首页 | 本学科首页   官方微博 | 高级检索  
   检索      


The determination and localization of sialic acid in guinea-pig granulocytes.
Authors:J W DePierre  J Lazdins  and M L Karnovsky
Abstract:When intact guinea-pig granulocytes (polymorphonuclear leucocytes) disrupted by sonication or with detergent were treated with neuraminidase from Vibrio cholerae, 3.1--3.2 nmol of sialic acid/10(7) cells was released. By using a chromatographic procedure for the specific determination of total cell sialic acid, this releasable portion was found to constitute 70% of the total sialate. All of the neuraminidase-releasable sialic acid of the cells could be removed by enzymic treatment of intact cells with neuraminidase. It thus seemed likely that the neuraminidase-releasable sialic acid is all on the cell surface. To make sure that the result was not due to entry of neuraminidase into the cells, the enzyme was bound covalently to Sepharose 6B, and intact polymorphonuclear leucocytes were treated with the bound enzyme. All of the neuraminidase-releasable sialic acid could still be removed, though more slowly. The cells remained intact and only 1.5--2% of the bound enzyme was released from the Sepharose during incubation. Freed enzyme could have been responsible, at the very most, for release of 18% of the sialic acid. Fractionation studies showed that the nucleus and cytoplasm contain low amounts of sialic acid and that the neuraminidase-releasable sialic acid distributes in a manner similar to the distribution of 5'-nucleotidase, an unambiguous marker for the plasma membrane in these cells. Thus neuraminidase-releasable sialate constitutes a clear marker for the membrane of polymorphonuclear leucocytes. Most of the neuraminidase-insensitive sialate was present in the granule fraction. Removal of sialic acid from intact polymorphonuclear leucocytes did not affect their ecto-AMPase, -ATPase and -p-nitrophenyl phosphatase activities.
Keywords:
本文献已被 PubMed 等数据库收录!
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