Abstract
Scanning and transmission electron microscopy of Trypanosoma
congolense epimastigotes attached to a plastic substratum
shows them to elaborate a complex flagellum filament system and plaque
with
a highly organized structure. Non-ionic
detergent extraction of these cells shows that the resulting cytoskeletons
remain attached to the plaque. The subpellicular
corset of microtubules can be removed by salt or Ca+2
treatment leaving the axoneme, paraflagellar rod, associated filaments
and the plaque. Neither of these treatments therefore removed the
plaque-associated material from the substratum.
Analysis of these fractions by SDS–polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis
reveals an abundant 70 kDa protein that is highly
enriched in the salt extracted ‘minimal plaque’ structures
and
appears likely to be a major constituent of this structure.
These studies reveal that the complex filament and microtubule systems
of
the cytoskeleton involved the attachment of
trypanosomes to substrata and have established a method of biochemical
fractionation of the structures and components involved.
Publisher
Cambridge University Press (CUP)
Subject
Infectious Diseases,Animal Science and Zoology,Parasitology
Cited by
30 articles.
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