نتایج جستجو برای: actinin

تعداد نتایج: 1770  

Journal: :The Journal of Cell Biology 1976
E Lazarides

During the spreading of a population of rat embryo cells, approximately 40% of the cells develop a strikingly regular network which precedes the formation of the straight actin filament bundles seen in the fully spread out cells. Immunofluorescence studies with antibodies specific for the skeletal muscle structural proteins actin, alpha-actinin, and tropomyosin indicate that this network is com...

Journal: :The Journal of Cell Biology 1986
G Langanger M Moeremans G Daneels A Sobieszek M De Brabander J De Mey

Antibodies to chicken gizzard myosin, subfragment 1, light chain 20, and light meromyosin were used to visualize myosin in stress fibers of cultured chicken cells. The antibody specificity was tested on purified gizzard proteins and total cell lysates using immunogold silver staining on protein blots. Immunofluorescence on cultured chicken fibroblasts and epithelial cells exhibited a similar st...

Journal: :Journal of cell science 2013
Bianca Kovac Jessica L Teo Tomi P Mäkelä Tea Vallenius

Cell migration and spreading is driven by actin polymerization and actin stress fibers. Actin stress fibers are considered to contain α-actinin crosslinkers and nonmuscle myosin II motors. Although several actin stress fiber subtypes have been identified in migrating and spreading cells, the degree of molecular diversity of their composition and the signaling pathways regulating fiber subtypes ...

Journal: :Journal of neurochemistry 2005
Joachim Kremerskothen Christian Plaas Stefan Kindler Michael Frotscher Angelika Barnekow

Synaptopodin (SYNPO) is a cytoskeletal protein that is preferentially located in mature dendritic spines, where it accumulates in the spine neck and closely associates with the spine apparatus. Formation of the spine apparatus critically depends on SYNPO. To further determine its molecular action, we screened for cellular binding partners. Using the yeast two-hybrid system and biochemical assay...

Journal: :Journal of cell science 2014
Antje Schaefer Joost Te Riet Katja Ritz Mark Hoogenboezem Eloise C Anthony Frederik P J Mul Carlie J de Vries Mat J Daemen Carl G Figdor Jaap D van Buul Peter L Hordijk

Chronic vascular inflammation is driven by interactions between activated leukocytes and the endothelium. Leukocyte β2-integrins bind to endothelial intercellular adhesion molecule 1 (ICAM-1), which allows leukocyte spreading, crawling and transendothelial migration. Leukocytes scan the vascular endothelium for permissive sites to transmigrate, which suggests that there is apical membrane heter...

Journal: :Journal of cell science 2004
Stefanie Carroll Shajia Lu Amy H Herrera Robert Horowits

N-RAP is a muscle-specific protein with an N-terminal LIM domain (LIM), C-terminal actin-binding super repeats homologous to nebulin (SR) and nebulin-related simple repeats (IB) in between the two. Based on biochemical data, immunofluorescence analysis of cultured embryonic chick cardiomyocytes and the targeting and phenotypic effects of these individual GFP-tagged regions of N-RAP, we proposed...

Journal: :The Journal of Cell Biology 1993
W Witke A Hofmann B Köppel M Schleicher A A Noegel

Dictyostelium alpha-actinin is a Ca(2+)-regulated F-actin cross-linking protein. To test the inhibitory function of the two EF hands, point mutations were introduced into either one or both Ca(2+)-binding sites. After mutations, the two EF hands were distinguishable with respect to their regulatory activities. Inactivation of EF hand I abolished completely the F-actin cross-linking activity of ...

2015
Stewart I. Head Stephen Chan Peter J. Houweling Kate G. R. Quinlan Robyn Murphy Sören Wagner Oliver Friedrich Kathryn N. North

Over 1.5 billion people lack the skeletal muscle fast-twitch fibre protein α-actinin-3 due to homozygosity for a common null polymorphism (R577X) in the ACTN3 gene. α-Actinin-3 deficiency is detrimental to sprint performance in elite athletes and beneficial to endurance activities. In the human genome, it is very difficult to find single-gene loss-of-function variants that bear signatures of po...

Journal: :Current Biology 2000
Danika L Goosney Rebekah DeVinney Richard A Pfuetzner Elizabeth A Frey Natalie C Strynadka B.Brett Finlay

Enteropathogenic Escherichia coli (EPEC) triggers a dramatic rearrangement of the host epithelial cell actin cytoskeleton to form an attaching and effacing lesion, or pedestal. The pathogen remains attached extracellularly to the host cell through the pedestal for the duration of the infection. At the tip of the pedestal is a bacterial protein, Tir, which is secreted from the bacterium into the...

Journal: :The Journal of Cell Biology 1982
R M Leven V T Nachmias

Megakaryocytes from guinea pig bone marrow were isolated and maintained in liquid culture and were treated with ADP, thrombin, arachidonic acid, or collagen. Megakaryocytes spread with an active ruffled membrane in response to ADP (1-100 microM), thrombin (1.0 U/ml), and arachidonic acid (50 microM) but responded to collagen surfaces only if fibronectin was added to the cultures. Spreading coul...

نمودار تعداد نتایج جستجو در هر سال

با کلیک روی نمودار نتایج را به سال انتشار فیلتر کنید