Cell & Molecular Physiology 111 Mason Farm Road 5200 Medical Biomolecular Research Building CB 7545 Chapel Hill, NC 27599-7545 tel. (919) 966-5241 fax (919) 966-6927
|
- Info
Otey - Images
 | Figure 1. Palladin (in green) is concentrated in closely-spaced spots associated with contractile bundles of actin filaments (in red), in a cultured A7r5 vascular smooth muscle cell. |  | Figure 2. (Figures 2-4.) In cultured fibroblasts, three-color immunofluorescence staining is used to detect palladin (green), actin (blue) and VASP (red), which is a regulator of actin filament growth and a molecular partner for palladin. Note that palladin and VASP are detected in regularly-spaced dots along the actin filament bundles, and also at the ends of the bundles, where they attach to the plasma membrane on the lower surface of the cell. |  | Figure 3. (Figures 2-4.) In cultured fibroblasts, three-color immunofluorescence staining is used to detect palladin (green), actin (blue) and VASP (red), which is a regulator of actin filament growth and a molecular partner for palladin. Note that palladin and VASP are detected in regularly-spaced dots along the actin filament bundles, and also at the ends of the bundles, where they attach to the plasma membrane on the lower surface of the cell. |  | Figure 4. (Figures 2-4.) In cultured fibroblasts, three-color immunofluorescence staining is used to detect palladin (green), actin (blue) and VASP (red), which is a regulator of actin filament growth and a molecular partner for palladin. Note that palladin and VASP are detected in regularly-spaced dots along the actin filament bundles, and also at the ends of the bundles, where they attach to the plasma membrane on the lower surface of the cell. |
|
|
|