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1.
The surface saccharide composition of collagenase-dispersed pancreatic cells from adult guinea pig and rat glands was examined by using eight lectins and their ferritin conjugates: Concanavalin A (ConA); Lens culinaris (LCL); Lotus tetragonolobus (LTL); Ricinus communis agglutinins I and II (RCA I, RCA II); Soybean agglutinin (SBA); Ulex europeus lectin (UEL); and wheat germ agglutinin (WGA). Binding studies of iodinated lectins and lectin-ferritin conjugates both revealed one population of saturable, high-affinity receptor sites on the total cell population (approximately 95% acinar cells). Electron microscopy, however, revealed differences in lectin-ferritin binding to the plasmalemma of acinar, centroacinar, and endocrine cells. Whereas acinar cells bound heavily all lectin conjugates, endocrine and centroacinar cells were densely labeled only by ConA, LCL, WGA, and RCA I, and possessed few receptors for LTL, UEL, and SBA. Endocrine and centroacinar cells could be differentiated from each other by using RCA II, which binds to centroacinar cells but not to endocrine cells. Some RCA II receptors appeared to be glycolipids because they were extracted by ethanol and chloroform-methanol in contrast to WGA receptors which resisted solvent treatment but were partly removed by papain digestion. RCA I receptors were affected by neither treatment. The apparent absence of receptors for SBA on endocrine and centroacinar cells, and for RCA II on endocrine cells, was reversed by neuraminidase digestion, which suggested masking of lectin receptors by sialic acid. The absence of LTL and UEL receptors on endocrine and centroacinar cells was not reversed by neuraminidase. We suggest that the differential lectin-binding patterns observed on acinar, centroacinar, and endocrine cells from the adult pancreas surface-carbohydrate-developmental programs expressed during morphogenesis and cytodifferentiation of the gland.  相似文献   

2.
Summary Fluorochrome conjugated lectins were used to observe cell surface changes in the corneal endothelium during wound repair in the adult rat and during normal fetal development. Fluorescence microscopy of non-injured adult corneal endothelia incubated in wheat-germ agglutinin (WGA), Concanavalin A (Con A), and Ricinus communis agglutinin I (RCA), revealed that these lectins bound to cell surfaces. Conversely, binding was not observed for either Griffonia simplicifolia I (GS-I), soybean agglutinin (SBA) or Ulex europaeus agglutinin (UEA). Twenty-four hours after a circular freeze injury, endothelial cells surrounding the wound demonstrated decreased binding for WGA and Con A, whereas, RCA binding appeared reduced but centrally clustered on the apical cell surface. Furthermore, SBA now bound to endothelial cells adjacent to the wound area, but not to cells near the tissue periphery. Neither GS-I nor UEA exhibited any binding to injured tissue. By 48 h post-injury, the wound area repopulates and endothelial cells begin reestablishing the monolayer. These cells now exhibit increased binding for WGA, especially along regions of cell-to-cell contact, whereas, Con A, RCA and SBA binding patterns remain unchanged. Seventy-two hours after injury, the monolayer is well organized with WGA, Con A and RCA binding patterns becoming similar to those observed for non-injured tissue. However, at this time, SBA binding decreases dramatically. By 1 week post-injury, binding patterns for WGA, ConA and RCA closely resemble their non-injured counterparts while SBA continues to demonstrate low levels of binding. In early stages of its development, the endothelium actively proliferates and morphologically resembles adult tissue during wound repair. The 16-day fetal tissue is mitotically active, does not exhibit a well defined monolayer, and demonstrates weak fluorescence binding for WGA, Con A and RCA. Conversely, SBA binding is readily detected on many cell surfaces. By 19 days in utero, the endothelial monolayers becomes organized and cell proliferation greatly diminishes. WGA, Con A and RCA now exhibit binding similar to that seen in the adult tissue. SBA binding is not detected at this time. Thus, changes in lectin binding during wound repair of the adult rat corneal endothelium mimic changes in lectin binding seen during the development of the tissue.Supported by grant EY-06435 from The National Institutes of Health  相似文献   

3.
Studies of membrane glycoconjugates of Taenia taeniaeformis were initiated by assays of the lectin binding characteristics of 35-day-old cysticerci. Parasites fixed in glutaraldehyde were incubated with one of the following FITC-labelled lectins: Concanavalin A (Con A), Lens culinaris agglutinin (LCA), Ricinus communis agglutinin (RCA), peanut agglutinin (PNA), fucose binding protein (FBP) and wheat germ agglutinin (WGA) and either their specific or a nonspecific sugar. Ultraviolet microscopy revealed that only Con A and LCA bound in large amounts to the surface of cysticerci. This binding was partly inhibited by the specific sugar, but the nonspecific sugar had little effect. The lectin not removed by either of the sugars may have been bound nonspecifically to the charged glycocalyx. Lectins were primarily bound on the anterior third of the parasite around the scolex invagination. Kinetic studies of lectin interactions were carried out with LCA and RCA by spectrophotofluorometric analysis of the amount bound specifically or nonspecifically over a range of lectin concentrations. Lens culinaris lectin binding was found to be specific and involve 2 receptors which showed large differences in their affinity for lectin and prevalence on the surface. Ricinus communis lectin did not bind specifically but nonspecific interactions were observed. Adherence of small numbers of host cells was shown to have no measurable effect on the lectin binding characteristics. The results suggest that the major surface carbohydrates exposed are D-mannose and/or D-glucose residues with the other sugar groups poorly represented. This relatively homogeneous surface may have implications for the antigenicity of the parasite in its host.  相似文献   

4.
In the present investigation we localized binding sites for the lectins WGA (wheat germ agglutinin), RCA I (Ricinus communis agglutinin), LFA (Limax flavus agglutinin) and SBA (soya bean agglutinin) in the 7-day-old mouse embryo at the ultrastructural level. Lectin binding sites were localized on formaldehyde fixed embryos, embedded in LR-Gold, using gold-labelled lectins. Binding sites for WGA and RCA I were observed at the surface of the embryonic ectoderm oriented towards the proamnion cavity and the outer surface of the extraembryonic and the embryonic endoderm. Staining for SBA and LFA binding sites was seen in the basement membrane of the ectoderm. Moreover, binding sites for LFA were observed in the nucleoli of cells of the ectodermal, the mesodermal and the endodermal layer and in free ribosomes located in the cytoplasm of these cells.  相似文献   

5.
We studied the effects of different lectins on the adhesive properties of baby hamster kidney (BHK) cells. The purpose of these studies was to learn more about the cell surface receptors involved in cell adhesion. Three adhesive phenomena were analyzed: 1) the adhesion of BHK cells to lectin-coated substrata; 2) the effects of lectins on the adhesion of cells to substrata coated by plasma fibronectin (pFN); and 3) the effects of lectins on the binding of pFN-coated beads to cells. Initial experiments with fluorescein-conjugated lectins indicated that concanavalin A (Con A), ricinus communis agglutinin I (RCA I), and wheat germ agglutinin (WGA) bound to BHK cells but peanut agglutinin (PNA), soybean agglutinin (SBA), and ulex europaeus agglutinin I (UEA I) dod not bind. All three of the lectins which bound to the cells promoted cell spreading on lectin substrata, and the morphology of the spread cells was similar to that observed with cells spread on pFN substrata. Protease treatment of the cells, however, was found to inhibit cell spreading on pFN substrata or WGA substrata more than on Con A substrata or RCA I substrata. In the experiment of cells with Con A or WGA inhibited cell spreading on pFN substrata, but RCA I treatment had no effect. Finally, treatment of cells with WGA inhibited binding to cells of pFN beads, but neither Con A nor RCA I affected this interaction. These results indicate that the lectins modify cellular adhesion in different ways, probably by interacting with different surface receptors. The possibility that the pFN receptor is a WGA receptor is discussed.  相似文献   

6.
The cell surface glycoproteins of goat epididymal maturing spermatozoa have been investigated using lectins as surface probes that interact with specific sugars with high affinity. Concanavalin A (ConA) and wheat-germ agglutinin (WGA) showed high affinity for mature cauda epididymal sperm agglutination, whereas RCA2, kidney beans lectin and peanut agglutinin caused much lower or little agglutination of the cells. The mature sperm exhibited markedly higher efficacy than the immature caput epididymal sperm for binding both ConA and WGA, as evidenced by sperm agglutination and the binding of the fluorescence isothiocyanate (FITC)-labelled lectins. FITC-ConA binds uniformly to the entire mature sperm surface whereas FITC-WGA binds to the acrosomal cap region of the head. The FITC-RCA2 mainly labelled the posterior head of mature cauda sperm. However, no WGA-specific glycoprotein receptors could be detected in sperm plasma membrane (PM) by WGA-Sepharose affinity chromatography. The data implied that the epididymal sperm maturation is associated with a marked increase in the ConA/WGA receptors and that WGA receptors may be glycolipids rather than glycoproteins. Analysis of the ConA receptors of cauda sperm PM identified by ConA-Sepharose affinity chromatography and subsequent resolution in SDS-PAGE demonstrated the presence of five glycopolypeptides of different concentrations (98, 96, 43, 27 and 17 kDa) of goat sperm membrane. The immunoblot of these ConA-specific glycopeptides with anti-sperm membrane antiserum showed that 98- and 96-kDa receptors are immunoresponsive.  相似文献   

7.
Concanavalin A (Con A), wheat germ agglutinin (WGA), and Ricinus communis agglutinin (RCA) bound with either 125I, fluorescent dyes, or fluorescent polymeric microspheres were used to quantitate and visualize the distribution of lectin binding sites on mouse neuroblastoma cells. As viewed by fluorescent light and scanning electron microscopy, over 107 binding sites for Con A, WGA, and RCA appeared to be distributed randomly over the surface of differentiated and undifferentiated cells. An energy-dependent redistribution of labeled sites into a central spot occurred when the cells were labeled with a saturating dose of fluorescent lectin and maintained at 37°C for 60 min. Reversible labeling using appropriate saccharide inhibitors indicated that the labeled sites had undergone endocytosis by the cell. A difference in the mode of redistribution of WGA or RCA and Con A binding sites was observed in double labeling experiments. When less than 10% of the WGA or RCA lectin binding sites were labeled, only these labeled sites appeared to be removed from the cell surface. In contrast, when less than 10% of the Con A sites were labeled, both labeled and unlabeled Con A binding sites were removed from the cell surface. Cytochalasin B uncoupled the coordinate redistribution of labeled and unlabeled Con A sites, suggesting the involvement of microfilaments. Finally, double labeling experiments employing fluorescein-tagged Con A and rhodamine-tagged WGA indicate that most Con A and WGA binding sites reside on different membrane components and redistribute independenty of each other.  相似文献   

8.
Electron microscopic cytochemical studies were made on saccharides involved in the plasma membranes of rat ascites hepatoma cells (AH7974F) using ferritin-conjugated lectins and dialysed iron (DI). In the rat hepatoma cells, saccharide receptors for each of the three lectins used (concanavalin A (ConA), wheat germ agglutinin (WGA) and Ricinus communis agglutinin (RCA)) were shown to be distributed homogeneously throughout the plasma membranes. When the cells were agglutinated, however, the saccharide receptors for each lectin appeared to form clusters on the plasma membranes. The cluster formation induced by one lectin was found to lead to a changed distribution of saccharide receptors for another lectin. None of the cluster formation types induced by lectins yield any noticeable effects upon the distribution of DI reactive acidic saccharides on the plasma membranes.  相似文献   

9.
Bloodstream trypomastigote and culture procyclic (insect midgut) forms of a cloned T. rhodesiense variant (WRATat 1) were tested for agglutination with the lectins concanavalin A (Con A), phytohemagglutinin P (PP), soybean agglutinin (SBA), fucose binding protein (FBP), wheat germ agglutinin (WGA), and castor bean lectin (RCA). Fluorescence-microscopic localization of lectin binding to both formalin-fixed trypomastigotes and red cells was determined with fluorescein isothiocyanate (FITC)-conjugated Con A, SBA, FBP, WGA, RCA, PNA (peanut agglutinin), DBA (Dolichos bifloris), and UEA (Ulex europaeus) lectins. Electron microscopic localization of lectin binding sites on bloodstream trypomastigotes was accomplished by the Con A-horseradish peroxidase-diaminobenzidine (HRP-DAB) technique, and by a Con A-biotin/avidin-ferritin method. Trypomastigotes, isolated by centrifugation or filtration through DEAE-cellulose or thawed after cryopreservation, were agglutinated by the lectins Con A and PP with agglutination strength scored as Con A < PP. No agglutination was observed in control preparations or with the lectins WGA, FBA or SBA. Red cells were agglutinated by all the lectins tested. Formalin-fixed bloodstream trypomastigotes bound FITC-Con A and FITC-RCA but not FITC-WGA, -SBA, -PNA, -UEA or -DBA lectins. All FITC-labeled lectins bound to red cells. Con A receptors, visualized by Con A-HRP-DAB and Con A-biotin/avidin-ferritin techniques, were distributed uniformly on T. rhodesiense bloodstream forms. No lectin receptors were visualized on control preparations. Culture procyclics lacked a cell surface coat and were agglutinated by Con A and WGA but not RCA, SBA, PP and FBP. Procyclics were not agglutinated by lectins in the presence of competing sugar at 0.25 M. The expression of lectin binding cell surface saccharides of T. rhodesiense WRATat 1 is related to the parasite stage. Sugars resembling α-D-mannose are on the surface of bloodstream trypomastigotes and culture procyclics; n-acetyl-D-galactosamine and D-galactose residues are on bloodstream forms; and n-acetyl-D-glucosamine-like sugars are on procyclic stages.  相似文献   

10.
Hepatocyte cell surface polarity as demonstrated by lectin binding   总被引:2,自引:0,他引:2  
We performed an investigation at the ultrastructural level of the differential distribution of lectin-binding sites among sinusoidal, lateral, and bile canalicular domains of adult rat hepatocytes. Lectin binding to hepatocyte glycocalices was studied in situ or after cellular dissociation by enzymatic (collagenase), chemical (EDTA), and mechanical methods, as well as during cell culture. Using thirteen biotinylated lectins and an avidin-biotin-peroxidase complex (ABC), we have identified lectin-binding sites that are predominantly localized in the bile canalicular [Ricinus communis agglutinin (RCA)] or sinusoidal [Phaseolus vulgaris (PHA)] domains in situ and in mechanically dissociated cells. Lens culinaris (LCA) staining was prominent on sinusoidal surfaces, slight along lateral surfaces, and completely absent in the bile canalicular domain. Concanavalin A (ConA) was unique in binding equally to all domains. Triticum vulgaris [wheat germ agglutinin (WGA)] was also bound to all domains, but most intensely to the bile canalicular region. Cells dissociated via collagenase or EDTA treatment exhibited a spherical morphology characterized by many surface microvilli and absence of morphological domains. Lectin binding to dissociated cells was uniformly distributed over the entire cell surface, suggesting a redistribution of lectin receptors that was independent of the separation procedure. Hepatocytes in culture exhibited a partial restoration of morphological domains, but lectin binding polarity was not re-established.  相似文献   

11.
Plant lectins were used to monitor qualitative changes in carbohydrate-containing receptors during preimplantation mouse development. Beginning at the morula stage, an age-related decline was observed in agglutination of early mouse embryos by concanavalin A (ConA). In contrast, wheat germ agglutinin (WGA) and Ricinus communis agglutinin (RCA) agglutinated embryos strongly throughout preimplantation development.  相似文献   

12.
The effect of concanavalin A (conA), fucose-binding protein (FBP), Ricinus communis agglutinin (RCA), and wheat germ agglutinin (WGA) on fertilization of the ascidian Phallusia mammillata was investigated. ConA, FBP, and RCA had no influence on fertilization and did not bind to the chorion or sperm, as determined with FITC-conjugated conA and by electron microscopy with gold-labelled FBP. WGA (100 μg/ml) prevented fertilization of eggs by sperms in concentrations which gave 100% fertilization in controls (2 × 107 sperm/ml). N-Acetyl-glucosamine (50 mM) abolished the effect of WGA, whereas an excess (100 mM) of this competitive sugar alone did not affect fertilization. FITC-conjugated and gold-labelled WGA revealed binding sites on the chorion, but not on follicle cells nor sperms. Electron microscopy showed that WGA gold-markers are bound to the fibrillar network forming the outer layer of the chorion and indicate that WGA inhibits fertilization by interfering with sperm binding to the chorion. Binding of WGA to the chorion may either mask sperm binding receptors or cause chorion resistance to sperm enzymes.  相似文献   

13.
Fluorescent lectins were used to study the chemical nature of carbohydrate moieties present on the surface of female and male germ cells isolated from mouse gonads during fetal and early posnatal development. Concanavalin A (ConA), lens culinaris agglutinin (LCA), ricinus communis agglutinin (RCAI) and wheat germ agglutinin (WGA) bound intensely to the germ cell plasma membrane at all stages studied. Other lectins such as ulex europaeus agglutinin (UEAI) and agglutinin (SBA) did not bind or bound moderately (SBA to female germ cells only). Distinct developmental-related changes were observed when female germ cells were labeled with fluorescein-conjugated peanut agglutinin (PNA) or dolichos biflorus agglutinin (DBA). DBA and PNA binding was absent or weak in fetal female and male germ cells, but became intensely positive in oocytes in the immediate postnatal period. The percentage of oocytes stained with DBA increased during the first three days after birth, and from day 3–4 onwards all oocytes were strongly labeled. I suggest that these changes in lectin binding reflect changes in biochemical structure of the oocyte surface related to differentiative events occurring in the mouse ovary immediately after birth.  相似文献   

14.
Summary A panel of 10 FITC-labelled lectins (MPA, PNA, ConA, DBA, SBA, RCA-120, WGA, UEA, GS-I, GS-II) was applied to cryosections of seven specimens of normal urothelium. Seven of the lectins (MPA, ConA, RCA, WGA, UEA, GS-I and GS-II) showed a pattern of increasing fluorescence intensity from basal to superficial cells of the urothelium whereas PNA, DBA and SBA showed more uniform binding throughout the urothelium. Urothelial cell suspensions labelled with FITC-lectins were studied by flow cytometry to quantify the variation in binding to different cells types. Three cellular subpopulations were identified in normal urothelium on the basis of their optical properties. Fluorescence intensity due to specific lectin binding was then measured separately for each subpopulation. Although there was some variation among individual cases, a general pattern emerged in this small series. WGA, RCA, and GS-II bind in large quantities to all urothelial cells while PNA, SBA, ConA and DBA show little binding. MPA, RCA, UEA and GS-I showed the most marked increase in fluorescence intensity from basal to superficial cells as observed microscopically and quantified by flow cytometry.  相似文献   

15.
The interaction of several lectins, both native and chemically modified, with mouse peritoneal macrophages was studied. Surface distribution and interiorization of the lectins was assessed quantitatively using their radioactively-labeled derivatives, and qualitatively by employing fluorescein-labeled lectins. On the basis of their effect on the macrophages, the lectins tested fall into two classes: lectins that induce vacuole formation in the cells (concanavalin A (ConA), wax bean agglutinin (WBA) and wheat germ agglutinin (WGA)) and lectins that in their native form do not induce vacuolation (soybean agglutinin (SBA), peanut agglutinin (PNA) and the lectin from Lotus tetragonolobus (LT)). Neuraminidase treatment of the cells did not change their response to the lectins, though in the case of SBA and PNA binding was observed only with neuraminidase-treated macrophages. Incubation of the latter cells with SBA and subsequently with ConA resulted in significantly higher vacuolation than that observed with ConA alone. Glutaraldehyde-crosslinked polymers of SBA and of PNA, which are multivalent with respect to sugar binding, induced vacuolation in neuraminidase-treated macrophages. On the other hand, succinylation of ConA, which reduces the number of sugar binding sites per mole from four to two, abolished its ability to induce vacuole formation. These data suggest that multivalency of lectins and probably also their size are important factors in inducing vacuolation, by causing extensive crosslinkage of membrane receptors which is prerequisite for triggering of vacuole formation. Quantitative binding and internalization data indicate that vacuole formation is not directly related to the number of lectin receptors on the macrophages nor to the extent of their internalization.  相似文献   

16.
Summary In the present study lectin-binding sites were investigated for the lectins Ricinus communis agglutinin (RCA I), wheat germ agglutinin (WGA), soya bean agglutinin (SBA), concanavalin A (Con A), Lotus tetragonolobus(LTA) and Limulus polyphemus agglutinin (LPA) during the initial stages of vasculogenesis of the CNS-anlage in 10 to 12-day-old NMRI mouse embryos. Specific binding sites for the lectins RCA I (sugar specificity: -D-galactose, N-acetylgalactosamine), WGA (sugar specificity: N-acetylglucosamine, sialic acid), and SBA (sugar specificity: N-acetylgalactosamine, -D-galactose) were detected in the newly formed capillaries within the neuroepithelial cell layer. In contrast, binding sites for Con A, LTA and LPA could not be observed at the start of the vascularization of the CNS-anlage. From these results, the conclusion can be drawn that glycoconjugates containing D-galactose, N-acetylgalactosamine and N-acetyl-glucosamine moieties are involved in the early vasculogenesis of the embryonic CNS-anlage of the mouse.  相似文献   

17.
Cells from dissociated embryonic mouse cerebellum, when plated at high cell density in a 10 μl microwell, assembled into a reproducible three-dimensional pattern of reaggregates containing 2–10000 cells each and interconnecting cables of processes. The details of this pattern were modifiable by coating the culture substratum with poly-d-lysine and by the use of different types of serum in the growth medium. Formation of interconnecting cables was inhibited reversibly by the dimeric lectin Succinyl Concanavalin A (Succ-ConA). Cells from cerebellum, midbrain, medulla and cerebral cortex, cultured separately in microwells, formed distinguishable patterns that appeared to be more region-specific than developmental stage-specific.With lectins as probes of carbohydrate-containing surface macromolecules, cells harvested from different tissue regions had different cell surface properties. In addition the concentration of concanavalin A (ConA) or wheat germ agglutinin (WGA) required for half maximal agglutination was greatly increased for cerebellar cells harvested later than embryonic day 16. These observations suggest both regional and age-specific alterations in cell surface elements required for lectin-induced agglutination during mouse brain development.  相似文献   

18.
We compared the wheat-germ agglutinin (WGA) and Ricinus communis agglutinin (RCA) binding sites of baby-hamster kidney (BHK) cells. There were 1.01 X 10(8) WGA-binding sites per cell (Kd = 0.027 nM) and 6 X 10(6) RCA-binding sites per cell (Kd = 0.014 nM). Binding of WGA or RCA to BHK cells resulted in more than 75% of the cell-surface binding sites becoming associated with the cytoskeleton (i.e. resistant to extraction with detergent), although no more than 10% of these sites were associated with the cytoskeleton before addition of the lectins. After binding of WGA to the cells, the cell surface was cross-linked so extensively that it remained intact even after detergent extraction of the treated cells, and could be observed by electron microscopy. A similar cross-linking effect did not occur after binding of RCA to cells, which may be because there were so many more binding sites for WGA than for RCA. The composition of WGA- and RCA-binding molecules was analysed by lectin affinity chromatography of metabolically radiolabelled BHK cells. We found that in the WGA-binding-molecule preparations there were eight major polypeptides, ranging in molecular mass from 93 to 340 kDa, and that the RCA-binding molecules were a subpopulation of the WGA-binding molecules. A polyclonal antibody against the 140 kDa fibronectin (FN) receptors of Chinese-hamster ovary (CHO) cells immunoblotted a 145 kDa polypeptide component in both WGA- and RCA-binding-molecule preparations. The results indicated that the 145 kDa component was present in at least two FN-receptor complexes that differed in glycosylation, only one of which was able to bind to RCA affinity columns. The oligomeric nature of the FN-receptor complex, which contained three polypeptides with molecular masses of 120-145 kDa, was demonstrated by using anti-(CHO-cell FN receptor) antibodies to immunoprecipitate extracts prepared from radioiodinated BHK cells.  相似文献   

19.
Canine and feline platelet cytocentrifuge preparations (CCPs), cryostat and paraffin-embedded bone marrow sections were used in this study. We evaluated whether platelets, megakaryocytes and megakaryocyte precursor cells could be labelled by monoclonal antibodies (Y2/51, CLB-thromb/1, HPL1) against human platelet membrane glycoprotein GP IIIa and the GP IIb/IIIa complex or by the following 10 biotinylated lectins: concanavalin A (Con A), Lens culinaris agglutinin (LCA), Pisum sativum agglutinin (PsA), wheat germ agglutinin (WGA), peanut agglutinin (PNA), Phaseolus vulgaris lectin (PHA-L), Ricinus communis agglutinin 120 (RCA120), Ulex europaeus agglutinin — I(UEA-1), soybean agglutinin (SBA) and Dolichos biflorus agglutinin (DBA). Monoclonal antibodies Y2/51 and HPL1 cross reacted with platelets and megakaryocytic cells from both species, whereas CLB-thromb/1 was unreactive with canine preparations. Only Y2/51 labelled megakaryocytic cells in paraffin-embedded samples. LCA, PSA, WGA and PHA-L labelled feline and canine platelets and different numbers of morphologically identifiable megakaryocytes and numerous other, mostly myeloid, cells. Immunoblots of dog and cat platelet lysates using Y2/51 visualized a single protein of 95 kDa (unreduced), a mol·wt value within the range of those reported for GP IIIa. Some of the platelet (but not necessarily megakaryocyte) glycoproteins reacting with LCA, PSA and WGA could be identified in lectin blots following one- or two (nonreduced/reduced)-dimensional sodium dodecyl sulphatepolyacrylamide gel electrophoresis (SDS-PAGE). Thus in dogs and cats, the immunohistochemical detection of GP IIIa (and eventually GP IIb/IIIa) rather than lectin binding patterns could be important for the diagnosis of megakaryoblastic leukaemias.  相似文献   

20.
Fluorochrome conjugated lectins were used to observe cell surface changes in the corneal endothelium during wound repair in the adult rat and during normal fetal development. Fluorescence microscopy of non-injured adult corneal endothelia incubated in wheat-germ agglutinin (WGA), Concanavalin A (Con A), and Ricinus communis agglutinin I (RCA), revealed that these lectins bound to cell surfaces. Conversely, binding was not observed for either Griffonia simplicifolia I (GS-I), soybean agglutinin (SBA) or Ulex europaeus agglutinin (UEA). Twenty-four hours after a circular freeze injury, endothelial cells surrounding the wound demonstrated decreased binding for WGA and Con A, whereas, RCA binding appeared reduced but centrally clustered on the apical cell surface. Furthermore, SBA now bound to endothelial cells adjacent to the wound area, but not to cells near the tissue periphery. Neither GS-I nor UEA exhibited any binding to injured tissue. By 48 h post-injury, the wound area repopulates and endothelial cells begin reestablishing the monolayer. These cells now exhibit increased binding for WGA, especially along regions of cell-to-cell contact, whereas, Con A, RCA and SBA binding patterns remain unchanged. Seventy-two hours after injury, the monolayer is well organized with WGA, Con A and RCA binding patterns becoming similar to those observed for non-injured tissue. However, at this time, SBA binding decreases dramatically. By 1 week post-injury, binding patterns for WGA, ConA and RCA closely resemble their non-injured counterparts while SBA continues to demonstrate low levels of binding. In early stages of its development, the endothelium actively proliferates and morphologically resembles adult tissue during wound repair.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

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