4.6 Article

Effect of cytochalasins on F-actin and morphology of Ehrlich ascites tumor cells

Journal

EXPERIMENTAL CELL RESEARCH
Volume 261, Issue 1, Pages 209-219

Publisher

ACADEMIC PRESS INC
DOI: 10.1006/excr.2000.5032

Keywords

F-actin; cytochalasin; cell volume; blebs; myosin II

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Cytochalasins have been used extensively to probe the role of F-actin in different aspects of cellular function. Most of the data obtained are interpreted on the basis of the well-established depolymerizing effects of cytochalasins on F-actin preparations in vitro. However, some evidence indicates that, in intact cells, different cytochalasins can have varying effects on cell morphology and F-actin content and organization. To examine this problem in more detail, we analyzed the effects of cytochalasins on the cell morphology of and F-actin content and organization in Ehrlich ascites tumor (EAT) cells. After a 3-min exposure to 0.5 muM cytochalasin D, B, or E, F-actin content was equally reduced in all cases and this correlated with a reduction in the amount of cortical F-actin associated with the EAT cell membrane. However, only with CE was cell morphology markedly altered, with the appearance of numerous blebs. At 10 muM, blebbing was present in all conditions and the organization of cortical F-actin was disrupted. F-actin content, however, was not further reduced by this higher concentration and in CD it was identical to control levels. Exposure of EAT cells to similar concentrations of cheatoglobosin C, an analog of the cytochalasins that has little to no affinity for F-actin, resulted in a loss of F-actin content, a reduction in F-actin fluorescence, but no change in cell morphology, including a complete lack of bleb formation. Myosin II immunoreactivity, concentrated in the cortical cytoplasm colocalized with F-actin and in an area associated with the Golgi, was reduced by the high-dose cytochalasin. These results demonstrate that caution must be exercised in the use of cytochalasins to probe the role of F-actin in cellular function and that several parameters must be analyzed to obtain an accurate assessment of the effect of cytochalasin on the actin filament system. (C) 2000 Academic Press.

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