Actin Filament Turnover Regulated by Cross-linking Accounts for the Size, Shape, Location, and Number of Actin Bundles inDrosophilaBristles
Open Access
- 1 October 2003
- journal article
- Published by American Society for Cell Biology (ASCB) in Molecular Biology of the Cell
- Vol. 14 (10) , 3953-3966
- https://doi.org/10.1091/mbc.e03-03-0158
Abstract
Drosophila bristle cells are shaped during growth by longitudinal bundles of cross-linked actin filaments attached to the plasma membrane. We used confocal and electron microscopy to examine actin bundle structure and found that during bristle elongation, snarls of uncross-linked actin filaments and small internal bundles also form in the shaft cytoplasm only to disappear within 4 min. Thus, formation and later removal of actin filaments are prominent features of growing bristles. These transient snarls and internal bundles can be stabilized by culturing elongating bristles with jasplakinolide, a membrane-permeant inhibitor of actin filament depolymerization, resulting in enormous numbers of internal bundles and uncross-linked filaments. Examination of bundle disassembly in mutant bristles shows that plasma membrane association and cross-bridging adjacent actin filaments together inhibits depolymerization. Thus, highly cross-bridged and membrane-bound actin filaments turn over slowly and persist, whereas poorly cross-linked filaments turnover more rapidly. We argue that the selection of stable bundles relative to poorly cross-bridged filaments can account for the size, shape, number, and location of the longitudinal actin bundles in bristles. As a result, filament turnover plays an important role in regulating cytoskeleton assembly and consequently cell shape.Keywords
This publication has 26 references indexed in Scilit:
- The growth ofDrosophilabristles and laterals is not restricted to the tip or baseJournal of Cell Science, 2002
- Thin filaments elongate from their pointed ends during myofibril assembly in Drosophila indirect flight muscleThe Journal of cell biology, 2001
- Intraflagellar transport balances continuous turnover of outer doublet microtubulesThe Journal of cell biology, 2001
- F-Actin Bundles Are Derivatives of Microvilli: What Does This Tell Us about How Bundles Might Form?The Journal of cell biology, 2000
- F-Actin Bundles Are Derivatives of Microvilli: What Does This Tell US about How Bundles Might Form?The Journal of cell biology, 2000
- Why Are Two Different Cross-linkers Necessary for Actin Bundle Formation In Vivo and What Does Each Cross-link Contribute?The Journal of cell biology, 1998
- F-actin bundles in Drosophila bristles are assembled from modules composed of short filaments.The Journal of cell biology, 1996
- Synaptic Activity and the Construction of Cortical CircuitsScience, 1996
- F actin bundles in Drosophila bristles. I. Two filament cross-links are involved in bundling.The Journal of cell biology, 1995
- Inhibition of actin filament depolymerization by the Dictyostelium 30,000-D actin-bundling protein.The Journal of cell biology, 1992