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1.
The intermediate filament systems of the established epithelial cell lines HeLa and PtK2 have been characterized by electron microscopy using indirect immunoferritin labelling. The results provide a direct ultrastructural confirmation of the proposal based on indirect immunofluorescence microscopy, that vimentin and cytokeratin fibrils constitute two distinct 10 nm filament systems in much of the cell body. In agreement both with classical histology and with the finding that cytokeratins are typically present in many epithelial tissues, demosome-attached 10 nm filaments (tonofilaments) were found to be of the cytokeratin type. Vimentin, but not cytokeratin filaments were translocated into juxtanuclear caps after exposure of the cells to colcemid. Regions of the cytoplasm where the two distinct systems form mixed bundles were identified and both side-by-side arrangements and the occurrence of vimentin fibers in a sheath-like structure around a cytokeratin filament core are described. Our results emphasize that the two systems interact but differ in their organization and control.  相似文献   

2.
The distribution of individual cytokeratin polypeptides in the adult rat lung parenchyma was investigated by immunohistochemistry with 44 monoclonal and 2 polyclonal antibodies. Simple epithelial cytokeratins 7, 8, 18 and 19 were found to be expressed differently in alveolar and bronchial epithelial cells. Three distinct types of alveolar cells were detected according to their pattern of immunoreactivity: type II cells strongly expressing cytokeratins 8 and 18 and weakly expressing cytokeratins 7 and 19 in the cell periphery; type I cells predominantly positive for cytokeratins 7 and 19 and weakly for cytokeratin 8; and a newly defined third cell type III (alveolar brush cell) with cytokeratin 18 abundantly expressed but organized in an unusual intracellular (globular) structure. The latter cell type failed to bind the type II specific Maclura pomifera lectin, and contained no surfactant proteins. Bronchial epithelial cells exhibited a more or less uniform staining pattern for cytokeratins 8, 18 and 19 and focally for cytokeratins 4 and 7.This work was supported by Bundesminister für Forschung und Technologie (07NBL03) and Dakopatts (Glostrup, Denmark)  相似文献   

3.
Cytoskeletal elements, enriched in intermediate-sized filaments and insoluble in buffers of high salt concentrations and Triton X-100, were isolated from various cultures of rat hepatocytes and hepatoma cells, and their proteins were studied by one- and two-dimensional gel electrophoresis and immunofluorescence microscopy. The cells examined included several permanent cell lines (MH1C1, HTC, hepatoma 72/22, clone 12 from Gunn rat hepatocytes, and cell clones from normal rat hepatocytes), as well as freshly dissociated hepatocytes that were cultured and allowed to attach to substratum for increasing periods of time, beginning at 24 h after removal of the liver from the animal. Filaments containing vimentin, which were not found in hepatocytes grown in liver tissue, were detected in most of the cultured hepatocytes and hepatoma cells, except in MH1C1 cells, and were shown to be newly synthesized during the first days of primary culture. Maintenance of expression of filaments containing proteins immunologically related to epidermal prekeratin (‘cytokeratins’) was observed in all cells examined but HTC cells. Detailed comparison of the cytokeratin polypeptides present in various hepatocyte and hepatoma cell cultures showed that, in some of the cultured epithelial liver cells, cytokeratins are expressed which are identical with, or similar to, those of normal hepatocytes grown in the liver. On the other hand, differences in cytokeratin polypeptides were also found among different hepatocyte-derived cell cultures. Changes of expression of cytoskeletal proteins were found to occur even in cloned cell populations, and cells positive for certain cytokeratins could be seen next to other cells that were negative.The results demonstrate that profound changes of cytoskeletal composition, especially concerning intermediate filament protein patterns, can occur during culturing in vitro. Moreover, we show that different intermediate filament proteins can be expressed in different hepatocyte-derived cell cultures and that changes of cytoskeletal composition can occur in a given cell population, without obvious effects on cell growth rate and cell morphology. During culturing of hepatocytes and hepatoma cells, there seems to be a general tendency to induce the production of vimentin filaments as well as to maintain the production of cytokeratins similar to the hepatocyte-specific cytokeratins in liver tissue. However, the demonstrated exceptions speak against a role of these filament proteins as prerequisites for the growth of an epithelial cell in vitro. Rather, the presence of filaments containing certain cytokeratins and of desmosomes in epithelial cells growing in vitro seems to reflect the synthesis of specific differentiation markers which may be lost, independently, in some cells during culturing.  相似文献   

4.
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   

5.
The cytokeratin family of intermediate filament (IF) proteins can be grouped into the epithelial polypeptides ("soft alpha-keratins"), of which at least 19 exist in the various human epithelia, and the hair-type cytokeratins ("hard alpha-keratins"), which are typical of trichocytes, i.e., the living hair-forming cells. We have recently shown [34] that the hair follicles from diverse mammalian species contain a set of eight major cytokeratin polypeptides, four each of the acidic (type I) and the basic (type II) subfamily, which are different from all known epithelial cytokeratins. In addition, we have identified two new minor trichocytic cytokeratin polypeptides, designated Hax (type I) and Hbx (type II). Antibodies against trichocytic cytokeratins that do not crossreact with any of the epithelial cytokeratins have enabled us to study the expression of both kinds of cytokeratin in the various cell types of human and bovine hair follicles. Using immunofluorescence microscopy, we have observed intense reactions of trichocytic cytokeratins only in cells contributing to the forming hairs, i.e., hair shaft, medulla and cuticle, whereas immunostaining of the peribulbar matrix cells was weaker, if at all detectable. In contrast, epithelial cytokeratins were localized in both the inner and outer root sheath epithelia but, surprisingly, also in certain portions of the trichocyte column, notably cells of the cuticle, certain medullary cells, and trichocytes of the basalmost peripapillary cell layers. Cells coexpressing trichocytic and epithelial cytokeratins have been identified by double-label immunofluorescence microscopy. Epithelial cytokeratins of the inner and outer root sheath epithelia include, most remarkably, "simple-epithelium-type" cytokeratins 8, 18, and 19; these occur in certain peribulbar regions, in distinct patterns, but with variable frequencies. The occurrence of simple epithelial cytokeratins in hair follicles has also been confirmed by high-sensitivity immunoblotting of follicular polypeptides separated by gel electrophoresis. Vimentin-positive cells were abundantly interspersed (in some follicles, but not in all) between the trichocytes of the peripapillary cone, most of them probably being melanocytes. The cell-type complexity of the hair follicle and the different patterns of cytoskeletal protein expression in the various hair follicle cells are discussed in relation to the development and growth of this organ.  相似文献   

6.
During normal murine palatogenesis, regional specific differentiation of the epithelium results in three cell phenotypes: nasal (ciliated pseudostratified columnar cells), oral (stratified squamous cells) and medial edge (migratory, epithelio-mesenchymally transformed cells). We have developed a defined, serum-free, culture system which supports the growth and differentiation of isolated murine embryonic palatal epithelia in vitro. Using immunofluorescence microscopy, an established panel of antibodies was used to characterise the cytokeratin intermediate filament profile of palatal epithelial sheets at a precise developmental stage, following culture in serum-free medium with and without either transforming growth factor alpha (TGF alpha) or 10% donor calf serum (DCS). The morphologically discernable oral, medial edge and nasal phenotypes exhibited distinctive cytokeratin profiles, which remained consistent for all culture conditions, and which correlated with the known differentiation states of the epithelial types. The oral epithelia stained positively for cytokeratin 19 and cytokeratins characteristic of multilayered epithelia (1, 5, 14). Nasal epithelia stained similarly but in addition expressed the simple-epithelial cytokeratin pair, 8 and 18. Medial edge epithelia also expressed cytokeratins 1, 5 and 14 but with the exception of a few isolated cells there was no staining for cytokeratins 8 and 18. Cytokeratin 19 was absent specifically from the medial edge epithelial cells: this result may be related to the loss of cytokeratin expression observed during epithelial-mesenchymal transformations. By exhibiting a complexity of expression linked to differentiation state and independent of culture conditions, cytokeratins constitute useful markers of palatal epithelial differentiation in vitro as well as in vivo.  相似文献   

7.
A number of human cytokeratins are expressed during the development of stratified epithelia from one-layered polar epithelia and continue to be expressed in several adult epithelial tissues. For studies of the regulation of the synthesis of stratification-related cytokeratins in internal tissues, we have prepared cDNA and genomic clones encoding cytokeratin 4, as a representative of the basic (type II) cytokeratin subfamily and cytokeratin 15, as representative of the acidic (type I) subfamily, and determined their nucleotide sequences. The specific expression of mRNAs encoding these two polypeptides in certain stratified tissues and cultured cell lines is demonstrated by Northern blot hybridization. Hybridization in situ with antisense riboprobes and/or synthetic oligonucleotides shows the presence of cytokeratin 15 mRNA in all layers of esophagus, whereas cytokeratin 4 mRNA tends to be suprabasally enriched, although to degrees varying in different regions. We conclude that the expression of the genes encoding these stratification-related cytokeratins starts already in the basal cell layer and does not depend on vertical differentiation and detachment from the basal lamina. Our results also show that simple epithelial and stratification-related cytokeratins can be coexpressed in basal cell layers of certain stratified epithelia such as esophagus. Implications of these findings for epithelial differentiation and the formation of squamous cell carcinomas are discussed.  相似文献   

8.
Four epithelial cell lines established from juvenile rat liver and selected on the basis of their capacity to prolong the lifespan of cocultured hepatocytes were compared with respect to several immunocytochemical markers (vimentin, cytokeratin 19, MAB 19C6), enzyme activities, and amino acid uptake systems. Their phenotypes were found to be quite different from that of hepatocytes and bile duct epithelial cells (BEC), but very similar among each other. In particular, a variety of functions affected by dexamethasone (DEX) or changing spontaneously in cultured hepatocytes and/or BEC, showed neither inducibility nor spontaneous changes in the four cell lines. Instead, the lines were inducible for glutamine synthetase (GS) by DEX, in contrast to hepatocytes and BEC but also to other juvenile or adult epithelial lines that did not support cocultured hepatocytes. In addition, they showed relatively high basal levels of GS activity, exceeding those found in adult epithelial cell lines and approaching the average values found for liver tissue. Basal as well as DEX-induced GS activity was reduced in the presence of newborn calf serum, while only DEX-induced but not basal activity was suppressed by glutamine.These results suggest an origin of these four juvenile epithelial cell lines different from that of hepatocytes as well as of BEC. Furthermore, they suggest the coherent acquisition of new functional properties during early phases of cultivation of these cell lines; the selective inducibility of GS by DEX and its suppression by glutamine are the most intriguing of these, because neither is found in any normal cell type present in rat liver.  相似文献   

9.
In the present study we have localized immunohistochemically the intermediate filament proteins of the human pituitary gland (adenohypophysis, pars intermedia and pars tuberalis) by an indirect immunoperoxidase technique or by double immunofluorescence methods and analysed the individual cytokeratin polypeptides using two-dimensional gel electrophoresis. We found that the expression of cytokeratins in different epithelial cells of the human anterior pituitary gland was heterogeneous. Whereas the endocrine cells only expressed cytokeratins 8 and 18, the folliculo-stellate cells exhibited a reactivity for cytokeratins 7, 8, 18 and 19 as well as for GFAP and vimentin. The squamous epithelial cells of the pars tuberalis and the Ratke's cysts showed a more complex cytokeratin pattern of both squamous and simple type. Whereas in may cystic epithelial cells including the "pseudo-follicles" a triple expression of cytokeratin, vimentin and GFAP could be observed, only some basal cells of squamous epithelial nests coexpressed cytokeratin and vimentin. The differences in the intermediate filament protein distribution are discussed in the light of embryological relationships of the different parts of the human pituitary gland.  相似文献   

10.
The complete sequence of a bovine gene encoding an epidermal cytokeratin of mol. wt. 54 500 (No VIb) of the acidic (type I) subfamily is presented, including an extended 5' upstream region. The gene (4377 bp, seven introns) which codes for a representative of the glycine-rich subtype of cytokeratins of this subfamily, is compared with genes coding for: another subtype of type I cytokeratin; a basic (type II) cytokeratin gene; and vimentin, a representative of another intermediate filament (IF) protein class. The positions of the five introns located within the highly homologous alpha-helix-rich rod domain are identical or equivalent, i.e., within the same triplet, in the two cytokeratin I genes. Four of these intron positions are also identical with intron sites in the vimentin gene, and three of these intron positions are identical or similar in the type I and type II cytokeratin subfamilies. On the other hand, the gene organization of both type I cytokeratins differs from that of the type II cytokeratin in the rod region in five intron positions and in the introns located in the carboxy-terminal tail region, with the exception of one position at the rod-tail junction. Remarkably, the two type I cytokeratins also differ from each other in the positions of two introns located at and in the region coding for the hypervariable, carboxy-terminal portion. The introns and the 5' upstream regions of the cytokeratin VIb gene do not display notable sequence homologies with the other IF protein genes, but sequences identical with--or very similar to--certain viral and immunoglobulin enhancers have been identified.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

11.
The expression patterns of intermediate filament proteins in fetal and normal or nonpathological adult human lung tissues are described using (chain-specific) monoclonal antibodies. In early stages of development (9-10 weeks and 25 weeks of gestation) only so-called simple cytokeratins such as cytokeratins 7 (minor amounts). 8, 18 and 19 are detected in bronchial epithelial cells. At later stages of development, the cytokeratin expression patterns become more complex. The number of bronchial cells positive for cytokeratin 7 increases, but basal cells in the bronchial epithelium remain negative. These latter cells show, however, expression of cytokeratin 14 in the third trimester of gestation. Developing alveolar epithelial cells express cytokeratins 7, 8, 18 and 19. In adult human bronchial epithelium cytokeratins 4 (varying amounts), 7, 8, 13 (minor amounts), 14, 18 and 19 can be detected, with the main expression of cytokeratins 7, 8, and 18 in columnar cells and the main expression of cytokeratin 14 in basal cells. Vimentin is detected in all mesenchymal tissues. In addition, fetal lung expresses vimentin in bronchial epithelium, however, to a lesser extent with increasing age, resulting in the expression of vimentin in only few scattered bronchial cells at birth. Also in adult bronchial epithelium the expression of vimentin is noticed in part of the basal and columnar epithelial cells. Desmin filaments, present in smooth muscle cells of the lung, appear to alter their protein structure with age. In early stages of development smooth muscle cells surrounding blood vessels are partly reactive with some cytokeratin antibodies and with a polyclonal desmin antibody. At week 9-10 and week 25 of gestation a monoclonal antibody to desmin, however, is not reactive with blood vessel smooth muscle cells but is only reactive with smooth muscle cells surrounding bronchi. With increasing age the reactivity of cytokeratin antibodies with smooth muscle cells in blood vessels decreases, while the reactivity with the monoclonal desmin antibody increases. Our results show that during differentiation profound changes in the intermediate filament expression patterns occur in the different cell types of the developing lung.  相似文献   

12.
Using immunofluorescence microscopy and two-dimensional gel electrophoresis, we compared the cytoskeletal proteins expressed by human amnion epithelium in situ, obtained from pregnancies of from 10-wk to birth, with the corresponding proteins from cultured amnion epithelial cells and cultures of cells from the amniotic fluid of 16 week pregnancies. Epithelia of week 16 fetuses already display tissue-specific patterns of cytokeratin polypeptides which are similar, although not identical, to those of the corresponding adult tissues. In the case of the simple amnion epithelium, a complex and characteristic complement of cytokeratin polypeptides of Mr 58,000 (No. 5), 56,000 (No. 6), 54,000 (No. 7), 52,500 (No. 8), 50,000 (No. 14), 46,000 (No. 17), 45,000 (No. 18), and 40,000 (No. 19) is present by week 10 of pregnancy and is essentially maintained until birth, with the addition of cytokeratin No. 4 (Mr 59,000) and the disappearance of No. 7 (Mr 54,000) at week 16 of pregnancy. In full-term placentae, the amnion epithelium displays two morphologically distinct regions, i.e., a simple and a stratified epithelium, both of which express the typical amnion cytokeratin polypeptides. However, in addition the stratified epithelium also synthesizes large amounts of special epidermal cytokeratins such as No. 1 (Mr 68,000), 10 (Mr 56,500), and 11 (Mr 56,000). In culture amnion epithelial cells obtained from either 16-wk pregnancies or full-term placentae will continue to synthesize the amnion-typical cytokeratin pattern, except for a loss of detection of component No. 4. This pattern is considerably different from the cytokeratins synthesized by cultures of cells from amniotic fluids (cytokeratins No. 7, 8, 18, and 19, sometimes with trace amounts of No. 17) and from several so-called "amnion epithelial cell lines." In addition, amnion epithelial cells in situ as well as amnion epithelial cell cultures appear to be heterogeneous in that they possess some cells that co-express cytokeratins and vimentin. These observations lead to several important conclusions: In contrast to the general concept of recent literature, positively charged cytokeratins of the group No. 4-6 can be synthesized in a simple, i.e., one-layered epithelium. The change from simple to stratified amnion epithelium does not require a cessation of synthesis of cytokeratins of the simple epithelium type, but in this case keratins characteristic of the terminally differentiated epidermis (No. 1, 10, and 11) are also synthesized.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)  相似文献   

13.
Of the various intermediate filament (IF) proteins certain cytokeratins, usually a hallmark of epithelial differentiation, can also be detected in some non-epithelial cells in low amounts. We have studied a representative case of this atypical expression, the smooth muscle cells of the blood vessel walls of the human umbilical cord, at the protein and nucleic acid level, by light and electron microscopic immunolocalization, gel electrophoresis and immunoblotting of cytoskeletal proteins, and mRNA identification by Northern blotting. For the latter we have used sensitive probes for various cytokeratins, including new probes for cytokeratin 19. We also describe the chromosome 17 locus comprising the genes for cytokeratins 15 and 19, and we emphasize the occurrence of several unusual and evolutionarily stable sequence elements in the introns of the cytokeratin 19 gene. Most, perhaps all smooth muscle cells of these blood vessels, positively identified by the presence of desmin and smooth muscle type alpha-actin, are immunostained by antibodies specific for cytokeratins 8 and 18, and a subpopulation also contains cytokeratin 19. Immunoelectron microscopy indicates that these cytokeratins are arranged in IFs that are distributed differently from the majority of the IFs formed by desmin and vimentin. Gel electrophoresis of cytoskeletal proteins from microdissected vascular wall tissue shows that the amounts of cytokeratins 8 and 18 present in these tissues are very low, representing less than 1% of the total IF protein, and that cytokeratin 19 is present only in trace amounts. Correspondingly, the contents of mRNAs for cytokeratins 8, 18 and 19 in these tissues are much lower than those present in epithelial cells examined in parallel. We have also established cell cultures derived from umbilical cord vascular smooth muscles that have maintained the expression of cytokeratins 8, 18 and 19, together with vimentin and the smooth muscle type alpha-actin, but do not synthesize desmin. In these cell cultures the cytokeratins are present in much higher amounts than in the original tissue and form IFs that, surprisingly, show a similar distribution as the vimentin IFs and, upon treatment of the cells with colcemid, collapse into juxtanuclear aggregates, often even more effectively than the vimentin IFs do. We conclude that in a certain subtype of smooth muscle cells, the genes encoding cytokeratins of the "simple epithelial type", i.e., cytokeratins 8, 18 and 19, are expressed and that the low level expression of these genes is compatible with myogenic differentiation.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)  相似文献   

14.
During the last stages of fetal life, the immature epithelial cells of the rat lung alveolus develop the properties of mature type 2 cells. Adult type 2 cells rapidly lose these same properties when isolated and maintained in cell culture. We have examined the synthesis of cytokeratin proteins by adult type 2 cells as they lose their differentiated characteristics during 1 week in culture, and of immature fetal alveolar epithelial cells as they differentiate either in utero or when cultured on an extracellular matrix. Freshly isolated adult type 2 cells synthesize four cytokeratins which by electrophoretic mobilities and Western blot analysis correspond to human cytokeratins Nos. 7, 8, 18, and 19. During 7 days in culture synthesis of cytokeratin No. 19 is dramatically decreased and cytokeratin No. 18 becomes the predominant acidic cytokeratin produced. Fetal lung epithelial cells at 18 days gestation lack most characteristics of mature type 2 cells. When freshly isolated, these cells synthesize cytokeratins Nos. 7, 8, and 18 but make only minimal amounts of cytokeratin No. 19. When these cells are allowed to mature either in utero or in culture on a whole basement membrane extract, they develop both the morphological characteristics and the pattern of cytokeratin synthesis of fully developed type 2 cells, with cytokeratins No. 19 being the major acidic cytokeratin produced.  相似文献   

15.
Summary In the present study we have localized immunohistochemically the intermediate filament proteins of the human pituitary gland (adenohypophysis, pars intermedia and pars tuberalis) by an indirect immunoperoxidase technique or by double immunofluorescence methods and analysed the individual cytokeratin polypeptides using two-dimensional gel electrophoresis. We found that the expression of cytokeratins in different epithelial cells of the human anterior pituitary gland was heterogeneous. Whereas the endocrine cells only expressed cytokeratins 8 and 18, the folliculo-stellate cells exhibited a reactivity for cytokeratins 7, 8, 18 and 19 as well as for GFAP and vimentin. The squamous epithelial cells of the pars tuberalis and the Ratke's cysts showed a more complex cytokeratin pattern of both squamous and simple type. Whereas in many cystic epithelial cells including the pseudo-follicles a triple expression of cytokeratin, vimentin and GFAP could be observed, only some basal cells of squamous epithelial nests coexpressed cytokeratin and vimentin. The differences in the intermediate filament protein distribution are discussed in the light of embryological relationships of the different parts of the human pituitary gland.  相似文献   

16.
The hair-forming cells (trichocytes) and the mature hair contain four major trichocytic cytokeratins from each of the subfamilies, basic (Hb1-4) and acidic (Ha1-4); these are related - but not identical - to the epithelial cytokeratins. Here we show, by biochemical methods and immunofluorescence microscopy using antibodies specific for either epithelial or trichocyte cytokeratins, that the same set of hair-type cytokeratins, including two newly identified minor components, designated Hax (type I) and Hbx (type II), are also expressed in cells forming nails, in the filiform papillae of the dorsal surface of human and bovine tongue, and, most surprisingly, in some cells of the epithelial reticulum of bovine and human thymus. By double-label immunofluorescence microscopy, we also show that the expression of the two subsets of cytokeratins, i.e., the epithelial and the trichocytic ones, is not necessarily mutually exclusive, but that certain cells of hair follicles, nail matrix and bed, lingual papillae, and the nonlymphoid cell system of the thymus contain both trichocytic and certain epithelial cytokeratins. This indicates that these cells coexpress representatives of both kinds of cytokeratin. Implications of these findings with respect to problems of regulatory control of cytokeratin synthesis in tissue development and differentiation, and the possible functional meaning of the occurrence of trichocytic cytokeratins in such histologically diverse tissues, are discussed.  相似文献   

17.
The cell of origin of the nonparenchymal epithelioid cells that emerge in liver cell cultures is unknown. Cultures of rat hepatocytes and several types of nonparenchymal cells obtained by selective tissue dispersion procedures were typed with monoclonal antibodies to rat liver cytokeratin and vimentin, polyvalent antibodies to cow hoof cytokeratins and porcine lens vimentin, and monoclonal antibodies to surface membrane components of ductular oval cells and hepatocytes. Immunoblot analysis revealed that, in cultured rat liver nonparenchymal epithelial cells, the anti-rat hepatocyte cytokeratin antibody recognized a cytokeratin of relative mass (Mr) 55,000 and the anti-cow hoof cytokeratin antibody reacted with a cytokeratin of Mr 52,000, while the anti-vimentin antibodies detected vimentin in both cultured rat fibroblasts and nonparenchymal epithelial cells. Analyses on the specificity of anti-cytokeratin and anti-vimentin antibodies toward the various cellular structures of liver by double immunofluorescence staining of frozen tissue sections revealed unique reactivity patterns. For example, hepatocytes were only stained with anti-Mr 55,000 cytokeratin antibody, while the sinusoidal cells reacted only with the anti-vimentin antibodies. In contrast, epithelial cells of the bile ductular structures and mesothelial cells of the Glisson capsula reacted with all the anti-cytokeratin and anti-vimentin antibodies. It should be stressed, however, that the reaction of the anti-vimentin antibodies on bile ductular cells was weak. The same analysis on tissue sections using the anti-ductular oval cell antibody revealed that it reacted with bile duct structures but not with the Glisson capsula. The anti-hepatocyte antibody reacted only with the parenchymal cells. The differential reactivity of the anti-cytokeratin and anti-vimentin antibodies with the various liver cell compartments was confirmed in primary cultures of hepatocytes, sinusoidal cells, and bile ductular cells, indicating that the present panel of antibodies to intermediate filament constituants allowed a clear-cut distinction between cultured nonparenchymal epithelial cells, hepatocytes, and sinusoidal cells. Indirect immunofluorescence microscopy on nonfixed and paraformaldehyde-fixed cultured hepatocytes and bile ductular cells further confirmed that both anti-hepatocyte and anti-ductular oval cell antibodies recognized surface-exposed components on the respective cell types.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)  相似文献   

18.
Different clonal cell lines have been isolated from cultures of mammary gland epithelium of lactating cow’s udder and have been grown in culture media containing high concentrations of hydrocortisone, insulin, and prolactin. These cell (BMGE+H), which grow in monolayers of typical epithelial appearance, are not tightly packed, but leave intercellular spaces spanned by desmosomal bridges. The cells contain extended arrays of cytokeratin fibrils, arranged in bundles attached to desmosomes. Gel electophoresis show that they synthesize cytokeratins similar, if not identical, to those found in bovine epidermis and udder, including two large (mol wt 58,500 and 59,000) and basic (pH range: 7-8) and two small (mol wt 45,500 and 50,000) and acidic (pH 5.32 and 5.36) components that also occur in phosphorylated forms. Two further cytokeratins of mol wts 44,000 (approximately pH 5.7) and 53,000 (pH 6.3) are detected as minor cytokeratins in some cell clones. BMGE+H cells do not produce vimentin filaments as determined by immunofluorescence microscopy and gel electrophoresis. By contrast, BMGE-H cells, which have emerged from the same original culture but have been grown without hormones added, are not only morphologically different, but also contain vimentin filaments and a different set of cytokeratins, the most striking difference being the absence of the two acidic cytokeratins of mol wt 50,000 and 45,500. Cells of the BMGE+H line are characterized by an unusual epithelial morphology and represent the first example of a nonmalignant permanent cell line in vitro that produces cytokeratin but not vimentin filaments. The results show that (a) tissue-specific patterns of intermediate filament expression can be maintained in permanent epithelial cell lines in culture, at least under certain growth conditions; (b) loss of expression of relatively large, basic cytokeratins is not an inevitable consequence of growth of epithelial cells in vitro. Our results further show that, during culturing, different cell clones with different cytoskeletal composition can emerge from the same cell population and suggest that the presence of certain hormones may have an influence on the expression of intermediate filament proteins.  相似文献   

19.
Summary An immunohistochemical study of the production of the intermediate filaments [vimentin, cytokeratin, and glial filament acidic protein (GFAP)] during development of the pituitary gland was made by use of fetal and adult human pituitary tissue. Among these intermediate filament proteins in the anterior and intermediate lobes of the pituitary, cytokeratin is the first to appear, followed by GFAP and vimentin. However, only cytokeratin is seen during the period of morphogenesis of the pituitary gland, with the type-II subfamily cytokeratin 8 being the earliest to appear. Among the simple-epithelial-type cytokeratins, cytokeratins 8 and 19 were observed within the pituitary primordium during morphogenesis. Cells immunoreactive for cytokeratins 8 and 19 showed a heterogeneous three-dimensional distribution pattern in Rathke's pouch. Both cytokeratins 8 and 19 tended to be strongly positive at sites in the pituitary primordium where cells had become more loosely arranged (i.e., areas far from the diencephalon) but were only weakly positive in areas in which the epithelial cells were densely packed (i.e., areas closely associated with the diencephalon). It is concluded that, during the period of morphogenesis, Rathke's pouch has the intermediate filaments characteristic of simple epithelium and shows different immunoreactivity for simple-epithelial-type cytokeratins from place to place according to the extent of cellular differentiation.  相似文献   

20.
Cytokeratin expression in simple epithelia   总被引:10,自引:0,他引:10  
To study the regulation of the expression of cytokeratins characteristic of simple epithelia, i.e., human cytokeratins nos. 7, 8, 18, and 19, we prepared several cDNA clones coding for these proteins and their bovine counterparts. In the present study, we describe a cDNA clone of the mRNA coding for human cytokeratin no. 18, which was isolated from an expression library using the monoclonal antibody, KG 8.13. This clone (756 nucleotides, excluding the polyA portion), encodes approximately one-half of the mRNA (approximately 1.4 kb), identifies one mRNA band in Northern-hybridization blots, and specifically selects one mRNA species coding for cytokeratin no. 18, as demonstrated by translation in vitro. Comparison of the deduced amino acid sequence--confirmed by direct amino-acid-sequence analyses of some polypeptide fragments produced by cleavage with cyanogen bromide--indicated that cytokeratin no. 18 is a member of the acidic (type I) subfamily of cytokeratins. It has only limited sequence homologies in common with other intermediate-sized filament proteins, and these are essentially restricted to certain domains of the alpha-helical rod portion. The carboxyterminal tail sequence does not contain glycine-rich elements, thus distinguishing this cytokeratin from those acidic (type I) cytokeratins that are characterized by this feature. The similarities and differences between cytokeratin no. 18 and previously described epidermal cytokeratins are discussed in relation to the differences in the stability of the complexes which this cytokeratin forms with basic (type II) cytokeratins, as well as in relation to possible functional differences of cytokeratins in simple and stratified epithelia.  相似文献   

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