Functional remodeling of the contractile smooth muscle cell cortex, a provocative concept, supported by direct visualization of cortical remodeling
Date Issued
2022-04-26Publisher Version
10.3390/biology11050662Author(s)
Suphamungmee, Worawit
Lehman, William
Morgan, Kathleen G.
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https://hdl.handle.net/2144/46010Version
Published version
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W. Suphamungmee, W. Lehman, K.G. Morgan. 2022. "Functional Remodeling of the Contractile Smooth Muscle Cell Cortex, a Provocative Concept, Supported by Direct Visualization of Cortical Remodeling." Biology, Volume 11, Issue 5, pp.662-. https://doi.org/10.3390/biology11050662Abstract
Considerable controversy has surrounded the functional anatomy of the cytoskeleton of the contractile vascular smooth muscle cell. Recent studies have suggested a dynamic nature of the cortical cytoskeleton of these cells, but direct proof has been lacking. Here, we review past studies in this area suggesting a plasticity of smooth muscle cells. We also present images testing these suggestions by using the technique of immunoelectron microscopy of metal replicas to directly visualize the cortical actin cytoskeleton of the contractile smooth muscle cell along with interactions by representative cytoskeletal binding proteins. We find the cortical cytoskeletal matrix to be a branched, interconnected network of linear actin bundles. Here, the focal adhesion proteins talin and zyxin were localized with nanometer accuracy. Talin is reported in past studies to span the integrin-cytoplasm distance in fibroblasts and zyxin is known to be an adaptor protein between alpha-actinin and VASP. In response to activation of signal transduction with the alpha-agonist phenylephrine, we found that no movement of talin was detectable but that the zyxin-zyxin spacing was statistically significantly decreased in the smooth muscle cells examined. Contractile smooth muscle is often assumed to have a fixed cytoskeletal structure. Thus, the results included here are important in that they directly support the concept at the electron microscopic level that the focal adhesion of the contractile smooth muscle cell has a dynamic nature and that the protein-protein interfaces showing plasticity are protein-specific.
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Copyright: © 2022 by the authors. Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) license (https://reativecommons.org/licenses/by4.0/)Collections