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1.
Normal human peripheral blood granulocytes which are tagged with 1-fluoro-2,4-dinitrobenzene (DNFB) are agglutinated by concanavalin A (ConA) in a way which resembles the pattern of reactivity displayed by leukemic cells. The present study further defines this reaction. The binding of ConA to untagged and DNP-tagged granulocytes, treated with DNFB at a ratio of 1011 molecules/cell, was quantified by isotopic dilution experiments employing [3H]ConA. Similar amounts of the lectin were bound to untagged and DNP-tagged cells following incubation for 5 min at 4 °C or 30 min at 24 °C: 1.1 × 105 molecules/cell, 4.6 × 1022 of surface area, and 1.6 × 103/μg of protein. The binding of [3H]ConA to both untagged and DNP-tagged cells was inhibited to the same degree by α-methylglucopyranoside (α-MG). Fixation with either glutaraldehyde or formaldehyde, which immobilizes ConA receptor sites, completely inhibited the agglutination of both untagged and DNP-tagged cells although lectin binding was unchanged. This suggests that the inhibition of agglutination was not due to the blocking of ConA-binding sites by aldehyde groups but rather to the immobilization of lectin receptors. We conclude that dinitrophenylation of normal granulocytes facilitates the rearrangement of lectin receptors in a way which resembles the ConA-induced clustering of sites which have been observed with malignant and transformed cells.  相似文献   

2.
Agglutination of malignant transformed hamster cells by concanavalin A (ConA) and the lectins from wheat germ (WGA) and soybean (SBA) has been automatically quantitated, by measuring the amount of light transmitted through a cell suspension. The transformed hamster cells were agglutinated by SBA only after treatment with neuraminidase. The initial rate of agglutination and the concentration of lectin (Kc) required for the half-maximum rate (Vm) has been determined. The initial rate and Vm were lower and more temperature-sensitive, and the Kc was higher, for ConA than for WGA and SBA. There was no detectable temperature-dependent phase transition for the initial rate of agglutination. The total number of receptors was lower for ConA than for WGA and SBA and the apparent association constant between lectin molecules and cell surface receptors was higher for ConA (107M?1) than for WGA and SBA (1.6 × 106M?1). The half Vm of agglutination required 75% saturation of the cell receptors for ConA, and only 13–17% saturation of the receptors for SBA and WGA. A 30% decrease in the number of SBA receptors present in agglutinable cells completely prevented their agglutination. The results indicate that there is heterogeneity of lectin receptors on the cell surface and that only a small proportion of the total number of WGA and SBA receptors have to be occupied for agglutination by these lectins.  相似文献   

3.
Embryonic chick neural retina cells dissociated from retina tissue by treatment with EGTA (a calcium chelator) show an age-dependent decline in ability to agglutinate with concanavalin A (ConA). This developmental change in cell surface properties is not due to loss of ConA-binding sites, since mature retina cells can be rendered agglutinable by mild trypsinization. It is also not due to masking of ConA receptors, or to a decrease in their amount, since retina cells from late embryos (19 days) bind four times as much 125I-ConA as cells from early embryos (8 days). Our findings lead us to suggest that, as the retina differentiates the lateral mobility of ConA receptors in the cell membrane decreases resulting in a reduction of cell agglutinability; trypsinization of late embryo retina cells increases the mobility of the receptors and thereby facilitates their clustering by the lectin into a configuration conducive to cell agglutination.The ability of late embryo (19 day) retina cells dispersed with EGTA to agglutinate with ConA could be increased by still other treatments: by pre-incubation of the cell suspension in Tyrode's balanced salt solution (1 h, 37 °C); and by brief pre-exposure to glutaraldehyde. These two treatments did not enhance cell agglutination with wheat germ agglutinin (WGA). Glutaraldehyde treatment of trypsinized cells made them agglutinable with ConA also at 4 °C; cells treated otherwise agglutinated only at higher temperature. Surface-saturation of monodispersed retina cells with ConA at 37 °C—but not at 4 °C—prevented their agglutination with this lectin, but not with WGA; this inhibition was reversible by methyl a-D-glucopyranoside (αMG).  相似文献   

4.
The binding of concanavalin A (ConA) to zona-free unfertilized and fertilized mouse eggs has been investigated using tritiated ConA. At low lectin concentrations (1–5 μg ml?1) the fertilized egg shows a higher affinity for [3H]ConA than does the unfertilized egg. In saturation conditions, however, unfertilized and fertilized eggs show the same binding capacity (1.55 × 108 ConA molecules/egg). The results indicate that ConA-binding sites change qualitatively following fertilization; possible connections between this change and other fertilization-induced changes in the egg surface are discussed.  相似文献   

5.
The parameters affecting the agglutination of cells of Dictyostelium discoideum by Concanavalin A (ConA) have been investigated. Under the incubation conditions employed, incubation time does not markedly affect agglutination, but there are distinct optima for cell density and gyration speed. Agglutination does not occur at low temperatures, but the transition temperature between the unagglutinated and fully agglutinated states is markedly influenced by ConA concentration. The rate of aggregation of strain NC-4 is considerably reduced by ConA. In contrast, the differentiation of strain Ax-2 in the presence of ConA is either unaffected or only slightly inhibited, depending on the incubation conditions. Succinylated-ConA binds to the same sites as the unmodified lectin, but has no effect on the differentiation of strain NC-4, suggesting that ConA binding sites are not directly involved in cell-cell contacts vital to the differentiation of D. discoideum. There is a gradual decrease in the susceptibility of cells of D. discoideum to agglutination by ConA as the cells pass from exponential growth phase to stationary growth phase in axenic medium and from vegetative amoebae to aggregates on a solid substratum. These results provide quantitative evidence for a gradual change in carbohydrate containing binding sites during differentiation.  相似文献   

6.
Native cells of the cyanobacterium (blue-green alga)Anacystis nidulans did not bind fluorescein isothiocyanate-conjugated concanavalin A (FITC-ConA) as measured by fluorescent spectrophotometry. By contrast, spheroplasts ofA. nidulans underwent rapid and specific agglutination in the presence of ConA thus showing appreciable affinity towards the lectin. After treatment with 0.01–0.05% (wt/vol) cetyltrimethylammonium bromide (CTAB) intact cells also became liable to ConA binding, which was not accompanied by significant agglutination. Detergents, other than CTAB, were far less effective. Specific and nonspecific binding was discriminated, as usual, with the aid of methyl -d-mannoside. Conditions are described that allow specific binding of up to 7×104 molecules of FITC-ConA per cell. The binding of ConA to pretreated cells ofA. nidulans was verified by freeze-etching electron microscopy using ferritin-ConA conjugate. Our results appear to be first to demonstrate lectin binding to a cyanobacterium.  相似文献   

7.
We have developed two improved methods: (1) a procedure for coupling 125Iodine to ConcanavalinA (ConA) that yields intensely labeled and fully active lectin; (2) a procedure that allows studies of lectin binding to be carried out with a minimum of non-specific binding to reaction vessels. We found that BALB/c 3T3 cells, SV3T3 cells, and human red blood cells have 1.3 × 107, 1.5 × 107, and 2.2 × 106 ConA binding sites/cell. More than 99.5% of the radioactivity in the samples counted was associated with the cells; background radioactivity, in the absence of cells, was negligible. We also found that although α-methylmannopyranoside (α-MM) prevented almost all of the ConA from binding to cells, when ConA had first been allowed to bind, α-MM removed only 60 to 80% of the bound ConA. In addition, even after the removal of a portion of bound lectin by α-MM, most, if not all, of the remaining cell-associated ConA was coupled to the plasma membrane.  相似文献   

8.
Polyclonal stimuli like phorbol myristate acetate (PMA) plus calcium ionophore (Ca-I), concanavalin A (ConA) or anti-CD3 plus anti-CD28 (αCD3/αCD28) are widely used T cell stimuli. All three stimuli act at different sites and in different ways to activate the T cell receptor pathway and are widely used in different concentrations, stimulation durations and read-out systems. This study was designed to establish the most suitable polyclonal stimulus in human peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMC) experiments by assessing the kinetics of cell viability, present immunophenotypes, proliferation, and cytokine production of the PBMC. In addition, changes in these read-out parameters due to cryopreservation have been investigated by comparing fresh and cryopreserved PBMC cultures at days 1, 3, 5, and 7. This study showed a reduction in the cytokine levels after cryopreservation of PMA/Ca-I stimulated PBMC, whereas no significant differences due to the cryopreservation were observed in ConA or αCD3/αCD28 stimulated PBMC. Cryopreservation did not alter the maximal proliferation capacity of ConA or αCD3/αCD28 stimulated PBMC, whereas it did delay the proliferation. Although cryopreservation had no effect on the CD3+CD4+ or CD3+CD8+ T cell subsets, PMA/Ca-I significantly reduced the amount of both T cell subsets over time.In conclusion, PMA/Ca-I is suitable as a positive control in experiments where high cytokine production is expected and only fresh PBMC are used. Proliferation and effects on the T cell subsets in long-term PBMC cultures should use ConA or αCD3/αCD28 as positive control.  相似文献   

9.
The ConA-mediated interaction of yeast cells with macrophages was brought about in two steps. The first step involved the interaction of either macrophages or yeast cells with ConA, MConA or YConA in brief, respectively. The second step consisted of interacting the ConA-coated cells with their non-coated counterpart, yielding MConA-Y or M-YConA. The extent of yeast cell attachment to macrophages depends on the degree of saturation of ConA binding sites on the cell coated with ConA in the first step and on the temperature at which the two cell types interact. The temperature dependence in the range of 10–25 °C implies that cell-cell attachment is sensitive to the physical state of membrane lipids as reflected in increased lateral mobility of ConA receptors in the membrane plane. The extent of ConA-mediated cell association is not influenced significantly by colchicine, cytochalasin B (CB) or hydrocortisone. A mild treatment of macrophages with glutaraldehyde reduces, however, the association of yeast cells, further indicating a need for lateral mobility of ConA receptors. ConA-mediated yeast cell attachment could be totally reversed by α-methyl mannoside in the case of MConA-Y and only partially in the case of M-YConA. Yeast cell ingestion is highly temperature-dependent; in MConA-Y a 50% interiorization of the associated yeast cells is reached at 32 °C and detectable interiorization starts only above 19 °C, while in M-YConA a 50% value of interiorization is reached at 18 °C and about 15% of yeast cells are interiorized already at 5 °C. Interiorization of attached yeast cells is not affected by colchicine. Cytochalasin B (CB) (10 μg/ml) inhibits 82% of yeast interiorization in MConA-Y and only 12% in M-YConA. Hydrocortisone has a similar differential effect of inhibition of ingestion; at 25 °C inhibition in MConA-Y amounts to 78% and in M-YConA to 22%. Sodium azide inhibits 90% of interiorization of yeast cells in both MConA-Y and M-YConA. The following working hypothesis was proposed to explain both the characteristics of attachment and the remarkable difference in ingestion pattern of yeast cells in MConA-Y and M-YConA. ConA-mediated yeast cell attachment to macrophages involves multipoint interaction between the two cells achieved by a certain clustering of ConA receptors in the membrane plane. To achieve interiorization a higher extent of bridge formation between the cells is required, and a higher number of ConA-membrane receptors have to be recruited to the area of apposition of the two membranes. This requires lateral mobility of either ConA receptors conjugates (in the case of MConA) or of mobile non-crosslinked ConA receptors in macrophages interacting with YConA). Mobility of ConA receptor conjugates is more sensitive to membrane fluidity than that of non-crosslinked receptors and hence the differential temperature-dependence of ingestion. The effect of CB suggests an involvement of the cytoskeleton in the reorganization of ConA receptors at the membrane level.  相似文献   

10.
The mechanism by which chondroitin sulfate enhances both the self-aggregation and the concanavalin A (ConA)-induced agglutination of trypsin-dissociated embryonic chick retina cells was investigated. Studies with fluorescently labeled ConA showed no influence of chondroitin sulfate on patching or capping. When 3H- or 35SO4-labeled glycosaminoglycans or proteoglycans from retinas were added to freshly dissociated cells, an average of less than 2% of the label became associated with the unwashed cell pellet, and most of this was removed from the cells by a single wash. The presence of ConA did not alter the amount of binding by this criterion. Rapid cell aggregation in the absence of ConA was promoted by a number of natural and synthetic polymers. Aggregation rate bore a direct relationship to polymer viscosity at low viscosities and was inhibited at high viscosities, apparently due to reduced cell collision frequency. For any given polymer, aggregation was directly related to its molecular weight and concentration. Linear polymers were more effective than branched ones. Neutral polymers were as effective as those which were strongly polyanionic. Stable aggregates of formalin-fixed cells were not promoted by polymers. All of these observations are consistent with the hypothesis that enhancement of retina cell aggregation by physiological concentrations of glycosaminoglycans is due largely to steric exclusion of the cells by the polymer mesh. Although others have shown that glycosaminoglycans probably interact specifically with some cells, the evidence presented here suggests that these macromolecules by virtue of their excluded volumes could also have important non-specific influences on cell migration and cell reorganization during morphogenesis.  相似文献   

11.
Binding of small amounts of glycolipid mR595 to rat cells, followed by sequential incubation of cells at 37 °C with rabbit anti-glycolipid mR595 and fluorescein-conjugated sheep anti-rabbit γ-globulin antisera results in the localization of fluorescence at one pole of the cell surface (capping). Binding of higher amounts of glycolipid mR595 to cells not only inhibits formation of glycolipid caps but those of the ConA receptor-fluorescent ConA complex as well. Glycolipid mR595 binding does not alter [3H]ConA binding to cells but cell agglutination by ConA is inhibited in a competitive fashion. Binding of small amounts of ConA to cells does not affect glycolipid capping. Colchicine and cytochalasin B (CB) treatment of cells inhibits glycolipid cap formation.  相似文献   

12.
Adriamycin increases (a) the rate of agglutination of Sarcoma 180 cells by concanavalin A after brief exposure of 2–3 h and (b) membrane fluidity as measured by ESR within 30 min of exposure at concentrations of the anthracycline of 10?7–10?5 M. The effect of adriamycin on agglutination is not due to an increase in the number of surface receptors for concanavalin A, since the extent of binding of the lectin is not altered by adriamycin and no change occurs in the rate of occupancy of the concanavalin A binding sites by the lectin in cells treated with the antibiotic. The order parameter, a measurement of membrane fluidity, decreases in cells exposed to adriamycin and is dose-related. The results indicate that adriamycin can induce changes in the surface membrane of Sarcoma 180 cells within a brief period of exposure to a low but cytotoxic level of this agent.  相似文献   

13.
The effect of concanavalin A on transferrin and iron uptake by reticulocytes was determined using rabbit reticulocytes and rabbit transferrin labelled with 59Fe and 125I and concanavalin A (ConA) labelled with 131I. In concentrations of 50–200 μg/ml ConA markedly inhibited iron uptake but did not inhibit transferrin uptake or release from the cells. ConA was itself taken up by rabbit blood cells in a manner similar to that of transferrin except that the uptake was not specific for reticulocytes but occurred also with mature erythrocytes. The inhibition of iron uptake by concanavalin and the uptake of concanavalin by the cells were both inhibited by α-methyl-d-mannoside. It is concluded that the effects observed were due to the binding of concanavalin to glycoproteins of the cell membrane, either by a direct interaction with transferrin receptors or by the production of a non-specific change in the structure of the membrane.  相似文献   

14.
J. Burgess  P.J. Linstead 《Planta》1977,136(3):253-259
The binding of a colloidal gold-Concanavalin A (ConA) complex to the plasmalemma of tobacco leaf protoplasts has been investigated using scanning electron microscopy. At 5° C the particles of gold-ConA appear to be randomly distributed over the surface of the protoplast. If the temperature is raised, the particles associate into clusters. Saturation of the membrane with particles can only occur when the weight of ConA in solution exceeds 1 g/104 protoplasts in suspension, and when its concentration exceeds 15 g/ml. These results are discussed in terms of the properties of the ConA binding site and the mobility of such sites within the membrane surface.Abbreviations ConA Concanavalin A - AuConA Colloidal gold-Concanavalin A complex  相似文献   

15.
Native concanavalin A (con A) molecules bound to human erythrocytes were visualized directly by freeze-etching. This technique revealed 400–700 randomly distributed con A molecules/μm2 at saturation (or approx. 100 000 per cell, based on a surface of 145 μm2) on both untreated and neuraminidase treated cells. Temperature-dependent mobility of lectin receptors was demonstrated by a redistribution of con A following reactions with anti-con A antibodies. Since the extent of cell agglutination was temperature-independent, clustering or mobility of the receptor sites cannot be an important factor in erythrocyte agglutination. Comparison of the distribution of con A molecules on surfaces of cells with that of the intramembranous particles suggests that there is no direct relationship between these entities.  相似文献   

16.
Plant lectins and other agents which are mitogenic for lymphocytes and fibroblasts were tested for their effects on DNA synthesis in primary monolayer cultures of neural retina cells from 10-day chick embryos. Concanavalin A (ConA), phytohemagglutinin (PHA), wheat germ agglutinin (WGA), and anti-retina cell antiserum significantly stimulated [3H]TdR incorporation; the maximum increase was reached 15 h after exposure of the cultures to these agents. Cells stimulated by ConA to synthesize DNA subsequently divided. The divalent succinyl derivative of ConA had a considerably lesser effect than the native tetramer, suggesting that cross-linking of cell surface components may be an important aspect of the changes that lead to the stimulation of DNA synthesis in these cells.Using [125I]ConA, the average number of ConA-binding sites per 10-day retina cell was estimated to be 1.7 × 106 (under the culture conditions employed); binding of the lectin to 25–50% of these sites was sufficient to elicit the maximal stimulation of DNA synthesis. Continuous association of the lectin with the cell surface for up to 8 h was essential for the maximal effect, since removal of the lectin from the cell surface (with α-methyl mannose) prior to this time reduced or prevented the stimulation of DNA synthesis.The stimulation by ConA of DNA synthesis in these cultures was dependent on the cell density and was reduced or absent at lower than optimal densities. Examination of this effect suggested that the frequency of intercellular contacts or specific cell associations play a role in the responsiveness of these cells to stimulation of DNA synthesis by ConA.  相似文献   

17.
At low concentrations of concanavalin A (conA), binding of the lectin to the erythrocytes appears to be the rate-limiting step in the agglutination of these cells. At higher concentrations of lectin the rate of agglutination is concentration-independent, indicating that the aggregation reaction is rate-determining. Only 5 to 7% of the 1.2 × 105 receptor sites need be occupied by con A in order for agglutination to take place. Although trypsin-treated cells bind 30% less 125I-conA, they agglutinate better than untreated cells. At high lectin concentrations, erythrocyte agglutination by wheat germ agglutinin (WGA) is more than 8 times faster than the conA-mediated reaction. Lowering of the temperature to 0 °C reduces the rate but not the extent of the agglutination by both lectins. Mechanical shear reduced the conA-mediated agglutination of native cells by more than 160-fold and that of trypsinized and neuraminidase-treated cells 6-fold and 4-fold, respectively.It is concluded that metabolic activity, receptor mobility (i.e. cluster or patch formation) and cytochalasin B-sensitive processes, all of which have been reported to be involved in the lectin-mediated agglutination of fibroblasts and other cells, do not play a role in erythrocyte agglutination. Lectin-mediated erythrocyte agglutination appears to be governed primarily by the rate and extent of binding of lectin to the cell surface, the cell surface charge (modifiable by enzyme treatments or polycations) and the shear forces in the suspension. Morphological studies confirm and amplify these conclusions.  相似文献   

18.
The interaction of red blood cells and macrophages mediated by Concanavalin A (ConA) was studied using mouse peritoneal macrophages and fresh, homologous red cells. Erythrocytes exposed to ConA at 0.5 μg/ml, a condition that leads to a saturation of 3% of the ConA sites, were bound by macrophages at 22 °C. The ConA inhibitor, α-methylmannoside, prevented this attachment of red cells and largely reversed it when added to preformed macrophage-red cell rosettes up to 90 min. However, red cell attachment was essentially irreversible by 3 h. Electron microscopy showed a progressive increase in the degree of contiguity between red cells and macrophages with time, some macrophage projections distorting and partially encircling red cells at 3 h. Macrophages pretreated with high concentrations of ConA (25 μg/ml) also bound red cells. However, phagocytosis of adherent red cells did not occur at either 22 or 37 °C, even when both red cells and macrophages were pretreated with ConA. In contrast, phagocytosis of attached red cells was observed when preformed rosettes were exposed to ConA at a concentration of 5 μg/ml, and it was complete with ConA at a concentration of 25 μg/ml. These studies demonstrate that ConA in low concentration on red cells is detected by macrophages which form a progressively tighter bond with the red cell surface. However, it appears that phagocytosis can occur only under conditions in which a high density of ConA is established on the surface of the red cell.  相似文献   

19.
Yeast cell attachment to Concanavalin A (ConA)-coated fibroblasts depends on the degree of saturation of ConA-binding sites on the fibroblast. Under comparable conditions, fresh mouse erythrocytes fail to establish stable contacts with ConA-coated fibroblasts. The interaction of ConA-coated erythrocytes with fibroblasts and of non-coated erythrocytes with wheat germ agglutinin (WGA)-coated fibroblasts is remarkably less efficient than that of yeast cells interacting with ConA-coated fibroblasts. Ingestion of attached cells was not observed in any of the above lectin-mediated cell-cell interactions. Yeast cells coated with ConA show a high extent of attachment to fibroblasts (three-fold that of yeast cell attachment to ConA-coated fibroblasts). The attachment is highly temperature sensitive, being 3 times more at 37 °C than at 14 °C. A significant fraction of attached yeast cells (˜46%) is ingested by the fibroblasts during the 60 min incubation at 37 °C. The ingestion exhibits a strong temperature dependence, being nil at 14 °C and amounting to 150 and 600 ingested yeast cells per 100 fibroblasts at 24 °C and 37 °C, respectively. Transmission and scanning electron microscopy of ConA-mediated yeast cell-fibroblast interaction indicates a tighter interaction when the yeast cells are coated with ConA than when the fibroblasts are coated with ConA. Thus spreading of the plasma membrane around the attached yeast cell as well as transduction of attachment to ingestion could be triggered only under conditions of a very extensive multibridge interaction between the two apposing surfaces. Such an interaction is not achieved when the mobility of ConA-receptors within the fibroblast membrane plane is restricted as a result of crosslinking with ConA.  相似文献   

20.
The cell surface glycoproteins of goat epididymal maturing spermatozoa have been investigated using lectins as surface probes that interact with specific sugars with high affinity. Concanavalin A (ConA) and wheat-germ agglutinin (WGA) showed high affinity for mature cauda epididymal sperm agglutination, whereas RCA2, kidney beans lectin and peanut agglutinin caused much lower or little agglutination of the cells. The mature sperm exhibited markedly higher efficacy than the immature caput epididymal sperm for binding both ConA and WGA, as evidenced by sperm agglutination and the binding of the fluorescence isothiocyanate (FITC)-labelled lectins. FITC-ConA binds uniformly to the entire mature sperm surface whereas FITC-WGA binds to the acrosomal cap region of the head. The FITC-RCA2 mainly labelled the posterior head of mature cauda sperm. However, no WGA-specific glycoprotein receptors could be detected in sperm plasma membrane (PM) by WGA-Sepharose affinity chromatography. The data implied that the epididymal sperm maturation is associated with a marked increase in the ConA/WGA receptors and that WGA receptors may be glycolipids rather than glycoproteins. Analysis of the ConA receptors of cauda sperm PM identified by ConA-Sepharose affinity chromatography and subsequent resolution in SDS-PAGE demonstrated the presence of five glycopolypeptides of different concentrations (98, 96, 43, 27 and 17 kDa) of goat sperm membrane. The immunoblot of these ConA-specific glycopeptides with anti-sperm membrane antiserum showed that 98- and 96-kDa receptors are immunoresponsive.  相似文献   

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