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1.
We isolated a concanavalin A (Con-A)-binding glycoprotein from human stratum corneum by nonionic detergent extraction, lectin affinity chromatography, and preparative gel electrophoresis. This glycoprotein migrates as a single band at 40 kilodaltons at sodium-dodecyl-sulfate gel electrophoresis with or without the presence of 2-mercaptoethanol. It was shown to have a heterogeneous distribution between pH 5.6 and 7.6 by isoelectric focusing. The glycoprotein is histidine rich (10.4%) but is distinct from other histidine-rich proteins (epidermal filaggrin and the histidine-rich glycoprotein from serum). It does not bind to lectins specific for L-fucose or alpha-D-galactose. We prepared a monospecific polyclonal antibody to the 40-kilodalton glycoprotein; at the ultrastructural level, it cytoimmunolocalizes exclusively to the membranes of the stratum corneum. A unique feature of the glycoprotein is that it is an endogenous lectin: it hemagglutinates trypsinized and gluteraldehyde-fixed rabbit erythrocytes. The inhibition of its hemagglutination was found to be greatest with amino sugars, down to a saccharide concentration of 10(-5) mM. Such a high affinity of binding at the cell surface suggests that this glycoprotein is a major carbohydrate-binding, cross-linking molecule that holds adjacent corneocytes together in the stratum corneum. We hypothesize that this lectin plays a role in the adhesion and desquamation of the stratum corneum.  相似文献   

2.
The stratum corneum can be dissociated into single squames by several extraction methods: mechanically, with organic solvents, and with detergents. We have performed studied of reaggregation from single squames prepared by these methods. Mechanically dispersed corneocytes recombined into a lamellar-like structure closely resembling intact stratum corneum. Squames obtained by dissociation in ether formed a multilayered structure which differed from the intact tissue in the collapse of the bilayered lamellar structure into a single lucent band with osmiophilic deposits. Squames obtained after extraction with detergent failed to reaggregate.  相似文献   

3.
The stratum corneum is the outermost layer of the skin, which acts as a barrier membrane against the penetration of molecules into and out of the body. It has a biphasic structure consisting of keratinized cells (corneocytes) that are embedded in a lipid matrix. The macroscopic transport properties of the stratum corneum are functions of its microstructure and the transport properties of the corneocytes and the lipid matrix, and are of considerable interest in the context of transdermal drug delivery and quantifying exposure to toxins, as well as for determining the relation of skin disorders to disruption of the stratum corneum barrier. Due to the complexity of the tissue and the difference in length scales involved in its microstructure, a direct analysis of the mass transport properties of the stratum corneum is not feasible. In this study, we undertake an approach where the macroscopic diffusion tensor of the stratum corneum is obtained through homogenization using the method of asymptotic expansions. The biphasic structure of the stratum corneum is fully accounted for by allowing the corneocytes to be permeable and considering the partitioning between the corneocytes and the lipid phases. By systematically exploring the effect of permeable corneocytes on the macroscopic transport properties of the stratum corneum, we show that solute properties such as lipophilicity and relative permeabilities in the two phases have large effects on its transdermal diffusion behavior.  相似文献   

4.
We studied the water regulation mechanism in human stratum corneum which is composed of corneocytes and intercellular lipid matrix by the ex vivo small- and medium-angle X-ray diffraction. Under the normal condition water molecules are stored mainly in the corneocytes. When the water content increased, from the small-angle X-ray diffraction of the human stratum corneum we obtained the swelling behavior of the short lamellar lipid structure as a result of incorporating a very small amount of water into water layers between neighboring the lipid bilayers, and its diffraction peak width became narrow and turned to wide at the water content of 20-30wt%. In addition as evidence for uptake of water in the corneocytes, we observed the structural modification of soft keratins in the corneocytes from the medium-angle X-ray diffraction. Based upon these results we propose that the water content in the human stratum corneum is regulated to be at 20-30wt% so as to stabilize the short lamellar structure in the intercellular lipid matrix.  相似文献   

5.
To accurately characterize the carbohydrate moieties of oligosaccharide chains in glycosylated proteins, it is necessary to distinguish exactly which types of oligosaccharides are present at which site. We describe lectin overlay assays, which take advantage of the ability of lectins to distinguish between different types of glycoproteins via recognition of terminal sugars, thus allowing the chain type and peripheral antigenic components to be determined. Three microassays involving lectins are reported in this paper: non-proteasetreated intact glycoproteins; glycopeptides released by prior digestion of the glycoprotein and then separated by HPLC; and release of sugars from glycoproteins by hydrazinolysis and then coupling them to a multivalent support.  相似文献   

6.
This article attempts to provide a comprehensive review on the roles of various classes of molecules in the cohesion and desquamation of the stratum corneum. In the first part of this monograph we review the field of epidermal differentiation in vivo and vitro, describing the expression and functions of a number of key structural molecules that characterize the process. In the second part we emphasize terminal differentiation and the biogenesis of the stratum corneum. The stratum corneum is a cell layer unique to fully differentiated squamous epithelia such as skin. While it is a dead stratum, it nevertheless is in a homeostatic process of continual shedding and renewal in synchrony with basal cell replication. It is also a degradative layer containing many proteinases and glycosidases in which a variety of intracellular and intercellular macromolecules are degraded. We highlight the molecules localized within the intercorneal matrix that are most likely to play a role in cohesion and desquamation, including: glycoproteins, lipids and enzymes. Because it is difficult to study the stratum corneum and desquamation in the native tissue, we discuss a number of model systems that have been used. The stratum corneum can be dispersed into single squames in different ways; these include mechanical dispersion as well as agents such as detergents and enzymes. The solubilized molecules and the structures remaining can then be studied as to their specific roles in desquamation. Using this approach it is possible to reconstitute multilayered structures that resemble a real stratum corneum. We have shown that glycoproteins play a key role in squame reaggregation and that this process can be modulated with amino sugars in a lectin-like fashion. Cohesion and desquamation can also be studied in tissue culture. Depending on the culture system, the extent of terminal differentiation and squame accumulation varies. Yet desquamation does not normally occur. It can be induced however by the inclusion of exogenous agents such as IFN-gamma which are found in the native epidermis but are absent in vitro. Modulation of desquamation by other exogenous agents is likely to yield further knowledge of how shedding occurs in vivo. Insight has also come from studies of scaling skin disorders. The glycoprotein and lipid profiles are altered in the stratum corneum in many diseases of aberrant terminal differentiation. A number of abnormalities in the levels of cytokines and growth factors have also been reported in the lesional tissue of such diseases.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)  相似文献   

7.
By sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoretic analysis the plasma membranes from porcine lymphocytes contain at least 30--35 glycopolypeptides and one or more glycolipids to which one or more of 12 purified lectins bind. The specificities of binding generally followed the same pattern as those of the reaction of the lectin with intact pig lymphocytes. Some lectins (e.g., the isolectin pair, Agaricus bisporus lectins A and B and a group consisting of the Lens culinaris A and B isolectins and the closely related Pisum sativum lectins) bind to almost identical populations of plasma membrane components and compete with each other for all their binding sites. Others (e.g., Concanavalin A and the Lens culinaris-Pisum sativum group and a group consisting of phytohemagglutinin-L, Ricinus communis lectin-60 and Ricinus communis lectin-120 bind in a cross reactive manner to some common binding moieties but, in addition, to certain nonshared ones. Still others (e.g., soybean agglutinin, peanut agglutinin and wheat germ agglutinin) do not share any common binding moieties with the other lectins. The amount of lectin binding and the number of membrane components to which a lectin binds is directly related to the Ka of binding of the lectin to the intact lymphocyte. Those with high Ka (Cocanavalin A Lens culinaris lectins, Pisum sativum lectins, phytohemagglutinin-L), bind to 20-30 different components giving very complex binding patterns while those with lower Ka (Agaricus bisporus lectins, wheat germ agglutinin, peanut agglutinin, and soybean agglutinin) bind to 8--13 components with easily distinguishable patterns. Soybean agglutinin binds almost exclusively to a glycolipid fraction while for the others one or more glycopolypeptides served as the major lectin-binding molecule. The Ricinus lectins, two lymphocyte toxins, bind to essentially every plasma membrane component to which the mitogen phytohemagglutinin-L binds, in fact competing for most of those plasma membrane moieties which bind phytohemagglutinin-L.  相似文献   

8.
Coupling of biotin to an endogenous lectin yields a probe which can be used for selective nonradioactive detection of complementary endogenous ligands. To exemplify practical applications of this type of compounds, we have synthesized and characterized a biotinylated derivative of a beta-galactoside-specific human brain lectin. Proteins which bind this lectin can be located on nitrocellulose sheets after electrophoretic transfer from gradient polyacrylamide gels, by sequential incubation with biotinylated probes and streptavidin-peroxidase, with visualization by an insoluble reaction product (affinoblotting). Biotinylated galactoside-binding plant lectins were used in the same way to visualize human brain glycoproteins, and their binding specificity was compared with that of human brain lectin. The results obtained by means of these different probes showed the usefulness of the endogenous lectin derivative to actually identify its endogenous partners. Thus this approach may find extended applications in the study of biological activities of vertebrate lectins in homologous systems, i.e., with lectins and ligands coming from the same tissue origin.  相似文献   

9.
Though avian skin is known to possess a highly lipogenic epidermis, little is known about its permeability barrier function. We correlated epidermal barrier function, fine structure and lipid biochemistry in the pigeon, Columbia livia, and compared these features with terrestrial mammalian systems. Whereas barrier function, as assessed by transepidermal water loss was not as efficient as in mammals, both groups shared certain morphological features including substantial compartmentalization of lipids in stratum corneum intercellular domains. Avian intercellular lipids derive from extrusion of intracellular non-membrane-bound droplets from lowermost corneocytes, rather than by secretion of lamellar discs from multigranular bodies, as previously reported in some avians, and in mammals. Instead, both the internal lamellae and the limiting membranes of multigranular bodies appear to degenerate, leading to the formation of non-membrane-bound droplets. The lipid content of avian epidermis and stratum corneum demonstrates important similarities to terrestrial mammals, i.e. abundant sphingolipids, a paucity of phospholipids, and abundant neutral lipids, but also certain striking differences, i.e. persistence of glycosphingolipids and triglycerides into the stratum corneum. Thus, avian stratum corneum forms a two-compartment system of lipid-depleted cells embedded in non-polar-lipid enriched intercellular domains, analogous to mammals. But, in contrast to mammals, the highly attenuated corneocytes of avians, which results from a paucity of keratin filaments, produce a 'straws-and-mortar' tissue, rather than the 'bricks-and-mortar' tissue of mammals.  相似文献   

10.
Corneodesmosin is a putative adhesion glycoprotein located in the extracellular part of the desmosomes in the upper layers of the epidermis. Synthesized by granular keratinocytes as a 52-56-kDa protein, corneodesmosin is progressively proteolysed during corneocyte maturation. This processing is a prerequisite for desquamation. Two glycine- and serine-rich domains of the protein might take on the conformation of adhesive secondary structures similar to glycine loops. Corneodesmosin proteolysis was further characterized. Deglycosylation experiments and reactivity with lectins demonstrated that the corneodesmosin carbohydrate moiety does not prevent the proteolysis. Immunoblotting, immunohistochemistry, and immunoelectron microscopy experiments using affinity-purified anti-peptide antibodies raised to four of the five structural domains of corneodesmosin and a monoclonal antibody against its fifth central domain showed that the first step in corneodesmosin processing is the cleavage of its extremities and probably occurs before its incorporation into desmosomes. Then the glycine loop-related domains are cleaved, first the N-terminal and then part of the C-terminal domain. At the epidermis surface, the multistep proteolytic cleavage leaves intact only the central domain, which was detected on exfoliated corneocytes and probably lacks adhesive properties. Importantly, corneodesmosin was demonstrated to be a preferred substrate of two serine proteases involved in desquamation, the stratum corneum tryptic and chymotryptic enzymes.  相似文献   

11.
The nude mouse is an athymic mutant whose immunological deficiency has been exploited for transplantation of normal and diseased xenogeneic tissue. Histologically, its skin has no unusual features apart from the absence of hair. We report here a biochemical study of its epidermis, with comparison to the hairless mouse (which is devoid of hair but otherwise functionally normal). The epidermal glycoproteins were probed with the lectin, concanavalin A (Con A). Fluorescein isothiocyanate (FITC)-Con A overlays of cryostat skin sections gave a similar fluorescent pattern for both mouse strains: all the viable epidermal cell layers were labeled but not the stratum corneum. In contrast, when different populations of keratinocytes that were separated on Percoll gradients were analyzed by gel electrophoresis, and the gels then overlaid with iodinated Con A, all the epidermal layers, including the stratum corneum, were labeled. For all the epidermal cell layers there are substantial differences between the two mouse strains. We observe changes in the glycoprotein distribution with the stage of differentiation. Comparison with our earlier data for human epidermis indicates that the discrepancies between the nude mouse and the hairless mouse are much greater than those between the latter and man. The most striking difference is the absence in the stratum corneum of the nude mouse of a 40 K glycoprotein which is the dominant feature for the hairless mouse and for man. The gel patterns point to functional discrepancies in the epidermis of the nude mouse, particularly in the stratum corneum, not evident histologically or with FITC-Con A.  相似文献   

12.
Lectins as Markers of Human Epidermal Cell Differentiation   总被引:7,自引:0,他引:7  
The expression of sugar residues on human epidermal cells was investigated by means of lectin binding, as a way of determining membrane structural changes occurring during the differentiation of the epidermis. Fourteen lectins of different sugar specificity were conjugated with fluorescein isothiocyanate (FITC-lectins) and tested in fluorescence microscopy on frozen sections of normal human epidermis. In parallel, FITC-lectins were tested on psoriatic-involved epidermis to visualize differences in the expression of sugar residues that might occur during abnormal epidermal differentiation. No labelling could be obtained with lectins from Bandeira simplicifolia I, Dolichos biflorus, Limulus polyhemus, Tetragonolobus purpureas, Ulex europeus I , and Triticum vulgaris (group 1 lectins). A "pemphigus-like" intercellular labelling of the whole epidermis, except the stratum corneum, was obtained with lectins from Canavalia ensiformis, Maclura pomifera, Phaseolus vulgaris , and Ricinus communis I (group 2 lectins). A selective intercellular labelling of the stratum spinosum and the stratum granulosum was seen in normal epidermis with lectins from Arachis hypogaea, Glycine max, Helix pomatia , and Sophora japonica (group 3 lectins). In psoriatic epidermis, not only the basal cell layer, but also cells from the adjacent lower stratum spinosum were found to be negative, using FITC-lectins of group 3. These data indicate that the expression of lectin binding sites in normal epidermis differs according to the maturation of the cell from the basal cell to the more mature keratinocyte in the stratum granulosum. They suggest that lectins may be used as markers of epidermal cells in various stages of normal and abnormal differentiation.  相似文献   

13.
Skin tissue, in addition to its specific use in dermal research, provides an excellent model for developing the techniques of vibrational microscopy and imaging for biomedical applications. In addition to permitting characterization of various regions of skin, the relative paucity of major biological constituents in the stratum corneum (the outermost layer of skin), permits us to image, with microscopic resolution, conformational alterations and concentration variations in both the lipid and protein components. Thus we are able to monitor the effects of exogenous materials such as models for drug delivery agents (liposomes) and permeation enhancers (DMSO) on stratum corneum lipid organization and protein structure. In addition, we are able to monitor protein conformational changes in single corneocytes. The current article demonstrates these procedures, ranging from direct univariate measures of lipid chain conformational disorder, to factor analysis which permits us to image conformational differences between liposomes that have permeated through the stratum corneum from those which have remained on the surface in a reservoir outside the skin.  相似文献   

14.
Skin tissue, in addition to its specific use in dermal research, provides an excellent model for developing the techniques of vibrational microscopy and imaging for biomedical applications. In addition to permitting characterization of various regions of skin, the relative paucity of major biological constituents in the stratum corneum (the outermost layer of skin), permits us to image, with microscopic resolution, conformational alterations and concentration variations in both the lipid and protein components. Thus we are able to monitor the effects of exogenous materials such as models for drug delivery agents (liposomes) and permeation enhancers (DMSO) on stratum corneum lipid organization and protein structure. In addition, we are able to monitor protein conformational changes in single corneocytes. The current article demonstrates these procedures, ranging from direct univariate measures of lipid chain conformational disorder, to factor analysis which permits us to image conformational differences between liposomes that have permeated through the stratum corneum from those which have remained on the surface in a reservoir outside the skin.  相似文献   

15.
Both concanavalin A (con A) and its divalent derivative, succinyl-concanavalin A (S-con A) are mitogenic for porcine lymph node lymphocytes. We have compared the binding of these two lectins to intact porcine lymphocytes and phospholipid vesicles containing reconstituted lymphocyte membrane glycoproteins. Both con A and S-con A showed high- and low-affinity binding to intact cells, as indicated by LIGAND analysis of Scatchard plots of binding data. Despite the apparently identical saccharide specificities of the two lectins, high-affinity binding sites for S-con A were only one-third as numerous as high-affinity sites for the parent lectin. Large numbers of low-affinity binding sites existed for con A, while many fewer were present for S-con A. It is suggested that these sites result from hydrophobic association. Con A bound to lymphocytes in a positively cooperative fashion, while S-con A showed non-cooperative behavior. Lectin binding to large unilamellar phospholipid vesicles containing reconstituted lymphocyte membrane glycoproteins was measured using a rapid filtration assay, and was linear with the glycoprotein content of the vesicles. Almost all of the outward-facing glycoprotein was functional in terms of lectin binding. Reconstituted glycoproteins showed only a single class of high-affinity binding sites for both con A and S-con A, with association constants similar to those measured for intact cells. Con A, but not S-con A, showed positively cooperative binding to reconstituted vesicles. Cooperativity was observed in both gel phase and liquid crystalline phase lipid, and was thus not dependent on long-range lateral rearrangement of glycoprotein receptors. Results suggested that con A induces a microre-distribution of receptors on the lymphocyte membrane surface, leading to the exposure of glycoproteins that were previously inaccessible to the lectin. S-Con A does not cause glycoprotein redistribution, and a large fraction of the receptors remain cryptic.  相似文献   

16.
Both concanavalin A (con A) and its divalent derivative, succinyl-concanavalin A (S-con A) are mitogenic for porcine lymph node lymphocytes. We have compared the binding of these two lectins to intact porcine lymphocytes and phospholipid vesicles containing reconstituted lymphocyte membrane glycoproteins. Both con A and S-con A showed high- and low-affinity binding to intact cells, as indicated by LIGAND analysis of Scatchard plots of binding data. Despite the apparently identical saccharide specificities of the two lectins, high-affinity binding sites for S-con A were only one-third as numerous as high-affinity sites for the parent lectin. Large numbers of low-affinity binding sites existed for con A, while many fewer were present for S-con A. It is suggested that these sites result from hydrophobic association. Con A bound to lymphocytes in a positively cooperative fashion, while S-con A showed noncooperative behavior. Lectin binding to large unilamellar phospholipid vesicles containing reconstituted lymphocyte membrane glycoproteins was measured using a rapid filtration assay, and was linear with the glycoprotein content of the vesicles. Almost all of the outward-facing glycoprotein was functional in terms of lectin binding. Reconstituted glycoproteins showed only a single class of high-affinity binding sites for both con A and S-con A, with association constants similar to those measured for intact cells. Con A, but not S-con A, showed positively cooperative binding to reconstituted vesicles. Cooperativity was observed in both gel phase and liquid crystalline phase lipid, and was thus not dependent on long-range lateral rearrangement of glycoprotein receptors. Results suggested that con A induces a microredistribution of receptors on the lymphocyte membrane surface, leading to the exposure of glycoproteins that were previously inaccessible to the lectin. S-Con A does not cause glycoprotein redistribution, and a large fraction of the receptors remain cryptic.  相似文献   

17.
An anti-A1 lectin has been isolated from the extract of Amphicarpaea bracteata seeds by affinity chromatography on Epoxy-activated Sepharose 6B coupled to N-acetyl-D-galactosamine. The yield of the purified lectin was 86 microgram/g of seeds. The purified lectin shows one main band on electrophoresis in sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide. The amino acid and neutral sugar composition indicate that this lectin is an acidic glycoprotein with a neutral sugar content of approx. 2%. The composition of the lectin is different from that of the Dolichos biflorus lectin but the two lectins have some common characteristics. The most powerful inhibitors of the agglutination of A1 red blood cells by the A. bracteata lectin is N-acetyl-D-galactosamine. Much weaker inhibitors of the agglutination are alpha-lactose, D-fucose, and five other sugars.  相似文献   

18.
Mammalian endogenous carbohydrate-binding proteins (lectins) play fundamental roles in a variety of mechanisms of interactions both at the molecular and cellular levels. We have investigated the binding of one of them (human brain lectin) to soluble acrylamide copolymerized with derivatives of either lactose (O-beta-lactosyloxyallylallylaminoacrylamide copolymer) or D-mannose (D-alpha-mannosyloxyallylallylaminoacrylamide copolymer) in direct enzyme affinoassays, in an attempt to develop simple procedures for detection and estimation of its carbohydrate-binding activity. Biotinylated plant lectins were utilized as reference standards. Affinoassays employed the polymer dotted on nitrocellulose and the polymer coated on microtiter plates as well as detection of bound biotinylated lectin by streptavidin/horseradish peroxidase reagent. Both assays provided reproducible binding, inhibitable by specific sugars. The microtiter plate assay is well suited to sensitive detection of the negative endogenous lectin by competition with biotinylated brain lectin. We conclude that the use of derivatized acrylamide in dotting and microtiter plate assays may prove practical for detection of endogenous lectins and that such polymers may serve as model substances in the study of biological partners of these carbohydrate-binding proteins.  相似文献   

19.
Endogenous lectins in both cellular slime molds and chicken tissues have been localized primarily intracellularly, in contrast with the predominantly extracellular localization of the glycoproteins, glycolipids, and glycosaminoglycans with which they might interact. Here we present evidence that lectins in both of these organisms may be externalized and become associated with the cell surface and/or extracellular materials. In chicken intestine, chicken-lactose-lectin-II is shown to be localized in the secretory granules of the goblet cells, along with mucin, and to be secreted onto the intestinal surface. In embryonic muscle, chicken-lactose-lectin-I is shown to be externalized with differentiation, ultimately becoming localized on the surface of myotubes and in the extracellular spaces. In a cellular slime mold, Dictyostelium purpureum, externalization of lectin is elicited by either polyvalent glycoproteins that bind the small amount of endogenous cell surface lectin, or by slime mold or plant lectins that bind unoccupied complementary cell surface oligosaccharides. These results suggest that externalization of endogenous lectin may be a response to specific external signals. We conclude that lectins are frequently held in intracellular reserves awaiting release for specific external functions.  相似文献   

20.
Lectin preparations have been isolated and purified from the culture liquid of the xylotrophic basidiomycete Lentinus edodes (Berk.) Singer [Lentinula edodes (Berk.) Pegler]. The culture of L. edodes F-249 synthesizes two extracellular lectins different in composition and physicochemical properties. Extracellular lectin L1 from L. edodes is a glycoprotein of mono-subunit structure with molecular weight of 43 kD. L1 is comprised of 10.5 +/- 1.0% (w/w) carbohydrates represented by glucose (Glc). Extracellular lectin L2 is a proteoglycan of mono-subunit structure with molecular weight of 37 kD. L2 is comprised of 90.3 +/- 1.0% (w/w) carbohydrates represented by Glc (73% of the total mass of the carbohydrate moiety of the lectin molecule) and galactose (Gal) (27% of the total mass of the carbohydrate part of the lectin molecule). The content of Asn in L2 is high, i.e. 42% (w/w) of total amino acids. This fact along with the composition of the carbohydrate part of the molecule (Glc + Gal) allows one to assign L2 to N-asparagine-bound proteins. Both lectins are specific to D-Gal and lactose (Lac) at an equal for L1 and L2 minimal inhibiting concentration of these carbohydrates (2.08 mM Gal and 8.33 mM Lac). Other carbohydrates to which the lectins show affinity are different for the two lectins: Rha (4.16 mM) for L1 and Ara (4.16 mM) and mannitol (8.33 mM) for L2. The purified extracellular lectins of L. edodes are highly selective at recognition of definite structures on the surface of trypsinized rabbit erythrocytes and do not react with the erythrocytes of other animals and humans.  相似文献   

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