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Cytoskeleton molecular components

More than 50 proteins have been discovered in the cytosol of nonmuscle cells that bind to actin and affect the assembly and disassembly of actin filaments or the cross-linking of actin filaments with each other, with other filamentous components of the cytoskeleton, or with the plasma membrane. Collectively, these are known as actin-binding proteins (ABPs). Their mechanisms of actions are complex and are subject to regulation by specific binding affinities to actin and other molecules, cooperation or competition with other ABPs, local changes in the concentrations of ions in the cytosol, and physical forces (Way and Weeds, 1990). Classifications of ABPs have been proposed that are based on their site of binding to actin and on their molecular structure and function (Pollard and Cooper, 1986 Herrmann, 1989 Pollard et al., 1994). These include the following ... [Pg.22]

Two of the cytoskeletal components, the actin filaments and the microtubules have been studied with molecular rotors. The main component of the actin filaments is the actin protein, a 44 kD molecule found in two forms within the cell the monomeric globulin form (G-actin) and the filament form (F-actin). Actin binds with ATP to form the microfilaments that are responsible for cell shape and motility. The rate of polymerization from the monomeric form plays a vital role in cell movement and signaling. Actin filaments form the cortical mesh that is the basis of the cytoskeleton. The cytoskeleton has an active relationship with the plasma membrane. Functional proteins found in both structures... [Pg.297]

Properties of slow transport suggest molecular mechanisms. Information about mechanisms of slow axonal transport is relatively limited. They are energy-dependent and require an intact axonal cytoskeleton. Indirect evidence suggests that MTs play a critical role, because transport of NFs can be pharmacologically uncoupled from MT transport without eliminating slow transport [33]. In contrast, all agents that disrupt MTs appear to block slow transport of all components. While this does not rule out a role for the MF cytoskeleton in slow transport movements, MTs appear to provide motive force for other elements of the cytoskeleton. [Pg.494]

The cytoskeleton The molecular framework regulating cell shape and the traffic of intracellular components... [Pg.128]

Until the past decade, the cytoplasm was widely considered to be structurally unorganized with the main division of labor at the organellar level. Certainly, relatively little was known about the nature of the cyto-skeleton (with the notable exception of the mitotic apparatus and striated muscle), and the dynamics of cytoplasmic behavior were conceptualized vaguely in terms of sol-gel transitions without a sound molecular foundation. Substantial improvements in electron, light, and fluorescence microscopy, as well as the isolation of discrete protein components of the cytoskeleton, have led the way to a much better appreciation of the structural organization of the cytoplasm. Indeed, the lacelike network of thin filaments, intermediate filaments, and microtubules in nonmuscle cells is as familiar today as the organelles identified... [Pg.133]

There are several self-assembling macromolecules that are of interest to us in this text. They include (1) collagen, the primary structural material found in the extracellular matrix (2) actin, a component of the cell cytoskeleton that is involved in cell locomotion and in formation of the thin filaments of muscle (3) microtubules, which are involved in cell mitosis, movement, and organelle movement and finally (4) fibrinogen, which forms fibrin networks that minimize bleeding from cut vessels. Self-assembly is important in these systems because the function of these macromolecules can be modified via processes that increase the molecular axial ratio and hence decrease the solubility. [Pg.143]

Myosins, kinesins, and dyneins move by cycling between states with different affinities for the long, polymeric macromolecules that serve as their tracks. For myosin, the molecular track is a polymeric form of actin, a 42-kd protein that is one of the most abundant proteins in eukaryotic cells, typically accounting for as much as 10% of the total protein. Actin polymers are continually being assembled and disassembled in cells in a highly dynamic manner, accompanied by the hydrolysis of ATP. On the microscopic scale, actin filaments participate in the dynamic reshaping of the cytoskeleton and the cell itself and in other motility mechanisms that do not include myosin. In muscle, myosin and actin together are the key components responsible for muscle contraction. [Pg.1406]


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Cytoskeleton

Molecular components

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