Antibodies against different cytoskeletal proteins were used to study the cytoskeletal organization of human spermatozoa. A positive staining with actin antibodies was seen in both the acrosomal cap region and the principal piece region of the tail. However, no staining was obtained with nitrobenzoxadiazol-phallacidin, suggesting that most of the actin was in the nonpolymerized form. Most of the myosin immunoreactivity was confined to a narrow band in the neck region of spermatozoa. Tubulin was located to the entire tail, whereas vimentin was only seen in a discrete band-like structure encircling the sperm head, apparently coinciding with the equatorial segment region. Surface staining of the spermatozoa with fluorochrome-coupled Helix pomatia agglutinin revealed a similar band-like structure that codistributed with the vimentin-specific staining. Instead, other lectin conjugates used labeled either the acrosomal cap region (peanut and soybean agglutinins), both the acrosomal cap and the postacrosomal region of the head (concanavalin A), or the whole sperm cell surface membrane (wheat germ and lens culinaris agglutinins and ricinus communis agglutinin I). In lectin blotting experiments, the Helix pomatia agglutinin-binding was assigned to a 80,000-mol-wt polypeptide which, together with vimentin, also resisted treatment with Triton X-100.Only the acrosomal cap and the principal piece of the tail were decorated with rabbit and hydridoma antibodies against an immunoanalogue of erythrocyte c~-spectrin (p230). p230 appeared to be the major calmodulin-binding polypeptide in spermatozoa, as shown by a direct overlay assay of electrophoretic blots of spermatozoa with t251-calmodulin.The results indicate that spermatozoa have a highly specialized cytoskeletal organization and that the distribution of actin, spectrin, and vimentin can be correlated with distinct surface specializations of the sperm cells. This suggests that cytoskeleton may regulate the maintenance of these surface assemblies and, hence, affect the spermatozoan function.Mammalian spermatozoa are highly specialized cells which have many unique properties (for a review, see reference 18). The major compartments of a fully developed spermatozoon are the head, containing the nucleus and the sharply demarcated acrosomal and postacrosomal domains, the neck region, and the tail which contains mitochondria in its middle piece (18). The acrosomal region undergoes drastic changes during acrosomal reaction upon contact with the oocyte (18,30,64). These consist of a dissolution of the acrosomal plasma membrane and exposure of the acrosomal sac which subsequently becomes fused with the oocyte membrane (e.g., reference 30).Although the structure and function of spermatozoa have been the subjects of an intensive study during recent years, many aspects of their motility, activation, and membrane THE JOURNAL OF CELL BIOLOGY . VOLUME 99 SEPTEMBER 1984 1083-1091 © The Rockefeller University Press • 0021-9525/84/09/1083/09 $1.00 organization are still poorly unders...
Biochemical and immunofluorescence studies have demonstrated that p36, a major substrate for the tyrosinespecific protein kinases induced by several sarcoma viruses and epidermal growth factor, is associated with plasma membranes and detergent-resistant cytoskeletal structures of cultured cells. We have used here polyclonal antisera and monoclonal antibodies in indirect immunofluorescence microscopy to study the subcellular location of p36 and the p230, which is a subplasmalemmal polypeptide showing immunologic cross-reactivity with erythrocyte a-spectrin. Both p36 and p230 showed a diffuse distribution in fixed and permeabilized cells and were localized in a surface lamina-like network in Triton-extracted cells. In double-staining experiments, an extensive co-distribution between these proteins was seen in detergent-treated cultured fibroblasts. These results, together with our previous work, suggest that the p36 protein is an integral part of the detergent-resistant proteinaceous network at the cytoplasmic face of the plasma membrane.
The Toxoplasma gondii antigenic components eliciting the immunoglobulin G (IgG), IgM, and IgA antibody responses were studied by using follow-up sera from a laboratory worker who developed an acute glandular toxoplasmosis after an accidental infection with the protozoa. IgG toxoplasma antibodies reacted with multiple components over a wide molecular weight range from 6,000 to 150,000. In contrast, IgM toxoplasma antibodies reacted predominantly with polypeptides of 6, 25, and 35 kilodaltons, which might be useful in new diagnostic procedures. The general pattern of antigenic components in the IgA toxoplasma antibody response closely resembled that in the IgM response, even though some characteristic features were constantly observed. The possibility that the restricted IgM and IgA antibody responses relate to the pathogenetic events in human toxoplasmosis is considered.
Extremely severe gliosis develops at the end stage of infantile neuronal ceroid-lipofuscinosis (INCL), a fatal encephalopathy characterized by accumulation of autofluorescent storage material in the brain and other tissues followed by a terminal subtotal neuronal and myelin loss. A major fraction of highly enriched intermediate filaments was obtained with a density gradient centrifugation method from INCL brain tissue, whereas the storage material represented only a minor fraction. SDS-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis of the filament fraction showed a major protein with molecular weight of 51 kD and three to four polypeptides of 40-48 kD identified as glial fibrillary acidic protein (GFAP) and its degradation products by the immunoblotting technique with monoclonal antibodies against GFAP. Immunization experiments with the isolated INCL glial filament fraction produced antibodies reacting only with GFAP but not with other types of intermediate filament proteins, furthermore indicating a high content of GFAP in the isolated fraction. No significant amounts of vimentin or other types of intermediate filament proteins could be detected. These results document the extremely high content of glial filaments at the terminal stage of INCL and suggest that INCL brain may serve as a good human model for studies on the composition of glial filaments in vivo and on the pathogenesis of gliosis.
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