Evidence for Myosin Motors on Organelles in Squid Axoplasm

Squid axoplasm has proved a rich source for the identification of motors involved in organelle transport. Recently, squid axoplasmic organelles have been shown to move on invisible tracks that are sensitive to cytochalasin, suggesting that these tracks are actin filaments. Here, an assay is describe...

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Veröffentlicht in:Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences - PNAS 1993-12, Vol.90 (23), p.11252-11256
Hauptverfasser: Bearer, E. L., DeGiorgis, J. A., Bodner, R. A., Kao, A. W., Reese, T. S.
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Squid axoplasm has proved a rich source for the identification of motors involved in organelle transport. Recently, squid axoplasmic organelles have been shown to move on invisible tracks that are sensitive to cytochalasin, suggesting that these tracks are actin filaments. Here, an assay is described that permits observation of organelles moving on unipolar actin bundles. This assay is used to demonstrate that axoplasmic organelles move on actin filaments in the barbedend direction, suggesting the presence of a myosin motor on axoplasmic organelles. Indeed, axoplasm contains actindependent ATPase activity, and a pan-myosin antibody recognized at least four bands in Western blots of axoplasm. An ≈235-kDa band copurified in sucrose gradients with KI-extracted axoplasmic organelles, and the myosin antibody stained the organelle surfaces by immunogold electron microscopy. The myosin is present on the surface of at least some axoplasmic organelles and thus may be involved in their transport through the axoplasm, their movement through the cortical actin in the synapse, or some other aspect of axonal function.
ISSN:0027-8424
1091-6490
DOI:10.1073/pnas.90.23.11252