16 results match your criteria: "Centre de Biologie Cellulaire (CNRS)[Affiliation]"
Int J Dev Biol
September 1993
Centre de Biologie Cellulaire CNRS, Ivry-sur-Seine, France.
Using immunocytochemical and biochemical methods, we analyzed the localization of HSP 70-related proteins constitutively expressed during oogenesis and embryogenesis in the amphibian Xenopus laevis. Our results provided evidence for a regional localization in oocytes. In embryos, the regional distribution observed in oocytes was found to be maintained from fertilization up to late blastula.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBiol Cell
October 1992
Centre de Biologie Cellulaire CNRS, Ivry-sur-Seine, France.
Annexins 1 and 2 are Ca(2+)-binding proteins related to the cytoskeletal proteins which have been reported to bind in a calcium-dependent manner of F-actin and phospholipids in vitro. Proteins immunologically related to the brain 37-kDa annexin 1 and 36-kDa annexin 2 were characterized by immunoblotting epithelial ciliated cells from quail oviduct. They were detected by immunofluorescence in ciliated as well as glandular cells, using antisera and purified antibodies directed against pig brain annexins.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFI present an electron microscopical analysis of the columnar hexagonal liquid crystalline phase of DNA. Freeze-fracture methods reveal that this phase is a lamellar structure, each layer (30 to 40 A thick) composed of DNA molecules aligned in parallel. Numerous defects can be seen in the structure, and their nature is determined.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBiol Cell
October 1991
Centre de Biologie Cellulaire (CNRS), Ivry-sur-Seine, France.
The ultrastructure of liquid crystalline phases of DNA raises numerous problems because of the structure itself which is fluid and which nature depends on the relative amount of DNA, water and ions. Different cryofixation methods were tested and compared after freeze-fracture of the specimen. A good ultrastructural preservation of the samples can be achieved without addition of any cryoprotectant by quick-freezing against a copper block cooled down to liquid helium temperature.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBiol Cell
October 1991
Centre de Biologie Cellulaire CNRS, Ivry-sur-Seine, France.
In ciliated cells of metazoa, striated rootlets associated with basal bodies anchor the ciliary apparatus to the cytoskeleton. We have used here a monoclonal antibody against a 175 kDa protein associated with the striated rootlets of quail ciliated cells, to study ciliated cells of different species. In mussel gill epithelium the antibody recognized a protein of 92 kDa which shows a periodic distribution along the striated rootlets.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFExp Cell Res
December 1989
Centre de Biologie Cellulaire (CNRS), Ivry sur Seine, France.
When Pleurodeles (Amphibian, Urodele) females were subjected to high temperatures (32-35 degrees C) for varying periods of time (45 min to 7 days), lampbrush chromosome structure underwent striking modifications. These changes included a numerical reduction in normal loops and progressive disorganization of RNP matrices of various loops. The degree of such disorganization was a function of the intensity and duration of the stress.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFNature
June 1989
Centre de Biologie Cellulaire (CNRS), Ivry-sur-Seine, France.
The DNA molecule is extremely compacted in bacteria, in cell nuclei, sperm heads and virus capsids. These interactions between DNA molecules are important to our understanding of chromatin condensation. DNA forms multiple liquid-crystalline phases whose nature depends on the polymer concentration, and it has been suggested that the highly concentrated phase of 50-nm DNA molecules is two-dimensionally ordered and smectic-like.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFTissue Cell
March 1990
Centre de Biologie Cellulaire CNRS, Ivry-sur-Seine, France.
A confluent PtK2 cell sheet was incised in a serum-free culture medium, at 15 min, 2 hr and 24 hr after wounding. The culture media were collected in the same way and used as conditioned media. Unwounded confluent cells were cultured in the conditioned medium for 24 hr.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFTissue Cell
March 1990
Centre de Biologie Cellulaire CNRS, Ivry-sur-Seine, France.
Confluent PtK2 cells 4 hr treated with 5 mM acrylamide were FN-detected by indirect immunofluorescence. The initial fibrillar-FN network was replaced by an alveolar-type network located at the cell-cell contacts areas in the form of a thick frame with a lace-like appearance. Afterwards, acrylamide removal was obtained by several washes with fresh FCS-free culture medium.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBiol Cell
February 1990
Centre de Biologie Cellulaire (CNRS), Ivry-sur-Seine, France.
The oocyte nucleus of Pleurodeles waltl contains a major 185-kDa protein analog of Xenopus N1N2. Rabbit antibodies were raised against the 185-kDa protein. Affinity-purified antibody directed against the acid part (pI 4.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFQuail oviduct development is controlled by sex steroid hormones. Estrogen (E) induce cell proliferation, formation of tubular glands by epithelial cell evagination and cell differentiation. Progesterone (P) strongly increases the secretory process in E-treated quails, but inhibits cell proliferation, cell evagination and differentiation of ciliated cells.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBiol Cell
February 1990
Centre de Biologie Cellulaire CNRS, Ivry-sur-Seine, France.
The assembly properties of concentrated solutions of type I collagen molecules are compared before and after a 5-min sonication, breaking the 300-nm triple helices into short segments of about 20 nm, with a strong polydispersity. The collagen concentration of these solutions, sonicated or not, was increased up to 100 mg/ml by slow evaporation of the solvent. Whereas the non-sonicated solutions remain isotropic, the sonicated solutions transform after a few hours into a twisted liquid crystalline phase, well recognizable in polarizing microscopy.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBiol Cell
February 1990
Centre de Biologie Cellulaire CNRS, Ivry-sur-Seine, France.
Actin microfilaments were localized in quail oviduct ciliated cells using decoration with myosin subfragment S1 and immunogold labeling. These polarized epithelial cells show a well developed cytoskeleton due to the presence of numerous cilia and microvilli at their apical pole. Most S1-decorated microfilaments extend from the microvilli downward towards the upper part of the ciliary striated rootlets with which they are connected.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBiol Cell
April 1989
Centre de Biologie Cellulaire CNRS, Ivry-sur-Seine, France.
During estrogen-induced development of the quail oviduct, tubular glands are formed by evagination of epithelial cells into the stroma. The distribution of laminin was studied during the early stages by means of immunofluorescence and immunoperoxidase techniques. Ultrastructural changes in the basal lamina were studied by electron microscopy.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBiol Cell
January 1989
Centre de Biologie Cellulaire CNRS, Ivry-sur-Seine, France.
Ciliated cells are characterized by a highly organized cytoskeleton which is connected with the ciliary apparatus. The organization of microtubules, microfilaments, and cytokeratin filaments is described and the relationships of each network with the ciliary apparatus are emphasized. Possible functions of such a complex cytoskeleton are discussed.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBiol Cell
May 1988
Centre de Biologie Cellulaire CNRS, Ivry-sur-Seine, France.
In the quail oviduct, the mature ciliated cells contain a well developed and polarized cytokeratin network which is bound to desmosomes and in close contact with the striated rootlets associated with basal bodies. In ovariectomized quail, the immature epithelial cells of oviduct present a rudimentary cytokeratin network associated with the centrioles of the diplosome (one of them forming a primary cilium) and with the short striated rootlets. The development of the cytokeratin network which occurs simultaneously with the ciliogenesis was observed by electron microscopy and immunocytochemistry (immunofluorescence and immunogold staining) using a prekeratin antiserum.
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