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1.
Treatment of untransformed mouse and hamster cells with the tertiary amine local anesthetics dibucaine, tetracaine and procaine increases their susceptibility to agglutination by low doses of the plant lectin concanavalin A. Agglutination of anesthetic-treated untransformed cells by low doses of concanavalin A is accompanied by redistribution of concanavalin A receptors on the cell surface to form patches, similar to that occurring in spontaneous agglutination of virus-transformed cells by concanavalin A. Immunofluorescence and freeze-fracture electronmicroscopic observations indicate that local anesthetics per se do not induce this redistribution of concanavalin A receptors but modify the plasma membrane so that receptor redistribution is facilitated on binding of concanavalin A to the cell surface. Fluorescence polarization measurements on the rotational freedom of the membrane-associated probe, diphenylhexatriene, indicate that local anesthetics produce a small increase in the fluidity of membrane lipids. Spontaneous agglutination of transformed cells by low doses of concanavalin A is inhibited by colchicine and vinblastine but these alkaloids have no effect on concanavalin A agglutination of anesthetic-treated cells. Evidence is presented which suggests that local anesthetics may impair membrane peripheral proteins sensitive to colchicine (microtubules) and cytochalasin-B (microfilaments). Combined treatment of untransformed 3T3 cells with colchicine and cytochalasin B mimics the effect of local anesthetics in enhancing susceptibility to agglutination by low doses of concanavalin A. A hypothesis is presented on the respective roles of colchicine-sensitive and cytochalasin B-sensitive peripheral membrane proteins in controlling the topographical distribution of lectin receptors on the cell surface.  相似文献   

2.
Treatment of untransformed mouse and hamster cells with the tertiary amine local anesthetics dibucaine, tetracaine and procaine increases their susceptibility to agglutination by low doses of the plant lectin concanavalin A. Agglutination of anesthetic-treated untransformed cells by low doses of concanavalin A is accompanied by redistribution of concanavalin A receptors on the cell surface to form patches, similar to that occurring in spontaneous agglutination of virus-transformed cells by concanavalin A. Immunofluorescence and freeze-fracture electronmicroscopic observations indicate that local anesthetics per se do not induce this redistribution of concanavalin A receptors but modify the plasma membrane so that receptor redistribution is facilitated on binding of concanavalin A to the cell surface. Fluorescence polarization measurements on the rotational freedom of the membrane-associated probe, diphenylhexatriene, indicate that local anesthetics produce a small increase in the fluidity of membrane lipids. Spontaneous agglutination of transformed cells by low doses of concanavalin A is inhibited by colchicine and vinblastine but these alkaloids have no effect on concanavalin A agglutination of anesthetic-treated cells. Evidence is presented which suggests that local anesthetics may impair membrane peripheral proteins sensitive to colchicine (microtubules) and cytochalasin-B (microfilaments). Combined treatment of untransformed 3T3 cells with colchicine and cytochalasin B mimics the effect of local anesthetics in enhancing susceptibility to agglutination by low doses of concanavalin A. A hypothesis is presented on the respective roles of colchicine-sensitive and cytochalasin B-sensitive peripheral membrane proteins in controlling the topographical distribution of lectin receptors on the cell surface.  相似文献   

3.
Current research on the mechanism of transmembrane regulationof topographic modulation at the cell surface is described forthe sea urchin egg and Sarcoma 180 ascites tumor cells of SwissWebster white mice. The transmembrane system is characterizedin terms of three components: glycocalyx, membrane, and cytofibrillarstructures. The importance of membrane molecular architectureper se relative to the other surface components is assessedin terms of freeze fracture analysis of both cell types as wellas concanavalin A (ConA)-mediated long term agglutination, cytochalasinB effects, and other drug-induced changes at Sarcoma 180 cellsurfaces. A quantitative and qualitative assessment of intramembranousparticle (IMP) sizes and density distributions reveals intrinsicstructural changes of the fusing membranes at cortical reactionduring sea urchin egg fertilization and also with the post-fertilizedaccumulation of surface microvilli. Comparable changes in IMPare noted for microvillus retraction and membrane smoothingin Sarcoma 180 cells under a variety of experimental conditions.On the other hand, chemical perturbation of S-180 cell surfacesreveals a rather non-ubiquitous, though identifiable, involvementof microfilaments and no microtubule involvement in these topographicchanges. These observations suggest that the plasma membraneis a dynamic structure poised between "restrictive" and "lessrestrictive" states of fluidity or deformability and, hence,is a determinant component in topographic change.  相似文献   

4.
The fluidity of the plasma membrane of Sarcoma 180 mouse ascites tumor cells has been studied in viable cells using fatty acid spin labels. The order parameter was found to vary from 0.61, approximately four carbon bond lengths removed from the membrane surface, to 0.47 approximately eleven bond lengths removed at 22 degrees C and from 0.55 to 0.33 at 37 degrees C. Thus these cells show similar membrane fluidity to that found in other mammalian cells with the exception of human erythrocytes which are less fluid. The concanavalin A mediated agglutinability of Sarcoma 180 cells was altered by the addition of cytochalasin B and the fluidity was found to be the same as in unaltered cells.  相似文献   

5.
The concanavalin A receptor from human erythrocyte membranes has been isolated by affinity chromatography using the mild, readily-dialyzable detergent dodecyltrimethylammonium bromide. The purified protein has been reincorporated into large unilamellar phospholipid vesicles using a detergent dialysis technique. The mean diameter of these vesicles increases as the lipid: protein ratio decreases. Binding of succinyl-concanavalin A to these vesicles was quantitated using 125I-labelled lectin in a filtration assay. The concanavalin A receptor in lipid bilayer vesicles provides specific high affinity binding sites for succinyl-concanavalin A with an association constant of 2.13·106 M?1. Scatchard plots indicate positive cooperativity of binding at very low lectin concentrations, a characteristic also seen in concanavalin A binding to intact human erythrocytes. The presence of bovine serum albumin has little effect on lectin binding and is not required for expression of cooperativity. Concanavalin A effectively competes with succinyl-concanavalin A for binding to the vesicles with an association constant of 4.83·106 M?1. Receptor-bearing vesicles are readily agglutinated by concanavalin A but not by its succinylated derivative. The kinetics of vesicle agglutination are biphasic, with an initial rapid phase followed by a pseudo-first order process. We suggest that studies on reassembled receptor proteins in lipid bilayers can provide valuable insight into receptor involvement in transmembrane signalling events and the factors involved in cell membrane behaviour and cell agglutination.  相似文献   

6.
At low concentrations of concanavalin A (conA), binding of the lectin to the erythrocytes appears to be the rate-limiting step in the agglutination of these cells. At higher concentrations of lectin the rate of agglutination is concentration-independent, indicating that the aggregation reaction is rate-determining. Only 5 to 7% of the 1.2 × 105 receptor sites need be occupied by con A in order for agglutination to take place. Although trypsin-treated cells bind 30% less 125I-conA, they agglutinate better than untreated cells. At high lectin concentrations, erythrocyte agglutination by wheat germ agglutinin (WGA) is more than 8 times faster than the conA-mediated reaction. Lowering of the temperature to 0 °C reduces the rate but not the extent of the agglutination by both lectins. Mechanical shear reduced the conA-mediated agglutination of native cells by more than 160-fold and that of trypsinized and neuraminidase-treated cells 6-fold and 4-fold, respectively.It is concluded that metabolic activity, receptor mobility (i.e. cluster or patch formation) and cytochalasin B-sensitive processes, all of which have been reported to be involved in the lectin-mediated agglutination of fibroblasts and other cells, do not play a role in erythrocyte agglutination. Lectin-mediated erythrocyte agglutination appears to be governed primarily by the rate and extent of binding of lectin to the cell surface, the cell surface charge (modifiable by enzyme treatments or polycations) and the shear forces in the suspension. Morphological studies confirm and amplify these conclusions.  相似文献   

7.
Several aspects of the interaction of various lectins with the surface of Ehrlich ascites carcinoma cells are described. The order of agglutinating activity for various various lectins is Ricinuscommunis > wheat germ concanavalin A soybean >Limuluspolyphemus. No agglutination was noted for Ulex europaeus. Using 125I-labeled lectins it was determined that there are 1.6 and 7 times as many Ricinus communis lectin binding sites as sites for concanavalin A and soybean lectins. Sodium deoxy-cholate-solubilized plasma membrane material was subjected to lectin affinity chromatography and sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis. The lectin receptors of the plasma membrane appeared to be heterogeneous and some qualitative differences could be discerned among the electrophoretically analyzed material, which bound to and was specifically eluted from the various lectin affinity colums. The characteristics of elution of bound material from individual lectin columns indicated secondary hydrophobic interactions between concanavalin A or wheat germ agglutinin and their respective lectin receptor molecules.  相似文献   

8.
Cell surface alterations occurred during murine erythroleukemia cell (clone 745) differentiation that were detected by both agglutination and lectin binding. Agglutination of erythroleukemia cells was produced by wheat germ agglutinin; whereas, concanavalin A, Ricin, soybean agglutinin and fucose-binding protein were either ineffective or much less efficacious. Treatment of leukemia cells with the inducer of erythroid differentiation dimethylsulfoxide (DMSO) caused a progressive accumulation of hemoglobin-containing cells in culture and a decrease in the rate of agglutination by wheat germ agglutinin, which began at 24 h after exposure to the polar solvent, reached a nadir at 48 h, and remained essentially constant thereafter. The binding of radioactive wheat germ agglutinin by untreated control erythroleukemia cells increased with time in culture, reaching a maximum value at 48 h, and decreased progressively thereafter. Although an increase in 3H-labeled wheat germ agglutinin binding also occurred in DMSO-treated cells, the level bound was significantly lower than that observed in control cells at 24–96 h. The treatment of erythroleukemia cells with various concentrations of DMSO resulted in a decrease in the number of wheat germ agglutinin receptor sites. Other inducers of differentiation (i.e., dimethylformamide, bis(acetyl)diaminopentane) also inhibited the rate of wheat germ agglutinin-induced agglutination of erythroleukemia cells while, in contrast, the inducer tetramethylurea did not. These studies indicate that membrane changes occur during differentiation and suggest that there may be more than one mechanism involved in the initiation of maturation which ultimately leads to the common pathway of erythroid development.  相似文献   

9.
Intact, viable ultransformed 3T3 and transformed SV101-3T3 cells were labeled with fatty acid spin labels and with 2,2,6,6-tetramethylpiperidine-1-oxyl in order to measure the fluidity properties of membrane lipids. Both cell types were grown in regular calf serum and in a lipid-depleted serum supplemented with either oleate or elaidate. The temperature dependence of the spectra obtained revealed inflections that correlate with the temperature below which agglutination with concanavalin A is inhibited, and another inflection that correlates with the temperature below which agglutination with wheat germ agglutinin is inhibited, suggesting that (a) the lipid phase(s) in the vicinity of the receptor(s) for these two lectins differ, and (b) a fluid membrane in the vicinity of the lectin receptor(s) is necessary for agglutination with either concanavalin A or wheat germ agglutinin. Studies with a partially characterized plasma membrane fraction suggest that the plasma membrane fluidity parameters closely resemble those of the intact cell. 3T3 and SV101-3T3 cells show virtually identical fluidity profiles by all of the tests we have applied.  相似文献   

10.
Concanavalin A, which binds to specific carbohydrate determinants on the cell surface, was used to investigate the binding of prolactin to its receptors in liver membranes from female rats. The binding of 125I-labeled ovine prolactin to receptors was sharply inhibited by concanavalin A. This effect was reversed by the competitive sugar α-methyl-D-mannopyranoside and thus required the presence of specifically bound lectin. Concentrations of concanavalin A of up to 50 μg/ml caused a progressive decrease in the apparent affinity of the prolactin receptor for hormone. When higher concentrations were used, the number of available binding sites decreased. Concanavalin A-resistant receptors, about 30% of the total, had the same dissociation constant (Kd) as the controls. The binding of 125I-labeled concanavalin A in the same membrane preparations showed the presence of two distinct types of concanavalin A binding. At low concentrations, the lectin bound with high affinity (Kd ≈ 6.6 · 10?8 M). At high lectin concentrations, low affinity (Kd ≈ 6.7 · 10?5 M) binding predominated. Since high affinity concanavalin A binding was saturated at 50 μg/ml, this class of binding most likely alters the affinity of the prolactin receptor for hormone; low affinity concanavalin A binding may mask prolactin receptors, making them inaccessible to the hormone.Binding sites for concanavalin A and prolactin appear to be independent but closely related since (i) concanavalin A did not displace bound prolactin from its receptor, and (ii) detergent-solubilized 125I-labeled prolactin-receptor complexes bound to concanavalin A-Sepharose and were eluted by α-methyl-D-mannopyranoside.  相似文献   

11.
The mode of binding of 125I-labelled concanavalin A and succinyl-concanavalin A to rat thymocytes at 4 degrees C was investigated. Simultaneously, the free binding sites of the cell-bound lectin molecules were quantified by horseradish peroxidase binding. Concanavalin A showed cooperative binding while succinyl-concanavalin A did not. The number of molecules of concanavalin A bound to the cell surface when it was saturated was twice the number of molecules of succinyl-concanavalin A. We interpret these results as showing that the binding of native concanavalin A to thymocytes at 4 degrees C brings about a cooperative modification of the membrane which leads to appearance of new receptors. Divalent succinyl-concanavalin A has no such effect. Horseradish peroxidase binding to cell-bound lectin was shown to be related to the immobilization of membrane receptors; the more they are immobilized, the more receptor-associated lectin can bind horseradish peroxidase. This allowed us to establish that post-binding events, which we called micro-redistribution, occurred at 4 degrees C when either concanavalin A or succinyl-concanavalin A binds to cells. A cooperative restriction of the micromobility of cell receptors is produced by increasing concentrations of concanavalin A. Succinyl-concanavalin A does not restrict cell receptor mobility at any concentration tested. The results are discussed in terms of cell stimulation and cell agglutination.  相似文献   

12.
Agglutination of malignant transformed hamster cells by concanavalin A (ConA) and the lectins from wheat germ (WGA) and soybean (SBA) has been automatically quantitated, by measuring the amount of light transmitted through a cell suspension. The transformed hamster cells were agglutinated by SBA only after treatment with neuraminidase. The initial rate of agglutination and the concentration of lectin (Kc) required for the half-maximum rate (Vm) has been determined. The initial rate and Vm were lower and more temperature-sensitive, and the Kc was higher, for ConA than for WGA and SBA. There was no detectable temperature-dependent phase transition for the initial rate of agglutination. The total number of receptors was lower for ConA than for WGA and SBA and the apparent association constant between lectin molecules and cell surface receptors was higher for ConA (107M?1) than for WGA and SBA (1.6 × 106M?1). The half Vm of agglutination required 75% saturation of the cell receptors for ConA, and only 13–17% saturation of the receptors for SBA and WGA. A 30% decrease in the number of SBA receptors present in agglutinable cells completely prevented their agglutination. The results indicate that there is heterogeneity of lectin receptors on the cell surface and that only a small proportion of the total number of WGA and SBA receptors have to be occupied for agglutination by these lectins.  相似文献   

13.
ABSTRACT. We studied galactose (Gal)-specific binding of the soluble purified 260-kDa Entamoeba histolytica adherence protein to glycosylation deficient Chinese hamster ovary (CHO) cell mutants. Our goal was to further define the lectin's functional activity and carbohydrate receptor specificity. The adherence protein was purified by acid elution from an immunoaffnity column; however, exposure of the surface membrane lectin on viable trophozoites to identical acid pH conditions had no effect on carbohydrate binding activity. Saturable Gal-specific binding of soluble lectin to parental CHO cells was demonstrated at 4°C by radioimmunoassay; the dissociation coefficient (Kd was 2.39 × 10?8 M?1 with 5.97 × 104 lectin receptors present per CHO cell. Gal-specific binding of lectin to Lec2 CHO cell mutants, which have increased N- and O-linked terminal Gal residues on cell surface carbohydrates, was increased due to an enhanced number of receptors (2.41 × 105/cell) rather than a significantly reduced dissociation constant (4.93 × 10?8 M?1). At 4°C, there was no measurable Gal-specific binding of the adherence protein to the Lec and IdlD.Lecl CHO mutants, which contain surface carbohydrates deficient in terminal Gal residues. Binding of lectin (20 μg/ml) to CHO cells was equivalent at 4°C and 37°C and unaltered by adding the microfilament inhibitor, Cytochalasin D (10 μg/ml). Gal-specific binding of the lectin at 4°C was calcium independent and reduced by 81% following adsorption of only 0.2% of the lectin to CHO cells. In summary, these findings indicate that the purified E. histolytica adherence lectin demonstrates saturable Gal-specific binding to 1–6 branched-N-linked and not O-linked galactose terminal cell surface carbohydrates; however, apparently only a small percentage of purified amebic lectin molecules actually possess galactose binding activity.  相似文献   

14.
Exposure of rounded, glass-adherent hemocytes from a Schistosoma mansoni-susceptible (PR albino) and S. mansoni-refractory (10-R2) stock of snails, Biomphalaria glabrata, to fluoresceinlabeled concanavalin A induces a redistribution of surface membrane Con A receptors. Receptor redistribution (patching and capping) on hemocytes from both snail stocks can be characterized as (1) rapid, with maximum cap formation occurring within 15 min of lectin treatment at 22°C, (2) sodium azide sensitive, but only at relatively high inhibitor concentrations (100–200 mm?N3 for capping and 200 mm?N3 for patching inhibition), (3) pronase sensitive (partial), but trypsin resistant, and (4) generally unaffected by exposure of snails to S. mansoni miracidia 60 or 180 min prior to extraction of hemolymph (hemocyte) samples for Con A testing. Although differences in the time course of receptor redistribution are exhibited between PR albino and 10-R2 snail hemocytes, the results of experiments involving sodium azide, proteolytic enzymes, and schistosome exposure strongly suggest that Con A-binding determinants and their associated membrane components on rounded hemocytes are very similar in both susceptible and refractory Biomphalaria stocks. It is concluded that if schistosome recognition in refractory 10-R2 snails is mediated through specific hemocyte membrane components, those components associated with Con A reactivity probably are not directly involved in the recognition process.  相似文献   

15.
M Lüscher-Mattli 《Biopolymers》1987,26(9):1509-1526
The nonspecific interaction of the mitogenic lectin Concanavalin A (Con A) with glycosyl-free liposomes of various composition has been investigated by microcalorimetric titration measurements. The results obtained show the following features of main interest: (1) the affinity constants (Ka) of the interaction of Con A with liposomal bilayers are in the order of magnitude 105–106M?1. The reaction enthalpies (ΔH) are positive, and small (approximately 0.1 KJ mol?1 lipid), compared to the free energy terms (?ΔG = 30–40 KJ mol?1 lipid). All lectin–lipid interactions are strongly entropy-controlled (ΔH/TΔS < 1.0). These thermodynamic features are characteristic for hydrophobic interaction processes. (2) The liposomal head-group charge does not significantly affect the lipid-affinity of Con A. Electrostatic forces thus appear to play a minor role in lectin–lipid interactions. (3) The lipid affinity of Con A is sensitive to the fluidity of the liposomal bilayers, increasing with increasing fluidity. Below the gel to liquid-crystal phase transition temperature, the lectin binding to liposomal bilayers is inhibited. (4) The binding isotherms, corresponding to the interaction of Con A with liposomes, composed of tightly packed, saturated phospholipids, exhibit pronounced positive cooperativity. This phenomenon is absent in the binding curves, corresponding to the interaction of Con A with more fluid liposomal bilayers. (5) The Con A specific inhibitor α-D -methylmannopyranoside (50 mM) drastically increases the molar reaction enthalpy. The Ka term is significantly reduced in presence of the inhibitor sugar. Urea induces analogous changes in the thermodynamic parameters of the lectin–lipid interaction. The effects of α-D -methylmannopyranoside are thus not Con A specific, but are attributable to solvent effects. (6) It was shown that the binding of one Con A molecule affects a large number (approximately 1000) of phospholipid molecules in the liposomal bilayer. (7) The affinity constants (Ka) of the interaction of Con A with glycosyl-free lipids are smaller by a factor of approximately 10, compared to the Ka terms, reported for Con A binding to biological membranes. The presence of glycosidic receptor groups thus controls the specificity of lectin–membrane interactions, whereas the nonspecific lectin–lipid interactions appear to represent the main driving force for the strong attachment of the lectin to membrane surfaces.  相似文献   

16.
Effects of trypsin treatment on insulin and concanavalin A binding to, and glucose and proline transport in, dissociated R3230AC mammary adenocarcinoma cells were examined. Reduction of binding of 125I-labelled insulin was dependent on the amount of trypsin used, the temperature and the time of the incubation period. Under conditions that reduced insulin binding by greater than 75%, transport of glucose and proline was reduced by less than 15%. Scatchard analysis of insulin binding after trypsin treatment yielded slopes similar to those from cells not exposed to trypsin, assuming either two classes of receptors or an average affinity, K?e. Dissociation of bound insulin from untreated or trypsin-treated cells was enhanced by addition of excess unlabelled ligand. Insulin added in vitro, which decreased glucose transport in untreated cells, produced a decrease in glucose transport in cells treated with trypsin for 5 min (insulin binding was decreased 35%), but not in cells treated for 45 min (insulin binding was decreased 90%). Binding of the plant lectin concanavalin A was also reduced by trypsin treatment, but to a lesser extent and with a different time-course than for insulin. Scatchard analysis of the binding of concanavalin A in untreated and trypsin-treated cells yielded comparable values for Kd. The insulinomimetic actions of concanavalin A on glucose transport were abolished after brief exposure to trypsin. Pre-treatment of cells with concanavalin A reduced insulin binding and partially protected insulin receptors from trypsin digestion, but the inability to remove all of the concanavalin A precluded its use as a method to protect insulin receptors. Thus, in this rat mammary tumor, the number, but not the affinity or functional activity, of insulin receptors can be reduced by trypsin treatment without significant effects on glucose or A system amino acid transport.  相似文献   

17.
Normal human peripheral blood granulocytes which are tagged with 1-fluoro-2,4-dinitrobenzene (DNFB) are agglutinated by concanavalin A (ConA) in a way which resembles the pattern of reactivity displayed by leukemic cells. The present study further defines this reaction. The binding of ConA to untagged and DNP-tagged granulocytes, treated with DNFB at a ratio of 1011 molecules/cell, was quantified by isotopic dilution experiments employing [3H]ConA. Similar amounts of the lectin were bound to untagged and DNP-tagged cells following incubation for 5 min at 4 °C or 30 min at 24 °C: 1.1 × 105 molecules/cell, 4.6 × 1022 of surface area, and 1.6 × 103/μg of protein. The binding of [3H]ConA to both untagged and DNP-tagged cells was inhibited to the same degree by α-methylglucopyranoside (α-MG). Fixation with either glutaraldehyde or formaldehyde, which immobilizes ConA receptor sites, completely inhibited the agglutination of both untagged and DNP-tagged cells although lectin binding was unchanged. This suggests that the inhibition of agglutination was not due to the blocking of ConA-binding sites by aldehyde groups but rather to the immobilization of lectin receptors. We conclude that dinitrophenylation of normal granulocytes facilitates the rearrangement of lectin receptors in a way which resembles the ConA-induced clustering of sites which have been observed with malignant and transformed cells.  相似文献   

18.
Glucose utilization, energy metabolism and associated membrane changes, have been studied in D+ myeloid leukemic cells that can be induced to undergo cell differentiation to mature granulocytes by incubation with the appropriate conditioned medium (CM) and in D? myeloid leukemic cells that cannot be induced to differentiate to mature cells. Before incubation with CM, glycolysis and the glycolytic production of ATP were lower and the activity of the pentose cycle was higher in D+ than in D? cells. ATP depletion induced a higher degree of agglutination by concanavalin A in D? than in D+ cells, indicating a difference in their surface membrane. There were no detectable differences in the transport of glucose and the synthesis of sterols and fatty acids. After incubation with CM, the D+ cells, like normal granulocytes, showed a higher glycolysis, produced their ATP more through glycolysis than oxidative phosphorylation, became less dependent on the exogenous supply of glucose and oxygen and had a lower rate of sterol and fatty acid synthesis. The differentiating D+ cells also showed a change in their surface membrane resulting in an increased agglutinability without a change in ATP content and a stimulation of the pentose cycle by concanavalin A. These properties, which were not acquired by D? cells, were found before most of the D+ cells had differentiated to mature granulocytes. The data indicate, that the block in the ability of the D? cells to differentiate and the acquisition of the metabolic properties of normal granulocytes by differentiating D+ cells, were associated with differences in the organization of the cell surface membrane.  相似文献   

19.
Several aspects of the interaction of various lectins with the surface of Ehrlich ascites carcinoma cells are described. The order of agglutinating activity for various lectins is Ricinus communis greater than wheat germ greater than or equal to concanavalin A greater than or equal to soybean greater than Limulus polyphemus. No agglutination was noted for Ulex europaeus. Using 125I-labeled lectins it was determined that there are 1.6 and 7 times as many Ricinus communis lectin binding sites for concanavalin A and soybean lectins. Sodium deoxycholate-solubilized plasma membrane material was subjected to lectin affinity chromatography and sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis. The lectin receptors of the plasma membrane appeared to be heterogeneous and some qualitative differences could be discerned among the electrophoretically analyzed material, which bound to and was specifically eluted from the various lectin affinity columns. The characteristics of elution of bound material from individual lectin columns indicated secondary hydrophobic interactions between concanavalin A or wheat germ agglutinin and their respective lectin receptor molecules.  相似文献   

20.
The effect of concanavalin A and its succinylated derivative on cell agglutination and potassium compartmentation of mature and immature erythrocytes was observed. The binding of tetravalent concanavalin A to the surface glycoproteins of rabbit erythrocytes leads to a change in the properties of the surface membrane, which results in an induction of cell agglutination and concomitant release of potassium from the cells. Both of the phenomena induced by concanavalin A are temperature dependent, and observed at above 15°C.Divalent succinylated concanavalin A, lacking the inducing activity of surface glycoprotein cross-linking into patches and caps, caused neither cell agglutination nor change in the potassium compartmentation of erythrocytes and reticulocytes.In the case of immature reticulocytes, however, remarkable agglutination of the cells was induced without a change in the potassium compartmentation after treatment with tetravalent concanavalin A.It is suggested that changes in the molecular organization of the surface membrane occur in which potassium compartmentation of the reticulocytes becomes more susceptible to surface glycoprotein cross-linking during cellular maturation.  相似文献   

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