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1.
Low density lipoproteins (LDL) were conjugated to colloidal gold for investigation of the ultrastructural aspects of binding and receptor-mediated internalization of LDL by cultured endothelial cells from the human umbilical artery and vein. The number of LDL receptors was increased by preincubation in lipoprotein-depleted serum. When the cells were incubated with LDL-gold particles for 2 h at 4 degrees C, the complexes were found in coated pits as well as in clusters attached to the plasma membrane. Small vesicles containing a few LDL-gold complexes appeared in the cytoplasm close to the plasma membrane when the cells were incubated with the conjugate for 5 min at 37 degrees C. After 15 min at 37 degrees C, larger vesicles with a pale matrix and membrane-orientated LDL-gold complexes were seen. After incubation for 30 min at 37 degrees C, colloidal gold particles were present in dense bodies. Quantification of the binding of LDL-gold complexes to the plasma membrane at 4 degrees C showed no differences between arterial and venous endothelial cells.  相似文献   

2.
The uptake mechanism of homologous IgG and immune complex, and the participation of coated vesicles in this process were studied in rat peritoneal macrophages. Peroxidase-antiperoxidase (PAP) immune complex produced in rat, and purified rat IgG adsorbed to gold particles (IgG-Au) were used as ligands. Freshly collected peritoneal macrophages were preincubated with the ligands at 4 degrees C, washed, warmed up to 37 degrees C, maintained in a serum-free culture medium for 5 sec to 30 min and subsequently fixed for electron microscopy. In the IgG-Au experiments, acid phosphatase reaction was also applied to identify lysosomes, and ruthenium red to trace membranes exposed to the extracellular space. At the end of the preincubation period PAP and IgG were found randomly distributed on the external surface of the plasma membrane. After warming up the cells to 37 degrees C, the ligands bound to the plasma membrane showed a tendency to move towards deep labyrinthic invaginations of the cell surface from where they were internalized via coated pits and coated vesicles. In the initial period, these structures seemed to be the primary carriers of the ligands. In the period between 5 and 10 min, ligands were concentrated in vacuoles (endosomes) located in the deeper cytoplasm, while after 30 min, they were present in large lysosome-like or multivesicular bodies, which were found to be acid phosphatase positive.  相似文献   

3.
The morphological aspects of the binding and internalization of low density lipoproteins (LDL) and acetylated low density lipoproteins (AcLDL) by cultured human monocyte-derived macrophages were investigated. For this purpose, LDL and AcLDL were conjugated to 20 nm colloidal gold particles. After incubation of the cells with the conjugated lipoproteins at 4 degrees C some LDL- or AcLDL-gold complexes were found to be attached to the cell surface, but without characteristic localization. However, after incubation of the cells at 8 degrees C with either LDL-gold or AcLDL-gold, lipoprotein-gold complexes were present in clusters on the plasma membrane, often in coated pits. Cells incubated at 37 degrees C for various time periods showed internalization of both LDL- and AcLDL-gold complexes via small coated and non-coated vesicles and processing of the complexes in smooth-walled endosomes. When the cells were pulse-chased with LDL- or AcLDL-gold for 30 min at 37 degrees C, the gold conjugates occurred in dense bodies, probably lysosomes. The results suggest that although native and modified LDL are reported to be metabolized differently by macrophages, the morphological aspects of the endocytosis of LDL and AcLDL by cultured human monocyte-derived macrophages are similar.  相似文献   

4.
Earlier studies have shown that immunoglobulin G (IgG)-coated colloidal gold particles bind to specific receptors on the macrophage surface and accumulate in coated pits. They are then internalized via endocytic vesicles and transferred to lysosomes. During this process the plasma membrane is depleted of binding sites for IgG, suggesting that both the receptor and the ligand end up in lysosomes. Here, we have examined the effects of the weak base chloroquine and the Na+-H+ ionophore monensin on endocytosis and intracellular transport of IgG-coated colloidal gold particles in cultured macrophages. The results indicate that chloroquine and monensin do not arrest uptake of IgG-coated particles bound to the cell surface. On the other hand, the drugs strongly inhibit transfer of the particles from endocytic vesicles to lysosomes, the latter marked by prior pulse-chase labeling of the cells with horseradish peroxidase. Since the main effect shared by chloroquine and monensin is to raise pH in acid compartments such as endocytic vesicles and lysosomes, the findings suggest that the transfer of IgG-coated particles into the lysosomes is a pH-dependent process. It remains to be shown whether it is the membrane fusion as such that is controlled by pH or, more specifically, the transfer of receptor-bound ligands into the lysosomes.  相似文献   

5.
Summary The morphological aspects of the binding and internalization of low density lipoproteins (LDL) and acetylated low density lipoproteins (AcLDL) by cultured human monocyte-derived macrophages were investigated. For this purpose, LDL and AcLDL were conjugated to 20 nm colloidal gold particles. After incubation of the cells with the conjugated lipoproteins at 4° C some LDL-or AcLDL-gold complexes were found to be attached to the cell surface, but without characteristic localization. However, after incubation of the cells at 8° C with either LDL-gold or AcLDL-gold, lipoprotein-gold complexes were present in clusters on the plasma membrane, often in coated pits. Cells incubated at 37° C for various time periods showed internalization of both LDL- and AcLDL-gold complexes via small coated and non-coated vesicles and processing of the complexes in smooth-walled endosomes. When the cells were pulse-chased with LDL- or AcLDL-gold for 30 min at 37° C, the gold conjugates occurred in dense bodies, probably lysosomes. The results suggest that although native and modified LDL are reported to be metabolized differently by macrophages, the morphological aspects of the endocytosis of LDL and AcLDL by cultured human monocyte-derived macrophages are similar.  相似文献   

6.
Low density lipoproteins (LDL) were conjugated to colloidal gold to visualize the route for internalization of LDL in the cultured cells of human term placenta. Cells were obtained from placental villi (caesarian section) by a standard trypsin-DNase dispersion method followed in some cases by a Percoll gradient centrifugation step. Employing electron microscopy it was observed that after 3 days of culture, cells obtained by trypsin-DNase dispersion were a mixture of macrophages, mononucleated cells and large multinucleated cells. When the cells were incubated for 3 days after the Percoll purification, essentially multinucleated cells identical to the syncytiotrophoblast were present. The number of LDL receptor was increased by preincubation in medium with lipoprotein depleted serum. In binding experiments cells incubated at 4 degrees C for 2 h with medium containing gold LDL conjugates showed gold LDL attached to the plasma membrane without characteristic localization. After incubation with gold LDL at 37 degrees C for various times, the three cellular types showed ligand internalization. Gold LDL endocytosis involved first coated pits but also uncoated plasmalemmal invaginations. Then gold LDL was further observed in coated and non coated vesicles, smooth walled endosomes, multivesicular bodies and tubular vesicles. Lastly free gold particles were observed in lysosome like dense bodies. These results prove the internalization of gold LDL conjugates by human cultured placental cells, particularly by syncytiotrophoblast like multinucleated cells. This accumulation of LDL (the major cholesterol carrying protein in humans) is recognised to be responsible for the exogenous cholesterol supply indispensable to the progesterone biosynthesis and cellular growth of the placenta.  相似文献   

7.
We have raised specific polyclonal immunoglobulin G (IgG) against a major lysosomal membrane sialoglycoprotein (LGP107) taken from rat liver and have prepared a conjugate of its Fab' fragment with horseradish peroxidase (HRP-anti LGP107 Fab') as a probe for the subcellular antigen. Electron immunocytochemistry in primary cultured rat hepatocytes showed that LGP107 resided primarily within lysosomes and was associated with luminal amorphous materials as well as limiting membranes. In addition, LGP107 was shown to be substantially distributed throughout the endocytic vacuolar system. The glycoprotein was found clustered in coated pits at the cell surface and localized along the surrounding membranes in endocytic vesicles. When cultured cells were exposed to HRP-anti LGP107 Fab', the antibody which was bound to its antigen within the coated pits was internalized via a system of endocytic vesicles and transported to lysosomes. During 20 min of incubation at 37 degrees C, the HRP tracer appeared at an early stage in small vesicles and moved progressively to larger vesicles, including multivesicular bodies. After 1 h, the tracer could be clearly seen in lysosomes heterogeneous in shape and size. The existence of LGP107 in endocytic compartments and the uptake of anti LGP107 antibody by hepatocytes were not blocked by prior treatment of the cells with cycloheximide and excess amounts of anti LGP107 IgG. These data suggest that LGP107 circulates between the cell surface and lysosomes through the endocytic membrane traffic in hepatocytes.  相似文献   

8.
After in vitro incubation of Xenopus oocytes with vitellogenin (VTG)-gold conjugate, the gold particles are distributed on the whole plasma membrane. Their concentration in coated pits still occurs at 0 degrees C. At +20 degrees C the label quickly (30 sec) appears in multi-vesicular endosomes (MVE) which segregate together with primary endocytic vesicles into distinct clusters below the plasma membrane. From this step up to crystallization of the yolk platelets, the gold particles stay in the same compartment. During 5.5 h the label progressively increases along the MVE membrane, first (1.5 h) by fusion of primary endocytic vesicles with consecutively enlarging endosomes, then (4 h) by decreasing of the MVE membrane. As concerns the yolk platelet formation, concentration of primordial yolk platelets (PYP) occurs at 5.5 h from the incubation onset, the labeling of preexisting yolk platelets starts at 7 h, while crystallization of PYP begins only after 12-13 h. Our results indicate that VTG receptors are not preclustered in coated pits and their lateral translation is not inhibited at 0 degrees C. The yolk protein processing takes place within one compartment only. The VTG condensation begins with a long concentration phase of receptor-VTG complexes still integrated in the endosome membrane. It occurs in MVE by: i) a repeated fusion of primary endocytic vesicles; ii) removing part of the endosome membrane by internal vesiculation. Fusion between endosomes occurs only after VTG has dissociated from its receptors and VTG dissociates only when when the density of the VTG-receptor complexes in the endosome membrane is sufficient. Crystallization begins after a 7-8 h delay. The endosome migration into the oocyte is also controlled by the binding of VTG to its receptors. Our results also demonstrate that binding of VTG colloidal gold modifies neither the vitellogenic pathway nor the duration of the vitellogenin internalization. However when vitellogenin is bound to colloidal gold, dissociation of ligand-receptor complexes is delayed because the amount of ligand in the incubation medium is necessarily low.  相似文献   

9.
Summary Low density lipoproteins (LDL) were conjugated to colloidal gold to visualize the route for internalization of LDL in the cultured cells of human term placenta. Cells were obtained from placental villi (caesarian section) by a standard trypsin-DNase dispersion method followed in some cases by a Percoll gradient centrifugation step. Employing electron microscopy it was observed that after 3 days of culture, cells obtained by trypsin-DNAse dispersion were a mixture of macrophages, mononucleated cells and large multinucleated cells. When the cells were incubated for 3 days after the Percoll purification, essentially multinucleated cells identical to the syncytiotrophoblast were present. The number of LDL receptor was increased by preincubation in medium with lipoprotein depleted serum. In binding experiments cells incubated at 4° C for 2 h with medium containing gold LDL conjugates showed gold LDL attached to the plasma membrane without characteristic localization. After incubation with gold LDL at 37° C for various times, the three cellular types showed ligand internalization. Gold LDL endocytosis involved first coated pits but also uncoated plasmalemmal invaginations. Then gold LDL was further observed in coated and non coated vesicles, smooth walled endosomes, multivesicular bodies and tubular vesicles. Lastly free gold particles were observed in lysosome like dense bodies. These results prove the internalization of gold LDL conjugates by human cultured placental cells, particularly by syncytiotrophoblast like multinucleated cells. This accumulation of LDL (the major cholesterol carrying protein in humans) is recognised to be responsable for the exogenous cholesterol supply indispensable to the progesterone biosynthesis and cellular growth of the placenta.  相似文献   

10.
The interaction of homologous and heterologous albumin-gold complex (Alb-Au) with capillary endothelium was investigated in the mouse lung, heart, and diaphragm. Perfusion of the tracer in situ for from 3 to 35 min was followed by washing with phosphate-buffered saline, fixation by perfusion, and processing for electron microscopy. From the earliest time examined, one and sometimes two rows of densely packed particles bound to some restricted plasma membrane microdomains that appeared as uncoated pits, and to plasmalemmal vesicles open on the luminal front. Morphometric analysis, using various albumin-gold concentrations, showed that the binding is saturable at a very low concentration of the ligand and short exposure. After 5 min, tracer-carrying vesicles appeared on the abluminal front, discharging their content into the subendothelial space. As a function of tracer concentration 1-10% of plasmalemmal vesicles contained Alb-Au particles in fluid phase; from 5 min on, multivesicular bodies were labeled by the tracer. Plasma membrane, coated pits, and coated vesicles were not significantly marked at any time interval. Heparin or high ionic strength did not displace the bound Alb-Au from vesicle membrane. No binding was obtained when Alb-Au was competed in situ with albumin or was injected in vivo. Gold complexes with fibrinogen, fibronectin, glucose oxidase, or polyethyleneglycol did not give a labeling comparable to that of albumin. These results suggest that on the capillary endothelia examined, the Alb-Au is adsorbed on specific binding sites restricted to uncoated pits and plasmalemmal vesicles. The tracer is transported in transcytotic vesicles across endothelium by receptor-mediated transcytosis, and to a lesser extent is taken up by pinocytotic vesicles. The existence of albumin receptors on these continuous capillary endothelia may provide a specific mechanism for the transport of albumin and other molecules carried by this protein.  相似文献   

11.
Earlier studies have shown that transferrin binds to specific receptors on the reticulocyte surface, clusters in coated pits and is then internalized via endocytic vesicles. Guinea-pig reticulocytes also have specific receptors for ferritin. In this paper ferritin and transferrin endocytosis by guinea-pig reticulocytes was studied by electron microscopy using the natural electron density of ferritin and colloidal gold-transferrin (AuTf). At 4 degrees C both ligands bound to the cell surface. At 37 degrees C progressive uptake occurred by endocytosis. AuTf and ferritin clustered in the same coated pits and small intracellular vesicles. After 60 min incubations the ligands colocalized to large multivesicular endosomes (MVE), still membrane-bound. MVE subsequently fused with the plasma membrane and released AuTf, ferritin and inclusions by exocytosis. All endocytic structures labelled with AuTf contained ferritin, but 23 to 35% of ferritin-labelled endocytic structures contained no AuTf. These data suggest that ferritin and transferrin are internalized through the same pathway involving receptors, coated pits and vesicles, but that these proteins are recycled only partly in common.  相似文献   

12.
The fate of tetanus toxin bound to neuronal cells at 0 degree C was followed using an anti-toxin 125I-protein A assay. About 50% of surface-bound toxin disappeared within 5 min of warming cells to 37 degrees C. Experiments with 125I-toxin showed that much of this loss was due to dissociation of bound toxin into the medium. Some toxin was however rapidly internalised, and could be detected only by permeabilizing cells with Triton X-100 prior to assay. To investigate the mechanism of internalisation, tetanus toxin was adsorbed to colloidal gold. Toxin-gold was shown to be stable, and to recognise the same receptor(s) as free toxin. Quantitation of the distribution of toxin-gold particles bound to the cell body at 4 degrees C showed that it was concentrated in coated pits. After 5 min at 37 degrees C, toxin-gold appeared in coated vesicles, endosomes, and tubules. After 15 min, it was found largely in endosomes, and at 30 min in multivesicular bodies. The involvement of coated pits in internalisation of tetanus toxin, but not cholera toxin, was confirmed using the free toxins, anti-toxins, and protein A-gold. Toxin-gold also entered nerve terminals and axons via coated pits, accumulating in synaptic vesicles and intraaxonal uncoated vesicles, respectively.  相似文献   

13.
We have determined the subcellular distribution of fucosyl residues in rat duodenal absorptive enterocytes and goblet cells, using the binding affinity of the lectin I of Ulex europaeus (UEA I). In absorptive enterocytes, UEA I-lectin gold complexes were detected at the brush border and at the basolateral plasma membrane; pits of the plasma membrane were labeled, as were small vesicles, multivesicular bodies, lysosomes, and the Golgi apparatus. In the Golgi stacks, about half of the cisternae showed gold marker particles: accessible fucosyl residues were sparse in the cis subcompartment, the cismost cisterna mostly remaining negative; more intense label was found in medial cisternae; reactions were concentrated in the trans and transmost Golgi subcompartments. Cisternae, tubules and vesicles located at the trans Golgi side were the most constantly and intensely stained Golgi elements. In goblet cells, mucin granules and trans Golgi cisternae were labeled. Rarely, UEA I-gold bound to cisternae of the medial subcompartment; the cis subcompartment remained unstained. In part, UEA I-gold particles were restricted to dilated portions of the transmost Golgi cisterna and to secretory granules.  相似文献   

14.
Receptor-mediated hepatic uptake of low density lipoproteins (LDL) conjugated to colloidal gold was studied by perfusion of livers from rats treated for 5 d with 17 alpha-ethinylestradiol. Estrogen treatment resulted in a marked decrease in serum lipid and lipoprotein concentrations. After 15 min of perfusion the conjugate was bound to the hepatic microvilli of both control and estrogen-treated rats; the estrogen-treated rats showed an 8- to 11-fold greater number of membrane-bound conjugates. The conjugates were bound to the membrane receptor by the LDL particle because the gold granules were regularly displaced from the membrane by 20 +/- 3.2 nm, the diameter of LDL. Internalization of the conjugate, evident by gold particles in multivesicular bodies, occurred at coated pits at the base of the microvillus where coated vesicles containing a single gold-LDL conjugate were released. After 1 h of perfusion, the livers from the estrogen-treated rats showed all phases of endocytosis and incorporation into multivesicular bodies of the conjugate. After 2 h of perfusion, there was congregation of gold-labeled lysosomes near the bile canaliculi. Gold-LDL conjugates were also observed to bind and be internalized by Kupffer cells and sinusoidal endothelium. These findings indicate that estrogen treatment induces hepatic receptors for LDL. The catabolic pathway of binding and endocytosis of the conjugate is similar to that seen in fibroblasts, although slower. Because gold-LDL conjugates were also present in the Kupffer and endothelial cells, the uptake of LDL by the liver involves the participation of more than a single cell type.  相似文献   

15.
Summary Using a direct conjugate of urokinase and ferritin, the binding has been followed at the plasma membrane and the internalization of urokinase into BALB/C-3T3 fibroblasts, cultured in plasminogen-free conditions. At 0° C, the conjugate was observed bound on both coated and uncoated cell surface regions as singlets, and small and large clusters. No binding was observed in the presence of excess native urokinase. The binding was impaired by preincubation of the conjugate with a competitive inhibitor of the catalytic site, suggesting an interaction between the receptor and the catalytic site of the enzyme.Within 1 min at 37° C, urokinase clustered on coated regions of the plasma membrane. At 5 min after warming, ferritin was found on deeply indented coated pits and in both coated and uncoated vesicles close to the cell surface. By 10 min at 37° C, ferritin particles were present in uncoated endosomes and in multivesicular bodies in the Golgi area. Within 10 min, the receptors on the surface strongly decreased. New receptors were observed on the membrane after 20 min at 37° C. At this time, ferritin was observed both in endosomes or multivesicular bodies and in vesicles close to the plasma membrane.  相似文献   

16.
The topography and dynamics of IgA-secretory component (SC) complexes on the surface of cultured hepatocytes and its disturbance by cytochalasin B were investigated using the colloidal gold technique in conjunction with surface replication. The distribution of IgA-gold conjugates after incubation at 4 degrees C was similar in normal and cytochalasin B-treated hepatocytes and was characterized by diffusely scattered single and clustered particles, the latter often associated with coated pits. After raising the temperature to 37 degrees C, redistribution of particles and their gradual uptake into coated vesicles was observed in control cultures. This ligand-induced redistribution led to a progressive gathering of single and grouped particles in larger clusters (50-200 particles), which appeared to be the site of the most intensive endocytotic activity. In contrast, huge patches of IgA-gold conjugates were formed at the cell periphery of cytochalasin B-treated hepatocytes within 20-60 min at 37 degrees C, while central areas were cleared. Patch formation was triggered by binding of both unlabeled and labeled IgA, but could not be observed with the unoccupied receptor as demonstrated by gold-labeled antibodies against SC. These results show that the topography of SC is markedly changed by binding of its ligand, IgA, and suggest that the dynamics of the IgA-SC complexes in hepatocyte plasma membrane are affected by microfilaments.  相似文献   

17.
Proteoglycans (Mr approximately 200 000) isolated from bovine arterial tissue were decorated with 17 nm diameter gold particles for tracing in electron microscopic thin sections and surface replicas. Lysine and arginine residues of their proteoglycan protein core are assumed to be essential for gold conjugation. The resulting proteoglycan-gold conjugates, which appear as pearl string-like gold strands of about 170 nm in length were used to visualize binding, endocytosis and intracellular translocation of proteoglycans by homologous cultured arterial smooth muscle cells. The proteoglycan-gold conjugates bind to coated as well as to non-coated cell surface membrane areas at 4 degrees C. This is followed by the formation of membrane invaginations. Postincubation at 37 degrees C leads to a time-dependent uptake of proteoglycan-gold conjugates via non-coated and coated vesicles which after fusion are translocated to multivesicular bodies and to large sized vesicles within 1 h. After conversion of these vesicles to lysosomal compartments the gold particles are uncoupled from the proteoglycans and are concentrated within residual vacuoles. From these vacuoles the gold particles are extruded. In contrast to the surface-bound proteoglycan-gold conjugates the released gold particles are condensed to bulky aggregates. The results, which include competition, inhibition and pulse chase experiments, extend biochemical data on endocytosis and degradation of proteoglycans.  相似文献   

18.
Monomeric ferritin-insulin was used as an ultrastructural marker to determine by quantitative electron microscopy the time course and route of insulin uptake in rat adipocytes. To approximate steady state membrane binding conditions prior to any internalization, adipocytes were prefixed with glutaraldehyde and incubated for 30 min with 70 nM monomeric ferritin-insulin. Electron micrographs of these cells showed that the ferritin-insulin particles were predominantly in small groups of receptor sites on the plasma membrane and in pinocytotic-like invaginations of the plasma membrane. Significant amounts of ferritin-insulin were observed in cytoplasmic vesicles of unfixed cells as early as 2 min and in multivesicular bodies and lysosome-like structures within 5 to 10 min after the addition of the ligand. Ferritin-insulin accumulation reached steady state levels in the cytoplasmic vesicles in 5 to 10 min and in the lysosome-like structures in 15 min. Little ferritin-insulin was bound to coated pits, and the relative paucity of coated pits found in adipocytes suggested that these specialized endocytotic structures have a relatively insignificant role in insulin uptake in fat cells. Quantitative analysis of the uptake process suggested that a proportion of the insulin internalized by the cell may not be transported to lysosomes, but may be recycled along with the insulin receptor to the plasma membrane.  相似文献   

19.
At 4 degrees C transferrin bound to receptors on the reticulocyte plasma membrane, and at 37 degrees C receptor-mediated endocytosis of transferrin occurred. Uptake at 37 degrees C exceeded binding at 4 degrees C by 2.5-fold and saturated after 20-30 min. During uptake at 37 degrees C, bound transferrin was internalized into a trypsin- resistant space. Trypsinization at 4 degrees C destroyed surface receptors, but with subsequent incubation at 37 degrees C, surface receptors rapidly appeared (albeit in reduced numbers), and uptake occurred at a decreased level. After endocytosis, transferrin was released, apparently intact, into the extracellular space. At 37 degrees C colloidal gold-transferrin (AuTf) clustered in coated pits and then appeared inside various intracellular membrane-bounded compartments. Small vesicles and tubules were labeled after short (5-10 min) incubations at 37 degrees C. Larger multivesicular endosomes became heavily labeled after longer (20-35 min) incubations. Multivesicular endosomes apparently fused with the plasma membrane and released their contents by exocytosis. None of these organelles appeared to be lysosomal in nature, and 98% of intracellular AuTf was localized in acid phosphatase-negative compartments. AuTf, like transferrin, was released with subsequent incubation at 37 degrees C. Freeze-dried and freeze-fractured reticulocytes confirmed the distribution of AuTf in reticulocytes and revealed the presence of clathrin-coated patches amidst the spectrin coating the inner surface of the plasma membrane. These data suggest that transferrin is internalized via coated pits and vesicles and demonstrate that transferrin and its receptor are recycled back to the plasma membrane after endocytosis.  相似文献   

20.
Summary The uptake and pathway of different markers and ligands for fluid-phase, adsorptive and receptor mediated endocytosis were analyzed in the epithelial cells lining the rete testis after their infusion into the lumen of these anastomotic channels. At 2 min after injection, diferric transferrin bound to colloidal gold was seen attached to the apical plasma membrane and to the membrane of endocytic coated and uncoated pits and vesicles. The injection of transferrin-gold in the presence of a 100-fold excess of unconjugated diferric transferrin revealed no binding or internalization of transferrin-gold. Similarly, apotransferrin-gold was neither bound to the apical plasma membrane nor internalized by these cells. These results thus indicate the presence of specific binding sites for diferric transferrin. At 5 min, internalized diferric transferrin-gold reached endosomes. At 15 and 30 min, the endosomes were still labeled but at these time intervals the transferrin-gold also appeared in tubular elements connected to or associated with these bodies or seen in close proximity to the apical plasma membrane. At 60 and 90 min, most of the transferrin-gold was no longer present in these organelles and was seen only exceptionally in secondary lysosomes. These results thus suggest that the tubular elements may be involved in the recycling of transferrin back to the lumen of the rete testis. The coinjection of transferrin-gold and the fluid-phase marker native ferritin revealed that both proteins were often internalized in the same endocytic pit and vesicle and shared the same endosome. However, unlike transferrin, native ferritin at the late time intervals appeared in dense multivesicular bodies and secondary lysosomes. When the adsorptive marker cationic ferritin and the fluid-phase marker albumin-gold were coinjected, again both proteins often shared the same endocytic pit and vesicle, endosome, pale and dense multivesicular body and secondary lysosomes. However, several endocytic vesicles labeled only with cationic ferritin appeared to bypass the endosomal and lysosomal compartments and to reach the lateral intercellular space and areas of the basement membrane. The rete epithelial cells, therefore, appear to be internalizing proteins and ligands by receptor-mediated and non-specific endocytosis which, after having shared the same endocytic vesicle and endosome, appear to be capable of being segregated and routed to different destinations.  相似文献   

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