ATPases associated with Golgi membranes from lactating rat mammary gland: high-affinity requirement for Ca2+ and Mg2+ ions

1982 ◽  
Vol 10 (6) ◽  
pp. 531-532
Author(s):  
RICHARD A. EASOM ◽  
DAVID W. WEST ◽  
ROGER A. CLEGG
1981 ◽  
Vol 9 (5) ◽  
pp. 469-469
Author(s):  
DAVID J. FLINT ◽  
DAVID W. WEST

1986 ◽  
Vol 236 (1) ◽  
pp. 91-96 ◽  
Author(s):  
A V Wallace ◽  
N J Kuhn

The ability of rat mammary-gland Golgi membranes to produce monosaccharide-specific pores in phospholipid vesicles was investigated. The apparent ability of Triton X-100 extracts of Golgi membranes to form such pores was re-evaluated, since we have now found that an apparent pore is produced by the detergent alone. We therefore incorporated intact Golgi membranes (1 mg of protein) into egg-yolk phospholipid vesicles by direct sonication in the absence of any detergent. These vesicles retained about 0.6% of the total sucrose, but demonstrated selective permeability towards glucose compared with sucrose, with 19.8% of the glucose being lost during gel filtration on Sepharose 4B. This phenomenon seemed to be enhanced by the presence of acidic phospholipids and lysophosphatidylcholine, but was inhibited by inclusion of cholesterol in the vesicles. The best mixture of phospholipids comprised 6.5 mg of egg-yolk phospholipid, 1 mg of phosphatidylserine and 0.05 mg of lysophosphatidylcholine, where 32.9% of the glucose was lost. By using this optimum phospholipid mixture the pores were shown to be permeable to both glucose and mannitol, whereas sucrose and lactose were retained by the vesicles. Chaps (3- [(3-cholamidopropyl)dimethylammonio] propane-1-sulphonate)-solubilized membranes produced similar permeability in vesicles produced by dialysis of a solution of the phospholipids mixed with the membrane extract. This technique resulted in a greater loss of glucose, 33% loss requiring about 0.25 mg of protein. The pore-forming ability of both intact Golgi membranes and Chaps extracts was sensitive to boiling and proteolysis, indicating that a membrane protein was likely to be involved in pore formation.


1989 ◽  
Vol 67 (2-3) ◽  
pp. 152-162 ◽  
Author(s):  
Melvyn S. Soloff ◽  
Mats A. Fernström ◽  
Martha J. Fernström

The addition of oxytocin to minces of rat mammary gland preincubated with (3H)myo-inositol stimulated the formation of inositol phosphate (IP) in both lactating and regressed glands. Stimulation was about 4 times greater in regressed tissue, consistent with an oxytocin effect on myoepithelial cells, which are enriched relative to epithelial cells during regression. The stimulation of IP formation was agonist specific, as shown with several oxytocin analogs. Arginine vasopressin (AVP), however, was more than twice as potent as oxytocin in stimulating IP formation in regressed tissue. Both V1- and V2-selective AVP receptor antagonists inhibited the stimulation of IP formation by oxytocin. The V1-selective antagonist was about 10 times more inhibitory than the V2-selective antagonist. [3H]AVP was bound to plasma membranes from the mammary gland of the lactating rat with an apparent Kd of about 0.7 nM and Bmax of 54.6 fmol/mg protein. These values were comparable with those found for AVP receptors of kidney plasma membranes. Our results suggest that the stimulation of IP formation in rat mammary gland by oxytocin occurs through occupancy of AVP, and not oxytocin, receptor sites. A second aspect of these studies was to determine if a recently developed iodinated antagonist of oxytocin-induced uterine contractions could be used as a specific probe for oxytocin receptors in the rat mammary gland. Under steady state conditions, [125I]d(CH2)51[Tyr(Me)2,Thr4,Tyr-NH29]OVT was bound to a single class of independent binding sites in mammary gland plasma membrane from lactating rats with an apparent Kd of 65 pM and Bmax of 225 fmol/mg protein. Noniodinated antagonist had an affinity about 150 times less than the monoiodinated form. The affinity of binding sites for AVP was 10 times greater than the noniodinated antagonist and 2.4 times greater than oxytocin. In view of the presence of AVP receptors in mammary tissue, these findings suggested that the iodinated antagonist binds to AVP receptors. However, comparison of the binding of iodinated antagonist to plasma membranes from the lactating mammary gland with kidney medulla and liver, target sites for AVP, showed that binding was specific for the mammary gland and hence oxytocin receptors. The concentration of oxytocin receptors in mammary gland, as determined by [125I]d(CH2)51[Tyr(Me)2,Thr4,Tyr-NH29]OVT binding, was 4 times greater than the concentration of high-affinity AVP receptors, as determined by [3H]AVP binding. The high affinity, specificity, and specific activity of the iodinated antagonist should make it very useful in further studies to discriminate between oxytocin and AVP receptors, demonstrate oxytocin receptors with small amounts of samples, perform autoradiographic studies with short-term exposures, and to purify oxytocin receptors.Key words: oxytocin, vasopressin, receptor, mammary gland, antagonist.


1980 ◽  
Vol 190 (3) ◽  
pp. 621-624 ◽  
Author(s):  
M D White ◽  
N J Kuhn ◽  
S Ward

The Golgi-membrane vesicles present in particulate preparations of lactating rat mammary gland were biosynthetically loaded with [14C]lactose. This lactose was effectively retained by particles sedimented after exposure to 0.25 M-disaccharide, but was partly lost after exposure to 0.25 M-glucose or other solutes of similar size. Loss of lactose was time-, concentration- and temperature-dependent and varied with the solute structure. This behaviour is ascribed to the presence of protein in the Golgi membrane, forming a specific carrier or channel that serves to supply glucose for lactose synthesis.


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