222 research outputs found
Who Needs Microtubules? Myogenic Reorganization of MTOC, Golgi Complex and ER Exit Sites Persists Despite Lack of Normal Microtubule Tracks
A wave of structural reorganization involving centrosomes, microtubules, Golgi complex and ER exit sites takes place early during skeletal muscle differentiation and completely remodels the secretory pathway. The mechanism of these changes and their functional implications are still poorly understood, in large part because all changes occur seemingly simultaneously. In an effort to uncouple the reorganizations, we have used taxol, nocodazole, and the specific GSK3-β inhibitor DW12, to disrupt the dynamic microtubule network of differentiating cultures of the mouse skeletal muscle cell line C2. Despite strong effects on microtubules, cell shape and cell fusion, none of the treatments prevented early differentiation. Redistribution of centrosomal proteins, conditional on differentiation, was in fact increased by taxol and nocodazole and normal in DW12. Redistributions of Golgi complex and ER exit sites were incomplete but remained tightly linked under all circumstances, and conditional on centrosomal reorganization. We were therefore able to uncouple microtubule reorganization from the other events and to determine that centrosomal proteins lead the reorganization hierarchy. In addition, we have gained new insight into structural and functional aspects of the reorganization of microtubule nucleation during myogenesis
Radiation-magnetohydrodynamic simulations of the photoionisation of magnetised globules
We present the first three-dimensional radiation-magnetohydrodynamic
simulations of the photoionisation of a dense, magnetised molecular globule by
an external source of ultraviolet radiation. We find that, for the case of a
strong ionising field, significant deviations from the non-magnetic evolution
are seen when the initial magnetic field threading the globule has an
associated magnetic pressure that is greater than one hundred times the gas
pressure. In such a strong-field case, the photoevaporating globule will adopt
a flattened or "curled up" shape, depending on the initial field orientation,
and magnetic confinement of the ionised photoevaporation flow can lead to
recombination and subsequent fragmentation during advanced stages of the
globule evolution. We find suggestive evidence that such magnetic effects may
be important in the formation of bright, bar-like emission features in H II
regions. We include simple but realistic fits to heating and cooling rates in
the neutral and molecular gas in the vicinity of a high-mass star cluster and
show that the frequently used isothermal approximation can lead to an
overestimate of the importance of gravitational instability in the radiatively
imploded globule. For globules within 2 parsecs of a high-mass star cluster, we
find that heating by stellar x rays prevents the molecular gas from cooling
below 50 K.Comment: 19 pages, 16 figures, many in full color. Accepted by MNRAS. Updated
to reflect the accepted version. Significantly expanded and improved with
respect to the first version. Well worth downloading agai
Wolbachia Bacteria Reside in Host Golgi-Related Vesicles Whose Position Is Regulated by Polarity Proteins
Wolbachia pipientis are intracellular symbiotic bacteria extremely common in various organisms including Drosophila melanogaster, and are known for their ability to induce changes in host reproduction. These bacteria are present in astral microtubule-associated vesicular structures in host cytoplasm, but little is known about the identity of these vesicles. We report here that Wolbachia are restricted only to a group of Golgi-related vesicles concentrated near the site of membrane biogenesis and minus-ends of microtubules. The Wolbachia vesicles were significantly mislocalized in mutant embryos defective in cell/planar polarity genes suggesting that cell/tissue polarity genes are required for apical localization of these Golgi-related vesicles. Furthermore, two of the polarity proteins, Van Gogh/Strabismus and Scribble, appeared to be present in these Golgi-related vesicles. Thus, establishment of polarity may be closely linked to the precise insertion of Golgi vesicles into the new membrane addition site
Retrograde traffic in the biosynthetic-secretory route
In the biosynthetic-secretory route from the rough endoplasmic reticulum, across the pre-Golgi intermediate compartments, the Golgi apparatus stacks, trans Golgi network, and post-Golgi organelles, anterograde transport is accompanied and counterbalanced by retrograde traffic of both membranes and contents. In the physiologic dynamics of cells, retrograde flow is necessary for retrieval of molecules that escaped from their compartments of function, for keeping the compartments’ balances, and maintenance of the functional integrities of organelles and compartments along the secretory route, for repeated use of molecules, and molecule repair. Internalized molecules may be transported in retrograde direction along certain sections of the secretory route, and compartments and machineries of the secretory pathway may be misused by toxins. An important example is the toxin of Shigella dysenteriae, which has been shown to travel from the cell surface across endosomes, and the Golgi apparatus en route to the endoplasmic reticulum, and the cytosol, where it exerts its deleterious effects. Most importantly in medical research, knowledge about the retrograde cellular pathways is increasingly being utilized for the development of strategies for targeted delivery of drugs to the interior of cells. Multiple details about the molecular transport machineries involved in retrograde traffic are known; a high number of the molecular constituents have been characterized, and the complicated fine structural architectures of the compartments involved become more and more visible. However, multiple contradictions exist, and already established traffic models again are in question by contradictory results obtained with diverse cell systems, and/or different techniques. Additional problems arise by the fact that the conditions used in the experimental protocols frequently do not reflect the physiologic situations of the cells. Regular and pathologic situations often are intermingled, and experimental treatments by themselves change cell organizations. This review addresses physiologic and pathologic situations, tries to correlate results obtained by different cell biologic techniques, and asks questions, which may be the basis and starting point for further investigations
Knocking at the brain’s door: intravital two-photon imaging of autoreactive T cell interactions with CNS structures
Since the first applications of two-photon microscopy in immunology 10 years ago, the number of studies using this advanced technology has increased dramatically. The two-photon microscope allows long-term visualization of cell motility in the living tissue with minimal phototoxicity. Using this technique, we examined brain autoantigen-specific T cell behavior in experimental autoimmune encephalitomyelitis, the animal model of human multiple sclerosis. Even before disease symptoms appear, the autoreactive T cells arrive at their target organ. There they crawl along the intraluminal surface of central nervous system (CNS) blood vessels before they extravasate. In the perivascular environment, the T cells meet phagocytes that present autoantigens. This contact activates the T cells to penetrate deep into the CNS parenchyma, where the infiltrated T cells again can find antigen, be further activated, and produce cytokines, resulting in massive immune cell recruitment and clinical disease
Nicolas Pélissier, Marc Marti, dirs, Le storytelling. Succès des histoires, histoire d’un succès
L’ouvrage est un ensemble de textes qui ont été soumis à l’évaluation par un comité scientifique à l’issue de la journée d’étude ayant eu lieu à l’université Nice Sophia Antipolis en novembre 2011 : « Du storytelling à la mise en récit des mondes sociaux : la révolution narrative a-t-elle eu lieu ? ». Onze contributions y sont présentées. Après une introduction de Marc Marti et Nicolas Pélissier (pp. 11-22) présentant très brièvement l’histoire de la controverse sur le storytelling et regroup..
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