Heterogeneous distribution of isoactins in cultured vascular smooth muscle cells does not reflect segregation of contractile and cytoskeletal domains
Contribuinte(s) |
D G Baskin Kevin A. Roth |
---|---|
Data(s) |
01/01/2000
|
Resumo |
We have previously demonstrated that or-smooth muscle (alpha -SM) actin is predominantly distributed in the central region and beta -non-muscle (beta -NM) actin in the periphery of cultured rabbit aortic smooth muscle cells (SMCs). To determine whether this reflects a special form of segregation of contractile and cytoskeletal components in SMCs, this study systematically investigated the distribution relationship of structural proteins using high-resolution confocal laser scanning fluorescent microscopy. Not only isoactins but also smooth muscle myosin heavy chain, alpha -actinin, vinculin, and vimentin were heterogeneously distributed in the cultured SMCs. The predominant distribution of beta -NM actin in the cell periphery was associated with densely distributed vinculin plaques and disrupted or striated myosin and ol-actinin aggregates, which may reflect a process of stress fiber assembly during cell spreading and focal adhesion formation. The high-level labeling of alpha -SM actin in the central portion of stress fibers was related to continuous myosin and punctate alpha -actinin distribution, which may represent the maturation of the fibrillar structures. The findings also suggest that the stress fibers, in which actin and myosin filaments organize into sar-comere-like units with alpha -actinin-rich dense bodies analogous to Z-lines, are the contractile vimentin structures of cultured SMCs that link to the network of vimentin-containing intermediate alpha -actinin filaments through the dense bodies and dense plaques. |
Identificador | |
Idioma(s) |
eng |
Publicador |
Histochemical Society |
Palavras-Chave | #Cell Biology #Actin Isoform #Myosin Heavy Chain #Vimentin #Alpha-actinin #Vinculin #Actin Messenger-rna #Stress Fibers #Chicken Gizzard #Beta-actin #Myosin #Expression #Fibroblasts #Localization #Apparatus #Filaments #270100 Biochemistry and Cell Biology #C1 #321003 Cardiology (incl. Cardiovascular Diseases) #730106 Cardiovascular system and diseases |
Tipo |
Journal Article |