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1.
The uptake of transferrin and iron by the rat liver was studied after intravenous injection or perfusion in vitro with diferric rat transferrin labelled with 125I and 59Fe. It was shown by subcellular fractionation on sucrose density gradients that 125I-transferrin was predominantly associated with a low-density membrane fraction, of similar density to the Golgi-membrane marker galactosyltransferase. Electron-microscope autoradiography demonstrated that most of the 125I-transferrin was located in hepatocytes. The 59Fe had a bimodal distribution, with a larger peak at a similar low density to that of labelled transferrin and a smaller peak at higher density coincident with the mitochondrial enzyme succinate dehydrogenase. Approx. 50% of the 59Fe in the low-density peak was precipitated with anti-(rat ferritin) serum. Uptake of transferrin into the low-density fraction was rapid, reaching a maximal level after 5-10 min. When livers were perfused with various concentrations of transferrin the total uptakes of both iron and transferrin and incorporation into their subcellular fractions were curvilinear, increasing with transferrin concentrations up to at least 10 microM. Analysis of the transferrin-uptake data indicated the presence of specific transferrin receptors with an association constant of approx. 5 X 10(6) M-1, with some non-specific binding. Neither rat nor bovine serum albumin was taken up into the low-density fractions of the liver. Chase experiments with the perfused liver showed that most of the 125I-transferrin was rapidly released from the liver, predominantly in an undegraded form, as indicated by precipitation with trichloroacetic acid. Approx. 40% of the 59Fe was also released. It is concluded that the uptake of transferrin-bound iron by the liver of the rat results from endocytosis by hepatocytes of the iron-transferrin complex into low-density vesicles followed by release of iron from the transferrin and recycling of the transferrin to the extracellular medium. The iron is rapidly incorporated into mitochondria and cytosolic ferritin.  相似文献   

2.
Iron distribution in subcellular fractions was investigated at different times after a single cohort of 59Fe-125 I-labeled transferrin (Tf) endocytosis in K562 cells. Cell homogenates prepared by hypotonic lysis and deoxyribonuclease (DNAase) treatment were fractionated on Percoll density gradients. Iron-containing components in the postmitochondrial supernatant were further fractionated according to their molecular weight using gel chromatography and membrane filtration. In the initial phases of endocytosis, both iron and Tf were found in the light vesicular fraction. After 3 min the labels diverged, with iron appearing in the postmitochondrial supernatant and Tf in the heavy fraction containing mitochondria, lysosomes and nuclei. Iron released from Tf-containing vesicles appeared both in low- and high-molecular-weight fractions in the postmitochondrial supernatant. After 5 min of endocytosis 59Fe activity in the low-molecular-weight fraction remained constant and 59Fe accumulated in a high-molecular-weight fraction susceptible to desferrioxamine chelation. After 10 min, 59Fe radioactivity in this fraction decreased and a majority of cytosolic 59Fe was found in ferritin. These results do not support the concept of the cytosolic low-molecular-weight iron pool as a kinetic intermediate between transferrin and ferritin iron in K562 cells.  相似文献   

3.
The subcellular localization of 3H-labelled 59Fe-loaded transferrin accumulated by the liver has been studied by means of cell fractionation techniques. More than 96% of the 59Fe present in the liver of rats perfused with 59Fe-labelled transferrin is recovered in the parenchymal cells. Rat livers were perfused with 10 micrograms/ml 3H-labelled 59Fe-saturated transferrin, homogenized separated in nuclear (N), mitochondrial (M), light mitochondrial (L), microsomal (P) and supernatant (S) fractions; M, L and P fractions were further analysed by isopycnic centrifugation in sucrose gradients. 3H label distributes essentially around densities of 1.13-1.14 g/ml overlapping to a large extent with the distribution of galactosyltransferase, the marker enzyme of the Golgi complex. However, after treatment with low concentrations of digitonin the 3H label dissociates from galactosyltransferase and is shifted to higher densities, suggesting an association of transferrin with cholesterol-rich endocytic vesicles which could derive from the plasma membrane. 59Fe is mostly found in the supernatant fraction largely in the form of ferritin, as indicated by its reaction with antiferritin antibodies. In the mitochondrial fraction the density distribution of 59Fe suggests an association with lysosomes and/or mitochondria. In contrast to the lysosomal enzyme cathepsin B, the density distribution of 59Fe was only slightly affected by pretreatment of the rats with Triton WR 1339, suggesting its association with the mitochondria. At 15 degrees C, 59Fe and 3H labels are recovered together in low-density endocytic vesicles. On the basis of our results we suggest that, at low extracellular transferrin concentration, iron uptake by the liver involves endocytosis of the transferrin protein. The complex is interiorized in low-density acidic vesicles where iron is released. The iron passes into the cytosol, where it is incorporated into ferritin and into the mitochondria. The iron-depleted transferrin molecule would then be returned to the extracellular medium during the recycling of the plasma membrane.  相似文献   

4.
The mechanism of action of the hydroxamate iron chelators desferrioxamine (DFO), rhodotorulic acid (RHA) and cholylhydroxamic acid (CHA) was studied using rat hepatocytes in culture. Each chelator affected both the uptake and, to a much smaller extent, the release of transferrin-125I-59Fe from the cells. All chelators reduced the 59Fe uptake and incorporation into ferritin in a concentration-dependent manner. Uptake of 59Fe into the membrane (stromal-mitochondrial) fraction was also decreased by DFO and RHA but increased by CHA. Transferrin-125I binding was reduced slightly by DFO and RHA and increased by CHA. All chelators released 59Fe transferrin-125I from hepatocytes prelabelled by incubation with rat transferrin-125I-59Fe and washed before reincubation in the presence of the chelators. DFO decreased membrane 59Fe but had little effect on ferritin-59Fe. RHA decreased 59Fe in both membrane and ferritin fractions. CHA decreased hepatocyte-59Fe but increased 59Fe in the hepatocyte membrane fraction. Higher concentrations of the chelators had little further effect on 59Fe release but promoted transferrin-125I release from hepatocytes. All chelators appeared to act on kinetically important iron pools of limited size and hence are likely to be most effective when given by continuous infusion rather than bolus injection.  相似文献   

5.
The subcellular localization of ferritin and its iron taken up by rat hepatocytes was investigated by sucrose-density-gradient ultracentrifugation of cell homogenates. After incubation of hepatocytes with 125I-labelled [59Fe]ferritin, cells incorporate most of the labels into structures equilibrating at densities where acid phosphatase and cytochrome c oxidase are found, suggesting association of ferritin and its iron with lysosomes or mitochondria. Specific solubilization of lysosomes by digitonin treatment indicates that, after 8 h incubation, most of the 125I is recovered in lysosomes, whereas 59Fe is found in mitochondria as well as in lysosomes. As evidenced by gel chromatography of supernatant fractions, 59Fe accumulates with time in cytosolic ferritin. To account for these results a model is proposed in which ferritin, after being endocytosed by hepatocytes, is degraded in lysosomes, and its iron is released and re-incorporated into cytosolic ferritin and, to a lesser extent, into mitochondria.  相似文献   

6.
Rats were studied for [(59)Fe-(125)I]transferrin uptake in total brain, and fractions containing brain capillary endothelial cells (BCECs) or neurons and glia. (59)Fe was transported through BCECs, whereas evidence of similar transport of transferrin was questionable. Intravenously injected transferrin localized to BCECs and failed to accumulate within neurons, except near the ventricles. No significant difference in [(125)I]transferrin distribution was observed between Belgrade b/b rats with a mutation in divalent metal transporter I (DMT1), and Belgrade +/b rats with regard to accumulation in vascular and postvascular compartments. (59)Fe occurred in significantly lower amounts in the postvascular compartment in Belgrade b/b rats, indicating impaired iron uptake by transferrin receptor and DMT1-expressing neurons. Immunoprecipitation with transferrin antibodies on brains from Belgrade rats revealed lower uptake of transferrin-bound (59)Fe. In postnatal (P)0 rats, less (59)Fe was transported into the postvascular compartment than at later ages, suggesting that BCECs accumulate iron at P0. Supporting this notion, an in situ perfusion technique revealed that BCECs accumulated ferrous and ferric iron only at P0. However, BCECs at P0 together with those of older age lacked DMT1. In conclusion, BCECs probably mediate iron transport into the brain by segregating iron from transferrin without involvement of DMT1.  相似文献   

7.
Several aspects of iron metabolism were studied in cultured Friend erythroleukemia cells before and after induction of hemoglobin synthesis by dimethyl sulfoxide. The maximal rate of iron uptake from 59Fe-labeled transferrin, 1.5 X 10(6) atoms of Fe/cell per 30 min in uninduced cells, increased to 3 X 10(6) atoms/cell after 5 days of induction. The increase in iron uptake was not accompanied by a proportional increase in the number of transferrin receptors detected by 125I-labeled transferrin binding, suggesting a more efficient iron uptake by transferrin receptors in induced cells, with the rate of about 26 iron atoms per receptor per hour, compared to 15 atoms in uninduced cells. In agreement with this conclusion are results of the study of cellular 125I or 59Fe labeled transferrin kinetics. In the induced cells transferrin endocytosis and release proceeded with identical rates and all the endocytosed iron was retained inside the cell. On the other hand, transferrin release by uninduced cells was significantly slower and a substantial part of internalized 59Fe was released. On the basis of these results, different efficiency of iron release from internalized transferrin, accompanied by changes in cellular transferrin kinetics, is proposed as one of the factors determining the rate of iron uptake by developing erythroid cells.  相似文献   

8.
The iron chelators desferrioxamine (DFO), pyridoxal isonicotinoyl hydrazone (PIH), 2,2-bipyridine, diethylenetriamine penta-acetic acid (DTPA) and 1,2 dimethyl-3-hydroxy pyrid-4-one (CP20) were analysed for their ability to change59Fe uptake and release from the brain of 15- and 63-day rats either during or after intravenous injection of59Fe-125I-transferrin. DTPA was the only chelator unable to significantly reduce iron uptake into the brain of 15-day rats. This indicates that iron is not released from transferrin at the luminal surface of brain capillary endothelial cells. CP20 was able to reduce iron uptake in the brain by 85% compared to 28% with DFO. Only CP20 was able to significantly reduce brain iron uptake in 63 day rats. Once59Fe had entered the brain no chelator used was able to mediate its release. All of the chelators except CP20 had similar effects on femur iron uptake as they did on brain uptake, suggesting similar iron uptake mechanisms. It is concluded that during the passage of transferrin-bound iron into the brain the iron is released from transferrin within endothelial cells after endocytosis of transferrin.  相似文献   

9.
Ferritin and its protein subunits in rat hepatoma cell clone M-5123-C1 were biosynthetically labeled with [14C]leucine and 59Fe. Radioimmunoassays of ferritin/apoferritin and of protein subunits in the free polyribosome, membrane-bound polyribosome, smooth membrane, and cytosol fractions were done with ferritin-specific and subunit-specific rabbit IgG antibodies at various time intervals after pulsing. Much more 59Fe was bound by ferritin/apoferritin than by subunits in all of the cell fractions. Binding of iron to subunits may have been a random process. When hepatoma cells were simultaneously pulse-labeled with 59Fe and [14C]leucine, uptake of much of the 59Fe by ferritin occurred relatively early, in comparison to incorporation of [14C]leucine, in all of the cell fractions examined. Thus, 59Fe was readily incorporated into pre-existing ferritin. We conclude that most, if not nearly all, of the iron is incorporated after assembly of protein subunits.  相似文献   

10.
This paper describes a study of the incorporation of 5 9Fe from 5 9Fe-labelled rat transferrin into rat bone marrow cells in culture. 5 9Fe was found in both stroma and cytoplasm of marrow cells, and the cytoplasmic 5 9Fe separated by polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis, into ferritin, haemoglobin and a low molecular weight fraction.The incorporation of 5 9Fe into all three cytoplasmic fractions, but not into the stroma, increased progressively with time. Erythropoietin stimulated the increase of 5 9Fe in ferritin within 1 h, the earliest time examined, and more than 3 h later in the stroma and haemoglobin.A proportion of the 59Fe incorporated into the stroma and low molecular weight iron fractions during a 1 h incubation with 59Fe-labelled transferrin was mobilised into ferritin and haemoglobin during a subsequent 4-h “cold-chase”. Erythropoietin, when present during the “cold-chase”, did not influence these 59Fe fluxes. The erythropoietin stimulation of 59Fe incorporation into ferritin, one of the earliest erythropoietin effects to be recorded, was therefore considered to be due to an increase of 59Fe uptake by the hormone-responsive cells rather than a direct effect on ferritin synthesis.20-h cultures containing erythropoietin when incubated with 59Fe-labelled transferrin for 4 h, showed dose-related erythropoietin stimulation of 59Fe incorporation into haemoglobin only.In the presence of 10 mM isonicotinic acid hydrazide, 59Fe incorporation into haemoglobin was inhibited, as in reticulocytes (Ponka, P. and Neuwirt, J. (1969) Blood 33, 690–707), while that into the stroma, ferritin and low molecular weight iron fractions, was stimulated; there were no reproducible effects of erythropoietin.  相似文献   

11.
F El-Shobaki  W Rummel 《Blut》1985,50(2):95-101
The uptake of iron from a tied off jejunal segment into the body after the injection of a 59Fe labeled test dose was decreased after the administration of endotoxin by about 80% in both normal and iron deficient animals.--In the iron deficient group the distribution of 59Fe in the cytosol fraction of jejunal mucosa between transferrin and ferritin was determined chromatographically; the amount of 59Fe in the ferritin fraction increased remarkably after the endotoxin treatment and the ratio of both was changed in favor of ferritin.--It is hypothesized that the association of the diversion of iron to the mucosal ferritin with the decrease of the transport of iron into the blood caused by endotoxin might be the consequence of abnormal oxidations in the mucosa measured by others in liver tissue.  相似文献   

12.
The transfer of iron between the maternal and fetal circulations of an isolated perfused lobule of term human placenta was investigated using 125I-labelled or 59Fe-labelled diferric transferrin. There was negligible transplacental transfer of intact transferrin whereas nearly 4 per cent of the added 59Fe was transferred into the fetal circulation after 2 h, where it became associated with fetal transferrin. Over 20 per cent of the added 59Fe radioactivity was sequestered within the placental tissue during this period, associated with transferrin, ferritin and other uncharacterized molecules. This suggests an important role for an intracellular pool in regulating transfer. The presence of 10 mM chloroquine in the maternal circulation substantially reduced tissue accumulation of 59Fe and totally inhibited transfer to the fetus. It is concluded that the initial stages of iron transfer to the fetus involve the internalization of maternal iron-saturated transferrin bound to membrane receptors by receptor-mediated endocytosis, which can be inhibited by the drug chloroquine. Subsequently, the transplacental transfer of iron to the fetus does not involve the concomitant movement of transferrin.  相似文献   

13.
The uptake of transferrin-bound iron by receptor-mediated endocytosis has been the subject of extensive experimental investigation. However, the path followed by iron (Fe) after release from transferrin (Tf) remains obscure. Once Fe is released from Tf within the endosome, it must be transported across the endosomal membrane into the cell. The present investigation describes the presence of a cytoplasmic Tf-free Fe pool which is detectable only when cells are detached from their culture dishes at low temperature, after initial incorporation of diferric transferrin at 37 degrees C. This cellular iron pool was greatly reduced if incubation temperatures were maintained at 37 degrees C or if cells were treated with pronase. Human melanoma cells (SK-MEL-28) in culture were prelabeled by incubation with human 125I-59Fe-transferrin for 2 h, washed, and reincubated at 4 degrees C or 37 degrees C in balanced salt solution in the presence or absence of pronase. The cells were then mechanically detached from the plates and separated into "internalized" and supernatant fractions by centrifugation. Approximately 90% of cellular 59Fe and 20% of 125I-Tf remained internalized when this reincubation procedure was carried out in balanced salt solution at 37 degrees C. However, at 4 degrees C, cellular internalized iron was reduced to approximately 50% of the initial value. The release of this component of cellular 59Fe (approximately 40% of total cell 59Fe) at 4 degrees C was completely inhibited in the presence of pronase and other general proteinases at 4 degrees C and at 37 degrees C, without affecting internalized transferrin levels. Similar results were obtained in fibroblasts and hepatoma cells, indicating that this phenomenon is not unique to melanoma cells. The characterization of this Tf-free cellular Fe pool which is detectable at low temperature may yield valuable insights into the metabolic fate of iron following its transport across the membrane of the endocytotic vesicle.  相似文献   

14.
The effects of various maneuvers on the handling of 59Fe-labeled heat-damaged red cells (59Fe HDRC) by the reticuloendothelial system were studied in rats. Raising the saturation of transferrin with oral carbonyl iron had little effect on splenic release of 59Fe but markedly inhibited hepatic release. Splenic 59Fe release was, however, inhibited by the prior administration of unlabeled HDRC or by the combination of carbonyl iron and unlabeled HDRC. When carbonyl iron was administered with unlabeled free hemoglobin, the pattern of 59Fe distribution was the same as that observed when carbonyl iron was given alone. 59Fe ferritin was identified in the serum after the administration of 59Fe HDRC but the size of the fraction was not affected by raising the saturation of transferrin. Sizing column analyses of tissue extracts from the spleen at various times after the administration of 59Fe HDRC revealed a progressive shift from hemoglobin to ferritin, with only small amounts present in a small molecular weight fraction. The small molecular weight fraction was greater in hepatic extracts, with the difference being marked in animals that had received prior carbonyl iron. The increased hepatic retention of 59Fe associated with a raised saturation of transferrin was reduced by a hydrophobic ferrous chelator (2,2'-bipyridine), a hydrophilic ferric chelator (desferrioxamine), and an extracellular hydrophilic ferric chelator (diethylene-triaminepentacetic acid). Transmembrane iron transport did not seem to be a rate-limiting factor in iron release, since no differences in 59Fe membrane fractions were noted in the different experimental settings. These findings are consistent with a model in which RE cells release iron from catabolized red cells at a relatively constant rate. When the saturation of transferrin is raised, a significant proportion of the iron is transported from the spleen to the liver either in small molecular weight complexes or in ferritin. Although a saturated transferrin had no effect on the release of iron from reticuloendothelial cells, prior loading with HDRC conditions them to release less iron.  相似文献   

15.
Four aspects of iron metabolism were studied in cultured Friend erythroleukemia cells before and after induction of erythroid differentiation by dimethyl sulfoxide. (1) The binding of 125I-labeled transferrin was determined over a range of transferrin concentrations from 0.5 to 15 μM. Scatchard analysis of the binding curves demonstrated equivalent numbers of transferrin binding sites per cell: 7.78 ± 2.41 · 105 in non-induced cells and 9.28 ± 1.57 · 105 after 4 days of exposure to dimethyl sulfoxide. (2) The rate of iron transport was determined by measuring iron uptake from 59Fe-labeled transferrin. Iron uptake in non-induced cells was approx. 17 000 molecules of iron/cell per min; 24 h after addition of dimethyl sulfoxide it increased to 38 000, and it rose to maximal levels of approx. 130 000 at 72 h. (3) Heme synthesis, assayed qualitatively by benzidine staining and measured quantitatively by incorporation of 59Fe or [2-14C]glycine into cyclohexanone-extracted or crystallized heme, was not detected until 3 days after addition of dimethyl sulfoxide, when 12% of the cells were stained by benzidine and 6 pmol 59Fe and 32 pmol [2-14C]glycine were incorporated into heme per 108 cells/h. After 4 days, 60% of the cells were benzidine positive and 34 pmol 59Fe and 90 pmol [2-14C]glycine were incorporated into heme per 108 cells/h. (4) The rate of incorporation of 59Fe into ferritin, measured by immunoprecipitation of ferritin by specific antimouse ferritin immunoglobulin G, rose from 4.4 ± 0.6 cells to 18.4 ± 1.3 pmol 59Fe/h per 108 cells 3 days after addition of dimethyl sulfoxide, and then fell to 11.6 ± 3.1 pmol 4 days after dimethyl sulfoxide when heme synthesis was maximal. These studies indicate that one or more steps in cellular iron transport distal to transferrin binding is induced early by dimethyl sulfoxide and that ferritin may play an active role in iron delivery for heme synthesis.  相似文献   

16.
Mouse (MEL) and human (K-562) erythroleukemia cell lines can be induced to undergo erythroid differentiation, including hemoglobin (Hb) synthesis, by extra cellular hemin. In order to study the effect of extracellular hemin on intracellular ferritin and Hb content, we have used Mossabauer spectroscopy to measure the amount of 57Fe incorporated into ferritin or Hb and a fluorescent enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA) to measure the ferritin protein content. When K-562 cells were cultured in the presence of a 57Fe source either as transferrin or citrate, in the absence of a differentiation inducer, all the intracellular 57Fe was detected in ferritin. When the cells were cultured in the presence of 57Fe-hemin, 57Fe was found in both ferritin and Hb. 57Fe in ferritin increased rapidly, and after 2 days it reached a plateau at 5 X 10(-14) g/cell. 57Fe in Hb increased linearly with time and reached the same value after 12 days. Addition of other iron sources such as iron-saturated transferrin, iron citrate, or iron ammonium citrate caused a much lower increase in ferritin protein content as compared to hemin. When K-562 cells were induced by 57Fe-hemin in the presence of 56Fe-transferrin, 57Fe was found to be incorporated in equal amounts into both ferritin and Hb. However, when the cells were induced by 56Fe-hemin in the presence of 57Fe-transferrin, 57Fe was incorporated only into ferritin, but not into Hb, which contained 56Fe iron. These results indicate that in K-562 cells, when hemin is present in the culture medium it is preferentially incorporated into Hb, regardless of the availability of other extra- or intracellular iron sources such as transferrin or ferritin. In MEL cells induced to differentiate by dimethylsulfoxide (DMSO) a different pattern of iron incorporation was observed; 57Fe from both transferrin and hemin was found to incorporate in ferritin as well as in Hb.  相似文献   

17.
Intracellular ferritin in newt (Triturus cristatus) erythroblasts was accessible to the chelating effects of EDTA and pyridoxal phosphate. EDTA (0.5-1 mM) promoted release of radioactive iron from ferritin of pulse-labelled erythroblasts during chase incubation, but its continuous presence was not necessary for ferritin iron mobilization. Brief exposure to EDTA was sufficient to release 60-70% of ferritin 59Fe content during ensuing chase in EDTA-free medium. EDTA also suppressed cellular iron uptake and utilization for heme synthesis, but these activities were restored upon its removal. Pyridoxal-5'-phosphate (0.5-5 mM) also stimulated loss of radioactive iron from ferritin; however, ferritin iron release by pyridoxal phosphate required its continued presence. Unlike EDTA, pyridoxal phosphate did not interfere with iron uptake or its utilization for heme synthesis. Chelator-mobilized ferritin iron accumulated initially in the hemolysate as a low-molecular-weight component and appeared to be eventually released into the medium. No radioactive ferritin was found in the medium of chelator-treated cells, indicating that secretion or loss of ferritin was not responsible for decreasing cellular ferritin 59Fe content. Moreover, there was no transfer of radioactive iron between the low-molecular-weight component released into the medium and plasma transferrin. These results indicate that chelator-released ferritin iron is not available for cellular utilization in heme synthesis and that ferritin iron released by this process is not an alternative or complementary iron source for heme synthesis. Correlation of these data with effects of succinylacetone inhibition of heme synthesis and with previous studies indicates that the main role of erythroid cell ferritin is absorption and storage of excess iron not used for heme synthesis.  相似文献   

18.
Following a pulse with 59Fe-transferrin, K562 erythroleukemia cells incorporate a significant amount of 59Fe into ferritin. Conditions or manipulations which alter the supply of iron to cells result in changes in the rate of ferritin biosynthesis with consequent variations in the size of the ferritin pool. Overnight exposure to iron donors such as diferric transferrin or hemin increases the ferritin level 2-4- or 6-8-fold above that of the control, respectively. Treatment with the anti-human transferrin receptor antibody, OKT9 (which reduces the iron uptake by decreasing the number of transferrin receptors) lowers the ferritin level by approximately 70-80% with respect to the control. The fraction of total cell-associated 59Fe (given as a pulse via transferrin) that becomes ferritin bound is proportional to the actual ferritin level and is independent of the instantaneous amount of iron taken up. This has allowed us to establish a curve that correlates different levels of intracellular ferritin with corresponding percentages of incoming iron delivered to ferritin. Iron released from transferrin appears to distribute to ferritin according to a partition function; the entering load going into ferritin is set for a given ferritin level over a wide range of actual amounts of iron delivered.  相似文献   

19.
The mechanism of transferrin uptake by reticulocytes was investigated using rabbit transferrin labelled with 125I and 59Fe and rabbit reticulocytes which had been treated with trypsin, Pronase or neuraminidase. Low concentrations of the proteolytic enzymes produced a small increase in transferrin and iron uptake by the cells. However, higher concentrations or incubation of the cells with the enzymes for longer periods caused a marked fall in transferrin and iron uptake. This fall was associated with a reduction in the proportion of cellular transferrin which was bound to a cell membrane component solubilized with the non-ionic detergent, Teric 12A9. The effect of trypsin and Pronase on transferrin release from the cells was investigated in the absence and in the presence of N-ethylmaleimide which inhibits the normal process of transferrin release. It was found that only a small proportion of transferrin which had been taken up by reticulocytes at 37 degrees C but nearly all that taken up 4 degrees C was released when the cells were subsequently incubated with trypsin plus N-ethylmaleimide, despite the fact that about 80% of the 59Fe in the cells was released in both instances. Neuraminidase produced no change in transferrin and iron uptake by the cells. These experiments provide evidence that transferrin uptake by reticulocytes requires interaction with a receptor which is protein in nature and that following uptake at 37 degrees C, most of the transferrin is located at a site unavailable to the action of proteolytic enzymes. The results support the hypothesis that transferrin enters reticulocytes by endocytosis.  相似文献   

20.
To evaluate the ultrastructural distribution of transferrin on the surface of L1210 ascites tumor cells, we used ferrocyanide to stain ferric iron (Prussian blue reaction) in transferrin, as well as in ferritin conjugated to antibody that was immunologically attached to the transferrin. Small deposits averaging 5 nm in diameter identified transferrin iron, whereas large cuboidal deposits averaging 50 nm in diameter stained ferritin conjugated-antibody that was bound to both transferrin and apotransferrin on the cell surface. The ability of transferrin to deliver iron to ascites tumor cells was confirmed by kinetic studies of transferrin labeled with 59Fe and 125I. These preliminary results are consistent with release of transferrin iron at the cell surface and demonstrate additional uses for ferrocyanide in ultrastructural cytochemical techniques.  相似文献   

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