The cytoplasmic cytoskeleton is a complex network of  microtubules, actin filaments (microfilaments), and intermediate filaments.  These structural proteins provide for the shaping of cells and also play an  important role in the movements of organelles and intracytoplasmic vesicles. The  cytoskeleton also participates in the movement of entire cells.
Microtubules
Within the cytoplasmic matrix of eukaryotic cells are  tubular structures known as microtubules (Figures 2–30, 2–31, and 2–32).  Microtubules are also found in cytoplasmic processes called cilia (Figure 2–33)  and flagella. They have an outer diameter of 24 nm, consisting of a dense wall 5  nm thick and a hollow core 14 nm wide. Microtubules are variable in length, and  individual tubules can attain lengths of several micrometers. Occasionally, arms  or bridges are found linking two or more tubules (Figure 2–34).
Figure 2–30
Figure 2–30
Figure 2-31
Electron micrograph of fibroblast cytoplasm. Note the actin  filaments (AF) and microtubules (MT). x60,000. (Courtesy of E  Katchburian.)
Figure 2-32
Electron micrograph of a section of a photosensitive retinal  cell. Note the accumulation of transversely sectioned microtubules (arrows).  Reduced slightly from x80,000.
Figure 2-33
Photomicrograph of the epithelium covering the inner surface of  the respiratory airways. Most cells in this epithelium contain numerous cilia in  their apices (free upper extremities). N, cell nuclei; M, cytoplasmic mucus  secretion, which appears dark in this preparation. H&E stain. High  magnification.
Figure 2-34
Schematic representation of microtubules, cilia, and centrioles.  A: Microtubules as seen in the electron microscope after fixation with  tannic acid in glutaraldehyde. The unstained tubulin subunits are delineated by  the dense tannic acid. Cross sections of tubules reveal a ring of 13 subunits of  dimers arranged in a spiral. Changes in microtubule length are due to the  addition or loss of individual tubulin subunits. B: A cross section  through a cilium reveals a core of microtubules called an axoneme. The axoneme  consists of two central microtubules surrounded by nine microtubule doublets. In  the doublets, microtubule A is complete and consists of 13 subunits, whereas  microtubule B shares two or three heterodimers with A. When activated by ATP,  the dynein arms link adjacent tubules and provide for the sliding of doublets  against each other. C: Centrioles consist of nine microtubule triplets  linked together in a pinwheel-like arrangement. In the triplets, microtubule A  is complete and consists of 13 subunits, whereas microtubules B and C share  tubulin subunits. Under normal circumstances, these organelles are found in  pairs with the centrioles disposed at right angles to one another.
The subunit of a microtubule is a heterodimer composed of   and
 and  tubulin  molecules of closely related amino acid composition, each with a molecular mass  of about 50 kDa.
 tubulin  molecules of closely related amino acid composition, each with a molecular mass  of about 50 kDa.
  and
 and  tubulin  molecules of closely related amino acid composition, each with a molecular mass  of about 50 kDa.
 tubulin  molecules of closely related amino acid composition, each with a molecular mass  of about 50 kDa.Under appropriate conditions (in vivo or in  vitro), tubulin subunits polymerize to form microtubules. With special  staining procedures, tubulin can be seen as heterodimers organized into a  spiral. A total of 13 units is present in one complete turn of the spiral  (Figure 2–34).
 Polymerization of tubulins to form microtubules in  vivo is directed by a variety of structures collectively known as  microtubule-organizing centers. These structures include cilia, basal  bodies, and centrosomes. Microtubule growth, via subunit polymerization, occurs  more rapidly at one end of existing microtubules. This end is referred to as the  plus (+) end, and the other extremity is the minus (–) end. Tubulin  polymerization is under control of the concentration of Ca2+ and of  the microtubule-associated proteins, or MAPs. Microtubule stability is  variable; for example, microtubules of cilia are stable, whereas microtubules of  the mitotic spindle have a short duration. The antimitotic alkaloid colchicine  binds specifically to tubulin, and when the complex tubulin–colchicine binds to  microtubules, it prevents the addition of more tubulin in the plus (+)  extremity. Mitotic microtubules are broken down because the depolymerization  continues, mainly at the minus (–) end, and the lost tubulin units are not  replaced. Another alkaloid that interferes with the mitotic microtubule is  taxol, which accelerates the formation of microtubules but at the same time  stabilizes them. All cytosolic tubulin is used in stable microtubules, and no  tubulin is left for the formation of the mitotic spindle. Another alkaloid,  vinblastine, acts by depolymerizing formed microtubules and, in a second step,  aggregating to form paracrystalline arrays of tubulin.
Medical Application
 The antimitotic alkaloids are useful tools in  cell biology (eg, colchicine is used to arrest chromosomes in metaphase and to  prepare karyotypes) and in cancer chemotherapy (eg, vinblastine, vincristine,  and taxol are used to arrest cell proliferation in tumors). Because tumor cells  proliferate rapidly, they are more affected by antimitotic drugs than are normal  cells. However, chemotherapy has many undesirable consequences. For example,  some normal blood-forming cells and the epithelial cells that cover the  digestive tract also show a high rate of proliferation and are adversely  affected by chemotherapy.
Cytoplasmic microtubules are stiff structures that play a  significant role in the development and maintenance of cell shape. They are  usually present in a proper orientation, either to effect development of a given  cellular asymmetry or to maintain it. Procedures that disrupt microtubules  result in the loss of this cellular asymmetry.
 Microtubules also participate in the intracellular  transport of organelles and vesicles. Examples include axoplasmic transport in  neurons, melanin transport in pigment cells, chromosome movements by the mitotic  spindle, and vesicle movements among different cell compartments. In each of  these examples, movement is related to the presence of complex microtubule  networks, and such activities are suspended if microtubules are disrupted. The  transport guided by microtubules is under the control of special proteins called  motor proteins, which use energy to move molecules and vesicles.
 Microtubules provide the basis for several complex  cytoplasmic components, including centrioles, basal bodies, cilia, and flagella.  Centrioles are cylindrical structures (0.15  m in diameter and 0.3–0.5
m in diameter and 0.3–0.5   m in length) composed  primarily of short, highly organized microtubules (Figure 2–34). Each centriole  shows nine sets of microtubules arranged in triplets. The microtubules are so  close together that adjacent microtubules of a triplet share a common wall.  Close to the nucleus of nondividing cells is a centrosome (Figure 2–35)  made of a pair of centrioles surrounded by a granular material. In each pair,  the long axes of the centrioles are at right angles to each other. Before cell  division, more specifically during the S period of the interphase, each  centrosome duplicates itself so that now each centrosome has two pairs of  centrioles. During mitosis, the centrosomes divide in two, move to opposite  poles of the cell, and become organizing centers for the microtubules of the  mitotic spindle.
m in length) composed  primarily of short, highly organized microtubules (Figure 2–34). Each centriole  shows nine sets of microtubules arranged in triplets. The microtubules are so  close together that adjacent microtubules of a triplet share a common wall.  Close to the nucleus of nondividing cells is a centrosome (Figure 2–35)  made of a pair of centrioles surrounded by a granular material. In each pair,  the long axes of the centrioles are at right angles to each other. Before cell  division, more specifically during the S period of the interphase, each  centrosome duplicates itself so that now each centrosome has two pairs of  centrioles. During mitosis, the centrosomes divide in two, move to opposite  poles of the cell, and become organizing centers for the microtubules of the  mitotic spindle.
 m in diameter and 0.3–0.5
m in diameter and 0.3–0.5   m in length) composed  primarily of short, highly organized microtubules (Figure 2–34). Each centriole  shows nine sets of microtubules arranged in triplets. The microtubules are so  close together that adjacent microtubules of a triplet share a common wall.  Close to the nucleus of nondividing cells is a centrosome (Figure 2–35)  made of a pair of centrioles surrounded by a granular material. In each pair,  the long axes of the centrioles are at right angles to each other. Before cell  division, more specifically during the S period of the interphase, each  centrosome duplicates itself so that now each centrosome has two pairs of  centrioles. During mitosis, the centrosomes divide in two, move to opposite  poles of the cell, and become organizing centers for the microtubules of the  mitotic spindle.
m in length) composed  primarily of short, highly organized microtubules (Figure 2–34). Each centriole  shows nine sets of microtubules arranged in triplets. The microtubules are so  close together that adjacent microtubules of a triplet share a common wall.  Close to the nucleus of nondividing cells is a centrosome (Figure 2–35)  made of a pair of centrioles surrounded by a granular material. In each pair,  the long axes of the centrioles are at right angles to each other. Before cell  division, more specifically during the S period of the interphase, each  centrosome duplicates itself so that now each centrosome has two pairs of  centrioles. During mitosis, the centrosomes divide in two, move to opposite  poles of the cell, and become organizing centers for the microtubules of the  mitotic spindle.Figure 2-35
Drawing of a centrosome with its granular protein material  surrounding a pair of centrioles, one shown at a right angle to the other. Each  centriole is composed of nine bundles of microtubules, with three microtubules  per bundle.
Cilia and flagella (singular, cilium,  flagellum) are motile processes, covered by cell membrane, with a highly  organized microtubule core. Ciliated cells typically possess a large number of  cilia, each about 2–3  m in length. Flagellated cells have only one flagellum, with a length  close to 100
m in length. Flagellated cells have only one flagellum, with a length  close to 100  m. In  humans, the spermatozoa are the only cell type with a flagellum. The main  function of cilia is to sweep fluid from the surface of cell sheets. Both cilia  and flagella possess the same core organization.
m. In  humans, the spermatozoa are the only cell type with a flagellum. The main  function of cilia is to sweep fluid from the surface of cell sheets. Both cilia  and flagella possess the same core organization.
  m in length. Flagellated cells have only one flagellum, with a length  close to 100
m in length. Flagellated cells have only one flagellum, with a length  close to 100  m. In  humans, the spermatozoa are the only cell type with a flagellum. The main  function of cilia is to sweep fluid from the surface of cell sheets. Both cilia  and flagella possess the same core organization.
m. In  humans, the spermatozoa are the only cell type with a flagellum. The main  function of cilia is to sweep fluid from the surface of cell sheets. Both cilia  and flagella possess the same core organization.This core consists of nine pairs of microtubules  surrounding two central microtubules. This sheaf of microtubules, possessing a  9 + 2 pattern, is called an axoneme (Gr. axon, axis, +  nema, thread). Each of the nine peripheral pairs shares a common wall  (Figure 2–34). The microtubules in the central pair are enclosed within a  central sheath. Adjacent peripheral pairs are linked to each other by  protein bridges called nexins and to the central sheath by radial  spokes. The microtubules of each pair are identified as A and B. Microtubule  A is complete, with 13 heterodimers, whereas B has only 10 heterodimers (in a  cross section). Extending from the surface of microtubule A are pairs of arms  formed by the protein dynein, which has ATPase activity.
 At the base of each cilium or flagellum is a basal  body, essentially similar to a centriole, that controls the assembly of the  axoneme.
Medical Application
 Several mutations have been described in the  proteins of the cilia and flagella. They are responsible for the immotile  cilia syndrome, the symptoms of which are immotile spermatozoa, male  infertility, and chronic respiratory infections caused by the lack of the  cleansing action of cilia in the respiratory tract.
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3 comments:
Kerenlah.. pokok'e :)
Keren Mas Dedi .. :)
@DAW-XP thx for your comment brother... :D
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