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Journal Articles
Intermicrotubular actin filaments in the transalar cytoskeletal arrays of Drosophila
M.M. Mogensen, J.B. Tucker
Journal of Cell Science 1988 91: 431-438;
M.M. Mogensen
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J.B. Tucker
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Summary

Rabbit muscle myosin subfragment S1 decorates 6 nm diameter filaments in Drosophila wing epidermal cells in the arrowhead fashion characteristic of the binding of subfragment S1 to actin filaments. The filaments in question are concentrated between microtubules that are mostly composed of 15 protofilaments and form cell surface-associated transcellular bundles. There are indications that the majority of the actin filaments have the same polarity and that, like the microtubules, they may elongate from sites at the apical surfaces of the cells. The bundles of F actin and microtubules occur in dorsal and ventral epidermal cell layers of a wing blade. They are joined in dorso-ventral pairs by attachment desmosomes. These transalar cytoskeletal arrays may provide an example of a situation where actin filaments operate as stiffeners rather than active generators of force in conjunction with myosin. The arrays probably function as noncontractile pillars to maintain basal cell extensions and keep haemocoelic spaces open in the highly folded and expanding wing blades of late pupae.

  • © 1988 by Company of Biologists
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Journal Articles
Intermicrotubular actin filaments in the transalar cytoskeletal arrays of Drosophila
M.M. Mogensen, J.B. Tucker
Journal of Cell Science 1988 91: 431-438;
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Intermicrotubular actin filaments in the transalar cytoskeletal arrays of Drosophila
M.M. Mogensen, J.B. Tucker
Journal of Cell Science 1988 91: 431-438;

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