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1.
Structure of Golgi apparatus   总被引:2,自引:0,他引:2  
Summary Golgi apparatus (GA) of eukaryotic cells consist of one or more stacks of flattened saccules (cisternae) and an array of fenestrae and tubules continuous with the peripheral edges of the saccules. Golgi apparatus also are characterized by zones of exclusion that surround each stack and by an assortment of vesicles (or vesicle buds) associated with both the stacks and the peripheral tubules of the stack cisternae. Each stack (sometimes referred to as Golgi apparatus, Golgi complex, or dictyosome) is structurally and functionally polarized, reflecting its role as an intermediate between the endoplasmic reticulum, the cell surface, and the lysosomal system of the cell. There is probably only one GA per cell, and all stacks of the GA appear to function synchronously. All Golgi apparatus are involved in the generation and movement of product and membrane within the cell or to the cell exterior, and these functions are often reflected as structural changes across the stacks. For example, in plants, both product and membrane appear to maturate from the cis to the trans poles of the stacks in a sequential, or serial, manner. However, there is also strong ultrastructural evidence in plants for a parallel input to the stack saccules, probably through the peripheral tubules. The same modes of functioning probably also occur in animal GA; although here, the parallel mode of functioning almost surely predominates. In some cells at least, GA stacks give rise to tubular-vesicular structures that resemble the trans Golgi network. Rudimentary GA, consisting of tubular-vesicular networks, have been identified in fungi and may represent an early stage of GA evolution.  相似文献   

2.
 The Golgi apparatus of epididymal principal cells shares many structural features with other cell types. Saccular regions are arranged in a cis-Golgi network, eight flattened saccules, and several trans-Golgi networks (TGNs). Dilated tubules form intersaccular connecting regions which joint together saccules at the same or different levels between adjacent stacks. Wells exist as large perforations in register with the four cis-most saccules and serve as areas of vesicular interactions. TGNs are variable and can appear to peel off the stack or to be detached from it in the form of an anastomotic tubular network with pale dilated areas corresponding to prosecretory granules connected by short narrow bridges. Elongated or discoid dilated cisternae of endoplasmic reticulum (ER) (sparsely granulated) lie over the cis face of the stack, from which they are separated by an intermediate compartment filled with vesicles and tubules. The ER is also closely juxtaposed to the TGNs and the eighth saccule but interconnections are never seen between them. Vesicles of the COP variety reside at all levels of the stack and appear to bud off the cis-located ER and the edges of the saccules, while clathrin-coated vesicles appear mainly on the trans face of the stack and next to lysosomes. In the supranuclear cytoplasm, clusters of vesicles and tubules, at times budding off enveloping ER, appear to radiate toward the Golgi stacks where they fuse with cis Golgi elements. Taken together, these observations suggest dynamic functions and interactions for the various Golgi elements, associated vesicles, ER, and vesicular tubular clusters. Accepted: 29 January 1998  相似文献   

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

4.
The fungal-derived derivative, brefeldin A, was used to disruptthe Golgi apparatus (GA) of the green alga, Gloeomonas kupfferi.Upon short treatments (10 µg ml–1 for 10 min orless), the Golgi bodies maintain their perinuclear positioning.However, the medial locus transforms from a tight stack of elongatecisternae to a network of swollen tubules. Upon longer treatments(60 min), swelling and vesiculation of cis face cisternae becomeapparent. Likewise, the edges of several trans face cisternaemay fuse with those of adjacent Golgi bodies leading to theformation of multiGolgi complexes. Key words: Brefeldin A, Golgi apparatus, Gloeomonas kupfferi  相似文献   

5.
Understanding vesicle trafficking to and through the Golgi stack has been greatly elucidated recently, but the question of what holds the endoplasmic reticulum (ER) and Golgi stack together in many cell types and an explanation of anterograde trafficking in the ER-Golgi transitional zone have not yet been adequately explained. We have studied these problems using both the thin sectioning and the quick-freeze deep-etch (QF-DE) technique on Paramecium cells harvested at different culture ages. Although the Golgi apparatus of Paramecium is made up of many sets of more reduced stacks of cisternae than those of many mammalian cells, the stacks in Paramecium always bear a close relationship to a transitional element of the ER from which non-clathrin-coated transition vesicles arise. In QF-DE replicas two networks of filaments are clearly shown; one is in this ER-Golgi transition zone and the other is on the trans side of the Golgi stack. The network associated with the trans-Golgi region links a number of vesicular elements. The network in the transition zone spans the distance between the ER and the cis-cisterna of the Golgi stack and has branches extending to the coats of the enmeshed nonclathrin-coated transition vesicles. These coats consist of a layer of 11-nm globular elements (the same size as coatomer complexes) which surround the 40-nm-diameter transition vesicles. We conclude that the filamentous network holds the ER and Golgi stack together and prevents the dispersal of the transition vesicles away from this zone. This network may also delineate and stabilize the transitional element within the ER and, finally, help organize anterograde transition vesicle trafficking in this ER-Golgi transition zone.  相似文献   

6.
The central organelle within the secretory pathway is the Golgi apparatus, a collection of flattened membranes organized into stacks. The cisternal maturation model of intra-Golgi transport depicts Golgi cisternae that mature from cis to medial to trans by receiving resident proteins, such as glycosylation enzymes via retrograde vesicle-mediated recycling. The conserved oligomeric Golgi (COG) complex, a multi-subunit tethering complex of the complexes associated with tethering containing helical rods family, organizes vesicle targeting during intra-Golgi retrograde transport. The COG complex, both physically and functionally, interacts with all classes of molecules maintaining intra-Golgi trafficking, namely SNAREs, SNARE-interacting proteins, Rabs, coiled-coil tethers, vesicular coats, and molecular motors. In this report, we will review the current state of the COG interactome and analyze possible scenarios for the molecular mechanism of the COG orchestrated vesicle targeting, which plays a central role in maintaining glycosylation homeostasis in all eukaryotic cells.  相似文献   

7.
Electron microscopy and cryoimmunocytochemistry were used to characterize tubular connections in the secretory pathway using rat spermatids as model. Our results support the existence of a complex tubular network enriched in the Golgi matrix protein GM130 that transiently joins the cis-Golgi side and the endoplasmic reticulum. These tubules occasionally contain the endoplasmic reticulum resident protein PDI but not COPII complexes or KDEL receptor. At the lateral edges of the stacks tubules were seen to connect cisternae belonging to the same or adjacent stacks. These connections were observed in all cisternae but preferentially on the cis side. Giantin, Gos28 and Rab6 were detected in the tubules; importantly, we reported the presence of cis-trans heterotypic connections between cisternae. On the trans-Golgi side, we occasionally observed tubules highly immunoreactive for Rab6 connecting the stack with the forming acrosome. Together, our results support the existence of transient continuities throughout the secretory pathways.  相似文献   

8.
The budding yeast Pichia pastoris contains ordered Golgi stacks next to discrete transitional endoplasmic reticulum (tER) sites, making this organism ideal for structure-function studies of the secretory pathway. Here, we have used P. pastoris to test various models for Golgi trafficking. The experimental approach was to analyze P. pastoris tER-Golgi units by using cryofixed and freeze-substituted cells for electron microscope tomography, immunoelectron microscopy, and serial thin section analysis of entire cells. We find that tER sites and the adjacent Golgi stacks are enclosed in a ribosome-excluding "matrix." Each stack contains three to four cisternae, which can be classified as cis, medial, trans, or trans-Golgi network (TGN). No membrane continuities between compartments were detected. This work provides three major new insights. First, two types of transport vesicles accumulate at the tER-Golgi interface. Morphological analysis indicates that the center of the tER-Golgi interface contains COPII vesicles, whereas the periphery contains COPI vesicles. Second, fenestrae are absent from cis cisternae, but are present in medial through TGN cisternae. The number and distribution of the fenestrae suggest that they form at the edges of the medial cisternae and then migrate inward. Third, intact TGN cisternae apparently peel off from the Golgi stacks and persist for some time in the cytosol, and these "free-floating" TGN cisternae produce clathrin-coated vesicles. These observations are most readily explained by assuming that Golgi cisternae form at the cis face of the stack, progressively mature, and ultimately dissociate from the trans face of the stack.  相似文献   

9.
Golgi apparatus were released without fixatives from rat hepatocytes by gentle homogenization, concentrated by differential centrifugation, and purified by sucrose gradient centrifugation. Examination of sections of purified fractions by electron microscopy showed fields of morphologically intact units of Golgi apparatus consisting of stacks of parallel flattened cisternae, secretory vesicles, and small vesicular profiles. Negative staining of unfixed pellets revealed a complex network of anastomotic tubules continuous with platelike structures and secretory vesicles. These structures corresponded, respectively, to the small vesicular profiles and parallel flattened cisternae with attached secretory vesicles of sectioned material. Small fragments of granular endoplasmic reticulum were often closely associated with the peripheral tubules, suggesting sites of continuity in intact hepatocytes.  相似文献   

10.
The effects of the fungal metabolite brefeldin A (BFA) on the endocytic routes of internalised wheat germ agglutinin (WGA) were studied in human HepG2 hepatoma cells, drawing particular attention to the application times in relation to the membrane dynamics occurring at the trans Golgi face during endocytosis. As shown in previous studies, transport of internalised WGA into the Golgi apparatus can be classified in three stages being characterised by predominance of vesicular endosomes (stage I), formation of an extended endocytic trans Golgi network (stage II) and uptake of WGA into the stacked Golgi cisternae (stage III). BFA treatment of the cells led to rapid tubular-reticular transformations of the Golgi stacks. Retrograde transport and further destinations of internalised WGA depended on the time of BFA application. When BFA was administered during stages I or II, WGA was localised within the BFA-induced tubules and networks, but never was found within the endoplasmic reticulum. By contrast, BFA treatment during stage III led to a redistribution of internalised WGA into cisternae of the endoplasmic reticulum. These results show that BFA administered according to a precise time schedule can be used as a regulatory agent that allows to control retrograde traffic of internalised molecules into the endoplasmic reticulum.  相似文献   

11.
Wang Y  Wei JH  Bisel B  Tang D  Seemann J 《PloS one》2008,3(2):e1647
The Golgi apparatus in mammalian cells is composed of flattened cisternae that are densely packed to form stacks. We have used the Golgi stacking protein GRASP65 as a tool to modify the stacking state of Golgi cisternae. We established an assay to measure protein transport to the cell surface in post-mitotic cells in which the Golgi was unstacked. Cells with an unstacked Golgi showed a higher transport rate compared to cells with stacked Golgi membranes. Vesicle budding from unstacked cisternae in vitro was significantly increased compared to stacked membranes. These results suggest that Golgi cisternal stacking can directly regulate vesicle formation and thus the rate of protein transport through the Golgi. The results further suggest that at the onset of mitosis, unstacking of cisternae allows extensive and rapid vesiculation of the Golgi in preparation for its subsequent partitioning.  相似文献   

12.
The Golgi apparatus (GA) is a dynamic store of Ca2+ that can be released into the cell cytosol. It can thus participate in the regulation of the Ca2+ concentration in the cytosol ([Ca2+]cyt), which might be critical for intra‐Golgi transport. Secretory pathway Ca2+‐ATPase pump type 1 (SPCA1) is important in Golgi homeostasis of Ca2+. The subcellular localization of SPCA1 appears to be GA specific, although its precise location within the GA is not known. Here, we show that SPCA1 is mostly excluded from the cores of the Golgi cisternae and is instead located mainly on the lateral rims of Golgi stacks, in tubular noncompact zones that interconnect different Golgi stacks, and within tubular parts of the trans Golgi network, suggesting a role in regulation of the local [Ca2+]cyt that is crucial for membrane fusion. SPCA1 knockdown by RNA interference induces GA fragmentation. These Golgi fragments lack the cis‐most and trans‐most cisternae and remain within the perinuclear region. This SPCA1 knockdown inhibits exit of vesicular stomatitis virus G‐protein from the GA and delays retrograde redistribution of the GA glycosylation enzymes into the endoplasmic reticulum caused by brefeldin A; however, exit of these enzymes from the endoplasmic reticulum is not affected. Thus, correct SPCA1 functioning is crucial to intra‐Golgi transport and maintenance of the Golgi ribbon.  相似文献   

13.
Using stereology and immunoelectron microscopy we examined the pathway of Golgi duster formation during treatment with the phosphatase inhibitor okadaic acid. During the first hour the Golgi stack of suspension HeLa cells lost 90% of its membrane without appreciable reduction in the number of cisternae. During this time clusters of tubules and vesicles (Golgi clusters) appeared and these contained only a fraction of the Golgi membrane present in untreated cells. Despite the overall reduction in membrane the total amount of immunolabeling for galactosyltransferase over the Golgi clusters of a typical cell was maintained, indicating that galactosyltransferase had been retained in Golgi membranes. The observation that, after 40 min okadaic acid treatment, labeling density for galactosyltransferase within trans Golgi cisternae increased 1.6-fold (n = 3, CE 10%) suggests that membrane loss from trans cisternae was selective. Careful evaluation of immunolabeled clusters showed that most of the galactosyltransferase labeling was located over complex tubular profiles and not vesicular profiles. Tubular structures were also observed during disassembly and these were found both connected to disassembling cisternae and within forming Golgi clusters, indicating that they were intermediates in cluster formation. We also investigated the role of vesicular transport in cluster formation. During disassembly we found no accumulation of COP-coated buds and vesicles over Golgi membrane. However, aluminium fluoride, previously found to arrest transport in the Golgi stack, completely inhibited membrane depletion and stack disassembly. Taken together, our results indicate that during Golgi cluster formation, membrane leaves the Golgi but galactosyltransferase is retained within a tubular reticulum which is a direct descendant of trans-Golgi cisternae. Membrane depletion may require ongoing vesicular transport and we postulate that it arises because of an imbalance in membrane traffic into and out of the Golgi apparatus.  相似文献   

14.
 Tubules constitute an integral part of the Golgi apparatus and have been shown to form a complex and dynamic network at its trans side. We have studied in detail structural features of the trans Golgi network and its relationship with the cisternal stack in thin sections of Lowicryl K4M embedded human absorptive enterocytes by immunolectron microscopy. Immunoreactive sites for α1,3 N-acetylgalactosaminyltransferase and blood group A substance were detectable troughout the cisternal stack and the entire trans Golgi network. Furthermore, the entire trans Golgi network was reactive for CMPase activity. Evidence for two kinds of tubules at the trans side of the Golgi apparatus was found: tubules that laterally connect adjacent and distant cisternal stacks, and others extending from central and lateral portions of trans cisternae to form the complex and extensive trans Golgi network. Trans cisternae showed often the peeling-off phenomenon and were continuous with the trans Golgi network. Both, trans cisternae and tubules of the trans Golgi network exhibited regionally buds and vesicles with a lace-like, non clathrin coat, previously reported by others in NRK cells, which contained glycoproteins with terminal N-acetylgalactosamine residues. These buds and vesicle are therefore involved in constitutive exocytosis. Accepted: 12 January 1998  相似文献   

15.
Root border cells lie on the surface of the root cap and secrete massive amounts of mucilage that contains polysaccharides and proteoglycans. Golgi stacks in the border cells have hypertrophied margins, reflecting elevated biosynthetic activity to produce the polysaccharide components of the mucilage. To investigate the three‐dimensional structures and macromolecular compositions of these Golgi stacks, we examined high‐pressure frozen/freeze‐substituted alfalfa root cap cells with electron microscopy/tomography. Golgi stacks in border cells and peripheral cells, precursor cells of border cells, displayed similar morphological features, such as proliferation of trans cisternae and swelling of the trans cisternae and trans‐Golgi network (TGN) compartments. These swollen margins give rise to two types of vesicles larger than other Golgi‐associated vesicles. Margins of trans‐Golgi cisternae accumulate the LM8 xylogalacturonan (XGA) epitope, and they become darkly stained large vesicles (LVs) after release from the Golgi. Epitopes for xyloglucan (XG), polygalacturonic acid/rhamnogalacturonan‐I (PGA/RG‐I) are detected in the trans‐most cisternae and TGN compartments. LVs produced from TGN compartments (TGN‐LVs) stained lighter than LVs and contained the cell wall polysaccharide epitopes seen in the TGN. LVs carrying the XGA epitope fuse with the plasma membrane only in border cells, whereas TGN‐LVs containing the XG and PGA/RG‐I epitopes fuse with the plasma membrane of both peripheral cells and border cells. Taken together, these results indicate that XGA is secreted by a novel type of secretory vesicles derived from trans‐Golgi cisternae. Furthermore, we simulated the collapse in the central domain of the trans‐cisternae accompanying polysaccharide synthesis with a mathematical model.  相似文献   

16.
To characterize endogenous molecules and activities of the Golgi complex, proteins in transit were >99% cleared from rat hepatocytes by using cycloheximide (CHX) treatment. The loss of proteins in transit resulted in condensation of the Golgi cisternae and stacks. Isolation of a stacked Golgi fraction is equally efficient with or without proteins in transit [control (CTL SGF1) and cycloheximide (CHX SGF1)]. Electron microscopy and morphometric analysis showed that >90% of the elements could be positively identified as Golgi stacks or cisternae. Biochemical analysis showed that the cis-, medial-, trans-, and TGN Golgi markers were enriched over the postnuclear supernatant 200- to 400-fold with and 400- to 700-fold without proteins in transit. To provide information on a mechanism for import of calcium required at the later stages of the secretory pathway, calcium uptake into CTL SGF1 and CHX SGF1 was examined. All calcium uptake into CTL SGF1 was dependent on a thapsigargin-resistant pump not resident to the Golgi complex and a thapsigargin-sensitive pump resident to the Golgi. Experiments using CHX SGF1 showed that the thapsigargin-resistant activity was a plasma membrane calcium ATPase isoform in transit to the plasma membrane and the thapsigargin-sensitive pump was a sarcoplasmic/endoplasmic reticulum calcium ATPase isoform. In vivo both of these calcium ATPases function to maintain millimolar levels of calcium within the Golgi lumen.  相似文献   

17.
The Golgi complex in the Sertoli cell of the Syrian hamster is well developed and consists of stacks of cisternae and associated vesicles. The inner- and outermost cisternae of the Golgi stacks are usually moderately dilated and exhibit numerous fenestrations. The middle portions of the intermediate cisternae are greatly flattened and not fenestrated, but toward the periphery these cisternae gradually become dilated and show a few fenestrations. On the inner aspect of the Golgi stacks the following structures are seen frequently: (1) one or two series of linearly arrayed circular profiles some of which are interconnected by tubules; (2) networks of anastomosing tubules with circular or oval meshes (800 to 1200 A in diameter); and/or (3) irregularly disposed tubules. The circular profiles and tubules are approximately 450 A in diameter. Acid phosphatase activity was localized in these anastomosing tubules when the tissues were incubated for more than one hour in a modified Gomori's medium (Barka and Anderson, 1963). Strong thiamine pyrophosphatase activity was demonstrated in the inner one to three cisternae of the Golgi stacks but not in the associated tubules. The system of the Golgi associated tubules is morphologically and histochemically distinct from the Golgi stacks and is probably equivalent to the Golgi-endoplasmic reticulum-lysosome system (GERL) in other cell types. The three dimensional aspects of the GERL-equivalent system are discussed.  相似文献   

18.
The secretory route in eukaryotic cells has been regarded as one common pathway from the endoplasmic reticulum (ER) through the Golgi cisternae to the trans Golgi network where recognition, sorting and exit of cargo molecules are thought to occur. Morphologically, the ribosome-coated ER is observed throughout the cytoplasm, while the Golgi apparatus usually is confined to a perinuclear position in mammalian cells. However, Golgi outposts have been observed in neuronal dendrites and dispersed Golgi elements in skeletal muscle myofibers. In insects, like in Drosophila melanogaster imaginal disc cells and epidermal cells of Tobacco and Arabidopsis leafs, individual Golgi stacks are distributed throughout the cytoplasm. Golgi stacks do not only differ in their intracellular localization but also in the number of stacks from one to several hundreds. Each stack consists of closely aligned, flattened, membrane-limited cisternae. The number of cisternae in a Golgi stack is also variable, 2-3 in some ciliates, 10 in many plant cell types and up to 30 in certain euglenoids. The yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae has a Golgi structure of minimal complexity with scattered solitary cisternae. It is assumed that the number of Golgi cisternae reflects the overall complexity of the enzymatic reactions that occur in their lumen, while the number of stacks reflects the load of macromolecules arriving at the cis side. In this review, we will focus on how the available morphological and biochemical data fit with the current view of protein sorting in the secretory pathway, particularly in polarized cells like neuronal and epithelial cells.  相似文献   

19.
During microtubule depolymerization, the central, juxtanuclear Golgi apparatus scatters to multiple peripheral sites. We have tested here whether such scattering is due to a fragmentation process and subsequent outward tracking of Golgi units or if peripheral Golgi elements reform through a novel recycling pathway. To mark the Golgi in HeLa cells, we stably expressed the Golgi stack enzyme N-acetylgalactosaminyltransferase-2 (GalNAc-T2) fused to the green fluorescent protein (GFP) or to an 11–amino acid epitope, VSV-G (VSV), and the trans/TGN enzyme β1,4-galactosyltransferase (GalT) fused to GFP. After nocodazole addition, time-lapse microscopy of GalNAc-T2–GFP and GalT–GFP revealed that scattered Golgi elements appeared abruptly and that no Golgi fragments tracked outward from the compact, juxtanuclear Golgi complex. Once formed, the scattered structures were relatively stable in fluorescence intensity for tens of minutes. During the entire process of dispersal, immunogold labeling for GalNAc-T2–VSV and GalT showed that these were continuously concentrated over stacked Golgi cisternae and tubulovesicular Golgi structures similar to untreated cells, suggesting that polarized Golgi stacks reform rapidly at scattered sites. In fluorescence recovery after photobleaching over a narrow (FRAP) or wide area (FRAP-W) experiments, peripheral Golgi stacks continuously exchanged resident proteins with each other through what appeared to be an ER intermediate. That Golgi enzymes cycle through the ER was confirmed by microinjecting the dominant-negative mutant of Sar1 (Sar1pdn) blocking ER export. Sar1pdn was either microinjected into untreated or nocodazole-treated cells in the presence of protein synthesis inhibitors. In both cases, this caused a gradual accumulation of GalNAc-T2–VSV in the ER. Few to no peripheral Golgi elements were seen in the nocodazole-treated cells microinjected with Sar1pdn. In conclusion, we have shown that Golgi-resident glycosylation enzymes recycle through the ER and that this novel pathway is the likely explanation for the nocodazole-induced Golgi scattering observed in interphase cells.  相似文献   

20.
Summary Based on cell-free processing whereby membrane glycoproteins from one cell type were processed by enzymes located in Golgi apparatus from another cell type, J. Rothman and colleagues postulated that vesicles budding from one Golgi apparatus stack migrated to and fused with cisternal membranes of other Golgi apparatus stacks in the cell-free milieu. An extension of this hypothesis was that these same or similar vesicles were involved in the trafficking of membrane material from one cisterna to the next even in the same Golgi apparatus stack [W. G. Dunphy, J. E. Rothman: Compartmental organization of the Golgi stack. Cell 42: 13–21 (1985)]. A coated bud revealed by tannic acid-containing fixatives was the morphological entity associated with this intercompartment Golgi apparatus transfer. This report summarizes information from the author's laboratories that suggests that perhaps the majority of these coated buds, while associated with the Golgi apparatus, are not vesicles per se but rather coated ends of tubules. Golgi apparatus tubules have been postulated to permit interconnections among adjacent Golgi apparatus stacks but not to function in transport between contiguous cisternae of the same Golgi apparatus stack.In the interest of scientific discourse, reasoned and constructive replies to views expressed under New Ideas in Cell Biology will be considered for publication. In this case, the responsible editor, to be contacted by respondents, is E. Schnepf.  相似文献   

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