Sign In

Polarity of the Cytoskeleton

The intrinsic polarity of cells can be primarily attributed to two factors- i) the asymmetric accumulation of mobile components such are regulatory molecules and subcellular components across the cell and ii) the orientation of polar cytoskeletal filaments that make up the cytoskeletal networks, specifically microfilaments, and microtubules arranged along the axis of polarity. Interactions between the cytoskeletal filaments are crucial for the establishment and maintenance of the polar nature of the cell.

Other factors that contribute to cytoskeletal polarity include the structure of monomers, the structure of individual filaments, the filament’s rate of assembly or disassembly, accessory proteins associated with cytoskeletal filaments, and the overall asymmetric distribution of these filaments within the cell. Microtubules and microfilaments are inherently polar and contribute through all these factors, whereas intermediate filaments are non-polar and contribute only through their asymmetric distribution in a cell.

Cellular Functions Based on Cytoskeleton Polarity

The polarity of cytoskeletal filaments regulates cell motility and transport of molecules within the cell. A cell moves by repeatedly extending and forming an attachment at the front, followed by detachment and retraction of the rear end. The polarity of the microfilaments directs the directionality of such protrusions. In migrating cells, F-actins dominate at the migrating front and promote the formation of lamellipodia or filopodia—membrane protrusions essential for cell movement.

Vesicular transport by motor proteins is regulated by microtubule polarity. Microtubules determine the directionality of cargoes carried by kinesin and dynein. While kinesin moves towards the cell’s periphery with the plus-end of microtubules, dynein moves towards the nucleus with the minus end.

Tags
PolarityCytoskeletonMobile ComponentsRegulatory MoleculesSubcellular ComponentsCytoskeletal FilamentsMicrofilamentsMicrotubulesPolarity Of The CellAsymmetric AccumulationCell StructureMonomersFilament Assembly disassemblyAccessory ProteinsAsymmetric DistributionIntermediate FilamentsCell MotilityMolecule TransportCell ProtrusionsF actins

From Chapter undefined:

article

Now Playing

Polarity of the Cytoskeleton

Related Videos

10.5K Views

article

Introduction to the Cytoskeleton

Related Videos

17.2K Views

article

Adaptability of Cytoskeletal Filaments

Related Videos

2.8K Views

article

Assembly of Cytoskeletal Filaments

Related Videos

11.4K Views

article

Cytoskeletal Linker Proteins - Plakins

Related Videos

2.0K Views

article

Cytoskeletal Accessory Proteins

Related Videos

2.6K Views

article

Cytoskeletal Proteins in Bacteria

Related Videos

2.9K Views

article

Intracellular Movement of Viruses and Bacteria

Related Videos

2.2K Views

article

Studying the Cytoskeleton

Related Videos

2.8K Views

article

Introduction to Actin

Related Videos

3.9K Views

article

Actin Polymerization

Related Videos

4.4K Views

article

Actin Treadmilling

Related Videos

6.5K Views

article

Generation of Straight or Branched Actin Filaments

Related Videos

2.4K Views

article

Actin Filament Depolymerization

Related Videos

2.6K Views

article

Formation of Higher-order Actin Filaments

Related Videos

2.5K Views

See More

JoVE Logo

Privacy

Terms of Use

Policies

Research

Education

ABOUT JoVE

Copyright © 2024 MyJoVE Corporation. All rights reserved