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1.
The endocytosis pathways of particles with terminal beta-D-galactosyl groups were studied in isolated rat Kupffer cells by electron microscopy. Colloidal gold particles of sizes 5, 17 and 50 nm were coated with asialofetuin (ASF) and isolated liver macrophages were allowed to bind (at 4 degrees C) or take up (at 37 degrees C) these ligands. Particles of all three sizes were bound via the galactose-particle receptor as shown by carbohydrate inhibition experiments and were ingested effectively. But, whereas ASF-gold particles of sizes 5 and 17 nm are taken up via the coated pit/coated vesicle pathway, the 50 nm particles are not. These enter the cell via non-coated endocytic vacuoles. All three particle sizes are transported to the same lysosomal compartment. These observations demonstrate that at least in macrophages one receptor is capable to mediate endocytosis via two different pathways depending on ligand size and/or valency.  相似文献   

2.
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   

3.
To determine whether hepatic sinusoidal cells contain glucagon receptors and, if so, to study the significance of the receptors in the cells, binding of [125I]-glucagon to nonparenchymal cells (mainly endothelial cells and Kupffer cells) isolated from mouse liver was examined by quantitative autoradiography and biochemical methods. Furthermore, the pathway of intracellular transport of colloidal gold-labeled glucagon (AuG) was examined in vivo. Autoradiographic and biochemical results demonstrated many glucagon receptors in both endothelial cells and Kupffer cells, and more receptors being present in endothelial cells than in Kupffer cells. In vivo, endothelial cells internalized AuG particles into coated vesicles via coated pits and transported the particles to endosomes, lysosomes, and abluminal plasma membrane. Therefore, receptor-mediated transcytosis of AuG occurs in endothelial cells. The number of particles present on the abluminal plasma membrane was constant if the amount of injected AuG increased. Therefore, the magnitude of receptor-mediated transcytosis of AuG appears to be regulated by endothelial cells. Kupffer cells internalized the ligand into cytoplasmic tubular structures via plasma membrane invaginations and transported the ligand exclusively to endosomes and lysosomes, suggesting that the ligand is degraded by Kupffer cells.  相似文献   

4.
Colloidal gold particles coated with asialoglycoproteins are bound by hepatocytes as well as by liver macrophages. Binding by both cell types is inhibited by N-acetylgalactosamine and related saccharides and is dependent on the presence of Ca2+. We have now performed an electron microscopic study on receptor anchorage in the plasma membranes. Cells with prebound ligand were treated with 20 mM EDTA at 4 degrees C, washed free of chelator and tested for residual galactose-specific receptor activity. Whereas hepatocytes preserve binding activity (73% of untreated control), liver macrophages lose galactose-specific receptor activity (12% of untreated control). Liver macrophages regain binding activity after a 2 min incubation at 37 degrees C allowing for receptor recycling. If the macrophages were fixed with low glutaraldehyde concentration prior to EDTA treatment they fully retained their receptor activity (74% of control). Ligands were also removed from both cell types by incubation with 80 mM N-acetylgalactosamine. After washing the cells free of the competing monosaccharide, both the hepatocytes as well as the macrophages show full binding activity (120% and 85% of untreated controls). Therefore, membrane anchorage sites of the macrophage receptors are not identical to ligand-binding sites. These results suggest a Ca2+-Mg2+-dependent receptor anchorage on the macrophage plasma membrane. As shown in the accompanying paper (Roos, P.H., Hartmann, H.J., Schlepper-Sch?fer, J., Kolb, H. and Kolb-Bachofen, V. (1985) Biochim. Biophys. Acta 847, 115-121), EDTA-induced dissociation from the membrane can be used for isolation of the galactose-specific receptors of liver macrophages.  相似文献   

5.
We studied interactions of isolated Thomsen-Friedenreich (T)- and Tn-specific glycoproteins with the Gal/GalNAc-specific receptors on rat Kupffer cells and compared them to those with rat hepatocytes. Immunoreactive T and Tn are specific pancarcinoma epitopes. Electron microscopy of gold-labelled T and Tn antigens revealed their specific binding to Kupffer cells, followed by their uptake via the coated pit/vesicle pathway of receptor-mediated endocytosis. Preincubation of Kupffer cells with GalNAc and GalNAc-BSA, but not GlcNAc or GlcNAc-BSA specifically inhibited binding of the T and Tn glycoproteins. Desialylated, isologous erythrocytes (T RBC) are known to bind to the Gal/GalNAc receptors of rat Kupffer cells and hepatocytes. This attachment was specifically inhibited by T and Tn in a concentration-dependent manner: 50% T RBC-Kupffer cell contacts were inhibited at 8.5.10(-6) mM T and 8.5.10(-5) mM Tn antigen concentrations, respectively. The corresponding figures for hepatocytes were 6.10(-6) mM T and 1.2.10(-6) mM Tn antigen. Amino-terminal cleavage products of the T glycoprotein, possessing clusters terminating in non-reducing Gal/GalNAc, inhibited T RBC binding to Kupffer cells and hepatocytes usually at 10(-2) to 10(-5) mM concentrations, whereas GalNAc, galactose and galactose glycosides inhibited at millimolar concentrations. Galactose-unrelated carbohydrates were inactive at concentrations greater than or equal to 50 mM.  相似文献   

6.
We have analyzed interaction of recombinant human surfactant protein A (SP-A) with isolated rat alveolar macrophages in the electron microscope. SP-A coated onto gold particles of different diameter is bound and internalized by macrophages. Binding and uptake occurs via coated membrane structures. SP-A gold particles are transported to secondary lysosomes. Binding and uptake is specific; i.e., excess of SP-A inhibits SP-A gold particle binding and uptake by 67% and depends on the presence of divalent cations. In experiments with ManBSA (5 x 10(-6) M) inhibition is 60%, but no inhibition occurs with GalBSA. The mannose-dependent interaction of SP-A particles with macrophages is not due to the mannose-specific receptor on the cell surface of macrophages as shown in experiments with macrophages exhibiting reduced mannose receptor activity. These cells show reduced binding and uptake of mannan gold particles (42% inhibition) but no reduction of SP-A gold particle binding and uptake. Furthermore, mannan gold particles do not compete with binding of SP-A gold particles.  相似文献   

7.
The interaction of apolipoprotein (apo) E-free high-density lipoprotein (HDL) with parenchymal, endothelial and Kupffer cells from liver was characterized. At 10 min after injection of radiolabelled HDL into rats, 1.0 +/- 0.1% of the radioactivity was associated with the liver. Subfractionation of the liver into parenchymal, endothelial and Kupffer cells, by a low-temperature cell-isolation procedure, indicated that 77.8 +/- 2.4% of the total liver-associated radioactivity was recovered with parenchymal cells, 10.8 +/- 0.8% with endothelial cells and 11.3 +/- 1.7% with Kupffer cells. It can be concluded that inside the liver a substantial part of HDL becomes associated with endothelial and Kupffer cells in addition to parenchymal cells. With freshly isolated parenchymal, endothelial and Kupffer cells the binding properties for apo E-free HDL were determined. For parenchymal, endothelial and Kupffer cells, evidence was obtained for a saturable, specific, high-affinity binding site with Kd and Bmax. values respectively in the ranges 10-20 micrograms of HDL/ml and 25-50 ng of HDL/mg of cell protein. In all three cell types nitrosylated HDL and low-density lipoproteins did not compete for the binding of native HDL, indicating that lipids and apo B are not involved in specific apo E-free HDL binding. Very-low-density lipoproteins (VLDL), however, did compete for HDL binding. The competition of VLDL with apo E-free HDL could not be explained by label exchange or by transfer of radioactive lipids or apolipoproteins between HDL and VLDL, and it is therefore suggested that competition is exerted by the presence of apo Cs in VLDL. The results presented here provide evidence for a high-affinity recognition site for HDL on parenchymal, liver endothelial and Kupffer cells, with identical recognition properties on the three cell types. HDL is expected to deliver cholesterol from peripheral cells, including endothelial and Kupffer cells, to the liver hepatocytes, where cholesterol can be converted into bile acids and thereby irreversibly removed from the circulation. The observed identical recognition properties of the HDL high-affinity site on liver parenchymal, endothelial and Kupffer cells suggest that one receptor may mediate both cholesterol efflux and cholesterol influx, and that the regulation of this bidirectional cholesterol (ester) flux lies beyond the initial binding of HDL to the receptor.  相似文献   

8.
Human leukocytes express a receptor that mediates the binding of cells and particles coated with C3bi, a fragment of the third component of complement. Previous data indicate that the capacity of this receptor to mediate binding is regulated by changes in its aggregation state. Randomly distributed receptors bind ligand very inefficiently, but stimulation of polymorphonuclear leukocytes with phorbol esters causes a ligand-independent clustering of the receptors in the membrane, and the clustered receptors avidly bind C3bi-coated cells (1). We examined whether the aggregation state of surface-bound ligands also affects the efficiency of binding between receptors and ligands. We found that erythrocytes bearing C3bi in clusters were bound by both macrophages and polymorphonuclear leukocytes far more avidly than erythrocytes bearing the same number of ligands in random array. We made similar observations with erythrocytes coated with C3b, a ligand that is recognized by a separate receptor. Our observations show that the ability of a receptor-bearing cell to bind particles coated with the corresponding ligands is dramatically affected by the distribution of ligand on the surface of the particle. Cell-cell interactions may thus be regulated by alterations in the two-dimensional distribution of receptors and ligands on opposing cell surfaces.  相似文献   

9.
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   

10.
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   

11.
Morphological characteristics of the interaction of low density lipoproteins (LDL) and acetylated low density lipoproteins (AcLDL) with rat liver cells are described. These liver cell types are mainly responsible for the catabolism of these lipoproteins in vivo. Isolated rat liver Kupffer, endothelial, and parenchymal cells were incubated with LDL or AcLDL conjugated to 20 nm colloidal gold. LDL was mainly internalized by Kupffer cells, whereas AcLDL was predominantly found in endothelial cells. Kupffer and endothelial cells displayed different morphological characteristics in the processing of these lipoproteins. Kupffer cells bound LDL at uncoated regions of the plasma membrane often at the base of pseudopodia, and internalized the particles via small smooth vesicles. These uptake characteristics differ from the classical LDL uptake pathway, as described for other cell types, and may be related to the unique recognition properties of the receptor of Kupffer cells as observed in biochemical studies. Liver endothelial cells bound AcLDL in coated pits, followed by rapid uptake. Uptake proceeded through small coated vesicles, and after 5 min of incubation large (600-1200 nm) electron-lucent vacuoles (endosomes) with AcLDL-gold particles arranged along the membrane region were present. The endosomes were often associated closely with the cell membrane which might enable direct recycling of AcLDL receptors. These observations might explain the high efficiency of these cells in the processing of modified LDL in vivo.  相似文献   

12.
Lung surfactant protein A (SP-A) is the main protein component of pulmonary surfactant, which lines the alveolar space. We examined the interaction between recombinant human SP-A and human macrophages or monocytes. Binding and uptake of SP-A adsorbed onto colloidal gold particles was followed by electron microscopy and quantitated on micrographs. SP-A particles were internalized via coated pits/vesicles and transported to secondary lysosomes. Uptake was inhibited in the presence of alpha-D-mannosyl-bovine serum albumin (BSA) but not by beta-D-galactosyl-BSA. Two mannose-dependent recognition mechanisms might mediate SP-A uptake by macrophages. First, as SP-A is a glycoprotein with N-glycosylated glycans it could act as a ligand for the mannose-specific receptor on macrophages. Second, as SP-A is a mannose-specific lectin itself it could bind to mannose residues on the macrophage's cell surface. Activity of the Man-receptor on macrophages was demonstrated with alpha-D-mannosyl-BSA coated onto gold particles. Exposed alpha-D-mannosyl residues on macrophages were identified by Concanavalin A adsorbed onto gold particles. Hence, both mechanisms may be involved in principle. As monocytes have no mannose-specific receptor activity on their cell surface but internalize SP-A gold particles in a mannose-dependent manner, we conclude that at least the second mechanism participates in the recognition of SP-A by macrophages.  相似文献   

13.
Kupffer cells isolated from the rat liver are able to bind neuraminidase-treated rat erythrocytes via a D-galactose-specific receptor on the cell surface. Binding of desialylated erythrocytes was inhibited by several mono- and oligo-saccharides related to D-galactose, but not by unrelated sugars. However, after phosphorylation at position 6 D-glucose was as good an inhibitor as D-galactose. Two synthetic glycoproteins, D-galactosyl-albumin and, at a higher concentration, D-glucosyl-albumin, strongly inhibit cell contacts. Lectin-mediated binding of desialylated erythrocytes is dependent on the presence of Ca2'ons, but independent of ATP formation and cell motility. It is concluded that binding of desialylated erythrocytes by rat Kupffer cells is mediated by a Ca2-dependent D-galactosyl/D-glucosyl-recognition system.  相似文献   

14.
Cultured extrahepatic cells possess a specific high affinity binding site (receptor) for high density lipoprotein (HDL) that is induced by cholesterol delivery to cells. To characterize the binding recognition site(s) on HDL, the ability of HDL to interact with cultured human fibroblasts was assayed after chemical alteration of specific apoprotein amino acid residues. Reduction and alkylation, acetylation, and cyclohexanedione treatment of HDL3 had little or no effect on its cellular binding. Treatment of HDL3 with tetranitromethane (TNM), however, caused a large dose-dependent decrease in binding, with maximum inhibition at 3 mM. Amino acid analysis of the TNM-treated particles showed specific alteration of tyrosine residues, but sodium dodecyl sulfate-gel electrophoresis demonstrated apoprotein cross-linking coincident with decreased binding. These results suggest that modification of HDL tyrosine residues and/or cross-linking of HDL apoproteins alters the ligand site recognized by the HDL receptor. Gradient gel electrophoresis, molecular sieve chromatography, and electron microscopy showed only minor changes in size distribution and shape of HDL3 particles after treatment with 3 mM TNM, but at higher TNM concentrations, coalescence and aggregation of particles was evident. Treatment of HDL3 with 3 mM TNM affected neither its promotion of the low affinity (receptor-independent) cholesterol efflux from cells nor its ability to accept cholesterol from an albumin suspension, yet promotion of high affinity (receptor-dependent) cholesterol efflux from cells was abolished. The finding that TNM treatment of HDL3 decreases both its receptor binding and its promotion of cholesterol efflux from cells without substantial alteration of its physical properties supports the hypothesis that the HDL receptor functions to facilitate cholesterol transport from cells.  相似文献   

15.
Asialoorosomucoid (ASOR) is internalized and degraded by HepG2 cells after binding to the asialoglycoprotein (ASGP) receptor, internalization through the coated pit/coated vesicle pathway, and trafficking to lysosomes. Primaquine, an 8-aminoquinoline antimalarial compound, inhibits ASOR degradation at concentrations greater than 0.2 mM by neutralizing intracellular acid compartments. This leads to alterations in surface receptor number, receptor-ligand dissociation, and receptor recycling. We have investigated the effects of primaquine on 125I-ASOR uptake and degradation as a function of primaquine concentration and duration of exposure. Concentrations below those required for neutralization of acidic compartments block 125I-ASOR degradation in HepG2 cells and lead to intracellular ligand accumulation. This effect is maximal at 80 microM primaquine. The intracellular 125I-ASOR is undegraded, dissociated from the ASGP receptor, and contained within vesicular compartments distinct from lysosomes, plasma membrane, or endosomes. In addition, the effect of 80 microM primaquine on 125I-ASOR degradation is very slowly reversible (greater than 6 h), in contrast to primaquine's rapidly reversible effect on receptor recycling and ligand uptake (10 min). Furthermore, the effect is ligand-specific. 125I-asialofetuin, another ASGP receptor ligand, is internalized and degraded in lysosomes at normal rates in HepG2 cells exposed to 80 microM primaquine. These findings indicate that primaquine has multiple effects on the uptake and degradation of ligand occurring in the endosome-lysosome pathway. These effects of primaquine differ in their concentration-dependence, site of action, reversibility, and ligand selectivity.  相似文献   

16.
Upon injection of chylomicrons into rats, chylomicron remnants are predominantly taken up by parenchymal cells, with a limited contribution (8.6% of the injected dose) by Kupffer cells. In vitro storage of partially processed chylomicron remnants for only 24 h leads, after in vivo injection, to an avid recognition by Kupffer cells (uptake up to 80% of the total liver-associated radioactivity). Lactoferrin greatly reduces the liver uptake of chylomicron remnants, which appears to be the consequence of a specific inhibition of the uptake by parenchymal cells. Kupffer-cell uptake is not influenced by lactoferrin. In vitro studies with isolated parenchymal and Kupffer cells show that both contain a specific recognition site for chylomicron remnants. The Kupffer-cell recognition site differs in several ways from the recognition site on parenchymal cells as follows. (a) The maximum level of binding is 3.7-fold higher/mg cell protein than with parenchymal cells. (b) Binding of chylomicron remnants is partially dependent on the presence of calcium, while binding to parenchymal cells is not. (c) beta-Migrating very-low-density lipoprotein is a less effective competitor for chylomicron-remnant binding to Kupffer cells compared to parenchymal cells. (d) Lactoferrin leaves Kupffer-cell binding uninfluenced, while it greatly reduces binding of chylomicron remnants to parenchymal cells. The properties of chylomicron-remnant recognition by parenchymal cells are consistent with apolipoprotein E being the determinant for recognition. It can be concluded that the chylomicron-remnant recognition site on Kupffer cells possesses properties which are distinct from the recognition site on parenchymal cells. It might be suggested that partially processed chylomicron remnants are specifically sensitive to a modification, which induces an avid interaction with the Kupffer cells. The recognition site for (modified) chylomicron remnants on Kupffer cells might function as a protection system against the occurrence of these potential atherogenic chylomicron-remnant particles in the blood.  相似文献   

17.
Latex beads with covalently bound bovine serum albumin were prepared and coated with anti-BSA immunoglobulin G. These particles were shown to possess on their surfaces a defined quantity of the antibody with the Fc portions exposed to the medium. One homologous and two heterologous antibodies of the G class were used and compared in terms of their binding to the rat Kupffer cells and their ability to elicit the typical phagocytotic responses. These particles were phagocytosed by rat Kupffer cells and elicited synthesis of prostaglandins and superoxide anion radicals. A significant release of superoxide into the medium was observed in the presence of cytochalasin B only. The data presented here suggest that a) Fc-carrying particles can be bound to Kupffer cells and elicit responses via specific receptors; b) coating with the homologous antibody yields the most effective particles; c) superoxide release into the surrounding medium is most abundant when the particle-binding membrane areas are prevented from forming phagocytotic vesicles.  相似文献   

18.
We studied the carbohydrate recognition systems on liver sinusoidal cells of adult chicken and 20-day-old embryos. We localized and quantified the binding sites for glycoproteins exposing terminal N-acetylglucosamine (GlcNAc), mannose and galactose (Gal) residues. Sinusoidal liver cells from animals of both ages express on their cell surfaces binding sites for GlcNAc, mannose and galactose residues, while hepatocytes bind glycoproteins with GlcNAc resiudes. The gold particles distribution on Kuffer cells depend on the binding sites and the age considered. Binding sites for GlcNAc and Gal residues are generally present as clusters of gold granules, while mannose-specific binding sites are always as single gold granules. Ligand-gold complexes bound on endothelial cells are always present on the coated regions of the cell surface. The number of GlcNAc and Gal-specific receptors expressed on the cell surface of Kupffer cells undergoes modifications between embryonal and adult life.  相似文献   

19.
Neoglycoproteins (Lee, Y.C., Stowell, C.P., and Krantz, M.J. (1976) Biochemistry 15, 3956-3963) and monosaccharides which interact with the Man/Fuc receptor (Stah, P.D., Rodman, J.S., Miller, M.J., and Schlesinger, P.H. (1978) Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U.S.A. 75, 1399-1403) stimulate lysosomal enzyme secretion in rabbit alveolar macrophages in a dose- and time-dependent fashion. Man43-bovine serum albumin (BSA), L-Fuc30-BSA, and Man96-poly-D-lysine (Hoppe, C.A., and Lee, Y.C. (1984) Biochemistry 23, 1723-1730) were potent stimulators of lysosomal enzyme secretion. Mannose, L-fucose (Fuc), N-acetylmannosamine and N-acetylglucosamine were also effective, but much higher concentrations (above 10 mM) were required to elicit the same effects as the corresponding neoglycoproteins. After a 1.5-h incubation of the cells with Man43-BSA in the presence of 10 mM EDTA, the stimulation of lysosomal enzyme secretion was reduced by 73%. These results indicate that the Man/L-Fuc receptor participates in the process of lysosomal enzyme secretion. Addition of cycloheximide did not affect the stimulation by Man43-BSA, indicating that shunting of newly synthesized enzymes is not involved in the observed phenomenon. The temporary binding of ligands to the cell surface Man/Fuc receptor at 4 degrees C also did not show the stimulation effect. Secretion of Man211-poly-D-lysine preloaded in secondary lysosome was stimulated by Man43-BSA, suggesting that secondary lysosome is one of the pools from which lysosomal enzymes are secreted. However, neither storage of an undegradable ligand in lysosomes nor the degradation of a degradable ligand was an absolute requirement for stimulation of enzyme secretion, because both Man96-poly-D-lysine (nondegradable ligand) and Man43-BSA (degradable ligand) can stimulate to a similar extent.  相似文献   

20.
Lack of a direct role for macrosialin in oxidized LDL metabolism   总被引:2,自引:0,他引:2  
Murine macrosialin (MS), a scavenger receptor family member, is a heavily glycosylated transmembrane protein expressed predominantly in macrophage late endosomes. MS is also found on the cell surface where it is suggested, on the basis of ligand blotting, to bind oxidized LDL (oxLDL). Here we report on the regulation of MS by an atherogenic high-fat diet and oxLDL, and on the inability of MS in transfected cells to bind oxLDL. MS expression was markedly increased in the livers of atherosclerosis-susceptible C57BL/6 and atherosclerosis-resistant C3H/HeJ mice fed an atherogenic high-fat diet. In resident-mouse peritoneal macrophages, treatment with oxLDL upregulated MS mRNA and protein expression 1.5- to 3-fold. MS, overexpressed in COS-7 cells through adenovirus mediated gene transfer, bound oxLDL by ligand blotting. However, no binding of oxLDL to MS was observed in intact transfected COS-7 and Chinese hamster ovary cells, despite significant cell surface expression of MS. Furthermore, inhibition of MS through gene silencing did not affect the binding of oxLDL to macrophages. We conclude that although MS expression in macrophages and Kupffer cells is responsive to a proatherogenic inflammatory diet and to oxLDL, MS does not function as an oxLDL receptor on the cell surface.  相似文献   

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