Literature DB >> 10891854

Recurring views on the structure and function of the cytoskeleton: a 300-year epic.

E Frixione1.   

Abstract

Some unnoticed or seldom remembered precedents of current views on biological motion and its structural bases are briefly outlined, followed by a concise recapitulation of how the present theory has been constructed in the last few decades. It is shown that the evolution of the concept of fibers as main constituents of living matter led to hypothesizing microscopic structures closely resembling microtubules in the 18th century. At the beginning of this period, fibers sliding over each other and driven by interposed moving elements were envisioned as the cause of muscle contraction. In the following century, an account of the mechanism of myofibril contraction visualized longitudinal displacements of myosin-containing submicroscopic rodlets. The existence of fibrils in the protoplasm of non-muscle cells, a subject of long debate in the second half of the 19th century, was virtually discarded as irrelevant or fallacious 100 years ago. The issue resurfaced in the early 1930s as a theoretical notion--the cytosquelette--nearly two decades before intracellular filamentous structures were first observed with electron microscopy. The role originally assumed for such fibrils as signal conductors is nowadays being reappraised, although under new interpretations with a much wider significance including modulation of gene expression, morphogenesis, and even consciousness. Since all of the above ancestral conceptions were eventually abandoned, the corresponding current views are, to a certain extent, recurrent. Copyright 2000 Wiley-Liss, Inc.

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Year:  2000        PMID: 10891854     DOI: 10.1002/1097-0169(200006)46:2<73::AID-CM1>3.0.CO;2-0

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Cell Motil Cytoskeleton        ISSN: 0886-1544


  13 in total

1.  Muscle microanatomy and its changes during contraction: the legacy of William Bowman (1816-1892).

Authors:  Eugenio Frixione
Journal:  J Muscle Res Cell Motil       Date:  2006-02-08       Impact factor: 2.698

2.  Fast label-free cytoskeletal network imaging in living mammalian cells.

Authors:  Pierre Bon; Sandrine Lécart; Emmanuel Fort; Sandrine Lévêque-Fort
Journal:  Biophys J       Date:  2014-04-15       Impact factor: 4.033

3.  Role of cytoskeleton in controlling the disorder strength of cellular nanoscale architecture.

Authors:  Dhwanil Damania; Hariharan Subramanian; Ashish K Tiwari; Yolanda Stypula; Dhananjay Kunte; Prabhakar Pradhan; Hemant K Roy; Vadim Backman
Journal:  Biophys J       Date:  2010-08-04       Impact factor: 4.033

4.  Sperm Lysozyme-Like Protein 1 (SLLP1), an intra-acrosomal oolemmal-binding sperm protein, reveals filamentous organization in protein crystal form.

Authors:  H Zheng; A Mandal; I A Shumilin; M D Chordia; S Panneerdoss; J C Herr; W Minor
Journal:  Andrology       Date:  2015-07       Impact factor: 3.842

Review 5.  Active biological materials.

Authors:  Daniel A Fletcher; Phillip L Geissler
Journal:  Annu Rev Phys Chem       Date:  2009       Impact factor: 12.703

Review 6.  Alphaherpesviruses and the cytoskeleton in neuronal infections.

Authors:  Sofia V Zaichick; Kevin P Bohannon; Gregory A Smith
Journal:  Viruses       Date:  2011-06-27       Impact factor: 5.048

7.  Vascular fasciatherapy danis bois method: a study on mechanism concerning the supporting point applied on arteries.

Authors:  Bernard Payrau; Nadine Quéré; Danis Bois
Journal:  Int J Ther Massage Bodywork       Date:  2011-12-31

Review 8.  Canine liver transplantation model and the intermediate filaments of the cytoskeleton of the hepatocytes.

Authors:  Consolato Sergi; Reem Abdualmjid; Yasser Abuetabh
Journal:  J Biomed Biotechnol       Date:  2012-03-28

9.  Transciptomic and histological analysis of hepatopancreas, muscle and gill tissues of oriental river prawn (Macrobrachium nipponense) in response to chronic hypoxia.

Authors:  Shengming Sun; Fujun Xuan; Hongtuo Fu; Jian Zhu; Xianping Ge; Zhimin Gu
Journal:  BMC Genomics       Date:  2015-07-03       Impact factor: 3.969

Review 10.  Genetics of Human and Canine Dilated Cardiomyopathy.

Authors:  Siobhan Simpson; Jennifer Edwards; Thomas F N Ferguson-Mignan; Malcolm Cobb; Nigel P Mongan; Catrin S Rutland
Journal:  Int J Genomics       Date:  2015-07-22       Impact factor: 2.326

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