Using a glycerination procedure designed to avoid excessive plasmolysis or disruption of the ectoplasm, microfilaments in bundles at the ectoplasm-endoplasm interface of Nitella internode cell segments were found to bind rabbit heavy meromyosin (HMM) in situ. All HMM arrowheads in a bundle seem to have the same polarity and many lie in register as judged from the electron micrographs; the arrowhead periodicity is approximately 380 . The decorated microfilaments are thus similar to those seen in negatively stained cytoplasmic suspensions of internode cells. In glycerinated material, as well as in suspensions, the microfilaments are closely associated with chloroplasts. The microfilaments lie adjacent to or are attached to the chloroplast envelope. The results provide further evidence that the microfilaments thought to play a role in cytoplasmic streaming in vivo in Nitella consist of actin and suggest that they may be anchored to the chloroplasts.
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1 April 1975
Article|
April 01 1975
Identification of actin in situ at the ectoplasm-endoplasm interface of Nitella. Microfilament-chloroplast association.
B A Palevitz
P K Hepler
Online ISSN: 1540-8140
Print ISSN: 0021-9525
J Cell Biol (1975) 65 (1): 29–38.
Citation
B A Palevitz, P K Hepler; Identification of actin in situ at the ectoplasm-endoplasm interface of Nitella. Microfilament-chloroplast association.. J Cell Biol 1 April 1975; 65 (1): 29–38. doi: https://doi.org/10.1083/jcb.65.1.29
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