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1.
Endothelial binding of transferrin in fractionated liver cell suspensions   总被引:3,自引:0,他引:3  
Several studies using crude liver cell suspensions incubated with labeled transferrin have led to a conclusion that hepatocytes have transferrin receptors. When a visual probe, which permits evaluation of transferrin binding to individual cells, was used, the binding was unexpectedly found to be limited to endothelial cells in liver cell suspensions. Neither hepatocytes nor Kupffer cells contained transferrin receptors. In the present study, we fractionated liver cell suspensions using metrizamide gradients and centrifugal elutriation to obtain hepatocytes, Kupffer cell and endothelial cell fractions of high purity. Incubation of these fractions with 125I- or 59Fe-labeled transferrin led to exclusive binding to endothelial cells but not hepatocytes nor Kupffer cells. Kinetic analysis demonstrated Kd of 1.9 X 10(-7) M, Bmax of 3.1 pmol/10(6) cells per min, corresponding to 2.1 X 10(5) molecules/cell per min. At 4 degrees C, the binding reached a steady-state plateau within 5 min. Comparison of our data with those of previous investigators demonstrates a consistency if we consider that crude liver cell suspensions are contaminated with 2-3% endothelial cells. Thus, the previously reported findings may be entirely due to the contamination of crude liver cell suspensions with a small number of endothelial cells.  相似文献   

2.
The mode of transport of ceruloplasmin (CP) into the liver was investigated in fractionated liver cell suspensions. Incubation of 125I-CP at 4 degrees C with these different fractions led to its binding only to endothelial cells but not Kupffer cells and hepatocytes. Incubation at 37 degrees C led to rapid uptake of 125I-CP by endothelium, but cell-associated radioactivity declined after 15 min, which suggests the release of the labeled substance. Internalization was confirmed by fractionation of surface-bound and internalized ligand. The released label now acquired binding potential for fresh target hepatocytes, and the binding was inhibitable with asialoceruloplasmin but not native CP. This suggested that the released molecule was modified in the endothelium by desialation. Desialation was confirmed by incubation of endothelium with double-labeled CP (3H label on sialic acid and 125I on the protein part). We conclude that in the liver, CP is first recognized and taken up by endothelial cells that are endowed with appropriate surface receptors for the protein. Endothelium then modifies the molecule by desialation to expose the penultimate galactosyl residues. The modified molecule is then released, recognized, and taken up by hepatocytes through their membrane galactosyl-recognition system. These findings are consistent with the role of endothelium as an active mediator of molecular transport between blood and tissue, and further assign a biological role for the galactosyl-recognition system in hepatocytes.  相似文献   

3.
Interaction of 125I-labeled human antithrombin III (125I-AT III) X protease complexes with bovine corneal endothelial cells has been studied in tissue culture. 125I-AT III does not bind to endothelial cells, but its complexes with either thrombin or trypsin bind specifically to the cultures. The binding of 125I-AT III X protease complexes is not via the moiety of the free antithrombin III (AT III) or the free protease, since neither AT III nor thrombin compete on the binding of 125I-AT III X thrombin complexes. Only unlabeled AT III X thrombin complexes compete on the binding of the iodinated ligand. 125I-AT III X trypsin complexes bind with a KD of 1.4 X 10(-7) M to high affinity-binding sites present on the cell surface of corneal endothelial cells. Saturation of binding to the cell surface is observed at a concentration of 2.5 X 10(-7) M 125I-AT III X trypsin complexes and the number of binding sites per cell is about 4 X 10(4). The cell surface binding reaches a maximum by 15 min and then decreases with time. The cells, when incubated at 37 degrees C, appear to internalize the bound complexes by adsorptive endocytosis which proceeds at a rate of 0.5-0.8 pmole/1 X 10(6) cells/h. The internalization process of 125I-AT III X protease complexes is saturated at a concentration of 2.5 X 10(-7) M. Since the cells release 125I-labeled material into the extracellular media which cannot be precipitated by trichloroacetic acid (TCA), it probably represents degradation of 125I-AT III X protease complexes into small fragments at a linear rate of about 0.5 pmole/1 X 10(6) cells/h. The described process of AT III X protease complexes binding, internalization and subsequent degradation by corneal endothelial cells may represent a clearing mechanism for extracellular AT III X protease complexes formed under pathological conditions.  相似文献   

4.
G F Rush  D Alberts 《Life sciences》1987,40(7):679-685
Hepatocytes are known to bind and internalize a variety of small molecular weight proteins by a process known as receptor-mediated endocytosis (RME). The purpose of this investigation was to characterize the binding and uptake kinetics of a small protein known to be taken up by the liver by RME, epidermal growth factor (EGF), using suspensions of freshly isolated rat hepatocytes. Rat hepatocytes accumulated 125I-EGF (90 pM) in a temperature-dependent fashion. Isolated hepatocytes incubated at 37 degrees C with 125I-EGF began to release a TCA-soluble radiolabeled material into the incubation medium with a lag period of 20 min. EGF uptake by isolated hepatocytes was linear for only 60 seconds and displayed saturation kinetics (apparent Km of 4 nM and a Vmax of 105 fM/min/10(6) cells). Hepatocytes incubated at 4 degrees C bound, but did not internalize, EGF. Under these conditions, EGF binding was saturable at concentrations above 8 nM. A Scatchard analysis revealed that the average number of receptors per hepatocyte was 7.7 X 10(4) with a dissociation constant of 2.6 nM. These data demonstrate that freshly isolated hepatocytes are capable of binding, internalizing and metabolizing EGF and thus are a good model to study RME of small molecular weight proteins.  相似文献   

5.
The distribution of insulin receptors was studied in rat liver cell suspensions using a latex minibead covalently bound to insulin. This probe can be visualized by electron microscopy (EM). Using this visual probe, the highest density of the receptor was found on endothelial cells in the cell suspension, with hepatocytes having only few receptors and Kupffer cells having none. Fractionation of liver cell suspensions on metrizamide gradients yielded two populations of cells; large cells (hepatocytes) and small cells which consisted mostly of Kupffer cells and endothelial cells, distinguishable by their surface and cytoplasmic features. Again, by the use of an insulin-minibead probe, the highest density of receptors was found on endothelial cells. It is suggested that the endothelium has a crucial role in the uptake and transport of the hormone across the tissue-blood barrier.  相似文献   

6.
We have previously shown that in the liver, transferrin (TF) receptors are limited to endothelial cells, and hepatocytes and Kupffer cells do not have TF receptors. To study the transport of iron into hepatocytes, we fractionated liver cell suspensions into endothelium and hepatocyte fractions. At 4 degrees C liver (but not umbilical cord) endothelium bound Fe-TF with a saturable kinetics. At 37 degrees C, the endothelial uptake was followed by its gradual release. Transendothelial transport of TF was visually demonstrated by perfusion of liver using colloidal gold-labeled TF. The released Fe-TF acquired the potential for binding to fresh target hepatocytes and binding was not inhibited by excess cold TF but was inhibitable by asialofetuin, suggesting galactosyl receptors and not TF receptors as a recognition mechanism. Isoelectrofocusing of the supernate after preincubation for 90 min at 37 degrees C with endothelial cells, demonstrated the presence of a newly generated band which co-migrated with asialotransferrin. We conclude that Fe-TF is initially removed by liver endothelium where it is modified probably by desialation to expose the galactosyl residues of the glycoproteins. The modified molecule is subsequently released and recognized by hepatocytes through a TF receptor-independent mechanism which may involve galactosyl receptors of hepatocytes. The findings indicate a key role for endothelium in the transport of Fe-TF into the liver and may suggest a physiological function for galactosyl receptors on hepatocyte surface.  相似文献   

7.
Summary Cellular distribution of insulin receptors was studied in fractionated rat liver cell suspensions using 1251-insulin and a visual probe consisting of latex beads covalently linked to insulin (minibeads). Fractionation was done on metrizamide gradients which yielded two cellular fractions. The large cell fraction consisted mostly of hepatocytes and the small cell fraction consisted of 37% endothelial cells as well as Kupffer cells. The magnitude of insulin uptake by the endothelium-rich small cell fraction was at least double that of the uptake by the hepatocyte-rich fraction. The minibead technique demonstrated that in the small cell fraction only endothelial cells, and not Kupffer cells, were responsible for the insulin uptake. Our findings suggest that liver endothelium may be responsible for the uptake of circulating insulin and its transport to hepatocyte. This emphasizes the presence of a tissue-blood barrier in the liver.Abbreviations PRS phosphate-buffered saline - SEM scanning electron microscopy - TEM transmission electron microscopy  相似文献   

8.
125I-Labelled alpha 2-macroglobulin-trypsin complex (125I-labelled alpha 2-macroglobulin X trypsin) was associated to isolated rat adipocytes and hepatocytes with a half-time of about 60 min at 37 degrees C. The association of 0.5 micrograms/ml 125I-labelled alpha 2-macroglobulin X trypsin was inhibited by unlabelled alpha 2-macroglobulin X trypsin with a half-inhibition constant of about 8 micrograms/ml (11 nM). 125I-Labelled alpha 2-macroglobulin became cell-associated to a smaller extent (10-40% of that of alpha 2-macroglobulin X trypsin) and the half-inhibition constant was about 35 micrograms/ml in adipocytes. The cell association of 125I-labelled alpha 2-macroglobulin X trypsin was markedly inhibited by dansylcadaverine, bacitracin, omission of Ca2+ from the medium or pretreatment of the cells with trypsin. After incubation for 180 min more than 60% of the cell-associated 125I-labelled alpha 2-macroglobulin X trypsin was not removed by treatment of the cells with trypsin-EDTA and represented probably internalized material. 125I-Labelled alpha 2-macroglobulin X trypsin was degraded to trichloroacetic acid-soluble fragments by suspensions of both cell types but only to a negligible extent by incubation media preincubated with these cells. The rate of degradation of 0.5 micrograms/ml 125I-labelled alpha 2-macroglobulin was approx. 40% of that of 125I-labelled alpha 2-macroglobulin X trypsin. Degradation of 125I-labelled alpha 2-macroglobulin X trypsin was abolished by a high concentration (0.5 mg/ml) of alpha 2-macroglobulin X trypsin. It is concluded that alpha 2-macroglobulin X trypsin by a specific and saturable mechanism is bound to, internalized and degraded by isolated rat adipocytes and hepatocytes.  相似文献   

9.
Insulin-like growth factor-II (IGF-II) receptors in primary cultures of adult rat hepatocytes were characterized and their regulation by cell density examined. In hepatocytes cultured at 5 X 10(5) cells per 3.8 cm2 plate [125I]IGF-II bound to specific, high affinity receptors (Ka = 4.4 +/- 0.5 X 10(9) l/mol). Less than 1% cross-reactivity by IGF-I and no cross-reactivity by insulin were observed. IGF-II binding increased when cells were permeabilized with 0.01% digitonin, suggesting the presence of an intracellular receptor pool. Determined by Scatchard analysis and by polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis after affinity labeling, the higher binding was due solely to an increase in binding sites present on 220 kDa type II IGF receptors. In hepatocytes cultured at low densities, the number of cell surface receptors increased markedly, from 10-20,000 receptors per cell at a culture density of 6 X 10(5) cells/well to 70-80,000 receptors per cell at 0.38 X 10(5) cells/well. The increase was not due simply to the exposure of receptors from the intracellular pool, as a density-related increase in receptors was also seen in cells permeabilized with digitonin. There was no evidence that IGF binding proteins, either secreted by hepatocytes or present in fetal calf serum, had any effect on the measurement of receptor concentration or affinity. We conclude that rat hepatocytes in primary culture contain specific IGF-II receptors and that both cell surface and intracellular receptors are regulated by cell density.  相似文献   

10.
Cultured bovine aortic endothelial cells incubated with Factor Xa activate prothrombin. Factor V, synthesized by the endothelial cells, or plasma Factor V and calcium are required for the reaction. In the present study, it has been demonstrated that 125I-Factor Xa binds specifically to endothelial cells. In addition, the activation of prothrombin by Factor Xa and aortic endothelial cells has been further characterized. The binding of 125I-Factor Xa to endothelial cells was saturable and reversible. The equilibrium dissociation constant (Kd) for 125I-Factor Xa binding was 3.6 X 10(-9) M, with 39000 molecules bound per cell. 125I-Factor Xa, inactivated by diisopropylfluorophosphate did not bind specifically to endothelial cells, indicating that the active site of Factor Xa was required for binding. Factor Xa, but not activated protein C, competed with 125I-Factor Xa for binding. Autoradiograms of sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gels of cell lysates indicated that the radiolabeled material that bound to the cells had electrophoretic mobility identical to Factors Xa alpha and Xa beta. Although Factor X partially inhibited the binding of 125I-Factor Xa, Factor Xa did not inhibit the binding of 125I-Factor X, indicating that the zymogen and enzyme bound to different receptors. The relationship of the 125I-Factor Xa binding which was measured in these studies to aortic endothelial cell prothrombin activation is unclear since an anti-Factor V IgG blocked prothrombin activation but not Factor Xa binding. Additionally, 125I-Factor Xa binds to nonvascular cells; these cells do not activate prothrombin in the presence of Factor Xa. Moreover, the calcium requirements for each reaction and the saturation curves of 125I-Factor Xa binding and prothrombin activation differ. Although these data do not exclude a relationship between Factor Xa binding and prothrombin activation, the binding of 125I-Factor Xa to aortic endothelium measured in these studies may be related to a separate cellular function. To further characterize prothrombin activation by Factor Xa and endothelial cells, the rates of thrombin generation by intact bovine aorta or endothelial cells derived from this tissue were compared and were found to be equivalent. These data indicate that vascular endothelium may serve as a physiologic surface for hemostasis.  相似文献   

11.
Intravenously administered 125I-labelled monomeric alpha 1 chains (125I-alpha 1) of collagen type I were rapidly cleared and degraded by the liver of rats. Isolation of the liver cells after injection of the label revealed that the uptake per liver endothelial cell equalled the uptake per Kupffer cell, whereas the amount taken up per hepatocyte was negligible. The uptake of 125I-alpha 1 in cultured cells was 10 times higher per liver endothelial cell than per Kupffer cell. The ligand was efficiently degraded by cultures of both cell types. However, spent medium from cultures of Kupffer cells, unlike that from cultures of other cells, contained gelatinolytic activity which degraded 125I-alpha 1. The presence of hyaluronic acid, chondroitin sulphate or mannose/N-acetylglucosamine-terminal glycoproteins, which are endocytosed by the liver endothelial cells via specific receptors, did not interfere with binding, uptake or degradation of 125I-alpha 1 by these cells. Unlabelled alpha 1 and heat-denatured collagen inhibited the binding to a much greater extent than did native collagen. The presence of fibronectin or F(ab')2 fragments of anti-fibronectin antibodies did not affect the interaction of the liver endothelial cells, or of other types of liver cells, with 125I-alpha 1. The accumulation of fluorescein-labelled heat-denatured collagen in vesicles of cultured liver endothelial cells is evidence that the protein is internalized. Moreover, chloroquine, 5-dimethylaminonaphthalene-1-sulphonylcadaverine (dansylcadaverine), monensin and cytochalasin B, which impede one or more steps of the endocytic process, inhibited the uptake of 125I-alpha 1 by the liver endothelial cells. Leupeptin, an inhibitor of cathepsin B and 'collagenolytic cathepsins', inhibited the intralysosomal degradation of 125I-alpha 1, but had no effect on the rate of uptake of the ligand. The current data are interpreted as follows. (1) The ability of the liver endothelial cells and the Kupffer cells to sequester circulating 125I-alpha 1 efficiently may indicate a physiological pathway for the breakdown of connective-tissue collagen. (2) The liver endothelial cells express receptors that specifically recognize and mediate the endocytosis of collagen alpha 1(I) monomers. (3) The receptors also recognize denatured collagen (gelatin). (4) Fibronectin is not involved in the binding of alpha 1 to the receptors. (5) Degradation occurs intralysosomally by leupeptin-inhibitable cathepsins.  相似文献   

12.
An improved non-perfusion method for the preparation of cultured foetal-rat hepatocytes is described. Digestion of the liver with collagenase and deoxyribonuclease I gave yields of 40 X 10(6) hepatocytes/g of liver. The plating efficiency of hepatocytes in medium with 10 microM-cortisol was 50%. Cell morphology and metabolism were maintained through 3 days of monolayer culture, with minimal contamination by haematopoietic cells or fibroblasts. The cultured cells bound and degraded 125I-insulin in a time- and dose-dependent manner. The estimated ED50 for competitive binding at 37 degrees C was 1.1 nM. Curvilinear Scatchard plots were observed, with estimates of 16 500 high-affinity sites (Kd = 813 pM) and 53 000 low-affinity sites (Kd = 23 nM) per cell. The cultured cells demonstrated a glycogenic response to insulin, with an estimated ED50 of 120 pM. The degree of glycogenic response to insulin varied with time in culture: 500% above basal on day 1, 200% on day 2, and only 150% on day 3. Cultured foetal cells also exhibited a time-dependent uptake of 2-aminoisobutyric acid, which, in contrast with previous reports with adult cells, was not stimulated by the presence of 10 nM-insulin. Cultured foetal hepatocytes may provide an interesting model with which to study the relationship between insulin-receptor binding and insulin action.  相似文献   

13.
125I-Hemoglobin.haptoglobin injected intravenously into rats was incorporated into liver parenchymal cells as evidenced by a cell separation technique. A mixture of freshly isolated liver parenchymal and nonparenchymal cells failed to internalize and degrade the 125I-hemoglobin.haptoglobin added, although it retained the ability to bind the molecule. The liver parenchymal cells in primary culture also lacked the ability to degrade 125I-hemoglobin.haptoglobin, although they bound the molecule more extensively as compared with the freshly isolated liver cells. It was confirmed that the 125I-hemoglobin.haptoglobin which was bound to the freshly isolated liver parenchymal cells localized on the outer surface of liver plasma membranes. Scatchard plots revealed the existence of two binding sites for 125I-hemoglobin-haptoglobin on the isolated liver plasma membrane: an apparent high affinity binding site (Kd = 1.3 X 10(-7) M) and an apparent low affinity binding site (Kd = 4.0 X 10(-6) M) at 37 degrees C. In contrast, freshly isolated liver parenchymal cells had only an apparent low affinity binding site (Kd = 1.4 X 10(-6) M) at 37 degrees C. Impairment of the apparent high affinity binding site during the isolation procedure with collagenase seemed to be related to loss of the ability to internalize and degrade the 125I-hemoglobin.haptoglobin molecules into the freshly isolated liver parenchymal cells or liver parenchymal cells in primary culture.  相似文献   

14.
We followed the intrahepatic binding and uptake of variously sized ligands with terminal galactosyl residues in rat livers. The ligands were administered to prefixed livers in binding studies and in vivo and in situ (serum-free perfused livers) in uptake studies. Gold sols with different particle diameters were prepared: 5 nm (Au5), 17 nm (Au17), 50 nm (Au50) and coated with galactose exposing glycoproteins (asialofetuin (ASF) or lactosylated BSA (LacBSA)). Electron microscopy of mildly prefixed livers perfused with LacBSA-Au5 in serum-free medium showed ligand binding to liver macrophages, hepatocytes and endothelial cells. Ligands bound to prefixed cell surfaces reflect the initial distribution of receptor activity: pre-aggregated clusters of ligands are found on liver macrophages, single particles statistically distributed on hepatocytes and pre-aggregated clusters of particles restricted to coated pits on endothelial cells. Ligand binding is prevented in the presence of 80 mM N-acetylgalactosamine (GalNAc), while N-acetylglucosamine (GlcNAc) is without effect. Electron microscopy of livers after ligand injection into the tail vein shows that in vivo uptake of electron-dense galactose particles by liver cells is size-dependent. Using a LacBSA-Au preparation with heterogeneous particle diameter (2.2-11.7 nm) we found that hepatocytes take up only ligands up to the size of 7.8 nm, whereas particles of all sizes available in this experiment are found in liver macrophages and endothelial cells. ASF-Au17 and LacBSA-Au17 are endocytosed by liver macrophages and endothelial cells, but not by hepatocytes. ASF-Au50 is taken up by liver macrophages only. In vivo uptake by liver macrophages is mediated by galactose-specific recognition as shown by inhibition with GalNAc. Some 52-65% inhibition was measured in in vivo experiments and 78% inhibition in in situ experiments. GlNAc showed no inhibitory effect. Furthermore, we measured uptake of [125J]ASF and of [125J]ASF adsorbed to Au17 by the different cell populations of rat livers in vivo. While the bulk of the molecular ligand is found in the hepatocyte fraction, the particulate ligand is located in the sinusoidal fraction.  相似文献   

15.
Interaction of plasmin with endothelial cells.   总被引:5,自引:0,他引:5       下载免费PDF全文
Interaction of human plasmin with a monolayer culture of mini-pig aortic endothelial cells was studied by using the 125I-labelled enzyme. The binding of plasmin was time- and concentration-dependent. Equilibrium between bound and free enzyme was obtained within 90s, and Scatchard analysis indicated a high- and a low-affinity population of binding sites of approx. 1.24 X 10(4) sites/cell having a Kd of 1.4 X 10(-9) M and 7.2 X 10(4) sites/cell with a Kd of 2 X 10(-8) M respectively. Plasmin, bound to cell, was spontaneously released within 2 min, suggesting a rapid equilibrium. Chemical modification of the enzyme with phenylmethanesulphonyl fluoride or pyridoxal 5'-phosphate revealed that neither the active centre nor the heparin-binding site of plasmin was involved in the interaction with the endothelial cell. In terms of endothelial-cell receptors, the binding sites of cells for plasmin and thrombin were different: the two enzymes did not compete with each other, and the pretreatment of cells with neuraminidase or chondroitin ABC lyase resulted in a 50% decrease of thrombin or plasmin binding respectively. Arachidonic acid incorporated into phospholipids of the cell was released by plasmin, but a change in the rate of prostacyclin formation was not measurable. The interaction of plasmin with endothelial cells seems to be specific in the fibrinolytic system, since plasminogen did not bind to these cells under similar conditions.  相似文献   

16.
125I-Hyaluronic acid (HA) uniquely modified only at the reducing end (Raja, R.H., LeBoeuf, R. D., Stone, G.W., and Weigel, P.H. (1984) Anal. Biochem. 139, 168-177) binds specifically to rat liver endothelial cells in suspension or in culture. About 67-85% of the HA binding sites in isolated cells in suspension and 50% in cultured cells were intracellular, since they were exposed after permeabilizing cells with digitonin. Specific 125I-HA binding at 4 degrees C varied from 60 to 80% for intact cells and from 70 to 90% for permeabilized cells. Freshly isolated permeabilized cells bound about 500,000 HA molecules/cell at saturation. Within 5 h of culture, however, total HA binding decreased to 250,000 molecules/cells and then remained constant for at least 36 h. Surface HA receptor activity was essentially the same on cultured cells or cells in suspension (approximately 10(5)/cell). Cultured cells had 1.8 x 10(5) fewer intracellular receptors/cell. The affinities of surface and intracellular receptors of cells in culture and in suspension were essentially the same. The average Kd, determined by equilibrium binding studies, was 5.8 +/- 2.8 x 10(-8) M (n = 12). Dissociation of bound 125I-HA from permeable cultured cells was rapid (t1/2 = 30.9 min;kappa off = 3.7 x 10(-4) s-1). A variety of carbohydrates had essentially identical effects on 125I-HA binding to surface or total cellular receptors in cells in culture or in suspension. Chondroitin sulfate and heparin competed almost as effectively as unlabeled HA for 125I-HA binding at 4 degrees C. Other saccharides including polygalacturonic acid, dextran, glucuronic acid, and N-acetylglucosamine competed poorly or not at all. We conclude that (i) the 125I-HA binding sites within liver endothelial cells are HA receptors, identical in affinity and specificity to those on the cell surface; (ii) the distribution of cellular HA receptors is similar to other receptor systems with about 50-80% being intracellular; (iii) the liver endothelial cell HA receptor recognizes several glycosaminoglycans; and (iv) the liver endothelial receptor is different in function and characteristics than the fibroblast HA receptor.  相似文献   

17.
Primary cultures of rabbit hepatocytes which were preincubated for 20 h in a medium containing lipoprotein-deficient serum subsequently bound, internalized and degraded 125I-labeled high-density lipoproteins2 (HDL2). The rate of degradation of HDL2 was constant in incubations from 3 to 25 h. As the concentration of HDL2 in the incubation medium was increased, binding reached saturation. At 37 degrees C, half-maximal binding (Km) was achieved at a concentration of 7.3 micrograms of HDL2 protein/ml (4.06 X 10(-8)M) and the maximum amount bound was 476 ng of HDL2 protein/mg of cell protein. At 4 degrees C, HDL2 had a Km of 18.6 micrograms protein/ml (1.03 X 10(-7)M). Unlabeled low-density lipoproteins (LDL) inhibited only at low concentrations of 125I-labeled HDL2. Quantification of 125I-labeled HDL2 binding to a specific receptor (based on incubation of cells at 4 degrees C with and without a 50-fold excess of unlabeled HDL) yielded a dissociation constant of 1.45 X 10(-7)M. Excess HDL2 inhibited the binding of both 125I-labeled HDL2 and 125I-labeled HDL3, but excess HDL3 did not affect the binding of 125I-labeled HDL3. Preincubation of hepatocytes in the presence of HDL resulted in only a 40% reduction in specific HDL2 receptors, whereas preincubation with LDL largely suppressed LDL receptors. HDL2 and LDL from control and hypercholesterolemic rabbits inhibited the degradation of 125I-labeled HDL2, but HDL3 did not. Treatment of HDL2 and LDL with cyclohexanedione eliminated their capacity to inhibit 125I-labeled HDL2 degradation, suggesting that apolipoprotein E plays a critical role in triggering the degradative process. The effect of incubation with HDL on subsequent 125I-labeled LDL binding was time-dependent: a 20 h preincubation with HDL reduced the amount of 125I-labeled LDL binding by 40%; there was a similar effect on LDL bound in 6 h but not on LDL bound in 3 h. The binding of 125I-labeled LDL to isolated liver cellular membranes demonstrated saturation kinetics at 4 degrees C and was inhibited by EDTA or excess LDL. The binding of 125I-labeled HDL2 was much lower than that of 125I-labeled LDL and was less inhibited by unlabeled lipoproteins. The binding of 125I-labeled HDL3 was not inhibited by any unlabeled lipoproteins. EDTA did not affect the binding of either HDL2 or HDL3 to isolated liver membranes. Hepatocytes incubated with [2-14C]acetate in the absence of lipoproteins incorporated more label into cellular cholesterol, nonsaponifiable lipids and total cellular lipid than hepatocytes incubated with [2-14C]acetate in the presence of any lipoprotein fraction. However, the level of 14C-labeled lipids released into the medium was higher in the presence of medium lipoproteins, indicating that the effect of those lipoproteins was on the rate of release of cellular lipids rather than on the rate of synthesis.  相似文献   

18.
By investigating the presence and distribution of GalNAc/Gal-specific receptors on liver cells in vitro and in vivo, we provided evidence that the hepatocyte is not the only liver cell expressing receptor activity but that receptors of similar specificity are found on liver macrophages and also on endothelial cells. The receptor distribution in the plasma membrane is strinkingly different between the three cell types, as judged from the binding pattern of colloidal gold particles coated with asialofetuin or lactosylated serum albumin. Binding to hepatocytes occurs as single particles statistically distributed, binding to liver macrophages in a clustered arrangement all over the cell membrane and binding to endothelial cells also in a clustered arrangement but restricted to coated pits only. The different receptor distribution results in different binding and uptake abilities. Whereas hepatocytes bind and take up molecules and small particles (5 nm) only, the clustered receptor arrangement of endothelial cells and macrophages enables them to effectively bind and ingest larger particles. Ligands larger than 35 nm can be taken up by the macrophages only. The different receptor arrangement results also in different capacities of cell contact formation. Although in vitro liver macrophages and hepatocytes can both bind desialylated cells the macrophage needs much less galactosyl groups exposed on erythrocytes to establish stable contacts than the hepatocyte. The contacts formed by hepatocytes stay reversible for 30 min at 37 degrees C, whereas the contacts formed by the liver macrophages become irreversible after 10 min at 37 degrees C.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

19.
Binding and processing of fibrinogen by rabbit hepatocytes   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
We describe a specific fibrinogen-hepatocyte interaction. Rabbit 125I-labeled fibrinogen (125I-FGN) was incubated at 4 degrees C with suspensions of rabbit hepatocytes (approximately 1 X 10(6) cells/ml). Bound ligand was separated from free by centrifugation of cells through oil and quantitated by gamma-scintillation counting. Specific binding, determined by subtraction of nonspecific binding in the presence of 8 mM EDTA from total binding in the presence of 2 mM CaCl2, required 3 h to plateau and represented approximately 70% of total binding. Specific binding was calcium-dependent and was negligible in buffer containing 2 mM MgCl2. Half-maximal saturation occurred at approximately 30 nM 125I-FGN with approximately 480,000 molecules/cell at saturation. Dilution experiments revealed comparable affinities for labeled and unlabeled fibrinogen. Total binding was irreversible as determined by addition of excess unlabeled fibrinogen or EDTA. Specific binding of 25 nM 125I-FGN was inhibited, in a concentration-dependent fashion, by unlabeled fibrinogen or fibrinogen fragment D95 (Mr = 95,000), but not by fibrinogen fragment E or Arg-Gly-Asp-containing peptides. Unlabeled fibrinogen (3.1 microM) completely abolished specific binding, whereas greater than 80% inhibition was achieved with 10 microM fragment D95. Sodium dodecyl sulfate polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis and autoradiography of 125I-FGN bound in the presence of calcium demonstrated disappearance of A alpha chains with formation of products of Mr greater than 200,000; EDTA or unlabeled fibrinogen prevented fibrinogen processing. These data describe a unique fibrinogen-hepatocyte interaction which differs considerably from the platelet-fibrinogen interaction, especially with regard to the processing of the fibrinogen molecule.  相似文献   

20.
A new method for preparing non-parenchymal rat liver cells (NPC) is described. The liver cell suspension, prepared by perfusing the liver with collagenase, was treated with enterotoxin from Clostridium perfringens for 15 min. The enterotoxin made the parenchymal cells leaky, and these cells could be separated from the NPC by centrifugation in a solution containing Nycodenz (20%, w/v). During the centrifugation, the NPC floated, while the parenchymal cells sedimented. The yield of NPC per liver (200 g rat) was about 250 X 10(6) cells. The NPC were further separated into endothelial cells, Kupffer cells and stellate cells by centrifugal elutriation. This method was particularly useful for preparing endothelial cells in high yield (100 X 10(6) cells per liver). Intravenously injected formaldehyde-treated albumin was selectively taken up by the endothelial cells. Isolated endothelial cells in suspension as well as in surface culture maintained their ability to endocytose this ligand.  相似文献   

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