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Biophysical Journal 61: 1495-1512 (1992)
© 1992 the Biophysical Society

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The invertebrate myosin filament: subfilament arrangement of the solid filaments of insect flight muscles.

G Beinbrech, F T Ashton and F A Pepe

Zoologisches Institut, Universität Münster, Federal Republic of Germany.

ABSTRACT

Transverse sections (approximately 140 nm thick) of solid myosin filaments of the flight muscles of the fleshfly, Phormia terrae-novae, the honey bee, Apis mellifica, and the waterbug, Lethocerus uhleri, were photographed in a JEM model 200A electron microscope at 200 kV. The images were digitized and computer processed by rotational filtering. In each of these filaments it was found that the symmetry of the core and the wall was not the same. The power spectra of the images showed sixfold symmetry for the wall and threefold symmetry for the core of the filaments. The images of the filaments in each muscle were superimposed according to the sixfold center of the wall. These averaged images for all three muscles showed six pairs of subunits in the wall similar to those found in the wall of tubular filaments. From serial sections of the fleshfly filaments, we conclude that the subunits in the wall of the filaments represent subfilaments essentially parallel to the long axis of the filament. In each muscle there are additional subunits in the core, closely related to the subunits in the wall. Evaluation of serial sections through fleshfly filaments suggests that the relationship of the three subunits observed in the core to those in the wall varies along the length of the filaments. In waterbug filaments there are three dense and three less dense subunits for a total of six all closely related to the wall. Bee filaments have three subunits related to the wall and three subunits located eccentrically in the core of the filaments. The presence of core subunits can be related to the paramyosin content of the filaments.




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H. Liu, M. S. Miller, D. M. Swank, W. A. Kronert, D. W. Maughan, and S. I. Bernstein
Paramyosin phosphorylation site disruption affects indirect flight muscle stiffness and power generation in Drosophila melanogaster
PNAS, July 26, 2005; 102(30): 10522 - 10527.
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Copyright © 1992 by the Biophysical Society.