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1.
Cathepsins B and H are representative cysteine proteinases localized to lysosomes of a variety of mammalian cells. Previous studies indicated the presence of these enzymes also in secretory granules of endocrine cells. Therefore, the human endocrine pancreas and human insulinomas were investigated by light microscopical immunohistochemistry on serial semithin plastic sections immunostained sequentially for cathepsins B or H and pancreatic hormones. Out of the four established endocrine cell types, insulin (B-) and glucagon (A-) cells showed immunoreactivities for these cathepsins. Cathepsin B immunoreactivities showed a dot-like appearance in A- and B-cells and in insulinoma cells. Immunoreactivities for cathepsin H additionally were found in cell parts containing secretory granules of B-cells and insulinoma cells. By single and double immunoelectron microscopy the dot-like immunoreactivities for cathepsin B were identified as immunoreactive lysosomes of A- and B-cells and insulinoma cells. In addition, some of the secretory granules of A- and B-cells showed cathepsin B immunoreactivities. Cathepsin H immunoreactivities showed an other pattern: they were found regularly in the secretory granules of A- and B-cells and insulinoma cells, and in lysosomes of A-cells. These findings suggest that cathepsins B and H in lysosomes of A- and/or B-cells are involved in the degradation of lysosomal constituents. In secretory granules of these cells, these cysteine proteinases may participate in the processing of the corresponding hormones from their precursor proteins.  相似文献   

2.
Summary Cathepsins B and H are representative cysteine proteinases localized to lysosomes of a variety of mammalian cells. Previous studies indicated the presence of these enzymes also in secretory granules of endocrine cells. Therefore, the human endocrine pancreas and human insulinomas were investigated by light microscopical immunohistochemistry on serial semithin plastic sections immunostained sequentially for cathepsins B or H and pancreatic hormones. Out of the four established endocrine cell types, insulin (B-) and glucagon (A-) cells showed immunoreactivities for these cathepsins. Cathepsin B immunoreactivities showed a dot-like appearance in A- and B-cells and in insulinoma cells. Immunoreactivities for cathepsin H additionally were found in cell parts containing secretory granules of B-cells and insulinoma cells. By single and double immunoelectron microscopy the dot-like immunoreactivities for cathepsin B were identified as immunoreactive lysosomes of A- and B-cells and insulinoma cells. In addition, some of the secretory granules of A- and B-cells showed cathepsin B immunoreactivities. Cathepsin H immunoreactivities showed an other pattern: they were found regularly in the secretory granules of A- and B-cells and insulinoma cells, and in lysosomes of A-cells. These findings suggest that cathepsins B and H in lysosomes of A- and/or B-cells are involved in the degradation of lysosomal constituents. In secretory granules of these cells, these cystine proteinases may participate in the processing of the corresponding hormones from their precursor proteins.  相似文献   

3.
The cellular and subcellular distribution of L-glutamate decarboxylase (GAD), the biosynthetic enzyme for gamma-aminobutyric acid (GABA), was determined immunohistochemically in rat pancreatic islet using light and electron microscopic techniques. The cellular distribution of GAD was determined at the light microscopic level using an elution/re-staining protocol and a computerized digital image processing technique. At this level of resolution, immunofluorescent GAD was observed to be co-localized with immunofluorescent insulin in the islet B-cells and absent in both the A-cells, which contained glucagon, and the D-cells, which contained somatostatin. Subcellular localization of GAD was determined using an electron microscopic, colloidal gold post-embedding protocol and was compared to insulin immunoreactivity in serial sections of the same B-cell. In the same islet B-cell, GAD immunoreactivity appeared predominantly in the extragranular cytoplasm, whereas insulin immunoreactivity was associated with the secretory granules. Quantitative analysis of GAD immunoreactivity in the B-cell revealed 15.3 +/- 1.8 gold particles/micron2 in the cytoplasm, 1.7 +/- 0.2 gold particles/micron2 in the secretory granules, and 0.4 +/- 0.4 gold particles/micron2 in the mitochondria. The results of this study, localization of the biosynthetic enzyme for GABA to the B-cell cytoplasmic compartment and its absence in the secretory granules which contain insulin, are compatible with the hypothesis that GABA functions as an intracellular mediator of B-cell activity.  相似文献   

4.
To determine the characteristics of lysosomes in rat islet endocrine cells, we examined the precise localization of cathepsins B, H, and L and their specific inhibitors, cystatins alpha and beta, using immunocytochemical techniques. By use of serial semi-thin sections, we detected immunoreactivity for cathepsin B in insulin-, glucagon-, somatostatin-, and pancreatic polypeptide-positive (PP) cells. Strong immunoreactivity for cathepsin H was seen in A-cells and weak immunoreactivity in PP cells, but none in others. Immunodeposits for cystatin beta were demonstrated in B-cells. Brief dipping of thin sections in 1% sodium methoxide before the following immunocytochemical reaction enhanced specific deposits of immunogold particles on the target organelles. Use of a double-immunostaining technique showed co-localization of insulin with cystatin beta in many secretory granules. This suggests that cystatin beta may regulate converting enzymes participating in the maturation process of insulin. By use of an immunogold technique, heterogeneous localization of cathepsins B and H in lysosomes was also found among islet cells at the light microscopic level. This may be due to the difference in peptides degraded in lysosomes among the cells.  相似文献   

5.
Four major pancreatic hormones were immunolocalized at the light and electron microscopic levels in the pancreas of the Nile crocodile, Crocodilus niloticus. Immunogold was used for electron microscopy, and peroxidase-antiperoxidase was used for light microscopy. Somatostatin-positive D-cells and pancreatic polypeptide-containing F-cells accounted for about 60% of the immunoreactive cells in the ventral pancreas. Glucagon-positive A-cells were the least frequent cell type in the ventral pancreas, about 15%, but were the predominant cell type, about 40%, in the pancreas that was dorsal in character. An expanded population of D-cells (relative to mammals and other higher vertebrates) in association with two very different numbers of A-cells can be expected to have important consequences for the homotropic control of secretory activity of the endocrine pancreas as well as for the function of the acinar pancreas. F-cells were absent from the dorsal part of the pancreas, whereas insulin-containing B-cells were slightly more abundant in this portion of the pancreas. The regional character of the endocrine pancreas was related to the complex looping of the proximal small intestine. Without immunolabeling, only B-granules were morphognomonic in electron micrographs. The insulin-reactive B-granules were the smallest (370 nm) of the secretory granules and were followed in size by somatostatin-positive D-granules (380 nm). The pancreatic polypeptide-containing secretory granules were the largest (580 nm). Glucagon-reactive A-granules (430 nm) sometimes exhibited a protuberance or extension of secretory granule matrix and limiting membrane. Such a morphological feature has previously been associated with secretion of glucagon and the initiation of insulin secretion. Taken together these studies indicate that protuberances have a significant, but as yet undefined, role in pancreatic endocrine cells.  相似文献   

6.
Differences in glucose handling by pancreatic A- and B-cells   总被引:10,自引:0,他引:10  
Glucose exerts opposite effects upon glucagon and insulin release from the endocrine pancreas. Glucose uptake and oxidation were therefore compared in purified A- and B-cells. In purified B-cells, the intracellular concentration of glucose or 3-O-methyl-D-glucose equilibrates within 2 min with the extracellular levels, and, like in intact islets, the rate of glucose oxidation displays a sigmoidal dose-response curve for glucose. In contrast, even after 5 min of incubation, the apparent distribution space of D-glucose or 3-O-methyl-D-glucose in A-cells remains much lower than the intracellular volume. In A-cells, both the rate of 3-O-methyl-D-glucose uptake and glucose oxidation proceed proportional to the hexose concentration up to 10 mM and reach saturation at higher concentrations. Addition of insulin failed to affect 3-O-methyl-D-glucose or D-glucose uptake and glucose oxidation by purified A-cells. Glucose releases 30-fold more insulin from islets than from single B-cells, but this marked difference is not associated with differences in glucose handling. The rate of glucose oxidation is virtually identical in single and reaggregated B-cells and is not altered after addition of glucagon or somatostatin. It is concluded that the dependency of glucose-induced insulin release upon the functional coordination between islet cells is not mediated through changes in glucose metabolism.  相似文献   

7.
Summary Comparative ultrastructural study of the B-cells in the intimai layer of the synovial membrane in mouse, rat, rabbit, guinea-pig and man clearly distinguishes these cells from both the histiocytic A-cells (macrophage-like cells) and the fibroblasts. In addition to the marked development of the rough endoplasmic reticulum and Golgi apparatus, typical dense secretory vesicles apparently of Golgi origin are always found in mouse B-cells and frequently in those of the rat. These secretory characteristics clearly relate these cells to glandular cells engaged in polypeptidic secretion. The variations in the other species studied concern only the figuration of secretory material. Thus, the B-cells appear to constitute a category of secretory cells specific to the synovial membrane, but the function of which has yet to be determined.  相似文献   

8.
Secretory granules of pancreatic B-cells contain high concentrations of zinc and calcium. The effect of gradual degranulation (induced by tolbutamide over a period of 3 days) and the subsequent regranulation (over a period of 4 days) on the histochemically detectable zinc (Zn) and calcium (Ca) content of B-cells was investigated. Zn was stained by dithizone, Ca by glyoxal-bis-(2-hydroxyanil), (GBHA), and B-granules by aldehyde fuchsin (AF). The staining intensities were determined cytophotometrically. A decrease of the granulation by 50% causes a comparable decrease of the Zn content. Almost complete degranulations, however, hardly further diminished the Zn content. Regranulation restores the Zn content parallel to the granulation. The presence of 40% of the initial Zn content in degranulated B-cells suggests the existence of a non-granular Zn fraction. The Zn content of B-cells may be partly involved in the storage of insulin as a Zn-insulin complex in the secretory vesicles. A-cells, however, contain even more (+ 30%) Zn than B-cells. Degranulation of B-cells is accompanied by a moderate decrease of the zinc content of the A-cells. The function of Zn in A-cells is completely unknown. Degranulation of B-cells causes the GBHA-Ca content to decrease to a very low level parallel to the AF-positive granulation. During regranulation the GBHA-Ca content restores parallel to the granulation and reaches after complete regranulation a slightly higher level than in untreated control rats. Almost complete disappearance of CBHA-Ca in the B-cells is accompanied by a decrease of the total islet calcium content of 33%. The results indicate that GBHA stains a Ca fraction which is mainly localized to the secretory granules. The stainability of granular Ca by GBHA is probably based on: a) the high Ca concentration in the granules, b) the presence of ionized Ca in the granules, due to the low intragranular pH, and c) on the properties of GBHA, which stains, under conditions used, only ionized (possibly also readily ionizable) Ca.  相似文献   

9.
Male Small-obese mice (Small-ob) which derived from a C57BL/6 J-ob/ob mouse colony were examined histopathologically at 13-, 39-, and over 52-week-old. C57BL/6 J-ob mice (?/+: Non-ob, ob/ob: Ob) were studied as controls. In Small-ob mice, plasma glucagon concentration was higher than that of the Ob mice (this difference was highly significant), and serum levels for insulin was within normal limits. Microscopically, hypertrophy and hyperplasia of the islets of Langerhans were found only in the pancreas of Ob mice. The increase in the number of A-cells and the decrease in the number of B-cells were revealed immunohistochemically in the islets of Small-ob mice. These changes were more severe with advance of age. In the aged Small-ob mice, perivascular and periductular cell infiltration were found, but inflammatory change of islet tissue was not confirmed in any animals examined. Diabetic symptoms in Small-ob mice seems to stem from the disparity in insulin/glucagon (I/G) ratio associated with hyperglucagonemia which result from increased number of A-cells of pancreatic islets.  相似文献   

10.
The structure and cytochemistry of the Golgi apparatus and GERL of rat parotid acinar cells was studied after in vivo secretory stimulation with isoproterenol. Discharge of mature secretory granules was complete within 1 hr after isoproterenol injection, but immature granules in the Golgi region or near the lumen were not released. At early times (1-5 hr) after isoproterenol, acid phosphatase (AcPase) activity was markedly increased in GERL and immature secretory granules compared to uninjected controls. GERL appeared increased in extent and numerous continuities with immature granules were observed. Reaccumulation of mature secretory granules was first evident at 5 hr, and was almost complete by 16 hr after isoproterenol. Thiamine pyrophosphatase (TPPase) activity, normally restricted to the trans Golgi saccules, was frequently present in immature granules during this time. Narrow cisternae resembling GERL, occasionally in continuity with immature granules, also contained TPPase reaction product. By 16-24 hr after stimulation, the activity and distribution of AcPase and TPPase were similar to control cells. These results demonstrate the dynamic nature of the Golgi apparatus and GERL in parotid acinar cells, and emphasize the close structural and functional relationship between these two structures.  相似文献   

11.
The pancreatic acinar carcinoma established in rat by Reddy and Rao (1977, Science 198:78-80) demonstrates heterogeneity of cytodifferentiation ranging from cells containing abundant well- developed secretory granules to those with virtually none. We examined the synthesis intracellular transport and storage of secretory proteins in secretory granule-enriched (GEF) and secretory granule-deficient (GDF) subpopulations of neoplastic acinar cells separable by Percoll gradient centrifugation, to determine the secretory process in cells with distinctly different cytodifferentiation. The cells pulse-labeled with [3H]leucine for 3 min and chase incubated for up to 4 h were analyzed by quantitative electron microscope autoradiography. In GEF neoplastic cells, the results of grain counts and relative grain density estimates establish that the label moves successively from rough endoplasmic reticulum (RER) leads to the Golgi apparatus leads to post-Golgi vesicles (vacuoles or immature granules) leads to mature secretory granules, in a manner reminiscent of the secretory process in normal pancreatic acinar cells. The presence of approximately 40% of the label in association with secretory granules at 4 h postpulse indicates that GEF neoplastic cells retain (acquire) the essential regulatory controls of the secretory process. In GDF neoplastic acinar cells the drainage of label from RER is slower, but the peak label of approximately 20% in the Golgi apparatus is reached relatively rapidly (10 min postpulse). The movement of label from the Golgi to the post- Golgi vesicles is evident; further delineation of the secretory process in GDF neoplastic cells, however, was not possible due to lack of secretory granule differentiation. The movement of label from RER leads to the Golgi apparatus leads to the post-Golgi vesicles suggests that GDF neoplastic cells also synthesize secretory proteins, but to a lesser extent than the GEF cells. The reason(s) for the inability of GDF cells to concentrate and store exportable proteins remain to be elucidated.  相似文献   

12.
Secretory granules have been seen within components of the Golgi bodies of rat pituitary acidophils and mouse pancreatic acinar cells. The fact that secretory granules are much more frequently encountered within Golgi components under conditions of increased secretory activity suggests that granule formation may occur within the Golgi apparatus in these two types of cells.  相似文献   

13.
Summary The immunoreaction of a rabbit chromogranin A and B antiserum was studied in normal human pancreatic islets. By examination of consecutive light microscopical sections, it was revealed that, at high antiserum concentrations (1:2000 or less), the whole islet area was heavily labelled, although the peripheral glucagon (A)-cells were the most intense in their immunoreaction. At low antiserum concentrations (1:4000 or more) the A-cells still showed the same intense labelling reaction, but the central B-cells were weakly labelled. Electron microscopically, reactivity towards the chromogranin A and B antiserum and the monoclonal insulin antibodies was present in the same central electron-dense core of the B-cell secretory granules, as demonstrated after application of the immunogold technique at different antibody dilutions. In the A-cells, the chromogranin immunoreactivity was concentrated at the peripheral mantle of the secretory granules. The D-cell granules showed a weak immunolabelling. Examination of human islets with the monoclonal chromogranin A antibody LK2H10 revealed immunogold labelling only in the peripheal mantle of the A-cell granules, while the B-cell granules were unlabelled.The present results show that a chromogranin peptide is co-stored with insulin the in normal human B-cell secretory granules. Although the exact composition of this B-cell chromogranin is unknown, it is not identical to that of the chromogranin A present in the A-cell granules.  相似文献   

14.
Histologic studies of pancreatic tissues of one pygmy sperm whale, Kiogia breviceps , and one dwarf sperm whale, K. simus , demonstrated rather typical exocrine pancreatic anatomy. Peroxidase-antiperoxidase (PAP) techniques determined that the cell composition of the islets of Langerhans resembled that of other mammals. Within islets, cells secreting insulin (B-cells) and glucagon (A-cells), were clearly demonstrated, but, surprisingly, isolated A- and B-cells were also found among pancreatic acinar cells. PAP techniques demonstrated the presence of neuron-specific enolase within islets, but failed to provide a sufficiently clear reaction to demonstrate the presence of somarostatin-producing D-cells. No positive PAP reaction for serotonin occurred.  相似文献   

15.
In this article we have presented a philosophical and historical perspective on quick freezing, freeze-drying, freeze-substitution, and immunocytochemical localization of pancreatic islet hormones. A compilation of our findings indicates that quick-freezing does not produce any gross distortion of islet tissue; the amount of usable islet tissue for ultrastructural analysis is approximately 13 micron deep from the frozen edge; three different cell types can be identified in quick-frozen tissue based on general morphological characteristics; freeze-substitution with tetrahydrofuran produces a unique ultrastructural appearance in which ribosomes are particularly striking; with the use of protein A-gold, insulin and glucagon can be localized immunocytochemically on silver-gray (50-nm-thick) sections treated with 1% ovalbumin at room temperature overnight; secretory granules of quick-frozen alpha and beta cells may exist in either a swollen or condensed state; swollen beta cell secretory granules contain a filamentous material that demonstrates immunogold labeling for insulin; insulin and glucagon can be localized within the cisternae of endoplasmic reticulum; our methods provide not only discrete immunocytochemical localization of hormone, but also well-preserved cellular compartments; energy electron loss spectroscopy (EELS) has shown that quantifiable nitrogen maps can be used as an index of hormone packaging in secretory granules; and the sectioning properties of secretory granules at the ultramicrotome change when islet tissue is unosmicated and sectioned on glycerol.  相似文献   

16.
 Calcium is known to be of critical importance for hormone secretion in the insulin-producing B-cells of the endocrine pancreas. Calcium-mediated intracellular signal transduction and the regulation of the concentration of free calcium in B-cells probably involve calcium-binding proteins. In the present study, we have investigated the expression of the calcium/calmodulin-dependent phosphatase, calcineurin, and the EF-hand calcium-binding protein, calretinin, in pancreata of hamsters, gerbils, and rats by immunocytochemistry. Immunocytochemical investigations of serial semithin sections of plastic-embedded pancreata revealed that calcineurin and calretinin were constantly present in islet cells of all three species. In addition to B-cells, these proteins could also be detected in glucagon (A-), somatostatin (D-), and pancreatic polypeptide (PP-) cells. Non-B-cells, especially glucagon-producing A-cells, often exhibited a significantly higher degree of immunoreactivity for both calcium-binding proteins than B-cells. Thus, calcineurin and calretinin may play distinct roles in the regulation of calcium-dependent secretory activities of the different pancreatic endocrine cell types. Accepted: 10 April 1997  相似文献   

17.
We studied the subcellular localization of two major secretory products of adult rat submandibular gland (RSMG), blood group A-reactive mucin glycoprotein and glutamine/glutamic acid-rich protein (GRP), by light and electron microscopic immunocytochemistry. The structure of the major neutral oligosaccharide of the mucin was shown to be: GalNAc alpha 1,3(Fuc alpha 1,2)Gal beta 1,3GalNAc. A mouse monoclonal antibody (1F9) with specificity for blood group A determinants was prepared against the mucin. The antibody recognized a single band of approximately 114 KD on Western blots of RSMG extract. A previously characterized monoclonal antibody (59) against GRP (Mirels et al.: J Biol Chem 262: 7289, 1987) reacted with a doublet of 45-50 KD on Western blots of extraparotid saliva. Immunofluorescence and immunoperoxidase staining of cryostat sections of RSMG with anti-mucin antibodies and anti-GRP antibodies revealed reactivity in acinar cells of the gland. No specific labeling was seen in duct cells of RSMG or in mucous acinar cells of the adjacent sublingual gland. Post-embedding immunogold labeling of thin sections of glutaraldehyde-fixed RSMG with anti-mucin showed strong labeling of the Golgi apparatus and secretory granules of acinar cells. Gold particles were seen mainly over electron-lucent areas of the granules. No labeling occurred over the endoplasmic reticulum. The labeling pattern with the anti-GRP antibodies was similar, except that both electron-dense and -lucent areas of the granules were labeled, and the endoplasmic reticulum was reactive. Double labeling with two different sizes of gold particles showed that both mucin and GRP co-localized in the same granules. Pre-absorption of the antibodies with their respective antigens eliminated immunolabeling of the acinar cells. These antibodies will be useful in studies of cell differentiation in RSMG and of synthesis, processing, and packaging of RSMG secretory products.  相似文献   

18.
The present electron microscopic cytochemical investigation was undertaken to characterize the alterations in the golgi apparatus and GERL of rat parotid acinar cells during ethionine intoxication and recovery. Although the Golgi apparatus and GERL were reduced in size, and some broadening of the Golgi saccules occurred as the result of ethionine treatment, the relative localization of thiamine pyrophosphatase (TPPase) activity in the Golgi saccules, and acid phosphatase activity (AcPase) in GERL, remained unchanged. Shortly after ethionine treatment was stopped, a dramatic redistribution of enzyme activities was noted. Within the first 24 hours of recovery, the Golgi apparatus began to enlarge, and the content of secretory granules increased. By day 3 of recovery, cisternae morphologically identifiable as GERL and forming secretory granules possessed TPPase activity, while AcPase activity was virtually undetectable. After seven days of recovery, the Golgi apparatus and GERL appeared both morphologically and cytochemically normal. The enzyme modulation observed during recovery may be correlated with increased secretory granule production. Furthermore, the presence of TPPase activity in GERL and forming secretory granules lends support to the suggestion that GERL may be derived from the trans Golgi saccule.  相似文献   

19.
Summary In Bufo bufo at stage III6 the first endocrine islets appear in the part of the pancreas corresponding to the dorsal anlage. At stage IV2, 5 days later, the pancreatic duct develops and new islets arise by budding off from the ductal epithelium. The ultrastructural study of the secretory granules morphology of endocrine cells has distinguished four different cell types: B-cells (stage III9), A-cells (stage IV3), D-cells (stage IV3) and a fourth type not yet identified (stage IV3). By immunocytology insulin and corticotropin-releasing factor (CRF) cells have been demonstrated at stage III9, and glucagon and somatostatin cells at stage IV1. Lastly, endocrine islets can be homogeneous (predominantly containing insulin cells, rarely glucagon cells) or heterogeneous (insulin cells at the centre and glucagon or somatostatin cells at the periphery). Hypotheses are put forward for the origin and the constitution of the different generations of endocrine islets and isolated cells.  相似文献   

20.
Endocrine cells require several protein convertases to process the precursors of hormonal peptides that they secrete. In addition to the convertases, which have a crucial role in the maturation of prohormones, many other proteases are present in endocrine cells, the roles of which are less well established. Two of these proteases, dipeptidyl peptidase IV (EC 3.4.14.5) and membrane dipeptidase (EC 3.4.13.19), have been immunocytochemically localized in the endocrine pancreas of the pig. Membrane dipeptidase was present exclusively in cells of the islet of Langerhans that were positive for the pancreatic polypeptide, whereas dipeptidyl peptidase IV was restricted to cells positive for glucagon. Both enzymes were observed in the content of secretory granules and therefore would be released into the interstitial space as the granules undergo exocytosis. At this location they could act on secretions of other islet cells. The relative concentration of dipeptidyl peptidase IV was lower in dense glucagon granules, where the immunoreactivity to glucagon was higher, and vice versa for light granules. This suggests that, in A-cells, dipeptidyl peptidase IV could be sent for degradation in the endosomal/lysosomal compartment during the process of granule maturation or could be removed from granules for continuous release into the interstitial space. The intense proteolytic activity that takes place in the endocrine pancreas could produce many potential dipeptide substrates for membrane dipeptidase. (J Histochem Cytochem 47:489-497, 1999)  相似文献   

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