animais , Linhagem Celular , Membrana Celular/ultraestrutura , Células Cultivadas , Histocitoquímica , Concentração de Íons de Hidrogênio , Lisossomos/fisiologia , Microtúbulos/fisiologia , Movimento , Organelas/fisiologia , Organelas/ultraestrutura , Fagossomos/fisiologia , Fagossomos/ultraestrutura
5.
J Cell Biol ; 108(2): 401-11, 1989 Feb.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-2563729

RESUMO

Reducing the internal pH of cultured cells by several different protocols that block endocytosis is found to alter the structure of clathrin lattices on the inside of the plasma membrane. Lattices curve inward until they become almost spherical yet remain stubbornly attached to the membrane. Also, the lattices bloom empty "microcages" of clathrin around their edges. Correspondingly, broken-open cells bathed in acidified media demonstrate similar changes in clathrin lattices. Acidification accentuates the normal tendency of lattices to round up in vitro and also stimulates them to nucleate microcage formation from pure solutions of clathrin. On the other hand, several conditions that also inhibit endocytosis have been found to create, instead of unusually curved clathrin lattices with extraneous microcages, a preponderance of unusually flat lattices. These treatments include pH-"clamping" cells at neutrality with nigericin, swelling cells with hypotonic media, and sticking cells to the surface of a culture dish with soluble polylysine. Again, the unusually flat lattices in such cells display a tendency to round up and to nucleate clathrin microcage formation during subsequent in vitro acidification. This indicates that regardless of the initial curvature of clathrin lattices, they all display an ability to grow and increase their curvature in vitro, and this is enhanced by lowering ambient pH. Possibly, clathrin lattice growth and curvature in vivo may also be stimulated by a local drop in pH around clusters of membrane receptors.


Assuntos
Clatrina/metabolismo , Invaginações Revestidas da Membrana Celular/ultraestrutura , Citoplasma/metabolismo , Endossomos/ultraestrutura , Animais , Membrana Celular/ultraestrutura , Células Cultivadas , Galinhas , Citoplasma/ultraestrutura , Endocitose , Fibroblastos/ultraestrutura , Imunofluorescência , Técnica de Congelamento e Réplica , Humanos , Concentração de Íons de Hidrogênio , Substâncias Macromoleculares , Microscopia Eletrônica
6.
J Cell Biol ; 103(6 Pt 1): 2209-27, 1986 Dec.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-2946704

RESUMO

Freeze-etch preparation of the laminated bundles of microtubules in motile axostyles demonstrates that the cross-bridges populating individual layers or laminae are structurally similar to the dynein arms of cilia and flagellae. Also, like dynein, they are extracted by high salt and undergo a change in tilt upon removal of endogenous ATP (while the axostyle as a whole straightens and becomes stiff). On the other hand, the bridges running between adjacent microtubule laminae in the axostyle turn out to be much more delicate and wispy in appearance, and display no similarity to dynein arms. Thus we propose that the internal or "intra-laminar" cross-bridges are the active force-generating ATPases in this system, and that they generate overall bends or changes in the helical pitch of the axostyle by altering the longitudinal and lateral register of microtubules in each lamina individually; e.g., by "warping" each lamina and creating longitudinal shear forces within it. The cross-links between adjacent laminae, on the other hand, would then simply be force-transmitting elements that serve to translate the shearing forces generated within individual laminae into overall helical shape changes. (This hypothesis differs from the views of earlier workers who considered a more active role for the later cross-links, postulating that they cause an active sliding between adjacent layers that somehow leads to axostyle movement.) Also described here are physical connections between adjacent intra-laminar cross-bridges, structurally analogous to the overlapping components of the outer dynein arms of cilia and flagella. As with dynein, these may represent a mechanism for propagating local changes from cross-bridge to cross-bridge down the axostyle, as occurs during the passage of bends down the length of the organelle.


Assuntos
Adenosina Trifosfatases/análise , Dineínas/análise , Eucariotos/ultraestrutura , Microtúbulos/ultraestrutura , Animais , Movimento Celular , Eucariotos/enzimologia , Eucariotos/fisiologia , Técnica de Congelamento e Réplica , Técnica de Fratura por Congelamento , Microscopia Eletrônica
7.
J Cell Biol ; 88(1): 160-71, 1981 Jan.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-6259176

RESUMO

Taking advantage of the fact that nerve terminal mitochondria swell and sequester calcium during repetitive nerve stimulation, we here confirm that this change is caused by calcium influx into the nerve and use this fact to show that botulinum toxin abolishes such calcium influx. The optimal paradigm for producing the mitochondrial changes in normal nerves worked out to be 5 min of stimulation at 25 Hz in frog Ringer's solution containing five time more calcium than normal. Applying this same stimulation paradigm to botulinum-intoxicated nerves produced no mitochondrial changes at all. Only when intoxicated nerves were stimulated in 4-aminopyridine (which grossly exaggerates calcium currents in normal nerves) or when they were soaked in black widow spider venom (which is a nerve-specific calcium ionophore) could nerve mitochondria be induced to swell and accumulate calcium. These results indicate that nerve mitochondria are not damaged directly by the toxin and point instead to a primary inhibition of the normal depolarization-evoked calcium currents that accompany nerve activity. Because these currents normally provide the calcium that triggers transmitter secretion from the nerve, this demonstration of their inhibition helps to explain how botulinum toxin paralyzes.


Assuntos
Toxinas Botulínicas/farmacologia , Cálcio/metabolismo , Mitocôndrias/metabolismo , Junção Neuromuscular/fisiologia , Transmissão Sináptica/efeitos dos fármacos , Animais , Dilatação Mitocondrial , Junção Neuromuscular/ultraestrutura , Rana pipiens , Venenos de Aranha/farmacologia
8.
J Cell Biol ; 83(1): 91-108, 1979 Oct.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-574515

RESUMO

Exocytosis of cortical granules was observed in sea urchin eggs, either quick-frozen or chemically fixed after exposure to sperm. Fertilization produced a wave of exocytosis that began within 20 s and swept across the egg surface in the following 30 s. The front of this wave was marked by fusion of single granules at well-separated sites. Toward the rear of the wave, granule fusion became so abundant that the egg surface left with confluent patches of granule membrane. The resulting redundancy of the egg surface was accommodated by elaboration of characteristic branching microvilli, and by an intense burst of coated vesicle formation at approximately 2 min after insemination. Freeze-fracture replicas of eggs fixed with glutaraldehyde and soaked in glycerol before freezing displayed forms of granule membrane interaction with the plasma membrane which looked like what other investigators have considered to be intermediates in exocytosis. These were small disks of membrane contact or membrane fusion, which often occurred in multiple sites on one granule and also between adjacent granules. However, such membrane interactions were never found in eggs that were quick-frozen fixation, or in eggs fixed and frozen without exposure to glycerol. Glycerination of fixed material appeared to be the important variable; more concentrated glycerol produced a greater abundance of such "intermediates." Thus, these structures may be artifacts produced by dehydrating chemically fixed membranes, and may not be directly relevant to the mechanism by which membranes naturally fuse.


Assuntos
Membrana Celular/ultraestrutura , Exocitose , Fertilização , Ouriços-do-Mar/fisiologia , Animais , Feminino , Técnica de Fratura por Congelamento , Microscopia Eletrônica , Zigoto/ultraestrutura
9.
J Cell Biol ; 84(3): 618-32, 1980 Mar.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-7188942

RESUMO

Eggs of the sea urchin Strongylocentrotus purpuratus were quick-frozen, freeze fractured, and deep-etched to reveal the detailed structure of the vitelline layer (VL), an extracellular coat. The VL consisted of a network of fibers lying in sheet raised 20 nm off the plasma membrane and connected to it by a series of short processes. Sperm attached to the fibers of this sheet and upon fertilization the VL rose off the egg surface to form the fertilization envelope (FE). By 1 min postinsemination (p.i.), the FE had become augmented by a new set of smaller fibrils, and the original fibers of the VL appeared to be undergoing degradation. The FE exhibited casts of microvilli the VL had once covered. These were rounded at 1 min p.i., but by 2 min they had become angular and coated with an orderly array of repeating macromolecular units. In areas between casts, the coating process was slower; incomplete rows of units were seen at 5 min p.i. and complete rows at 10 min. Deep-etching of FE isolated from eggs by homogenization and differential centrifugation showed that both top and bottom surfaces were coated. The coat pattern was made up of 17.5-nm wide rows of parallelogram-like units that repeated every 12.2 nm along the row axis. Units in adjacent rows were in register to produce a secondary axis 76 degrees from the row axis. The results of this and previous studies suggest that the coating process plays a major role in "hardening" the FE to produce a tough barrier that protects the early embryo from chemical and mechanical injury.


Assuntos
Fertilização , Óvulo/ultraestrutura , Membrana Vitelina/ultraestrutura , Animais , Membrana Celular/ultraestrutura , Feminino , Técnica de Congelamento e Réplica , Técnica de Fratura por Congelamento , Microvilosidades/ultraestrutura , Ouriços-do-Mar
10.
J Cell Biol ; 91(2 Pt 1): 399-409, 1981 Nov.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-7198124

RESUMO

The cytoskeleton that supports microvilli in intestinal epithelial cells was visualized by the quick-freeze, deep-etch, rotary-replication technique (Heuser and Salpeter. 1979. J. Cell Biol. 82: 150). Before quick freezing, cells were exposed to detergents or broken open physically to clear away the granular material in their cytoplasm that would otherwise obscure the view. After such extraction, cells still displayed a characteristic organization of cytoskeletal filaments in their interiors. Platinum replicas of these cytoskeletons had sufficient resolution to allow us to identify the filament types present, and to determine their characteristic patterns of interaction. The most important new finding was that the apical "terminal web" in these cells, which supports the microvilli via their core bundles of actin filaments, does not itself contain very much actin but instead is comprised largely of narrow strands that interconnect adjacent actin bundles with one another and with the underlying base of intermediate filaments. These strands are slightly thinner than actin, do not display actin's 53A periodicity, and do not decorate with myosin subfragment S1. On the contrary, two lines of evidence suggested that these strands, could include myosin molecules. First, other investigators have shown that myosin is present in the terminal web (Mooseker et al. 1978. J. Cell Biol. 79: 444-453), yet we could find no thick filaments in this area. Second, we found that the strands were removed completely in the process of decorating the core filament bundles with the myosin subfragment S1, suggesting that they had been competitively displaced by exogenous myosin. We conclude that myosin may play a structural role in these cells, via its cross-linking distribution, in addition to whatever role it plays in microvillar motility.


Assuntos
Membrana Celular/ultraestrutura , Citoesqueleto/ultraestrutura , Mucosa Intestinal/ultraestrutura , Microvilosidades/ultraestrutura , Actinas/análise , Animais , Citoesqueleto/análise , Desmossomos/ultraestrutura , Técnica de Congelamento e Réplica , Masculino , Camundongos , Microscopia Eletrônica , Miosinas/análise
11.
J Cell Biol ; 109(4 Pt 1): 1457-66, 1989 Oct.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-2571614

RESUMO

Clathrin-coated vesicles were uncoated with the 70-kD "uncoating ATPase" from bovine brain, and the molecular products were visualized by freeze-etch electron microscopy. This yielded images of released clathrin triskelia with up to three 70-kD uncoating ATPase molecules bound to their vertices. Likewise, incubation of soluble clathrin triskelia with purified uncoating ATPase also led to trimeric binding of the ATPase to the vertices of clathrin triskelia. However, this occurred only when either EDTA or nonhydrolyzable analogues of ATP were present, in which case the ATPase also appeared to self-associate. When ATP was present instead, no 70-kD ATPases could be found on clathrin triskelia and all ATPases remained monomeric. These observations support the notion that ATP controls an allosteric conversion of the 70-kD uncoating ATPase between two different molecular conformations, an ATP-charged state in which the molecule has relatively low affinity for itself as well as low affinity for clathrin, and an ATP-discharged state in which both of these affinities are high. We presume that in vivo, the latter condition is brought about by ATP hydrolysis and product release, at which point the ATPase will bind tightly to clathrin and/or self-associate. We further propose that these reactions, when occurring in concert within a clathrin lattice, will tend to destabilize it by a mechanism we call "protein polymer competition". We stress the analogies between such a mechanism of uncoating and the ATP-driven events in muscle contraction. Finally, we show that under experimental conditions in which the uncoating ATPase fully removes the coats from brain coated vesicles, identical aliquots of the enzyme do not affect plasmalemmal coated pits in situ. This remarkable selectivity, the mechanism of which remains a complete mystery, is at least consistent with the idea that the 70-kD ATPase indeed plays a role in uncoating coated vesicles after they have formed in vivo.


Assuntos
Proteínas de Transporte/metabolismo , Clatrina/metabolismo , Invaginações Revestidas da Membrana Celular/ultraestrutura , Endossomos/ultraestrutura , Proteínas de Choque Térmico HSP70 , Animais , Encéfalo/metabolismo , Encéfalo/ultraestrutura , Bovinos , Técnica de Congelamento e Réplica , Técnica de Fratura por Congelamento , Proteínas de Choque Térmico HSC70 , Substâncias Macromoleculares , Microscopia Eletrônica , Modelos Estruturais , Peso Molecular , Ligação Proteica
12.
J Cell Biol ; 107(3): 877-86, 1988 Sep.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-3417785

RESUMO

Assembly proteins were extracted from bovine brain clathrin-coated vesicles with 0.5 M Tris and purified by clathrin-Sepharose affinity chromatography, then adsorbed to mica and examined by freeze-etch electron microscopy. The fraction possessing maximal ability to promote clathrin polymerization, termed AP-2, was found to be a tripartite structure composed of a relatively large central mass flanked by two smaller mirror-symmetric appendages. Elastase treatment quantitatively removed the appendages and clipped 35 kD from the molecule's major approximately 105-kD polypeptides, indicating that the appendages are made from portions of these polypeptides. The remaining central masses no longer promote clathrin polymerization, suggesting that the appendages are somehow involved in the clathrin assembly reaction. The central masses are themselves relatively compact and brick-shaped, and are sufficiently large to contain two copies of the molecule's other major polypeptides (16- and 50-kD), as well as two copies of the approximately 70-kD protease-resistant portions of the major approximately 105-kD polypeptides. Thus the native molecule seems to be a dimeric, bilaterally symmetrical entity. Direct visualization of AP-2 binding to clathrin was accomplished by preparing mixtures of the two molecules in buffers that marginally inhibit AP-2 aggregation and cage assembly. This revealed numerous examples of AP-2 molecules binding to the so-called terminal domains of clathrin triskelions, consistent with earlier electron microscopic evidence that in fully assembled cages, the AP's attach centrally to inwardly-directed terminal domains of the clathrin molecule. This would place AP-2s between the clathrin coat and the enclosed membrane in whole coated vesicles. AP-2s linked to the membrane were also visualized by enzymatically removing the clathrin from brain coated vesicles, using purified 70 kD, uncoating ATPase plus ATP. This revealed several brick-shaped molecules attached to the vesicle membrane by short stalks. The exact stoichiometry of APs to clathrin in such vesicles, before and after uncoating, remains to be determined.


Assuntos
Clatrina/metabolismo , Proteínas/análise , Silicatos de Alumínio , Animais , Química Encefálica , Bovinos , Cromatografia de Afinidade , Liofilização , Técnica de Congelamento e Réplica , Congelamento , Microscopia Eletrônica , Elastase Pancreática/metabolismo , Polímeros
13.
J Cell Biol ; 121(6): 1311-27, 1993 Jun.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-8509452

RESUMO

Amoebae of the eukaryotic microorganism Dictyostelium discoideum were found to contain an interconnected array of tubules and cisternae whose membranes were studded with 15-nm-diameter "pegs." Comparison of the ultrastructure and freeze-fracture behavior of these pegs with similar structures found in other cells and tissues indicated that they were the head domains of vacuolar-type proton pumps. Supporting this identification, the pegs were observed to decorate and clump when broken amoebae were exposed to an antiserum against the B subunit of mammalian vacuolar H(+)-ATPase. The appearance of the peg-rich cisternae in quick-frozen amoebae depended on their osmotic environment: under hyperosmotic conditions, the cisternae were flat with many narrow tubular extensions, while under hypo-osmotic conditions the cisternae ranged from bulbous to spherical. In all cases, however, their contents deep etched like pure water. These properties indicated that the interconnected tubules and cisternae comprise the contractile vacuole system of Dictyostelium. Earlier studies had demonstrated that contractile vacuole membranes in Dictyostelium are extremely rich in calmodulin (Zhu, Q., and M. Clarke, 1992, J. Cell Biol. 118: 347-358). Light microscopic immunofluorescence confirmed that antibodies against the vacuolar proton pump colocalized with anti-calmodulin antibodies on these organelles. Time-lapse video recording of living amoebae imaged by interference-reflection microscopy, or by fluorescence microscopy after staining contractile vacuole membranes with potential-sensitive styryl dyes, revealed the extent and dynamic interrelationship of the cisternal and tubular elements in Dictyostelium's contractile vacuole system. The high density of proton pumps throughout its membranes suggests that the generation of a proton gradient is likely to be an important factor in the mechanism of fluid accumulation by contractile vacuoles.


Assuntos
Dictyostelium/ultraestrutura , Bombas de Próton/fisiologia , Vacúolos/química , Animais , Bicarbonatos/metabolismo , Membrana Celular/química , Dictyostelium/química , Dictyostelium/fisiologia , Imunofluorescência , Liofilização , Técnica de Congelamento e Réplica , Vacúolos/fisiologia , Vacúolos/ultraestrutura
14.
J Cell Biol ; 88(3): 564-80, 1981 Mar.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-6260814

RESUMO

The sequence of structural changes that occur during synaptic vesicle exocytosis was studied by quick-freezing muscles at different intervals after stimulating their nerves, in the presence of 4-aminopyridine to increase the number of transmitter quanta released by each stimulus. Vesicle openings began to appear at the active zones of the intramuscular nerves within 3-4 ms after a single stimulus. The concentration of these openings peaked at 5-6 ms, and then declined to zero 50-100 ms late. At the later times, vesicle openings tended to be larger. Left behind at the active zones, after the vesicle openings disappeared, were clusters of large intramembrane particles. The larger particles in these clusters were the same size as intramembrane particles in undischarged vesicles, and were slightly larger than the particles which form the rows delineating active zones. Because previous tracer work had shown that new vesicles do not pinch off from the plasma membrane at these early times, we concluded that the particle clusters originate from membranes of discharged vesicles which collapse into the plasmalemma after exocytosis. The rate of vesicle collapse appeared to be variable because different stages occurred simultaneously at most times after stimulation; this asynchrony was taken to indicate that the collapse of each exocytotic vesicle is slowed by previous nearby collapses. The ultimate fate of synaptic vesicle membrane after collapse appeared to be coalescence with the plasma membrane, as the clusters of particles gradually dispersed into surrounding areas during the first second after a stimulus. The membrane retrieval and recycling that reverse this exocytotic sequence have a slower onset, as has been described in previous reports.


Assuntos
Junção Neuromuscular/ultraestrutura , Transmissão Sináptica , Vesículas Sinápticas/ultraestrutura , Animais , Membrana Celular/ultraestrutura , Exocitose , Técnica de Fratura por Congelamento , Membranas Intracelulares/ultraestrutura , Cinética , Microscopia Eletrônica , Junção Neuromuscular/fisiologia , Rana pipiens
15.
J Cell Biol ; 82(1): 150-73, 1979 Jul.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-479296

RESUMO

The receptor-rich postsynaptic membrane of the elasmobranch electric organ was fixed by quick-freezing and then viewed by freeze-fracture, deep-etching and rotary-replication. Traditional freeze-fracture revealed a distinct, geometrical pattern of shallow 8.5-nm bumps on the E fracture-face, similar to the lattice which has been seen before in chemically fixed material, but seen less clearly than after quick-freezing. Fracture plus deep-etching brought into view on the true outside of this membrane a similar geometrical pattern of 8.5-nm projections rising out of the membrane surface. The individual projections looked like structures that have been seen in negatively stained or deep-etched membrane fragments and have been identified as individual acetylcholine receptor molecules. The surface protrusions were twice as abundant as the large intramembrane particles that characterize the fracture faces of this membrane, which have also been considered to be receptor molecules. Particle counts have always been too low to match the estimates of postsynaptic receptor density derived from physiological and biochemical studies; counts of surface projections, however, more closely matched these estimates. Rotary-replication of quick-frozen, etched postsynaptic membranes enhanced the visibility of these surface protuberances and illustrated that they often occur in dimers, tetramers, and ordered rows. The variations in these surface patterns suggested that in vivo, receptors in the postsynaptic membrane may tend to pack into "liquid crystals" which constantly appear, flow, and disappear in the fluid environment of the membrane. Additionally, deep-etching revealed a distinct web of cytoplasmic filaments beneath the postsynaptic membrane, and revealed the basal lamina above it; and delineated possible points of contact between these structures and the membrane proper.


Assuntos
Acetilcolina , Órgão Elétrico/inervação , Peixes/anatomia & histologia , Receptores Colinérgicos/análise , Membranas Sinápticas/ultraestrutura , Animais , Técnica de Congelamento e Réplica , Técnica de Fratura por Congelamento
16.
J Cell Biol ; 86(2): 666-74, 1980 Aug.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-7400221

RESUMO

We have used quick-freezing and freeze-fracture to study early stages of exocytosis in rat peritoneal mast cells. Mast cells briefly stimulated with 48/80 (a synthetic polycation and well-known histamine-releasing agent) at 22 degrees C displayed single, narrow-necked pores (some as small as 0.05 micrometer in diameter) joining single granules with the plasma membrane. Pores that had become as large as 0.1 micrometer in diameter were clearly etchable and thus represented aqueous channels connecting the granule interior with the extracellular space. Granules exhibiting pores usually did not have wide areas of contact with the plasma membrane, and clearings of intramembrane particles, seen in chemically fixed mast cells undergoing exocytosis, were not present on either plasma or granule membranes. Fusion of interior granules later in the secretory process also appeared to involve pores; granules were often joined by one pore or a group of 2-4 pores. Also found were groups of extremely small, etchable pores on granule membranes that may represent the earliest aqueous communication between fusing granules.


Assuntos
Membrana Celular/ultraestrutura , Grânulos Citoplasmáticos/ultraestrutura , Mastócitos/ultraestrutura , Animais , Exocitose , Feminino , Técnica de Fratura por Congelamento , Masculino , Proteínas de Membrana/metabolismo , Microscopia Eletrônica , Ratos , p-Metoxi-N-metilfenetilamina/farmacologia
17.
J Cell Biol ; 86(1): 212-34, 1980 Jul.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-6893451

RESUMO

This report presents the appearance of rapidly frozen, freeze-dried cytoskeletons that have been rotary replicated with platinum and viewed in the transmission electron microscope. The resolution of this method is sufficient to visualize individual filaments in the cytoskeleton and to discriminate among actin, microtubules, and intermediate filaments solely by their surface substructure. This identification has been confirmed by specific decoration with antibodies and selective extraction of individual filament types, and correlated with light microscope immunocytochemistry and gel electrophoresis patterns. The freeze-drying preserves a remarkable degree of three-dimensionality in the organization of these cytoskeletons. They look strikingly similar to the meshwork of strands or "microtrabeculae" seen in the cytoplasm of whole cells by high voltage electron microscopy, in that the filaments form a lattice of the same configutation and with the same proportions of open area as the microtrabeculae seen in whole cells. The major differences between these two views of the structural elements of the cytoplasmic matrix can be attributed to the effects of aldehyde fixation and dehydration. Freeze-dried cytoskeletons thus provide an opportunity to study--at high resolution and in the absence of problems caused by chemical fixation--the detailed organization of filaments in different regions of the cytoplasm and at different stages of cell development. In this report the pattern of actin and intermediate filament organization in various regions of fully spread mouse fibroblasts is described.


Assuntos
Citoesqueleto/ultraestrutura , Microscopia Eletrônica/métodos , Microtúbulos/ultraestrutura , Actinas/metabolismo , Animais , Galinhas , Liofilização , Congelamento , Camundongos , Tubulina (Proteína)/metabolismo
18.
J Cell Biol ; 57(2): 315-44, 1973 May.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-4348786

RESUMO

When the nerves of isolated frog sartorius muscles were stimulated at 10 Hz, synaptic vesicles in the motor nerve terminals became transiently depleted. This depletion apparently resulted from a redistribution rather than disappearance of synaptic vesicle membrane, since the total amount of membrane comprising these nerve terminals remained constant during stimulation. At 1 min of stimulation, the 30% depletion in synaptic vesicle membrane was nearly balanced by an increase in plasma membrane, suggesting that vesicle membrane rapidly moved to the surface as it might if vesicles released their content of transmitter by exocytosis. After 15 min of stimulation, the 60% depletion of synaptic vesicle membrane was largely balanced by the appearance of numerous irregular membrane-walled cisternae inside the terminals, suggesting that vesicle membrane was retrieved from the surface as cisternae. When muscles were rested after 15 min of stimulation, cisternae disappeared and synaptic vesicles reappeared, suggesting that cisternae divided to form new synaptic vesicles so that the original vesicle membrane was now recycled into new synaptic vesicles. When muscles were soaked in horseradish peroxidase (HRP), this tracerfirst entered the cisternae which formed during stimulation and then entered a large proportion of the synaptic vesicles which reappeared during rest, strengthening the idea that synaptic vesicle membrane added to the surface was retrieved as cisternae which subsequently divided to form new vesicles. When muscles containing HRP in synaptic vesicles were washed to remove extracellular HRP and restimulated, HRP disappeared from vesicles without appearing in the new cisternae formed during the second stimulation, confirming that a one-way recycling of synaptic membrane, from the surface through cisternae to new vesicles, was occurring. Coated vesicles apparently represented the actual mechanism for retrieval of synaptic vesicle membrane from the plasma membrane, because during nerve stimulation they proliferated at regions of the nerve terminals covered by Schwann processes, took up peroxidase, and appeared in various stages of coalescence with cisternae. In contrast, synaptic vesicles did not appear to return directly from the surface to form cisternae, and cisternae themselves never appeared directly connected to the surface. Thus, during stimulation the intracellular compartments of this synapse change shape and take up extracellular protein in a manner which indicates that synaptic vesicle membrane added to the surface during exocytosis is retrieved by coated vesicles and recycled into new synaptic vesicles by way of intermediate cisternae.


Assuntos
Junção Neuromuscular/fisiologia , Vesículas Sinápticas/fisiologia , Animais , Anuros , Axônios/citologia , Membrana Celular/fisiologia , Estimulação Elétrica , Retículo Endoplasmático , Histocitoquímica , Membranas/fisiologia , Microscopia Eletrônica , Mitocôndrias Musculares , Neurônios Motores/fisiologia , Músculos/citologia , Neurofibrilas , Peroxidases/isolamento & purificação , Rana pipiens , Células de Schwann/citologia , Transmissão Sináptica , Fatores de Tempo
19.
J Cell Biol ; 57(3): 743-59, 1973 Jun.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-4572922

RESUMO

Work-induced growth of rat soleus muscle is accompanied by an early increase in new RNA synthesis. To determine the cell type(s) responsible for the increased RNA synthesis, we compared light autoradiographs of control and hypertrophying muscles from rats injected with tritiated uridine 12, 24, and 48 h after inducing hypertrophy. There was an increased number of silver grains over autoradiographs of hypertrophied muscle. This increase occurred over connective tissue cells; there was no increase in the number of silver grains over the muscle fibers. Quantitative studies demonstrated that between 70 and 80% of the radioactivity in the muscle that survived fixation and washing was in RNA. Pretreatment of the animals with actinomycin D reduced in parallel both the radioactivity in RNA and the number of silver grains over autoradiographs. Proliferation of the connective tissue in hypertrophying muscle was evident in light micrographs, and electron micrographs identified the proliferating cells as enlarged fibroblasts and macrophages; the connective tissue cells remained after hypertrophy was completed. Thus, proliferating connective tissue cells are the major site of the increase in new RNA synthesis during acute work-induced growth of skeletal muscle. It is suggested that in the analysis of physiological adaptations of muscle, the connective tissue cells deserve consideration as a site of significant molecular activity.


Assuntos
Músculos/metabolismo , RNA/biossíntese , Animais , Autorradiografia , Fracionamento Celular , Tecido Conjuntivo/patologia , Dactinomicina/administração & dosagem , Fibroblastos , Hipertrofia/patologia , Macrófagos , Microscopia Eletrônica , Microscopia de Contraste de Fase , Músculos/patologia , Ácido Orótico/metabolismo , Ratos , Fatores de Tempo , Extratos de Tecidos , Trítio , Uridina/metabolismo
20.
J Cell Biol ; 34(2): 407-20, 1967 Aug.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-4166578

RESUMO

The sheaths from freshly teased nerve fibers of the prawn exhibit a positive radial birefringence, consistent with their EM appearance as highly organized laminated structures composed of numerous thin cytoplasmic sheets or laminae bordered by unit membranes and arranged concentrically around the axon. The closely apposed membranes in these sheaths are fragile and often break down into rows of vesicles during fixation. Desmosome-like attachment zones occur in many regions of the sheath. The membranes within these zones resist vesiculation and thereby provide a "control" region for relating the type of vesicles formed in the fragile portions of the sheaths to the specific fixation conditions. It is proposed that during fixation the production of artifactual vesicles is governed by an interplay of three factors: (a) direct chemical action of the fixative on the polar strata of adjacent unit membranes, (b) osmotic forces applied to membranes during fixation, and (c) the pre-existing natural relations between adjacent membranes. It is found that permanganate best preserves the continuity of the membranes but will still produce vesicles if the fixative exerts severe osmotic forces. These results support other reports (19) of the importance of comparing tissues fixed by complementary procedures so that systematic artifacts will not be described as characteristic of the natural state.


Assuntos
Citoplasma , Técnicas Histológicas , Neurônios/citologia , Osmose , Animais , Axônios , Birrefringência , Crustáceos/citologia , Membranas , Microscopia Eletrônica , Osmio , Permanganato de Potássio , Coloração e Rotulagem
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