Associations of elements of the Golgi apparatus with microtubules.
Open Access
- 1 September 1984
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Rockefeller University Press in The Journal of cell biology
- Vol. 99 (3) , 1092-1100
- https://doi.org/10.1083/jcb.99.3.1092
Abstract
The intracellular spatial relationships between elements of the Golgi apparatus (GA) and microtubules in interphase cells have been explored by double immunofluorescence microscopy. By using cultured cells infected with the temperature-sensitive Orsay-45 mutant of vesicular stomatitis virus and a temperature shift-down protocol, we visualized functional elements of the GA by immunolabeling of the G protein of the virus that was arrested in the GA during its intracellular passage to the plasma membrane 13 min after the temperature shift-down. Complete disassembly of the cytoplasmic microtubules by nocodazole at the nonpermissive temperature before the temperature shift led to the dispersal of the GA elements, from their normal compact perinuclear configuration close to the microtubule-organizing center (MTOC) into the cell periphery. Washout of the nocodazole that led to the reassembly of the microtubules from the MTOC also led to the recompaction of the GA elements to their normal configuration. During this recompaction process, GA elements were seen in close lateral apposition to microtubules. In cells treated with nocodazole followed by taxol, an MTOC developed, but most of the microtubules were free of the MTOC and were assembled into bundles in the cell periphery. Under these circumstances, the GA elements that had been dispersed into the cell periphery by the nocodazole treatment remained dispersed despite the presence of an MTOC. In cells treated directly with taxol, free microtubules were seen in the cytoplasm in widely different, bundled configurations from one cell to another, but, in each case, elements of the GA appeared to be associated with one of the two end regions of the microtubule bundles, and to be uncorrelated with the locations of the vimentin intermediate filaments in these cells. These results are interpreted to suggest two types of associations of elements of the GA with microtubules: one lateral, and the other (more stable) end-on. The end-on association is suggested to involve the minus-end regions of microtubules, and it is proposed that this accounts for the GA-MTOC association in normal cells.This publication has 33 references indexed in Scilit:
- Effect of microtubule assembly status on the intracellular processing and surface expression of an integral protein of the plasma membrane.The Journal of cell biology, 1984
- Immunoelectron microscopic studies of the intracellular transport of the membrane glycoprotein (G) of vesicular stomatitis virus in infected Chinese hamster ovary cells.The Journal of cell biology, 1983
- A rat monoclonal antibody reacting specifically with the tyrosylated form of alpha-tubulin. II. Effects on cell movement, organization of microtubules, and intermediate filaments, and arrangement of Golgi elements.The Journal of cell biology, 1983
- A monoclonal antibody that recognizes Golgi-associated protein of cultured fibroblast cells.The Journal of cell biology, 1982
- Decoration of spindle microtubules with Dynein: evidence for uniform polarity.The Journal of cell biology, 1981
- Structural polarity of kinetochore microtubules in PtK1 cells.The Journal of cell biology, 1981
- Subcellular compartmentalization of saccharide moieties in cultured normal and malignant cells.The Journal of cell biology, 1980
- Polarity of microtubules of the mitotic spindleJournal of Molecular Biology, 1978
- Biochemical and immunological analysis of rapidly purified 10-nm filaments from baby hamster kidney (BHK-21) cells.The Journal of cell biology, 1978
- Influence of colchicine and vinblastine on the Golgi complex and matrix deposition in chondrocyte aggregatesExperimental Cell Research, 1975