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1.
The lens capsule is a specialized thickened basement membrane that completely surrounds the lens and provides anchoring sites for zonules, the filamentous bodies that suspend the lens. Like other basement membranes, the lens capsule contains collagen IV, which is a family of six polypeptides, subunits alpha1(IV)-alpha6(IV), each of which is encoded by a distinct gene. We have investigated the presence of collagen IV subunits in the developing lens capsule by using confocal immunohistochemistry and antibodies against each of the six collagen IV subunits. In murine embryos, subunits alpha1(IV), alpha2(IV), alpha5(IV) and alpha6(IV) were detected in the basement membrane surrounding the lens vesicle, and they persisted in the capsule until adulthood. In contrast, neither collagen alpha3(IV) nor alpha4(IV) was detected in the lens capsule until 2 weeks postnatal. Similarly, we detected no collagen alpha3(IV) or alpha4(IV) in lens capsules of 54-day human embryos, while collagen alpha3(IV) and alpha4(IV) were detected in adult humans. Thus, in the lens capsule, there is a developmental shift in detectable collagen IV subunits; early in development we observed subunits alpha1(IV), alpha2(IV), alpha5(IV) and alpha6(IV), which is consistent with the presence of fibrillar [alpha1alpha1alpha2] and elastic [alpha5alpha5alpha6] protomers, but later in development components of the more cross-linked [alpha3alpha4alpha5] protomer appear. An elastic lens capsule may be necessary in order to accommodate rapid lens growth in early development, whereas later in development a stronger, more cross-linked capsule may be necessary in order to tolerate the stress caused by postnatal accommodation and disaccommodation of the lens.  相似文献   

2.
The macromolecular components of bovine glomerular basement membrane (GBM) and lens capsules (anterior and posterior) solubilized by sequential extractions with denaturing agents were quantitated and characterized by polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis, CL-6B filtration, and DEAE-cellulose chromatography with the help of immunochemical techniques. Laminin, entactin, fibronectin, and heparan sulfate proteoglycan were primarily recovered (over 80%) from both basement membranes in a guanidine HCl extract which contained only a limited amount of the total protein (10-14%); most of the remainder of these noncollagenous components could be solubilized by the guanidine in the presence of reducing agent. Although a portion of the Type IV collagen could be obtained by these treatments, effective extraction of this protein depended on exposure to sodium dodecyl sulfate under reducing conditions. Immunoblot analysis revealed a remarkably similar pattern for GBM and lens capsule Type IV collagens with prominent bands of Mr = 390,000, 210,000, and 190,000 being evident. Fibronectin was present in much greater amounts in GBM than lens capsule while the reverse was true for entactin. In both GBM and lens capsules, the entactin (Mr = 150,000) exceeded laminin; the latter protein on immunoblotting was found to contain primarily the alpha-subunit (Mr = 200,000). The size of the heparan sulfate proteoglycan from anterior (Mr = 400,000) and posterior lens capsule (Mr greater than 500,000) was substantially larger than that from GBM (Mr = 200,000). During DEAE-cellulose chromatography under nonreducing conditions in a denaturing solvent, a portion of the Type IV collagen coeluted with the proteoglycan from these membranes. Considerable Bandeiraea simplicifolia I binding activity (alpha-D-galactose specific) was observed in GBM and lens capsule extracts and column fractions which could not be accounted for by laminin alone. Several components which reacted with this lectin were seen on transblots and among these Type IV collagen was identified. In contrast to the basement membranes from bovine tissues, the constituents from human GBM did not react with the B. simplicifolia I lectin.  相似文献   

3.
To define the molecular structure of bovine lens epithelium and its anterior lens capsule, we investigated the composition of lens capsule basement membrane proteins. Immunofluorescence and immunogold techniques were used to demonstrate the presence of type I and type III collagen in the lens capsule and in primary explant epithelial cultures grown on protein-binding membranes. Immunofluorescence staining with specific antibodies indicated that type I and type III collagen were constituents of lens basement membrane. We observed that deposition of type III collagen was more than type I collagen. The synthesis of fibrillar collagen by lens epithelium and its deposition in the lens capsule was established by localization of fibrillar collagen by transmission immunoelectron microscopy. These results demonstrate for the first time that normal lens epithelium synthesize fibrillar collagen which is an intrinsic component of the anterior lens capsule basement membrane.  相似文献   

4.
The COOH-terminal non-collagenous domains (NC1) of type IV collagen from glomerular basement membranes (GBM), lens capsule basement membranes, and Descemet's membrane varied in the distribution of their NC1 subunits. All of these basement membranes (BMs) contained both classical (alpha 1(IV) and alpha 2(IV)) and novel collagen chains (alpha 3(IV), alpha 4(IV) and the Alport antigen). Whereas GBM had a predominance of disulfide-bonded subunits, the lens capsule and Descemet's membrane were primarily monomeric, differences that are likely related to the functional and structural diversity of collagen in various tissues. A heterodimer formed from monomeric subunits of alpha 3(IV) and the Alport antigen exists in human and bovine GBM. This dimer represents an important cross-link of the NC1 domain of novel collagen. Additionally, immunoaffinity methodology showed that the novel BM collagen hexamers segregate into populations containing only novel BM subunits without the participation of the classical subunits (alpha 1(IV) and alpha 2(IV)). These data provided evidence for the presence of two separate networks of BM collagen: one containing alpha 1(IV) and alpha 2(IV), and the other consisting of the novel collagen chains.  相似文献   

5.
The histogenesis of renal basement membranes was studied in grafts of avascular, 11-day-old mouse embryonic kidney rudiments grown on chick chorioallantoic membrane (CAM). Vessels of the chick CAM invade the mouse tissue during an incubation period of 7-10 days and eventually hybrid glomeruli composed of mouse epithelium and chick endothelium form. Formation of basement membranes during this development was followed by immunofluorescence and immunoperoxidase stainings using polyclonal and monoclonal antibodies against mouse and chick collagen type IV and against mouse laminin. These antibodies were species-specific as shown in immunochemical and immunohistologic analyses. The glomerular basement membrane contained both mouse and chick collagen type IV, demonstrating its dual cellular origin. All other basement membranes were either exclusively of chick origin (mesangium, vessels) or of mouse origin (tubuli, Bowman's capsule).  相似文献   

6.
Basement membranes were separated from rat glomeruli and purified by mild procedures, which led to a highly enriched basement membrane fraction. Here, the production and characterization of five monoclonal antibodies against tubular and glomerular basement membranes are described. These antibodies were analyzed immunohistochemically on frozen sections of rat, bovine, and human kidneys as well as on rat embryos. One monoclonal antibody (BM O II) exclusively recognized the glomerular basement membranes, another one (BM O VII) bound to tubular basement membranes and to Bowman's capsule. Three antibodies (BM O IV, BM M II, BM M III) recognized their antigens in both glomerular and tubular basement membranes as well as in mesangial cells. The BM O II antibody showed a stringent species specificity and bound only to glomerular basement membranes of the rat. The other four antibodies cross-reacted with human and bovine glomerular basement membrane and mesangial antigens; they also bound to other tissues in the developing rat embryo. Antibody binding to specific purified components of the basement membranes such as collagen type IV, laminin, heparan sulphate proteoglycan, and fibronectin was investigated by enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA). None of these antibodies reacted with any of these known basement membrane components, indicating that the antibodies may serve as useful tools in future investigations of so far unidentified components of basement membranes.  相似文献   

7.
Affinity-purified rabbit antibodies specific for collagen types I, III, AB2 and for a partially characterized type IV collagen derived from a murine tumor were used to study the distribution of collagens in the normal mouse kidney. Immunofluorescence staining of conventional frozen sections demonstrated that types I and III were present in bundles around large vessels and in fibers surrounding glomeruli and tubules, whereas types IV and AB2 were distributed in a linear fashion along basement membranes of tubules, glomeruli, and Bowman's capsule and in the mesangial stalk. The distribution of types IV nd AB2 was examined at the ultrastructural level by staining of 600- to 800-A thick frozen sections with a three-stage procedure employing specific collagen antibodies, biotinyl sheep antirabbit IgG, and avidin-ferritin conjugates. Labeling by this procedure demonstrated codistribution of types AB2 and the putative type IV in all three basement membranes. In addition, mesangial matrix was shown to contain both of these collagen types. These results support recent biochemical evidence of collagen heterogeneity in basement membranes, and also support the concept of a structural relationship between mesangial matrix and glomerular basement membranes.  相似文献   

8.
《The Journal of cell biology》1989,109(4):1837-1848
The deposition of intestinal heparan sulfate proteoglycan (HSPG) at the epithelial-mesenchymal interface and its cellular source have been studied by immunocytochemistry at various developmental stages and in rat/chick interspecies hybrid intestines. Polyclonal heparan sulfate antibodies were produced by immunizing rabbits with HSPG purified from the Engelbreth-Holm-Swarm mouse tumor; these antibodies stained rat intestinal basement membranes. A monoclonal antibody (mAb 4C1) produced against lens capsule of 11-d-old chick embryo reacted with embryonic or adult chick basement membranes, but did not stain that of rat tissues. Immunoprecipitation experiments indicated that mAb 4C1 recognized the chicken basement membrane HSPG. Immunofluorescent staining with these antibodies allowed us to demonstrate that distribution of HSPG at the epithelial-mesenchymal interface varied with the stages of intestinal development, suggesting that remodeling of this proteoglycan is essential for regulating cell behavior during morphogenesis. The immunofluorescence pattern obtained with the two species-specific HSPG antibodies in rat/chick epithelial/mesenchymal hybrid intestines developed as grafts (into the coelomic cavity of chick embryos or under the kidney capsule of adult mice) led to the conclusion that HSPG molecules located in the basement membrane of the developing intestine were produced exclusively by the epithelial cells. These data emphasize the notion already gained from previous studies, in which type IV collagen has been shown to be produced by mesenchymal cells (Simon- Assmann, P., F. Bouziges, C. Arnold, K. Haffen, and M. Kedinger. 1988. Development (Camb.). 102:339-347), that epithelial-mesenchymal interactions play an important role in the formation of a complete basement membrane.  相似文献   

9.
The anterior lens capsule provides a thick, easily handled model system for the study of the organization of type IV collagen, the main component of basement membranes. We have used the technique of rapid freezing, deep-etch, and rotary replication to study the three-dimensional organization of the collagen skeleton in mammalian lens capsule after a variety of extraction procedures. In all cases the collagen appeared as a densely packed three-dimensional branching network of fine microfibrils. The organization of the microfibrils appears to show some regularity, with branch points approximately 40 nm apart. Most junctions are three-way and the network forms predominantly five-sided figures. This closely resembles the collagenous network described by Yurchenco and Ruben (1987, 1988) in human amniotic basement membrane and EHS tumor matrix, but extends their findings to another system for which X-ray diffraction data are available. The three-dimensional network is discussed in terms of molecular packing of type IV collagen in light of the information available from the diffraction data.  相似文献   

10.
Polyclonal rabbit antibodies raised against the globular domain NC1 of collagen IV from human placenta and a mouse tumor react with conformational antigenic determinants present on the NC1 hexamers and also with the three major subunits obtained after dissociation. The antibodies recognized unique structures within basement membranes and showed a broad tissue reactivity but only limited species cross-reactivity. Using these antibodies, it was possible to detect small amounts of collagen IV antigens from cell cultures and in serum. Monoclonal rat antibodies against mouse NC1 revealed a similar reaction potential. Autoantibodies could be produced in mice against mouse NC1 which react with kidney and lung basement membranes in a pathological manner, mimicking Goodpasture syndrome.  相似文献   

11.
A monoclonal antibody, IV-IA8, generated against chicken type IV collagen has been characterized and shown to bind specifically to a conformational-dependent site within a major, triple helical domain of the type IV molecule. Immunohistochemical localization of the antigenic determinant with IV-IA8 revealed that the basement membranes of a variety of chick tissues were stained but that the basement membrane of the corneal epithelium showed little, if any, staining. Thus, basement membranes may differ in their content of type IV collagen, or in the way in which it is assembled. The specificity of the antibody was determined by inhibition ELISA using purified collagen types I-V and three purified molecular domains of chick type IV collagen ([F1]2F2, F3, and 7S) as inhibitors. Only unfractionated type IV collagen and the (F1)2F2 domain bound the antibody. Antibody binding was destroyed by thermal denaturation of the collagen, the loss occurring at a temperature similar to that at which previous optical rotatory dispersion studies had shown melting of the triple helical structure of (F1)2F2. Such domain-specific monoclonal antibodies should prove to be useful probes in studies involving immunological dissection of the type IV collagen molecule, its assembly within basement membranes, and changes in its distribution during normal development and in disease.  相似文献   

12.
Aso S  Baba R  Noda S  Ikuno S  Fujita M 《Teratology》2000,61(4):262-272
Adult homozygous lap mice show various eye abnormalities such as aphakia, retinal disorganization, and dysplasia of the cornea and anterior chamber. In the fetal eye of a homozygous lap mouse, the lens placode appears to develop normally. However, the lens vesicle develops abnormally to form a mass of cells without a cavity, and the mass vanishes soon afterward. Apoptotic cell death is associated with the disappearance of the lens anlage. We examined the basement membranes of the lens anlage of this mutant by immunohistochemical methods under light microscopy using antibodies against basement membrane components of the lens anlage, type IV collagen, fibronectin, laminin, heparan sulfate proteoglycan, and entactin and by transmission electron microscopy. Immunohistochemistry showed the distribution and intensity of antibody binding to the lens anlage to be almost the same for each these antibodies regardless of the stage of gestation or whether the anlagen were from normal BALB/c or lap mice. Thus, positive continuous reactions were observed around the exterior region of the lens anlage from day 10 of gestation for type IV collagen, fibronectin, laminin, heparan sulfate proteoglycan antibodies, and at least from day 11of gestation for entactin antibody. The basement membrane lamina densa of both normal and lap mice was shown by electron microscopy to be discontinuous at days 10 and 10.5 of gestation. However, by day 11 the lamina densa was continuous in the lens anlagen of normal mice but still discontinuous in the lap mice. By day 12 of gestation, the lamina densa had thickened markedly in normal mice, whereas in lap mice it remained discontinuous and its thinness indicated hypoplasia. These results indicate that, while all basement components examined are produced and deposited in the normal region of the lens anlage in the lap mouse, the basement membrane is, for some reason, imperfectly formed. The time at which hypoplasia of the basement membrane was observed in this mutant coincided with the stage during which apoptosis in the lens anlage occurred. This result may indicate a possibility of the relationship between the basement membrane and apoptosis in this mutant.  相似文献   

13.
Immunohistochemical methods were used to determine whether type IV collagen, laminin, fibronectin, and heparan sulfate proteoglycan were present in diverse basement membranes. Antisera or antibodies against each substance were prepared, tested by enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay, and exposed to frozen sections of duodenum, trachea, kidney, spinal cord, cerebrum, and incisor tooth from rats aged 20 days to 34 months. Bound antibodies were then localized by indirect or direct peroxidase methods for examination in the light microscope. Immunostaining for type IV collagen, laminin, fibronectin, and heparan sulfate proteoglycan was observed in all of the basement membranes encountered. Fibronectin was also found in connective tissue. In general, the intensity of immunostaining was strong for type IV collagen and laminin, moderate for heparan sulfate proteoglycan, and weak for fibronectin. The pattern was similar in the age groups under study. Very recently the sulfated glycoprotein, entactin, was also detected in the basement membranes of the listed tissues in 20-day-old rats. It is accordingly proposed that, at least in the organs examined, type IV collagen, laminin, fibronectin, heparan sulfate proteoglycan, and entactin are present together in basement membranes.  相似文献   

14.
We have produced four monoclonal antibodies against type IV collagen obtained from human placenta. An antibody with a high titer by ELISA, named JK-199, reacted not only with type IV collagen in the triple-helical conformation but also with thermally denatured chains. After affinity chromatography on JK-199 antibody-coupled resin, the amino acid composition and CD spectrum of the affinity-purified peptides from the crude pepsin extract of human placenta were typical of those of human type IV collagen in the triple-helical conformation. On SDS-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis, the purified protein showed only one broad band with a molecular weight of approximately 260,000 before reduction and six smaller peptide bands after reduction. On immunoelectroblotting, JK-199 reacted with all six peptide bands. Immunohistochemically, typical basement membranes were exclusively and strongly stained with JK-199 on frozen sections of PLP-fixed human placentas without any enzymatic pretreatment in the routine immunoperoxidase method. Judging from these findings, it is concluded that the epitopes of type IV collagen that reacted with JK-199 are exposed on the surface of basement membranes. This antibody should be useful for identification of type IV collagen in normal or pathological basement membranes or other structures.  相似文献   

15.
Type IV collagen includes six genetically distinct polypeptides named alpha1(IV) through alpha6(IV). These isoforms are speculated to organize themselves into unique networks providing mammalian basement membranes specificity and inequality. Recent studies using bovine and human glomerular and testis basement membranes have shown that unique networks of collagen comprising either alpha1 and alpha2 chains or alpha3, alpha4, and alpha5 chains can be identified. These studies have suggested that assembly of alpha5 chain into type IV collagen network is dependent on alpha3 expression where both chains are normally present in the tissue. In the present study, we show that in the lens and inner ear of normal mice, expression of alpha1, alpha2, alpha3, alpha4, and alpha5 chains of type IV collagen can be detected using alpha chain-specific antibodies. In the alpha3(IV) collagen-deficient mice, only the expression of alpha1, alpha2, and alpha5 chains of type IV collagen was detectable. The non-collagenous 1 domain of alpha5 chain was associated with alpha1 in the non-collagenous 1 domain hexamer structure, suggesting that network incorporation of alpha5 is possible in the absence of the alpha3 chain in these tissues. The present study proves that expression of alpha5 is not dependent on the expression of alpha3 chain in these tissues and that alpha5 chain can assemble into basement membranes in the absence of alpha3 chain. These findings support the notion that type IV collagen assembly may be regulated by tissue-specific factors.  相似文献   

16.
Abstract. Human fetal membranes or pepsin solubilized proteins thereof were used as immunogens in the production of monoclonal antibodies to basement membrane-associated components. Some of the antibodies obtained reacted with all basement membranes in indirect immunofluorescent-cent microscopy, others reacted with all epithelial but not with endothelial basement membranes, and yet other antibodies reacted only with certain epithelial basement membranes in these tests. The reactivities of the antibodies demonstrate that different basement membranes are (immuno)chemically different and contain unique components in addition to ubiquitous components such as type IV collagen and laminin  相似文献   

17.
Basement membrane diversity detected by monoclonal antibodies   总被引:19,自引:0,他引:19  
Human fetal membranes or pepsin solubilized proteins thereof were used as immunogens in the production of monoclonal antibodies to basement membrane-associated components. Some of the antibodies obtained reacted with all basement membranes in indirect immunofluorescent microscopy, others reacted with all epithelial but not with endothelial basement membranes, and yet other antibodies reacted only with certain epithelial basement membranes in these tests. The reactivities of the antibodies demonstrate that different basement membranes are (immuno) chemically different and contain unique components in addition to ubiquitous components such as type IV collagen and laminin.  相似文献   

18.
A guanidine-HCl extraction of lens capsule basement membrane dissolves collagenous material. This material was fractionated on an Agarose A-5M column. Fractions 1, 2 and 3 were further purified and partially characterized immunochemically and by amino acid analysis. Fraction 3 has a molecular weight of 55,000 when compared with collagen type I standard. The CNBr peptide pattern and composition of fraction 3 are different from those of alpha 1 (IV) 95K and alpha 2 (IV) 95K chains. The results described suggest the presence of a new chain in lens capsule basement membrane.  相似文献   

19.
E D Adamson  S E Ayers 《Cell》1979,16(4):953-965
The location of type IV (basement membrane)collagen in early post-implantation mouse embryos was examined by immunoperoxidase reactions using a specific immunoglobulin raised against mouse lens capsule collagen. Reaction was positive in the earliest embryos studied--on the fifth day of gestation (the day of detection of the copulation plug is the first day). It was found only in the primitive endoderm adjacent to the blastocoelic cavity. Subsequently in development, strong staining reactions were found in the parietal endoderm, Reichert's membrane and an acellular layer which separates the visceral endoderm of the egg cylinder from the ectoderm. In tenth to eighteenth day visceral yolk sacs, the mesodermal portion was stained, which is consistent with the presence of basement membranes around blood vessels. The endodermal portion of the visceral yolk sac did not react, while small amounts were found in the amnion. By incubation of various embryonic tissues with tritiated amino acids, purification of the biosynthesized secreted collagens and their partial characterization, the differential expression of several collagen genes was detected. Identification of collagen types was made by: reaction with specific antibodies to type I and IV collagens; electrophoretic mobility; sensitivity to reduction and to collagenase; analysis of the proportions of 3-hydroxyproline, 4-hydroxyproline and hydroxylysine; and CNBr peptides. In agreement with the data of Minor et al. (1976a) for the rat, mouse parietal endoderm synthesizes large amounts of type IV collagen. In contrast to their findings, however, the 165,000 molecular weight polypeptide is not converted to one of 100,000 after reduction, alkylation and repepsinization (Dehm and Kefalides, 1978). The endoderm of the visceral yolk sac was shown to be synthesizing primarily type I collagen, while the mesoderm layer of this membrane synthesized both type I and IV collagens. Little or no type IV collagen synthesis was detected in the endoderm of the visceral yolk sac. If it is correct that the visceral endoderm of the early embryo makes a major contribution to the formation of the endoderm portion of the visceral yolk sac, then it is clear that a switch in collagen gene expression must occur as it does so.  相似文献   

20.
The glycosaminoglycans of various basement membranes (human and bovine renal glomerular and tubular basement membranes as well as calf and cow anterior and posterior lens capsules) have been isolated by DEAE-cellulose chromatography after protease digestion. On the basis of composition, ion-exchange elution, electrophoretic mobility, and susceptibility to nitrous acid treatment heparan sulfate was identified as the predominant glycosaminoglycan component of each membrane. Quantitation of the heparan sulfate was achieved by a DEAE-cellulose microcolumn procedure and indicated that the amount of this component present in basement membranes spanned a wide range, extending from 0.3% of peptide weight in bovine and human tubular membranes to 6% in calf posterior lens capsule. Comparison of the heparan sulfate content of calf and cow anterior lens capsules indicated that it underwent a pronounced decrease with increasing age. Analyses of the glycosaminoglycan-peptide fractions from calf anterior and posterior lens capsules indicated hexuronic acid to xylose ratios of 29 and 37, respectively, and relatively low degrees of N-sulfation (0.2 N-sulfate, 0.6 total sulfate groups per repeating disaccharide). The composition of the lens capsule heparan sulfate was in many ways similar to that from bovine glomerular basement membrane (N. Parthasarathy and R. G. Spiro, 1981, J. Biol. Chem.256, 507–513). The present study also indicated that the heparan sulfate content of bovine glomerular basement membrane (0.8 mg/100 mg peptide) was not appreciably altered even by prolonged sonic treatment.  相似文献   

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