Cytoskeleton Centrosome and Centriole
Cytoskeleton Centrosome and Centriole
Cytoskeleton Centrosome and Centriole
Actin filaments are made of g-actin that has been assembled into f-actin strands. Two filaments twist together to form a
microfilament strand.
Actin is a highly conserved protein across evolution and is the most abundant protein in eukaryotic cells.
2. Intermediate Filaments
These cytoplasmic fibers average 10 nm in diameter (and thus are "intermediate" in size
between actin filaments (8 nm) and microtubules (25 nm)(as well as of the thick
filaments of skeletal muscle fibers).
There are several types of intermediate filament, each constructed from one or more
proteins characteristic of it.
• keratins are found in epithelial cells and also form hair and nails;
• nuclear lamins form a meshwork that stabilizes the inner membrane of the nuclear
envelope;
• neurofilaments strengthen the long axons of neurons;
• vimentins provide mechanical strength to muscle (and other) cells.
Functions of intermediate filaments:
3. Microtubules
• are straight, hollow cylinders whose wall is made up
of a ring of 13 "protofilaments";
• have a diameter of about 25 nm;
• are variable in length but can grow 1000 times as long
as they are wide;
• are built by the assembly of dimers of alpha tubulin
and beta tubulin;
• are found in both animal and plant cells. In plant cells,
microtubules are created at many sites scattered
through the cell. In animal cells, the microtubules
originate at the centrosome.
• The attached end is called the minus end; the other
end is the plus end.
Microtubules
• grow at the plus end by the polymerization of tubulin
dimers (powered by the hydrolysis of GTP), and
• shrink by the release of tubulin dimers
(depolymerization) at the same end.
Microtubule motors
There are two major groups of microtubule motors:
• kinesins (most of these move toward the plus end of
the microtubules) and
• dyneins (which move toward the minus end).
Spindle fibers have three destinations:
• Some attach to one kinetochore of a dyad with those growing from the opposite centrosome binding to
the other kinetochore of that dyad.
• Some bind to the arms of the chromosomes.
• Still others continue growing from the two centrosomes until they extend between each other in a region
of overlap.