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1.
We have localized two cell-wall-matrix polysaccharides, the main pectic polysaccharide, rhamnogalacturonan I (RG-I), and the hemicellulose, xyloglucan (XG), in root-tip and leaf tissues of red clover (Trifolium pratense L.) using immunoelectron microscopy. Our micrographs show that in both leaf and root tissues RG-I is restricted to the middle lamella, with 80–90% of the label associated with the expanded regions of the middle lamella at the corner junctions between cells. Xyloglucan, however, is nearly exclusively located in the cellulose-microfibril-containing region of the cell wall. Thus, these cell-wall-matrix polysaccharides are present in distinct and complementary regions of the cell wall. Our results further show that during cell expansion both RG-I and XG are present within Golgi cisternae and vesicles, thus confirming that the Golgi apparatus is the main site of synthesis of the non-cellulosic cell-wall polysaccharides. No label is seen over the endoplasmic reticulum, indicating that synthesis of these complex polysaccharides is restricted to the Golgi. The distribution of RG-I and XG in root-tip cells undergoing cell division was also examined, and it was found that while XG is present in the Golgi stacks and cell plate during cytokinesis, RG-I is virtually absent from the forming cell plate.Abbreviations ER endoplasmic reticulum - RG-I rhamnogalacturonan I - XG xyloglucan  相似文献   

2.
Using immunocytochemical techniques and antibodies that specifically recognize xyloglucan (anti-XG), polygalacturonic acid/rhamnogalacturonan I (anti-PGA/RG-I), and methylesterified pectins (JIM 7), we have shown that these polysaccharides are differentially synthesized and localized during cell development and differentiation in the clover root tip. In cortical cells XG epitopes are present at a threefold greater density in the newly formed cross walls than in the older longitudinal walls, and PGA/RG-I epitopes are detected solely in the expanded middle lamella of cortical cell corners, even after pretreatment of sections with pectinmethylesterase to uncover masked epitopes. These results suggest that in cortical cells XG and PGA/RG-I are differentially localized not only to particular wall domains, but also to particular cell walls. In contrast to their nonoverlapping distribution in cortical cells, XG epitopes and PGA/RG-I epitopes largely colocalize in the epidermal cell walls. The results also demonstrate that the middle lamella of the longitudinal walls shared by epidermal cells and by epidermal and cortical cells constitutes a barrier to the diffusion of cell wall and mucilage molecules. Synthesis of XG and PGA/RG-I epitope-containing polysaccharides also varies during cellular differentiation in the root cap. The differentiation of gravitropic columella cells into mucilage-secreting peripheral cells is marked by a dramatic increase in the synthesis and secretion of molecules containing XG and PGA/RG-I epitopes. In contrast, JIM 7 epitopes are present at abundant levels in columella cell walls, but are not detectable in peripheral cell walls or in secreted mucilage. There were also changes in the cisternal labeling of the Golgi stacks during cellular differentiation in the root tip. Whereas PGA/RG-I epitopes are detected primarily in cis- and medial Golgi cisternae in cortical cells (Moore, P. J., K. M. M. Swords, M. A. Lynch, and L. A. Staehelin. 1991. J. Cell Biol. 112:589-602), they are localized predominantly in the trans-Golgi cisternae and the trans-Golgi network in epidermal and peripheral root cap cells. These observations suggest that during cellular differentiation the plant Golgi apparatus can be both structurally and functionally reorganized.  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.
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   

5.
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   

6.
The Golgi apparatus of plant cells is engaged in both the processing of glycoproteins and the synthesis of complex polysaccharides. To investigate the compartmentalization of these functions within individual Golgi stacks, we have analyzed the ultrastructure and the immunolabeling patterns of high-pressure frozen and freeze-substituted suspension-cultured sycamore maple (Acer pseudoplatanus L.) cells. As a result of the improved structural preservation, three morphological types of Golgi cisternae, designated cis, medial, and trans, as well as the trans Golgi network, could be identified. The number of cis cisternae per Golgi stack was found to be fairly constant at approximately 1, whereas the number of medial and trans cisternae per stack was variable and accounted for the varying number of cisternae (3-10) among the many Golgi stacks examined. By using a battery of seven antibodies whose specific sugar epitopes on secreted polysaccharides and glycoproteins are known, we have been able to determine in which types of cisternae specific sugars are added to N-linked glycans, and to xyloglucan and polygalacturonic acid/rhamnogalacturonan-I, two complex polysaccharides. The findings are as follows. The β-1,4-linked d-glucosyl backbone of xyloglucan is synthesized in trans cisternae, and the terminal fucosyl residues on the trisaccharide side chains of xyloglucan are partly added in the trans cisternae, and partly in the trans Golgi network. In contrast, the polygalacturonic/rhamnogalacturonan-I backbone is assembled in cis and medial cisternae, methylesterification of the carboxyl groups of the galacturonic acid residues in the polygalacturonic acid domains occurs mostly in medial cisternae, and arabinose-containing side chains of the polygalacturonic acid domains are added to the nascent polygalacturonic acid/rhamnogalacturonan-I molecules in the trans cisternae. Double labeling experiments demonstrate that xyloglucan and polygalacturonic acid/rhamnogalacturonan-I can be synthesized concomitantly within the same Golgi stack. Finally, we show that the xylosyl residue-linked β-1,2 to the β-linked mannose of the core of N-linked glycans is added in medial cisternae. Taken together, our results indicate that in sycamore maple suspension-cultured cells, different types of Golgi cisternae contain different sets of glycosyl transferases, that the functional organization of the biosynthetic pathways of complex polysaccharides is consistent with these molecules being processed in a cis to trans direction like the N-linked glycans, and that the complex polysaccharide xyloglucan is assembled exclusively in trans Golgi cisternae and the trans Golgi network.  相似文献   

7.
Secretion of cell wall polysaccharides in Vicia root hairs   总被引:2,自引:1,他引:1  
Root hairs of hairy winter vetch ( Vicia villosa Roth) synthesize and secrete abundant cell wall matrix polysaccharides, making this an excellent system for the study of secretion during tip growth. Roots with newly formed hairs were preserved by cryofixation and freeze substitution. Cryofixed root hairs showed excellent structural and antigenic preservation. Ultrastructural analyses showed numerous vesicles near the tip and a concentration of Golgi bodies in the subapical region of the hair. The distribution of polygalacturonic acid and xyloglucan in the endomembrane system and cell wall were revealed by immunolabeling, using previously characterized monoclonal antibodies. De-esterified polygalacturonic acid was present on the external surface of the cell wall, but was not detected within the cell, although chemical de-esterification revealed abundant antigen in Golgi bodies and secretory vesicles. Methyl-esterified polygalacturonic acid epitopes were detected within the medial and trans cisternae of Golgi bodies, in secretory vesicles, and throughout the wall, indicating that pectin is secreted in a neutral form and may then be de-esterified in muro . Xyloglucan was also detected within the trans cisternae of Golgi bodies, secretory vesicles and throughout the cell wall. Double labeling experiments demonstrated that both polysaccharides occur simultaneously in the same Golgi bodies, and that secretory vesicles containing both polygalacturonic acid and xyloglucan deliver the polysaccharides to the cell wall at the growing tip.  相似文献   

8.
The intracellular pathway of cartilage proteoglycan biosynthesis was investigated in isolated chondrocytes using a protein A-gold electron microscopy immunolocalization procedure. Proteoglycans contain a protein core to which chondroitin sulfate and keratan sulfate chains and oligosaccharides are added in posttranslational processing. Specific antibodies have been used in this study to determine separately the distribution of the protein core and chondroitin sulfate components. In normal chondrocytes, proteoglycan protein core was readily localized only in smooth-membraned vesicles which co-labeled with ricin, indicating them to be galactose-rich medial/trans-Golgi cisternae, whereas there was only a low level of labeling in the rough endoplasmic reticulum. Chondroitin sulfate was also localized in medial/trans-Golgi cisternae of control chondrocytes but was not detected in other cellular compartments. In cells treated with monensin (up to 1.0 microM), which strongly inhibits proteoglycan secretion (Burditt, L.J., A. Ratcliffe, P. R. Fryer, and T. Hardingham, 1985, Biochim. Biophys. Acta., 844:247-255), there was greatly increased intracellular localization of proteoglycan protein core in both ricin-positive vesicles, and in ricin-negative vesicles (derived from cis-Golgi stacks) and in the distended rough endoplasmic reticulum. Chondroitin sulfate also increased in abundance after monensin treatment, but continued to be localized only in ricin-positive vesicles. The results suggested that the synthesis of chondroitin sulfate on proteoglycan only occurs in medial/trans-Golgi cisternae as a late event in proteoglycan biosynthesis. This also suggests that glycosaminoglycan synthesis on proteoglycans takes place in a compartment in common with events in the biosynthesis of both O-linked and N-linked oligosaccharides on other secretory glycoproteins.  相似文献   

9.
The budding yeast Pichia pastoris contains ordered Golgi stacks next to discrete transitional endoplasmic reticulum (tER) sites, making this organism ideal for structure-function studies of the secretory pathway. Here, we have used P. pastoris to test various models for Golgi trafficking. The experimental approach was to analyze P. pastoris tER-Golgi units by using cryofixed and freeze-substituted cells for electron microscope tomography, immunoelectron microscopy, and serial thin section analysis of entire cells. We find that tER sites and the adjacent Golgi stacks are enclosed in a ribosome-excluding "matrix." Each stack contains three to four cisternae, which can be classified as cis, medial, trans, or trans-Golgi network (TGN). No membrane continuities between compartments were detected. This work provides three major new insights. First, two types of transport vesicles accumulate at the tER-Golgi interface. Morphological analysis indicates that the center of the tER-Golgi interface contains COPII vesicles, whereas the periphery contains COPI vesicles. Second, fenestrae are absent from cis cisternae, but are present in medial through TGN cisternae. The number and distribution of the fenestrae suggest that they form at the edges of the medial cisternae and then migrate inward. Third, intact TGN cisternae apparently peel off from the Golgi stacks and persist for some time in the cytosol, and these "free-floating" TGN cisternae produce clathrin-coated vesicles. These observations are most readily explained by assuming that Golgi cisternae form at the cis face of the stack, progressively mature, and ultimately dissociate from the trans face of the stack.  相似文献   

10.
W J Brown  M G Farquhar 《Cell》1984,36(2):295-307
Mannose-6-phosphate (Man-6-P) receptors for lysosomal enzymes were localized by immunocytochemistry in several secretory and adsorptive cell types using monospecific antireceptor antibodies. By immunofluorescence, the receptors were found in the Golgi region of polarized cells. When localized by immunoperoxidase at the electron microscope level, they were detected in Golgi cisternae, coated vesicles, endosomes, and lysosomes of all cell types examined (hepatocytes, exocrine pancreatic and epididymal epithelia). Within the Golgi complex, immunoreactive receptors were restricted in their distribution to one or two cisternae on the cis side of the Golgi stacks. They were not detected in trans Golgi or GERL cisternae. Based on their high concentration of Man-6-P receptors, we propose that the cis Golgi cisternae represent the site where the secretory and lysosomal pathways diverge: lysosomal enzymes bearing the Man-6-P recognition marker bind to Man-6-P receptors in this location and are delivered to endosomes and lysosomes via coated vesicles.  相似文献   

11.
Targeting of active sialyltransferase to the plant Golgi apparatus.   总被引:20,自引:6,他引:14       下载免费PDF全文
E G Wee  D J Sherrier  T A Prime    P Dupree 《The Plant cell》1998,10(10):1759-1768
Glycosyltransferases in the Golgi apparatus synthesize cell wall polysaccharides and elaborate the complex glycans of glycoproteins. To investigate the targeting of this type of enzyme to plant Golgi compartments, we generated transgenic Arabidopsis plants expressing alpha-2,6-sialyltransferase, a glycosyltransferase of the mammalian trans-Golgi cisternae and the trans-Golgi network. Biochemical analysis as well as immunolight and immunoelectron microscopy of these plants indicate that the protein is targeted specifically to the Golgi apparatus. Moreover, the protein is predominantly localized to the cisternae and membranes of the trans side of the organelle. When supplied with the appropriate substrates, the enzyme has significant alpha-2,6-sialyltransferase activity. These results indicate a conservation of glycosyltransferase targeting mechanisms between plant and mammalian cells and also demonstrate that glycosyltransferases can be subcompartmentalized to specific cisternae of the plant Golgi apparatus.  相似文献   

12.
Distribution of xylosylation and fucosylation in the plant Golgi apparatus   总被引:4,自引:0,他引:4  
Antibodies have been immunopurified which are specific for carbohydrate epitopes containing the β1→2 xylose or α1→3 fucose residues found on complex N-linked glycans in plants. The antibody specificity was determined by taking advantage of an Arabidopsis thaliana N-glycosylation mutant which lacks N-acetyl-glucosaminyltransferase I and is unable to synthesize complex glycans. These antibodies were used to immunolocalize xylose- and fucose-containing glycoproteins in suspension-cultured sycamore cells (Acer pseudoplatanus). By mapping the enzymatic reaction products within the Golgi apparatus, the fucosyl- and xylosyltransferase subcellular localization was made possible using immunocytochemistry on thin sections of high-pressure frozen and freeze-substituted sycamore cells. This procedure allows a much better preservation of organelles, and particularly of the Golgi stack morphology, than that obtained with conventionally fixed samples. Glycoproteins containing β→2 xylose and α1→3 fucose residues were immunodetected in the cell wall, the vacuole, and the Golgi cisternae. The extent of immunolabeling over the different cisternae of 50 Golgi stacks was quantified after treatment with anti-xylose or anti-fucose antibodies. Labeling for xylose-containing glycoproteins was predominent in the medial cisternae, while fucose-containing glycoproteins were mainly detected in the trans compartment. Therefore, in plants, complex N-linked glycan xylosylation probably occurs mostly at the medial Golgi level and α1→3 fucose is mainly incorporated in the trans cisternae. Finally, fucose- and xylose-containing glycoproteins were also immunolocalized, albeit to a lesser extent, in earlier Golgi compartments. This indicates that the glycosylation events are a continuous process with some maxima in given compartments, rather than a succession of discrete and compartment-dependent steps.  相似文献   

13.
The sodium ionophore monensin was used as an inhibitor of Golgifunction to study the secretory event in suspension-culturedsycamore cells. The morphological changes induced by monensinwere recorded. Concurrent studies of the disturbance causedby the drug were carried out by biochemical, cytochemical andimmunocytochemical techniques. Monensin induced accumulationof smooth and coated vesicles in the vicinity of the Golgi apparatus,swelling of Golgi cisternae and also provoked the formationof extracytoplasmic pockets between the plasma membrane andthe cell wall. Cytochemical tests for polysaccharides and immunolocalizationof secreted pectins, recognized by the monoclonal antibody JIM7, were performed, and the results indicated that the biosynthesisand/or processing machinery of polysaccharides was affectedby the drug. In contrast, immunolocalization of glycoproteins,recognized by the monoclonal antibodies JIM 84 and JIM 13 demonstratedthat the accumulation of vesicles in the cytoplasm were Golgiderived, and that the secretion of glycoproteins was not drasticallyaffected by monensin. Fluorography of radiolabelled proteinsdemonstrated that in this system the secretion of proteins wasnot qualitatively changed by monensin. The implications of theseresults are discussed in the light of the current hypotheseson the effects of monensin on the secretory pathway. Key words: Golgi apparatus, immunocytochemistry, monensin, secretion  相似文献   

14.
We have developed an in vitro system to study the biochemical events in the fusion of ilimaquinone (IQ) induced vesiculated Golgi membranes (VGMs) into stacks of cisternae. The Golgi complex in intact normal rat kidney cells (NRK) is vesiculated by treatment with IQ. The cells are washed to remove the drug and then permeabilized by a rapid freeze-thaw procedure. VGMs of 60 nm average diameter assemble into stacks of Golgi cisternae by a process that is temperature dependent, requires ATP and a high speed supernatant from cell extract (cytosol), as revealed by immunofluorescence and electron microscopy. The newly assembled stacks are functionally active in vesicular protein transport and contain processing enzymes that carry out Golgi specific modifications of glycoproteins. The fusion of VGMs requires NSF, a protein known to promote fusion of transport vesicles with the target membrane in the exocytic and endocytic pathways. Immunoelectron microscopy using Golgi specific anti-mannosidase II antibody reveals that VGMs undergo sequential changes in their morphology, whereby they first fuse to form larger vesicles of 200-300-nm average diameter which subsequently extend into tubular elements and finally assemble into stacks of cisternae.  相似文献   

15.
7-Dehydrobrefeldin A (7-oxo-BFA) is a brefeldin A (BFA) analog that, like BFA, is a potent phytotoxin of Alternaria carthami, a fungal pathogen of safflower (Carthamus tinctorius L.) plants. Both BFA and 7-oxo-BFA have been shown to be causal agents of the leaf spot disease of these plants. We have investigated the effects of 7-oxo-BFA on the secretion and the structure of the Golgi stacks of sycamore maple (Acer pseudoplatanus) suspension-cultured cells to determine whether 7-oxo-BFA affects these cells in the same manner as BFA. When applied at 10 micrograms/mL for 1 h, 7-oxo-BFA inhibits secretion of proteins by approximately 80%, the same value obtained for BFA. However, electron micrographs of high-pressure frozen/freeze-substituted cells demonstrated that 7-oxo-BFA is a more potent disrupter of the Golgi stacks of sycamore maple cells than BFA. In cells treated for 1 h with 10 micrograms/mL 7-oxo-BFA, very few Golgi stacks can be discerned. Most of those that are left consist of fewer than three cisternae, all of which stain like trans-Golgi cisternae. They are surrounded by clusters of large (150-300 nm in diameter), darkly staining vesicles that are embedded in a fine-filamentous, ribosome-excluding matrix. Similarly sized and stained vesicles are seen budding from the rims of the residual trans-Golgi cisternae. Both the large vesicles and the residual Golgi stack buds stain with anti-xyloglucan polysaccharide antibodies. Recovery of Golgi stacks after removal of 7-oxo-BFA from 1-h-treated cells takes 2 to 6 h, compared with 1 to 2 h for cells treated with BFA. In contrast to 7-oxo-BFA, the BFA breakdown product BFA acid had no effect either on secretion or on the secretory apparatus. This is the first report, to our knowledge of a BFA analog inhibiting secretion in a eukaryotic cell system.  相似文献   

16.
Human blood group A antigenicity of glycoproteins is retained on epon-embedded jejunum sections after glutaraldehyde fixation and osmium treatment. The intracellular location of molecules bearing these determinants was visualized in the four types of epithelial cells of A+ rabbit jejunum sections with immuno-colloidal gold labeling. The brush border membrane and in particular the glycocalyx of absorbing cells as well as the secretory granules of goblet and Paneth cells were heavily labeled. In enteroendocrine cells, the membrane of secretory granules and not their content was lightly labeled. The differential labeling of secretory or membrane bound glycoproteins is accompanied by different labels of the Golgi complex as expected if labeling of the Golgi saccules was due to the presence of glycoproteins in transit. In all cases the label is primarily concentrated in only half the cisternae on the trans side of the Golgi stacks. In absorbing cells, structures have been revealed in the terminal web that could be related to the brush border membrane and consequently implicated in its biogenesis. The fibrillar material of the glycocalyx appears as highly labeled tangled structures which apparently proceed from densely stained "carrier" vesicles arising from the Golgi apparatus. Vesicles fusing at the lower part of microvilli could result of integration of this material into the lightly labeled vesicles strictly found in the terminal web. These last vesicles could also contain newly synthesized brush border hydrolases.  相似文献   

17.
Summary Two polyclonal antisera, anti-xyloglucan (anti-XG) and anti-polygalacturonic acid/rhamnogalacturonan I (anti-PGA/RG-I), which recognize, respectively, noncellulosic -(14)-D-glucan containing polysaccharides and the unesterified forms of the acidic pectic polysaccharide polygalacturonic acid/rhamnogalacturonan I, were used to localize epitopes recognized by the two antisera in the root tip of oat (Avena sativa). Immunoblot analysis shows that epitopes recognized by the anti-XG antibodies are present in both the mixed linkage -(13)-(14)-D-glucans (MG) and in xyloglucan (XG). Immunogold electron microscopy shows that the cell walls of meristematic, cortical, epidermal, columella, and peripheral cells contain significant amounts of such epitopes. In contrast, the molecules that carry these MG/XG epitopes appear to be sparse in the expanded middle lamella of meristematic cells, but dense in the expanded middle lamella of peripheral root cap cells. This finding suggests that the porosity of the middle lamella is altered in peripheral root cap cells to facilitate mucilage secretion. In contrast, few PGA/RG-I epitopes were detected in any cell walls of any of the cell types examined. Double immunogold labeling experiments revealed an intriguing localization pattern of MG/XG and of PGA/RG-I epitopes in the peripheral mucilage-secreting cells of the root cap. Whereas MG/XG epitopes were abundant in the cell wall, they were sparse in both the secreted mucilage and in intracellular secretory vesicles. In marked contrast, PGA/RG-I epitopes were detected at high density in intracellular secretory vesicles, but unexpectedly, were quite sparse in both the cell wall and in the mucilage. These immunolabeling patterns are consistent with the hypotheses that the synthesis and secretion of particular -D-glucans is subject to both activation and down-regulation during cell development and differentiation and that post-secretory alterations of pectic polysaccharides, such as enzymatic release of RG-I-type mucilage molecules from PGA/RG-I precursors, may occur in the peripheral cell walls of the oat root cap.Abbreviations MG mixed linkage -(13)-(14)-D-glucan - PGA/RG-I polygalacturonic acid/rhamnogalacturonan I - SEPS sycamore extracellular polysaccharides - TGN trans Golgi network - XG xyloglucan  相似文献   

18.
Differentiation of the Arabidopsis thaliana seed coat cells includes a secretory phase where large amounts of pectinaceous mucilage are deposited to a specific domain of the cell wall. During this phase, Golgi stacks had cisternae with swollen margins and trans-Golgi networks consisting of interconnected vesicular clusters. The proportion of Golgi stacks producing mucilage was determined by immunogold labeling and transmission electron microscopy using an antimucilage antibody, CCRC-M36. The large percentage of stacks found to contain mucilage supports a model where all Golgi stacks produce mucilage synchronously, rather than having a subset of specialist Golgi producing pectin product. Initiation of mucilage biosynthesis was also correlated with an increase in the number of Golgi stacks per cell. Interestingly, though the morphology of individual Golgi stacks was dependent on the volume of mucilage produced, the number was not, suggesting that proliferation of Golgi stacks is developmentally programmed. Mapping the position of mucilage-producing Golgi stacks within developing seed coat cells and live-cell imaging of cells labeled with a trans-Golgi marker showed that stacks were randomly distributed throughout the cytoplasm rather than clustered at the site of secretion. These data indicate that the destination of cargo has little effect on the location of the Golgi stack within the cell.  相似文献   

19.
Electron microscopy and cryoimmunocytochemistry were used to characterize tubular connections in the secretory pathway using rat spermatids as model. Our results support the existence of a complex tubular network enriched in the Golgi matrix protein GM130 that transiently joins the cis-Golgi side and the endoplasmic reticulum. These tubules occasionally contain the endoplasmic reticulum resident protein PDI but not COPII complexes or KDEL receptor. At the lateral edges of the stacks tubules were seen to connect cisternae belonging to the same or adjacent stacks. These connections were observed in all cisternae but preferentially on the cis side. Giantin, Gos28 and Rab6 were detected in the tubules; importantly, we reported the presence of cis-trans heterotypic connections between cisternae. On the trans-Golgi side, we occasionally observed tubules highly immunoreactive for Rab6 connecting the stack with the forming acrosome. Together, our results support the existence of transient continuities throughout the secretory pathways.  相似文献   

20.
《The Journal of cell biology》1983,97(6):1815-1822
Human hepatoma cells, infected by vesicular stomatitis virus, offer a good system to study simultaneously the intracellular localization of a well defined transmembrane glycoprotein (VSV-G), a secretory glycoprotein (transferrin), and a nonglycosylated secretory protein (albumin). We used monospecific antibodies in combination with 5- and 8- nm colloidal gold particles complexed with protein A to immunolabel these proteins simultaneously in thin frozen sections of hepatoma cells. VSV-G, transferrin, and albumin are present in the same rough endoplasmic reticulum cisternae, the same Golgi compartments, and the same secretory vesicles. In the presence of the ionophore monensin intracellular transport is blocked at the trans cisternae of the Golgi complex, and VSV-G, transferrin, and albumin accumulate in dilated cisternae, which are apparently derived from the trans-Golgi elements. Glycoproteins, synthesized and secreted in the presence of monensin, are less acidic than those in control cultures. This is probably caused by a less efficient contact between the soluble secretory proteins and the membrane-bound glycosyltransferases that are present in the most monensin-affected (trans) Golgi cisternae.  相似文献   

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