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Syncytioskeletons in choriocarcinoma in culture

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Syncytioskeletons in choriocarcinoma in culture. / OCKLEFORD, C D ; DEARDEN, L ; BADLEY, R A .
In: Journal of Cell Science, Vol. 66, 01.03.1984, p. 1-20.

Research output: Contribution to Journal/MagazineJournal articlepeer-review

Harvard

OCKLEFORD, CD, DEARDEN, L & BADLEY, RA 1984, 'Syncytioskeletons in choriocarcinoma in culture', Journal of Cell Science, vol. 66, pp. 1-20. <http://jcs.biologists.org/content/66/1/1.abstract>

APA

OCKLEFORD, C. D., DEARDEN, L., & BADLEY, R. A. (1984). Syncytioskeletons in choriocarcinoma in culture. Journal of Cell Science, 66, 1-20. http://jcs.biologists.org/content/66/1/1.abstract

Vancouver

OCKLEFORD CD, DEARDEN L, BADLEY RA. Syncytioskeletons in choriocarcinoma in culture. Journal of Cell Science. 1984 Mar 1;66:1-20.

Author

OCKLEFORD, C D ; DEARDEN, L ; BADLEY, R A . / Syncytioskeletons in choriocarcinoma in culture. In: Journal of Cell Science. 1984 ; Vol. 66. pp. 1-20.

Bibtex

@article{31c97120c4294a5481b1b7ba10c7e648,
title = "Syncytioskeletons in choriocarcinoma in culture",
abstract = "Indirect immunofluorescence microscopy using anti-actin serum has been used to investigate the distribution of actin-containing polymers in BeWo cells. This cell line, derived from a human choriocarcinoma, contains tissue that, like its tissue of origin, is partly syncytial. The syncytial nature has been inferred from study of Nomarski optical sections and from transmission electron microscopy. The multinucleated plaques of tissue possess a syncytioskeleton with a number of actin-containing features characteristic of cultured cells. These include stress fibres, cortical layers and ruffled membranes. Other actin-containing structures are more typical of the related non-pathological syncytiotrophoblast. These include a dense population of microvilli. The overall organization of the actin syncytioskeletons bears no obvious relationship to the number or position of nuclei in the syncytium. Indirect immunofluorescence microscopy has also been employed to localize the protein tubulin in BeWo cells. The microtubules do not appear to be spatially organized by a particular nucleus. Rather, there are numerous microtubule-organizing centres (MTOCs) that exist in the cytoplasm and do not have the expected numerical and positional relationship to nuclei. From these data it appears that polymeric cytoskeletal elements in these syncytia are organized in a manner not immediately subordinate to syncytial nuclei.",
author = "OCKLEFORD, {C D} and L DEARDEN and BADLEY, {R A}",
year = "1984",
month = mar,
day = "1",
language = "English",
volume = "66",
pages = "1--20",
journal = "Journal of Cell Science",
issn = "0021-9533",
publisher = "Company of Biologists Ltd",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Syncytioskeletons in choriocarcinoma in culture

AU - OCKLEFORD, C D

AU - DEARDEN, L

AU - BADLEY, R A

PY - 1984/3/1

Y1 - 1984/3/1

N2 - Indirect immunofluorescence microscopy using anti-actin serum has been used to investigate the distribution of actin-containing polymers in BeWo cells. This cell line, derived from a human choriocarcinoma, contains tissue that, like its tissue of origin, is partly syncytial. The syncytial nature has been inferred from study of Nomarski optical sections and from transmission electron microscopy. The multinucleated plaques of tissue possess a syncytioskeleton with a number of actin-containing features characteristic of cultured cells. These include stress fibres, cortical layers and ruffled membranes. Other actin-containing structures are more typical of the related non-pathological syncytiotrophoblast. These include a dense population of microvilli. The overall organization of the actin syncytioskeletons bears no obvious relationship to the number or position of nuclei in the syncytium. Indirect immunofluorescence microscopy has also been employed to localize the protein tubulin in BeWo cells. The microtubules do not appear to be spatially organized by a particular nucleus. Rather, there are numerous microtubule-organizing centres (MTOCs) that exist in the cytoplasm and do not have the expected numerical and positional relationship to nuclei. From these data it appears that polymeric cytoskeletal elements in these syncytia are organized in a manner not immediately subordinate to syncytial nuclei.

AB - Indirect immunofluorescence microscopy using anti-actin serum has been used to investigate the distribution of actin-containing polymers in BeWo cells. This cell line, derived from a human choriocarcinoma, contains tissue that, like its tissue of origin, is partly syncytial. The syncytial nature has been inferred from study of Nomarski optical sections and from transmission electron microscopy. The multinucleated plaques of tissue possess a syncytioskeleton with a number of actin-containing features characteristic of cultured cells. These include stress fibres, cortical layers and ruffled membranes. Other actin-containing structures are more typical of the related non-pathological syncytiotrophoblast. These include a dense population of microvilli. The overall organization of the actin syncytioskeletons bears no obvious relationship to the number or position of nuclei in the syncytium. Indirect immunofluorescence microscopy has also been employed to localize the protein tubulin in BeWo cells. The microtubules do not appear to be spatially organized by a particular nucleus. Rather, there are numerous microtubule-organizing centres (MTOCs) that exist in the cytoplasm and do not have the expected numerical and positional relationship to nuclei. From these data it appears that polymeric cytoskeletal elements in these syncytia are organized in a manner not immediately subordinate to syncytial nuclei.

M3 - Journal article

VL - 66

SP - 1

EP - 20

JO - Journal of Cell Science

JF - Journal of Cell Science

SN - 0021-9533

ER -