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1.
O'leary  M. T  Blakemore  W. F 《Brain Cell Biology》1997,26(4):191-206
A lack of suitable markers for cells which undergo division following transplantation has hindered studies assessing the long-term survival of glial cell grafts in the CNS. A probe specific to the rat Y chromosome was used to identify male glial cells grafted into an area of ethidium bromide-induced demyelination in syngeneic adult female rat spinal cord 4 weeks, 6 months and 12 months post-transplantation. At all time points there was extensive oligodendrocyte remyelination of transplanted lesions, and graft-derived cells were present within the lesion up to 12 months post-transplantation. In order to demonstrate graft-derived oligodendrocytes in the remyelinated region at 6 and 12 months, double-labelling studies were performed using the oligodendrocyte-specific antibodies carbonic anhydrase II or phosphatidyl ethanolamine-binding protein in combination with the Y chromosome probe. It was found that the majority of oligodendrocytes in the transplanted region were graft-derived. Graft-mediated remyelination was associated with a reduction in myelin sheath thickness and increase in nodal frequency similar to that observed in spontaneous remyelination, suggesting that, like axons remyelinated spontaneously, axons remyelinated by grafted cells will be capable of secure conduction. An alteration in the immunoreactivity of oligodendrocytes from carbonic anhydrase II-negative in the unlesioned dorsal funiculus to carbonic anhydrase II-positive in the remyelinated dorsal funiculus was considered to reflect a reduction in the amount of myelin supported by each oligodendrocyte, leading to the proposal that carbonic anhydrase II immunoreactivity may provide a means of identifying areas of remyelination in normally carbonic anhydrase II-negative white matter tracts.  相似文献   

2.
The activities of three myelin-associated enzymes, carbonic anhydrase, 5'-nucleotidase, and 2',3'-cyclic nucleotide-3'-phosphodiesterase (CNP), were measured in oligodendrocytes, neurons, and astrocytes isolated from the brain of rats 10, 20, 60, and 120 days old. The carbonic anhydrase specific activity in oligodendrocytes was three- to fivefold higher than that in brain homogenates at each age, and, at all the ages, low activities of this enzyme were measured in neurons and astrocytes. The oligodendrocytes and astrocytes from the brains of rats at all ages had higher activities of the membrane-bound enzyme 5'-nucleotidase than was observed in neurons. In oligodendrocytes from 10- and 20-day-old rats, the 5'-nucleotidase activity was two-to threefold the activity in the homogenates (i.e., relative specific activity = 2.0-3.0), and the relative specific activity of this enzyme in the oligodendrocytes declined to less than 1.0 at the later ages, concomitant with the accumulation of 5'-nucleotidase in myelin. The CNP activity was always higher in oligodendrocytes than in neurons, but not appreciably different from that in astrocytes from 20 days of age onward. The relative specific activity of CNP was highest in the oligodendrocytes from 10-day-old rats but was lower, at all ages, than we had observed in bovine oligodendrocytes. These enzyme activities in oligodendroglia are quite different in amount and developmental pattern from those reported previously for myelin.  相似文献   

3.
The peroxidase-antiperoxidase technique was used for immunocytochemical localization of carbonic anhydrase in the mouse spinal cord to detect whether this antigen was normally present in myelinated fibers, in oligodendrocytes in both white and gray matter, and in astrocytes, and to determine where the carbonic anhydrase might be localized in the spinal cords of dysmyelinating mutant (shiverer) mice. The most favorable methods for treating tissue were: 1) immersion in formalin-ethanol-acetic acid followed by paraffin embedding, or 2) light fixation with paraformaldehyde and preparation of vibratome sections. Carnoy's solution, followed by paraffin embedding, extracted myelin from the tissue, while aqueous aldehydes, when used before paraffin embedding, reduced staining everywhere except at sites of compact myelin. The latter conclusion was based, in part, on the almost complete loss of this antigen from the shiverer cord, where compact myelin is known to be virtually absent but where membrane-bound carbonic anhydrase was demonstrated enzymatically. When the optimal methods were used with normal mouse cords, carbonic anhydrase was found throughout the white matter columns and in the oligodendrocytes in gray and white matter. The staining of the white matter was attributed to myelinated fibers because of the similarity in distribution to both a histological myelin stain and the immunocytochemical staining for myelin basic protein. In the mutant mice the oligodendrocyte cell bodies and processes, which were stained in all areas of the spinal cord, were particularly numerous at the periphery of the sections. In contrast to the oligodendrocytes, the fibrous astrocytes appeared to lack carbonic anhydrase, or to have lower than detectable levels, since the astrocyte marker, glial fibrillary acidic protein, had a very different distribution from that of carbonic anhydrase. Even finer localization was obtained in vibratome sections, where the antibody against carbonic anhydrase permitted visualization of the processes connecting oligodendrocytes to myelinated fibers in the normal adult spinal cord.  相似文献   

4.
In the cerebellum, the isoenzyme II of carbonic anhydrase (CAII) appears to be a specific oligodendrocyte marker. Formation and maturation of oligodendrocytes during the postnatal development of rat cerebellum were followed by using specific immune serum directed against CAII for immunohistofluorescence and radioimmunoassay. Few oligodendrocytes are present in the cerebellum of the newborn rat. Their number increases rapidly between the fourth and the tenth days after birth and then more slowly until the end of the third week. Sequential changes in oligodendrocyte morphology have been observed. Determinations of CAII in cerebellar homogenate by radioimmunoassay show that the CAII level is low from birth to the end of the second week, the increase in the number of oligodendrocytes being accompanied by a small increase in the CAII level. Subsequent cell maturation is accompanied by significant accumulation of CAII.  相似文献   

5.
A physiologically significant level of intracellular carbonic anhydrase has been identified in Chlamydomonas reinhardtii after lysis of the cell wall-less mutant, cw15, and two intracellular polypeptides have been identified which bind to anti-carbonic anhydrase antisera. The susceptibility of the intracellular activity to sulfonamide carbonic anhydrase inhibitors is more than three orders-of-magnitude less than that of the periplasmic enzyme, indicating that the intracellular activity was distinct from the periplasmic from of the enzyme. When electrophoretically separated cell extracts or chloroplast stromal fractions were probed with either anti-C. reinhardtii periplasmic carbonic anhydrase antiserum or anti-spinach carbonic anhydrase antiserum, immunoreactive polypeptides of 45 kilodaltons and 110 kilodaltons were observed with both antisera. The strongly immunoreactive 37 kilodalton polypeptide due to the periplasmic carbonic anhydrase was also observed in lysed cells, but neither the 37 kilodalton nor the 110 kilodalton polypeptides were present in the chloroplast stromal fraction. These studies have identified intracellular carbonic anhydrase activity, and putative intracellular carbonic anhydrase polypeptides in Chlamydomonas reinhardtii represented by a 45 kilodalton polypeptide in the chloroplast and a 110 kilodalton form probably in the cytoplasm, which may be associated with an intracellular inorganic carbon concentrating system.  相似文献   

6.
Carbonic Anhydrase Immunostaining in Astrocytes in the Rat Cerebral Cortex   总被引:7,自引:3,他引:4  
Carbonic anhydrase is known to occur in the choroid plexus, oligodendrocytes, and myelin, and to be virtually absent from neurons, in the mammalian CNS; however, there is significant controversy whether it is also present in astrocytes. When brain sections from adult rats were stained for simultaneous immunofluorescence of carbonic anhydrase and the astrocyte marker glutamine synthetase, both antigens were detected in the same glial cells in the cortical gray matter, whereas the oligodendrocytes and myelinated fibers in and adjacent to the white matter showed immunofluorescence only for carbonic anhydrase. Some glial cells in the gray matter also showed double immunofluorescence for carbonic anhydrase and glial fibrillary acidic protein. These results indicate that there is carbonic anhydrase in some astrocytes in the mammalian CNS.  相似文献   

7.
The cellular distribution of carbonic anhydrase is a key characteristic for the role of the enzyme in cell function. In several epithelia involved in bicarbonate transport this enzyme is located in the plasma membrane. Because bicarbonate secretion is an important mechanism in bile formation by the liver, we investigated the presence of carbonic anhydrase activity in isolated plasma membranes from rat hepatocytes. Carbonic anhydrase activity was enriched 1.79-fold in plasma membrane preparations. This activity was inhibited by acetazolamide and activated by Triton X-100, but was insensitive to Cl- or CNO-. It is highly unlikely that the low contamination of cytoplasm and intracellular membranes could account for the presence of carbonic anhydrase activity in plasma membrane preparations. Moreover, the results from resuspension/washing of plasma membrane fractions in ionic media suggest an absence of soluble carbonic anhydrase adsorption upon plasma membrane. Accordingly, the present findings provide strong evidence for the presence of carbonic anhydrase in the plasma membrane of rat hepatocytes.  相似文献   

8.
Prokaryotic carbonic anhydrases   总被引:2,自引:0,他引:2  
Carbonic anhydrases catalyze the reversible hydration of CO(2) [CO(2)+H(2)Oright harpoon over left harpoon HCO(3)(-)+H(+)]. Since the discovery of this zinc (Zn) metalloenzyme in erythrocytes over 65 years ago, carbonic anhydrase has not only been found in virtually all mammalian tissues but is also abundant in plants and green unicellular algae. The enzyme is important to many eukaryotic physiological processes such as respiration, CO(2) transport and photosynthesis. Although ubiquitous in highly evolved organisms from the Eukarya domain, the enzyme has received scant attention in prokaryotes from the Bacteria and Archaea domains and has been purified from only five species since it was first identified in Neisseria sicca in 1963. Recent work has shown that carbonic anhydrase is widespread in metabolically diverse species from both the Archaea and Bacteria domains indicating that the enzyme has a more extensive and fundamental role in prokaryotic biology than previously recognized. A remarkable feature of carbonic anhydrase is the existence of three distinct classes (designated alpha, beta and gamma) that have no significant sequence identity and were invented independently. Thus, the carbonic anhydrase classes are excellent examples of convergent evolution of catalytic function. Genes encoding enzymes from all three classes have been identified in the prokaryotes with the beta and gamma classes predominating. All of the mammalian isozymes (including the 10 human isozymes) belong to the alpha class; however, only nine alpha class carbonic anhydrase genes have thus far been found in the Bacteria domain and none in the Archaea domain. The beta class is comprised of enzymes from the chloroplasts of both monocotyledonous and dicotyledonous plants as well as enzymes from phylogenetically diverse species from the Archaea and Bacteria domains. The only gamma class carbonic anhydrase that has thus far been isolated and characterized is from the methanoarchaeon Methanosarcina thermophila. Interestingly, many prokaryotes contain carbonic anhydrase genes from more than one class; some even contain genes from all three known classes. In addition, some prokaryotes contain multiple genes encoding carbonic anhydrases from the same class. The presence of multiple carbonic anhydrase genes within a species underscores the importance of this enzyme in prokaryotic physiology; however, the role(s) of this enzyme is still largely unknown. Even though most of the information known about the function(s) of carbonic anhydrase primarily relates to its role in cyanobacterial CO(2) fixation, the prokaryotic enzyme has also been shown to function in cyanate degradation and the survival of intracellular pathogens within their host. Investigations into prokaryotic carbonic anhydrase have already led to the identification of a new class (gamma) and future research will undoubtedly reveal novel functions for carbonic anhydrase in prokaryotes.  相似文献   

9.
By measuring 18O exchange from doubly labeled CO2 (13C18O18O), intracellular carbonic anhydrase activity was studied with protoplasts and chloroplasts isolated from Chlamydomonas reinhardtii grown either on air (low inorganic carbon [Ci]) or air enriched with 5% CO2 (high Ci). Intact low Ci protoplasts had a 10-fold higher carbonic anhydrase activity than did high Ci protoplasts. Application of dextran-bound inhibitor and quaternary ammonium sulfanilamide, both known as membrane impermeable inhibitors of carbonic anhydrase, had no influence on the catalysis of 18O exchange, indicating that cross-contamination with extracellular carbonic anhydrase was not responsible for the observed activity. This intracellular in vivo activity from protoplasts was inhibited by acetazolamide and ethoxyzolamide. Intracellular carbonic anhydrase activity was partly associated with intact chloroplasts isolated from high and low Ci cells, and the latter had a sixfold greater rate of catalysis. The presence of dextran-bound inhibitor had no effect on chloroplast-associated carbonic anhydrase, whereas 150 micromolar ethoxyzolamide caused a 61 to 67% inhibition of activity. These results indicate that chloroplastic carbonic anhydrase was located within the plastid and that it was relatively insensitive to ethoxyzolamide. Carbonic anhydrase activity in crude homogenates of protoplasts and chloroplasts was about six times higher in the low Ci than in high Ci preparations. Further separation into soluble and insoluble fractions together with inhibitor studies revealed that there are at least two different forms of intracellular carbonic anhydrase. One enzyme, which was rather insoluble and relatively insensitive to ethoxyzolamide, is likely an intrachloroplastic carbonic anhydrase. The second carbonic anhydrase, which was soluble and sensitive to ethoxyzolamide, is most probably located in an extrachloroplastic compartment.  相似文献   

10.
Cammer  Wendy; Zhang  Hong 《Glycobiology》1993,3(6):627-631
To distinguish macroglia (oligodendrocytes and astrocytes) frommicroglia in the brain, ‘markers’ that have beenused in previous studies include carbonic anhydrase II (CAII)immunoreactivity for macroglia, and Ricinusand Bandeiraea(BS-I)lectins for microglia. However, in rats <1 week of age, manycells stained intensely with both anti-CAII and the labelledBS-I lectin. If some of the BS-I+/CAII+ cells were macroglia,and not microglia, BS-I should no longer be regarded as specificfor microglia. To confirm or rule out that possibility, lectinhistochemistry and double immunofluorescence staining were performedin tissue from the brains of normal young rats and from themicroglial cell-enriched brains of myelin-deficient mutant rats.BS-I+/ CAII+ cells were found and examined. The BS-I +/CAII-cellsresembled macrophages and microglia and did, indeed, differin sizes and shapes from the BS-I+/+cells. The BS-I+/CAII+ cellsappeared to represent CAII+ putative oligodendrocyte precursorsdescribed previously. Although less obvious, a lectin-bindingstructure was also observed in astrocytes. Lectins may cross-reactwith macroglial glycoproteins. For example, a glycoprotein foundin o ligodendrocytes and myelin, the myelin-associated glycoprotein(MAG), is related to the Ig superfamily and cell adhesion molecules.Therefore, it is cautioned that lectins and antibodies againstmembers of the latter families of proteins should be used ascell-type specific markers only if other parameters are alsoexamined. astrocytes carbonic anhydrase lectins microglia oligodendrocytes  相似文献   

11.
Carbonic anhydrases in higher plants and aquatic microorganisms   总被引:3,自引:1,他引:2  
At physiological pH-values CO2 and HCO3are the dominant inorganic carbon species and the interconversion between both is catalyzed by carbonic anhydrase (EC 4.2.1.1). This enzyme is widely distributed among photosynthetic organisms. In the first part of the review, the similarities and the differences of carbonic anhydrases from plants and animals are briefly described. In the second part recent advances in molecular biology to understand the structure of carbonic anhydrase from higher terrestrial plants as well as its involvement in photosynthetic CO2 fixation are summarized. Lastly, the review deals with the presence of carbonic anhydrase in aquatic organisms including cyanobacteria, microalgae, macroalgae and angiosperms. Evidence for the presence of extracellular and intracellular isozymes in these organisms are discussed. The properties and function(s) of carbonic anhydrase during the operation of the inorganic carbon concentrating mechanism are also described.  相似文献   

12.
Carbonic anhydrase was assayed and carbonic anhydrase and 5'-nucleotidase were localized in the CNS of myelin-deficient mutant rats and normal littermates. The carbonic anhydrase specific activities were reduced by 61% and 29% in the mutants' forebrains and cerebella, respectively, and the total carbonic anhydrase activity in the spinal cords was reduced by 35%. Immunostained cells were found in gray matter from both normal and mutant rats, but, in the mutants, there was a marked deficiency of interfascicular oligodendrocytes in the regions that are normally occupied by white matter. It is suggested that a developmental study could indicate the step(s) at which normal differentiation of interfascicular oligodendroglia is blocked in this mutant.  相似文献   

13.
Summary The postnatal expression of carbonic anhydrase (CA) activity in glia and neurons was investigated by a modified light microscopical method of Hansson. Strong CA activity was observed during the first postnatal week in ameboid microglia, clustering in the cingulum, the periaqueductal region, the roof of the lateral ventricles and the white matter of the cerebellum. The intensity of staining gradually decreased during the second week and finally disappeared. From the 9th postnatal day on, cerebellar Purkinje cells expressed strong CA activity, which completely disappeared by the end of the investigation period. CA staining of the oligodendrocytes and pericytes could be observed from the first postnatal day on. The present results raised the possibility that carbonic anhydrase activity may play a role in the regulation of the development and proliferation of some cell types, perhaps via intracellular pH changes.  相似文献   

14.
The postnatal expression of carbonic anhydrase (CA) activity in glia and neurons was investigated by a modified light microscopical method of Hansson. Strong CA activity was observed during the first postnatal week in ameboid microglia, clustering in the cingulum, the periaqueductal region, the roof of the lateral ventricles and the white matter of the cerebellum. The intensity of staining gradually decreased during the second week and finally disappeared. From the 9th postnatal day on, cerebellar Purkinje cells expressed strong CA activity, which completely disappeared by the end of the investigation period. CA staining of the oligodendrocytes and pericytes could be observed from the first postnatal day on. The present results raised the possibility that carbonic anhydrase activity may play a role in the regulation of the development and proliferation of some cell types, perhaps via intracellular pH changes.  相似文献   

15.
Affinity chromatography of carbonic anhydrase   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
An insoluble support for affinity chromatography of carbonic anhydrase has been prepared by coupling Sulfamylon (p-aminomethylbenzene sulfonamide) to Sepharose 4B. Carbonic anhydrase binds to Sulfamylon-Sepharose very strongly and can be eluted under mild conditions by the addition of enzyme inhibitors. The gel was used to purify carbonic anhydrase from human erythrocytes and to separate isozymes B and C. It was also employed to separate native enzyme from modified carbonic anhydrases. The apoenzyme and the carboxymethyl enzyme of human carbonic anhydrase B were both isolated by this method.  相似文献   

16.
1. Carbonic anhydrase (carbonate hydro-lyase, EC 4.2.1.1) has been purified from erythrocytes of hagfish (Myxine glutinosa). A single form with low specific CO2 hydration activity was isolated. The purified carbonic anhydrase appeared homogeneous judging from polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis and gel filtration experiments. The protein has a molecular weight of about 29 000, corresponding to about 260 amino acid residues. This molecular weight is in accordance with other vertebrate carbonic anhydrases with the exception of the elasmobranch enzymes, which have Mr 36 000--39 000. 2. The molecular weight obtained for hagfish carbonic anhydrase indicates that a carbonic anhydrase with Mr approx. 29 000 is the ancestral type of the vertebrate enzyme rather than, as in sharks, a heavier carbonic anhydrase molecule. 3. The circular dichroism spectrum may indicate a somewhat different structural arrangement of aromatic amino acid residues in this enzyme than in the mammalian carbonic anhydrases. 4. The enzyme is strongly inhibited by acetazolamide and also to a lesser extent by monovalent anions. 5. Zn2+, which is essential for activity, appears, contrary to other characterized carbonic anhydrases, less strongly bound in the active site of the enzyme.  相似文献   

17.
Butt  A. M.  Ibrahim  M.  Gregson  N.  Berry  M. 《Brain Cell Biology》1998,27(4):271-280
Brain Cell Biology - We have previously demonstrated differences in the expression of carbonic anhydrase II (CAII) in oligodendrocyte units myelinating small and large diameter fibres in the...  相似文献   

18.
The protein A-gold technique was used to localize carbonic anhydrase isozymes on ultrathin frozen sections of kidney collecting duct epithelial cells and erythrocytes. The particulate nature of the gold marker gives a more precise appreciation of the intracellular distribution of this enzyme than has been previously possible, and allows the intensity of the labeling to be quantified. Intercalated cells showed four times more labeling over the cytosol than adjacent principal cells in collecting ducts from the inner stripe of the outer medulla: by double-labeling using protein A-gold particles of different sizes, carbonic anhydrase isozymes B and C were simultaneously localized in erythrocytes.  相似文献   

19.
Summary The protein A-gold technique was used to localize carbonic anhydrase isozymes on ultrathin frozen sections of kidney collecting duct epithelial cells and erythrocytes. The particulate nature of the gold marker gives a more precise appreciation of the intracellular distribution of this enzyme than has been previously possible, and allows the intensity of the labeling to be quantified. Intercalated cells showed four times more labeling over the cytosol than adjacent principal cells in collecting ducts from the inner stripe of the outer medulla: by double-labeling using protein A-gold particles of different sizes, carbonic anhydrase isozymes B and C were simultaneously localized in erythrocytes.  相似文献   

20.
The distribution of carbonic anhydrase, K+-ATPase and K+-phosphatase in the subcellular fractions of gastric mucosa was studied. It was found that 90% of carbonic anhydrase are localized in the hyaloplasm, whereas K+-ATPase and K+-phosphatase are predominantly localized in the microsomal fraction. Subfractionation of the microsomal fraction in a sucrose density gradient showed that the membrane-bound carbonic anhydrase (5% of total content) and K+-ATPase are bound to various cell organelles. It is concluded that carbonic anhydrase functions as an intracellular pH-stat and is not directly involved in proton generation by the cell.  相似文献   

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