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Publication : Morphological analysis of glutaraldehyde-fixed vimentin intermediate filaments and assembly-intermediates by atomic force microscopy.

First Author  Ando S Year  2004
Journal  Biochim Biophys Acta Volume  1702
Issue  1 Pages  53-65
PubMed ID  15450850 Mgi Jnum  J:93077
Mgi Id  MGI:3055692 Doi  10.1016/j.bbapap.2004.07.008
Citation  Ando S, et al. (2004) Morphological analysis of glutaraldehyde-fixed vimentin intermediate filaments and assembly-intermediates by atomic force microscopy. Biochim Biophys Acta 1702(1):53-65
abstractText  Atomic force microscopy (AFM) was used to study the morphology of vimentin intermediate filaments (IFs) and their assembly intermediates. At each time after initiation of IF assembly in vitro of recombinant mouse vimentin, the sample was fixed with 0.1% glutaraldehyde and then applied to AFM analysis. When mature vimentin IFs were imaged in air on mica, they appeared to have a width of approximately 28 nm, a height of approximately 4 nm and a length of several micrometers. Taking into account the probe tip's distortion effect, the exact width was evaluated to be approximately 25 nm, suggesting that the filaments flatten on the substrate rather than be cylindrical with a diameter of approximately 10 nm. Vimentin IFs in air clearly demonstrated approximately 21-nm repeating patterns along the filament axis. The three-dimensional profiles of vimentin IFs indicated that the characteristic patterns were presented by repeating segments with a convex surface. The repeating patterns close to 21 nm were also observed by AFM analysis in a physiological solution condition, suggesting that the segments along the filaments are an intrinsic substructure of vimentin IFs. In the course of IF assembly, assembly intermediates were analyzed in air. Many short filaments with a full-width and an apparent length of approximately 78 nm (evaluated length approximately 69 nm) were observed immediately after initiation of the assembly reaction. Interestingly, the short full-width filaments appeared to be composed of the four segments. Further incubation enabled the short full-width filaments to anneal longitudinally into longer filaments with a distinct elongation step of approximately 40 nm, which corresponds to the length of the two segments. To explain these observations, we propose a vimentin IF formation model in which vimentin dimers are supercoiling around the filament axis.
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