Affiliation:
1. Department of Genetics, University of Leicester, UK.
Abstract
We have examined the contacts made by explanted chick heart and limb bud fibroblasts after 24–48 h on glass, using quantitative interference reflection microscopy (IRM). Contacts beneath very thin cytoplasmic lamellae were avoided because the images of such contacts depend on the thickness of the lamellae. Plaque-like focal contacts, distinguished on the basis of shape and low irradiance (darkness), are intimate adhesions to the substratum. These images can be interpreted if it is assumed that microfilaments associated with the lower membrane increase the local cytoplasmic refractive index. The range of irradiances measured for focal contacts was found to be rather wide, and our modelling shows that the most likely explanation for this is that the images receive variable contributions from the adjacent cytoskeleton. For this reason it is particularly difficult to assign a characteristic thickness for these contacts from IRM data. Close contacts, seen principally as ‘grey’ regions under migrating cells at the edges of the explants, also show a wide range of irradiances. Unlike focal contacts, it is not necessary to postulate any involvement of the cytoskeleton in their images and they can be modelled as regions where an aqueous glycocalyx zone about 20–30 nm thick separates the membrane bilayer from the glass. Paler grey regions that also look like close contacts are apparently formed where the cell surface has lifted several tens of nanometres from the glass.
Publisher
The Company of Biologists
Cited by
14 articles.
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