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1.
The intermediate-sized filaments present in epidermal keratinocytes derived from mouse skin and in an established cell line (HEL) derived from spontaneous transformation of murine keratinocytes grown in vitro, have been examined by immunofluorescence microscopy, using antibodies directed against subunit proteins of different classes of intermediate-sized filaments, as well as by electron microscopy and gel electrophoresis of cytoskeletal preparations highly enriched in intermediate-sized filaments. The keratinocytes derived from neonatal skin, which are capable of only limited replication in vitro, show only a single type of intermediate-sized filaments, i.e., the tonofibril-like arrays of filaments containing prekeratin. HEL cells, which proliferate indefinitely in vitro, retain the tonofilament-like structures typical of differentiated epidermal cells but in addition display intermediate-sized filaments of the vimentin type, i.e., the filament system typically found in mesenchymal and mesenchyme-derived cells. We discuss the possibility that (i) the advent of vimentin-type filaments in epidermal cells in culture is related either to the transformed state or the in vitro growth conditions as such and (ii) other differentiated epithelial cells proliferating in vitro may have more than one system of intermediate-sized filaments.  相似文献   

2.
Merkel cells are special neurosecretory cells which, in adult human skin, are usually very scarce. By immunofluorescence microscopy using antibodies to human cytokeratin polypeptide no. 18, we localized distinct non-keratinocyte cells in the glandular ridges of human fetal and adult plantar epidermis. Using electron and immunofluorescence microscopy, these cells were identified as Merkel cells containing typical neurosecretory granules as well as bundles of intermediate-sized filaments and desmosomes. Two-dimensional gel electrophoresis of the cytoskeletal fractions of microdissected epidermal preparations highly enriched in Merkel cells indicated the presence of cytokeratin polypeptides nos. 8, 18 and 19 which are typical of diverse simple epithelia of the human body. Double immunofluorescence microscopy showed that these human Merkel cells contain neither neurofilaments nor vimentin filaments. In human fetuses of 18-24 weeks of age, conspicuously high concentrations of Merkel cells, reaching a density of approximately 1,700 Merkel cells/mm2 skin, were found in the glandular ridges of plantar skin. The concentration decreased considerably at newborn and adult stages. Thin cell processes (up to 20 microns long) were observed in many fetal epidermal Merkel cells. In addition, we detected isolated Merkel cells deeper in the dermis (i.e. at distances of, at most, 100 microns from the epidermis) in fetal and newborn plantar skin. Our results show that Merkel cells are true epithelial cells which, however, differ profoundly from epidermal keratinocytes in their cytokeratin expression. The findings are discussed in relation to the much disputed question of the origin of Merkel cells. The present data speak against the immigration of Merkel cells from the neural crest, but rather suggest that they originate from epithelial cells of the skin, although most probably not from differentiated keratinocytes.  相似文献   

3.
The epithelial derived cell lines PtK2 and HeLa were characterized by double immunofluorescence microscopy using purified antibodies against vimentin and prekeratin. The results show that both cell types express simultaneously two immunologically distinct intermediate-sized filaments. Use of colcemid-treated cells confirms that the vimentin fibers and not the keratin-related fibers are rearranged into coils around the nucleus. In some cells staining of fibrous fragments is observed, which are perhaps involved in the synthesis or breakdown of this class of filaments. The concept that growing cells derived from differentiated cell types express not only the intermediate-sized filament system typical of the differentiated cell type but in addition contain intermediate-sized filaments of the vimentin type is discussed.  相似文献   

4.
Intermediate-sized filaments of human endothelial cells.   总被引:15,自引:0,他引:15       下载免费PDF全文
Human endothelial cells prepared from unbilical cords are characterized in parallel by electron microscopy and indirect immunofluorescence microscopy using specific antibodies against different classes of intermediate-sized filaments. The strongly developed, loose bundles of intermediate-sized filaments typically found in these cells are not decorated by antibodies against prekeratin or antibodies against smooth muscle desmin. They are, however, strongly decorated by antibodies directed against murine "vimentin," i.e., the 57,000 mol wt polypeptide which is the major protein of the intermediate-sized filaments predominant in various cells of mesenchymal origin. Cytoskeletal preparations greatly enriched in intermediate-sized filaments show the enrichment of a polypeptide band comigrating with murine vimentin. This shows that the intermediate-sized filaments that are abundant in human endothelial cells are predominantly of the vimentin type and can be demonstrated by their cross-reaction with the vimentin of rodents. These data also strengthen the evidence for several subclasses of intermediate-sized filaments, which can be distinguished by immunological procedures.  相似文献   

5.
Specific antibodies against vimentin, the major constitutive protein of intermediate-sized filaments present in cytoskeletons of mesenchymal cells of vertebrates, have been raised in guinea pigs. Antibodies to murine and human vimentin are of three types. The first two types produced against murine vimentin show an exclusive or preferential reaction with vimentin filaments of rodents. The third type raised against murine or human vimentin reacts with intermediate-sized filaments in species as diverse as mammals, birds and amphibia. This latter type is used here to show, both by immunoreplica techniques and by immunofluorescence microscopy, that almost all vertebrate cells growing in culture contain filaments of the vimentin type which are usually present in extended arrays. These immunological findings also suggest that the vimentin molecule contains both sequences conserved during evolution and regions different in different vertebrate species. The cells studied include not only cells of mesenchymal origin, but also cells derived from epithelia, in which it is now possible to demonstrate extensive arrays of vimentin filaments in interphase cells as well as intermediate-sized filaments of the prekeratin type. The data are consistent with the idea that most cells grown in culture contain intermediate-sized filaments of the vimentin type, irrespective of the state of differentiation of the cells from which they are derived.  相似文献   

6.
Myoepithelial cells from mammary glands, the modified sweat glands of bovine muzzle, and salivary glands have been studied by electron microscopy and by immunofluorescence microscopy in frozen sections in an attempt to further characterize the type of intermediate-sized filaments present in these cells. Electron microscopy has shown that all myoepithelial cells contain extensive meshworks of intermediate-sized (7--11-nm) filaments, many of which are anchored at typical desmosomes or hemidesmosomes. The intermediate-sized filaments are also intimately associated with masses of contractile elements, identified as bundles of typical 5--6-nm microfilaments and with characteristically spaced dense bodies. This organization resembles that described for various smooth muscle cells. In immunofluorescence microscopy, using antibodies specific for the various classes of intermediate-sized filaments, the myoepithelial cells are strongly decorated by antibodies to prekeratin. They are not specifically stained by antibodies to vimentin, which stain mesenchymal cells, nor by antibodies to chick gizzard desmin, which decorate fibrils in smooth muscle Z bands and intercalated disks in skeletal and cardiac muscle of mammals. Myoepithelial cells are also strongly stained by antibodies to actin. The observations show (a) that the epithelial character, as indicated by the presence of intermediate-sized filaments of the prekeratin type, is maintained in the differentiated contractile myoepithelial cell, and (b) that desmin and desmin-containing filaments are not generally associated with musclelike cell specialization for contraction but are specific to myogenic differentiation. The data also suggest that in myoepithelial cells prekeratin filaments are arranged--and might function--in a manner similar to the desmin filaments in smooth muscle cells.  相似文献   

7.
Summary Many of the morphologic and biochemical changes that occur during human fetal skin development have been described, yet there has been little experimental analysis of the processes that regulate the development of human fetal skin. This is due in part to difficulties in culturing human fetal epidermal keratinocytes. We have successfully cultured fetal keratinocytes in two different in vitro systems; in a serum-free keratinocyte growth medium (KGM) on tissue culture plastic and cocultured with dermal fibroblasts as spheroidal aggregates. To characterize these fetal keratinocytes in vitro we have assessed their ability to express several markers of epidermal differentiation. Human fetal keratinocytes grown on plastic in KGM stratify and express some of the components of the differentiated epidermis, such as involucrin and the high molecular weight keratins. However, these keratinocytes co-express keratins and vimentin and do not form a structured basement membrane. More characteristics of fetal skin are preserved in mixed aggregates of epidermal keratinocytes and dermal fibroblasts including epidermal stratification, synthesis of basement membrane components, tissue-specific expression of intermediate filaments, involucrin, and expression of high molecular weight keratins. The maintenance of human fetal epidermal keratinocytes in these two in vitro systems and their ability to express many differentiated characteristics suggests that these cultures will be valuable for studies of the molecular mechanisms that regulate the regionally specific differentiation of the human fetal epidermis. This work was supported by the Dermatology Foundation Fellowships funded by Herbert Laboratories and The Upjohn Company and awarded to A. R. H., NIH Training Program in Dermatological Research #5T32AR07472, and NIH grant #5R01HD20996 to A. T. L. Publication no. 74 of the Dermatology Department, University of Rochester, Rochester, NY.  相似文献   

8.
Plantar epidermis of the bovine heel pad as well as human plantar and palmar epidermis contain large amounts of an acidic (type I) keratin polypeptide (No. 9) of Mr 64,000 which so far has not been found in epidermis of other sites of the body. We present evidence for the keratinous nature of this protein, including its ability to form cytokeratin complexes and intermediate-sized filaments in vitro. We have isolated RNA from plantar epidermis of both species and show, using translation in vitro, that these polypeptides are genuine products of distinct mRNAs. Using immunofluorescence microscopy with specific antibodies against this protein, we demonstrate its location in most cells of suprabasal layers of plantar epidermis as well as in sparse keratinocytes which occur, individually or in small clusters, in upper layers of epidermis of other body locations. We conclude that cytokeratin No. 9 is characteristic of a special program of keratinocyte differentiation which during morphogenesis is expressed in most epidermal keratinocytes of soles and palms but only in a few keratinocytes at other body sites. This example of cell type-specific expression of a member of a multigene family in relation to a body site-related program of tissue differentiation raises important biological questions concerning the regulation of keratinocyte differentiation and morphogenesis as well as the function of such topological heterogeneity within a given type of tissue.  相似文献   

9.
Reconstituted skin from murine embryonic stem cells   总被引:16,自引:0,他引:16  
Embryonic stem (ES) cell lines can be expanded indefinitely in culture while maintaining their potential to differentiate into any cell type. During embryonic development, the skin forms as a result of reciprocal interactions between mesoderm and ectoderm. Here, we report the in vitro differentiation and enrichment of keratinocytes from murine ES cells seeded on extracellular matrix (ECM) in the presence of Bone Morphogenic Protein-4 (BMP-4) or ascorbate. The enriched preparation of keratinocytes was able to form an epidermal equivalent composed of a stratified epithelium when cultured at the air-liquid interface on a collagen-coated acellular substratum. Interestingly, an underlying cellular compartment that belongs to the fibroblast lineage was systematically formed between the reconstituted epidermis and the inert membrane. The resulting tissue displayed morphological patterns similar to normal embryonic skin, as evidenced by light and transmission electron microscopy. Immunohistochemical studies revealed expression patterns of cytokeratins, basement membrane (BM) proteins and late differentiation markers of epidermis, as well as fibroblast markers, similar to native skin. The results demonstrate the capacity of ES cells to reconstitute in vitro a fully differentiated skin. This ES-derived bioengineered skin provides a powerful tool for studying the molecular mechanisms controlling epidermal and dermal commitments.  相似文献   

10.
The cytoplasmic structure of Sertoli cells of rat testes has been studied by electron microscopy of ultrathin sections. Sertoli cells contain numerous intermediate-sized (7-11 nm) filaments which form a meshwork extending throughout the whole cytoplasm. Often the frequency of such filaments appears especially high in juxtanuclear and cortical regions, including the apical recesses containing the spermatids. Examination of frozen sections of testes by indirect immunofluorescence microscopy using guinea pig antibodies to prekeratin and vimentin has shown the absence of intermediate-sized filaments of the cytokeratin type in all cells of the testes but the presence of filaments of the vimentin type in Sertoli cells as well as in cells of the interstitial space. These results show that the intermediate-sized filaments, abundant in Sertoli cells, are of the vimentin type. In addition we conclude that the "germ epithelium" differs from others true epithelia by the absence of cytokeratin filaments and typical desmosomes and, in Sertoli cells, the presence of vimentin filaments, suggestive of a mesenchymal character or derivation.  相似文献   

11.
Epithelial cells contain a cytoskeletal system of intermediate-sized (7 to 11 nm) filaments formed by proteins related to epidermal keratins (cytokeratins). Cytoskeletal proteins from different epithelial tissues (e.g. epidermis and basaliomas, cornea, tongue, esophagus, liver, intestine, uterus) of various species (man, cow, rat, mouse) as well as from diverse cultured epithelial cells have been analyzed by one and two-dimensional gel electrophoresis. Major cytokeratin polypeptides are identified by immunological cross-reaction and phosphorylated cytokeratins by [32P]phosphate labeling in vivo.It is shown that different epithelia exhibit different patterns of cytokeratin polypeptides varying in molecular weights (range: 40,000 to 68,000) and electrical charges (isoelectric pH range: 5 to 8.5). Basic cytokeratins, which usually represent the largest cytokeratins in those cells in which they occur, have been found in all stratified squamous epithelia examined, and in a murine keratinocyte line (HEL) but not in hepatocytes and intestinal cells, and in most other cell cultures including HeLa cells. Cell type-specificity of cytokeratin patterns is much more pronounced than species diversity. Anatomically related epithelia can express similar patterns of cytokeratin polypeptides. Carcinomas and cultured epithelial cells often continue to synthesize cytokeratins characteristic of their tissue of origin but may also produce, in addition or alternatively, other cytokeratins. It is concluded: (1) unlike other types of intermediate-sized filaments, cytokeratin filaments are highly heterogeneous in composition and can contain basic polypeptides: (2) structurally indistinguishable filaments of the same class, i.e. cytokeratin filaments, are formed, in different epithelial cells of the same species, by different proteins of the cytokeratin family; (3) vertebrate genomes contain relatively large numbers of different cytokeratin genes which are expressed in programs characteristic of specific routes of epithelial differentiation; (4) individual cytokeratins provide tissue- or cell type-specific markers that are useful in the definition and identification of the relatedness or the origin of epithelial and carcinoma cells.  相似文献   

12.
Summary Antibodies against intermediate-sized filaments, of the prekeratin or vimentin type, were used to investigate the presence of these filaments by indirect immunofluorescence microscopy in cultured and non-cultured amniotic fluid cells, in frozen sections of the placenta and in isolated cells of the amniotic epithelium. Two major classes of cells can be cultured from amniotic fluids, namely cells of epithelial origin containing filaments of the prekeratin type and cells of different origin which contain filaments of the vimentin type but are negative when tested with antibodies to epidermal prekeratin. The presence of prekeratin type filaments correlates with the morphology of colonies of amniotic fluid cell cultures in vitro as classified by Hoehn et al. (1974). Cells of E-type colonies are shown to be of epithelial origin. In contrast our data indicate a different origin of almost all cells of F-type colonies and of the large majority of cells of AF-type colonies. Cells of epithelial origin and positively stained with antibodies to epidermal prekeratin are occasionally scattered in F-type colonies and in variable percentages (up to 30%) in AF-type colonies. Surprisingly, cryostat sections of the amniotic epithelium and isolated groups of amniotic cells showed positive reactions with both antibodies to vimentin and prekeratin. The possibility that amniotic cells may be different from other epithelial cells in that they contain both types of filaments simultaneously already in situ is presently under investigation.Part of this work is included in the doctoral thesis of Irmgard Treiss to be submitted to the Faculty of Medicine of the University of Heidelberg  相似文献   

13.
Normally the expression of the murine type I keratin K13 is restricted to differentiating cells of internal squamous epithelia which line the oral cavity and the upper digestive tract. Recently, however, we were able to show that K13 is aberrantly but constitutively expressed without its normal type II partner K4 also in differentiating parts of 7,12-dimethylbenz(a)anthracene (DMBA/TPA) 12-O-tetradecanoylphorbol-13-acetate-induced squamous cell carcinomas of mouse back skin, whereas its likewise suprabasal expression in papillomas is variable (Nischt et al., Mol. Carcinogenesis 1, 96-108, 1988). In an attempt to reproduce the aberrant expression of K13 in a mouse in vitro system, we have investigated eight established murine epidermal cell lines for their putative ability to express K13. The cell lines differed distinctly in their derivation and comprised cell lines originating from DMBA/TPA induced papillomas (line SP1) or DMBA-treated adult mouse epidermis (line 308) as well as cell lines derived from DMBA or DMBA/TPA-treated primary epidermal keratinocytes (lines PDV and MCA 3D) and cell lines which arose spontaneously by long-term culture of normal epidermal keratinocytes (lines HEL 30 degrees HEL 37 degrees, HELP I and HELP III). We show that, independent of their derivation, all cell lines possess the intrinsic property to aberrantly express K13. Invariably the K13 gene is not expressed when the lines are cultured under low Ca2+ conditions (0.05 mM) and thus prevented from differentiation. Its expression can, however, be induced either by increasing the extracellular Ca2+ concentration or by the addition of physiological concentrations of vitamin A acid to low Ca2+ medium. Whereas in the latter case, K13 expression occurs without concomitant induction of morphological differentiation of the cells, Ca2+ elevation in the culture medium induces squamous differentiation and K13 expression occurs only in differentiating cells, thus reflecting the situation observed in in vivo tumors. All cell lines exhibit a concentration optimum for the stimulatory agents; however, the degree of maximal K13 expression varies considerably among the individual cell lines and shows a striking correlation with the reported tumorigenicity of the lines after transplantation to animals. In contrast, a tentatively suggested correlation between the activation of the Ha-ras gene and the aberrant expression of K13 (Nischt et al., Mol. Carcinogenesis 1, 96-108, 1988) could not definitely be confirmed since we observed K13 expression also in three cell lines which did not carry a mutation in codon 61 of the Ha-ras gene.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)  相似文献   

14.
Epithelia-derived tumors (carcinomas) can be distinguished from mesenchymally derived tumors by the presence of intermediate-sized filaments of the cytokeratin type, which usually coincides with the absence of other types of intermediate-sized filaments such as vimentin filaments. In the course of diagnostic examinations of human tumors, using immunofluorescence microscopy, we have come across a case of an unusual carcinoma (Primary tumor and lymph node metastasis) positively stained not only with cytokeratin antibodies but also with immunoglobulins present in vimentin antisera. Therefore, this tumor, a cloacogenic carcinoma apparently derived from the rectal-anal transitional region, has been examined in greater detail using both immunofluorescence microscopy and immuno-electron microscopy as well as gel electrophoretic analysis of cytoskeletal polypeptides from total tumor tissue and from microdissected nodules enriched in carcinoma cells. The unusual reaction of the carcinoma cells with immunoglobulins present in seven different (rabbit or guinea pig) antisera raised against vimentin, has been found to be diminished after absorption on purified cytokeratin or total epidermal cytoskeletal material, but not after absorption on purified vimentin. Gel electrophoretic analysis of tumor cytoskeletons showed an unusual complex pattern of cytokeratin polypeptides containing relatively large (Mr 68,000 and Mr 58,000) neutral-to-slightly basic cytokeratins, as are typically found in epidermis and other stratified squamous epithelia, as well as several smaller acidic cytokeratins, including a Mr 40,000 polypeptide found in certain nonstratified epithelial such as colon and small intestine. Total tumor also showed the inclusion of some vimentin which, however, was significantly decreased in analysis of excised carcinoma nodules. Examining antibody binding to polypeptides separated by gel electrophoresis and blotted on nitrocellulose paper, we have found that antisera raised against vimentin contained not only vimentin antibodies but also immunoglobulins which specifically bound to the largest cytokeratin component. We conclude that the unusual reaction of immunoglobulins present in vimentin antisera with cytokeratin filament bundles does not represent specific binding to vimentin in these carcinoma cells, but is due to a component obviously widespread in vimentin antisera which binds specifically to a cytokeratin present in this type of tumor but not in most other carcinomas. It is proposed that use is made in diagnostic examinations of vimentin antisera or affinity-purified vimentin antibodies that have been pre-absorbed on cytokeratin protein, in order to eliminate such disturbing reactions.  相似文献   

15.
The location of constitutive proteins of different types of intermediate-sized (about 10 mm) filaments (cytokeratin, vimentin, desmin, brain filament protein) was examined in various tissues of 11--20 day chick embryos, using specific antibodies against the isolated proteins and immunofluorescence microscopy on frozen sections and on isolated serous membrane. The tissues studied which contained epithelia were small intestine, gizzard, esophagus, crop, liver, kidney, thymus, mesenteries, and epidermis. The results show that the different intermediate filament proteins, as seen in the same organ, are characteristic of specific lines of differentiation: Cytokeratin filaments are restricted to--and specific for--epithelial cells; vimentin filaments are seen--at this stage of embryogenesis--only in mesenchymal cells, including connective tissue, endothelial and blood cells, and chondrocytes; filaments containing protein(s) related to the subunit protein prepared from gizzard 10 nm filaments (i.e., desmin) are significant only in muscle cells; and intermediate filament protein of brain, most probably neurofilament protein, is present only in nerve cells. We conclude that for most tissues the expression of filaments of cytokeratin, vimentin, desmin, and neurofilament protein is mutually exclusive, and that these protein structurees provide useful markers for histochemical and cytochemical differentiation of cells of epithelial, mesenchymal, myogenic, and neurogenic differentiation.  相似文献   

16.
The cytoskeleton of the rat cultured cell line PC12, which is widely used in cell biology as a model system for neuron-like differentiation, displays an unusual combination of intermediate-sized filaments (IFs). As determined by electron microscopy, immunolocalization, and biochemical analyses, these cells contain, in addition to neurofilaments, an extended meshwork of bundles of cytokeratin IFs comprising cytokeratins A and D, equivalent to human cytokeratin polypeptides Nos. 8 and 18, irrespective of whether they are grown in the presence or absence of nerve growth factor. The two IF systems differ in their fibrillar arrays, the neurofilaments being concentrated in perinuclear aggregates similar to those found in certain neuroendocrine tumors of epithelial origin. We conclude that PC12 cells permanently co-express IFs of both the epithelial and the neuronal type and thus present an IF combination different from those of adrenal medulla cells and pheochromocytomas, i.e., the putative cells of origin of the line PC12. The IF cytoskeleton of PC12 cells resembles that of various neuroendocrine tumors derived from epithelial cells. The results show that the development of a number of typical neuronal differentiation features is compatible with the existence of an epithelial type IF cytoskeleton, i.e., cytokeratins. The implications of these findings concerning the validity of the PC12 cell line as a model for neuronal differentiation and possible explanations of the origin of cells with this type of IF co-expression are discussed.  相似文献   

17.
Hepatocytes of mammalian liver are known to contain intermediate-sized filaments of tonofilament morphology. Unlike many other epithelial cells, including cultured hepatocytes and hepatoma cells, hepatocytes present in normal liver tissue have been reported not to react, in significant intensity, with various preparations of antibodies to human and bovine epidermal prekeratin [2,6]. We have therefore examined, by biochemical and immunological methods, the cytoskeletal composition of hepatocytes grown in the body.Cytoskeletal preparations from hepatocytes of mouse and rat liver tissue resistant to high salt buffer and Triton X-100 are enriched in tangles of intermediate filaments and contain, besides some residual microfilamentous actin, a characteristic set of polypeptides. One- and two-dimensional gel electrophoresis reveals the presence of two major cytokeratin components, which appear as ‘pairs’ of isoelectric variants (component A, Mr 55 000, apparent pI values, 6.40 and 6.45; component D, Mr 49000, apparent pI values 5.43 and 5.38), and five minor components (Mr range from 41000 to 53 000), most of them also as ‘pairs’ of polypeptides slightly different in isoelectric pH value. These polypeptide patterns are very similar in mouse and rat liver although some minor but significant differences have been noted between the two species. The polypeptide patterns of liver cytoskeletons are also similar to—but clearly not identical with—the cytoskeletal protein patterns observed in other epithelial tissues and cells, including various lines of cultured rat hepatocytes and hepatoma cells.Guinea pig antibodies raised against individual cytokeratin proteins of mouse liver and against certain prekeratin polypeptides present in desmosome-attached tonofilaments of bovine muzzle are described which differ from previously described prekeratin antibodies. These prekeratin antibodies not only react with filament bundles of the prekeratin type present in many cultured epithelial cells (e.g. murine HEL, human HeLa, rat kangaroo PtK2) and various epithelial tissues, but also allow the detection of the cytokeratin components present in parenchymal cells of liver and pancreas of various species, man included. Immunofluorescence microscopy on frozen sections of liver using these antibodies reveals a novel structure, i.e. a three-dimensional filament meshwork extending throughout the whole cytoplasm of the hepatocyte, with higher intensity of staining in pericanalicular regions.The results show that parenchymal cells of normal liver and pancreas contain filaments of the cytokeratin type that are related to but not identical with epidermal prekeratin. The hepatocyte filaments appear to be different from prekeratin-type filaments present in epidermis and several other epithelial cells, both in some antigenic determinants exposed and in polypeptide composition. Our findings support the concept of the existence of a family of intermediate filament proteins, cytokeratins, containing many different polypeptides that are expressed in different epithelial cells in certain characteristic subsets in a cell type-specific mode.  相似文献   

18.
The location of constitutive proteins of different types of intermediate-sized (about 10 mm) filaments (cytokeratin, vimentin, desmin, brain filament protein) was examined in various tissues of 11–20 day chick embryos, using specific antibodies against the isolated proteins and immunofluorescence microscopy on frozen sections and on isolated serous membrane. The tissues studied which contained epithelia were small intestine, gizzard, esophagus, crop, liver, kidney, thymus, mesenteries, and epidermis. The results show that the different intermediate filament proteins, as seen in the same organ, are characteristic of specific lines of differentiation: Cytokeratin filaments are restricted to – and specific for – epithelial cells; vimentin filaments are seen – at this stage of embryogenesis – only in mesenchymal cells, including connective tissue, endothelial and blood cells, and chondrocytes; filaments containing protein(s) related to the subunit protein prepared from gizzard 10 nm filaments (i.e., desmin) are significant only in muscle cells; and intermediate filament protein of brain, most probably neurofilament protein, is present only in nerve cells. We conclude that for most tissues the expression of filaments of cytokeratin, vimentin, desmin, and neurofilament protein is mutually exclusive, and that these protein structures provide useful markers for histochemical and cytochemical differentiation of cells of epithelial, mesenchymal, myogenic, and neurogenic differentiation.  相似文献   

19.
We used lectins as probes to demonstrate the composition of membrane carbohydrates of canine keratinocytes in various functional stages and various degrees of differentiation. Keratinocytes during normal epidermal turnover were compared by lectin immunohistochemistry to cells of hyperplastic epidermis and neoplastic keratinocytes. Three types of epidermal tumors and oral squamous cell carcinomas were examined. In addition, two in vitro tissue culture systems for keratinocytes were studied and compared with in vivo epithelium. In normal skin, PNA reacted only weakly with basal cells, whereas in hyperplastic skin basal cells bound this lectin strongly, demonstrating increasing expression of PNA binding sites with increasing thickness of the stratified squamous epithelium. ConA bound to basal cell tumors only. In oral squamous cell carcinomas, the expression of distinct lectin binding sites correlated with certain histological growth patterns, e.g., UEA-I reacted with highly invasive tumors but not with tumors showing a solid growth pattern. Using cell surface iodination and polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis, distinct differences in cell membrane protein expression were demonstrated between normal and neoplastic keratinocytes. SDS-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis of cultured normal and neoplastic keratinocytes revealed several cell surface proteins that are specific for either cell type. Neoplastic cells specifically express a 140 KD lectin binding cell surface glycoprotein. The results of this study show that lectin binding patterns of keratinocytes are dependent on the functional state and the degree of differentiation of the cells and demonstrate correlation of some histological growth patterns with distinct lectin binding phenotypes, suggesting association of expression of cell membrane carbohydrate moieties with growth patterns. In addition, close similarities between "lifted cultures" grown at the air-liquid interface and native tissue demonstrate the value of this culture system as a model for differentiated stratified squamous epithelium.  相似文献   

20.
Indirect immunofluorescence microscopy has been used to detect cytoskeletal proteins, which allow a distinction between the two cell types present in the mouse blastocyst: i.e. the cells of the inner cell mass (ICM) and the outer trophoblastic cells. Antibodies against three classes of intermediate-sized filaments (cytokeratins, desmin and vimentin), as well as antibodies against actin and tubulin were studied. Antibodies against prekeratin stain the outer trophoblastic cells but not the ICM in agreement with the findings on adult tissues that cytokeratins are a marker for various epithelial cells. Interestingly, vimentin filaments typical of mesenchymal cells as well as of cells growing in culture seem to be absent in both cell types of the blastocyst. Thus, the cytokeratins of the trophoblastic cells seem to be the first intermediate-sized filaments expressed in embryogenesis. Antibodies to tubulin and actin show that microtubules and microfilaments are ubiquitous structures, although microfilaments have a noticeably different organization in the two cell types. In addition, since early embryogenic multipotential cells show close similarities to teratocarcinomic cells, a comparison is made between the cells of the blastocyst, embryonal carcinoma cells (EC cells) and an epithelial endodermal cell line (PYS2 cells) derived from EC cells. EC cells display vimentin filaments whereas PYS2 cells show both vimentin and cytokeratin filaments. The results emphasize the usefulness of antibodies specific for different classes of intermediate filaments in further embryological studies, and suggest that cells of the blastocyst and EC cells differ with respect to vimentin filaments.  相似文献   

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