Organization and spatial arrangement of fluorescein-labeled native actin microinjected into normal locomoting and experimentally influenced Amoeba proteus

Abstract
Fully polymerization-competent fluorescein-labeled actin from skeletal muscle was microinjected into both normal moving and experimentally treated Amoeba proteus. Its intracellular distribution was followed by integral image intensification of the fluorescence on a television screen and compared with controls injected with rhodamine-labeled serum albumin. The labeled actin was incorporated into the endogenous actin pool and exhibited a characteristic redistribution depending on the cellular morphology. Increased amounts of labeled actin could be detected within a thin layer separating the hyalo- and granuloplasm or running immediately beneath the plasma membrane when hyaloplasmic regions were absent. The topography of the fluorescent layer demonstrated in living cells is in agreement with the cortical microfilament layer described ultrastructurally recently in corresponding cells. The combined results emphasize the important role of the cortical filament layer in both morphogenetic processes (e.g., hyalo-granuloplasm separation or changes in cell shape) and motive force generation for cytoplasmic streaming and amoeboid movement.