Coping with the inevitable: how cells repair a torn surface membrane

被引:144
作者
McNeil, PL [1 ]
Terasaki, M
机构
[1] Med Coll Georgia, Dept Cellular Biol, Augusta, GA 30912 USA
[2] Med Coll Georgia, Inst Mol Med & Genet, Augusta, GA 30912 USA
[3] Univ Connecticut, Ctr Hlth, Dept Physiol, Farmington, CT 06032 USA
关键词
D O I
10.1038/35074652
中图分类号
Q2 [细胞生物学];
学科分类号
071009 ; 090102 ;
摘要
Disruption of the cell plasma membrane is a commonplace occurrence in many mechanically challenging, biological environments. 'Resealing' is the emergency response required for cell survival. Resealing is triggered by Ca2+ entering through the disruption; this causes vesicles present in cytoplasm underlying the disruption site to fuse rapidly with one another (homotypically) and also with the adjacent plasma membrane (heterotypically/exocytotically). The large vesicular products of homotypic fusion are added as a reparative 'patch' across the disruption, when its resealing requires membrane replacement. The simultaneous activation of the local cytoskeleton supports these membrane fusion events. Resealing is clearly a complex and dynamic cell adaptation, and, as we emphasize here, may be an evolutionarily primitive one that arose shortly after the ancestral eukaryote lost its protective cell wall.
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页码:E124 / E129
页数:6
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