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1.
125I-labeled and ferritin-labeled low density lipoprotein (LDL) were used as visual probes to study the surface distribution of LDL receptors and to examine the mechanism of the endocytosis of this lipoprotein in cultured human fibrobasts. Light microscopic autoradiograms of whole cells incubated with 125I-LDL at 4 degrees C showed that LDL receptors were widely but unevenly distributed over the cell surface. With the electron microscope, we determined that 60-70% of the ferritin-labeled LDL that bound to cells at 4 degrees C was localized over short coated segments of the plasma membrane that accounted for no more than 2% of the total surface area. To study the internalization process, cells were first allowed to bind ferritin-labeled LDL at 4 degrees C and were then warmed to 37 degrees C. Within 10 min, nearly all the surface-bound LDL-ferritin was incorporated into coated endocytic vesicles that were formed by the invagination and pinching-off of the coated membrane regions that contained the receptor-bound LDL. With increasing time at 37 degrees C, these coated vesicles were observed sequentially to migrate through the cytoplasm (1 min), to lose their cytoplasmic coat (2 min), and to fuse with either primary or secondary lysosomes (6 min). The current data indicate that the coated regions of plasma membrane are specialized structures of rapid turnover that function to carry receptor-bound LDL, and perhaps other receptor-bound molecules, into the cell.  相似文献   

2.
Endocytosis of immunoglobulin G (IgG)-coated colloidal gold particles in cultured mouse peritoneal macrophages was studied by scanning and transmission electron microscopy. At 4 degrees C, the tracers adhered to the plasma membrane and accumulated in coated pits located in the bottom of furrows or deep invaginations on the cell surface. In the presence of an excess of unlabeled mouse IgG, cellular binding of the tracer was reduced by 80 to 90%. After warming to 37 degrees C, surface-bound tracer particles were rapidly ingested and transported to small and large vesicles lacking membrane coat. From here, they were then passed over to multivesicular bodies and lysosomes characterized by their content of myelin-like figures and other inclusions. Double-labeling experiments with IgG-coated colloidal gold particles of two different sizes (20 and 5 nm diameter) indicated that the plasma membrane was depleted of binding sites after uptake of a polyvalent ligand. The restoration of the binding capacity was a slow process requiring ongoing protein synthesis. On the basis of these observations, a model for endocytosis of immune complexes in macrophages is presented. It includes the following four steps: IgG-containing macromolecular aggregates bind to specific receptors in the plasma membrane. These appear to be preclustered in coated pits or able to move laterally within the membrane even at 4 degrees C. The receptor-ligand complexes are internalized and transferred sequentially to larger uncoated vesicles or endosomes, multivesicular bodies, and lysosomes with inclusions of varying appearance. Receptors and ligands are degraded within the lysosomes.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

3.
Summary Immunocytochemistry has been used to study distribution of cell surface transferrin receptors in erythroid, leukemic (K562) cells. The cells were fixed and labelled with monoclonal (OKT-9) anti-transferrin receptor antibodies; the antibody-labelled receptors were then detected by either immunofluoresceinor immunoferritin-antimouse-antibody conjugates. Typically, the immunoferritin labels were distributed diffusely at the non-coated regions of the cell surface as well as concentrated in the clathrincoated pits. To examine further this pattern of distribution, cells were labelled at 0° C and then warmed to 37° C for zero to 30 min prior to fixation. The majority of the immunoferritin labels were initially dispersed in small groups at the non-coated regions of the cell surface (mean = 6 immunoferritin labels/cluster), but larger groups were common subsequent to incubation at 37° C (mean = 13 immunoferritin labels/cluster). However, the size of immunoferritin labels in the coated pits was unchanged (mean = 12 immunoferritin labels/pit). Immunoferritin labels were typical in coated and uncoated vesicles l min after warming to 37° C, but common in endosomes, multivesicular bodies and lysosomes by 30 min. It appears that single cell-surface receptors form large aggregates prior to their concentration in coated pits. Coated vesicles, uncoated vesicles, and endosomal vacuoles may together form the non-lysosomal compartment where the internalized receptors might be dissociated from the ligands (antibodies).  相似文献   

4.
Coated pits trap cell surface receptors and mediate their internalization. Once internalized, many receptors recycle back to the cell surface. When recycled receptors are inserted into the plasma membrane, they move until they are again trapped in coated pits. The mechanisms for moving receptors from their insertion sites to coated pits are unknown. Unaided diffusion as the transport mechanism is consistent with the observed kinetics of receptor recycling. Another candidate for the transport mechanism is convection. For receptors that recycle to random positions on the cell surface, or to restricted regions about coated pits, we assess the importance of convective flow in the transport of receptors to coated pits. First we consider local flows set up by the formation of coated pits and their transformation into coated vesicles. As coated pits form and round into coated vesicles, surrounding membrane is drawn inward, creating flows directed toward the coated pit centers. We show that unless the lifetime of a coated pit is very short, 10 s or less, such local flows have a negligible effect on the time it takes receptors to reach coated pits. We also show that they are unlikely to be the mechanism that keeps receptors that have reached coated pits trapped within coated pits until they are internalized. Finally we calculate the mean time tau for a diffusing receptor to reach a coated pit in the presence of membrane flow that is constant in magnitude and direction, as may occur on moving cells. We show that for typical membrane flow velocities, tau can be reduced significantly from its value in the absence of flow. For example, a velocity v = 2.8 micron/min cuts the mean transport time in half.  相似文献   

5.
The morphological aspects of the binding and internalization of low density lipoproteins (LDL) and acetylated low density lipoproteins (AcLDL) by cultured human monocyte-derived macrophages were investigated. For this purpose, LDL and AcLDL were conjugated to 20 nm colloidal gold particles. After incubation of the cells with the conjugated lipoproteins at 4 degrees C some LDL- or AcLDL-gold complexes were found to be attached to the cell surface, but without characteristic localization. However, after incubation of the cells at 8 degrees C with either LDL-gold or AcLDL-gold, lipoprotein-gold complexes were present in clusters on the plasma membrane, often in coated pits. Cells incubated at 37 degrees C for various time periods showed internalization of both LDL- and AcLDL-gold complexes via small coated and non-coated vesicles and processing of the complexes in smooth-walled endosomes. When the cells were pulse-chased with LDL- or AcLDL-gold for 30 min at 37 degrees C, the gold conjugates occurred in dense bodies, probably lysosomes. The results suggest that although native and modified LDL are reported to be metabolized differently by macrophages, the morphological aspects of the endocytosis of LDL and AcLDL by cultured human monocyte-derived macrophages are similar.  相似文献   

6.
Recent experiments suggest that low density lipoprotein (LDL) receptors on human fibroblasts are not inserted into the plasma membrane uniformly, as earlier experiments indicated, but are inserted into specialized regions, called plaques, where coated pits form. If the consequent reduction in the time required for LDL receptors to diffuse to coated pits were significant, this could alter conclusions drawn from previous calculations based on the assumption that LDL receptors are inserted uniformly. In particular, the conclusion could be wrong that diffusion of LDL receptors to coated pits is the rate limiting step in the interaction of cell surface LDL receptors with coated pits. Here we calculate the extent of the reduction in mean travel time of an LDL receptor to a coated pit, as a function of the plaque radius. We find that only if LDL receptor insertion is limited to a very small portion of the plasma membrane near coated pit sites is there a substantial decrease in the average time it would take an LDL receptor to diffuse to a coated pit. In order for preferential insertion of LDL receptors into plaques to cut the mean receptor travel time in half, plaques would have to take up no more than 10% of the cell surface area; to reduce the travel time by a factor of 10, plaques would have to cover only 2% of the cell surface, approximately twice the area covered by coated pits at 37 degrees C.  相似文献   

7.
The uptake mechanism of homologous IgG and immune complex, and the participation of coated vesicles in this process were studied in rat peritoneal macrophages. Peroxidase-antiperoxidase (PAP) immune complex produced in rat, and purified rat IgG adsorbed to gold particles (IgG-Au) were used as ligands. Freshly collected peritoneal macrophages were preincubated with the ligands at 4 degrees C, washed, warmed up to 37 degrees C, maintained in a serum-free culture medium for 5 sec to 30 min and subsequently fixed for electron microscopy. In the IgG-Au experiments, acid phosphatase reaction was also applied to identify lysosomes, and ruthenium red to trace membranes exposed to the extracellular space. At the end of the preincubation period PAP and IgG were found randomly distributed on the external surface of the plasma membrane. After warming up the cells to 37 degrees C, the ligands bound to the plasma membrane showed a tendency to move towards deep labyrinthic invaginations of the cell surface from where they were internalized via coated pits and coated vesicles. In the initial period, these structures seemed to be the primary carriers of the ligands. In the period between 5 and 10 min, ligands were concentrated in vacuoles (endosomes) located in the deeper cytoplasm, while after 30 min, they were present in large lysosome-like or multivesicular bodies, which were found to be acid phosphatase positive.  相似文献   

8.
Earlier studies have shown that immunoglobulin G (IgG)-coated colloidal gold particles bind to specific receptors on the macrophage surface and accumulate in coated pits. They are then internalized via endocytic vesicles and transferred to lysosomes. During this process the plasma membrane is depleted of binding sites for IgG, suggesting that both the receptor and the ligand end up in lysosomes. Here, we have examined the effects of the weak base chloroquine and the Na+-H+ ionophore monensin on endocytosis and intracellular transport of IgG-coated colloidal gold particles in cultured macrophages. The results indicate that chloroquine and monensin do not arrest uptake of IgG-coated particles bound to the cell surface. On the other hand, the drugs strongly inhibit transfer of the particles from endocytic vesicles to lysosomes, the latter marked by prior pulse-chase labeling of the cells with horseradish peroxidase. Since the main effect shared by chloroquine and monensin is to raise pH in acid compartments such as endocytic vesicles and lysosomes, the findings suggest that the transfer of IgG-coated particles into the lysosomes is a pH-dependent process. It remains to be shown whether it is the membrane fusion as such that is controlled by pH or, more specifically, the transfer of receptor-bound ligands into the lysosomes.  相似文献   

9.
We have examined, by analyzing thin (15-20 nm) serial sections, whether coated pits involved in adsorptive pinocytosis in cultured fibroblasts give rise to free coated vesicles or represent permanently surface-associated structures from the neck of which uncoated receptosomes pinch off and carry ligand into the cell. Human skin fibroblasts and mouse L-929 fibroblasts were incubated with cationized ferritin (CF), a ligand known to bind to coated pit regions, at 37 degrees C before fixation. In thin sections, CF was found in coated vesicular profiles within the cytoplasm. Serial sections revealed that whereas many of these coated profiles communicated with the cell surface, thus representing pits, about 10% in L-cells and 36% in skin fibroblasts were actually free coated vesicles. Moreover, evidence for uncoated vesicular structures (receptosomes) budding off from the coated pits was not obtained. We therefore conclude that coated pits do pinch off from the plasma membrane to form free, coated vesicles (pinosomes).  相似文献   

10.
Recent experiments suggest that low density lipoprotein (LDL) receptors on human fibroblasts are not inserted into the plasma membrane uniformly, as earlier experiments indicated, but are inserted into specialized regions, called plaques, where coated pits form. If the consequent reduction in the time required for LDL receptors to diffuse to coated pits were significant, this could alter conclusions drawn from previous calculations based on the assumption that LDL receptors are inserted uniformly. In particular, the conclusion could be wrong that diffusion of LDL receptors to coated pits is the rate limiting step in the interaction of cell surface LDL receptors with coated pits. Here we calculate the extent of the reduction in mean travel time of an LDL receptor to a coated pit, as a function of the plaque radius. We find that only if LDL receptor insertion is limited to a very small portion of the plasma membrane near coated pit sites is there a substantial decrease in the average time it would take an LDL receptor to diffuse to a coated pit. In order for preferential insertion of LDL receptors into plaques to cut the mean receptor travel time in half, plaques would have to take up no more than 10% of the cell surface area; to reduce the travel time by a factor of 10 plaques would have to cover only 2% of the cell surface, approximately twice the area covered by coated pits at 37°C.  相似文献   

11.
Using transmission electron microscopy, we have studied the interaction of alpha 2 macroglobulin (alpha 2 M) with the surface of cultured fibroblasts. When cells were incubated for 2 h at 4 degrees C with ferritin-conjugated alpha 2 M, approximately 90% of the alpha 2 M was diffusely distributed on the cell surface, and the other 10% was concentrated in "coated" pits. A pattern of diffuse labeling with some clustering in "coated" pits was also obtained when cells were incubated for 5 min at 4 degrees C with alpha 2 M, fixed with glutaraldehyde, and the alpha 2 M was localized with affinity-purified, peroxidase-labeled antibody to alpha 2 M. Experiments in which cells were fixed with 0.2% paraformaldehyde before incubation with alpha 2 M showed that the native distribution of alpha 2 M receptors was entirely diffuse without significant clustering in "coated" pits. This indicates that some redistribution of the alpha 2 M-receptor complexes into clusters occurred even at 4 degrees C. In experiments with concanavalin A(Con A), we found that some of the Con A clustered in coated regions of the membrane and was internalized in coated vesicles, but much of the Con A was directly internalized in uncoated vesicles or pinosomes. We conclude that unoccupied alpha 2 M receptors are diffusely distributed on the cell surface. When alpha 2 M-receptor complexes are formed, they rapidly cluster in coated regions or pits in the plasma membrane and subsequently are internalized in coated vesicles. Because insulin and epidermal growth factor are internalized in the same structures as alpha 2 M (Maxfield, F.R., J. Schlessinger, Y. Schechter, I. Pastan, and M.C. Willingham. 1978. Cell, 14: 805--810.), we suggest that all peptide hormones, as well as other proteins that enter the cell by receptor-mediated endocytosis, follow this same pathway.  相似文献   

12.
Mouse peritoneal macrophages accumulate large amounts of cholesteryl ester when incubated with human low-density lipoprotein that has been modified by chemical acetylation (acetyl-LDL). This accumulation is related to a high-affinity cell surface binding site that mediates the uptake of acetyl-LDL by adsorptive endocytosis and its delivery to lysosomes. The current studies demonstrate that the cholesteryl ester accumulation can be considered in terms of a two-compartment model: (a) the incoming cholesteryl esters of acetyl-LDL are hydrolyzed in lysosomes, and (b) the resultant free cholesterol is re-esterified in the cytosol where the newly formed esters are stored as lipid droplets. The following biochemical and morphologic evidence supports the hydrolysis-re-esterification mechanism: (a) Incubation of macrophages with acetyl-LDL markedly increased the rate of cholesteryl ester synthesis from [14C]oleate, and this was accompanied by an increase in the acyl-CoA:cholesteryl acyltransferase activity of cell-free extracts. (b) When macrophages were incubated with reconstituted acetyl-LDL in which the endogenous cholesterol was replaced with [3H]-cholesteryl linoleate, the [3H]cholesteryl linoleate was hydrolyzed, and at least one-half of the resultant [3H]cholesterol was re-esterified to form [3H]cholesteryl oleate, which accumulated within the cell. The lysosomal enzyme inhibitor chloroquine inhibited the hydrolysis of the [3H]cholesteryl linoleate, thus preventing the formation of [3H]cholesteryl oleate and leading to the accumulation of unhydrolyzed [3H]cholesteryl linoleate within the cells. (c) In the electron microscope, macrophages incubated with acetyl-LDL had numerous cytoplasmic lipid droplets that were not surrounded by a limiting membrane. The time course of droplet accumulation was similar to the time course of cholesteryl ester accumulation as measured biochemically. (d) When acetyl-LDL was removed from the incubation medium, biochemical and morphological studies showed that cytoplasmic cholesteryl esters were rapidly hydrolyzed and that the resultant free cholesterol was excreted from the cell.  相似文献   

13.
At 4 degrees C transferrin bound to receptors on the reticulocyte plasma membrane, and at 37 degrees C receptor-mediated endocytosis of transferrin occurred. Uptake at 37 degrees C exceeded binding at 4 degrees C by 2.5-fold and saturated after 20-30 min. During uptake at 37 degrees C, bound transferrin was internalized into a trypsin- resistant space. Trypsinization at 4 degrees C destroyed surface receptors, but with subsequent incubation at 37 degrees C, surface receptors rapidly appeared (albeit in reduced numbers), and uptake occurred at a decreased level. After endocytosis, transferrin was released, apparently intact, into the extracellular space. At 37 degrees C colloidal gold-transferrin (AuTf) clustered in coated pits and then appeared inside various intracellular membrane-bounded compartments. Small vesicles and tubules were labeled after short (5-10 min) incubations at 37 degrees C. Larger multivesicular endosomes became heavily labeled after longer (20-35 min) incubations. Multivesicular endosomes apparently fused with the plasma membrane and released their contents by exocytosis. None of these organelles appeared to be lysosomal in nature, and 98% of intracellular AuTf was localized in acid phosphatase-negative compartments. AuTf, like transferrin, was released with subsequent incubation at 37 degrees C. Freeze-dried and freeze-fractured reticulocytes confirmed the distribution of AuTf in reticulocytes and revealed the presence of clathrin-coated patches amidst the spectrin coating the inner surface of the plasma membrane. These data suggest that transferrin is internalized via coated pits and vesicles and demonstrate that transferrin and its receptor are recycled back to the plasma membrane after endocytosis.  相似文献   

14.
Lactoperoxidase-mediated iodination at 4 degrees C--an established method for covalent labelling of plasma membrane proteins--and quantitative electron microscopic autoradiography were used to follow the pathways of endocytosis in mouse macrophages in vitro. Directly after the labelling, the autoradiographic grains were concentrated to the cell surface. After warming to 37 degrees C, radioactive material was rapidly internalized into cytoplasmic vesicles and subsequently transferred to lysosomes as well as to the Golgi complex. Maximum grain density (% grains/% volume) over the vesicles was observed after 15 min, over the lysosomes after 30 to 45 min and over the Golgi complex after 30 and 90 min. Throughout the experimental period (120 min), the vesicles showed the largest fraction of intracellular grains, but higher grain densities occurred in lysosomes as well as in stacked Golgi cisternae and Golgi-associated vesicles. In spite of the internalization process, the labelling of the cell surface came to a steady state already after 30 min and at all intervals more than 50% of the autoradiographic grains were localized to this compartment. About 25% of the cell-associated radioactivity was lost rapidly with a half-life of 20 to 25 min and the remaining 75% slowly with a half-life of 7 to 9 h. The results indicate that membrane internalized by endocytosis partly follows a route to the lysosomes and that, additionally, there exists a route to and through the Golgi complex. They further support earlier notions of a bidirectional traffic between the surface and interior of the cell and suggest that recycling of membrane components may take place from endocytic vesicles, lysosomes, as well as the Golgi complex.  相似文献   

15.
A Dautry-Varsat 《Biochimie》1986,68(3):375-381
A variety of ligands and macromolecules enter cells by receptor-mediated endocytosis. Ligands bind to their receptors on the cell surface and ligand-receptor complexes are localized in specialized regions of the plasma membrane called coated pits. Coated pits invaginate and give rise to intracellular coated vesicles containing ligand-receptor complexes which are thus internalized. Transferrin, a major serum glycoprotein which transports iron into cells, enters cells by this pathway. It binds to its receptor on the cell surface, transferrin-receptor complexes cluster in coated pits and are internalized in coated vesicles. Coated vesicles then lose their clathrin coat and fuse with endosomes, an organelle with an internal pH of about 5-5.5. Most ligands dissociate from their receptors in endosomes and they finally end up in lysosomes where they are degraded, while their receptors remain bound to membrane structures and recycle to the cell surface. Transferrin has a different fate: in endosomes iron dissociates from transferrin but apotransferrin remains bound to its receptor because of its high affinity for the receptor at acid pH. Apotransferrin thus recycles back to the plasma membrane still bound to its receptor. When the ligand-receptor complex reaches the plasma membrane or a compartment at neutral pH, apotransferrin dissociates from its receptor with a half-life of 18 s because of its low affinity for its receptor at neutral pH. The receptor is then ready for a new cycle of internalization, while apotransferrin enters the circulation, reloads iron in the appropriate organs and is ready for a new cycle of iron transport.  相似文献   

16.
We have raised specific polyclonal immunoglobulin G (IgG) against a major lysosomal membrane sialoglycoprotein (LGP107) taken from rat liver and have prepared a conjugate of its Fab' fragment with horseradish peroxidase (HRP-anti LGP107 Fab') as a probe for the subcellular antigen. Electron immunocytochemistry in primary cultured rat hepatocytes showed that LGP107 resided primarily within lysosomes and was associated with luminal amorphous materials as well as limiting membranes. In addition, LGP107 was shown to be substantially distributed throughout the endocytic vacuolar system. The glycoprotein was found clustered in coated pits at the cell surface and localized along the surrounding membranes in endocytic vesicles. When cultured cells were exposed to HRP-anti LGP107 Fab', the antibody which was bound to its antigen within the coated pits was internalized via a system of endocytic vesicles and transported to lysosomes. During 20 min of incubation at 37 degrees C, the HRP tracer appeared at an early stage in small vesicles and moved progressively to larger vesicles, including multivesicular bodies. After 1 h, the tracer could be clearly seen in lysosomes heterogeneous in shape and size. The existence of LGP107 in endocytic compartments and the uptake of anti LGP107 antibody by hepatocytes were not blocked by prior treatment of the cells with cycloheximide and excess amounts of anti LGP107 IgG. These data suggest that LGP107 circulates between the cell surface and lysosomes through the endocytic membrane traffic in hepatocytes.  相似文献   

17.
Reconstitution of clathrin-coated pit budding from plasma membranes   总被引:16,自引:12,他引:4       下载免费PDF全文
Receptor-mediated endocytosis begins with the binding of ligand to receptors in clathrin-coated pits followed by the budding of the pits away from the membrane. We have successfully reconstituted this sequence in vitro. Highly purified plasma membranes labeled with gold were obtained by incubating cells in the presence of anti-LDL receptor IgG-gold at 4 degrees C, attaching the labeled cells to a poly-L-lysine-coated substratum at 4 degrees C and then gently sonicating them to remove everything except the adherent membrane. Initially the gold label was clustered over flat, clathrin-coated pits. After these membranes were warmed to 37 degrees C for 5-10 min in the presence of buffer that contained cytosol extract, Ca2+, and ATP, the coated pits rounded up and budded from the membrane, leaving behind a membrane that was devoid of LDL gold. Simultaneous with the loss of the ligand, the clathrin triskelion and the AP-2 subunits of the coated pit were also lost. These results suggest that the budding of a coated pit to form a coated vesicle occurs in two steps: (a) the spontaneous rounding of the flat lattice into a highly invaginated coated pit at 37 degrees C; (b) the ATP, 150 microM Ca2+, and cytosolic factors(s) dependent fusion of the adjoining membrane segments at the neck of the invaginated pit.  相似文献   

18.
The participation of cell surface anionic sites on the interaction between tachyzoites of Toxoplasma gondii and macrophages and the process of phagosome-lysosome fusion were analyzed using cationized ferritin as a marker of cell surface anionic sites and albumin-colloidal gold as a marker for secondary lysosomes. Incubation of either the macrophages or the parasites with cationized ferritin before the interaction increased the ingestion of parasites by macrophages. Anionic sites of the macrophage's surface, labeled with cationized ferritin before the interaction, were internalized together with untreated parasites. However, after interaction with glutaraldehyde-fixed or specific antibody-coated parasites, the cationized ferritin particles were observed in endocytic vacuoles which did not contain parasites. Macrophages previously labeled with albumin-gold at 37 degrees C, were incubated in the presence of cationized ferritin at 4 degrees C and then incubated with untreated or specific antibody-coated parasites. After interaction with opsonized parasites, the colloidal gold particles were observed in the parasitophorous vacuoles while the cationized ferritin particles were observed in cytoplasmic vesicles. However, when the interaction was carried out with untreated parasites, the parasitophorous vacuoles exhibited ferritin particles while the colloidal gold particles were observed in cytoplasmic vesicles. These observations, in association with studies previously reported, suggest that the state of the parasite surface determines the mechanism of parasite entry into the macrophage, the composition of the membrane lining the parasitophorous vacuole and the ability of lysosomes to fuse with the vacuoles.  相似文献   

19.
Summary Using a direct conjugate of urokinase and ferritin, the binding has been followed at the plasma membrane and the internalization of urokinase into BALB/C-3T3 fibroblasts, cultured in plasminogen-free conditions. At 0° C, the conjugate was observed bound on both coated and uncoated cell surface regions as singlets, and small and large clusters. No binding was observed in the presence of excess native urokinase. The binding was impaired by preincubation of the conjugate with a competitive inhibitor of the catalytic site, suggesting an interaction between the receptor and the catalytic site of the enzyme.Within 1 min at 37° C, urokinase clustered on coated regions of the plasma membrane. At 5 min after warming, ferritin was found on deeply indented coated pits and in both coated and uncoated vesicles close to the cell surface. By 10 min at 37° C, ferritin particles were present in uncoated endosomes and in multivesicular bodies in the Golgi area. Within 10 min, the receptors on the surface strongly decreased. New receptors were observed on the membrane after 20 min at 37° C. At this time, ferritin was observed both in endosomes or multivesicular bodies and in vesicles close to the plasma membrane.  相似文献   

20.
Dynamin is the mammalian homologue to the Drosophila shibire gene product. Mutations in this 100-kD GTPase cause a pleiotropic defect in endocytosis. To further investigate its role, we generated stable HeLa cell lines expressing either wild-type dynamin or a mutant defective in GTP binding and hydrolysis driven by a tightly controlled, tetracycline- inducible promoter. Overexpression of wild-type dynamin had no effect. In contrast, coated pits failed to become constricted and coated vesicles failed to bud in cells overexpressing mutant dynamin so that endocytosis via both transferrin (Tfn) and EGF receptors was potently inhibited. Coated pit assembly, invagination, and the recruitment of receptors into coated pits were unaffected. Other vesicular transport pathways, including Tfn receptor recycling, Tfn receptor biosynthesis, and cathepsin D transport to lysosomes via Golgi-derived coated vesicles, were unaffected. Bulk fluid-phase uptake also continued at the same initial rates as wild type. EM immunolocalization showed that membrane-bound dynamin was specifically associated with clathrin-coated pits on the plasma membrane. Dynamin was also associated with isolated coated vesicles, suggesting that it plays a role in vesicle budding. Like the Drosophila shibire mutant, HeLa cells overexpressing mutant dynamin accumulated long tubules, many of which remained connected to the plasma membrane. We conclude that dynamin is specifically required for endocytic coated vesicle formation, and that its GTP binding and hydrolysis activities are required to form constricted coated pits and, subsequently, for coated vesicle budding.  相似文献   

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