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The effects of cell population density on the plasma membrane of Acanthamoeba castellanii
Authors:J A Wilkins  J E Thompson
Institution:Department of Biology, University of Waterloo, Waterloo, Ont. Canada
Abstract:Plasma membranes were isolated from both exponential and stationary phase cells and their properties compared, to determine whether alterations are sustained coincident with the transition to plateau phase growth. Polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis revealed no significant differences in macromolecular composition between the two types of membrane. However, the specific activity of alkaline phosphatase (EC 3.1.3.1), an enzyme which shows enrichments in purified plasma membrane fractions relative to homogenates, was markedly reduced in preparations from stationary as compared with exponentially growing cells. The total activity per cell did not change, but in cell fractionation experiments the stationary phase cells yielded a higher proportion of the enzyme in microsomal fractions than did exponentially growing cells. This indicates that once plateau phase is attained, a greater proportion of the membrane bearing alkaline phosphatase activity is internalized as opposed to being associated with the plasmalemma.Alkaline phosphatase is known to be present on the contractile vacuole membrane. During discharge this vacuole becomes associated with the plasmalemma, an event which presumably accounts for at least part of the alkaline phosphatase in plasma membrane preparations. Thus one interpretation of the decreased levels of alkaline phosphatase in plasma membrane fractions from stationary phase cells is that they reflect a decline in the rate of water expulsion. This in turn suggests that the plasmalemma of stationary phase cells may have undergone changes leading to a decreased rate of water influx.
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