Filamentous actin in paramecium cells: functional and structural changes correlated with phalloidin affinity labeling in vivo.

Abstract
Rhodaminylated (R)-phalloidin microinjected into Paramecium tetraurelia cells at a final concentration of greater than or equal to 20 micrograms/ml produces considerable functional and structural changes. F-actin bundles (with 20 micrograms/ml phalloidin within 15 min) are formed, which subsequently (greater than 30 min) are sequestered into autophagic vacuoles; simultaneously, the originally intense fluorescence of a narrow cortical layer becomes more and more diminished. When such microinjected cells are processed for electron microscopy, they display concomitant ultrastructural alterations, namely, the formation of transcellular bundles of 5-7 nm-thick filaments, which subsequently appear in autophagosomes, as well as a considerable reduction of filamentous materials in the cortex. This, in turn, entails a considerable restructuring of the cortex, enabling free access of various structural components to the cortex. Higher doses of R-phalloidin abolish cytoplasmic streaming (e.g., 50 micrograms/ml after 20-30 min); although the cells may survive, new secretory organelles (trichocysts) are no longer docked to the cell membrane. In contrast, exocytosis of docked trichocysts (as well as subsequent membrane resealing and retrieval) is not impaired under any conditions. Cortical F-actin may account for the cytoplasmic streaming that may normally guarantee the delivery of new trichocysts to free docking sites at the cell membrane. When docking is inhibited by high R-phalloidin doses, excess free trichocysts are sequestered into autophagosomes (crinophagy). One of the most sensitive cell functions is food vacuole formation (assayed by prelabeling with India ink), which correlates with the presence of R-phalloidin labeling in the cytostomal region and around food vacuoles. The main conclusions from this work are that filamentous actin may be involved in structuring of the cortex and in cytoplasmic streaming, and may therefore influence the formation, and possibly the transcellular transport (cyclosis), of food vacuoles, as well as the docking of trichocysts, whereas it does not play a role in exocytosis per se or in the steps immediately following.