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1.
During encystment,Phytophthora cinnamomi zoospores bind firmly to the host surface. We have developed a microassay to study adhesion of the zoospores to solid surfaces, both biological and non-biological. The results show that timing of the acquisition of adhesiveness during encystment correlates closely with the secretion of high molecular weight glycoproteins. The adhesive phase is short lived, occurring between 1 and 4 min after induction of encystment. During this period, cells that come into contact with a variety of surfaces (glass, plastic, and onion epidermis) become firmly attached, while cells that come into contact with one of these substrata after this period are unable to bind. Our results also show that EGTA inhibits cyst adhesion, while addition of calcium promotes cyst adhesion, especially of cysts more than 4 min old. To help identify the cyst surface component involved in adhesion we tested a number of lectins for their ability to block cyst adhesion. Soybean agglutinin andHelix pomatia agglutinin, lectins which bind to the secreted high molecular weight glycoproteins, both inhibit adhesion in the presence and absence of the hapten sugar, indicating that inhibition was non-specific. Wheatgerm agglutinin, a lectin which does not bind to the cyst surface, also blocked adhesion non-specifically. 相似文献
2.
Summary Calmodulin distribution in the tinsel and whiplash flagella of zoospores ofPhytophthora cinnamomi has been studied by immunofluorescence microscopy and immunogold labelling. In whole zoospores labelled with a monoclonal antibody raised against pea calmodulin, followed by a second antibody-FITC, both flagella appear to be weakly stained except for a region at the base of the tinsel flagellum which was stained intensely. A similar staining pattern was also detected in isolated flagella labelled with anti-calmodulin. To identify the calmodulin rich region of the tinsel flagellum, we labelled sections of zoospores embedded in Lowicryl K4M with anti-calmodulin followed by a second antibody gold probe. In the tinsel flagellum, the gold labelling was restricted to a paraxonemal swelling close to the base. Very little gold labelling was detected elsewhere. The swelling extends for 1.5–2.0 n from the base of the tinsel flagellum and is hook shaped in cross section. Immunoblot analysis confirmed that the staining was specific for calmodulin. 相似文献
3.
Summary. A coimmunisation protocol using microsomal fractions from Phytophthora nicotianae cells has enhanced the production of monoclonal antibodies directed towards proteins produced during asexual sporulation. Over 40% of the antibodies targeted three categories of zoospore peripheral vesicles. Five antibodies label the contents of dorsal vesicles, with three of these reacting with two P. nicotianae polypeptides with a relative molecular mass of approximately 100 kDa. Two antibodies label the contents of large peripheral vesicles and react with two very high-molecular-weight polypeptides in extracts of P. nicotianae cells. These antibodies cross-react with the contents of large peripheral vesicles in P. cinnamomi zoospores. Ten antibodies label the contents of P. nicotianae zoospore ventral vesicles and react with a single polypeptide with a relative molecular mass of 230 kDa. A number of these antibodies against the contents of ventral vesicles in P. nicotianae zoospores cross-react with ventral-vesicle proteins in P. cinnamomi cells in immunofluorescence and immunoblot assays. The study illustrates the value of the coimmunisation protocol and has produced antibodies that could be instrumental in the cloning of genes encoding peripheral-vesicle proteins.Correspondence and reprints: Plant Cell Biology Group, Research School of Biological Sciences, Australian National University, GPO Box 475, Canberra, ACT 2601, Australia. 相似文献
4.
A. R. Hardham 《Protoplasma》1987,137(2-3):109-124
Summary A correlated immunofluorescence and ultrastructural study of the microtubular cytoskeleton has been made in zoospores and young cysts ofPhytophthora cinnamomi. Labelling of microtubules using antibodies directed towards tubulin has revealed new details of the arrangement of the flagellar rootlets in these cells, and of the variability that occurs from cell to cell. Most of the variation exists at the distal ends of the rootlets, and may be correlated with differences in cell shape in these regions. The rootlets have the same right and left configuration in all zoospores. The arrangement of the rootlet microtubules at the anterior end of the zoospores raises the possibility that the microtubules on the left hand side of the groove may not comprise an independent rootlet which arises at the basal bodies.The absolute configuration of the flagellar apparatus has been determined from ultrastructural observations of serial sections. In the vicinity of the basal bodies, there is little, if any, variation between individuals, and the structure of the flagellar apparatus is similar to that described for related species of fungi. Two ribbon-like coils surround the central pair of microtubules at the distal tip of the whiplash flagellum, and clusters of intramembranous particles, similar to ciliary plaques, have been found at the bases of both flagella. There are two arrays of microtubules associated with the nucleus in the zoospores. One array lies next to the outer surface of the nuclear envelope, and probably functions in the shaping and positioning of the apex of the nucleus. The nuclear pores in this region are aligned in rows alongside these microtubules. The second array is formed by kinetochore microtubules which extend into a collar-like arrangement of chromatin material around the narrow end of the (interphase) nucleus. During encystment, all flagellar rootlets are internalized when the flagella are detached at the terminal plate. The rootlets arrays are no longer recognizable 5–10 minutes after the commencement of encystment. 相似文献
5.
Synthesis and assembly of flagellar surface antigens during zoosporogenesis inPhytophthora cinnamomi
Summary Cryomicrotomy and immunofluorescence microscopy employing three different categories of monoclonal antibody (MAb) that label antigens on the surface of one or both flagella ofPhytophthora dnnamomi have been used to follow the synthesis and assembly of flagellar surface components. MAb Zf 1 binds to the surface of both the anterior tinsel and posterior whiplash flagella, as well as to a nuclear component. The labeling of the flagella is punctate in nature, is brighter at the flagellar base, and does not always extend to the distal tip of the flagella. MAbs in the Zt group recognise an antigen that is located along the sides of the tinsel flagellum and may be associated with the base of the mastigonemes. Immunodot-blot analysis has shown that binding of Zt MAbs is abolished by pretreatment with either pronase or periodate oxidation indicating that the antigen is a glycoprotein. MAbs in the Zg group bind to the mastigonemes on the tinsel flagellum and to packets of mastigonemes in the cytoplasm of zoospores. Zt and Zg antigens increase in abundance during zoosporogenesis and are present throughout the life cycle of the fungus, whereas the non-nuclear localisation of the Zf antigen appears only during sporulation. Prior to association with the flagellar surface, all three components become clustered in the groove region of zoospores. They do not become associated with the flagellar surface until at least 15 min after the flagellar axoneme has formed.Abbreviations BSA
bovine serum albumin
- DAPI
4,6-diamidino-2-phenylindole
- DMF
dimethylformamide
- lgG1
immunoglobulin G1
- MAbs
monoclonal antibodies
- NIM
non-immune mouse antibodies
- PBS
phosphate-buffered saline
- PBST
phosphate-buffered saline with 0.5% Tween 20
- PIPES
1,4-piperazinediethanesulfonic acid
- PPD
paraphenylenediamine dihydrochloride
- RT
room temperature
- TBS
tris-buffered saline
- TEST
tris-buffered saline with 0.05% Tween 20 相似文献
6.
7.
Mia Williams Tissa Senaratna Kingsley Dixon Krishnapillai Sivasithamparam 《Plant Growth Regulation》2003,41(1):89-91
Banksia attenuata plants were treated with soil drenches or foliar sprays of benzoic acid (BZA) to determine induced resistance to Phytophthora cinnamomi. Stems of B. attenuata were inoculated with the pathogen 1 week after treatment with BZA. Resistance was estimated by measuring P. cinnamomi lesions on stems. Treatment with 0.10 mM, 0.25 mM or 0.50 mM BZA caused a reduction in lesion size with 0.50 mM BZA applied as a soil drench being the most effective treatment at suppressing the development of lesions. This is the first report of BZA induced host resistance in any plant species to any pathogen. 相似文献
8.
The nature of the surface saccharides of zoospores, "partially encysted zoospores" and cysts of the root-rotting fungus Phytophthora cinnamomi, has been examined by quantitative lectin binding studies. Zoospores bound concanavalin A (Con A), but did not bind any of a variety of other lectins tested. In contrast, both cysts and "partially encysted zoospores" bound soybean agglutinin (SBA) as well as Con A. This indicates that accessible alpha-D-glucosyl/alpha-D-mannosyl-containing glycoconjugates predominate at the zoospore surface, whereas both alpha-D-glucosyl/alpha-D-mannosyl and galactosyl and/or N-acetyl-D-galactosaminosyl residues are accessible at the surface of cysts and "partially encysted zoospores." Neither Ulex europeus lectin nor wheat germ agglutinin (WGA) bound to any of the three cell preparations, indicating the absence of accessible alpha-L-fucosyl and N-acetyl-D-glucosaminosyl residues. 相似文献
9.
A R Hardham 《The journal of histochemistry and cytochemistry》1985,33(2):110-118
The study of the surface properties of zoospores and cysts of the fungus Phytophthora cinnamomi required a fixation regime that would preserve the cells adequately and not interfere with binding and detection of probes on the cell surface. When they were fixed in 4% formaldehyde (F), specific binding of concanavalin A-fluorescein isothiocyanate and rhodamine-labeled soybean agglutinin was obtained. However, electron microscopy showed that preservation was so poor that intracellular binding sites had become exposed. By contrast glutaraldehyde (G), even at concentrations as low as 0.05%, gave good preservation of the zoospores but induced high levels of nonspecific fluorescence, making its use impractical for studies using fluorescent probes. Addition of 1-4% F to 0.05-0.8% G reduced the level of G-induced fluorescence while not diminishing the quality of ultrastructural preservation. This effect was evaluated quantitatively and an optimum fixation regime for the fungal cells, namely, 0.2% G and 2-4% F in 50 mM PIPES buffer, was determined. This combined fixative facilities correlated fluorescence and ultrastructural labeling with lectins and immunocytochemical probes. 相似文献
10.
A panel of twelve monoclonal antibodies (MAbs), designated FS1 to FS12, have been raised against surface antigens of Fucus serratus sperm. The antibodies were selected on the basis that they show region-, gamete-, species- or genus-preferential binding. Indirect immunofluorescence shows that the antigens bound by the MAbs are distributed non-randomly over the cell surface. Seven MAbs (FS1, FS3, FS4, FS6, FS8, FS9, FS10) bind antigens located primarily on the cell body, while the others (FS2, FS5, FS7, FS11, FS12) bind antigens located primarily on the anterior flagellum. Of the MAbs that label the anterior flagellum, FS2, FS5, FS7 and FS12 form a halo at the perimeter of the flagellum. Electron microscopic-immunogold studies indicate that the halo results from labelling of the mastigonemes, as opposed to the flagellar plasmamembrane. Gamete-preferential binding of antibodies was detected using an enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay with egg membrane vesicles. Eight of the MAbs bind sperm antigens not common to eggs, though FS2, FS4, FS5 and FS9 bind antigens present on both sperm and eggs. In studies of species- and genus-specificity FS2, FS3, FS5, FS6, FS7, FS8, FS10, FS11 and FS12 exhibit genus-preferential binding, labelling sperm of F. serratus and F. vesiculosus more intensely than that of Ascophyllum nodosum. Only FS10 showed marked species-preferential binding, labelling sperm of F. serratus much more intensely than that of F. vesiculosus.Abbreviations Au-GAMIG
gold-conjugated goat anti-mouse immunoglobulin
- ELISA
enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay
- EM
electron microscope
- FITC-RAMIG
fluorescein-isothiocyanate-conjugated rabbit anti-mouse immunoglobulin
- IIF
indirect immunofluorescence
- MAb
monoclonal antibody 相似文献
11.
Characterisation of a new monoclonal antibody (mAb), designated LAS 41, directed against 124-kilodalton (kDa) etiolated-oat (Avena sativa L.) phytochrome, indicates that it recognises an epitope unique to the red-light-absorbing form, Pr. In a solid-phase enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA), LAS 41 exhibits a seven- to eight-fold higher affinity for Pr than for the far-red-light-absorbing form of phytochrome, Pfr. In addition, in immunoprecipitation assays LAS 41 effectively precipitates 100% of phytochrome presented as Pr but only precipitates a maximum of 24.5% of phytochrome presented as Pfr. These values are indicative of binding exclusively to Pr. Peptide-mapping studies show that LAS 41 recognises and epitope located within a region 6–10 kDa from the aminoterminus of the phytochrome molecule. Since binding of LAS 41 to Pr induces alterations in the spectral properties of Pr, this indicates that at least part of the 4 kDa domain to which the antibody binds is essential for protein-chromophore interaction. Subsequent photoconversion of LAS 41-Pr complexes produces native Pfr spectra, with concomitant production of free antibody and antigen, as shown by a modified ELISA. The specificity of LAS 41 for Pr has facilitated the purification of Pfr which is free of contaminating Pr. This has enabled direct determination of the mole fraction of Pfr established by red light to be 0.874.Abbreviations ELISA
enzyme-linked immunsorbent assay
- kDa
kilodalton
- mAb
monoclonal antibody
- Pfr
far-red-absorbing form of phytochrome
- Pr
red-absorbing form of phytochrome
- SDS-PAGE
sodium dodecyl sulphate polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis
- (A)
difference in absorbance (A
665
Pr
–A
730
Pr
)-(A
665
Pfr
–A
730
Pfr
)
- Ar/Afr
spectral change ratio (SCR)
- max
mole fraction of Pfr following saturating red light 相似文献
12.
Summary In asexual reproduction of the water mold,Saprolegnia ferax, four distinct and sequentially produced spores are involved in dispersal, two of which are motile and two of which are nonmotile. Composition of cell surface glycoproteins may be important in dispersal strategies for each of these stages. Binding patterns of fluorescently labelled lectins were investigated to identify differences in glycoproteins of asexually produced dispersal stages. The pattern of lectin binding to zoospores was diverse. FITC-Con A bound to surfaces of zoospores and membranes of the water expulsion vacuole system, indicating the prescence of mannosyl and glucosyl residues. In zoospores incubated for more than 30 min in FITC-WGA and FITC-GS II. which bind N-acetyl glucosamine, fluorescence was sometimes localized in peripheral, intracellular patches. In shorter incubations, secondary zoospores bound these lectins along the groove region where K-bodies were located. Surfaces of cystospores typically bound FITC-WGA, but not FITC-GS II. FITC-GS II, however, bound to empty cystospore walls, probably because reactive sugars were available at the inner surface of the wall. Germ tubes emerging from cystospores bound labelled WGA and GS II, but not Con A. The same lectin binding pattern was found along discharge papilla of primary cystospores, indicating that modifications in cystospore walls associated with direct germination and zoospore discharge were similar. Thus, glycoproteins involved in early establishment of the hyphal system differ from those forming the cell surface of cystospores. Differences in the binding pattern of lectins to zoospores and cystospores highlight differences between cell surface carbohydrates of motile and nonmotile asexual stages.Abbreviations BPA
lectin fromBauhinia purpurea
- C1
primary cystospore
- C2
secondary cystospore
- Con A
concanavalin A, lectin fromCanavalia ensiformis
- DBA
lectin fromDolichos biflorus
- DIC
Nomarski differential interference contrast optics
- DS
dilute salts
- FITC
fluorescein isothiocyanate
- FUC
fucose
- Gal
galactose
- GalNAc
N-acetyl galactosamine
- Glc
glucose
- GlcNAc
N-acetyl glucosamine
- GS I
Griffonia simplicifolia lectin I
- GS II
G. simplicifolia lectin II
- Man
mannose
- MPA
lectin fromMaclura pomifera
- PC
phase contrast optics
- PNA
lectin fromArachis hypogaea
- SBA
soybean agglutinin, lectin fromGlycine max
- UEA-1
lectin fromUlex europaeus
- WGA
wheat germ agglutinin fromTriticum vulgare
- WV
water expulsion vacuole 相似文献
13.
Hyou-Arm Joung Won-Bo Shim Duck-Hwa Chung Junhyoung Ahn Bong Hyun Chung Ho-Suk Choi Sang-Do Ha Keun-Sung Kim Kyu-Ho Lee Cheol-Ho Kim Kwang-Yup Kim Min-Gon Kim 《Biotechnology and Bioprocess Engineering》2007,12(2):80-85
In this study, a specific monoclonal antibody againstListeria monocytogenes was screened using an SPR biosensor Monoclonal antibodies were bound to protein L, after which theL. monocytogenes cells were subjected to an affinity assay. Protein L was immobilized on a carboxymethyl dextran (CM-Dex) surface via an amine
coupling method and utilized repeatedly by regeneration. The monoclonal antibody, ‘A18’, was selected and employed for the
high-sensitivity detection ofL. monocytogenes. Under optimized conditions, 103 cells/ml or 50 cells were detected by the SPR biosensor. 相似文献
14.
Cell type specificity of a neural cell surface antigen recognized by the monoclonal antibody A2B5 总被引:8,自引:0,他引:8
Summary The monoclonal antibody A2B5 reacts with the surface membrane of most neurons in monolayer cultures of cerebellum, retina, spinal cord, and dorsal root ganglion of embryonic and early postnatal C57BL/6J mice maintained in vitro for culture periods of 2 to 10 days. A small percentage of astroglial cells also expresses A2B5 antigen in murine, chicken and rabbit cerebellum, in chicken retina, and in murine spinal cord and dorsal root ganglion. Less mature astroglial cells are stained for A2B5 antigen to a greater extent than the more mature astrocytes. Astrocytes from rat cerebellum and mouse retina were not found to express A2B5 antigen under the present culture conditions. Some of the less mature oligodendrocytes recognized by 04 antibodies express A2B5 antigen, while the more mature 01 antigen and galactocerebroside-positive oligodendrocytes were not found to be A2B5 antigen-positive. Fibroblasts or fibroblast-like cells do not express detectable levels of A2B5 antigen. After fixation of the cells with paraformaldehyde and ethanol, all cell types present in culture are labeled by the A2B5 antibody intracellularly. 相似文献
15.
David Bueno Eduard Batlle Marc Aureli Soriano Lluis Espinosa Jaume Baguñá Rafael Romero 《Hydrobiologia》1995,305(1-3):263-264
During regeneration in planarians, anterior (head and prepharyngeal) and posterior (postpharyngeal and tail) fragments rebuild one of the most peculiar structures of planarians: the pharynx and the pharynx cavity. Previous studies (see Brønsted, 1969, for a general review, and Asai, 1990, 1991, for anterior regeneration) have shown that within postpharyngeal pieces both structures appear in the old stump from clusters of undifferentiated cells. However, the lineage and differentiation of their elements (inner and outer epithelial cells, muscle layers, gland cells, nerve rings) and the overall pattern of growth and differentiation is not clear. 相似文献
16.
István Grigorszky Kevi T. Kiss Viktória Béres István Bácsi Márta M-Hamvas Csaba Máthé Gábor Vasas Judit Padisák Gábor Borics Marija Gligora György Borbély 《Hydrobiologia》2006,563(1):527-535
For avoiding the unfavorable environmental conditions several aquatic microorganisms are capable of forming specialized resistance
cells like akinets, hypnospores, statospores, etc. Recognition of the important role of cysts in the life cycles of dinoflagellates
increased the need to study their role in the ecology of phytoplanktons, and this, combined with the knowledge of chemical
and biological characteristics of the water, may lead to a better understanding of the spatial and temporal dynamics of dinoflagellates.
This paper reports on the effects of temperature, nitrogen, and phosphorus on the percentage of encystment of the dinoflagellate
Peridinum cinctum Stein. The phosphorus content of the medium affected encystment only at the highest temperature applied (22 °C). Nitrogen
content and temperature were the most important factors controlling the encystment. 相似文献
17.
Summary The mammalian centrosome monoclonal antibody MPM-13 recognized component(s) of the well defined MTOC basal-body root complex in the green plantChlamydomonas. The antibody reaction coincided in location with the basal-body root complex and the cruciate nature of the staining pattern corresponded to the configuration of the root microtubules. During mitosis the behaviour of MPM-13 stained material mirrored the duplication, separation and migration to the spindle poles of the basal body-root complex. It is suggested that conserved MTOC components were recognized and that these may have retained a similar, perhaps universal, function in microtubule organization.Abbreviations BSA
bovine serum albumin
- DAPI
4,6-diamidine-2-phenylindole dihydrochloride
- mt
mating type
- MT
microtubule
- MTOC
microtubule organizing centre
- PFA
paraformaldehyde
- PBS
phosphate buffered saline 相似文献
18.
Changes in the cell surface coat during the development ofXenopus laevis embryos,detected by lectins
Jindřich Nosek 《Development genes and evolution》1978,184(3):181-193
Summary The composition of the surface coat in embryonic cells ofXenopus laevis was examined by agglutination and fluorescent staining with lectins.Cells of early and mid gastrula stages were agglutinated by lectins specific for D-mannose, D-galactose, L-fucose, N-acetyl-D-glucosamine and N-acetyl-D-galactosamine. No differences in agglutinability among ectoderm, mesoderm and endoderm cells were observed with lectins specific for D-mannose, D-galactose and N-acetyl-D-galactosamine, though agglutination of gastrula cells with fluorescent lectins revealed considerable differences in the intensity of lectin binding among cells within an aggregate. These differences in amount of lectin bound were not related to cell size or morphology. Patches of fluorescent material formed on the cells, suggesting that lectin receptors are mobile in the plane of the plasma membrane.In the early cleavage stages intensive lectin binding occurs only at the boundary between preexisting and nascent plasma membranes. The external surface of the embryo has few lectin receptors up to the late gastrula stage. The unpigmented nascent plasma membranes, when exposed to fluorescent lectins, do not assume any fluorescence distinguishable from the background autofluorescence of yolk, in stages up to the mid-blastula. From this stage onwards lectin binding was observed on the membranes of the reverse side of surface layer cells and on the membranes of deep layer cells. During gastrulation there is an accumulation of lectin-binding material on surfaces involved in intercellular contacts.The significance of lectin binding material for morphogenesis is discussed. 相似文献
19.
Summary The importance of the surface structure and chemistry in zoospores and cysts of oomycetes is briefly reviewed and the organelle systems associated with encystment described. The surface structure and chemistry of primary and secondary zoospores and cysts ofSaprolegnia diclina (a representative saprophytic species) andS. parasitica (a representative salmonid fish pathogen) were explored using the lectins concanavilin A (Con A) and wheat germ agglutinin (WGA) and monoclonal antibodies (MAbs) raised against a mixed zoospore and cyst suspension ofS. parasitica. The binding of lectins and antibodies to spores was determined using immunofluorescence microscopy with fluorescein isothiocyanate-labelled probes and with electron microscopy with gold-conjugated probes applied to spore suspensions post-fixation. In both species Con A, which is specific for glucose and mannose sugars, bound to both the surface of primary and secondary zoospores (the surface glycocalyx) and their cyst coats and readily induced zoospore encystment. The binding to the cysts appeared to be mainly associated with the matrix material released from the primary and secondary encystment vesicles and which appeared to diminish with time. No binding to germ tube walls was observed with this lectin. The MAb labelling showed a generally similar binding pattern to the primary and secondary cysts to that observed with Con A, although the binding to zoospores was more variable. Primary zoospores bound the antibodies but secondary zoospores appeared less reactive. It is suggested that the MAbs share a common epitope with one or more of the Con A-binding components. In both species WGA, which is specific for amongst other things the sugar N-acetyl glucosamine, bound to localised apical patches on the primary zoospores. This lectin also binds to the ventral groove region of secondary zoospores ofS. diclina, which were induced to encyst by this lectin. In contrast secondary zoospores ofS. parasitica were not induced to encyst by the addition of WGA and showed a patchy dorsal binding with this lectin. WGA also binds to both the inner wall of discharged primary cysts and the young germ tube walls of both species. These observations are discussed both in relation to other oomycete spores and to their possible functional and ecological significance.Abbreviations BSA
bovine serum albumin
- Con A
Concanavalin A
- DBA
Dolichos biflorus agglutinin
- ELISA
enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay
- EM
electron microscope
- EV
encystment vesicles
- FCS
foetal calf serum
- FITC
Fluorescein isothiocyanate
- FV
peripheral fibrillar vesicles
- G+F 0.2%
glutaraldehyde and 2.0% formaldehyde primary fixative solution
- 2G 2%
glutaraldehyde primary fixative
- LM
light microscopy
- MAbs
monoclonal antibodies
- LPV
large peripheral vesicles
- PBS
phosphate buffered saline
- PCV
flattened peripheral cisternae
- PEV
primary encystment vesicle
- PIPES
piperazine-N,N1-bis(2-ethane sulfonic acid)
- PNA
Ricinus communis agglutinin
- RAM-FITC/Au10–20
Fluorescein isothiocyanate/gold (10 or 20 nm) labelled rabbit anti-mouse immunoglobulin
- RCA
Ricinus communis agglutinin
- SEM
scanning electron micrograph
- SBA
soybean agglutinin
- SEV
secondary encystment vesicles
- TEM
transmission electron micrograph
- UEA I
Ulex europaeus agglutinin
- WGA
wheat germ agglutinin 相似文献
20.
Sperm of the brown alga Fucus serratus are highly differentiated, biflagellate, naked cells. Immunolocalisation studies, employing monoclonal antibodies (MAbs — designated FS1 to FS12) raised against antigens of these sperm cells, have revealed that some sperm surface components are distributed over the entire cell, whereas others are restricted to, or occur preferentially on, the surface of the anterior flagellum or cell body. This report describes the use of these MAbs in Western-blot procedures and antigen-modification binding assays to determine the nature of these sperm surface components. Monoclonal antibodies which bind to antigens found on the cell body and both flagella (FS3, FS4, FS6, FS8, FS10) recognise carbohydrate epitopes of a high-molecular-weight glycoprotein (Mr=205 kDa). These MAbs were initially chosen at random from a much larger number of antibodies which bound to sperm in a similar fashion, indicating that this glycoprotein is an immunodominant antigen. Though these MAbs compete under conditions of limited antigen availability, differences in the effects of periodate on antibody binding and differences in other binding data indicate that the MAbs recognise epitopes of this glycoprotein which are neighbouring or overlapping, rather than common. The MAb FS9, which has a similar binding pattern to the above antibodies, also seems to bind to carbohydrate epitopes, but the antigen recognised by this antibody could not be identified in Western-blotting procedures. The MAbs FS7 and FS12, which bind to the mastigonemes on the anterior flagellum and to the cell body and posterior flagellum, recognise a set of glycoproteins in the molecular-weight range 40–250 kDa. The evidence indicates that the antibodies are binding to N-linked carbohydrate side chains of these glycoproteins. Three MAbs that bind to the anterior flagellum (FS2, FS5 and FS11) recognise protein antigens in the molecular-weight range 90–250 kDa; it is not known whether these antigens are glycosylated. The MAb FS1, which binds primarily to the sperm cell body, could not be used in enzyme-linked immunosorbent assays or Western-blotting procedures and the antigen recognised by this antibody is so far uncharacterised.Abbreviations ELISA
enzyme linked immunosorbent assay
- HRP-RAMIG
horseradish-peroxidase-labelled rabbit anti mouse immunoglobulin
- Ig
immunoglobulin
- kDa
kilodalton
- MAb
monoclonal antibody
- Mr
relative molecular mass
- PBS
phosphate-buffered saline
- SDS-PAGE
sodium dodecyl sulphate polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis
We are grateful to AFRC for financial support under the cell signalling initiative. 相似文献