scholarly journals Subcellular localization of complex carbohydrates in rat macrophages and monocytes.

1979 ◽  
Vol 27 (8) ◽  
pp. 1180-1181 ◽  
Author(s):  
P L Sannes ◽  
M Eguchi ◽  
S S Spicer

Methods for visualization of complex carbohydrates ultrastructurally were employed to study specific organelles of the rat monocyte and macrophage. Vicinal glycols of glycoconjugates were demonstrated with the periodic acid-thiocarbohydrazide-silver proteinate (PA-TCH-SP) postembedding sequence and acid groups were delineated by the dialyzed iron (DI) and high iron diamine (HID) preembedding techniques. Lysosomal bodies were generally found reactive with all three methods, although those of monocytes from the bone marrow and peripheral blood were notably lacking in acidic groups. The Golgi complex was consistently PA-TCH-SP-reactive, as were associated vesicles and occasional cisternal expansions, possibly related to GERL. Numerous cytoplasmic vesicles and small granulated structures and cisternae of the rough endoplasmic reticulum were also PA-TCH-SP-reactive.

1984 ◽  
Vol 99 (2) ◽  
pp. 569-577 ◽  
Author(s):  
D J Grab ◽  
S Ito ◽  
U A Kara ◽  
L Rovis

Highly enriched Golgi complex and endoplasmic reticulum fractions were isolated from total microsomes obtained from Trypanosoma brucei, Trypanosoma congolense, and Trypanosoma vivax, and tested for glycosyltransferase activity. Purity of the fractions was assessed by electron microscopy as well as by biochemical analysis. The relative distribution of all the glycosyltransferases was remarkably similar for the three species of African trypanosomes studied. The Golgi complex fraction contained most of the galactosyltransferase activity followed by the smooth and rough endoplasmic reticulum fractions. The dolichol-dependent mannosyltransferase activities were highest for the rough endoplasmic reticulum, lower for the smooth endoplasmic reticulum, and lowest for the Golgi complex. Although the dolichol-independent form of N-acetylglucosaminyltransferase was essentially similar in all the fractions, the dolichol-dependent form of this enzyme was much higher in the endoplasmic reticulum fractions than in the Golgi complex fraction. Inhibition of this latter activity in the smooth endoplasmic reticulum fraction by tunicamycin A1 suggests that core glycosylation of the variable surface glycoprotein may occur in this organelle and not in the rough endoplasmic reticulum as previously assumed.


2017 ◽  
Vol 35 (2) ◽  
pp. 435-441
Author(s):  
Francisco Javier Gutiérrez-Cantú ◽  
Alma Lilián Guerrero-Barrera ◽  
Wulfrano Sánchez Meraz ◽  
Amaury de Jesús Pozos-Guillen ◽  
Héctor Flores-Reyes ◽  
...  

1997 ◽  
Vol 323 (3) ◽  
pp. 749-756 ◽  
Author(s):  
Anna PALUMBO ◽  
Anna DI COSMO ◽  
Ida GESUALDO ◽  
Vincent J. HEARING

The ink gland of the cuttlefish Sepia officinalis has traditionally been regarded as a convenient model system for investigating melanogenesis. This gland has been shown to contain a variety of melanogenic enzymes including tyrosinase, a dopachrome-rearranging enzyme and peroxidase. However, whether and to what extent these enzymes co-localize in the melanogenic compartments and interact is an open question. Using polyclonal antibodies that recognize the corresponding Sepia proteins, we have been able to demonstrate that peroxidase has a different subcellular localization pattern from tyrosinase and dopachrome-rearranging enzyme. Whereas peroxidase is located in the rough endoplasmic reticulum and in the matrix of premelanosomes and melanosomes, tyrosinase and dopachrome-rearranging enzyme are present in the rough endoplasmic reticulum–Golgi transport system, at the level of trans-Golgi cisternae, trans-Golgi network and coated vesicles, and in melanosomes on pigmented granules. These results fill a longstanding gap in our knowledge of the melanin-producing system in Sepia and provide the necessary background for dissection at the molecular level of the complex interaction between melanogenic enzymes. Moreover, the peculiar and complex organization of melanin in an invertebrate such as Sepia officinalis is surprising and could provide the basis for understanding the process in more evolved systems such as that of mammals.


1976 ◽  
Vol 70 (2) ◽  
pp. 384-394 ◽  
Author(s):  
M Locke ◽  
P Huie

The region between the rough endoplasmic reticulum (ER) and the Golgi complex has been studied in a variety of insect cell types in an attempt to find a marker for the exit gate or gates from the ER. We have found that the smooth surface of the rough endoplasmic reticulum near Golgi complex transitional elements has beadlike structures arranged in rings at the base of transition vesicles. They occur in all insect cell types and a variety of other organisms. The beads can be seen only after staining in bismuth salts. They are 10-12 nm in diameter and are separated from the membrane and one another by a clear halo giving them a center to center spacing of about 27 nm. The beads are not sensitive to nucleases under conditions which disrupt ribosomes or remove all Feulgen staining material from the nucleus. Under conditions similar to those used to stain tissue, bismuth does not react in vitro with nucleic acids. The component of the beads that stains preferentially with bismuth is therefore probably not nucleic acid.


Blood ◽  
2014 ◽  
Vol 124 (21) ◽  
pp. 821-821
Author(s):  
Jonas S. Jutzi ◽  
A Gruender ◽  
Konrad Aumann ◽  
Heike L. Pahl

Abstract Background: We have described overexpression of the transcription factor NF-E2 in MPN patients and shown that elevated NF-E2 levels cause a MPN phenotype in transgenic mice. This includes thrombocytosis, leukocytosis, splenomegaly as well as an expansion of the stem- and progenitor cell compartments in the bone marrow. Recently, we have shown that, counterintuitively for a transcription factor, NF-E2 is located exclusively in the cytoplasm in the vast majority of erythroid cells in the bone marrow (85%). Patients with PMF show a statistically highly significant elevation in the proportion of cells displaying nuclear NF-E2 compared to either healthy controls or ET and PV patients. However, the molecular mechanisms regulating the subcellular localization of NF-E2 and its aberrant localization in PMF remain to be investigated. The E3 ubiquitin ligase ITCH has been postulated to stabilize and retain NF-E2 in the cytosol by protein-protein interaction and subsequent ubiquitinylation. The phenotype of ITCH deficient mice, however, has only been described briefly: animals display splenomegaly and an expansion of the stem cell compartment. The effect of ITCH deficiency on peripheral blood counts and on NF-E2 activity has not been determined. Aims: To characterize the phenotype of ITCH deficient mice and investigate the effect of ITCH deficiency on NF-E2 localization and activity. Methods: The peripheral blood and bone marrow of ITCH knock out mice as well as of heterozygous and wild-type control animals was analyzed: CBCs were determined every four weeks, stem- and progenitor populations in the bone marrow were assessed by 7-color FACS. Expression levels of NF-E2 and its targets genes were measured by quantitative PCR. Plasma cytokine concentrations were measured by Cytometric Bead Array. To determine the subcellular localization of NF-E2, immunohistochemical stainings of ITCH knock out BMs and wild-type controls were conducted. Results: At several consecutive time points ITCH knock out mice displayed a statistically significant elevation in WBC compared to heterozygous and wild-type littermates. Interestingly, both the percentage and the absolute number of eosinophils were significantly increased, some animals presenting with a drastic eosinophilia, the differential containing over 60% eosinophils. Furthermore, ITCH knock out mice display a significant decrease in platelet count, accompanied by an increase in platelet mass and volume, indicative of giant platelets. In the bone marrow ITCH deficient mice show a significant increase in the absolute number of Common Myeloid Progenitors (CMP). NF-E2 expression levels in the peripheral blood as well as in the bone marrow were highly statistically significantly increased compared to the levels measured in wild-type or heterozygous control mice. Consequently, the NF-E2 target gene Thromboxane Synthase A was statistically significantly overexpressed in peripheral blood of ITCH knock out mice. Plamsa concentrations of the inflammatory cytokines INF-γ and TNF were statistically significantly elevated, reaching two to threefold higher levels in ITCH knock out mice compared to wild-type littermates. Lastly, NF-E2 subcellular localization was altered in ITCH deficient mice, which display a significant increase in the proportion of megakaryocytes positive for nuclear NF-E2. Summary/Conclusions: Our data identify the E3 ubiquitin ligase ITCH as a regulator of NF-E2 activity. Impaired ITCH activity leads to both an NF-E2 overexpression and an increased nuclear NF-E2 localization that together drive overexpression of NF-E2 target genes. Furthermore, ITCH deficiency leads to higher inflammatory cytokine levels, comparable to those seen in PMF patients. All of these factors contribute to the resulting myeloproliferative phenotype with eosinophilia. Our data provide the first pathophysiological explanation of the pathognomonic symptom of ITCH deletion: pruritus in "itchy" mice. Moreover, given the aberrant NF-E2 localization in PMF patients, our data provide a possible mechanism and underscore the role of elevated NF-E2 activity in the pathophysiology of myeloproliferative neoplasms. Disclosures No relevant conflicts of interest to declare.


Author(s):  
Anne D. Geddes ◽  
Mary E. Kirchen ◽  
G. June Marshall

Leukocyte alkaline phosphatase(LAP) is potentially a significant marker for following the maturation sequence of normal and abnormal neutrophils. This enzyme can be localized in the rough endoplasmic reticulum (rer) and in the Golgi complex of immature neutrophils but it has been very difficult to demonstrate LAP activity in the granules of mature neutrophils. This observation presents a dilemma since LAP is present in higher concentrations in mature as opposed to immature neutrophils as demonstrated by biochemical and light microscopy methods.In an attempt to solve this problem, variations on the routine methods for demonstrating LAP activity were explored. Acetone, formaldehyde, methanol and gluteraldehyde were used as fixatives.


1979 ◽  
Vol 149 (1) ◽  
pp. 17-26 ◽  
Author(s):  
JWM Van Der Meer ◽  
RHJ Beelen ◽  
DM Fluitsma ◽  
R Van Furth

Monoblasts, promonocytes, and macrophages in in vitro cultures of murine bone marrow were studied ultrastructurally, with special attention to peroxidatic activity. Monoblasts show peroxidatic activity in the rough endoplasmic reticulum and nuclear envelope as well as in the granules. The presence of peroxidatic activity in the Golgi apparatus could not be determined. Promonocytes have peroxidase-positive rough endoplasmic reticulum, Golgi apparatus, nuclear envelope, and granules, as previously reported. During culture, cells are formed with peroxidatic activity similar to that of monocytes or exudate macrophages (positive granules; negative Golgi apparatus, RER, and nuclear envelope); we call these cells early macrophages. In addition, transitional macrophages with both positive granules and positive RER, nuclear envelope, negative Golgi apparatus (as in exudate- resident macrophages in vivo), and mature macrophages with peroxidatic activity only in the RER and nuclear envelope (as in resident macrophages in vivo) were found. A considerable number of cells without detectable peroxidatic activity were also encountered. Our finding that macrophages with the peroxidatic pattern of monocytes (early macrophages), exudate-resident macrophages (transitional macrophages), and resident macrophages (mature macrophages), develop in vitro from proliferating precursor cells deriving from the bone marrow, demonstrates once again that resident macrophages in tissues originate from precursor cells in the bone marrow. Therefore, this conclusion can no longer be challenged on the basis of a cytochemical difference between monocytes and exudate macrophages on the one hand and resident macrophages on the other.


1983 ◽  
Vol 31 (8) ◽  
pp. 1019-1032 ◽  
Author(s):  
M Locke ◽  
P Huie

The Champy-Maillet OsKI reaction has been used upon Golgi complexes to show two kinds of staining. It stains material being processed as it passes along the secretory pathway of the rough endoplasmic reticulum (RER) and Golgi cisternae (GC) up to crystallization in secretory vesicles. It also stains separately the environment within parts of the GC. This GC staining may occur in all compartments (transition vesicles, saccules, condensing vacuoles), but it is characteristically missing from any one of them. The unstained cisternae may be explained if outer saccules are made from either stained or unstained transition vesicles, both of which occur. The presence of empty, unstained transition vesicles is dictated by the surface to volume ratios of microvesicles in relation to saccules. Most transition vesicles must return their membrane to the endoplasmic reticulum, but from time to time it is presumed that they fuse to make a saccule. Saccules, stained and unstained, then mature through the stack. OsKI reactions with tissues and test molecules suggest that in the RER and GC the stain detects labile--S . S--bridges before they lock the tertiary configuration of proteins.


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