AI Article Synopsis

  • The protein α-actinin is crucial for the structure of focal adhesions in both vertebrate cells and C. elegans muscle tissue.
  • Researchers created a mutant C. elegans strain lacking the α-actinin gene to investigate its role.
  • The findings showed that while certain focal adhesion proteins are still present, the mutant has structural abnormalities and impaired movement, suggesting that α-actinin is essential for effective muscle function and force transmission.

Article Abstract

The actin binding protein α-actinin is a major component of focal adhesions found in vertebrate cells and of focal-adhesion-like structures found in the body wall muscle of the nematode Caenorhabditis elegans. To study its in vivo function in this genetic model system, we isolated a strain carrying a deletion of the single C. elegans α-actinin gene. We assessed the cytological organization of other C. elegans focal adhesion proteins and the ultrastructure of the mutant. The mutant does not have normal dense bodies, as observed by electron microscopy; however, these dense-body-like structures still contain the focal adhesion proteins integrin, talin, and vinculin, as observed by immunofluorescence microscopy. Actin is found in normal-appearing I-bands, but with abnormal accumulations near muscle cell membranes. Although swimming in water appeared grossly normal, use of automated methods for tracking the locomotion of individual worms revealed a defect in bending. We propose that the reduced motility of α-actinin null is due to abnormal dense bodies that are less able to transmit the forces generated by actin/myosin interactions.

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http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3440862PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.jmb.2010.08.055DOI Listing

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