Vitronectin at sites of cell-substrate contact in cultures of rat myotubes.
Open Access
- 1 August 1986
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Rockefeller University Press in The Journal of cell biology
- Vol. 103 (2), 369-378
- https://doi.org/10.1083/jcb.103.2.369
Abstract
Affinity-purified antibodies to the serum glycoprotein, vitronectin, were used to study sites of cell-substrate contact in cultures of rat myotubes and fibroblasts. Cells were removed from the substrate by treatment with saponin, leaving fragments of plasma membrane attached to the glass coverslip. When stained for vitronectin by indirect immunofluorescence, large areas of the substrate were brightly labeled. The focal contacts of fibroblasts and the broad adhesion plaques of myotubes appeared black, however, indicating that the antibodies had failed to react with those areas. Contact sites within the adhesion plaque remained unlabeled after saponin-treated samples were extracted with Triton X-100, or after intact cultures were sheared with a stream of fixative. These procedures expose extracellular macromolecules at the cell-substrate interface, which can then be labeled with concanavalin A. In contrast, when samples were sheared and then sonicated to remove all the cellular material from the coverslip, the entire substrate labeled extensively and almost uniformly with anti-vitronectin. Extracellular molecules associated with substrate contacts were also studied after freeze-fracture, using a technique we term "post-release fracture labeling." Platinum replicas of the external membrane were removed from the glass with hydrofluoric acid to expose the extracellular material. Anti-vitronectin, bound to the replicas and visualized by a second antibody conjugated to colloidal gold, labeled the broad areas of close myotube-substrate attachment and the nearby glass equally well. Our results are consistent with the hypothesis that vitronectin is present at all sites of cell-substrate contact, but that its antigenic sites are obscured by material deposited by both myotube and fibroblast cells.This publication has 27 references indexed in Scilit:
- Label-fracture: a method for high resolution labeling of cell surfaces.The Journal of cell biology, 1984
- Isolation of acetylcholine receptor clusters in substrate-associated material from cultured rat myotubes using saponin.The Journal of cell biology, 1984
- Expression of transformation-associated protease(s) that degrade fibronectin at cell contact sites.The Journal of cell biology, 1984
- Lipid domains of acetylcholine receptor clusters detected with saponin and filipin.The Journal of cell biology, 1983
- Improved preservation and staining of HeLa cell actin filaments, clathrin-coated membranes, and other cytoplasmic structures by tannic acid-glutaraldehyde-saponin fixation.The Journal of cell biology, 1983
- Brain extract causes acetylcholine receptor redistribution which mimics some early events at developing neuromuscular junctions.The Journal of cell biology, 1982
- The removal of extracellular fibronectin from areas of cell-substrate contactCell, 1981
- “Western Blotting”: Electrophoretic transfer of proteins from sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gels to unmodified nitrocellulose and radiographic detection with antibody and radioiodinated protein AAnalytical Biochemistry, 1981
- Effects of a serum spreading factor on growth and morphology of cells in serum‐free mediumJournal of Supramolecular Structure, 1980
- Cleavage of Structural Proteins during the Assembly of the Head of Bacteriophage T4Nature, 1970