首页 | 本学科首页   官方微博 | 高级检索  
相似文献
 共查询到20条相似文献,搜索用时 93 毫秒
1.
The spatial arrangement of tight junctions in choroid plexus and ciliary body rabbit epithelia has been determined by studying freeze-fracture complementary replicas. In the choroid plexus epithelium, the interruptions of the junctional P-face fibrils were measured to be 14% of their total length. In the ciliary body epithelium, where the fibrils were found to be more fragmented than in the choroid plexus, the P-face fibril interruptions accounted for 12 % of the total length of the zonulae occludentes sealing the non-pigmented cells and 30% in the focal linear tight junctions connecting the non-pigmented and pigmented cells at their apices. In both epithelia, the interruptions of the ridges are precisely complemented by particles or short bars of similar length found in the E-face furrows. Consequently, it is possible to conclude that the junctional fibrils are continuous in these two epithelia. For the zonulae occludentes, this continuity appears to be inconsistent with the ‘leaky’ properties of these epithelia shown by some physiological investigations.  相似文献   

2.
Human fetal primary tooth germs in the cap stage were fixed with a glutaraldehyde-formaldehyde mixture, and formative processes of tight and gap junctions of the inner enamel epithelium and preameloblasts were examined by means of freeze-fracture replication. Chains of small clusters of particles on the plasma membrane P-face of the inner enamel epithelium and preameloblasts were the initial sign of tight junction formation. After arranging themselves in discontinuous, linear arrays in association with preexisting or forming gap junctions, these particles later began revealing smooth, continuous tight junctional strands on the plasma membrane P-face and corresponding shallow grooves of a similar pattern on the E-face. Although they exhibited evident meshwork structures of various extents at both the proximal and distal ends of cell bodies, they formed no zonulae occludentes. Small assemblies of particles resembling gap junctions were noted at points of cross linkage of tight junctional strands; but large, mature gap junctions no longer continued into the tight junction meshwork structure. Gap junctions first appeared as very small particle clusters on the plasma membrane P-face of the inner enamel epithelium. Later two types of gap junctions were recognized: one consisted of quite densely aggregated particles with occasional particle-free areas, and the other consisted of relatively loosely aggregated particles with particle-free areas and aisles. Gap junction maturation seemed to consist in an increase of particle numbers. Fusion of gap junctions in the forming stage too was recognized. The results of this investigation suggest that, from an early stage in their development, human fetal ameloblasts possess highly differentiated cell-to-cell interrelations.  相似文献   

3.
Freeze-fracture reveals intramembrane fibrils lying along the intermembrane contacts that characterize tight junctions. Tight junctions from a variety of species are reexamined here by rapid freezing prior to freeze-fracture. The tight junction fibril is uprooted alternatively from either the cytoplasmic or the exoplasmic hemibilayer during freeze-cleavage, exposing two distinct but complementary views of its hybrid structure within the same replica. When the transmembrane fibril is uprooted from the exoplasmic hemibilayer it appears on the P-fracture face as a smooth-surfaced cylinder which is sometimes resolved into periodic globular structures. The lack of indication that the P-face cylinder has been pulled out through the opposite membrane half indicates that this domain of the fibril is, in large part, buried in the hydrophobic interior of the membrane. However, when the transmembrane fibril is uprooted from the cytosolic hemibilayer it appears on the E-fracture face as a row of irregular intramembrane particles. The irregular particles on the E-face aspect of the fibril are interpreted as corresponding to transmembrane protein segments that may very well make projections onto the cytosolic surface of the bilayer. En face views of the outermost junction strand between adjacent epithelial cells show periodic lines on the bilayer on each side of the junction which are interpreted as periodic transmembrane protein segments arising from the core structure of the tight junction fibril. If the backbone of the tight junction strand is an inverted cylindrical micelle, it must typically include proteins, which might anchor it to structures outside the membrane bilayer.  相似文献   

4.
Structural integrity of hepatocyte tight junctions   总被引:9,自引:4,他引:5       下载免费PDF全文
The significance of discontinuities frequently found in freeze-fracture replicas of the tight junction was evaluated using complementary replicas of hepatocyte junctions from control and bile duct-ligated rats. An extensive analysis of complementary replicas using rotary platinum shadowing indicates that discontinuities in the protoplasmic (P) fracture face do not represent structural breaks in the tight- junctional network. In no case did P-face discontinuities correspond with interruptions in the groove network on the complementary extracellular (E) face. Quantitative analysis of replicas shows that P- face discontinuities result in part from "transfer" of material to the complementary E face (approximately 7% of the junctional length). However, many P-face discontinuities (7-30% of the junctional length) are matched only by a groove on the complementary E face. This finding demonstrates that a significant amount of material can be lost during freeze-fracture. An analysis of junctions from bile duct-ligated rats, which are known to have an increased paracellular permeability, shows comparable transfer and loss of material. However, the number of junctional elements and the tight-junction network density was significantly reduced by bile duct ligation. These observations indicate that discontinuities in tight-junctional elements result during the preparation of freeze-fracture replicas and are not physiologically important features of the junctional barrier. Variation in the number of elements provides the best explanation for observed differences in tight-junction permeability.  相似文献   

5.
Endothelial cells of the blood-brain barrier form complex tight junctions, which are more frequently associated with the protoplasmic (P-face) than with the exocytoplasmic (E-face) membrane leaflet. The association of tight junctional particles with either membrane leaflet is a result of the expression of various claudins, which are transmembrane constituents of tight junction strands. Mammalian brain endothelial tight junctions exhibit an almost balanced distribution of particles and lose this morphology and barrier function in vitro. Since it was shown that the brain endothelial tight junctions of submammalian species form P-face-associated tight junctions of the epithelial type, the question of which molecular composition underlies the morphological differences and how do these brain endothelial cells behave in vitro arose. Therefore, rat and chicken brain endothelial cells were investigated for the expression of junctional proteins in vivo and in vitro and for the morphology of the tight junctions. In order to visualize morphological differences, the complexity and the P-face association of tight junctions were quantified. Rat and chicken brain endothelial cells form tight junctions which are positive for claudin-1, claudin-5, occludin and ZO-1. In agreement with the higher P-face association of tight junctions in vivo, chicken brain endothelia exhibited a slightly stronger labeling for claudin-1 at membrane contacts. Brain endothelial cells of both species showed a significant alteration of tight junctions in vitro, indicating a loss of barrier function. Rat endothelial cells showed a characteristic switch of tight junction particles from the P-face to the E-face, accompanied by the loss of claudin-1 in immunofluorescence labeling. In contrast, chicken brain endothelial cells did not show such a switch of particles, although they also lost claudin-1 in culture. These results demonstrate that the maintenance of rat and chicken endothelial barrier function depends on the brain microenvironment. Interestingly, the alteration of tight junctions is different in rat and chicken. This implies that the rat and chicken brain endothelial tight junctions are regulated differently.  相似文献   

6.
Extensive and unequivocal tight junctions are here reported between the lateral borders of the cellular layer that circumscribes the arachnid (spider) central nervous system. This account details the features of these structures, which form a beltlike reticulum that is more complex than the simple linear tight junctions hitherto found in invertebrate tissues and which bear many of the characteristics of vertebrate zonulae occludentes. We also provide evidence that these junctions form the basis of a permeability barrier to exogenous compounds. In thin sections, the tight junctions are identifiable as punctate points of membrane apposition; they are seen to exclude the stain and appear as election- lucent moniliform strands along the lines of membrane fusion in en face views of uranyl-calcium-treated tissues. In freeze-fracture replicas, the regions of close membrane apposition exhibit P-face (PF) ridges and complementary E-face (EF) furrows that are coincident across face transitions, although slightly offset with respect to one another. The free inward diffusion of both ionic and colloidal lanthanum is inhibited by these punctate tight junctions so that they appear to form the basis of a circumferential blood-brain barrier. These results support the contention that tight junctions exist in the tissues of the invertebrata in spite of earlier suggestions that (a) they are unique to vertebrates and (b) septate junctions are the equivalent invertebrate occluding structure. The component tight junctional 8- to 10-nm-particulate PF ridges are intimately intercalated with, but clearly distinct from, inverted gap junctions possessing the 13-nm EF particles typical of arthropods. Hence, no confusion can occur as to which particles belong to each of the two junctional types, as commonly happens with vertebrate tissues, especially in the analysis of developing junctions. Indeed, their coexistance in this way supports the idea, over which there has been some controversy, that the intramembrane particles making up these two junctional types must be quite distinct entities rather than products of a common precursor.  相似文献   

7.
《The Journal of cell biology》1990,111(3):1255-1263
The foot processes of glomerular epithelial cells of the mammalian kidney are firmly attached to one another by shallow intercellular junctions or slit diaphragms of unknown composition. We have investigated the molecular nature of these junctions using an antibody that recognizes ZO-1, a protein that is specific for the tight junction or zonula occludens. By immunoblotting the affinity purified anti-ZO-1 IgG recognizes a single 225-kD band in kidney cortex and in slit diaphragm-enriched fractions as in other tissues. When ZO-1 was localized by immunofluorescence in kidney tissue of adult rats, the protein was detected in epithelia of all segments of the nephron, but the glomerular epithelium was much more intensely stained than any other epithelium. Among tubule epithelia the signal for ZO-1 correlated with the known fibril content and physiologic tightness of the junctions, i.e., it was highest in distal and collecting tubules and lowest in the proximal tubule. By immunoelectron microscopy ZO-1 was found to be concentrated on the cytoplasmic surface of the tight junctional membrane. Within the glomerulus ZO-1 was localized predominantly in the epithelial foot processes where it was concentrated precisely at the points of insertion of the slit diaphragms into the lateral cell membrane. Its distribution appeared to be continuous along the continuous slit membrane junction. When ZO-1 was localized in differentiating glomeruli in the newborn rat kidney, it was present early in development when the apical junctional complexes between presumptive podocytes are composed of typical tight and adhering junctions. It remained associated with these junctions during the time they migrate down the lateral cell surface, disappear and are replaced by slit diaphragms. The distribution of ZO-1 and the close developmental relationship between the two junctions suggest that the slit diaphragm is a variant of the tight junction that shares with it at least one structural protein and the functional property of defining distinctive plasmalemmal domains. The glomerular epithelium is unique among renal epithelia in that ZO-1 is present, but the intercellular spaces are wide open and no fibrils are seen by freeze fracture. The presence of ZO-1 along slit membranes indicates that expression of ZO-1 alone does not lead to tight junction assembly.  相似文献   

8.
Tight junctions are the most apical organelle of the apical junctional complex and are primarily involved in the regulation of paracellular permeability and membrane polarity. Extensive research in the past two decades has identified not only the individual molecules of the tight junctions but also their mutual interactions, which are the focus of the present review article. While a complete map of the interactions among the tight junction molecules is probably far from being complete, the available evidence already allows outlining the general molecular architecture of the tight junctions. Here, with the aim of gaining deeper mechanistic understanding of tight junction assembly, regulation and function, we have subdivided the known molecular interactions into four major clusters that are centered on cell surface, polarity, cytoskeletal and signaling molecules.  相似文献   

9.
Structural organization of the tight junctions   总被引:5,自引:0,他引:5  
Tight junctions are the most apical organelle of the apical junctional complex and are primarily involved in the regulation of paracellular permeability and membrane polarity. Extensive research in the past two decades has identified not only the individual molecules of the tight junctions but also their mutual interactions, which are the focus of the present review article. While a complete map of the interactions among the tight junction molecules is probably far from being complete, the available evidence already allows outlining the general molecular architecture of the tight junctions. Here, with the aim of gaining deeper mechanistic understanding of tight junction assembly, regulation and function, we have subdivided the known molecular interactions into four major clusters that are centered on cell surface, polarity, cytoskeletal and signaling molecules.  相似文献   

10.
Ectoplasmic specializations are actin filament-endoplasmic reticulum complexes that occur in Sertoli cells at sites of intercellular attachment. At sites between inter-Sertoli cell attachments, near the base of the cells, the sites are also related to tight junctions. We studied the characteristics of ectoplasmic specializations from six species using conventional views in which thin sections were perpendicular to the plane of the membranes, we used rare views in which the sections were in the plane of the membrane (en face views), and we also used the freeze-fracture technique. Tissues postfixed by osmium ferrocyanide showed junctional strands (fusion points between membranes) and actin bundles, actin sheets, or both, which could be visualized simultaneously. En face views demonstrated that the majority of tight junctional strands ran parallel to actin filament bundles. Usually, two tight junctional strands were associated with each actin filament bundle. Parallel tight junctions were occasionally extremely close together ( approximately 12 nm apart). Tight junctional strands were sometimes present without an apparent association with organized actin bundles or they were tangential to actin bundles. En face views showed that gap junctions were commonly observed intercalated with tight junction strands. The results taken together suggest a relationship of organized actin with tight junction complexes. However, the occasional examples of tight junction complexes being not perfectly aligned with actin filament bundles suggest that a precise and rigidly organized actin-tight junction relationship described above is not absolutely mandatory for the presence or maintenance of tight junctions. Species variations in tight junction organization are also presented.  相似文献   

11.
Application of carbon tetrachloride produced a progressive proliferation of tight junctions in the rat liver. This system proved to be rapid and highly reproducable and affords the opportunity for tracing the fate of tight junctions in freeze-fracture replicas, facilitating investigations on their formation and function. Beginning on day one carbon tetrachloride treatments resulted in the progressive loosening and fragmentation of the junctional meshwork. After three to four days the membrane outside the zonulae occludentes was extensively filled with proliferated discrete junctional elements often forming complex configurations. From the fifth day on the zonulae occludentes were restricted again predominantly around the bile canaliculus margins. But the junctional meshwork of the zonulae occludentes remained loosened in comparison to those in the control rats. It could be shown that tight junction proliferation on the lateral surface of the plasmalemma occurred both through de novo formation from discrete centers of growth by addition of intramembranous particles and through reorganization of preexistent junctional strands of the fragmented zonulae occludentes bodies. Whereas the large gap junctions close associated with the zonulae occludentes remained more or less unaffected during the experiments, small gap junctions increased in number after five days and were located at the margin or in the tight junction domain. It is assumed that the degeneration of the tight junctions served as a pool for intramembranous particles which form the gap junctions. The results of these observations are discussed in relation to those obtained in other systems.  相似文献   

12.
The stigmatal cells in the branchial basket of ascidians from a number of genera have been examined as to the nature and distribution of their intercellular junctions. The branchial wall consists of ciliated and parietal cells; the ciliated cells are arranged in seven rows and are associated by junctions with other cells in the same row as well as with those in adjacent rows. They are also associated by junctions with peripheral parietal cells. Junctions between adjacent ciliated cells in all cases exhibit tight junctions or zonulae occludentes. However, these cell borders also possess fasciae or zonulae adhaerentes if they are in the same row and the ciliary rootlets insert-into these junctions. If the cells are in adjacent rows they exhibit adhaerentes junctions only in species belonging to the orders Phlebobranchiata and Aplousobranchiata. In contrast, if the cells in adjacent rows belong to the order Stolidobranchiata. they never exhibit any adhaerentes junctions and the ciliary rootlets of the basal bodies from the cilia insert instead into the tight junctions and the non-junctional membrane below them. At the homologous junctional borders between adjacent parietal cells and also at heterologous junctional borders between parietal and ciliated cells, tight junctions alone occur, with no co-existing adhaerentes junctions along their lateral borders. Again, fibrils from ciliary rootlets insert into zonulae occludentes. This shows that tight junctions are capable both of forming permeability barriers, in that they can be seen to prevent the entry of exogenous tracers such as lanthanum, and of acting as adhesive devices.  相似文献   

13.
The tight junctions of the choroid plexus epithelium of rats were studied by freeze-fracture. In glutaraldehyde-fixed material, the junctions exhibited rows of aligned particles and short bars on P-faces, the E-faces showing grooves bearing relatively many particles. A particulate nature of the junctional strands could be established by using unfixed material. The mean values of junctional strands from the lateral, third, and fourth ventricles of Lewis rats were 7.5 +/- 2.6, 7.4 +/- 2.2, and 7.5 +/- 2.4; and of Sprague-Dawley rats 7.7 +/- 3.4, 7.4 +/- 2.3, and 7.3 +/- 1.6. Examination of complementary replicas (of fixed tissue) showed that discomtinuities are present in the junctional strands: 42.2 +/- 4.6% of the length of measured P-face ridges were discontinuities, and the total amount of complementary particles in E-face grooves constituted 17.8 +/- 4.4% of the total length of the grooves, thus approximately 25% of the junctional strands can be considered to be discontinuous. The average width of the discontinuities, when corrected for complementary particles in E-face grooves, was 7.7 +/- 4.5 nm. In control experiments with a "tighter" tight junction (small intestine), complementary replicas revealed that the junctional fibrils are rather continuous and that the very few particles in E-face grooves mostly filled out discontinuities in the P-face ridges. Approximately 5% of the strands were found to be discontinuous. These data support the notion that the presence of pores in the junctional strands of the choroid plexus epithelium may explain the high transepithelial conductance in a "leaky" epithelium having a high number of junctional strands. However, loss of junctional material during fracturing is also considered as an alternative explanation of the present results.  相似文献   

14.
Regulation of tight junctions and loss of barrier function in pathophysiology   总被引:12,自引:0,他引:12  
The mechanism by which epithelial and endothelial cells interact to form polarized tissue is of fundamental importance to multicellular organisms. Dysregulation of these barriers occurs in a variety of diseases, destroying the normal cellular environments and leading to organ failure. Increased levels of growth factors are a common characteristic of diseases exhibiting tissue permeability, suggesting that growth factors play a direct role in elevating permeability. Of particular concern for this laboratory, increased expression of vascular endothelial growth factor may enhance vascular permeability in diabetic retinopathy, leading to vision impairment and blindness. However, the mechanism by which growth factors increase permeability is unclear. Polarized cells form strong barriers through the development of tight junctions, which are specialized regions of the junctional complex. Tight junctions are composed of three types of transmembrane proteins, a number of peripheral membrane structural proteins, and are associated with a variety of regulatory proteins. Recent data suggest that growth factor-stimulated alterations in tight junctions contribute to permeability in a variety of disease states. The goal of this review was to elucidate potential mechanisms by which elevated growth factors elicit deregulated paracellular permeability via altered regulation of tight junctions, with particular emphasis on the tight junction proteins occludin and ZO-1, protein kinase C signaling, and endocytosis of junctional proteins. Understanding the molecular mechanisms underlying growth factor-mediated regulation of tight junctions will facilitate the development of novel treatments for diseases such as brain tumors, diabetic retinopathy and other diseases with compromised tight junction barriers.  相似文献   

15.
In cell culture, both endothelial and epithelial cell monolayers have been found to generate structurally similar tight junctional complexes, as assessed by thin complexes of the two cell types are, at least in part, responsible for the very different permeability characteristics of native endothelial and epithelial cell monolayers. The purpose of this work was to compare cultured endothelial and epithelial cells with respect to the function of their tight junctional complexes in regulating the movement of macromolecules and ions across the cell monolayers, and define functional parameters to characterize the tight junctional complexes. Bovine aorta endothelial cells and T84 colonic carcinoma epithelial cells were cultured on a microporous membrane support. The permeability coefficients of inulin, albumin, and insulin were determined with the cell monolayers and compared with the permeability coefficients obtained with 3T3-C2 fibroblasts, a cell line that does not generate tight junctions. Electrical resistance measurements across the monolayer-filter systems were also compared. The permeability coefficient of albumin across the endothelial cell monolayer compared favorably with other reported values. Likewise, the electrical resistance across the T84 cell monolayer was in good agreement with published values. Utilizing permeability coefficients for macromolecules as an index of tight junction function, we found that a distinction between a lack of tight junctions (fibroblasts), the presence of endothelial tight junctions, and the presence of epithelial tight junctions was readily made. However, when utilizing electrical resistance as an index of tight junction function, identical measurements were obtained with fibroblasts and endothelial cells. This indicates that more than one index of tight junction function is necessary to characterize the junctional complexes. Although structurally similar, epithelial cell and endothelial cell tight junctions perform very different functions, and, from our data, we conclude that the demonstration of tight junctional structures by electron microscopy is not relevant to the functional nature of the junction: structure does not imply function. A minimal assessment of tight junction function should rely on both the determination of the electrical resistance across the cell monolayer, and the determination of the permeability coefficients of selected macromolecules.  相似文献   

16.
Myofibrils are linked to the cell membrane at myotendinous junctions located at the ends of muscle fibers, and at costameres, sites positioned periodically along lateral surfaces of muscle cells. Both of these sites are enriched in proteins that link active components of myofibrils to the cell membrane. Costameres are also enriched in desmin intermediate filaments that link passive components of myofibrils to the lateral surfaces of muscle cells. In this study, the possibility that desmin is also found between the terminal Z-disk of myofibrils and the myotendinous junction membrane is examined by immunocytochemistry and by KI-extraction procedures. Data presented show that desmin is located in the filamentous core of cellular processes at myotendinous junctions at sites 30 nm or more from the membrane. This core lies deep to subsarcolemmal material previously shown to contain talin, vinculin, and dystrophin. The distance from desmin to the membrane suggests desmin does not interact directly with membrane proteins at the junction. Immunoblots and indirect immunofluorescence of junctional regions of muscle compared to nonjunctional regions show no apparent enrichment of desmin at junctional sites, although vinculin, another costameric and junctional component, is significantly enriched at junctional regions. These findings show that passive elements of myofibrils may be continuous from myotendinous junctions of muscle origin to insertion via desmin filaments located between terminal Z-disks and the junctional membrane. This can provide a system in parallel to that involving thin filaments, vinculin, and talin for linking myofibrils to the cell membrane at myotendinous junctions.  相似文献   

17.
Summary The rat brain capillary was studied with freeze-fracture technique. The attached plasmalemmal vesicles were quite few in number on the luminal front and sometimes numerous on the contraluminal side. The fracture appearance of some tight junctions showed interconnecting ridges on face A and complementary furrows devoid of particles on face B, comparable to the common tight junction in the normal epithelia. Other tight junctions revealed a preferential disposition of quasicontinuous rows of particles on shallow furrows of face B, resembling the tight junctional strands of capillary endothelium in non-cerebral tissues. Either behavior is probably due to the difference in the fracture plane around the single fibril. In addition, the tight junctional strand could surround the perimeter of the endothelial cell completely although the exposed strand of tight junction was limited in length.  相似文献   

18.
Summary Protamine is a naturally occurring basic protein (pI; 9.7 to 12.0). We have recently reported that protamine dissolved in the mucosal bath (2 to 20 m), induces about a twofold increase in transepithelial resistance inNecturus gallbladder within 10 min. Conductance decreased concomitantly with cation selectivity.In this leaky epithelium, where >90% of an applied current passes between cells, an increment in resistance of this magnitude suggests a paracellular actiona priori. To confirm this, ionic conductance across the apical cell membrane was studied with microelectrodes. Protamine increased transepithelial resistance without changing apical cell membrane voltage or fractional membrane resistance. Variation in extracellular K concentration (6 to 50mm) caused changes in apical membrane voltage not different from control.To determine if protamine-induced resistance changes were associated with structural alteration of tight junctions, gallbladders were fixedin situ at peak response and analyzed by freeze-fracture electron microscopy. According to a morphometrical analysis, the tight junctional intramembranous domain expands vertically due to incorporation of new strands (fibrils) into the main compact fibrillar meshwork.Since morphologic changes are complete within 10 min, strands are probably recycled into and out of the tight junctional membrane domain possibly by the cytoskeleton either from cytoplasmic vesicles or from intramembranous precursors. Regulation of tight junctional permeability by protamine and other perturbations may constitute a common mechanism by which leaky epithelia regulate transport, and protamine, in concentrations employed in this study, seems reasonably specific for the tight junction.  相似文献   

19.
Functional analysis of tight junctions   总被引:20,自引:0,他引:20  
Epithelial and endothelial cells are joined to each other via a set of intercellular junctions that differ in their morphological appearance, composition, and function. The tight junction or zonula occludens is the intercellular junction that regulates diffusion between cells and therefore allows endothelia and epithelia to form cellular barriers that separate compartments of different composition. This intercellular gate formed by tight junctions is not only highly regulated but is size- and ion-selective and, hence, represents a semipermeable diffusion barrier. In epithelia, tight junctions form a morphological and functional border between the apical and basolateral cell surface domains. They directly contribute to the maintenance of cell surface polarity by forming a fence that prevents apical/basolateral diffusion of lipids in the outer leaflet of the plasma membrane. Here we describe a set of assays that allow the analysis of tight junctions to determine their integrity and functional state.  相似文献   

20.
The tight junction: a multifunctional complex   总被引:2,自引:0,他引:2  
  相似文献   

设为首页 | 免责声明 | 关于勤云 | 加入收藏

Copyright©北京勤云科技发展有限公司  京ICP备09084417号