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  • 1
    ISSN: 1432-072X
    Keywords: Ribulose bisphosphate carboxylase ; Quaternary structure ; Molecular weight ; Electron microscopy ; Cyanobacteria ; Synechococcus
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Abstract Ribulose bisphosphate (RuP2) carboxylase from the marme cyanobacterium, Synechococcus sp., comprised both large (57,000 dalton) and small (12,000 dalton) subunits. The undissociated, purified enzyme was considerably smaller than the spinach enzyme when compared by pore-gradient electrophoresis, gel filtration and density-gradient centrifugation. This suggested that the cyanobacterial enzyme might have a hexameric (L6S6) subunit structure, unlike the enzymes from spinach and many other organisms which are octamers (L8S8). However, the molecular weight of the Synechococcus enzyme was measured by equilibrium sedimentation and found to be 530,000, which is within the range observed for L8S8-type enzymes. Furthermore, electron microscopic studies of negatively stained preparations of both the native enzyme, and a preparation depleted of 87% of its small subunits by repeated mild-acid precipitation, revealed four-fold symmetry characteristic of an octameric, cubical structure. Synechococcus RuP2 carboxylase therefore must be an L8S8 octamer and its anomalous pore-penetration behaviour may be due to an asymmetric shape. Some support for the latter possibility was provided by electron miscoscopic observations of two different types of images which may be different views of the molecule in two planes.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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  • 2
    ISSN: 1615-6102
    Keywords: Chara ; F-actin ; Immunofluorescence ; Microtubule ; Nitella ; Phalloidin
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Summary We report on the novel features of the actin cytoskeleton and its development in characean internodal cells. Images obtained by confocal laser scanning microscopy after microinjection of living cells with fluorescent derivatives of F-actin-specific phallotoxins, and by modified immunofluorescence methods using fixed cells, were mutually confirmatory at all stages of internodal cell growth. The microinjection method allowed capture of 3-dimensional images of high quality even though photobleaching and apparent loss of the probes through degradation and uptake into the vacuole made it difficult to record phallotoxin-labelled actin over long periods of time. When injected at appropriate concentrations, phallotoxins affected neither the rate of cytoplasmic streaming nor the long-term viability of cells. Recently formed internodal cells have relatively disorganized actin bundles that become oriented in the subcortical cytoplasm approximately parallel to the newly established long axis and traverse the cell through transvacuolar strands. In older cells with central vacuoles not traversed by cytoplasmic strands, subcortical bundles are organized in parallel groups that associate closely with stationary chloroplasts, now in files. The parallel arrangement and continuity of actin bundles is maintained where they pass round nodal regions of the cell, even in the absence of chloroplast files. This study reports on two novel structural features of the characean internodal actin cytoskeleton: a distinct array of actin strands near the plasma membrane that is oriented transversely during cell growth and rings of actin around the chloroplasts bordering the neutral line, the zone that separates opposing flows of endoplasm.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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