Microdensitometer—computer correlation analysis of two distinct, spatially segregated classes of microtubule bridges in Allogromia pseudopodia
Previous video-light microscopic studies have shown that the microtubule bundles in the pseudopodia of foraminiferan protists display several types of movements in vivo, including active bending, zipping/splaying, and axial translocations. To gain insight into the types and arrangement of microtubul...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Journal of structural biology 1990-10, Vol.105 (1), p.1-10 |
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Zusammenfassung: | Previous video-light microscopic studies have shown that the microtubule bundles in the pseudopodia of foraminiferan protists display several types of movements
in vivo, including active bending, zipping/splaying, and axial translocations. To gain insight into the types and arrangement of microtubule-associated proteins (
e.g., mechanoenzymes, crosslinkers) in such a highly dynamic system, we employed microdensitometric-computer correlation methods to analyze, quantitatively, intermicrotubule bridges in thin-section electron micrographs of
Allogromia laticollaris and
Allogromia sp. (strain NF). Two distinct bridges occupying mutually exclusive zones between adjacent microtubules were identified.
Type I bridges displayed a single axial repeat (34 nm for
A. laticollaris and 28 nm for
Allogromia sp.) and
Type II bridges showed a typical 12-dimer helical superlattice pattern. In
A. laticollaris, the two types of bridges were morphologically distinct:
Type I bridges were aligned perpendicular to the microtubule wall and were 23-nm wide with an electron-lucent core;
Type II bridges were irregular filaments projecting from the microtubules at various angles. When compared with the known distribution of microtubule-associated proteins in other systems, our findings indicate that,
in viuo, Allogromia pseudopodial microtubules are decorated with MAP2-like bridges interrupted by discrete clusters of a dynein-like component. |
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ISSN: | 1047-8477 1095-8657 |
DOI: | 10.1016/1047-8477(90)90092-Q |