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Cytoskeleton

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Title: Cytoskeleton


1
Cytoskeleton
A. Overview B. Experimental Methods C.
Microtubules D. Microfilaments
  • Overview
  • Experimental Methods
  • Microtubules
  • Microfilaments

(Updated 4/9/08)
2
A. Overview
A. Overview B. Experimental Methods C.
Microtubules D. Microfilaments
  • Definition
  • Types of Cytoskeleton Fibers
  • Dynamic Polymerization/Depolymerization
  • Molecular Motors
  • Alberts Fig. 16 1, Panel 16 1, Panel 16 2,
    Fig. 16 11, Fig 16 12, 16 8, 16 7, 16
    10, 16 13, 16 14, 16 15, 16 16, 16 17,
    16 19, 16 56, Table 16 1

3
B. Experimental methods
A. Overview B. Experimental Methods C.
Microtubules D. Microfilaments
  • Visualization Approaches
  • Light Microscopy
  • Fluorescence Microscopy
  • http//www.itg.uiuc.edu/exhibits/gallery/fluoresce
    ncegallery.htm
  • Digital/video Microscopy
  • Electron Microscopy
  • Genetic Approaches
  • Biochemical Approaches

4
C. Microtubules
A. Overview B. Experimental Methods C.
Microtubules 1. Structure 2. MAPs
3. Functions 4. Microtubule Motors 5.
MTOCs 6. Dynamic Properties 7. Flagella
and Cilia D. Microfilaments
  1. Structure
  2. Microtubule-associated proteins
  3. Functions
  4. Microtubule motors
  5. Microtubule organizing centers
  6. Dynamic properties of microtubules
  7. Flagella and cilia

5
C.1. Microtubules Structure
A. Overview B. Experimental Methods C.
Microtubules 1. Structure 2. MAPs
3. Functions 4. Microtubule Motors 5.
MTOCs 6. Dynamic Properties 7. Flagella
and Cilia D. Microfilaments
  • Structure
  • Alberts Fig 16 11
  • Structure and composition - hollow, tubular
    found in most eukaryotic cells (cilia, spindle,
    flagella)
  • Outer diameter - 24 nm
  • Wall thickness - 5 nm
  • May extend across cell length/breadth
  • Wall composed of globular proteins arranged in
    longitudinal rows (protofilaments)
  • Protofilaments are aligned parallel to tubule
    long axis
  • In cross section, consist of 13 protofilaments
    arrayed in circular pattern within wall

6
C.1. Microtubules Structure
A. Overview B. Experimental Methods C.
Microtubules 1. Structure 2. MAPs
3. Functions 4. Microtubule Motors 5.
MTOCs 6. Dynamic Properties 7. Flagella
and Cilia D. Microfilaments
  • Each protofilament is assembled of dimeric
    building blocks (one a-tubulin one b-tubulin A
    heterodimer) organized in linear array along
    length of protofilament
  • Two types of tubulin subunits have similar 3D
    structure fit tightly together
  • Protofilaments asymmetric (a-tubulin at one end,
    b-tubulin at other) All in single MT have same
    polarity Each assembly unit has 2 nonidentical
    components (heterodimer)
  • All protofilaments of microtubule have same
    polarity Thus so does full tubule (plus-
    minus-end)
  • Plus end - fast-growing (b-tubulins on tip)
    Minus end - slow-growing (a-tubulins on tip)

7
C.2. Microtubules MAPs
A. Overview B. Experimental Methods C.
Microtubules 1. Structure 2. MAPs
3. Functions 4. Microtubule Motors 5.
MTOCs 6. Dynamic Properties 7. Flagella
and Cilia D. Microfilaments
  • Microtubule-associated proteins
  • Alberts Fig 16-40, 16-41
  • MTs can assemble in vitro from purified tubulin,
    but MAPs are found with MTs isolated from cells
    most found only in brain tissue MAP4 has wider
    distribution
  • Have globular head domain that attaches to MT
    side filamentous tail protruding from MT
    surface
  • May interconnect MTs to help form bundles
    (cross-bridges), increase MT stability, alter MT
    rigidity, influence MT assembly rate

8
C. 2. Microtubules MAPs
A. Overview B. Experimental Methods C.
Microtubules 1. Structure 2. MAPs
3. Functions 4. Microtubule Motors 5.
MTOCs 6. Dynamic Properties 7. Flagella
and Cilia D. Microfilaments
  • MAP activity controlled by addition removal of
    phosphate groups from particular amino acid
    residues by protein kinases phosphatases,
    respectively example - Alzheimers disease (AD)
  • Abnormally high MAP (tau) phosphorylation
    implicated in fatal neurodegenerative diseases
    like AD neurofibrillary tangles in brains made
    of hyperphosphorylated tau may help kill nerve
    cells
  • Excessively phosphorylated tau molecules are
    unable to bind to MTs people with one of these
    diseases, a type of dementia called FTDP-17,
    carry mutations in tau gene, implicating it as
    cause

9
C. 3. Microtubules Functions
A. Overview B. Experimental Methods C.
Microtubules 1. Structure 2. MAPs
3. Functions 4. Microtubule Motors 5.
MTOCs 6. Dynamic Properties 7. Flagella
and Cilia D. Microfilaments
  • Functions
  • Alberts Table 16-2 Fig 16-23, 66
  • Internal skeleton (scaffold) providing structural
    support maintaining organelle position
  • Resist compression or bending forces on fiber
    provide mechanical support like girders in tall
    building prevent distortion of cell by
    cytoplasmic contractions
  • MT distribution conforms to helps determine
    cell shape flattened, round cells - radiate from
    nuclear area columnar epithelium - parallel to
    cell long axis like aluminum rods support tent

10
C. 3. Microtubules Functions
A. Overview B. Experimental Methods C.
Microtubules 1. Structure 2. MAPs
3. Functions 4. Microtubule Motors 5.
MTOCs 6. Dynamic Properties 7. Flagella
and Cilia D. Microfilaments
  • Elongated cell process (axon, axopods of
    heliozoan protists) - MTs oriented parallel to
    each other axon or axopod long axis help move
    things
  • In developing embryo, extend growing central NS
    axons to peripheral NS inhibit (colchicine CO,
    nocodazole NO) outgrowth stops, regresses
    (collapses back to rounded cell body)
  • Found as core of axopodial processes of heliozoan
    protozoa many MTs arranged in spiral with
    individual MTs traversing entire length of process

11
C. 3. Microtubules Functions
A. Overview B. Experimental Methods C.
Microtubules 1. Structure 2. MAPs
3. Functions 4. Microtubule Motors 5.
MTOCs 6. Dynamic Properties 7. Flagella
and Cilia D. Microfilaments
  • Plants play similar role in plants affect shape
    indirectly by influencing cell wall formation
    found in cortex just below membrane during
    interphase forming a distinct cortical zone

12
C. 3. Microtubules Functions
A. Overview B. Experimental Methods C.
Microtubules 1. Structure 2. MAPs
3. Functions 4. Microtubule Motors 5.
MTOCs 6. Dynamic Properties 7. Flagella
and Cilia D. Microfilaments
  • Also have role in maintenance of cell internal
    organization (organelle placement) - disrupt MTs
    (CO, NO) gt Golgi disperses to cell periphery
    goes back to cell center when inhibitors removed
  • Move macromolecules organelles around cell in
    directed manner (intracellular motility)
  • Halt vesicle transport between compartments if
    disrupt MTs so transport dependent on them
  • Proteins made in neuron cell body move down axon
    (neurotransmitters, etc.) in vesicles

13
C. 3. Microtubules Functions
A. Overview B. Experimental Methods C.
Microtubules 1. Structure 2. MAPs
3. Functions 4. Microtubule Motors 5.
MTOCs 6. Dynamic Properties 7. Flagella
and Cilia D. Microfilaments
  • Different materials move at different rates
    fastest rate is 5 µm/sec (400 mm/day) vesicles
    seen attached to MTs
  • Structures materials moving toward neuron
    terminals are said to move anterograde
  • Other structures, like endocytic vesicles that
    are formed at neuron terminals carry regulatory
    factors from target cells, move from synapse to
    cell body in a retrograde direction
  • Ex. axons filled with MTs, MFs IFs evidence
    suggests that both anterograde retrograde
    movement are mediated mostly by MTs video
    microscopy shows vesicles moving along MTs
  • Confirmed by EM of axons molecular motors move
    vesicles along the MTs that serve as tracks

14
C. 3. Microtubules Functions
A. Overview B. Experimental Methods C.
Microtubules 1. Structure 2. MAPs
3. Functions 4. Microtubule Motors 5.
MTOCs 6. Dynamic Properties 7. Flagella
and Cilia D. Microfilaments
  • Motile elements of cilia flagella (more later)
  • Active components of mitotic/meiotic machinery
    move chromosomes

15
C. 4. Microtubules Motors
A. Overview B. Experimental Methods C.
Microtubules 1. Structure 2. MAPs
3. Functions 4. Microtubule Motors 5.
MTOCs 6. Dynamic Properties 7. Flagella
and Cilia D. Microfilaments
  • Microtubule motors
  • Alberts Fig 16-58, 59, 60, 62, 63, 64, 67
  • Motor proteins convert chemical energy stored in
    ATP into mechanical energy that is used to move
    cellular cargo attached to motor
  • Types of cellular cargo transported by these
    molecular motors include vesicles, organelles
    (mitochondria, lysosomes, chloroplasts),
    chromosomes, other cytoskeletal filaments
  • A single cell may contain dozens of different
    motor proteins, each specialized for moving a
    particular type of cargo in particular cell region

16
C. 4. Microtubules Motors
A. Overview B. Experimental Methods C.
Microtubules 1. Structure 2. MAPs
3. Functions 4. Microtubule Motors 5.
MTOCs 6. Dynamic Properties 7. Flagella
and Cilia D. Microfilaments
  • Collectively, motor proteins are grouped into 3
    broad families myosins, kinesins, dyneins
  • Kinesins dyneins move along MTs myosins move
    along MFs None known for ifs
  • Motor proteins move unidirectionally along their
    cytoskeletal track in a stepwise manner from one
    binding site to the next
  • As they move along, they undergo a series of
    conformational changes (a mechanical cycle)
  • Steps of mechanical cycle are coupled to chemical
    cycle, which provides energy fueling movement
  • Includes motor binding ATP, ATP hydrolysis,
    product (ADP Pi) release binding of new ATP
  • Binding hydrolysis of 1 ATP moves motor a few
    nm along track Cycles repeated many times

17
C. 4. Microtubules Motors
A. Overview B. Experimental Methods C.
Microtubules 1. Structure 2. MAPs
3. Functions 4. Microtubule Motors 5.
MTOCs 6. Dynamic Properties 7. Flagella
and Cilia D. Microfilaments
  • Kinesins
  • Kinesins move vesicles/organelles from cell body
    to synaptic knobs isolated in 1985 from squid
    giant axons tetramer made of 2 identical heavy
    chains 2 identical light chains smallest
    best understood
  • Large protein - pair of globular heads generate
    force by hydrolyzing ATP bind MT each head
    connected to a neck, a rodlike stalk fan-shaped
    tail that binds cargo to be hauled
  • Diverse superfamily of kinesins - heads similar
    since roles similar tails vary since they haul
    different cargoes

18
C. 4. Microtubules Motors
A. Overview B. Experimental Methods C.
Microtubules 1. Structure 2. MAPs
3. Functions 4. Microtubule Motors 5.
MTOCs 6. Dynamic Properties 7. Flagella
and Cilia D. Microfilaments
  • In vitro mobility assay - kinesin-coated beads
    move to MT "" end (axon tip) it is a ""
    end-directed MT motor, therefore, kinesin
    responsible for anterograde movement
  • All MTs of axon are oriented with"-" ends facing
    cell body "" ends facing synaptic knobs
  • Moves through ATP-dependent cross-bridge cycle
    along single MT protofilament (rate proportional
    to ATP up to 1 µm/sec) at low
    concentrations, move slowly see movement in
    distinct steps
  • Each step is 8 nm in length, the spacing between
    tubulin dimers along protofilament
  • Appear to move 2 globular subunits (or 1 dimer at
    a time) usually toward membrane "" ends

19
C. 4. Microtubules Motors
A. Overview B. Experimental Methods C.
Microtubules 1. Structure 2. MAPs
3. Functions 4. Microtubule Motors 5.
MTOCs 6. Dynamic Properties 7. Flagella
and Cilia D. Microfilaments
  • Kinesin possesses 2 motor domains that work by
    hand-over-hand mechanism one always firmly
    attached to MT
  • 2 heads of kinesin behave in coordinated manner,
    so that they are always present at different
    stages in their chemical mechanical cycles at a
    given time
  • When one head binds to MT, the interaction
    induces a conformational change in adjacent neck
    region of motor protein it swings the other head
    forward toward binding site on next dimer
  • Force generated by head catalytic activity leads
    to swinging movement of neck
  • A kinesin molecule walks along a MT, hydrolyzing
    one ATP with each step

20
C. 4. Microtubules Motors
A. Overview B. Experimental Methods C.
Microtubules 1. Structure 2. MAPs
3. Functions 4. Microtubule Motors 5.
MTOCs 6. Dynamic Properties 7. Flagella
and Cilia D. Microfilaments
  • Conventional kinesin (discovered in 1985) is only
    one member of a superfamily of related kinesins
  • Mammalian genome sequence analysis leads to
    estimate that mammals make gt50 different kinesins
  • Heads of kinesins have related amino acid
    sequences, reflecting common evolutionary
    ancestry their similar role in moving along MTs
  • In contrast, kinesin tails have diverse
    sequences, reflecting variety of cargo different
    proteins haul

21
C. 4. Microtubules Motors
A. Overview B. Experimental Methods C.
Microtubules 1. Structure 2. MAPs
3. Functions 4. Microtubule Motors 5.
MTOCs 6. Dynamic Properties 7. Flagella
and Cilia D. Microfilaments
  • Most kinesins travel toward the "" end but one
    small subfamily of kinesins (including the
    Drosophila Ncd protein) moves toward the MT "-"
    end
  • one would expect that the heads of ""-
    "-"-directed would have a different structure
    since the heads contain the catalytic core of the
    motor domain
  • But the heads are virtually indistinguishable
    instead differences in direction of movement are
    determined by differences in the adjacent neck
    regions of the two proteins
  • When the head of a "-" end-directed Ncd molecule
    is joined to the neck-stalk portions of a kinesin
    molecule, the hybrid protein moves toward the ""
    end of a MT track
  • Even if the hybrid has a catalytic domain that
    would normally move toward the "-" end of a MT,
    as long as it is joined to the neck of a "" end
    motor, it moves in the "" direction

22
C. 4. Microtubules Motors
A. Overview B. Experimental Methods C.
Microtubules 1. Structure 2. MAPs
3. Functions 4. Microtubule Motors 5.
MTOCs 6. Dynamic Properties 7. Flagella
and Cilia D. Microfilaments
  • A third subfamily of kinesinlike proteins is
    incapable of movement kinesins of this group,
    like KXKCM1, are thought to destabilize MTs
    rather than acting as MT motors

23
C. 4. Microtubules Motors
A. Overview B. Experimental Methods C.
Microtubules 1. Structure 2. MAPs
3. Functions 4. Microtubule Motors 5.
MTOCs 6. Dynamic Properties 7. Flagella
and Cilia D. Microfilaments
  • Cytoplasmic Dyneins
  • Dyneins - first MT-associated motor found (1963)
    responsible for moving cilia flagella
  • Thought to be ubiquitous eukaryotic motor
    protein related protein found in variety of
    nonneural cells
  • Cilia/flagella form of protein was called
    axonemal dynein its new relatives were called
    cytoplasmic dynein
  • Huge protein (1.5 million daltons) 2 identical
    heavy chains variety of intermediate light
    chains
  • Each dynein heavy chain forms large globular head
    (10X larger than a kinesin head) that generates
    force moves along MT toward "-" end

24
C. 4. Microtubules Motors
A. Overview B. Experimental Methods C.
Microtubules 1. Structure 2. MAPs
3. Functions 4. Microtubule Motors 5.
MTOCs 6. Dynamic Properties 7. Flagella
and Cilia D. Microfilaments
  • Suggested roles of cytoplasmic dynein
  • Force generating agent for chromosome movement in
    mitosis
  • "-"-directed MT motor for Golgi complex
    positioning movement of vesicles/organelles
    through cytoplasm
  • In nerve cells, cytoplasmic dynein involved in
    axonal retrograde organelle movement (toward cell
    body cell center) anterograde movement of MTs
  • Fibroblasts other nonneural cells may move
    varied membranous organelles (endosomes,
    lysosomes, ER-derived vesicles going toward
    Golgi) from periphery toward cell center

25
C. 4. Microtubules Motors
A. Overview B. Experimental Methods C.
Microtubules 1. Structure 2. MAPs
3. Functions 4. Microtubule Motors 5.
MTOCs 6. Dynamic Properties 7. Flagella
and Cilia D. Microfilaments
  • Cytoplasmic dynein does not interact directly
    with membrane-bounded cargo, but requires
    intervening multisubunit complex, dynactin that
    may regulate dynein activity help bind it to MT
  • Present model may be overly simplistic kinesin
    cytoplasmic dynein move similar materials in
    opposite directions over the same railway network
  • Individual organelles may bind kinesin dynein
    simultaneously although only one is active at
    given time myosin may also be present on some of
    these organelles

26
C. 5. Microtubules MTOCS
A. Overview B. Experimental Methods C.
Microtubules 1. Structure 2. MAPs
3. Functions 4. Microtubule Motors 5.
MTOCs 6. Dynamic Properties 7. Flagella
and Cilia D. Microfilaments
  • Microtubule-organizing centers
  • Alberts Panel 16-1 Fig 16-29, 30, 31, 32, 33
    Function of MT in living cell depends on its
    location orientation, thus it is important to
    understand why a MT assembles in one place as
    opposed to another
  • controlled by MT-organizing centers (MTOCs)

27
C. 5. Microtubules MTOCS
A. Overview B. Experimental Methods C.
Microtubules 1. Structure 2. MAPs
3. Functions 4. Microtubule Motors 5.
MTOCs 6. Dynamic Properties 7. Flagella
and Cilia D. Microfilaments
  • Assembly of MTs from ab-dimers occurs in 2
    distinct phases
  • Nucleation - slower small portion of MT
    initially formed occurs in association with
    specialized structures in vivo called
    microtubule-organizing centers (MTOCs)
    centrosome is example
  • Elongation - more rapid

28
C. 5. Microtubules MTOCS
A. Overview B. Experimental Methods C.
Microtubules 1. Structure 2. MAPs
3. Functions 4. Microtubule Motors 5.
MTOCs 6. Dynamic Properties 7. Flagella
and Cilia D. Microfilaments
  • Centrosomes - complex structure with 2
    barrel-shaped centrioles surrounded by amorphous,
    electron dense pericentriolar material (PCM)
  • In animal cells, cytoskeleton MTs typically form
    in association with centrosome
  • Centrioles cylindrical 0.2 nm dia typically
    twice as long usually with 9 evenly spaced
    fibrils
  • Each fibril seen in cross section to be composed
    of 3 fused MTs (A, the only complete one B
    C), A is attached to centriole center by radial
    spoke

29
C. 5. Microtubules MTOCS
A. Overview B. Experimental Methods C.
Microtubules 1. Structure 2. MAPs
3. Functions 4. Microtubule Motors 5.
MTOCs 6. Dynamic Properties 7. Flagella
and Cilia D. Microfilaments
  • 3 MTs of each triplet arranged in pattern that
    gives centriole a characteristic pinwheel
    appearance
  • Centrioles usually in pairs at right angles to
    each other near cell center just outside nucleus
  • Extraction of isolated centrosomes with 1 M
    potassium iodide removes 90 of PCM protein
    leaving behind spaghetti-like scaffold of
    insoluble fibers
  • Centrosomes are sites of convergence of large
    numbers of MTs

30
C. 5. Microtubules MTOCS
A. Overview B. Experimental Methods C.
Microtubules 1. Structure 2. MAPs
3. Functions 4. Microtubule Motors 5.
MTOCs 6. Dynamic Properties 7. Flagella
and Cilia D. Microfilaments
  • MT polymerization disassembly - treat with
    poisons (CO, NO) or cold gt MTs disassemble much
    has been learned about their disassembly
    reassembly in cultured animal cells in this way
  • Observe assembly when cells warmed or poisons
    removed fix at various times after stain with
    fluorescent anti-tubulin ABs
  • Within a few minutes of inhibition removal, 1 or
    2 bright fluorescent spots seen in cytoplasm
  • Within 15 - 30 minutes, number of labeled
    filaments radiating from these foci rises
    dramatically

31
C. 5. Microtubules MTOCS
A. Overview B. Experimental Methods C.
Microtubules 1. Structure 2. MAPs
3. Functions 4. Microtubule Motors 5.
MTOCs 6. Dynamic Properties 7. Flagella
and Cilia D. Microfilaments
  • In EM MTs radiate out from centrosome MTs don't
    actually penetrate into centrosome contact
    centrioles, but terminate in dense pericentriolar
    material residing at centrosome periphery
  • PCM apparently initiates MT formation centrioles
    not involved in MT nucleation, but they probably
    play a role in recruiting surrounding PCM during
    centrosome assembly

32
C. 5. Microtubules MTOCS
A. Overview B. Experimental Methods C.
Microtubules 1. Structure 2. MAPs
3. Functions 4. Microtubule Motors 5.
MTOCs 6. Dynamic Properties 7. Flagella
and Cilia D. Microfilaments
  • Centrosome typically situated near center of
    cell, just outside nucleus
  • Columnar epithelium - centrosome moves from cell
    center to apical region just beneath cortex
    cytoskeletal MTs emanate from site, extending
    toward nucleus basal surface of cell
  • Regardless of location, centrosomes are sites of
    MT nucleation polarity is always the same "-"
    end at centrosome, "" (growing) end at opposite
    tip
  • Thus, even though MTs are nucleated at MTOC, they
    are elongated at opposite end of polymer

33
C. 5. Microtubules MTOCS
A. Overview B. Experimental Methods C.
Microtubules 1. Structure 2. MAPs
3. Functions 4. Microtubule Motors 5.
MTOCs 6. Dynamic Properties 7. Flagella
and Cilia D. Microfilaments
  • Not all MTs associated with centrosome
  • some animal cells (mouse oocytes) lack
    centrosomes entirely, but still make spindle
  • MTs of axon are not associated with centrosome,
    which is located in cell body, but they may be
    formed at centrosome, then released from that
    MTOC carried to axon by motor proteins

34
C. 5. Microtubules MTOCS
A. Overview B. Experimental Methods C.
Microtubules 1. Structure 2. MAPs
3. Functions 4. Microtubule Motors 5.
MTOCs 6. Dynamic Properties 7. Flagella
and Cilia D. Microfilaments
  • Basal bodies other MTOCs
  • Centrosomes are not the only MTOCs in cells
    basal bodies at base of cilia flagella serve as
    origin of ciliary flagellar MTs MTs grow out
    of them
  • Basal body cross-section looks like centriole in
    fact, the two can give rise to one another
  • Sperm flagellum arises from basal body derived
    from sperm centriole that had been part of
    meiotic spindle of spermatocyte from which the
    sperm arose
  • Conversely, sperm basal body typically becomes
    centriole during fertilized egg's first mitotic
    division of fertilized egg

35
C. 5. Microtubules MTOCS
A. Overview B. Experimental Methods C.
Microtubules 1. Structure 2. MAPs
3. Functions 4. Microtubule Motors 5.
MTOCs 6. Dynamic Properties 7. Flagella
and Cilia D. Microfilaments
  • Plant MTOC - lack both centrioles centrosomes
    MTOCs more dispersed than those of animals
  • In plant endosperm cells, the primary MTOC
    consists of patches of material situated at outer
    surface of nuclear envelope from which
    cytoskeletal MTs emerge
  • MT nucleation also thought to occur throughout
    plant cell cortex

36
C. 5. Microtubules MTOCS
A. Overview B. Experimental Methods C.
Microtubules 1. Structure 2. MAPs
3. Functions 4. Microtubule Motors 5.
MTOCs 6. Dynamic Properties 7. Flagella
and Cilia D. Microfilaments
  • MT nucleation
  • Despite diverse appearances, all MTOCs play
    similar roles in all cells
  • Control number of MTs that form their polarity
  • Control the number of protofilaments that make up
    their walls
  • Control the time location of MT assembly

37
C. 5. Microtubules MTOCS
A. Overview B. Experimental Methods C.
Microtubules 1. Structure 2. MAPs
3. Functions 4. Microtubule Motors 5.
MTOCs 6. Dynamic Properties 7. Flagella
and Cilia D. Microfilaments
  • All MTOCs share a common protein component,
    g-tubulin (discovered in mid-1980s) it is
    0.005 of total cell protein while a-
    b-tubulins are 2.5 of total nonneural cell
    protein
  • Fluorescent anti-g-tubulin antibodies (ABs) stain
    all MTOCs, like centrosome PCM suggests it is
    critical component in MT assembly nucleation
  • Microinject anti-g-tubulin AB into living cell gt
    blocks MT reassembly after depolymerization by
    drugs or cold temperatures
  • Genetically engineered fungi lacking functional
    g-tubulin gene cannot assemble normal MTs

38
C. 5. Microtubules MTOCS
A. Overview B. Experimental Methods C.
Microtubules 1. Structure 2. MAPs
3. Functions 4. Microtubule Motors 5.
MTOCs 6. Dynamic Properties 7. Flagella
and Cilia D. Microfilaments
  • Nucleation mechanism revealed by
    structure/composition studies of PCM at
    centrosome periphery
  • Insoluble fibers of PCM are thought to serve as
    attachment sites for ring-shaped structures that
    have same diameter as MTs (25 nm) contain
    g-tubulin
  • Ring-shaped structures found when centrosomes
    were purified incubated with gold-labeled
    anti-g-tubulin ABs gt cluster in
    rings/semi-circles at MT minus ends (ends
    embedded in PCM)
  • Isolate similar ring-shaped complexes (g-TuRCs)
    from cell extracts nucleate MT assembly in vitro

39
C. 5. Microtubules MTOCS
A. Overview B. Experimental Methods C.
Microtubules 1. Structure 2. MAPs
3. Functions 4. Microtubule Motors 5.
MTOCs 6. Dynamic Properties 7. Flagella
and Cilia D. Microfilaments
  • Model - helical array of 13 g-tubulin subunits
    forms open, ring-shaped template on which first
    row of ab-tubulin dimers assemble
  • Only a-tubulin of heterodimer can bind to ring of
    g-subunits, establishing polarity of entire MT
  • 2 other tubulin isoforms d-tubulin e-tubulin
    have also been identified in centrosomes, but
    their function has not been determined

40
C. 6. Microtubules Dynamic
A. Overview B. Experimental Methods C.
Microtubules 1. Structure 2. MAPs
3. Functions 4. Microtubule Motors 5.
MTOCs 6. Dynamic Properties 7. Flagella
and Cilia D. Microfilaments
  • Dynamic properties of microtubules
  • Alberts Table 16-2 Fig 16-16, 16-17
  • MTs vary markedly in stability even though
    similar morphologically - spindle/cytoskeleton
    labile mature neuron MTs less labile
    cilia/flagella very stable lability allows cell
    to respond to stimuli
  • Cilia/flagella MTs are stabilized by MAP
    attachment by enzymatic modification (e. g.
    acetylation) of specific amino acid residues
    within tubulin subunits
  • Labile MTs in living cells can be disassembled
    without disrupting other cell structures via a
    number of treatments

41
C. 6. Microtubules Dynamic
A. Overview B. Experimental Methods C.
Microtubules 1. Structure 2. MAPs
3. Functions 4. Microtubule Motors 5.
MTOCs 6. Dynamic Properties 7. Flagella
and Cilia D. Microfilaments
  • Treatments that cause MT disassembly usually
    interfere with noncovalent bonds holding them
    together
  • Cold temperatures
  • Hydrostatic pressure
  • Elevated Ca2 concentration
  • Variety of chemicals (often used in chemotherapy)
    - CO, vinblastine, vincristine, NO,
    podophyllotoxin

42
C. 6. Microtubules Dynamic
A. Overview B. Experimental Methods C.
Microtubules 1. Structure 2. MAPs
3. Functions 4. Microtubule Motors 5.
MTOCs 6. Dynamic Properties 7. Flagella
and Cilia D. Microfilaments
  • Some treatments (taxol) disrupt MT dynamic
    activity act by doing the opposite inhibit
    disassembly
  • Taxol binds MT polymer thus prevents
    disassembly cell cannot build new MT structures

43
C. 6. Microtubules Dynamic
A. Overview B. Experimental Methods C.
Microtubules 1. Structure 2. MAPs
3. Functions 4. Microtubule Motors 5.
MTOCs 6. Dynamic Properties 7. Flagella
and Cilia D. Microfilaments
  • Cytoskeletal MT lability reflects fact that they
    are polymers formed by noncovalent association of
    dimers subject to depolymerization/repolymerizati
    on as cell needs change
  • Dramatic changes in MT spatial organization may
    be achieved by combination of 2 separate
    mechanisms
  • Rearrangement of existing MTs
  • Disassembly of existing MTs reassembly of new
    ones in different cell regions

44
C. 6. Microtubules Dynamic
A. Overview B. Experimental Methods C.
Microtubules 1. Structure 2. MAPs
3. Functions 4. Microtubule Motors 5.
MTOCs 6. Dynamic Properties 7. Flagella
and Cilia D. Microfilaments
  • Study of MT dynamics in vitro - suggest that
    cytoskeleton can rapidly remodel respond to
    stimuli
  • Early studies established that GTP binding to b
    -subunit required for MT assembly GTP hydrolysis
    not needed for binding, but it is hydrolyzed soon
    after dimer attached to MT end GDP stays bound
  • After dimer is released from MT during
    disassembly enters soluble pool, GDP is
    replaced by GTP, thus recharging dimer so that it
    can add to polymer again
  • A GTP molecule is also bound to a-tubulin
    subunit, but it is not exchangeable it is not
    hydrolyzed after subunit incorporation

45
C. 6. Microtubules Dynamic
A. Overview B. Experimental Methods C.
Microtubules 1. Structure 2. MAPs
3. Functions 4. Microtubule Motors 5.
MTOCs 6. Dynamic Properties 7. Flagella
and Cilia D. Microfilaments
  • Assembly is not energetically inexpensive since
    it includes GTP hydrolysis, but it does allow the
    cell to control assembly disassembly
    independently
  • A dimer being added to MT has a bound GTP dimer
    being released from MT has bound GDP
  • GDP- GTP dimers have different conformations
    participate in different reactions the ends of
    growing shrinking MTs have different structures

46
C. 6. Microtubules Dynamic
A. Overview B. Experimental Methods C.
Microtubules 1. Structure 2. MAPs
3. Functions 4. Microtubule Motors 5.
MTOCs 6. Dynamic Properties 7. Flagella
and Cilia D. Microfilaments
  • The above facts lead to the following model
  • When a MT is growing, the "" end is present as
    an open sheet to which GTP-dimers are added
  • During rapid growth periods, tubulin dimers are
    added faster than GTP can be hydrolyzed
  • The resultant cap of GTP-dimers on MT at
    protofilament ends is thought to favor the
    addition of more subunits hence MT growth
  • However, MTs with open ends thought to undergo
    spontaneous reaction leading to tube closure

47
C. 6. Microtubules Dynamic
A. Overview B. Experimental Methods C.
Microtubules 1. Structure 2. MAPs
3. Functions 4. Microtubule Motors 5.
MTOCs 6. Dynamic Properties 7. Flagella
and Cilia D. Microfilaments
  • tube closure is accompanied by hydrolysis of
    bound GTP, changing tubulin dimer conformation gt
    resultant mechanical strain destabilizes MTs
  • Strain is released as protofilaments curl out
    from tubule catastrophically depolymerize
  • Disassembly can occur remarkably fast, especially
    in vivo, which allows very rapid MT cytoskeleton
    disassembly

48
C. 6. Microtubules Dynamic
A. Overview B. Experimental Methods C.
Microtubules 1. Structure 2. MAPs
3. Functions 4. Microtubule Motors 5.
MTOCs 6. Dynamic Properties 7. Flagella
and Cilia D. Microfilaments
  • Study of MT dynamics in vivo dynamic character
    of MT cytoskeleton inside cell is best revealed
    by microinjecting labeled tubulin into
    nondividing cultured cell
  • Inject labeled tubulin into nondividing cultured
    cell gt labeled subunits rapidly incorporated
    into preexisting cytoskeleton MTs, even in
    absence of any obvious morphological change
  • Watch cell with fluorescent-labeled MTs over time
    gt some MTs grow, others shrink dynamic
  • Both growth shrinkage in vivo occur
    predominantly at "" end of polymer, the end
    located opposite the centrosome (or other MTOC)

49
C. 6. Microtubules Dynamic
A. Overview B. Experimental Methods C.
Microtubules 1. Structure 2. MAPs
3. Functions 4. Microtubule Motors 5.
MTOCs 6. Dynamic Properties 7. Flagella
and Cilia D. Microfilaments
  • Single MTs switch randomly unpredictably
    between growing shrinking (dynamic instability)
  • MTs shrink faster than they grow, so in a matter
    of minutes, MTs disappear are replaced by new
    MTs that grow out from centrosome

50
C. 7. Microtubules Flagella
A. Overview B. Experimental Methods C.
Microtubules 1. Structure 2. MAPs
3. Functions 4. Microtubule Motors 5.
MTOCs 6. Dynamic Properties 7. Flagella
and Cilia D. Microfilaments
  • Cilia and flagella structure
  • Alberts Fig 16-80, 81, 82, 83, 84
  • Entire ciliary or flagellar projection is covered
    by membrane continuous with cell membrane
  • Cilium core (axoneme) contains an array of MTs
    that run longitudinally through entire organelle
  • Usually 9 peripheral doublet MTs surrounding
    central pair of single MTs known as 9 2
    pattern or array all MTs in array have same
    polarity ("" ends at tip, "-" ends at base)
  • Doublets - 1 complete (A tubule 13 subunits) MT
    1 incomplete (B tubule) MT with 10 or 11 subunits

51
C. 7. Microtubules Flagella
A. Overview B. Experimental Methods C.
Microtubules 1. Structure 2. MAPs
3. Functions 4. Microtubule Motors 5.
MTOCs 6. Dynamic Properties 7. Flagella
and Cilia D. Microfilaments
  • Not all eukaryotes have them cilia flagella
    generally absent among fungi, nematodes insects
  • Where they do occur, they nearly always show same
    9 2 array, a reminder that all living
    eukaryotes have evolved from a common ancestor
  • Despite high degree of conservation (e. g. 9 2
    pattern) some evolutionary departures
  • 9 1 array in flatworms
  • 9 0 array in Asian horseshoe crab, eel,
    mayfly some lacking central elements are motile,
    some not

52
C. 7. Microtubules Flagella
A. Overview B. Experimental Methods C.
Microtubules 1. Structure 2. MAPs
3. Functions 4. Microtubule Motors 5.
MTOCs 6. Dynamic Properties 7. Flagella
and Cilia D. Microfilaments
  • Central MTs enclosed by projections forming
    central sheath sheath connected to doublet A MTs
    by radial spokes doublets connected by
    interdoublet bridge made of elastic protein nexin
  • Pair of arms (inner outer) project from A MT in
    clockwise direction (when viewed base to tip)
  • Radial spokes typically in groups of three with
    major repeat of 96 nm
  • Inner outer dynein arms staggered along A MT
    length (outer arms spaced every 24 nm inner arms
    arranged to match unequal spacing of radial
    spokes)

53
C. 7. Microtubules Flagella
A. Overview B. Experimental Methods C.
Microtubules 1. Structure 2. MAPs
3. Functions 4. Microtubule Motors 5.
MTOCs 6. Dynamic Properties 7. Flagella
and Cilia D. Microfilaments
  • Cilia/flagellae emerge from basal bodies - 9
    peripheral fibers consisting of 3 MTs rather than
    2 (A tube complete, B/C incomplete) similar in
    structure to centrioles
  • No central MTs as in centrioles also similar to
    centrioles in other ways
  • A B tubules elongate to form cilia/flagella
    doublet if sheared off, regrow from basal body

54
C. 7. Microtubules Flagella
A. Overview B. Experimental Methods C.
Microtubules 1. Structure 2. MAPs
3. Functions 4. Microtubule Motors 5.
MTOCs 6. Dynamic Properties 7. Flagella
and Cilia D. Microfilaments
  • The mechanism of ciliary flagellar locomotion
    sliding filament model suggested mechanism of
    ciliary/flagellar movement was sliding of
    adjacent MT doublets relative to one another
  • In model, dynein arms act as swinging
    cross-bridges that generate forces needed for
    ciliary/flagellar movement dynein arms
    projecting from one doublet walk along adjacent
    doublet wall gt sliding

55
C. 7. Microtubules Flagella
A. Overview B. Experimental Methods C.
Microtubules 1. Structure 2. MAPs
3. Functions 4. Microtubule Motors 5.
MTOCs 6. Dynamic Properties 7. Flagella
and Cilia D. Microfilaments
  • Sequence of events in ciliary/flagellar sliding
    motion
  • Dynein arms anchored on a doublet's A MT attach
    to binding sites on B MT of adjacent doublet
  • Dynein molecules undergo conformational change
    causes A MT doublet to move slightly toward basal
    end of attached B MT doublet
  • Dynein then releases B tubule of adjacent doublet
  • Dynein arms reattach to adjacent doublet's B MT
    closer to its base so another cycle can begin

56
D. Microfilaments
A. Overview B. Experimental Methods C.
Microtubules D. Microfilaments 1. Structure
2. P/D 3. Myosins 4. Muscle
Contraction 5. Nonmuscle Actin
  1. Structure
  2. Polymerization/depolymerization
  3. Myosin
  4. Muscle Contraction
  5. Non-muscle motility

57
D. 1. Microfilaments Structure
A. Overview B. Experimental Methods C.
Microtubules D. Microfilaments 1. Structure
2. P/D 3. Myosins 4. Muscle
Contraction 5. Nonmuscle Actin
  • Structure
  • Alberts Fig 16-12
  • Microfilaments
  • 8 nm diameter
  • made of globular actin subunits (G-actin)
  • found in most animal cells, also higher plants
  • Microfilament, actin filament, F-actin
    filaments are synonyms but F-actin often used
    for those formed in vitro

58
D. 1. Microfilaments Structure
A. Overview B. Experimental Methods C.
Microtubules D. Microfilaments 1. Structure
2. P/D 3. Myosins 4. Muscle
Contraction 5. Nonmuscle Actin
  • In presence of ATP, G-actin polymerizes to form
    stiff filament made of 2 strands of F-actin wound
    around each other in a helical configuration
  • Each subunit has polarity all subunits are
    pointed in same direction, so entire MF has
    polarity
  • Depending on cell type activity in which it is
    engaged, MFs can be organized into highly ordered
    arrays, loose ill-defined networks, or tightly
    anchored bundles

59
D. 1. Microfilaments Structure
A. Overview B. Experimental Methods C.
Microtubules D. Microfilaments 1. Structure
2. P/D 3. Myosins 4. Muscle
Contraction 5. Nonmuscle Actin
  • Actin identified more than 50 years ago as one of
    major contractile proteins of muscle cells
  • Since then found to be major protein in virtually
    every eukaryotic cell examined
  • Higher plants animals possess number of
    actin-coding genes whose products are specialized
    for different types of motile processes
  • Actin structure highly conserved evolutionarily
    (yeast actin rabbit skeletal actin 88
    identical) means that nearly all aminos are
    crucial to function actin from diverse sources
    can copolymerize

60
D. 1. Microfilaments Structure
A. Overview B. Experimental Methods C.
Microtubules D. Microfilaments 1. Structure
2. P/D 3. Myosins 4. Muscle
Contraction 5. Nonmuscle Actin
  • Actin detected microscopically
  • By electron microscopy, using proteolytically
    cleaved myosin head fragments (HMM or S1
    fragments)
  • HMM S1 bind actin all along MF gt see polarity
    in EM one end of MF pointed, other end barbed
  • Orientation of arrowheads formed by S1-actin
    complex provides information as to direction in
    which MFs are likely to be moved by myosin motor
    protein
  • By fluorescence microscopy, with fluorescently
    labeled S1 or anti-actin ABs

61
D. 2. Microfilaments P/D
A. Overview B. Experimental Methods C.
Microtubules D. Microfilaments 1. Structure
2. P/D 3. Myosins 4. Muscle
Contraction 5. Nonmuscle Actin
  • MF polymerization/depolymerization
  • Alberts Table 16 2, Fig. 16 36, 37, 38
  • Before polymerization, actin monomer binds to
    adenosine nucleotide (usually ATP) like GTP in
    MTs
  • Actin is an ATPase (like tubulin is GTPase) role
    of ATP in MF assembly is same as GTP in MT
  • Some time after incorporation into growing actin
    filament, ATP hydrolyzed to ADP
  • If filaments built at high rate, the end has
    actin-ATP cap (hinders disassembly, favors
    assembly)

62
D. 2. Microfilaments P/D
A. Overview B. Experimental Methods C.
Microtubules D. Microfilaments 1. Structure
2. P/D 3. Myosins 4. Muscle
Contraction 5. Nonmuscle Actin
  • Actin polymerization can be studied in vitro by
    labeling or viscosity studies
  • In vitro with high concentration of labeled
    G-actin, both ends labeled but .....
  • One end incorporates monomers at 5 - 10 times
    higher rate than the other end
  • Decoration with S1 myosin fragment reveals that
    barbed ("" end) of MF is fast-growing end, while
    the pointed ("-") end is the slow-growing tip
  • In lower concentrations of G-actin
  • Actin-ATP subunits add to "" end actin-ADP
    subunits tend to leave from "-"
  • Can be demonstrated by pulse-chase treadmilling
    experiments
  • Dont know if treadmilling occurs in vivo

63
D. 2. Microfilaments P/D
A. Overview B. Experimental Methods C.
Microtubules D. Microfilaments 1. Structure
2. P/D 3. Myosins 4. Muscle
Contraction 5. Nonmuscle Actin
  • MFs maintain a dynamic equilibrium between
    monomeric polymeric actin - can be influenced
    by a variety of different proteins
  • Changes in local conditions in particular part of
    cell can push equilibrium either toward assembly
    or disassembly
  • allows cell to reorganize its MFs cytoskeleton by
    controlling this equilibrium
  • need such reorganization for dynamic processes
    (cell locomotion shape changes, cytokinesis)

64
D. 2. Microfilaments P/D
A. Overview B. Experimental Methods C.
Microtubules D. Microfilaments 1. Structure
2. P/D 3. Myosins 4. Muscle
Contraction 5. Nonmuscle Actin
  • Actin-binding proteins in the cell affect the
    nucleation and polymerization rate of
    microfilaments
  • Formin A dimeric protein that initiates
    nucleation by capturing two monomers of actin,
    then remains associated with the plus end of a
    rapidly growing microfolament
  • Thymosin A protein that binds to actin monomers
    and inhibits nucleotide exchange or
    polymerization, keeping much of the available
    actin in an unpolymerized state
  • Profilin A protien that competes with thymosin
    for binding to actin monomers it binds opposite
    the ATP binding site on actin and promotes
    polymerization at the plus end of a growing
    filament

65
D. 2. Microfilaments P/D
A. Overview B. Experimental Methods C.
Microtubules D. Microfilaments 1. Structure
2. P/D 3. Myosins 4. Muscle
Contraction 5. Nonmuscle Actin
  • Inhibitors of microfilament polymerization/depolym
    erization used to study microfilament
    polymerization (Table 16 - 2

66
D. 3. Microfilaments Myosins
A. Overview B. Experimental Methods C.
Microtubules D. Microfilaments 1. Structure
2. P/D 3. Myosins 4. Muscle
Contraction 5. Nonmuscle Actin
  • Myosins
  • Alberts fig 16 54, 55, 56, 57, 60, 61, 65, 68,
    69, 72
  • Myosin's sole known function is as motor for
    actin
  • Almost all motors known to interact with actin
    are members of myosin superfamily
  • all of them move toward MF plus end (except for
    myosin VI)
  • First isolated from mammalian skeletal muscle
    then from wide variety of eukaryotic cells
    protists, higher plants, nonmuscle animal cells,
    vertebrate cardiac smooth muscle tissues

67
D. 3. Microfilaments Myosins
A. Overview B. Experimental Methods C.
Microtubules D. Microfilaments 1. Structure
2. P/D 3. Myosins 4. Muscle
Contraction 5. Nonmuscle Actin
  • Structure of myosins
  • All share characteristic motor (head) domain,
    which has a site that binds actin filament one
    that binds hydrolyzes ATP to drive the myosin
    motor
  • While head domains of myosins are similar, tail
    domains are highly divergent
  • Myosins also contain variety of low molecular
    weight (light) chains
  • Based on these construction differences divided
    into 2 large groups - conventional
    unconventional

68
D. 3. Microfilaments Myosins
A. Overview B. Experimental Methods C.
Microtubules D. Microfilaments 1. Structure
2. P/D 3. Myosins 4. Muscle
Contraction 5. Nonmuscle Actin
  • Conventional (type II)
  • found in various muscle tissues, and also in a
    variety of nonmuscle cells (generate tension at
    focal contacts, cytokinesis)
  • Structure of myosin II molecules 6 polypeptide
    chains (one pair of heavy chains, 2 pairs of
    light chains) organized in a way that produces a
    highly asymmetric protein with 3 sections
  • A pair of globular heads that contain the
    molecules catalytic site
  • A pair of necks, each consisting of a single,
    uninterrupted a-helix 2 associated light chains
  • A single, long, rod-shaped tail formed by the
    intertwining of long a-helical sections of the 2
    heavy chains to form an a-helical coiled-coil

69
D. 3. Microfilaments Myosins
A. Overview B. Experimental Methods C.
Microtubules D. Microfilaments 1. Structure
2. P/D 3. Myosins 4. Muscle
Contraction 5. Nonmuscle Actin
  • Immobilize isolated myosin heads (S1 fragments)
    on glass cover slip gt cause actin filament
    sliding
  • Single head domain has all of the machinery
    needed for motor activity
  • The fibrous tail plays a structural role,
    allowing the protein to form filaments
  • Light chain phosphorylation regulates assembly of
    myosin II into thick filaments
  • Tail ends of myosin molecule point toward
    filament center heads point toward ends
    (bipolar)
  • Polarity of filament reverses at its center

70
D. 3. Microfilaments Myosins
A. Overview B. Experimental Methods C.
Microtubules D. Microfilaments 1. Structure
2. P/D 3. Myosins 4. Muscle
Contraction 5. Nonmuscle Actin
  • Skeletal muscle myosin II filaments are highly
    stable
  • smaller myosin II filaments (most nonmuscle
    cells) often display transient construction
    (assembling when where needed, then
    disassembling)

71
D. 3. Microfilaments Myosins
A. Overview B. Experimental Methods C.
Microtubules D. Microfilaments 1. Structure
2. P/D 3. Myosins 4. Muscle
Contraction 5. Nonmuscle Actin
  • Unconventional myosins subdivided into at least
    14 different types
  • Each type is presumed to have its own specialized
    functions
  • Several types may be present together in same
    cell
  • Some functions of unconventional myosins
  • Amoeboid movement phagocytosis (myosin I)
  • Movement of cytoplasmic vesicles organelles
    (myosins I, V, VI)
  • Stereocilia in cochlea hair cells of inner ear
    (myosin VIIa)

72
D. 4. Microfilaments Muscle
A. Overview B. Experimental Methods C.
Microtubules D. Microfilaments 1. Structure
2. P/D 3. Myosins 4. Muscle
Contraction 5. Nonmuscle Actin
  • Muscle contraction
  • Alberts 16 73, 74, 75, 76, 61, 77, 78
  • Skeletal muscle cell structure - highly
    unorthodox cylindrical 10 - 100 µm thick up to
    400 mm long
  • Skeletal muscle cells are multinucleate (100s),
    the result of embryonic fusion of mononucleate
    myoblasts (premuscle cells) even myoblasts from
    distantly related animals fuse in culture
  • Because of their properties, these cells are more
    appropriately called muscle fibers

73
D. 4. Microfilaments Muscle
A. Overview B. Experimental Methods C.
Microtubules D. Microfilaments 1. Structure
2. P/D 3. Myosins 4. Muscle
Contraction 5. Nonmuscle Actin
  • Muscle fibers may have the most orderly internal
    structure of any cell in body
  • Muscle fiber is cable made up of hundreds of
    thinner, cylindrical strands (myofibrils)
  • Each myofibril is repeating linear array of
    contractile units (sarcomeres)
  • Each sarcomere, in turn, has characteristic
    banding pattern that gives muscle fiber a
    striated look
  • Myofibrils separated by cytoplasm with
    intracellular membranes mitochondria, lipid
    droplets, glycogen granules

74
D. 4. Microfilaments Muscle
A. Overview B. Experimental Methods C.
Microtubules D. Microfilaments 1. Structure
2. P/D 3. Myosins 4. Muscle
Contraction 5. Nonmuscle Actin
  • Banding pattern is result of partial overlap
    between thick thin filaments
  • Each sarcomere extends from Z line to Z line
    (2.5 µm) contains several dark bands light
    zones there is a pair of light staining I bands
    at each end of sarcomere
  • More densely staining A band is between outer I
    bands lightly staining H zone in A band center
  • Densely staining M line lies in center of H zone
  • I bands - only thin filaments H zone - only
    thick filaments A band outside H zone - both
    overlap

75
D. 4. Microfilaments Muscle
A. Overview B. Experimental Methods C.
Microtubules D. Microfilaments 1. Structure
2. P/D 3. Myosins 4. Muscle
Contraction 5. Nonmuscle Actin
  • Composition organization of thin filaments
  • Thin filaments mostly actin
  • In addition to actin, thin filaments also contain
    two other proteins troponin tropomyosin
  • Tropomyosin - elongated, 40 nm long fits
    securely into grooves between two thin filament
    actin chains each rod-shaped tropomyosin
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