The movement of bound ligands over cell surfaces

1982 
Abstract The long range movements of membrane-bound ligands into surface caps and into the pseudopods of phagocytizing cells, the uropods of motile cells and the cleavage furrow of dividing cells appear to be analogous processes. A common mechanism to explain these movements must take into account several new and central observations: ligand-receptor complexes can migrate to regions of existing microfilament accumulation; laser photobleaching studies with fluorescent Con A indicate that ligand-receptor movement occurs unidirectionally; video computer analyses of Con A redistribution show that movement may exceed the maximum rates measured for protein diffusion in membranes. These observations are not consistent with models in which ligand-receptor movement occurs by diffusion or by direct interaction with contractile microfilaments. However, they can be satisfied by a new model that proposes the entrainment of selected membrane determinants on membrane waves directed towards regions such as caps, pseudopodia, uropods or cleavage furrow. These oriented waves are initiated by tension due to asymmetric microfilamentmembrane interaction.
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