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1.
The therapeutic activity of ricin A-chain immunotoxins is undermined by their rapid clearance from the bloodstream of animals by the liver. This uptake has generally been attributed to recognition of the mannose-terminating oligosaccharides present on ricin A-chain by receptors present on the non-parenchymal (Kupffer and sinusoidal) cells of the liver. However, we demonstrate here that, in the mouse, the liver uptake of a ricin A-chain immunotoxin occurs in both parenchymal and non-parenchymal cells in equal amounts. This is in contrast to the situation in the rat, where uptake of the immunotoxin is predominantly by the non-parenchymal cells. Recognition of sugar residues on the A-chain portion of the immunotoxin plays an important role in the liver uptake by both cell types in both species. However it is not the only mechanism since, firstly, an immunotoxin containing ricin A-chain which had been effectively deglycosylated with metaperiodate and cyanoborohydride was still trapped to a significant extent by hepatic non-parenchymal cells after it was injected into mice. Secondly, deglycosylation, while eliminating uptake of the free A-chain by parenchymal and non-parenchymal cells in vitro, only reduced the uptake of an immunotoxin by either cell type by about half. Thirdly, the addition of excess D-mannose or L-fucose inhibited the uptake of free A-chain by mouse liver cell cultures by more than 80% but only inhibited the uptake of the native A-chain immunotoxin by about half and had little effect on the uptake of the deglycosylated ricin A-chain immunotoxin. Recognition of the antibody portion of the immunotoxin by liver cells seems improbable, since antibody alone or an antibody-bovine serum albumin conjugate were not taken up in appreciable amounts by the cultures. Possibly attachment of the A-chain to the antibody exposes sites on the A-chain that are recognised by liver cells in vitro and in vivo.  相似文献   

2.
1. Hepatic uptake of low-density lipoprotein (LDL) in parenchymal cells and non-parenchymal cells was studied in control-fed and cholesterol-fed rabbits after intravenous injection of radioiodinated native LDL (125I-TC-LDL) and methylated LDL (131I-TC-MetLDL). 2. LDL was taken up by rabbit liver parenchymal cells, as well as by endothelial and Kupffer cells. Parenchymal cells, however, were responsible for 92% of the hepatic LDL uptake. 3. Of LDL in the hepatocytes, 89% was taken up via the B,E receptor, whereas 16% and 32% of the uptake of LDL in liver endothelial cells and Kupffer cells, respectively, was B,E receptor-dependent. 4. Cholesterol feeding markedly reduced B,E receptor-mediated uptake of LDL in parenchymal liver cells and in Kupffer cells, to 19% and 29% of controls, respectively. Total uptake of LDL in liver endothelial cells was increased about 2-fold. This increased uptake is probably mediated via the scavenger receptor. The B,E receptor-independent association of LDL with parenchymal cells was not affected by the cholesterol feeding. 5. It is concluded that the B,E receptor is located in parenchymal as well as in the non-parenchymal rabbit liver cells, and that this receptor is down-regulated by cholesterol feeding. Parenchymal cells are the main site of hepatic uptake of LDL, both under normal conditions and when the number of B,E receptors is down-regulated by cholesterol feeding. In addition, LDL is taken up by B,E receptor-independent mechanism(s) in rabbit liver parenchymal, endothelial and Kupffer cells. The non-parenchymal liver cells may play a quantitatively important role when the concentration of circulating LDL is maintained at a high level in plasma, being responsible for 26% of hepatic uptake of LDL in cholesterol-fed rabbits as compared with 8% in control-fed rabbits. The proportion of hepatic LDL uptake in endothelial cells was greater than 5-fold higher in the diet-induced hypercholesterolaemic rabbits than in controls.  相似文献   

3.
Parenchymal and non-parenchymal cells were isolated from adult rat liver that had been fully regenerated after a 70% partial hepatectomy. The characteristics of the parenchymal cell preparations from regenerated rat liver indicated that they were a homogeneous population and comparable with parenchymal cells isolated from intact liver. The parenchymal cells from regenerated adult rat liver contain glucokinase, hexokinase, pyruvate kinase type I and aldolase B. The non-parenchymal cells contain hexokinase, pyruvate kinase type III and aldolase B. When cells were isolated at different times of the day from rats on controlled feeding schedules, variation of tyrosine aminotransferase activity and liver glycogen content were observed in the parenchymal cells in keeping with the reported diurnal oscillations found in whole liver extracts. When parenchymal cells were isolated from rats 48 and 72h after partial hepatectomy, different isoenzyme patterns were observed. These cells appeared to synthesize pyruvate kinase type III, a function that was assigned previously to non-parenchymal cells or to foetal rat liver hepatocytes.  相似文献   

4.
Mannose receptor mediated uptake by the reticuloendothelial system has been suggested as an explanation for the rapid removal of ricin A chain antibody conjugates from the circulation after their administration. We have measured, in the rat, hepatic uptake of a ricin A chain antibody conjugate in vivo and its susceptibility to inhibition by a mannosylated protein and have measured uptake of the conjugate in vitro by rat parenchymal and non-parenchymal liver cells. The results indicate that rapid hepatic uptake of conjugate does occur in vivo; cultured non-parenchymal cells accumulate the conjugate to a much greater degree than cultured parenchymal cells and that mannose receptors appear to be involved in the process.  相似文献   

5.
The rate of Cd accumulation by adult rat liver parenchymal cells in serum free primary culture in the presence of 100 μM CdCl2 was 10 times greater than that by non-parenchymal Kupffer cells. Addition of the monothiol chelating agents, cysteine and penicillamine, decreased Cd uptake in both cell types, the effect becoming more pronounced as the monothiol concentration was increased from 0.1 to 1.0 mM. These monothiols thus appear to reduce the availability of Cd for transport across the cell membrane. In contrast 1–10 molar excesses of the dithiol agents 2,3-dimercaptopropanol (BAL) or dithiothreitol (DTT) stimulated to variable extents the rate of Cd accumulation 2–10-fold in parenchymal cells and by over 100-fold in Kupffer cells. Supplementation of the media with 3% serum had little effect on the Cd accumulation in the presence of monothiols but substantially depressed Cd uptake in the presence of dithiols. Intravenous injection of Cd (0.05 mg/kg CdCl2) with up to a 10-fold molar excess of cysteine or penicillamine had little effect on the hepatocellular Cd distribution. However Cd uptake by non-parenchymal cells was increased markedly by the simultaneous administration of BAL or DTT in 2 or 10 molar excess. Evidence is provided that these results may be partially explained by the endocytosis, particularly in Kupffer cells, of colloidal complexes of Cd which are formed with the dithiols but not the monothiols. These observations demonstrate that the physicochemical form of Cd determines its hepatocellular distribution which may be an important factor in the manifestation of Cd toxicity after thiol treatment.  相似文献   

6.
1. Modified lipoproteins have been implicated to play a significant role in the pathogenesis of atherosclerosis. In view of this we studied the fate and mechanism of uptake in vivo of acetylated human low-density lipoprotein (acetyl-LDL). Injected intravenously into rats, acetyl-LDL is rapidly cleared from the blood. At 10min after intravenous injection, 83% of the injected dose is recovered in liver. Separation of the liver into a parenchymal and non-parenchymal cell fraction indicates that the non-parenchymal cells contain a 30-50-fold higher amount of radioactivity per mg of cell protein than the parenchymal cells. 2. When incubated in vitro, freshly isolated non-parenchymal cells show a cell-association of acetyl-LDL that is 13-fold higher per mg of cell protein than with parenchymal cells, and the degradation of acetyl-LDL is 50-fold higher. The degradation of acetyl-LDL by both cell types is blocked by chloroquine (10-50mum) and NH(4)Cl (10mm), indicating that it occurs in the lysosomes. Competition experiments indicate the presence of a specific acetyl-LDL receptor and degradation pathway, which is different from that for native LDL. 3. Degradation of acetyl-LDL by non-parenchymal cells is completely blocked by trifluoperazine, penfluridol and chlorpromazine with a relative effectivity that corresponds to their effectivity as calmodulin inhibitors. The high-affinity degradation of human LDL is also blocked by trifluoperazine (100mum). The inhibition of the processing of acetyl-LDL occurs at a site after the binding-internalization process and before intralysosomal degradation. It is suggested that calmodulin, or a target with a similar sensitivity to calmodulin inhibitors, is involved in the transport of the endocytosed acetyl-LDL to or into the lysosomes. 4. It is concluded that the liver, and in particular non-parenchymal liver cells, are in vivo the major site for acetyl-LDL uptake. This efficient uptake and degradation mechanism for acetyl-LDL in the liver might form in vivo the major protection system against the potential pathogenic action of modified lipoproteins.  相似文献   

7.
Incorporation of 8 mol% lactosylceramide in small unilamellar vesicles consisting of cholesterol, dimyristoylphosphatidylcholine and phosphatidylserine in a molar ratio of 5:4:1 and containing [3H]inulin as an aqueous-space marker resulted in a 3-fold decreased half-life of the vesicles in blood and a corresponding increase in liver uptake after intracardial injection into rats. The increase in liver uptake was mostly accounted for by an enhanced uptake in the parenchymal cells, while the uptake by the non-parenchymal cells was only slightly increased. The uptake of both the control and the glycolipid-containing vesicles by the non-parenchymal cell fraction could be attributed completely to the Kupffer cells; no radioactivity was found in the endothelial cells. The effect of lactosylceramide on liver uptake and blood disappearance of the liposomes was effectively counteracted by desialylated fetuin, injected shortly before the liposome dose. This observation supports the notion that a galactose-specific receptor is involved in the liver uptake of lactosylceramide liposomes.  相似文献   

8.
The reduced minus oxidized difference spectra from isolated parenchymal and non-parenchymal cells from rat liver indicate that the non-parenchymal cells contain a considerable amount of peroxidase. This interpretation is favoured by the more than 30 times higher specific activity of peroxidase (EC 1.11.1.7) in the non-parenchymal cells as compared to the parenchymal cells. The catalase (EC 1.11.1.6) activity in the non-parenchymal cells is 4 times lower than in the parenchymal cells. These results are consistent with an antimicrobial function of the non-parenchymal cells in liver.  相似文献   

9.
1. Intact and pure parenchymal and non-parenchymal cells were isolated from rat liver. The specific activities of several mitochondrial enzymes were determined in both parenchymal and non-parenchymal cell homogenates to characterize the mitochondria in these liver cell types. 2.In general the activities of mitochondrial enzymes were lower in non-parenchymal liver cells than in parenchymal cells. The specific activity of pyruvate carboxylase in non-parenchymal cells expressed as the percentage of that in parenchymal cells was onlu 2% for glutamate dehydrogenase 4.3% and for cytochrome c oxidase 79.4%. Monoamine oxidase, as an exception, has an equal specific activity in both cell types. 3. The activity ratio of pyruvate carboxylase at 10 mM pyruvate over 0.1 mM pyruvate is 3.35 for parenchymal cells and 1.50 for non-parenchymal cells. This indicates that non-parenchymal liver cells only contain the high affinity form of pyruvate carboxylase in contrast to parenchymal cells. 4. The ratio of glycerol-3-phosphate cytochrome c reductase over succinate cytochrome c reductase activity differs from parenchymal (0.01) and non-parenchymal cells (0.10). This might indicate that the glycerol-3-phosphate shuttle, which is important for the transport of reduction equivalents for cytosol to mitochondria is relatively more active in non-parenchymal cells than in parenchymal cells. 5. The activity pattern of mitochondrial enzymes in parenchymal and non-parenchymal cell homogenates indicates that these cell types contain different types of mitochondria. The presence of these different cell types in liver will therefore contribute to the heterogeneity of isolated rat liver mitochondria in which the mitochondria from non-parenchymal cells might be considered as "non-gluconeogenic".  相似文献   

10.
Parenchymal and non-parenchymal cells were isolated from the livers of control, starved, Zn2+-injected and Cd2+-injected rats. Parenchymal cells were prepared by differential centrifugation after perfusion of the liver with collagenase. Non-parenchymal cells were separated from parenchymal cells by unit-gravity sedimentation and differential centrifugation. Yields of 2 x 10(8) non-parenchymal cells with greater than 95% viability and less than 0.2% contamination with parenchymal cells were obtained without exposing cells to Pronase. Metallothioneins-I and -II were identified in parenchymal cells and non-parenchymal cells from Zn2+-treated rats. The metallothionein contents of parenchymal cells, non-parenchymal cells and intact liver were quantified by a competitive 203Hg-binding assay. Administration of heavy-metal salts significantly increased the metallothionein content of both cell populations, although the concentration of the protein was approx. 2.5-fold greater in parenchymal cells than in non-parenchymal cells. Overnight starvation increased the metallothionein content of parenchymal cells without altering that of non-parenchymal cells. The potential significance of this differential response by different liver cell types with regard to the influence of Zn2+ on stress-mediated alterations in hepatic metabolism is discussed.  相似文献   

11.
Parenchymal and non-parenchymal cells were isolated from rat liver with purities of more than 90%. Total and ganglioside sialic acid contents were higher in non-parenchymal cells than in parenchymal cells. Thin-layer chromatography of gangliosides showed that the main component in rat liver was ganglioside GM3 and that this was abundant in non-parenchymal cells. Parenchymal cells had ganglioside GD1b as the main component and less GM3 than non-parenchymal cells. These results suggested that the main ganglioside of rat liver, GM3, arises mainly from non-parenchymal cells.  相似文献   

12.
The time course of cadmium-metallothionein synthesis was studied in non-parenchymal and parenchymal cells, isolated by a cell-separation technique from the livers of rats after the simultaneous injection of CdCl2 (0.05 mg of Cd/kg) and a 10-fold molar excess of 2,3-dimercaptopropanol. Under these conditions of dosing, in contrast with the injection of CdCl2 alone, both cell types accumulate similar concentrations of Cd and synthesize equivalent concentrations of metallothionein. It is concluded that both cell types have a similar capacity to synthesize the metalloprotein, and that the limiting factor under normal cadmium exposure is the relatively inefficient metal uptake into the non-parenchymal cells.  相似文献   

13.
We investigated the intrahepatic distribution of small unilamellar liposomes injected intravenously into rats at a dose of 0.10 mmol of lipid per kg body weight. Sonicated liposomes consisting of cholesterol/sphingomyelin (1:1), (A); cholesterol/egg phosphatidylcholine (1:1), (B); cholesterol/sphingomyelin/phosphatidylserine (5:4:1), (C) or cholesterol/egg-phosphatidylcholine/phosphatidylserine (5:4:1), (D) were labeled by encapsulation of [3H]inulin. The observed differences in rate of blood elimination and hepatic accumulation (A much less than B approximately equal to C less than D) confirmed earlier observations and reflected the rates of uptake of the four liposome formulations by isolated liver macrophages in monolayer culture. Fractionation of the liver into a parenchymal and a non-parenchymal cell fraction revealed that 80-90% of the slowly clearing type-A liposomes were taken up by the parenchymal cells while of the more rapidly eliminated type-B liposomes even more than 95% was associated with the parenchymal cells. Incorporation of phosphatidylserine into the sphingomyelin-based liposomes caused a significant increase in hepatocyte uptake but a much more substantial increase in non-parenchymal cell uptake, resulting in a major shift of the intrahepatic distribution towards the non-parenchymal cell fraction. For the phosphatidylcholine-based liposomes incorporation of phosphatidylserine did not increase the already high uptake by the parenchymal cells while uptake by the non-parenchymal cells was only moderately elevated; this resulted in only a small shift in distribution towards the non-parenchymal cells. The phosphatidylserine-induced increase in liposome uptake by non-parenchymal liver cells was paralleled by an increase in uptake by the spleen. Fractionation of the non-parenchymal liver cells in a Kupffer cell fraction and an endothelial cell fraction showed that even for the slowly eliminated liposomes of type A endothelial cells do not participate to a measurable extent in the elimination process, thus excluding involvement of fluid-phase pinocytosis in the uptake process.  相似文献   

14.
Cultured non-parenchymal rat liver cells internalize human urine alpha-N-acetylglucosaminidase, human skin beta-N-acetylglucosaminidase and pig kidney alpha-mannosidase. Different heat-stabilities of endocytosed and endogenous alpha-mannosidase activity provided indirect evidence that the increase in intracellular activity resulted from uptake. The high efficiency and the saturation kinetics of uptake indicated that these enzymes become internalized by adsorptive endocytosis. Competition experiments with glycoproteins bearing known carbohydrates at their non-reducing terminals, with mannans, methyl glycosides and monosaccharides, established that the uptake of these three lysosomal enzymes is mediated by the binding to cell-surface receptors that recognize mannose and N-acetylglucosamine residues. The decreased uptake after treatment of these enzymes with either beta-N-acetylglucosaminidase or alpha-mannosidase was in accordance with the results of the inhibition experiments. Removal of oligosaccharides of the high-mannose type by treatment with endoglucosaminidase H inhibited uptake almost completely, suggesting that the sugars recognized by cell-surface receptors of non-parenchymal liver cells are located in the outer core of these oligosaccharides. A comparison of the uptake of these three lysosomal enzymes by parenchymal and non-parenchymal rat liver cells indicates that infused alpha-N-acetylglucosaminidase is taken up preferentially by hepatocytes, whereas alpha-mannosidase and beta-N-acetylglucosaminidase are localized predominantly in non-parenchymal rat liver cells.  相似文献   

15.
Receptor-dependent uptake mechanisms for low-density lipoprotein (LDL) were studied in rabbit liver parenchymal and non-parenchymal cells. Hybridization studies with a cDNA probe revealed that mRNA for the apo (apolipoprotein) B,E receptor was present in endothelial and Kupffer cells as well as in parenchymal cells. By ligand-blotting experiments we showed that apo B,E-receptor protein was present in both parenchymal and non-parenchymal cells. Studies of binding of homologous LDL in cultured rabbit parenchymal cells suggested that about 63% of the specific LDL binding was mediated via the apo B,E receptor. Approx. 47% of the specific LDL binding was dependent on Ca2+, suggesting that specific Ca2+-dependent as well as Ca2+-independent LDL-binding sites exist in liver parenchymal cells. Methylated LDL bound to the parenchymal cells in a saturable manner. Taken together, our results showed that apo B,E receptors are present in rabbit liver endothelial and Kupffer cells as well as in the parenchymal cells, and that an additional saturable binding activity for LDL may exist on rabbit liver parenchymal cells. This binding activity was not inhibited by EGTA or reductive methylation of lysine residues in apo B. LDL degradation in parenchymal cells was mainly mediated via the apo B,E receptor.  相似文献   

16.
The capacity of the homogenates from human liver, rat parenchymal cells, rat non-parenchymal cells and total rat liver for the breakdown of human and rat high density lipoprotein (HDL) and human low density lipoprotein (LDL) was determined. Human HDL was catabolized by human liver, in contrast to human LDL, the protein degradation of which was low or absent. Human and rat HDL were catabolized by both the rat parenchymal and non-parenchymal cell homogenates with, on protein base, a 10-times higher activity in the non-parenchymal liver cells. This implies that more than 50% of the total liver capacity for HDL protein degradation is localized in these cell types. Human LDL degradation in the rat could only be detected in the non-parenchymal cell homogenates. These findings are discussed in view of the function of HDL and LDL as carriers for cholesterol.  相似文献   

17.
In order to assess the relative importance of the receptor for low-density lipoprotein (LDL) (apo-B,E receptor) in the various liver cell types for the catabolism of lipoproteins in vivo, human LDL was labelled with [14C]sucrose. Up to 4.5h after intravenous injection, [14C]sucrose becomes associated with liver almost linearly with time. During this time the liver is responsible for 70-80% of the removal of LDL from blood. A comparison of the uptake of [14C]sucrose-labelled LDL and reductive-methylated [14C]sucrose-labelled LDL ([14C]sucrose-labelled Me-LDL) by the liver shows that methylation leads to a 65% decrease of the LDL uptake. This indicated that 65% of the LDL uptake by liver is mediated by a specific apo-B,E receptor. Parenchymal and non-parenchymal liver cells were isolated at various times after intravenous injection of [14C]sucrose-labelled LDL and [14C]sucrose-labelled Me-LDL. Non-parenchymal liver cells accumulate at least 60 times as much [14C]sucrose-labelled LDL than do parenchymal cells accumulate at least 60 times as much [14C]sucrose-labelled LDL than do parenchymal cells when expressed per mg of cell protein. This factor is independent of the time after injection of LDL. Taking into account the relative protein contribution of the various liver cell types to the total liver, it can be calculated that non-parenchymal cells are responsible for 71% of the total liver uptake of [14C]sucrose-labelled LDL. A comparison of the cellular uptake of [14C]sucrose-labelled LDL and [14C]sucrose-labelled Me-LDL after 4.5h circulation indicates that 79% of the uptake of LDL by non-parenchymal cells is receptor-dependent. With parenchymal cells no significant difference in uptake between [14C]sucrose-labelled LDL and [14C]sucrose-labelled Me-LDL was found. A further separation of the nonparenchymal cells into Kupffer and endothelial cells by centrifugal elutriation shows that within the non-parenchymal-cell preparation solely the Kupffer cells are responsible for the receptor-dependent uptake of LDL. It is concluded that in rats the Kupffer cell is the main cell type responsible for the receptor-dependent catabolism of lipoproteins containing only apolipoprotein B.  相似文献   

18.
The major eicosanoid produced within the rat liver, prostaglandin (PG) D2, wa studied for its ability to interact with the various liver cell types. It appeared that PGD2 bound specifically to parenchymal liver cells, whereas the binding of PGD2 to Kupffer and endothelial liver cells was quantitatively unimportant. Maximally 700 pg of PGD2/mg of parenchymal-cell protein could be bound by a high-affinity site (1 x 10(6) PGD2-binding sites/cell). The recognition site for PGD2 is probably a protein because trypsin treatment of the cells virtually abolished the high-affinity binding. High-affinity binding of PGD2 was a prerequisite for the induction of a metabolic effect in isolated parenchymal liver cells, i.e. the induction of glycogenolysis. High-affinity binding of PGD2 by parenchymal cells was coupled to the conversion of PGD2 into three metabolites, whereas no conversion of PGD2 by Kupffer and endothelial liver cells was noticed. The temperature-sensitivity of the conversion of PGD2 was consistent with a conversion of PGD2 on or in the vicinity of the cell membrane. One of the PGD2 metabolites could be identified as 9 alpha, 11 beta-PGF2. It can be calculated that the conversion rate of PGD2 by parenchymal liver cells exceeds the production rate of PGD2 by Kupffer plus endothelial liver cells, indicating that PGD2 is meant to exert its activity within the liver. The present finding that PGD2 formed by the non-parenchymal liver cells is recognized by a specific receptor on parenchymal liver cells and that binding, conversion and metabolic effect of PGD2 are interlinked by this receptor provides further support for the specific role of PGD2 in the intercellular communication in the liver.  相似文献   

19.
(1) Parenchymal and non-parenchymal cells were isolated from rat liver. The characteristics of acid lipase activity with 4-methylumbelliferyl oleate as substrate and acid cholesteryl esterase activity with cholesteryl[1-14C]oleate as substrate were investigated. The substrates were incorporated in egg yolk lecithin vesicles and assays for total cell homogenates were developed, which were linear with the amount of protein and time. With 4-methylumbelliferyl oleate as substrate, both parenchymal and non-parechymal cells show maximal activities at acid pH and the maximal activity for non-parenchymal cells is 2.5 times higher than for parenchymal cells. It is concluded that 4-methylumbelliferyl oleate hydrolysis is catalyzed by similar enzyme(s) in both cell types. (2) With cholesteryl[1-14C]oleate as substrate both parenchymal and non-parenchymal cells show maximal activities at acid pH and the maximal activity for non-parenchymal cells is 11.4 times higher than for parenchymal cells. It is further shown that the cholesteryl ester hydrolysis in both cell types show different properties. (3) The high activity and high affinity of acid cholesteryl esterase from non-parenchymal cells for cholesterol oleate hydrolysis as compared to parenchymal cells indicate a relative specialization of non-parenchymal cells in cholesterol ester hydrolysis. It is concluded that non-parenchymal liver cells in cholesterol ester hydrolysis. It is concluded that non-parenchymal liver cells possess the enzymic equipment to hydrolyze very efficiently internalized cholesterol esters, which supports the suggestion that these cell types are an important site for lipoprotein catabolism in liver.  相似文献   

20.
1. Intact parenchymal and non-parenchymal cells were isolated from rat liver. The parenchymal cells were purified by differential centrifugation, while non-parenchymal cells were obtained free of parenchymal cell contamination by preferentially destroying the parenchymal cells with the aid of pronase (0.25%). 2. The ability to isolate pure intact parenchymal and non-parenchymal cells permitted the characterization and measurement of specific activities of various lysosomal enzymes, representing the main functional hydrolytic activities of the lysosomes in these distinct cell types. 3. Lysosomal enzymes catalysing the hydrolysis of the terminal carbohydrate moiety of glycoproteins and glycolipids were not particularly enriched in the non-parenchymal cells as compared to parenchymal cells. The ratio of the specific activities of non-parenchymal cells over parenchymal cells varied between 0.7 for N-acetyl-beta-D-hexoseaminidase to 2.1 for alpha-glucosidase. This suggests no specific role of the non-parenchymal cells in the hydrolysis of terminal carbohydrate moieties of glycoproteins and glycolipids. 4. The enzymes acid phosphatase and aryl sulphatase, representing the phosphate and sulphate hydrolyzing activities, were enriched in the non-paranchymal cells as compared to the parenchymal cells by a factor of 2.5. 5. The most important peptidase cathepsin D, representing protein breakdown capacity, is enriched in the non-parenchymal cells as compared to parenchymal cells by a factor 6.0, suggesting a possible specific function of non-parenchymal cells in protein breakdown. 6. The most enriched lysosomal enzyme, representing lipid hydrolysis, is acid lipase, which is enriched in the non-parenchymal cells with a factor of 10. 7. The distribution of lysosomal enzymes between parenchymal and non-parenchymal cells suggests different functional roles of the lysosomes in these cell types. It can be concluded that the non-parenchymal cells possess a set of lysosomal enzymes which makes them extremely suitable for a phagocytic and antimicrobial function in the liver.  相似文献   

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