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1.
We studied the kinetics of hepatic uptake of liposomes during serum-free recirculating perfusion of rat livers. Liposomes consisted of phosphatidylcholine, cholesterol and phosphatidylserine in a 6:4:0 or a 3:4:3 molar ratio and were radiolabelled with [3H]cholesteryl oleyl ether. The negatively charged liposomes were taken up to a 10-fold higher extent than the neutral ones. Hepatic uptake of fluorescently labelled liposomes was examined by fluorescence microscopy. The neutral liposomes displayed a typical Kupffer cell distribution pattern, in addition to weak diffuse staining of the parenchyma, while the negatively charged liposomes showed a characteristic sinusoidal lining pattern, consistent with an endothelial localization. In addition, scattered Kupffer cell staining was distinguished as well as diffuse parenchymal fluorescence. The mainly endothelial localisation of the negatively charged liposomes was confirmed by determining radioactivity in endothelial and Kupffer cells isolated following a 1-h perfusion. Perfusion in the presence of polyinosinic acid, an inhibitor of scavenger receptor activity, reduced the rate of uptake of the negatively charged liposomes twofold, indicating the involvement of this receptor in the elimination mechanism. These results are compatible with earlier in vitro studies on liposome uptake by isolated endothelial cells and Kupffer cells, which showed that in the absence of serum also endothelial cells in situ are able to take up massive amounts of negatively charged liposomes. The present results emphasize that the high in vitro endothelial cell uptake in the absence of serum from earlier observations was not an artifact induced by the cell isolation procedure.  相似文献   

2.
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   

3.
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 ∼55-kDa protein was identified as β2-glycoprotein I (β2GPI) by Western blotting. Despite the high affinity of β2GPI 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, β2GP1 inhibits, rather than enhances, liposome uptake by liver cells.  相似文献   

4.
The interaction with liver cells of liposomes containing different mol fractions of phosphatidylserine was investigated in vivo and in vitro. Increasing the amount of liposomal phosphatidylserine from 10 to 30 mol% leads to a faster blood disappearance of the liposomes. Within the liver, which is mainly responsible for this elimination, these liposomes are only taken up by the hepatocytes and Kupffer cells. By contrast, sinusoidal endothelial cells, in vitro, do bind and internalize liposomes containing >/=30% phosphatidylserine at least as actively as Kupffer cells. The uptake by endothelial and Kupffer cells is inhibited by poly(inosinic acid) and other anionic macromolecules, suggesting the involvement of scavenger receptors. The lack of liposome uptake by endothelial cells under in vivo conditions can be attributed to plasma effects since addition of various sera caused severe reduction of in vitro uptake of liposomes. In vivo the phosphatidylserine head groups may be masked by plasma proteins adsorbed to the liposomal surface, thus preventing recognition by receptors, which are intrinsically able to recognize phosphatidylserine.  相似文献   

5.
The blood clearance and tissue distribution of liposomes have been studied in mice subjected to reticuloendothelial blockade with dextran sulphate or carbon. The liposomes have been labelled in the lipid membranes with [3H]-cholesterol, [14C]phosphatidylcholine and/or 99mTc and the content with [14C]inulin. Reticuloendothelial blockade has been shown to slow the rate of clearance of neutral, positively and negatively charged liposomes and of both small unilamellar vesicles and large multilamellar vesicles. In normal animals, the liver uptake accounted for only 20-55% of the total injected radioactivity, the amount varying with the charge and size of the liposomes. Following blockade, the liver uptake of charged and neutral multilamellar liposomes was depressed. This was also true for negatively charged small unilamellar vesicles. The degree of depression of hepatic uptake was between 25-50%, which contrasts with the 80-90% reduction in uptake of a wholly phagocytosed particle (sheep red cells). This difference suggests that mechanisms other than Kupffer cell phagocytosis are also responsible for the normal uptake of liposomes into the liver. In the case of neutral and positively charged small unilamellar vesicles, delayed clearance due to blockade was not associated with 'depressed' hepatic uptake. The site of action of blockading agents for these preparations is not clear. With all preparations of liposomes, blockade produced a slight and variable increase in uptake in the lung and spleen. The alteration of distribution of liposomes by reticuloendothelial blockade is therefore not great and the value of the technique in modifying the tissue distribution of substances within liposomes may be limited.  相似文献   

6.
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   

7.
Isolation and separation of rat liver cells into endothelial, Kupffer, and parenchymal cell fractions were performed at different times after injection of human 125I-acetyl low density lipoproteins (LDL). In order to minimize degradation and redistribution of the injected lipoprotein during cell isolation, a low temperature (8 degrees C) procedure was applied. Ten min after injection, isolated endothelial cells contained 5 times more acetyl-LDL apoprotein per mg of cell protein than the Kupffer cells and 31 times more than the hepatocytes. A similar relative importance of the different cell types in the uptake of acetyl-LDL was observed 30 min after injection. For studies on the in vitro interaction of endothelial and Kupffer cells with acetyl-LDL, the cells were isolated with a collagenase perfusion at 37 degrees C. Pure endothelial (greater than 95%) and purified Kupffer cells (greater than 70%) were obtained by a two-step elutriation method. It is demonstrated that the rat liver endothelial cell possesses a high affinity receptor specific for the acetyl-LDL because a 35-fold excess of unlabeled acetyl-LDL inhibits association of the labeled compound for 70%, whereas unlabeled native human LDL is ineffective. Binding to the acetyl-LDL receptor is coupled to rapid uptake and degradation of the apolipoprotein. Addition of the lysosomotropic agents chloroquine (50 microM) or NH4Cl (10 mM) resulted in more than 90% inhibition of the high affinity degradation, indicating that this occurs in the lysosomes. With the purified Kupffer cell fraction, the cell association and degradation of acetyl-LDL was at least 4 times less per mg of cell protein than with the pure endothelial cells. Although cells isolated with the cold pronase technique are also still able to bind and degrade acetyl-LDL, it appeared that 40-60% of the receptors are destroyed or inactivated during the isolation procedure. It is concluded that the rat liver endothelial cell is the main cell type responsible for acetyl-LDL uptake.  相似文献   

8.
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   

9.
We evaluated the role of apolipoprotein E (apoE) in the clearance of neutral and negatively charged liposomes by hepatocytes in apoE-deficient mice. Negatively charged liposomes were cleared at identical rates in apoE-deficient and wild-type mice; neutral liposomes were cleared at a 3.6-fold slower rate in apoE-deficient mice. ApoE deficiency did not affect hepatic uptake of negatively charged liposomes but lowered that of neutral liposomes >5-fold. Hepatocyte uptake of neutral liposomes was reduced >20-fold in apoE-deficient mice; that of negatively charged liposomes remained unchanged. We conclude that uptake of neutral liposomes by hepatocytes is nearly exclusively apoE-mediated.  相似文献   

10.
Formaldehyde treated albumin (F-HSA) was found to consist of a monomeric and a polymeric fraction. Both fractions were primarily endocytosed by rat liver sinusoidal cells. However, immunohistochemical staining of endocytosed material showed that the relative contribution of the endothelial and Kupffer cells in uptake of the monomer and the polymer differed significantly, with the monomer mainly having an endothelial cell- and the polymer predominantly having a Kupffer cell pattern of distribution. To directly confirm these heterogeneous patterns, we injected in vivo the 125I-labeled F-HSA fractions and isolated the endothelial and Kupffer cells by centrifugal elutriation. 73.7% of the monomeric F-HSA was found in endothelial cells and only 14.9% was found in Kupffer cells. In contrast, the polymeric F-HSA (1500 kD) was mainly endocytosed by Kupffer cells (71%), whereas the endothelial cells contributed only for 24% in hepatic uptake. In vivo studies and isolated perfused rat liver experiments showed that endocytosis of both monomer and polymer was inhibited by co-administration of polyinosinic acid, a well known inhibitor for scavenger receptors, indicating that these receptors on endothelial and Kupffer cells are mainly involved in this uptake process.  相似文献   

11.
The use of asialo GM1-containing small unilamellar liposome preparations in vivo caused a 2.8-fold increase in the uptake by the liver as compared with the control (neutral) preparations (without asialo GM1). The uptake of negatively charged dicetylphosphate and dipalmitoyl phosphatidic acid-containing small unilamellar liposomes was found to be 1.6-and 1.8-fold respectively higher than that of the neutral preparations. In studies with isolated liver cell types, inhibition of the galactosylated liposome uptake by asialofetuin indicated a possible involvement of hepatic galactose receptors in the recognition of asialo GM1 liposomes by the hepatic parenchymal cells, which in turn were found to be mainly responsible for the enhanced incorporation of these liposomes in the liver. Sub-cellular distribution studies with isolated liver cell types indicated lysosomal localization of the liposomes both in parenchymal and nonparenchymal cells, and it has been proposed that the asialo GM1 liposomes are cointernalized with asialofetuin through a common lysosomal route of ligand internalization.  相似文献   

12.
Beta-glucuronidase and N-AS-D-chloroacetate esterase cytochemistry have been applied to rat liver sinusoidal endothelial cells and Kupffer cells. Both staining procedures allowed a clear-cut differentiation of either cell type. Kupffer cells which had been stained with beta-glucuronidase showed a positive reaction, whereas sinusoidal endothelial cells were completely negative. If the chloroacetate reaction was used, the former stained diffusely while the latter showed a characteristic granular staining pattern. Identity and purity of sinusoidal endothelial cells and Kupffer cells was validated by transmission and scanning electron microscopy as well as by the pattern of released eicosanoids which is characteristic for either cell type. These two staining techniques are a valuable addition to the peroxidase reaction commonly applied for differentiation.  相似文献   

13.
Human low density lipoprotein was oxidized (Ox-LDL) by exposure to 5 microM Cu2+ and its fate in vivo was compared to acetylated low density lipoprotein (Ac-LDL). Ox-LDL, when injected into rats, is rapidly removed from the blood circulation by the liver, similarly as Ac-LDL. A separation of rat liver cells into parenchymal, endothelial, and Kupffer cells at 10 min after injection of Ox-LDL or Ac-LDL indicated that the Kupffer cell uptake of Ox-LDL is 6.8-fold higher than for Ac-LDL, leading to Kupffer cells as the main liver site for Ox-LDL uptake. In vitro studies with isolated liver cells indicated that saturable high affinity sites for Ox-LDL were present on both endothelial and Kupffer cells, whereby the capacity of Kupffer cells to degrade Ox-LDL is 6-fold higher than for endothelial cells. Competition studies showed that unlabeled Ox-LDL competed as efficiently (90%) as unlabeled Ac-LDL with the cell association and degradation of 125I-labeled Ac-LDL by endothelial and Kupffer cells. However, unlabeled Ac-LDL competed only partially (20-30%) with the cell association and degradation of 125I-labeled Ox-LDL by Kupffer cells, while unlabeled Ox-LDL or polyinosinic acid competed for 70-80%. It is concluded that the liver contains, in addition to the scavenger (Ac-LDL) receptor which interacts efficiently with both Ac-LDL and Ox-LDL and which is concentrated on endothelial cells, an additional specific Ox-LDL receptor which is highly concentrated on Kupffer cells. In vivo the specific Ox-LDL recognition site on Kupffer cells will form the major protection system against the occurrence of the atherogenic Ox-LDL particles in the blood.  相似文献   

14.
In order to obtain more information on membrane phenomena occurring at the cell surface of rabbit thymocytes we have performed experiments aimed at altering the lipid composition of the plasma membrane. Thymocytes were incubated at 37°C with phospholipid vesicles of different compositions. Vesicle-cell interaction was followed by measuring the degree of fluorescence polarization and the uptake of vesicle-entrapped carboxyfluorescein. Neutral and negatively charged liposomes prepared from egg phosphatidylcholine are currently used in investigations of vesicle-cell interaction. In this report we show that these liposomes do not interact with rabbit thymocytes as is evident from unaltered lipid fluidity measured in whole cells and in isolated plasma membranes. This was confirmed by experiments with vesicle-entrapped carboxyfluorescein showing hardly any uptake of the fluorophor from neutral and negatively charged egg phosphatidylcholine liposomes. Using both techniques substantial interaction was found with positively charged egg phosphatidylcholine liposomes and with liposomes prepared from soybean lecithin which is composed of a variety of phospholipids. The results of these experiments were supported by lipid analysis of cells treated with soybean lecithin liposomes. Increase in phosphatidylcholine contents of mixed phospholipid vesicles was further shown to result in decreased vesicle-cell interaction. From measurements of the quantity of carboxyfluorescein inside cells and the total amount of cell-associated carboxyfluorescein it is concluded that adsorption plays a prominent role in interaction between liposomes and rabbit lymphocytes. The grade of maturation of lymphocytes was also found to affect vesicle-cell interaction. The more mature thymocytes took up more vesicle-entrapped carboxyfluorescein from soybean liposomes than immature thymocytes. Mesenteric lymph node cells exhibited a still stronger interaction. The role of vesicle and cell surface charge and membrane fluidity of both vesicles and cells in interaction between liposomes and rabbit thymocytes is discussed.  相似文献   

15.
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   

16.
BACKGROUND: The triggering of cellular responses during endotoxic shock is initiated for the binding of endotoxin (lipopolysaccharide; LPS) to the cell surface. Kupffer and endothelial liver cells, involved in the removal of endotoxin from blood circulation, show in vitro a rapid response to LPS in the absence of serum. METHODS: A double-labeling fluorescent assay was designed to evaluate the binding properties of Escherichia coli O111:B4 LPS to individual endothelial and Kupffer cells in suspension, where both populations occurred in the same relative proportion as in liver. After immunolabeling of the Kupffer cell population with the monoclonal antibody ED1 conjugated to R. phycoerythrin, the binding characteristics of LPS labeled with fluorescein to both endothelial and Kupffer cells were simultaneously studied by flow cytometry in serum-free conditions. RESULTS: Specific and saturable binding of endotoxin was observed with both populations, showing properties of a receptor-mediated process. The Kupffer cell population showed a faster capacity and a higher affinity for LPS binding. The Hill coefficients indicated positive cooperativity in the LPS interaction with both populations. CONCLUSIONS: Specific endotoxin binding to liver sinusoidal cells occurs in a serum-independent manner, particularly at high LPS concentrations. Flow cytometry is a fast, precise, and efficient technique to evaluate the simultaneous interaction of a ligand with two different cell types.  相似文献   

17.
Summary Light and electron microscopic localization of cathepsin D in rat liver was investigated by post-embedding immunoenzyme and protein A-gold techniques. By light microscopy, cytoplasmic granules of parenchymal cells and Kupffer cells were stained for cathepsin D. Weak staining was also noted in sinusoidal endothelial cells. In the parenchymal cells many of positive granules located around bile canaliculi. In the Kupffer cells and the endothelial cells, diffuse staining was noted in the cytoplasm in addition to granular staining. By electron microscopy, gold particles representing the antigenic sites for cathepsin D were seen in typical secondary lysosomes and some multivesicular bodies of the parenchymal cells and Kupffer cells. The lysosomes of the endothelial cells and fat-storing cells were weakly labeled. Quantitative analysis of the labeling density in the lysosomes of these three types of cells demonstrated that the lysosomes of parenchymal cells and Kupffer cells are main containers of cathepsin D in rat liver. The results suggest that cathepsin D functions in the intracellular digestive system of parenchymal cells and Kupffer cells but not so much in that of the endothelial cells.  相似文献   

18.
We investigated the intrahepatic distribution of small unilamellar liposomes injected intravenously into rats at a dose of 0.10 mmol of lipid per kg body weight. Sonicated liposomes consisting of cholesterol/sphingomyelin (1:1), (A); cholesterol/egg phosphatidylcholine (1:1), (B); cholesterol/sphingomyelin/phosphatidylserine (5:4:1), (C) or cholesterol/egg-phosphatidylcholine/phosphatidylserine (5:4:1), (D) were labeled by encapsulation of [3H]inulin. The observed differences in rate of blood elimination and hepatic accumulation (A much less than B approximately equal to C less than D) confirmed earlier observations and reflected the rates of uptake of the four liposome formulations by isolated liver macrophages in monolayer culture. Fractionation of the liver into a parenchymal and a non-parenchymal cell fraction revealed that 80-90% of the slowly clearing type-A liposomes were taken up by the parenchymal cells while of the more rapidly eliminated type-B liposomes even more than 95% was associated with the parenchymal cells. Incorporation of phosphatidylserine into the sphingomyelin-based liposomes caused a significant increase in hepatocyte uptake but a much more substantial increase in non-parenchymal cell uptake, resulting in a major shift of the intrahepatic distribution towards the non-parenchymal cell fraction. For the phosphatidylcholine-based liposomes incorporation of phosphatidylserine did not increase the already high uptake by the parenchymal cells while uptake by the non-parenchymal cells was only moderately elevated; this resulted in only a small shift in distribution towards the non-parenchymal cells. The phosphatidylserine-induced increase in liposome uptake by non-parenchymal liver cells was paralleled by an increase in uptake by the spleen. Fractionation of the non-parenchymal liver cells in a Kupffer cell fraction and an endothelial cell fraction showed that even for the slowly eliminated liposomes of type A endothelial cells do not participate to a measurable extent in the elimination process, thus excluding involvement of fluid-phase pinocytosis in the uptake process.  相似文献   

19.
Endocytosis of [125I]iodixanol was studied in vivo and in vitro in rat liver cells to determine fluid phase endocytic activity in different liver cells (hepatocytes, Kupffer cells and endothelial cells). The Kupffer cells were more active in the uptake of [l25I]iodixanol than parenchymal cells or endothelial cells. Inhibition of endocytic uptake via clathrin-coated pits (by potassium depletion and hypertonic medium) reduced uptake of [125I]iodixanol much more in Kupffer cells and endothelial cells than in hepatocytes. To gain further information about the importance of clathrin-mediated fluid phase endocytosis, the expression of proteins known to be components of the endocytic machinery was investigated. Using sodium dodecyl sulfate polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis (SDS-PAGE) and immunoblotting, endothelial cells and Kupffer cells were found to express approximately fourfold more rab4, rab5 and rab7 than parenchymal cells, while clathrin was expressed at a higher level in endothelial cells than in Kupffer cells and hepatocytes. Using electron microscopy it was shown that liver endothelial cells contained approximately twice as many coated pits per membrane unit than the parenchymal and Kupffer cells, thus confirming the immunoblotting results concerning clathrin expression. Electron microscopy on isolated liver cells following fluid phase uptake of horseradish peroxidase (HRP) showed that HRP-containing organelles had a different morphology in the different cell types: In the liver endothelial cells HRP was in small, tubular endosomes, while in Kupffer cells HRP was mainly found in larger structures, reminiscent of macropinosomes. Parenchymal cells contained HRP in small vacuolar endosomes with a punctuated distribution. In conclusion, we find that the Kupffer cells and the endothelial cells have a higher pinocytic activity than the hepatocytes. The hepatocytes do, however, account for most of the total hepatic uptake. The fluid phase endocytosis in liver endothelial cells depends mainly on clathrin-mediated endocytosis, while the parenchymal cells have additional clathrin-independent mechanisms that may play an important role in the uptake of plasma membrane components. In the Kupffer cells the major uptake of fluid phase markers seems to take place via a macropinocytic mechanism.  相似文献   

20.
Poly(ethylene glycol) (PEG)-stabilized liposomes were recently shown to exhibit differences in cell uptake that were linked to the liposome charge. To determine the differences and similarities between charged and uncharged PEG-decorated liposomes, we directly measured the forces between two supported, neutral bilayers with terminally grafted PEG chains. The measurements were performed with the surface force apparatus. The force profiles were similar to those measured with negatively charged PEG conjugates of 1, 2-distearoyl-sn-glycero-3-phosphatidyl ethanolamine (DSPE), except that they lacked the longer ranged electrostatic repulsion observed with the charged compound. Theories for simple polymers describe the forces between end-grafted polymer chains on neutral bilayers. The force measurements were complemented by surface plasmon resonance studies of protein adsorption onto these layers. The lack of electrostatic forces reduced the adsorption of positively charged proteins and enhanced the adsorption of negatively charged ones. The absence of charge also allowed us to determine how membrane charge and the polymer grafting density independently affect protein adsorption on the coated membranes. Such studies suggest the physical basis of the different interactions of charged and uncharged liposomes with proteins and cells.  相似文献   

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