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Research Article |
Department of Biology, University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, PA 19104-6018, USA
Author for correspondence (e-mail: gguild{at}sas.upenn.edu)
Accepted 26 October 2001
Drosophila bristle cells form enormous extensions that are
supported by equally impressive scaffolds of modular, polarized and
crosslinked actin filament bundles. As the cell matures and support is taken
over by the secreted cuticle, the actin scaffold is completely removed. This
removal begins during cell elongation and proceeds via an orderly series of
steps that operate on each module. Using confocal and electron microscopy, we
found that the
500-filament modules are fractured longitudinally into
25-50-filament subbundles, indicating that module breakdown is the reverse of
assembly. Time-lapse confocal analysis of GFP-decorated bundles in live cells
showed that modules were shortened by subunit removal from filament barbed
ends, again indicating that module breakdown is the reverse of assembly.
Module shortening takes place at a fairly slow rate of
1µm/hour,
implying that maximally crosslinked modules are not rapidly depolymerized.
Barbed-end depolymerization was prevented with jasplakinolide and accelerated
with cycloheximide, indicating that barbed-end maintenance requires continuous
protein synthesis. Subbundle adhesion was lost in the presence of
cytochalasin, indicating that continuous actin polymerization is required.
Thus, these polarized actin filament bundles are dynamic structures that
require continuous maintenance owing to protein and actin filament turnover.
We propose that after cell elongation, maintenance falls behind turnover,
resulting in the removal of this modular cytoskeleton.
Key words: Cytoskeleton, Crosslink, Development, Cycloheximide, Cytochalasin
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