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Communication, clearly essential to humans, is also essential to cells,
their elemental building blocks. In order to preserve organic cohesion,
cells need to communicate with their environment, but they also need to
ensure adequate communication between their various compartments.
These forms of intracellular exchange are essential and require the setting
up of actual networks. Membrane transport tubes were evidenced some years
ago, but their formation has up till now remained a mystery.
A team of CNRS* biologists and physicists working at
the Institut Curie has now, for the first time, managed to produce in
vitro a minimal system which emulates this form of intracellular transport.
This system should help better to understand intracellular protein transport.
Furthermore the tubes it generates may lend themselves to a number of
nanotechnological applications as well as to the study of antigens expressed
on the surface of tumor cells.
The paper presenting this work was published in the Proceedings of
the National Academy of Sciences of the USA on April 16, 2002.
Exchanges between cell compartments
occur constantly, and are indispensable to the preservation of all main
organic functions. In order properly to communicate, cells use molecules
on which information is inscribed** . But as this information
cannot be deposited randomly within cells, it needs to be ferried, or
transported.
Transportation was long ascribed to small bead-like structures known as
vesicles. We now know that other, more elongated membrane structures are
also involved in this process: these larger tubes carry molecules towards
their destination. In order to study the transportation of intracellular
information, the effectiveness of which is vital in vivo, teams
headed by Bruno Goud ("Compartimentation et dynamique cellulaires"
UMR 144 CNRS/Institut Curie) and Patricia Bassereau ("Physico-chimie
Curie" UMR 168 CNRS/Institut Curie) have for the first time developed
a minimal system which generates tubes in vitro on the basis of
artificial membranes.
Microtubules used as railway
tracks...
The system was developed using natural cell constituents.
The first phase involved emulating a microtubule-based support structure
(see page 3, Cytoskeleton). These long strands are distributed
homogeneously within cells and serve as railway tracks along which molecules
are ferried to their destination.
...and molecular motors to drive the train forward
In order to transport molecules, you need engines, or motors that will
pull them in the right direction. This is what kinesins do. Kinesins are
made up of two chains tipped with mechanisms onto which the fuel needed
for transportation (ie, ATP) can lock. This is how molecular motors can
move down the track, traveling in a given direction along
the microtubules.
An original system based
on giant vesicles and minibeads
Giant vesicles (diameter>10 microns) were prepared: basically, these
are large pockets made up of a single lipid membrane and filled with fluid.
Constitutionally, these vesicles resemble the membrane-surrounded cell
compartments from which information-inscribed molecules travel. The vesicles
largeness makes them easy to visualize with microscopes and furthermore
provides a sufficient store of membrane - as the experiment does not provide
for membrane renewal, contrary to what happens in vivo.
The research team then decided to use small polysterene beads (100 nm)
coated with molecules devised to lock on to the giant vesicle at one end,
and to the kinesins at the other.
The two bead locking links (to the vesicle and to the kinesins) are biotin
handles (a vitamin used here as a fixation molecule).
Once the polysterene bead has locked on to the giant lipid vesicle membrane,
it starts stretching it, as the kinesin arms pull it out,
their feet meanwhile rolling along the network of in vitro
replicated microtubules.
The tube formation mechanism is very tricky as it involves applying just
the right amount of traction to the vesicle membrane, while protecting
it against possible tears.
This artificial and sensitive system uses beads as a sort of resistor
to help avoid tube rupture. The cellular equivalent to this mechanism
is not yet fully understood but may well correspond to a protein complex
surfaced with a number of different motors.
A network of tubes emulating
tubes in live cells
A number of very fine tubes (with diameters of a few dozen nanometers)
were thus produced by stretching the membrane from a number of different
bead anchoring sites on the surface of the vesicle.
Once the process was initiated, the tubes proceeded to grow and generate
a complex microtubule-aligned network, as expected. This network is similar
to the one which forms in vivo in the endoplasmic reticulum or the Golgi
apparatus.
This minimal and original system thus provides for the generation of membrane
tubes with a very limited number of inputs: lipid vesicle membranes, kinesins,
microtubules, ATP.
Possible applications
In cell biology : This minimal
system is a significant measure of progess in terms of cell transport
studies, a broad area of research of great relevance to a number of different
fields. Hence the significance of tool optimization. However, inter-compartmental
information transmission involves many different players both for direction
selection and for actual transmission. Which is why this minimal system,
which is easy to replicate in vitro, should help speed up experiments
in cell transport. It will in particular make it easy to add extraneous
elements to base preparations so as to observe their direct impact, simple
comparison to the reference system thus allowing for easy assessment of
these elements possible role in cell transport. Until now, visualizing
given molecular functions involved de-activating other molecules, a task
both complex and fastidious.
In nanotechnology : In the
future, nanotechnologies are going to make very many new applications
possible. If tubes within cells transport molecules, why couldnt
they transport pre-selected objects in vitro ? One possible application
involves using nanotubes to transport fluids and thus create nanoreactors.
Another, making these tubes solid so as to generate fibers which can then
be used, inter alia, as nanooscillators. And these are but a few of the
new investigative possibilities being considered...
In oncology : Analyzing membrane
proteins in cancer cells is hard work. Scientists are thus contemplating
systems which would allow them to pull out artificial tubes
onto which they would slide the proteins they wish to study. These systems
would be made up of beads onto which would be placed antibodies specific
to given tumoral antigens expressed on the surface membranes of cancer
cells, so as to allow for the sorting and typing of these antigens.
* CNRS
Departments of Life Sciences, Physics and Mathematics, and Chemistry .
**This
discovery won Günter Blobel (Rockefeller University, New York) the
Nobel Prize for Medicine in 1999.
Reference : "A minimal system allowing tubulation with molecular
motors pulling on giant liposomes"
Aurélien Roux1-2, Giovanni Cappello2, Jean Cartaud3, Jacques Prost2,
Bruno Goud1* and Patricia Bassereau2*
PNAS, April 16, 2002.
1 Laboratoire Mécanismes moléculaires du transport intracellulaire,
UMR 144 CNRS/Institut Curie
2 Laboratoire Physico-Chimie Curie, UMR 168 CNRS/Institut Curie
3 Laboratoire de Biologie Cellulaire des Membranes, Institut Jacques Monod,
UMR 7592 CNRS/Universités Paris 6 et 7
* These authors contributed equally to this work.
BACKGROUND
A complex membrane system
The outer membranes of cells are generally very smooth, so as to preserve
proper separation between what is within cells, and what is without, but
inner membranes are quite different. Organizing cell compartments, these
membranes communicate through vesicles and tubes. Intracellular membranes
specific to these compartments therefore have very complex structures and
shapes.
The main cell compartments to be found in eukaryotic cells are as follows
:
a nucleus : contains most
of the genome and is the main site for DNA and RNA synthesis.
cytoplasm : surrounds the
nucleus and accounts for about half of the cells total volume. Is
inter alia the locus for protein synthesis.
endoplasmic reticulum : a
tubular network covering the whole intracellular space, with the exception
of the nucleus, a bit like a 3-D cobweb. This is where membrane proteins
and soluble proteins are synthesized. Its membrane accounts for half the
total membrane area.
Golgi apparatus : known for
their stacks of membrane-bound cisternae, these cells function as switching
stations. Proteins and lipids generating in the endoplasmic reticulum
are modified and then channelled towards other, specific compartments.
Vesicular structures which
are generally spherical. Depending on their function, these structures
are vesicles, or secretion granules, endosomes, peroxysomes or lysosomes.
The cytoskeleton
Just like the organisms they are the basic component parts of, cells are
held together by a skeleton which lends them shape, rigidity
and internal structure. Cytoskeletons are constantly evolving shapes,
made up of networks of protein filaments.
Their main component parts are as follows :
actin microfilaments lead
in terms of numbers and are somewhat like muscles placed under
plasmic membranes. They shape cells and are involved in the way cells
move on their supporting structures as well as in the displacement of
vesicles within the cytoplasm. Their remarkable movements have been described
as conveyor-belt-like.
intermediate microfilaments,
extremely resilient to stretching, make up the basic structure of cells.
Clustered in tubes, these microfilaments are very stable. In hair, they
are known as keratin.
microtubules, distributed
from the centrosome to the plasmic membrane. Their specific structure
is similar to that of railway tracks and allows them to transport molecules
to any point within the cell. Microtubules are sometimes linked to motor
proteins such as kinesin, or dynein. Within cells, the centrosome is the
main organizing center for microtubules supporting chromosomes during
cell division.
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