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1.
Summary We have followed the action of brefeldin A (BFA) on the Golgi apparatus of developing pea cotyledons, the cells of which are actively engaged in the synthesis and deposition of storage proteins. The Golgi apparatus of normal cells is characterized by the presence of three different types of vesicle: smooth-surfaced secretory vesicles, dense vesicles which carry the storage proteins, and clathrin-coated vesicles (CCV). The dense vesicles originate at the cis cisternae and undergo a maturation as they pass through the Golgi stack, presumably as a result of cisternal progression. CCV bud off from dense and smooth vesicles, which may be attached to one another, at the trans pole of the Golgi apparatus. BFA eliminates the CCV and leads, initially, to an increase in the number and length of the cisternae. Dense vesicles are still to be seen, and many show an increase in diameter. Longer BFA treatments result in a trans-driven vesiculation and an accumulation of vesicles within the vicinity of single cisternae. The vesicles were sometimes seen to be connected to one another via a network of tubules. As judged by immunocytochemistry with gold-coupled legumin and vicilin antisera, some of the dilated vesicles originate directly from dense vesicles by swelling whereas others probably arise by dilation of Golgi cisternae since they possess a layer of flocculent storage proteins at their periphery. By contrast the centre of the dilated vesicles labels positively with antibodies against complex glycans, indicating that the ability to segregate storage proteins from cell wall or lytic vacuole glycoproteins is lost during extended BFA treatment. The effects of BFA are reversible when cotyledons are further incubated on Gamborg's medium for 5 h without the inhibitor.Dedicated to Professor R. Kollmann on the occasion of his 65th birthday.  相似文献   

2.
This report concerns the effects of Brefeldin A (BFA): i) on the Golgi complex and the ER of retrovirus-transformed murine erythroleukemia (MEL) cells and, ii) on the viral proteins these cells express. Golgi complexes were extensively disorganized by BFA. Within 5 min, most stacked cisternae were converted to vesicles scattered throughout the centrosphere region. By 30 min, the Golgi complexes were completely disassembled. Only clusters of small vesicles ("Golgi remnants") persisted in the vicinity of the centrioles and microtubule-organizing centers. Some of these small vesicles had a simple coat structure on their membranes. Over the next 1 to 2 h of BFA treatment, the number of vesicles in the Golgi area decreased concomitantly with the expansion of a predominantly smooth membrane portion of the ER, consisting of a network of dilated tubules in continuity with regular RER cisternae, annulate lamellae and the nuclear envelope. By electron microscopy, viral glycoproteins appeared to accumulate on the membranes of this network, and immature virions were found to bud preferentially into its cisternal space. Viral accumulations increased with time under BFA. The rest of the RER appeared normal, apparently unaffected by the drug. Preferential virion budding suggests that this expanding network is a chemically differentiated part of the ER. By immunofluorescence, antibodies to viral envelope proteins gave a punctate staining at the surface of control cells, presumably in the areas of virion budding, whereas relatively large intracellular masses of antigens were found in BFA-treated cells. We assume that these masses represent the differentiated parts of the ER. Taken together, these findings suggest that BFA blocks intracellular transport of newly synthesized cellular and viral proteins immediately distal to the distinct compartment of the ER in which virion budding preferentially occurs. BFA effects are rapidly and fully reversible. Within 1 min of the removal of the drug, stacks of Golgi cisternae began to reappear in the vicinity of the centrioles, and by 30 min, Golgi complexes regained their normal structural appearance.  相似文献   

3.
A Driouich  G F Zhang    L A Staehelin 《Plant physiology》1993,101(4):1363-1373
Brefeldin A (BFA), a specific inhibitor of Golgi-mediated secretion in animal cells, has been used to study the organization of the secretory pathway and the function of the Golgi apparatus in plant cells. To this end, we have employed a combination of electron microscopical, immunocytochemical, and biochemical techniques to investigate the effects of this drug on the architecture of the Golgi apparatus as well as on the secretion of proteins and complex cell wall polysaccharides in sycamore maple (Acer pseudoplatanus) suspension-cultured cells. We have used 2.5 and 7.5 micrograms/mL of BFA, which is comparable to the 1 to 10 micrograms/mL used in experiments with animal cells. Electron micrographs of high-pressure frozen and freeze-substituted cells show that although BFA causes swelling of the endoplasmic reticulum cisternae, unlike in animal cells, it does not induce the disassembly of sycamore maple Golgi stacks. Instead, BFA induces the formation of large clusters of Golgi stacks, an increase in the number of trans-like Golgi cisternae, and the accumulation in the cytoplasm of very dense vesicles that appear to be derived from trans Golgi cisternae. These vesicles contain large amounts of xyloglucan (XG), the major hemicellulosic cell wall polysaccharide, as shown by immunocytochemical labeling with anti-XG antibodies. All of these structural changes disappear within 120 min after removal of the drug. In vivo labeling experiments using [3H]leucine demonstrate that protein secretion into the culture medium, but not protein synthesis, is inhibited by approximately 80% in the presence of BFA. In contrast, the incorporation of [3H]fucose into N-linked glycoproteins, which occurs in trans-Golgi cisternae, appears to be affected to a greater extent than the incorporation of [3H]xylose, which has been localized to medial Golgi cisternae. BFA also affects secretion of complex polysaccharides as evidenced by the approximate 50% drop in incorporation of [3H]xylose and [3H]fucose into cell wall hemicelluloses. Taken together, these findings suggest that at concentrations of 2.5 to 7.5 mu g/mL BFA causes the following major changes in the secretory pathway of sycamore maple cells: (a) it inhibits the transport of secretory proteins to the cell surface by about 80% and of hemicelluloses by about 50%; (b) it changes the patterns of glycosylation of N-linked glycoproteins and hemicelluloses; (c) it reduces traffic between trans Golgi cisternae and secretory vesicles; (d) it produces a major block in the transport of XG-containing, dense secretory vesicles to the cell surface; and (e) it induces the formation of large aggregates of Golgi apparatus of plant and animal cels share many functional and structural characteristics, the plant Golgi apparatus possesses properties that make its response to BFA unique.  相似文献   

4.
Brefeldin A (BFA) treatment stops secretion and leads to the resorption of much of the Golgi apparatus into the endoplasmic reticulum. This effect is reversible upon washing out the drug, providing a situation for studying Golgi biogenesis. In this investigation Golgi regeneration in synchronized tobacco BY-2 cells was followed by electron microscopy and by the immunofluorescence detection of ARF1, which localizes to the rims of Golgi cisternae and serves as an indicator of COPI vesiculation. Beginning as clusters of vesicles that are COPI positive, mini-Golgi stacks first become recognizable 60 min after BFA washout. They continue to increase in terms of numbers and length of cisternae for a further 90 min before overshooting the size of control Golgi stacks. As a result, increasing numbers of dividing Golgi stacks were observed 120 min after BFA washout. BFA-regeneration experiments performed on cells treated with BFA (10 microg mL(-1)) for only short periods (30-45 min) showed that the formation of ER-Golgi hybrid structures, once initiated by BFA treatment, is an irreversible process, the further incorporation of Golgi membranes into the ER continuing during a subsequent drug washout. Application of the protein kinase A inhibitor H-89, which effectively blocks the reassembly of the Golgi apparatus in mammalian cells, also prevented stack regeneration in BY-2 cells, but only at very high, almost toxic concentrations (>200 microm). Our data suggest that under normal conditions mitosis-related Golgi stack duplication may likely occur via cisternal growth followed by fission.  相似文献   

5.
 Newly synthesized proteins destined for delivery to the cell surface are inserted cotranslationally into the endoplasmic reticulum (ER) and, after their correct folding, are transported out of the ER. During their transport to the cell surface, cargo proteins pass through the various cisternae of the Golgi apparatus and, in the trans-most cisternae of the stack, are sorted into constitutive secretory vesicles that fuse with the plasma membrane. Simultaneously with anterograde protein transport, retrograde protein transport occurs within the Golgi complex as well as from the Golgi back to the ER. Vesicular transport within the early secretory pathway is mediated by two types of non-clathrin coated vesicles: COPI- and COPII-coated vesicles. The formation of these carrier vesicles depends on the recruitment of cytosolic coat proteins that are thought to act as a mechanical device to shape a flattened donor membrane into a spherical vesicle. A general molecular machinery that mediates targeting and fusion of carrier vesicles has been identified as well. Beside a general overview of the various coat structures known today, we will discuss issues specifically related to the biogenesis of COPI-coated vesicles: (1) a possible role of phospholipase D in the formation of COPI-coated vesicles; (2) a functional role of a novel family of transmembrane proteins, the p24 family, in the initiation of COPI assembly; and (3) the direction COPI-coated vesicles may take within the early secretory pathway. Moreover, we will consider two alternative mechanisms of protein transport through the Golgi stack: vesicular transport versus cisternal maturation. Accepted: 24 October 1997  相似文献   

6.
Summary The formation of three types of vesicles in the oomycetePhytophthora cinnamomi was investigated using ultrastructural and immunocytochemical techniques. All three vesicles are synthesised at the same time; one type serves a storage role; the others undergo regulated secretion. A monoclonal antibody Lpv-1 that is specific for glycoproteins contained in the storage vesicles labelled the endoplasmic reticulum (ER), elements in the transition region between ER and Golgi stack, and cis, medial and trans Golgi cisternae. Cpa2, a monoclonal antibody specific for glycoproteins contained within secretory dorsal vesicles labelled the transition region, cis cisternae and a trans-Golgi network. Vesicles possessing a structure characteristic of mature secretory ventral vesicles were observed in close association with the trans face of Golgi stacks. The results suggest that all three vesicles are formed by the Golgi apparatus. Double immunogold labelling with Lpv-1 and Cpa-2 showed that these two sets of glycoproteins occurred within the same Golgi cisternae, indicating that both products pass through and are sorted concurrently within a single Golgi stack.  相似文献   

7.
Two different, independent, and alternative modes of mucilage excretion were found in the unicellular green alga Micrasterias denticulata Bréb. under constant culture conditions. The cells were capable of either excreting mucilage over all their cell surface or they extruded mucilage from one of their polar ends, which enabled directed movement such as photoorientation or escape from unfavorable environmental conditions. By means of a polyclonal antibody raised against Micrasterias mucilage, the secretory pathway of Golgi derived mucilage vesicles from their origin to their discharge was analyzed by means of conventional and energy filtering TEM. Depending on the stage of the cell cycle, mucilage vesicles were subjected to maturation processes. This may occur either after they have been pinched off from the dictyosomes (e.g. during cell growth) or when still connected to trans‐Golgi cisternae, as in the case of interphase cells. Only fully grown mature vesicles contained mucilage in its final composition as indicated by antibody labeling. After fusion of mucilage vesicles with vacuoles, no immunolabeling was found in vacuoles, indicating that the vesicle content was digested. Mucilage vesicles fused with the plasma membrane in areas of cell wall pores but were also able to excrete mucilage at any site directly through the respective cell wall layer. This result disproves earlier assumptions that the pore apparatus in desmids are the only mucilage excreting areas at the cell surface. Both mechanisms, excretion through the pores and through the cell wall, lead to formation of mucilage envelopes covering the entire cell surface.  相似文献   

8.
Brefeldin A (BFA) causes a block in the secretory system of eukaryotic cells by inhibiting vesicle formation at the Golgi apparatus. Although this toxin has been used in many studies, its effects on plant cells are still shrouded in controversy. We have reinvestigated the early responses of plant cells to BFA with novel tools, namely, tobacco Bright Yellow 2 (BY-2) suspension-cultured cells expressing an in vivo green fluorescent protein-Golgi marker, electron microscopy of high-pressure frozen/freeze-substituted cells, and antisera against Atgamma-COP, a component of COPI coats, and AtArf1, the GTPase necessary for COPI coat assembly. The first effect of 10 microg/mL BFA on BY-2 cells was to induce in <5 min the complete loss of vesicle-forming Atgamma-COP from Golgi cisternae. During the subsequent 15 to 20 min, this block in Golgi-based vesicle formation led to a series of sequential changes in Golgi architecture, the loss of distinct Golgi stacks, and the formation of an endoplasmic reticulum (ER)-Golgi hybrid compartment with stacked domains. These secondary effects appear to depend in part on stabilizing intercisternal filaments and include the continued maturation of cis- and medial cisternae into trans-Golgi cisternae, as predicted by the cisternal progression model, the shedding of trans-Golgi network cisternae, the fusion of individual Golgi cisternae with the ER, and the formation of large ER-Golgi hybrid stacks. Prolonged exposure of the BY-2 cells to BFA led to the transformation of the ER-Golgi hybrid compartment into a sponge-like structure that does not resemble normal ER. Thus, although the initial effects of BFA on plant cells are the same as those described for mammalian cells, the secondary and tertiary effects have drastically different morphological manifestations. These results indicate that, despite a number of similarities in the trafficking machinery with other eukaryotes, there are fundamental differences in the functional architecture and properties of the plant Golgi apparatus that are the cause for the unique responses of the plant secretory pathway to BFA.  相似文献   

9.
Summary The fungal metabolite brefeldin A (BFA) causes inhibition of cell growth inMicrasterias denticulata after 2 h incubation, combined with slight malformation of the cell shape. The BFA effects on cell development are accompanied by a gradual decrease in the number of Golgi cisternae and severe structural and morphological changes of the dictyosomes which are already visible after only 10 min exposure. When the treatment is prolonged the number of dictyosomes is markedly reduced, leading to almost complete loss of Golgi bodies, particularly in the young semicell. Groups of primary wall material-containing vesicles accumulated in areas of former dictyosomes, and previously unknown vesicular bodies are found. Restitution of almost normal dictyosomes occurs within 5 h when the cells are allowed to recover from BFA treatment.Micrasterias cells incubated in BFA at concentrations below 15 M maintain their ability to divide over several generations. Our results indicate that, of the various inhibitors of the secretory pathway tested against growingMicrasterias cells, BFA is the only drug which induces complete and reversible dissociation of dictyosomes in the growing semicell. This allows deductions about the function of the processes targeted by BFA during cell development inMicrasterias.Abbreviations BFA brefeldin A - CPA cyclopiazonic acid - ER endoplasmic reticulum - TM tunicamycin  相似文献   

10.
Summary The antibiotic fungal toxin brefeldin A (BFA) causes synthesis of additional cell wall material in adult differentiated onion inner epidermal cells at concentrations of 5–30 g/ml. This tertiary wall contains callose and is layered on the secondary cellulosic wall in a time- and dose-dependent manner. Initially, callose is found in pit fields in the form of small vesicular patches. With time and dose, depositions grow in size and form large plugs invaginating into the cell, where the adjacent cytoplasm forms bulky accumulations and contains many organelles including endomembranes. Within the cytoplasm, BFA exerts the characteristic morphological effects on the secretory system including changes of the Golgi stacks, formation of large vesicles, and proliferation of dilated cisternae of the endoplasmic reticulum. Higher concentrations of BFA (60 g/ml) lead to disintegration of the Golgi apparatus; they have no effects on the cell wall, no callose synthesis occurs. We conclude from these observations that BFA has two independent targets in onion cells. BFA acts on the plasma membrane, hence operating as an elicitor of plant defense reactions and thus activates callose synthesis. BFA acts also on the membranes of the secretory system and influences budding and fusion of vesicles at the endoplasmic reticulum and at the dictyosomes. These two mechanisms occur in parallel, suggesting that the secretory system still can play its presumed role in callose synthesis. Only when dictyosomes are completely disintegrated, no more callose is formed.Abbreviations BFA Brefeldin A - PM plasma membrane - GA Golgi apparatus - ER endoplasmic reticulum - GS glucan synthetase Dedicated to Professor Walter Gustav Url on the occasion of his 70th birthday  相似文献   

11.
K. Zaar  E. Schnepf 《Planta》1969,88(3):224-232
Summary Root hairs of Lepidium sativum were incubated with a Wachstein-Meisel medium in experiments designed to localize the activity of nucleoside diphosphatase(s). Electron dense precipitates were found in the ER and in Golgi cisternae of the secretory face of the dictyosomes and their adjacent Golgi vesicles. Such precipitates were absent in the Golgi cisternae of the regeneration face of the dictyosomes and in the detached Golgi vesicles which extrude pectic cell wall substances. These results may be the consequence of the normal cycle of membrane compounds associated with the secretion in which the nucleoside diphosphatase(s) participate (by activation and inactivation) as one of the cycling components. Alternatively the nucleoside diphosphatase(s) may undergo a special cycle in which they are transferred from one cisterna or its vesicles to the next as part of the process of cisternal maturation.  相似文献   

12.
Root border cells lie on the surface of the root cap and secrete massive amounts of mucilage that contains polysaccharides and proteoglycans. Golgi stacks in the border cells have hypertrophied margins, reflecting elevated biosynthetic activity to produce the polysaccharide components of the mucilage. To investigate the three‐dimensional structures and macromolecular compositions of these Golgi stacks, we examined high‐pressure frozen/freeze‐substituted alfalfa root cap cells with electron microscopy/tomography. Golgi stacks in border cells and peripheral cells, precursor cells of border cells, displayed similar morphological features, such as proliferation of trans cisternae and swelling of the trans cisternae and trans‐Golgi network (TGN) compartments. These swollen margins give rise to two types of vesicles larger than other Golgi‐associated vesicles. Margins of trans‐Golgi cisternae accumulate the LM8 xylogalacturonan (XGA) epitope, and they become darkly stained large vesicles (LVs) after release from the Golgi. Epitopes for xyloglucan (XG), polygalacturonic acid/rhamnogalacturonan‐I (PGA/RG‐I) are detected in the trans‐most cisternae and TGN compartments. LVs produced from TGN compartments (TGN‐LVs) stained lighter than LVs and contained the cell wall polysaccharide epitopes seen in the TGN. LVs carrying the XGA epitope fuse with the plasma membrane only in border cells, whereas TGN‐LVs containing the XG and PGA/RG‐I epitopes fuse with the plasma membrane of both peripheral cells and border cells. Taken together, these results indicate that XGA is secreted by a novel type of secretory vesicles derived from trans‐Golgi cisternae. Furthermore, we simulated the collapse in the central domain of the trans‐cisternae accompanying polysaccharide synthesis with a mathematical model.  相似文献   

13.
The Golgi apparatus is the main glycosylation and sorting station along the secretory pathway. Its structure includes the Golgi vesicles, which are depleted of anterograde cargo, and also of at least some Golgi‐resident proteins. The role of Golgi vesicles remains unclear. Here, we show that Golgi vesicles are enriched in the Qb‐SNAREs GS27 (membrin) and GS28 (GOS‐28), and depleted of nucleotide sugar transporters. A block of intra‐Golgi transport leads to accumulation of Golgi vesicles and partitioning of GS27 and GS28 into these vesicles. Conversely, active intra‐Golgi transport induces fusion of these vesicles with the Golgi cisternae, delivering GS27 and GS28 to these cisternae. In an in vitro assay based on a donor compartment that lacks UDP‐galactose translocase (a sugar transporter), the segregation of Golgi vesicles from isolated Golgi membranes inhibits intra‐Golgi transport; re‐addition of isolated Golgi vesicles devoid of UDP‐galactose translocase obtained from normal cells restores intra‐Golgi transport. We conclude that this activity is due to the presence of GS27 and GS28 in the Golgi vesicles, rather than the sugar transporter. Furthermore, there is an inverse correlation between the number of Golgi vesicles and the number of inter‐cisternal connections under different experimental conditions. Finally, a rapid block of the formation of vesicles via COPI through degradation of ϵCOP accelerates the cis‐to‐trans delivery of VSVG. These data suggest that Golgi vesicles, presumably with COPI, serve to inhibit intra‐Golgi transport by the extraction of GS27 and GS28 from the Golgi cisternae, which blocks the formation of inter‐cisternal connections .  相似文献   

14.
The organization of secretory traffic remains unclear, mainly because of the complex structure and dynamics of the secretory pathway. We have thus studied a simplified system, a single synchronized traffic wave crossing an individual Golgi stack, using electron tomography. Endoplasmic-reticulum-to-Golgi carriers join the stack by fusing with cis cisternae and induce the formation of intercisternal tubules, through which they redistribute their contents throughout the stack. These tubules seem to be pervious to Golgi enzymes, whereas Golgi vesicles are depleted of both enzymes and cargo. Cargo then traverses the stack without leaving the cisternal lumen. When cargo exits the stack, intercisternal connections disappear. These findings provide a new view of secretory traffic that includes dynamic intercompartment continuities as key players.  相似文献   

15.
After leaving the endoplasmic reticulum, secretory proteins traverse several membranous transport compartments before reaching their destinations. How they move through the Golgi complex, a major secretory station composed of stacks of membranous cisternae, is a central yet unsettled issue in membrane biology. Two classes of mechanisms have been proposed. One is based on cargo-laden carriers hopping across stable cisternae and the other on “maturing” cisternae that carry cargo forward while progressing through the stack. A key difference between the two concerns the behavior of Golgi-resident proteins. Under stable cisternae models, Golgi residents remain in the same cisterna, whereas, according to cisternal maturation, Golgi residents recycle from distal to proximal cisternae via retrograde carriers in synchrony with cisternal progression. Here, we have engineered Golgi-resident constructs that can be polymerized at will to prevent their recycling via Golgi carriers. Maturation models predict the progress of such polymerized residents through the stack along with cargo, but stable cisternae models do not. The results support the cisternal maturation mechanism.  相似文献   

16.
T. Akashi  T. Kanbe  K. Tanaka 《Protoplasma》1997,197(1-2):45-56
Summary Candida albicans, a dimorphic yeast, has the abililty to switch its growth form between budding growth and hyphal growth. Since fungal growth involves secretory processes, spatial control of secretion should play a crucial role in such a morphogenetic transition. Brefeldin A (BFA), an inhibitor of the membrane trafficking system of eukaryotes, increases the occurrence of Golgi-like cisternae in the yeast. In the present study, BFA was used to obtain further insights into the spatial organization of secretory processes in hyphal growth ofC. albicans. BFA completely inhibited the formation and growth of germ tubes at a concentration of 35 M or higher. Electron microscopy of BFA-untreated germinated cells revealed many vesicles in the apical region and Golgi-like cisternae in the cytoplasm. In cells treated with 35 M BFA, the vesicles disappeared from the apical region, and, instead, stacked membrane cisternae and membrane-enclosed spherical dense bodies accumulated in the subapical region. These accumulated structures were positive for both polysaccharide staining and immunocytochemical staining with antibodies raised against cell surface antigens ofC. albicans, as were Golgi cisternae in BFA-untreated cells. In cells treated with a higher concentration of BFA (140 M), the structures that appeared in cells treated with 35 M BFA were no longer observed and the endoplasmic reticulum was extended and positive for polysaccharide staining. These results suggested that BFA affects different steps of membrane trafficking in a concentration-dependent manner. The accumulated structures induced by 35 M BFA seemed to be the altered forms of Golgi cisternae. Their accumulation in the subapical region of the germ tube might indicate that the step(s) in membrane trafficking that are associated with the Golgi pathway are vectorially organized in hyphal growth ofC. albicans.Abbrevations BFA brefeldin A - BSA bovine serum albumin - CBB Coomassie brilliant blue - Con A concanavalin A - HRP horseradish peroxidase  相似文献   

17.
CHLAMYDOMONAS NOCTIGAMA has a non-motile Golgi apparatus consisting of several Golgi stacks adjacent to transitional ER. These domains are characterized by vesicle-budding profiles and the lack of ribosomes on the side of the ER proximal to the Golgi stacks. Immunogold labelling confirms the presence of COPI-proteins at the periphery of the Golgi stacks, and COPII-proteins at the ER-Golgi interface. After addition of BFA (10 microg/ml) a marked increase in the number of vesicular profiles lying between the ER and the Golgi stacks is seen. Serial sections of cells do not provide any evidence for the existence of tubular connections between the ER and the Golgi stacks, supporting the notion that COPI- but not COPII-vesicle production is affected by BFA. The fusion of COPII-vesicles at the CIS-Golgi apparatus apparently requires the presence of retrograde COPI-vesicles. After 15 min the cisternae of neighbouring Golgi stacks begin to fuse forming "mega-Golgis", which gradually curl before fragmenting into clusters of vesicles and tubules. These are surrounded by the transitional ER on which vesicle-budding profiles are still occasionally visible. Golgi remnants continue to survive for several hours and do not completely disappear. Washing out BFA leads to a very rapid reassembly of Golgi cisternae. At first, clusters of vesicles are seen adjacent to transitional ER, then "mini Golgis" are seen whose cisternae grow in length and number to produce "mega Golgis". These structures then divide by vertical fission to produce Golgi stacks of normal size and morphology roughly 60 min after drug wash-out.  相似文献   

18.
T. Noguchi  H. Watanabe  R. Suzuki 《Protoplasma》1998,201(3-4):202-212
Summary The effects of brefeldin A (BFA) on the structure of the Golgi apparatus, the nuclear envelope, and the endoplasmic reticulum (ER), and on the thiamine pyrophosphatase (TPPase) activity in these organelles were examined in a green alga,Scenedesmus acutus, to obtain evidence for the existence of a retrograde transport from the Golgi apparatus to the ER via the nuclear envelope. InScenedesmus, Golgi bodies are situated close to the nuclear envelope throughout the cell cycle and receive the transition vesicles not directly from the ER, but from the nuclear envelope. BFA induced the disassembly of Golgi bodies and an increase in the ER cisternae at the trans-side of decomposed Golgi bodies in interphase cells and multinuclear cells before septum formation. The accumulated ER cisternae connected to the nuclear envelope at one part. TPPase activity was detected in all cisternae of Golgi bodies, but not in the nuclear envelope or the ER in nontreated cells. On the contrary, in BFA-treated cells, TPPase activity was detected in the nuclear envelope and the ER in addition to the decomposed Golgi bodies. When septum-forming cells were treated with BFA, the disassembly of Golgi bodies was less than that in interphase cells, and TPPase activity was detected in the Golgi cisternae but not in the nuclear envelope or the ER. These results suggest mat BFA blocks the anterograde transport from the nuclear envelope to the Golgi bodies but does not block the retrograde transport from the Golgi bodies to the nuclear envelope in interphase and multinuclear cells.Abbreviations BFA brefeldin A - ER endoplasmic reticulum - TPPase thiamine pyrophosphatase  相似文献   

19.
Summary Using cryo-fixation and freeze-substitution electron microscopy, the effects of brefeldin A (BFA) on the structure of the trans-Golgi network (TGN), the endoplasmic reticulum (ER), and Golgi bodies in the unicellular green algaBotryococcus braunii were examined at various stages of the cell cycle. In the presence of BFA, all the TGNs of interphase and dividing cells aggregated to form a single tubular mass. In contrast, the TGNs decomposed just after cell division and disappeared during cell wall formation. Throughout the cell cycle, the TGN produced at least six kinds of vesicles, of which two were not formed in the presence of BFA: vesicles with a diameter of 200 nm and fibrillar substances, which formed in interphase cells; and vesicles with a diameter of 180–240 nm, which may participate in septum formation. In addition, the number of clathrin-coated vesicles attaching to the TGN decreased. In interphase cells, BFA induced the disassembly of Golgi bodies and an increase in the smooth-ER cisternae at the cis-side of Golgi bodies. This result may suggest the existence of retrograde transport from the Golgi bodies to the ER in the presence of BFA. These drastic structural changes in the Golgi bodies and the ER of interphase cells were not observed in BFA-treated dividing cells.Abbreviations BFA brefeldin A - ER endoplasmic reticulum - TGN trans-Golgi network  相似文献   

20.
The trans Golgi network (TGN) of plant cells sorts and packages Golgi products into secretory (SV) and clathrin-coated (CCV) vesicles. We have analyzed of TGN cisternae in Arabidopsis root meristem cells by cell fractionation and electron microscopy/tomography to establish reliable criteria for identifying TGN cisternae in plant cells, and to define their functional attributes. Transformation of a trans Golgi cisterna into a Golgi-associated TGN cisterna begins with cisternal peeling, the formation of SV buds outside the plane of the cisterna and a 30-35% reduction in cisternal membrane area. Free TGN compartments are defined as cisternae that have detached from the Golgi to become independent organelles. Golgi-associated and free TGN compartments, but not trans Golgi cisternae, bind anti-RabA4b and anti-phosphatidylinositol-4 kinase (PI-4K) antibodies. RabA4b and PI-4Kβ1 localize to budding SVs in the TGN and to SVs en route to the cell surface. SV and CCV release occurs simultaneously via cisternal fragmentation, which typically yields ~30 vesicles and one to four residual cisternal fragments. Early endosomal markers, VHA-a1-green fluorescent protein (GFP) and SYP61-cyan fluorescent protein (CFP), colocalized with RabA4b in TGN cisternae, suggesting that the secretory and endocytic pathways converge at the TGN. pi4k1/pi4k2 knockout mutant plants produce SVs with highly variable sizes indicating that PI-4Kβ1/2 regulates SV size.  相似文献   

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