首页 | 本学科首页   官方微博 | 高级检索  
相似文献
 共查询到20条相似文献,搜索用时 15 毫秒
1.
The interaction between liposomes coated with covalently linked rabbit immunoglobulin (RbIg-liposomes), and rat liver macrophages (Kupffer cells) in monolayer culture was studied biochemically with radioactive tracers and morphologically by electron microscopy. The attachment of immunoglobulin (Ig) to liposomes caused a five-fold increase in liposome uptake by the Kupffer cells at 37 degrees C, in comparison with uncoated liposomes. The uptake was linear with time for at least 4 h and linear with liposome concentration up to a lipid concentration of 0.2 mM. At 4 degrees C uptake, probably representing cell surface-bound liposomes, was reduced to a level of approx. 20% of the 37 degrees C values. Involvement of the Fc receptor in the uptake process was indicated by the reduction of RbIg-liposome uptake by more than 75% as a result of preincubating the cells with heat-aggregated human or rabbit Ig at concentrations (less than 2 mg/ml) at which bovine serum albumin (BSA) had virtually no effect on uptake. At high concentrations (10-35 mg/ml), however, albumin also reduced liposome uptake significantly (20-30%), which suggests an interaction of the RbIg-liposomes with the Kupffer cells that is partially non-specific. RbIg-liposome uptake was dependent on the amount of RbIg coupled to the liposomes. Maximal uptake values were reached at about 200 micrograms RbIg/mumol liposomal lipid. Electron microscopic observations on cells incubated with horseradish peroxidase-containing RbIg-liposomes demonstrated massive accumulation of peroxidase reaction product in intracellular vacuoles, showing that the uptake observed by label association represents true internalization.  相似文献   

2.
We compared the metabolic fate of [3H]cholesteryl[14C]oleate, [3H]cholesteryl hexadecylether, 125I-labeled bovine serum albumin and [3H]inulin as constituents of large immunoglobulin-coupled unilamellar lipid vesicles following their internalization by rat liver macrophages (Kupffer cells) in monolayer culture. Under serum-free conditions, the cholesteryl oleate that is taken up is hydrolyzed, for the greater part, within 2 h. This occurs in the lysosomal compartment as judged by the inhibitory effect of the lysosomotropic agents monensin and chloroquin. After hydrolysis, the cholesterol moiety is accommodated in the cellular pool of free cholesterol and the oleate is reutilized for the synthesis mainly of phospholipids and, to a lesser extent of triacylglycerols. During incubation in plasma, however, substantial proportions of both the cholesterol and the oleate are shed from the cells, predominantly in the unesterified form. When the liposomes are labeled with the cholesteryl ester analog [3H]cholesteryl hexadecylether only a very small fraction of the label is released from the cells, even in the presence of plasma. Similar to the label remaining associated with the cells, the released label is identified in that case as unchanged cholesteryl ether. The liposomal aqueous phase marker 125I-labeled bovine serum albumin is also readily degraded intralysosomally and the radioactive label is rapidly released from the cells in a trichloroacetic acid-soluble form. Also, as much as 20% of the aqueous phase marker [3H]inulin that becomes cell-associated during a 2-h incubation with inulin-containing liposomes, is released from the cells during a subsequent 4-h incubation period in medium or rat plasma. The usefulness of the various liposomal labels as parameters of liposome uptake and intracellular processing is discussed.  相似文献   

3.
In this study we investigated the interaction of liposomes with rat Kupffer cells in maintenance culture by using the lysosomotropic amines ammonium chloride and chloroquine as inhibitors of intralysosomal degradation. The liposomes (large unilamellar vesicles) contained either the metabolically inert 3H-labeled inulin or the degradable 125I-labeled bovine serum albumin. In control incubations, the cells released nearly all accumulated protein label and about 30% of the lipid label when they were incubated in the absence of liposomes, after an initial uptake period of 1 h in the presence of liposomes. This release of label was, for the greater part, suppressed in the presence of ammonia or chloroquine. When the inhibitors were present during the initial uptake period, a several-fold increase in the amount of protein label accumulating in the cells and a smaller, but still marked, increase in lipid label accumulation were observed. The effect of ammonia when present during uptake was readily reversible in contrast to that of chloroquine. Experiments with encapsulated inulin revealed that both lysosomotropic agents also affected the uptake process per se to some extent, probably as a result of impaired membrane/receptor recycling. Labeled liposomes adsorbed to the cells at 4°C were effectively internalized and processed intracellulary after shifting the temperature to 37°C, even when a 500-fold excess of unlabeled liposomes was present in the medium during the 37°C incubation. The observed effects of ammonia and chloroquine indicate that, after uptake, the liposomes are degraded within lysosomes, thus confirming our previous conclusion that endocytosis is the major uptake mechanism at 37°C. From the temperature-change experiments we conclude that, at 4°C, the liposomes are bound with high affinity to the cells, remaining firmly attached to the cell-surface structures which initiate their internalization when the temperature is raised to 37°C.  相似文献   

4.
We investigated the effects of (dihydro)cytochalasin B, colchicine, monensin and trifluoperazine on uptake and processing of large unilamellar liposomes by rat Kupffer cells in maintenance culture. The phospholipid vesicles were labeled in the lipid moiety with phosphatidyl[14C]choline and contained [3H]inulin or [125I]iodoalbumin as nondegradable and degradable markers of the aqueous vesicle content, respectively. Cytochalasin B and dihydrocytochalasin B, inhibitors of microfilament function, reduced inert inulin label uptake by 75% maximally, but residual uptake was not followed by release of lipid degradation products from the cells. By contrast, colchicine, an inhibitor of microtubule assembly, reduced uptake of liposomal inulin by maximally 55% but could not inhibit release of lipid degradation products from the cells. It is concluded that the cytochalasins partly inhibit uptake but fully prevent the arrival of internalized liposomes in the lysosomal compartment, while the action of colchicine is to slow down the overall process of uptake and subsequent transportation to the lysosomes. Monensin reduced inulin uptake to an extent similar to that found with colchicine, but reversibly blocked degradation of liposomal lipid and encapsulated protein. The kinetics of degradation of liposomal constituents suggests that residual uptake in the presence of monensin represents accumulation in an intracellular compartment. Trifluoperazine did not affect binding, internalization or degradation of encapsulated protein at low concentration (6 microM), but completely inhibited release of liposomal lipid degradation products under these conditions. At intermediate concentration (14 microM), the drug also reduced the internalization, while a high concentration (22 microM) was required to inhibit protein degradation as well. We conclude that trifluoperazine has multiple sites of action in the uptake and processing of liposomal constituents by Kupffer cells.  相似文献   

5.
We studied the interaction of positively and negatively charged unilamellar and multilamellar phospholipid vesicles (liposomes) with rat-liver parenchymal cells in primary monolayer culture. Radioactive liposomal phosphatidylcholine was taken up more rapidly and to a larger extent from unilamellar than from multilamellar vesicles. No significant difference in uptake characteristics was observed between vesicles of different charge. The presence of serum greatly reduced uptake of liposomal phosphatidylcholine of both unilamellar and multilamellar vesicles. This serum effect was independent of surface charge of the vesicles. When cells were allowed to take up radioactive liposomal phospholipid and then incubated further in absence of vesicles, part of the radioactivity associated with the cells was released into the medium, most of it as water soluble degradation products. When cells were preincubated with vesicles containing horseradish peroxidase and then, after removal of the vesicles, further incubated, peroxidase activity could be demonstrated in the culture medium, part of it only after addition of Triton X-100. These observations were taken to indicate that part of the phospholipid taken up the cells represented vesicles binding to the cell surface rather than having been internalized. Vesicle-entrapped [125I]albumin was taken up by the cells and rapidly hydrolyzed as indicated by the appearance of radioactivity soluble in trichloroacetic acid within minutes after starting the incubation. No uptake of free albumin could be demonstrated. The kinetics of albumin uptake and release of trichloroacetic acid-soluble radioactivity from the cells suggest that, initially, liposomes are internalized predominantly by endocytosis, while during prolonged incubation fusion of the liposomal membrane with the plasma membrane gradually contributes more substantially to the overall uptake process. The significance of these findings is emphasized with special reference to the use of liposomes as intravenous carriers of enzymes or drugs.  相似文献   

6.
We studied the effect of fetal calf serum and serum protein fractions on the interaction of phospholipid vesicles consisting of phosphatidylcholine, cholesterol and dicetylphosphate (molar ratio 7 : 2 : 1), with rat liver parenchymal cells in a primary monolayer culture. During incubation of such vesicles with fetal calf serum part of the labeled phosphatidylcholine is transferred to a lipoprotein particle similar to the one we identified previously as a derivative of high density lipoprotein (Scherphof, G., Roerdink, F.H., Waite, M. and Parks, J. (1978) Biochim. Biophys. Acta 542, 296–307). When the particle thus formed is incubated with the cells a transfer of the phospholipid label to the cells is observed. When vesicles are incubated with the cells in presence of serum such lipoprotein-mediated lipid transfer may conceivably contribute to the total lipid uptake observed. However, we found that the presence of fetal calf serum in the culture medium greatly diminished rather than increased the total transfer of liposomal lipid to the cells. Also bovine serum albumin and bovine β-globulins reduced this transfer, although to a lesser extent than whole serum. α-Globulins, on the other hand, were as effective as complete serum in reducing the uptake of liposomal phospholipid. A γ-globulin fraction failed to exhibit any effect on the uptake of [14C]phosphatidylcholine by the cells.All protein fractions which were able to inhibit cellular uptake of liposomal phospholipid were shown to bind to the phospholipid vesicles. Furthermore, lipid vesicles preincubated with fetal calf serum and then separated from it showed reduced transfer of labeled phosphatidylcholine to parenchymal cells.These observations were taken to suggest that the diminished uptake of liposomal lipid may be caused by a modification of the liposomal surface membrane as a result of the binding of certain serum proteins. On the other  相似文献   

7.
We studied the effect of fetal calf serum and serum proteins fractions on the interaction of phospholipid vesicles consisting of phosphatidylcholine, cholesterol and dicetylphosphate (molar ratio 7 : 2 : 1), with rat liver parenchymal cells in a primary monolayer culture. During incubation of such vesicles with fetal calf serum part of the labeled phosphatidylcholine is transferred to a lipoprotein particle similar to the one we identified previously as a derivative of high density lipoprotein (Scherphof, G., Roerdink, F.H., Waite, M. and Parks, J. (1978) Biochim. Biophys. Acta 542, 296--307). When the particle thus formed is incubated with the cells a transfer of the phospholipid label to the cells is observed. When vesicles are incubated with the cells in presence of serum such lipoprotein-mediated lipid transfer may conceivably contribute to the total lipid uptake observed. However, we found that the presence of fetal calf serum in the culture medium greatly diminished rather than increased the total transfer of liposomal lipid to the cells. Also bovine serum albumin and bovine beta-globulins reduced this transfer, although to a lesser extent than whole serum. alpha-Globulins, on the other hand, were as effective as complete serum in reducing the uptake of liposomal phospholipid. A gamma-globulin fraction failed to exhibit any effect on the uptake of [14C]phosphatidylcholine by the cells. All protein fractions which were able to inhibit cellular uptake of liposomal phospholipid were shown to bind to the phospholipid vesicles. Furthermore, lipid vesicles reincubated with fetal calf serum and then separated from it showed reduced transfer of labeled phosphatidylcholine ot parenchymal cells. These observation were taken to suggest that the diminished uptake of liposomal lipid may be caused by a modification of tm proteins. On the other hand, we cannot rule out that plasma membrane modifications are involved in the mechanism of inhibition as well.  相似文献   

8.
Uptake and processing of liposomal phospholipids by Kupffer cells in vitro   总被引:5,自引:0,他引:5  
We investigated the intracellular metabolic fate of [Me-14C]choline-labeled phosphatidylcholines and sphingomyelin taken up by rat Kupffer cells in maintenance culture during interaction with large unilamellar liposomes composed of cholesterol, labeled choline-phospholipid and phosphatidylserine (molar ration 5:4:1). With both labeled compounds only small proportions of water-soluble radioactivity were found to accumulate in the cells and in the culture medium, suggesting limited phospholipid degradation. However, after a lag period of 30 min progressively increasing proportions of cell-associated liposomal phospholipid were found to be converted to cellular phospholipid, nearly all of which was phosphatidylcholine. This conversion as well as the limited release of water-soluble label from the cells was inhibited by the lysosomotropic agents ammonium chloride and chloroquine. With [Me-14C]choline-labeled lysophosphatidylcholine, label was found to become cell-associated far in excess of an encapsulated liposomal label, [3H]inulin. Without a lag period virtually all of this was rapidly converted to phosphatidylcholine, a process which was not inhibited by the lysosomotropic agents. It is concluded that Kupffer cells, after endocytosis of liposomes, degrade the liposomal phospholipids effectively but reutilize the choline moiety for de novo synthesis of cellular phosphatidylcholine.  相似文献   

9.
We studied the interaction of large unilamellar liposomes carrying different surface charges with rat Kupffer cells in maintenance culture. In addition to 14C-labeled phosphatidylcholine, all liposome preparations contained either 3H-labeled inulin or 125I-labeled bovine serum albumin as a non-degradable or a degradable aqueous space marker, respectively. With vesicles carrying no net charge, intracellular processing of internalized liposomes caused nearly complete release of protein label into the medium in acid-soluble form, while phospholipid label was predominantly retained by the cells, only about one third being released. The presence of the lysosomotropic agent, ammonia, inhibited the release of both labels from the cells. At 4 degrees C, the association and degradation of the vesicles were strongly reduced. These results are very similar to what we reported on negatively charged liposomes (Dijkstra, J., Van Galen, W.J.M., Hulstaert, C.E., Kalicharan, D., Roerdink, F.H. and Scherphof, G.L. (1984) Exp. Cell Res. 150, 161-176). The interaction of both types of vesicles apparently proceeds by adsorption to the cell surface followed by virtually complete internalization by endocytosis. Similar experiments with positively charged vesicles indicated that only about half of the liposomes were taken up by the endocytic route, the other half remaining adsorbed to the cell-surface. Attachment of all types of liposomes to the cells was strongly dependent on the presence of divalent cations; Ca2+ appeared to be required for optimal binding. Neutral liposomes only slightly competed with the uptake of negatively charged vesicles, both at 4 degrees and 37 degrees C, whereas negatively charged small unilamellar vesicles and negatively charged latex beads were found to compete very effectively with the large negatively charged liposomes. Neutral vesicles competed effectively for uptake with positively charged ones. These results suggest that neutral and positively charged liposomes are largely bound by the same cell-surface binding sites, while negatively charged vesicles attach mainly to other binding sites.  相似文献   

10.
Liposomes survive exposure to biological fluids poorly, extruding trapped enzymes, drugs, or solutes upon interaction with serum or plasma constituents. We have quantified the disruptive effects of human serum on liposomes and have studied whether various modifications in their phospholipid composition might produce liposomes with an increased carrier potential for application in vivo. Multilamellar liposomes (phosphatidycholine 70:dicetyl phosphate 20:cholesterol 10) were prepared with 3H-labeled phosphatidylcholine as the lipid phase marker and [14C]inulin and horseradish peroxidase as aqueous phase markers. Gel exclusion chromatography showed that 32 +/- 3% of [14C]inulin and 27 +/- 7% of horseradish peroxidase were lost after 1 h incubation with 10% (v/v) human serum. Loss of aqueous solutes was reduced to 20 +/- 5%/h and 17 +/- 2%/h, respectively, after treatment with decomplemented serum (56 degrees C, 30 min). Loss induced by serum was concentration and time dependent: to 57 +/- 2% at 1 h and 67 +/- 14% at 24 h, with 50% serum; plasma was slightly less perturbing whereas human serum albumin was not at all disruptive. By incorporating sphingomyelin (35 mol%) into multilamellar liposomes, the leakage of [14c]-inulin in the presence of 10% serum was reduced to 12 +/- 4%/h; increasing the molar percentage of cholesterol to 35% also stabilized the lipid bilayers, reducing leakage to 20 +/- 7%/h. Both small and large unilamellar vesicles could not be stablilized against serum-mediated leakage by the incorporation of sphingomyelin. The data suggest that cholesterol and sphingomyelin enhance liposomal integrity in the presence of serum or plasma and promise to yield enhanced survival of drug-laden lipid vesicles in biological fluids in vivo.  相似文献   

11.
Interaction of liposomes with human leukocytes in whole blood   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
The uptake of multilamellar liposomes into human leukocytes in whole blood in vitro was evaluated on the basis of the cellular association of liposomal markers (3H-labelled cholesterol, lipid phase; [14C]inulin, aqueous phase). The entry of liposomes into human blood leukocytes was linear for 60 min and was mediated by a saturable mechanism displaying affinity constants of 0.28 +/- 0.17 and 0.16 +/- 0.05 mM liposomal lipid (means +/- S.E.) for liposomal lipid and aqueous phase markers, respectively. Amicon filtration analysis of incubation mixtures containing blood and liposomes (phosphatidylcholine:dicetyl phosphate:cholesterol, 70:20:10) showed that 34% of [14C]inulin was lost (neither liposome-associated nor cell-associated) after 60 min. By preincorporating sphingomyelin (35 mol%) into multilamellar liposomes, the leakage of the model aqueous phase marker inulin was reduced to 8% after 60 min, thus enhancing the drug carrier potential of liposomes in blood. As a consequence of their interaction with liposomes, the polymorphonuclear leukocytes in whole blood decreased in apparent buoyant density, while maintaining their viability. These results indicate that blood leukocytes in their natural milieu of whole blood are capable of interacting with, and taking up multilamellar liposomes.  相似文献   

12.
Small unilamellar vesicles consisting of sphingomyelin, cholesterol and phosphatidylserine in a molar ratio of 4:5:1 containing [3H]inulin as a marker of the aqueous space or [Me-14C]choline-labeled sphingomyelin as a marker of the lipid phase were injected intravenously into rats. After separation of the non-parenchymal cells into a Kupffer cell fraction and an endothelial cell fraction by elutriation centrifugation analysis of the radioactivity contents demonstrated that Kupffer cells were actively involved in the uptake of the vesicles whereas endothelial cells did not contribute at all. Uptake by total parenchymal cells was also substantial but, on a per cell base, significantly lower than that by the Kupffer cells. By comparising the fate of the [3H]inulin label and the [14C]sphingomyelin label it was concluded that release of liposomal lipid degradation products especially occurred from Kupffer cells rather than from parenchymal cells. In both cell types, however, substantial proportions of the 14C-label accumulated in the phosphatidylcholine fraction, indicating intracellular degradation of sphingomyelin and subsequent phosphatidylcholine synthesis. Treatment of the animals with the lysosomotropic agent chloroquine prior to liposome injection effectively blocked the conversion of the choline-labeled sphingomyelin into phosphatidylcholine in both cell types. This observation indicates that uptake of the vesicles occurred by way of an endocytic mechanism.  相似文献   

13.
Liposomes survive exposure to biological fluids poorly, extruding trapped enzymes, drugs, or solutes upon interaction with serum or plasma constituents. We have quantified the disruptive effects of human serum on liposomes and have studied whether various modifications in their phospholipid composition might produce liposomes with an increased carrier potential for applications in vivo. Multilamellar liposomes (phosphatidylcholine 70:dicetyl phosphate 20: cholesterol 10) were prepared with 3H-labeled phosphatidylcholine as the lipid phase marker and [14C]inulin and horseradish peroxidase as aqueous phase markers. Gel exclusion chromatography showed that 32 ± 3% of [14C]inulin and 27 ± 7% of horseradish peroxidase were lost after 1 h incubation with 10% (v/v) human serum. Loss of aqueous solutes was reduced to 20 ± 5%/h and 17 ± 2%/h, respectively, after treatment with decomplemented serum (56°C, 30 min). Loss induced by serum was concentration and time dependent: to 57 ± 2% at 1 h and 67 ± 14% at 24 h, with 50% serum; plasma was slightly less perturbing whereas human serum albumin was not at all disruptive. By incorporating sphingomyelin (35 mol%) into multilamellar liposomes, the leakage of [14C]-inulin in the presence of 10% serum was reduced to 12 ± 4%/h; increasing the molar percentage of cholesterol to 35% also stabilized the lipid bilayers, reducing leakage to 20 ± 7%/h. Both small and large unilamellar vesicles could not be stabilized against serum-mediated leakage by the incorporation of sphingomyelin. The data suggest that cholesterol and sphingomyelin enhance liposomal integrity in the presence of serum or plasma and promise to yield enhanced survival of drug-laden lipid vesicles in biological fluids in vivo.  相似文献   

14.
In vivo uptake and processing by liver macrophages (Kupffer cells) of liposomes, covalently coated with rabbit immunoglobulin (Ig liposomes) was studied following intravenous injection in rats. Rabbit Ig liposomes were labeled with trace amounts of cholesteryl[14C]oleate and [3H]cholesteryl hexadecyl ether. 1 h after injection of the liposomes, the non-parenchymal cells were isolated and subjected to centrifugal elutriation with stepwise-increasing flow rates; thus, five sub-fractions of Kupffer cells were obtained ranging in size from 9 to 14 micron in diameter. The cells were assayed for peroxidase activity and protein content. Rabbit Ig liposomes were taken up preferentially by Kupffer cells with diameters larger than 11 micron, which constitute less than 25% of the total Kupffer cell population. The intralysosomal degradation of the ingested liposomes was monitored by measuring the 3H/14C ratio of the cells. Due to the rapid release from the cells of the [14C]oleate formed from the cholesteryl[14C]oleate and the virtually complete retention of the non-metabolizable [3H]cholesteryl hexadecyl ether the 3H/14C ratio of the cells increases with proceeding hydrolysis of the liposomes. Thus, we were able to show that, in vivo, the Kupffer cells of the larger size classes, are not only more active in liposome uptake, but are also substantially more active in liposome degradation than smaller cells. The maintenance of the observed heterogeneity of rat liver Kupffer cells, with respect to liposome uptake under in vitro culture conditions, was examined. Subfractions were maintained in monolayer culture for 2 days and incubated with rabbit Ig liposomes. Binding and uptake of liposomes by the cells was monitored by measuring cell-associated radioactivity at 4 degrees C and 37 degrees C, respectively. In contrast to our in vivo results, we observed maximal in vitro liposome binding and uptake in those subfractions containing small cells (10-11 micron diameter), while the fractions containing cells larger than 12 micron, which were more active in vivo, were substantially less active than the smaller cells. The maximum we observed was even more pronounced when the liposome concentration was increased. We conclude that liver macrophage subfractions that barely participate in liposome uptake from the bloodstream in vivo, possess the potential to develop the capacity in vitro to phagocytose rabbit Ig-coated liposomes to extents equal to or even higher than the cells belonging to those subfractions containing the phagocytically most active cells under in vivo conditions.  相似文献   

15.
125I-labeled albumin or poly(vinyl pyrrolidone) encapsulated in intermediate size multilamellar or unilamellar liposomes with 30–40% of cholesterol were injected intravenously into rats. In other experiments liposomes containing phosphatidyl[Me-14C]choline were injected. 1 h after injection parenchymal or non-parenchymal cells were isolated. Non-parenchymal cells were separated by elutriation centrifugation into a Kupffer cell fraction and an endothelial cell fraction. From the measurements of radioactivities in the various cell fractions it was concluded that the liposomes are almost exclusively taken up by the Kupffer cells. Endothelial cells did not contribute at all and hepatocytes only to a very low extent to total hepatic uptake of the 125I-labels. Of the 14C-label, which orginates from the phosphatidylcholine moiety of the liposomes, much larger proportions were recovered in the hepatocytes. A time-dependence study suggested that besides the involvement of phosphatidylcholine exchange between liposomes and high density lipoprotein, a process of intercellular transfer of lipid label from Kupffer cells to the hepatocytes may be involved in this phenomenon. Lanthanum or gadolinium salts, which effectively block Kupffer cell activity, failed to accomplish an increase in the fraction of liposomal material recovered in the parenchymal cells. This is compatible with the notion that liposomes of the type used in these experiments have no, or at most very limited, access to the liver parenchyma following their intravenous administration to rats.  相似文献   

16.
The interaction of liposomes with macrophage cells was monitored by a new fluorescence method (Hong, K., Straubinger, R.M. and Papahadjopoulos, D., J. Cell Biol. 103 (1986) 56a) that allows for the simultaneous monitoring of binding, endocytosis, acidification and leakage. Profound differences in uptake, cell surface-induced leakage and leakage subsequent to endocytosis were measured in liposomes of varying composition. Pyranine (1-hydroxypyrene-3,6,8-trisulfonic acid, HPTS), a highly fluorescent, water-soluble, pH sensitive dye, was encapsulated at high concentration into the lumen of large unilamellar vesicles. HPTS exhibits two major fluorescence excitation maxima (403 and 450 nm) which have a complementary pH dependence in the range 5-9: the peak at 403 nm is maximal at low pH values while the peak at 450 nm is maximal at high pH values. The intra- and extracellular distribution of liposomes and their approximate pH was observed by fluorescence microscopy using appropriate excitation and barrier filters. The uptake of liposomal contents by cells and their subsequent exposure to acidified endosomes or secondary lysosomes was monitored by spectrofluorometry via alterations in the fluorescence excitation maxima. The concentration of dye associated with cells was determined by measuring fluorescence at a pH independent point (413 nm). The average pH of cell-associated dye was determined by normalizing peak fluorescence intensities (403 nm and 450 nm) to fluorescence at 413 nm and comparing these ratios to a standard curve. HPTS-containing liposomes bound to and were acidified by a cultured murine macrophage cell line (J774) with a t1/2 of 15-20 min. The acidification of liposomes exhibited biphasic kinetics and 50-80% of the liposomes reached an average pH lower than 6 within 2 h. A liposomal lipid marker exhibited a rate of uptake similar to HPTS, however the lipid component selectively accumulated in the cell; after an initial rapid release of liposome contents, 2.5-fold more lipid marker than liposomal contents remained associated with the cells after 5 h. Coating haptenated liposomes with antibody protected liposomes from the initial release. The leakage of liposomal contents was monitored by co-encapsulating HPTS and p-xylene-bis-pyridinium bromide, a fluorescence quencher, into liposomes. The time course of dilution of liposome contents, detected as an increase in HPTS fluorescence, was coincident with the acidification of HPTS. The rate and extent of uptake of neutral and negatively charged liposomes was similar; however, liposomes opsonized with antibody were incorporated at a higher rate (2.9-fold) and to a greater extent (3.4-fold).(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)  相似文献   

17.
The influence of bile salts on the binding and uptake of Salmonella abortus equi lipopolysaccharide by cultured Kupffer cells was studied. In control preparations, the percentage of cell-associated lipopolysaccharide increased with time and reached a plateau after about 2 h incubation at 37 degrees C. About 1.2 micrograms lipopolysaccharide was associated with 10(6) Kupffer cells at this time interval. In the presence of 0.3, 0.6 and 1 mumol bile salts/ml the cell-associated lipopolysaccharide was respectively, about 5%, 13% and 29% lower than in control cultures. In the presence of 1 mumol bile salts/ml, the association of lipopolysaccharide to cells at 0 degrees C was about 25% lower than in controls. Preincubation of Kupffer cells with 1 mumol bile salts/ml, with or without lipopolysaccharide, did not affect cell-associated lipopolysaccharide after removal of the bile salts. The rate of secretion of radioactivity by Kupffer cells was not influenced by the presence of bile salts during the uptake or the secretion periods. Bile acids proved to inactivate lipopolysaccharide. From these observations it was concluded that low concentrations of bile salts influence the binding and uptake of lipopolysaccharide by Kupffer cells. It was, therefore, considered likely that, in patients with obstructive jaundice, the high serum bile acid level accounts for spill-over of portal lipopolysaccharide into the systemic blood.  相似文献   

18.
Using liposomes differing in size and lipid composition, we have studied the uptake characteristics of the liver parenchymal and Kupffer cells. Desferal labeled with iron-59 was chosen as a radiomarker for the liposomal content, because Desferal in its free form does not cross cellular membranes. At various time intervals after an intravenous injection of liposomes into mice, the liver was perfused with collagenase, and the cells were separated in a Percoll gradient. It was found that large multilamellar liposomes (diameter of about 0.5 μm) were mainly taken up by the Kupffer cells. For these large liposomes, the rate of uptake by Kupffer cells was rapid, with maximum uptake at around 2 hours after liposome injection. Unexpectedly, small unilamellar liposomes (diameter of about 0.08 μm) were less effectively taken up by Kupffer cells, and the rate of uptake was slow, with a maximum uptake at about 10 hours after liposome injection. In contrast, parenchymal cells were more effective in taking up small liposomes and the uptake of large liposomes was negligible. In addition, liposomes made with a galactolipid as part of the lipid constituents appeared to have higher affinity to parenchymal cells than liposomes made without the galactolipid. These findings should be of importance in designing suitable liposomes for drug targeting.  相似文献   

19.
Small unilamellar liposomes with an average external diameter of approximately 550 A were prepared by high pressure extrusion in a French press. Liposomes, composed of phosphatidylcholine, phosphatidylserine, and cholesterol at a molar ratio of 7:1:2, were incubated with suspensions of bovine adrenal chromaffin cells. The cell-liposome interactions were characterized using fluorescence and radiotracer techniques. Transfer of the liposomal contents into the cytoplasm was visualized by fluorescence microscopy, using fluorescence-labeled macromolecules, and further documented by flow cytometry with liposome-entrapped 5,6-carboxy-fluorescein. The dose dependence, time course, and temperature dependence of the cell-liposome association, as determined by radioactive labeling both the liposomal membranes and their contents, indicate saturable interaction of the cells with intact liposomes (KappM approximately 5 X 10(-7) M lipid/10(6) cells at 37 degrees C). Using nonexchangeable fluorescent phospholipid analogs, the cell-liposome interactions were characterized by fluorescence resonance energy transfer and by fluorescence recovery after photobleaching. From these latter experiments we conclude that after 1-h incubation of 10(6) cells with 1 microM lipid at 37 degrees C, 30% of the cell-associated liposomes will have fused with the plasma membranes, resulting in the delivery of the contents of approximately 1.25 X 10(5) liposomes into each cell. Thus, liposomal delivery is an effective means to gain access to the cytoplasm and can be exploited to modulate physiological responses from within intact chromaffin cells.  相似文献   

20.
Adsorption of serum proteins to the liposomal surface plays a critical role in liposome clearance from the blood. The aim of this study was to investigate the role of liposome-adsorbed serum proteins in the interaction of liposomes with hepatocytes. We analyzed the serum proteins adsorbing to the surface of differently composed small unilamellar liposomes during incubation with human or rat serum, and found that one protein, with a molecular weight of around 55 kDa, adsorbed in a large amount to negatively charged liposomes containing phosphatidylserine (PS) or phosphatidylglycerol (PG). The binding was dependent on the liposomal charge density. The approximately 55-kDa protein was identified as beta2-glycoprotein I (beta2GPI) by Western blotting. Despite the high affinity of beta2GPI for strongly negatively charged liposomes, in vitro uptake and binding experiments with isolated rat hepatocytes, Kupffer cells or liver endothelial cells, and with HepG2 cells showed no enhancing effect of this protein on the association of negatively charged liposomes with any of these cells. On the contrary, an inhibitory effect was observed. We conclude that despite abundant adsorption to negatively charged liposomes, beta2GP1 inhibits, rather than enhances, liposome uptake by liver cells.  相似文献   

设为首页 | 免责声明 | 关于勤云 | 加入收藏

Copyright©北京勤云科技发展有限公司  京ICP备09084417号