Locomotory behaviour of epitheliocytes and fibroblasts on metallic grids. (1/299)

Behaviour of epitheliocytes and fibroblasts on special discontinuous substrata (metallic grids with square openings of 45x45 microm2) was examined in order to compare the ability of these cells to spread in two mutually perpendicular directions and to stretch over the void spaces. Two cell types with typical fibroblastic morphology, the AGO 1523 line of human foreskin fibroblasts and secondary cultures of mouse embryo fibroblasts, and three cell types with typical epithelial morphology, primary mouse hepatocytes, the IAR-2 line of rat liver cells and the MDCK line of canine kidney epithelial cells (clone 20) were used. We also examined the epitheliocytes (MDCK cells, clone 20) transformed to fibroblast-like morphology by treatment with hepatocyte growth factor/scatter factor (HGF/SF). Time-lapse video microscopy, scanning electron microscopy and immunofluorescence microscopy were used to examine cell reorganizations at various stages of spreading. It was found that early stages of spreading of fibroblasts and epitheliocytes were similar: the cell spread along two bars, perpendicular to each other (bar and crossbar), with the formation of a small triangular lamellar cytoplasm stretched over the opening. Later central parts of the bodies of the fibroblasts retracted from the bars so that the cells remained attached only by their polar lamellae. Successive expansions and partial retractions of these lamellae led to elongation of the cell body crossing several openings of the grid. Epitheliocytes, in contrast to fibroblasts, at the late stages of spreading did not retract their bodies and did not contract polar lamellae. As a result, their central lamellae stretched progressively over the openings. As a result of the treatment of MDCK epitheliocytes with HGF/SF the behaviour of the cells on the grids became similar to that of fibroblasts. It is suggested that these distinct spreading patterns of epitheliocytes and fibroblasts are due to the type-specific differences in the actin-myosin cortex. Experiments with microtubule-specific drugs, colcemid and taxol, indicate that the organization of this cortex is under microtubular control.  (+info)

Expression of an isoform of the novel signal transduction protein ST5 is linked to cell morphology. (2/299)

The human ST5 gene is expressed as 4.6, 3.1 and 2.8 kb transcripts encoding putative 126, 82 and 70 kDa proteins that function in the MAP kinase signaling pathway in transient expression assays. Expression of the 2.8 kb transcript correlates with reduced tumorigenicity in HeLa-fibroblast hybrids, suggesting a role in tumor suppression. We now report the detection of ST5 proteins in cellular extracts, demonstrate specific expression of p70 in non-tumorigenic HeLa-fibroblast hybrids, extend the correlation between p70 expression and cellular morphology to a wide variety of cell lines, and provide direct evidence that p70 can effect changes in cell growth and morphology. ST5 proteins were identified in extracts of human, mouse and simian epithelial cells and fibroblasts, but were absent from lymphoid cells. Transfection of the 2.8 kb cDNA into a p70-negative mouse fibroblast line yielded stable transfectants with a flattened, less refractile morphology relative to controls. The p70 expressing clones had initial growth rates similar to those of control cells but their saturation density was reduced threefold, suggesting a restoration of contact-regulated growth. In conjunction with previous findings, these results suggest that ST5 proteins participate directly in events affecting cytoskeletal organization and tumorigenicity.  (+info)

Inhibition of glucocorticoid receptor nucleocytoplasmic shuttling by okadaic acid requires intact cytoskeleton. (3/299)

It has been shown previously that glucocorticoid receptors (GRs) that have undergone hormone-dependent translocation to the nucleus and have subsequently exited the nucleus upon hormone withdrawal are unable to recycle into the nucleus if cells are treated during hormone withdrawal with okadaic acid, a cell-permeable inhibitor of certain serine/threonine protein phosphatases. Using a green fluorescent protein (GFP) GR chimera (GFP-GR), we report here that okadaic acid inhibition of steroid-dependent receptor recycling to the nucleus is abrogated in cells treated for 1 h with colcemid to eliminate microtubule networks prior to steroid addition. After withdrawal of colcemid, normal cytoskeletal architecture is restored and okadaic acid inhibition of steroid-dependent GFP-GR nuclear recycling is restored. When okadaic acid is present during hormone withdrawal, GR that is recycled to the cytoplasm becomes complexed with hsp90 and binds steroid, but it does not undergo the normal agonist-dependent dissociation from hsp90 upon retreatment with steroid. However, when the cytoskeleton is disrupted by colcemid, the GR in okadaic acid-treated cells recycles from the cytoplasm to the nucleus in an agonist-dependent manner without dissociating from hsp90. This suggests that under physiological conditions where the cytoskeleton is intact, a dephosphorylation event is required for loss of high affinity binding to hsp90 that is required for receptor translocation through the cytoplasm to the nucleus along cytoskeletal tracts.  (+info)

Stable expression in Chinese hamster ovary cells of mutated tau genes causing frontotemporal dementia and parkinsonism linked to chromosome 17 (FTDP-17). (4/299)

Extensive neuronal loss and aggregation of tau as cytoplasmic inclusions in neurons and glial cells in selected cortical and subcortical regions is the most striking characteristic of frontotemporal dementia and parkinsonism linked to chromosome 17, which is caused by exonic or intronic mutations in the tau gene. Here, we examined the effects of four exonic mutations in four-repeat tau using stably transfected Chinese hamster ovary cells. The proportion of polymerized tubulin was the largest in the P301L transfectant. G272V and P301L transfectants showed greater instability of microtubules in the presence of Colcemid than wild-type tau, V337M, or R406W transfectants. Thus no distinct phenotypes were shared by the mutant tau transfectants with regard to microtubule assembly and stability. Unexpectedly, R406W showed low and negligible levels of phosphorylation at Thr 231 and Ser 396, respectively, in the transfectant. This presents a sharp contrast to the observation that tau aggregates in R406W-affected brains are heavily phosphorylated at these two sites. This result suggests that hyperphosphorylation at these sites cannot occur in the tau R406W bound to microtubules, and thus that the hyperphosphorylated species of tau may be generated only after disruption of microtubules.  (+info)

Alteration of microtubule polymerization modulates arteriolar vasomotor tone. (5/299)

Microtubules are important cytoskeletal elements that have been shown to play a major role in many cellular processes because of their mechanical properties and/or their participation in various cell signaling pathways. We tested the hypothesis that depolymerization of microtubules would alter vascular smooth muscle (VSM) tone and hence contractile function. In our studies, isolated cremaster arterioles exhibited significant vasoconstriction that developed over a 20- to 40-min period when they were treated with microtubule depolymerizing drugs colchicine (10 microM), nocodazole (10 microM), or demecolcine (10 microM). Immunofluorescent labeling of microtubules in cultured rat VSM revealed that both colchicine and nocodazole caused microtubule depolymerization over a similar time course. The vasoconstriction was maintained over a wide range of intraluminal pressures (30-170 cmH(2)O). The increased tone was not affected by endothelial denudation, suggesting that it was due to an effect on VSM. Microtubule depolymerization with demecolcine or colchicine had no effect on VSM intracellular Ca(2+) concentration ([Ca(2+)](i)). These data indicate that microtubules significantly interact with processes leading to the expression of vasomotor tone. The mechanism responsible for the effect of microtubules on vasomotor tone appears to be independent of both the endothelium and an increase in VSM [Ca(2+)](i).  (+info)

c-Myc overexpression uncouples DNA replication from mitosis. (6/299)

c-myc has been shown to regulate G(1)/S transition, but a role for c-myc in other phases of the cell cycle has not been identified. Exposure of cells to colcemid activates the mitotic spindle checkpoint and arrests cells transiently in metaphase. After prolonged colcemid exposure, the cells withdraw from mitosis and enter a G(1)-like state. In contrast to cells in G(1), colcemid-arrested cells have decreased G(1) cyclin-dependent kinase activity and show hypophosphorylation of the retinoblastoma protein. We have found that overexpression of c-myc causes colcemid-treated human and rodent cells to become either apoptotic or polyploid by replicating DNA without chromosomal segregation. Although c-myc-induced polyploidy is not inhibited by wild-type p53 in immortalized murine fibroblasts, overexpression of c-myc in primary fibroblasts resulted in massive apoptosis of colcemid-treated cells. We surmise that additional genes are altered in immortalized cells to suppress the apoptotic pathway and allow c-myc-overexpressing cells to progress forward in the presence of colcemid. Our results also suggest that c-myc induces DNA rereplication in this G(1)-like state by activating CDK2 activity. These observations indicate that activation of c-myc may contribute to the genomic instability commonly found in human cancers.  (+info)

Quantitative measurement of mammalian chromosome mitotic loss rates using the green fluorescent protein. (7/299)

We have measured the mitotic loss rates of mammalian chromosomes in cultured cells. The green fluorescent protein (GFP) gene was incorporated into a non-essential chromosome so that cells containing the chromosome fluoresced green, while those lacking it did not. The proportions of fluorescent and non-fluorescent cells were measured by fluorescence activated cell sorter (FACS) analysis. Loss rates ranged from 0.005% to 0.20% per cell division in mouse LA-9 cells, and from 0.02% to 0.40% in human HeLa cells. The rate of loss was elevated by treatment with aneugens, demonstrating that the system rapidly identifies agents which induce chromosome loss in mammalian cells.  (+info)

Induction of polyploidy and apoptosis after exposure to high concentrations of the spindle poison nocodazole. (8/299)

The proportions of aneuploid/polyploid versus euploid cells formed after treatment with spindle poisons like nocodazole are of course dependent on the relative survival of cells with numerical chromosome aberrations. This work aimed at studying the survival of polyploid cells formed after treatment with a nocodazole concentration sufficient to significantly decrease tubulin polymerization (0.1 microg/ml). First, normal primary lymphocytes were analysed and the following complementary chromosomal parameters were quantified: mitotic index, frequency of abnormal mitoses, polyploid metaphases and apoptotic cells. The results clearly indicate a positive correlation between abnormal mitotic figures, apoptosis and the induction of polyploidy. They therefore led to a single cell approach in which both apoptosis and polyploidy induction could be scored in the same cell. For this purpose, actively proliferating cells are required and two human leukaemic cell lines were used, KS (p53-positive) and K562 (p53-negative), which have a near-triploid karyotype. Cells were separated into an apoptotic and a viable fraction by means of annexin-V staining and flow cytometry. In KS, treatment with nocodazole induced a similar fraction of hexaploid cells in both the viable and apoptotic fraction, but no dodecaploid cells were ever observed. In contrast, a population of dodecaploid cells (essentially viable) was clearly observed in the K562 cell line. The results in KS, as compared with K562, confirm that wild-type p53 can prevent further cycling of polyploid cells by blocking rereplication. The most probable explanation for these data is that not only the mitotic spindle but also interphase microtubules are sensitive to nocodazole treatment. Our data thus strongly suggest that besides the G(1)/S checkpoint under the control of p53, the G(2)/M transition may be sensitive to depolymerization of microtubules, possibly under the control of Cdc2, Bcl-2, Raf-1 and/or Rho.  (+info)