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Hoffmann, R. A wiki for the life sciences where authorship matters. Nature Genetics (2008)
 
 
 
 
 

The participation of alpha-actinin in the capping of cell membrane components.

By means of double fluorescence staining experiments, intracellular alpha-actinin was found to accumulate under caps and patches induced in several cells by a variety of ligands. This phenomenon was demonstrated in lymphocytes and lymphoma cells treated with anti-H-2 sera; spleen lymphocytes treated with concanavalin A or anti-immunoglobulin antibodies, and VSV-infected mouse fibroblast line MC57 treated with antiserum against viral antigens. It occurred during both rapid and slow capping processes, and could be obtained by either direct or indirect ligand-induced redistribution. These observations were carried out on whole cells. For other cytoskeletal proteins such as filamin, tropomyosin and myosin, a similar accumulation under caps was not readily apparent using whole cell mounts, although earlier experiments with frozen-sectioned cells had shown such an enrichment of myosin (as well as actin). The enrichment of alpha-actinin under the clustered surface molecules was already apparent in early stages (patching) of the capping process, with or without 10 mM sodium azide present. Prolonged incubation of the cells with the different ligands resulted in endocytosis of the ligand-receptor complex. alpha-Actinin was not associated with the inernalized complex, however, suggesting that it may dissociate from the patched or capped surface structures at some stage during endocytosis.[1]

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