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The Apical Submembrane Cytoskeleton Participates in the Organization of the Apical Pole in Epithelial Cells
In a previous publication (Rodriguez, M.L., M. Brignoni, and P.J.I. Salas. 1994. J. Cell Sci. 107: 3145–3151), we described the existence of a terminal web-like structure in nonbrush border cells, which comprises a specifically apical cytokeratin, presumably cytokeratin 19. In the present study we c...
Autores principales: | , , , , |
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Formato: | Texto |
Lenguaje: | English |
Publicado: |
The Rockefeller University Press
1997
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Materias: | |
Acceso en línea: | https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2139782/ https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/9128248 |
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author | Salas, Pedro J.I. Rodriguez, Marcelo L. Viciana, Ana L. Vega-Salas, Dora E. Hauri, Hans-Peter |
author_facet | Salas, Pedro J.I. Rodriguez, Marcelo L. Viciana, Ana L. Vega-Salas, Dora E. Hauri, Hans-Peter |
author_sort | Salas, Pedro J.I. |
collection | PubMed |
description | In a previous publication (Rodriguez, M.L., M. Brignoni, and P.J.I. Salas. 1994. J. Cell Sci. 107: 3145–3151), we described the existence of a terminal web-like structure in nonbrush border cells, which comprises a specifically apical cytokeratin, presumably cytokeratin 19. In the present study we confirmed the apical distribution of cytokeratin 19 and expanded that observation to other epithelial cells in tissue culture and in vivo. In tissue culture, subconfluent cell stocks under continuous treatment with two different 21-mer phosphorothioate oligodeoxy nucleotides that targeted cytokeratin 19 mRNA enabled us to obtain confluent monolayers with a partial (40–70%) and transitory reduction in this protein. The expression of other cytoskeletal proteins was undisturbed. This downregulation of cytokeratin 19 resulted in (a) decrease in the number of microvilli; (b) disorganization of the apical (but not lateral or basal) filamentous actin and abnormal apical microtubules; and (c) depletion or redistribution of apical membrane proteins as determined by differential apical–basolateral biotinylation. In fact, a subset of detergent-insoluble proteins was not expressed on the cell surface in cells with lower levels of cytokeratin 19. Apical proteins purified in the detergent phase of Triton X-114 (typically integral membrane proteins) and those differentially extracted in Triton X-100 at 37°C or in n-octyl-β-d-glycoside at 4°C (representative of GPIanchored proteins), appeared partially redistributed to the basolateral domain. A transmembrane apical protein, sucrase isomaltase, was found mispolarized in a subpopulation of the cells treated with antisense oligonucleotides, while the basolateral polarity of Na(+)– K(+)ATPase was not affected. Both sucrase isomaltase and alkaline phosphatase (a GPI-anchored protein) appeared partially depolarized in A19 treated CACO-2 monolayers as determined by differential biotinylation, affinity purification, and immunoblot. These results suggest that an apical submembrane cytoskeleton of intermediate filaments is expressed in a number of epithelia, including those without a brush border, although it may not be universal. In addition, these data indicate that this structure is involved in the organization of the apical region of the cytoplasm and the apical membrane. |
format | Text |
id | pubmed-2139782 |
institution | National Center for Biotechnology Information |
language | English |
publishDate | 1997 |
publisher | The Rockefeller University Press |
record_format | MEDLINE/PubMed |
spelling | pubmed-21397822008-05-01 The Apical Submembrane Cytoskeleton Participates in the Organization of the Apical Pole in Epithelial Cells Salas, Pedro J.I. Rodriguez, Marcelo L. Viciana, Ana L. Vega-Salas, Dora E. Hauri, Hans-Peter J Cell Biol Article In a previous publication (Rodriguez, M.L., M. Brignoni, and P.J.I. Salas. 1994. J. Cell Sci. 107: 3145–3151), we described the existence of a terminal web-like structure in nonbrush border cells, which comprises a specifically apical cytokeratin, presumably cytokeratin 19. In the present study we confirmed the apical distribution of cytokeratin 19 and expanded that observation to other epithelial cells in tissue culture and in vivo. In tissue culture, subconfluent cell stocks under continuous treatment with two different 21-mer phosphorothioate oligodeoxy nucleotides that targeted cytokeratin 19 mRNA enabled us to obtain confluent monolayers with a partial (40–70%) and transitory reduction in this protein. The expression of other cytoskeletal proteins was undisturbed. This downregulation of cytokeratin 19 resulted in (a) decrease in the number of microvilli; (b) disorganization of the apical (but not lateral or basal) filamentous actin and abnormal apical microtubules; and (c) depletion or redistribution of apical membrane proteins as determined by differential apical–basolateral biotinylation. In fact, a subset of detergent-insoluble proteins was not expressed on the cell surface in cells with lower levels of cytokeratin 19. Apical proteins purified in the detergent phase of Triton X-114 (typically integral membrane proteins) and those differentially extracted in Triton X-100 at 37°C or in n-octyl-β-d-glycoside at 4°C (representative of GPIanchored proteins), appeared partially redistributed to the basolateral domain. A transmembrane apical protein, sucrase isomaltase, was found mispolarized in a subpopulation of the cells treated with antisense oligonucleotides, while the basolateral polarity of Na(+)– K(+)ATPase was not affected. Both sucrase isomaltase and alkaline phosphatase (a GPI-anchored protein) appeared partially depolarized in A19 treated CACO-2 monolayers as determined by differential biotinylation, affinity purification, and immunoblot. These results suggest that an apical submembrane cytoskeleton of intermediate filaments is expressed in a number of epithelia, including those without a brush border, although it may not be universal. In addition, these data indicate that this structure is involved in the organization of the apical region of the cytoplasm and the apical membrane. The Rockefeller University Press 1997-04-21 /pmc/articles/PMC2139782/ /pubmed/9128248 Text en This article is distributed under the terms of an Attribution–Noncommercial–Share Alike–No Mirror Sites license for the first six months after the publication date (see http://www.rupress.org/terms). After six months it is available under a Creative Commons License (Attribution–Noncommercial–Share Alike 4.0 Unported license, as described at http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-sa/4.0/). |
spellingShingle | Article Salas, Pedro J.I. Rodriguez, Marcelo L. Viciana, Ana L. Vega-Salas, Dora E. Hauri, Hans-Peter The Apical Submembrane Cytoskeleton Participates in the Organization of the Apical Pole in Epithelial Cells |
title | The Apical Submembrane Cytoskeleton Participates in the Organization of the Apical Pole in Epithelial Cells |
title_full | The Apical Submembrane Cytoskeleton Participates in the Organization of the Apical Pole in Epithelial Cells |
title_fullStr | The Apical Submembrane Cytoskeleton Participates in the Organization of the Apical Pole in Epithelial Cells |
title_full_unstemmed | The Apical Submembrane Cytoskeleton Participates in the Organization of the Apical Pole in Epithelial Cells |
title_short | The Apical Submembrane Cytoskeleton Participates in the Organization of the Apical Pole in Epithelial Cells |
title_sort | apical submembrane cytoskeleton participates in the organization of the apical pole in epithelial cells |
topic | Article |
url | https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2139782/ https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/9128248 |
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