scholarly journals The subcellular loclization and properties of the ferrochelatase of etiolated barley

1976 ◽  
Vol 156 (2) ◽  
pp. 309-314 ◽  
Author(s):  
H N Little ◽  
O T G Jones

The etioplast fraction prepared from dark-grown barley contained the enzyme ferrochelatase. A mitochondrial fraction prepared from the same dark-grown tissue also contained ferrochelatase. After density-gradient centrifugation an etioplast band was collected that was free from detectable mitochondrial marker enzymes and yet retained ferrochelatase activity. A membrane band that was enriched in mitochondria also contained ferrochelatase. The ferrochelatase in these two bands had different pH optima, but appeared very similar in their porphyrin specificity and their inhibition by metalloporphyrins.

1994 ◽  
Vol 304 (2) ◽  
pp. 617-624 ◽  
Author(s):  
J C Osypiw ◽  
R L Allen ◽  
D Billington

Freshly isolated viable rat hepatocytes were separated into five subpopulations on shallow discontinuous Percoll density gradients. The periportal marker enzymes alanine aminotransferase (ALT), malate dehydrogenase (MDH) and lactate dehydrogenase (LDH) showed gradients of increasing activity from the subpopulation of least density (band 1, rho = 1.07 g/ml) to the subpopulation of greatest density (band 5, rho = 1.09 g/ml). The perivenous marker enzymes pyruvate kinase (PK) and glutamate dehydrogenase (GDH) showed gradients of decreasing activity from band-1 cells to band-5 cells. Glutamine synthetase (GS), which is confined to the two or three cell layers around the hepatic venule, was almost entirely restricted to band-1 hepatocytes. Band-5: band-1 ratios of enzyme activity were as follows: ALT, 8.0; LDH, 2.1; MDH, 1.6; GDH, 0.7; PK, 0.2; GS, 0.01. Band-5:band-1 ratios for ALT, LDH, PK and GS were maintained after culture of subpopulations in identical conditions for up to 72 h, whereas the ratios for MDH and GDH decreased and increased respectively towards unity. Band-1 hepatocytes exhibited greater cytotoxicity than band-5 cells after incubation with carbon tetrachloride or paracetamol. These perivenous-selective toxins produced greater decreases in cell viability and greater release of ALT and LDH from band-1 hepatocytes than from band-5 hepatocytes. Conversely, band-5 hepatocytes were more susceptible than band-1 hepatocytes to the cytotoxic effects of 1-naphthylisothiocyanate and methotrexate (known periportal-selective toxins). It is concluded that band-5 hepatocytes are enriched in periportal cells, whereas band-1 hepatocytes are enriched in perivenous cells. Isolation of hepatocyte subpopulations by Percoll density-gradient centrifugation has the considerable advantage that periportal and perivenous cells can be obtained from the same liver.


1976 ◽  
Vol 54 (4) ◽  
pp. 365-381 ◽  
Author(s):  
J. McLaughlin ◽  
H. S. Injeyan ◽  
E. Meerovitch

A cell fractionation scheme was developed for studying the distribution of certain hydrolases, especially phosphohydrolases, in a Crithidia sp. (Trypanosomatidae). Whilst between 26–56% of the total cellular hydrolase activities were soluble (probably of flagellar pocket origin), a certain percentage, 5–40%, was sedimentable. A particulate fraction obtained after isopycnic density gradient centrifugation (ρ = 1.187–1.241), designated fraction FA/FB, was enriched in various acid hydrolases (relative specific activities 1.33–6.24) and displayed latent phosphohydrolase activities. The density gradient distributions of these hydrolytic enzymes were compared with reference to one another and malate dehydrogenase (mitochondrial marker). From the results obtained it appears that the sedimentable acid hydrolases of Crithidia are associated with a heterogeneous population of subcellular particles. Cytochemical observations on the FA/FB fraction supported this finding and revealed the association of acid phosphatase reaction product with subcellular elements resembling multivesicular bodies.A detailed study of the hydrolytic activity toward both ortho- and pyrophosphate substrates by the soluble, as compared to the FA/FB fractions, revealed the existence of distinct phosphohydrolase activities. It is proposed that these differences in properties are due to the existence of phosphohydrolase isoenzymes and that they in turn relate to a differentiation in the cellular digestive functions of Crithidia.


1963 ◽  
Vol 16 (3) ◽  
pp. 483-499 ◽  
Author(s):  
David J. L. Luck

Cells of a choline-requiring mutant of Neurospora crassa, labeled with radioactive choline, were transferred to unlabeled medium. At various times during their subsequent logarithmic growth, a highly purified mitochondrial fraction was prepared by sucrose density gradient centrifugation, and the distribution of label among individual mitochondria was determined by quantitative autoradiography. Preliminary experiments indicated that, under the conditions of this "washout" experiment, choline served as a stable mitochondrial label. Radioautographic analysis showed that, in fully labeled mycelia and for three mass doubling cycles in the unlabeled medium, radioactivity was randomly distributed among all mitochondria; i.e., the distribution of autographic grains among individual mitochondria followed a Poisson distribution. In experiments in which pulse labeling for 10 minutes was used, the label was randomly distributed among all mitochondria. The data suggest that the mitochondrial mass is increased by a continuous process of addition of new lecithin units to the already existing mitochondrial framework.


1977 ◽  
Vol 162 (2) ◽  
pp. 303-307 ◽  
Author(s):  
I Schousboe ◽  
B Bro ◽  
A Schousboe

In order to determne the intramitochondrial location of 4-aminobutyrate transaminase, mitochondria were prepared from ox brain and freed from myelin and synaptosomes by using conventional density-gradient-centrifugation techniques, and the purity was checked electron-microscopically. Inner and outer membranes and matrix were prepared from the mitochondria by large-amplitude swelling and subsequent density-grient centrifugation. The fractions were characterized by using both electron microscopy and different marker enzymes. From the specific activity of the 4-aminobutyrate transaminase in the submitochondrial fractions it was concluded that this enzyme is associated with the innter mitochondrial membrane.


Author(s):  
Lee F. Ellis ◽  
Richard M. Van Frank ◽  
Walter J. Kleinschmidt

The extract from Penicillum stoliniferum, known as statolon, has been purified by density gradient centrifugation. These centrifuge fractions contained virus particles that are an interferon inducer in mice or in tissue culture. Highly purified preparations of these particles are difficult to enumerate by electron microscopy because of aggregation. Therefore a study of staining methods was undertaken.


1983 ◽  
Vol 50 (04) ◽  
pp. 848-851 ◽  
Author(s):  
Marjorie B Zucker ◽  
David Varon ◽  
Nicholas C Masiello ◽  
Simon Karpatkin

SummaryPlatelets deprived of calcium and incubated at 37° C for 10 min lose their ability to bind fibrinogen or aggregate with ADP when adequate concentrations of calcium are restored. Since the calcium complex of glycoproteins (GP) IIb and IIIa is the presumed receptor for fibrinogen, it seemed appropriate to examine the behavior of these glycoproteins in incubated non-aggregable platelets. No differences were noted in the electrophoretic pattern of nonaggregable EDTA-treated and aggregable control CaEDTA-treated platelets when SDS gels of Triton X- 114 fractions were stained with silver. GP IIb and IIIa were extracted from either nonaggregable EDTA-treated platelets or aggregable control platelets with calcium-Tris-Triton buffer and subjected to sucrose density gradient centrifugation or crossed immunoelectrophoresis. With both types of platelets, these glycoproteins formed a complex in the presence of calcium. If the glycoproteins were extracted with EDTA-Tris-Triton buffer, or if Triton-solubilized platelet membranes were incubated with EGTA at 37° C for 30 min, GP IIb and IIIa were unable to form a complex in the presence of calcium. We conclude that inability of extracted GP IIb and IIIa to combine in the presence of calcium is not responsible for the irreversible loss of aggregability that occurs when whole platelets are incubated with EDTA at 37° C.


Sign in / Sign up

Export Citation Format

Share Document