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Molecular Cell Biology

Molecular Cell Biology. Actin, including Principles of Assembly Cooper. Introduction. Handouts Readings Text MiniReviews - PDF files online Homework. Reading. Textbook Chapters Lodish et al., Molecular Cell Biology, 6th ed., 2008, Freeman. Chaps. 17, 18.

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Molecular Cell Biology

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  1. Molecular Cell Biology Actin, including Principles of Assembly Cooper

  2. Introduction • Handouts • Readings • Text • MiniReviews - PDF files online • Homework

  3. Reading • Textbook Chapters • Lodish et al., Molecular Cell Biology, 6th ed., 2008, Freeman. Chaps. 17, 18. • Pollard & Earnshaw, Cell Biology, updated ed., 2004, Saunders. Chaps. 35-42, 47. • Articles on the Course Web Site • Original Articles • Reviews

  4. Older Advanced / Reference Materials • 1. Cell Movements, 2nd ed. ,Dennis Bray, 2001, Garland. • 2. Guidebook to the Cytoskeletal and Motor Proteins. Kreis and Vale, eds. 1999, Oxford Univ. Press. • 3. Video Tape of Motility. Sanger & Sanger, Cell Motility & the Cytoskeleton, Video Supplement 2, 1990. A one-hour tape of examples of microtubule-based motility. Short segments shown in class. Available at the Media Center in the Becker (medical) library.

  5. Chemotaxis of neutrophil to bacteria

  6. Phagocytosis of bacteria by Dictyostelium amoebae

  7. Biological Scope of Cell Motility & the Cytoskeleton • Shape • Translocation • Contraction • Intracellular Movements • Mechanical & Physical Properties

  8. Elements of the Cytoskeleton • Structural • Filaments - Actin, Microtubules, Intermediate Filaments, Septins • Crosslinkers • Motors • Actin - Myosin • Microtubules - Dynein, Kinesin • Regulators

  9. Higher Order Structures and Functions • Actin • Muscle sarcomere • Epithelial cell brush border • Cortex of motile cells • Microtubules • Cilia & Flagella • Mitotic spindle apparatus • Radiate from MTOC - organize membranes • Septins - cytokinesis • Major Sperm Protein in nematode sperm

  10. Self-Assembly by Proteins -Entropy & the Hydrophobic Effect • High Order in Assembled State Implies Lower Entropy, which is Unfavorable • ∆G = ∆H - T∆S must be <0 for a Reaction to Occur • But ∆H>0, ∆S>>0 ! • Higher Entropy => Disorder in Assembled State • Ordered Water on Hydrophobic Surface of Protein Subunit is Released

  11. Self-Assembly by Proteins - Specificity • Hydrophobic Surfaces of Proteins Must Fit Snugly to Exclude Water • Assorted Non-covalent Bonds • Van der Waals • Coulombic • H-bond

  12. Why Use Subunits to Make Large Molecules? • Efficient Use of the Genome • Error Management • Variable Size • Disassembly / Reassembly

  13. Equivalence and Quasi-Equivalence • Subunits in Polymer Must be Indistinguishable from Each Other • Helical Arrangement Produces Linear Filament • Some Flexibility in Structure Produces Loss of Equivalence • Quasi-Equivalence: Similar with Distortion

  14. Assembly of Helical Filaments • Add & Lose Subunits Only at Ends • ON Rate = k+ c1 N • OFF Rate = k- N c1 = Concentration of Monomers N = Concentration of Filament Ends

  15. Assembly of Helical Filaments • At Steady State, by Definition • ON Rate = OFF Rate • k+ c1 N = k- N • c1 = k- / k+ • Subunit Concentration is Constant?!

  16. Critical Concentration [Polymer] Steady-state Concentrations of Polymer & Monomer [Monomer] [Total]

  17. Critical Concentration and Binding Affinity A1 + Nj Nj+1 [Nj+1] Ka = _ c1 [Nj]

  18. Critical Concentration and Binding Affinity 1 Ka = _ c1 _ c1 _ c1 [Nj] Kd = = [Nj+1]

  19. Treadmilling • Polar Filaments have Two Different Ends • Can Have Different Critical Concentrations at the Two Ends • Steady State Critical Concentration is an Intermediate Value • Net Addition at One End, Net Loss at the Other End

  20. Microtubule PhotobleachingExperiment In Vivo Fluorescent Tubulin Microinjected into Cell as Tracer Laser Bleaches a Vertical Stripe

  21. Cells Regulate Polymers • Cells Have Unexpectedly High Concentrations of Subunits • Cells Change their Subunit / Polymer Ratio Dramatically • Filament Lengths in Cells are Short

  22. How do Cells Regulate the Level of Polymerization? • Total Concentration of Protein • Covalent Modification of Subunits • Binding of Small Molecules • Binding of Another Protein

  23. How do Cells Regulate the Number and Length of Filaments? • Limit Growth • Intrinsic to Protein • Deplete Subunits • Capture by Capping End • Template • Create New Filaments • Nucleation - End or Side • Bolus of Subunits - High Concentration

  24. Nucleation • Creation of New Filament from Subunits is Unfavorable • Subunit Prefers End of Filament to One or Two Other Subunits • Allows Cell to Control Where & When Filaments Form

  25. “Dynamic Instability” of Microtubules GFP-tubulin in Cells Pure proteins in vitro

  26. Nucleotides Can Generate “Dynamic Instability” • The Basic Facts... • Tubulin Binds GTP or GDP • GTP Tubulin Polymerizes Strongly • GDP Tubulin Polymerizes Poorly • Subunits Exchange w/ Free GTP • GTP on Tubulin Hydrolyzes to GDP over Time after Addition to Microtubule

  27. The Implication of All those Facts, taken together is... • At Steady State, at any given time... • Most Ends have a GTP “Cap” and Grow Slowly • A Few Ends • Lose their GTP Cap • Exposing GDP-tubulin subunits • so the Microtubule Shrinks Rapidly • Occurs In Vitro and In Vivo for Tubulin - Extensive and Relevant

  28. Steps in Cell Movement Extension Adhesion Retraction Lodish et al. Molecular Cell Biology

  29. Types of Actin Structures in a Migrating Cell

  30. Scanning EM of the Front of a Migrating Cell

  31. Small G-Proteins Regulate Different Assemblies of Actin Stress Fibers Lamellipodia Filopodia

  32. GFP-Actin in a Migrating Melanoma Cell Text

  33. Fish Keratocyte - Gliding Across a Surface 0.1 - 1 µm per second

  34. Fish Keratocytes Stationary Moving

  35. End-to-Side Branches Svitkina et al. 1997.

  36. Free Ends toward Direction of Movement Svitkina et al. 1997.

  37. Arp2/3 Complex at Filament Branches in vitro in vivo

  38. Arp2/3 Complex Structure, at a Filament Branch Point Hanein, Robinson & Pollard. 2001.

  39. Creation & Growth

  40. Termination

  41. Destruction & Recycling

  42. Model for Listeria Actin Motility Jon Alberts. Center for Cell Dynamics, Friday Harbor, U Wash. CellDynamics.Org.

  43. Model for Listeria Actin Motility Jon Alberts. Center for Cell Dynamics, Friday Harbor, U Wash. CellDynamics.Org.

  44. Fluorescence Microscopy of Living Cells • GFP technology - colors, aggregation, multiple labels, FRET • Sensitive video cameras - increased time until bleaching • Speed and sensitivity • Confocality • Laser scanning •Spinning disk • Two-photon •TIRF

  45. Speckles to Single Molecules

  46. Evidence for Single Molecules Fluorescence Intensity of Single Speckles over Time

  47. Speckle Microscopy in Living Cells

  48. Two-Color Speckle Microscopy Microtubules Actin

  49. TIRF (Total Internal Reflection Fluorescence) Microscopy

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