Abstract: | Formaldehyde fixation, nonionic detergent extraction, and ligand binding are commonly used in conjunction with immunofluorescence microscopy to visualize antigens and lectin-reactive molecules in cytoskeletal preparations. These procedures have the potential to produce serious artifacts in cytolocalization studies, as is shown in the present investigation of wheat-germ agglutinin (WGA) binding and localization in BeWo choriocarcinoma cells. Formaldehyde fixation of intact cells reduced the binding of 125I-labeled WGA by 30% and altered the pattern of staining with fluorescein isothyocyanate (FITC)-WGA. Except for perinuclear sites which were brightly stained, the binding of FITC-WGA to other cell surface regions was significantly decreased. Nonionic detergent extractions had two different effects on lectin binding activity depending on whether or not the cells had been pretreated with lectin. In lectin-pretreated cells, 50% of bound lectin was solubilized by detergent but all of the surface binding sites appeared to be retained in active form in the detergent-insoluble residue. Nuclear-cytoskeletal monolayers prepared from cells that were not lectin pretreated lost considerable binding activity, however. These results suggest that a number of erroneous conclusions can be drawn from studies on cytoskeletal associations with membrane components using immunofluorescence microscopy on fixed and detergent-extracted cells. |