AI Article Synopsis

  • The study utilized structured illumination microscopy (SIM) to create detailed super-resolution images of muscle attachment structures in C. elegans, revealing distinct localization patterns of M-line components.
  • Proteins associated with β-integrin were found in discrete segments with gaps, while others appeared as continuous lines throughout the M-line, indicating differing spatial organization.
  • Electron microscopy (EM) further supported these findings by showing "zipper-like" structures at cell boundaries, and the study suggested that myofilament tension is essential for the proper formation and maintenance of dense body shapes in muscle cells.

Article Abstract

We used structured illumination microscopy (SIM) to obtain super-resolution images of muscle attachment structures in Caenorhabditis elegans striated muscle. SIM imaging of M-line components revealed two patterns: PAT-3 (β-integrin) and proteins that interact in a complex with the cytoplasmic tail of β-integrin and localize to the basal muscle cell membrane [UNC-112 (kindlin), PAT-4 (ILK), UNC-97 (PINCH), PAT-6 (α-parvin), and UNC-95], are found in discrete, angled segments with gaps. In contrast, proteins localized throughout the depth of the M-line (UNC-89 (obscurin) and UNC-98) are imaged as continuous lines. Systematic immunostaining of muscle cell boundaries revealed that dense body components close to the basal muscle cell membrane also localize at cell boundaries. SIM imaging of muscle cell boundaries reveal "zipper-like" structures. Electron micrographs reveal electron dense material similar in appearance to dense bodies located adjacent to the basolateral cell membranes of adjacent muscle cells separated by ECM. Moreover, by EM, there are a variety of features of the muscle cell boundaries that help explain the zipper-like pattern of muscle protein localization observed by SIM. Short dense bodies in atn-1 mutants that are null for α-actinin and lack the deeper extensions of dense bodies, showed "zipper-like" structures by SIM similar to cell boundary structures, further indicating that the surface-proximal components of dense bodies form the "zipper-like" structures at cell boundaries. Moreover, mutants in thin and thick filament components do not have "dot-like" dense bodies, suggesting that myofilament tension is required for assembly or maintenance of proper dense body shape.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5811768PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/cm.21410DOI Listing

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