Fluorescence anisotropy imaging microscopy maps calmodulin binding during cellular contraction and locomotion.
Open Access
- 1 June 1993
- journal article
- Published by Rockefeller University Press in The Journal of cell biology
- Vol. 121 (5) , 1095-1107
- https://doi.org/10.1083/jcb.121.5.1095
Abstract
Calmodulin is a calcium transducer that activates key regulatory and structural proteins through calcium-induced binding to the target proteins. A fluorescent analog of calmodulin in conjunction with ratio imaging, relative to a volume indicator, has demonstrated that calmodulin is uniformly distributed in serum-deprived fibroblasts and there is no immediate change in the distribution upon stimulation with complete serum. The same fluorescent analog of calmodulin together with steady state fluorescence anisotropy imaging microscopy has been used to define the temporal and spatial changes in calmodulin binding to cellular targets during stimulation of serum-deprived fibroblasts and in polarized fibroblasts during wound healing. In serum-deprived fibroblasts, which exhibit a low free calcium ion concentration, a majority of the fluorescent analog of calmodulin remained unbound (fraction bound, fB < 10%). However, upon stimulation of the serum-deprived cells with complete serum, calmodulin binding (maximum fB approximately 95%) was directly correlated with the time course of the elevation and decline of the free calcium ion concentration, while the contraction of stress fibers continued for an hour or more. Calmodulin binding was also elevated in the leading lamellae of fibroblasts (maximum FB approximately 50%) during the lamellar contraction phase of wound healing and was spatially correlated with the contraction of transverse fibers containing myosin II. Highly polarized and motile fibroblasts exhibited the highest anisotropy (calmodulin binding) in the retracting tails and in association with contracting transverse fibers in the cortex of the cell. These results suggest that local activation of myosin II-based contractions involves the local binding of calmodulin to target proteins. The results also demonstrate a powerful yet simple mode of light microscopy that will be valuable for mapping molecular binding of suitably labeled macromolecules in living cells.Keywords
This publication has 40 references indexed in Scilit:
- Centripetal transport of cytoplasm, actin, and the cell surface in lamellipodia of fibroblastsCell Motility, 1988
- The distribution of calmodulin in living mitotic cellsExperimental Cell Research, 1983
- Ultrastructural immunocytochemical localization of calmodulin in cultured cells.Journal of Histochemistry & Cytochemistry, 1983
- Molecular dynamics of calmodulin as monitored by fluorescence anisotropyArchives of Biochemistry and Biophysics, 1982
- Fluorescent analog cytochemistry of contractile proteins.1982
- Characterization of antibodies to smooth muscle myosin kinase and their use in localizing myosin kinase in nonmuscle cells.Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 1981
- Mechanism of activation of cyclic nucleotide phosphodiesterase: requirement of the binding of four Ca2+ to calmodulin for activation.Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 1981
- Fluorescently labelled molecules as probes of the structure and function of living cellsNature, 1980
- Carbocyanine dye orientation in red cell membrane studied by microscopic fluorescence polarizationBiophysical Journal, 1979
- Molecular cytochemistry: incorporation of fluorescently labeled actin into living cells.Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 1978