scholarly journals Properties of membrane-bound bilirubin UDP-glucuronyltransferase in rough and smooth endoplasmic reticulum and in the nuclear envelope from rat liver

1989 ◽  
Vol 259 (3) ◽  
pp. 659-663 ◽  
Author(s):  
F Vanstapel ◽  
L Hammaker ◽  
K Pua ◽  
N Blanckaert

We examined regulatory properties of bilirubin UDP-glucuronyltransferase in sealed RER (rough endoplasmic reticulum)- and SER (smooth endoplasmic reticulum)-enriched microsomes (microsomal fractions), as well as in nuclear envelope from rat liver. Purity of membrane fractions was verified by electron microscopy and marker studies. Intactness of RER and SER vesicles was ascertained by a high degree of latency of the lumenal marker mannose-6-phosphatase. No major differences in the stimulation of UDP-glucuronyltransferase by detergent or by the presumed physiological activator, UDPGlcNAc, were observed between total microsomes and RER- or SER-enriched microsomes. Isolated nuclear envelopes were present as a partially disrupted membrane system, with approx. 50% loss of mannose-6-phosphatase latency. The nuclear transferase had lost its latency to a similar extent, and the enzyme failed to respond to UDPGlcNAc. Our results underscore the necessity to include data on the integrity of the membrane permeability barrier when reporting regulatory properties of UDP-glucuronyltransferase in different membrane preparations.

1977 ◽  
Vol 55 (4) ◽  
pp. 408-414 ◽  
Author(s):  
J. C. Jamieson

Ultrasonic extracts of rough and smooth endoplasmic reticulum fractions and Golgi fractions from rat liver were examined by immunoelectrophoresis using antiserum to α1-acid glycoprotein. Rough endoplasmic reticulum fractions contained only sialic acid free α1-acid glycoprotein, whereas smooth endoplasmic reticulum and Golgi fractions also contained sialic acid containing α1-acid glycoprotein. Determination of the sialic acid contents of immune precipitates isolated from the extracts suggested that the Golgi complex was the main site of addition of sialic acid to α1-acid glycoprotein. Immunological studies on puromycin extracts of polyribosomes showed that polypeptide chains of α1-acid glycoprotein and albumin were assembled mainly on membrane-bound polyribosomes. Evidence is presented from incorporation studies with labelled leucine and glucosamine that initial glycosylation of α1-acid glycoprotein occurs mainly or entirely after release of nascent polypeptide from the ribosomal site.


1992 ◽  
Vol 285 (1) ◽  
pp. 153-159 ◽  
Author(s):  
I J Cartwright ◽  
J A Higgins

We have developed a method for measurement of apolipoprotein (apo) B-48 and apo B-100 in blood and subcellular fractions of rat liver based on SDS/PAGE followed by quantitative immunoblotting using 125I-Protein A. Standard curves were prepared in each assay using apo B prepared from total rat lipoproteins by extraction with tetramethylurea. Subcellular fractions (rough and smooth endoplasmic reticulum and Golgi fractions) were prepared from rat liver and separated into membrane and cisternal-content fractions. For quantification, membrane fractions were solubilized in Triton X-100, and the apo B was immunoprecipitated before separation by SDS/PAGE and immunoblotting. Content fractions were concentrated by ultrafiltration and separated by SDS/PAGE without immunoprecipitation. Quantification of apo B in subcellular fractions and detection of apo B by immunoblotting yielded consistent results. In all fractions apo B-48 was the major form, accounting for approximately three-quarters of the total apo B. By using marker enzymes as internal standards, it was calculated that all of the apo B was recovered in the endoplasmic reticulum and Golgi fractions, with approximately 80% of each form of apo B in the endoplasmic reticulum. More than 90% of the apo B of the rough- and smooth-endoplasmic-reticulum fractions was membrane-bound, whereas approx. 33 and 15% of the apo B of the cis-enriched Golgi fractions and trans-enriched Golgi fractions respectively were membrane-bound.


1985 ◽  
Vol 228 (3) ◽  
pp. 635-645 ◽  
Author(s):  
N Lambert ◽  
R B Freedman

Protein disulphide-isomerase (PDI) activity was not detectable in freshly prepared rat liver microsomes (microsomal fraction), but became detectable after treatments that damage membrane integrity, e.g. sonication, detergent treatment or freezing and thawing. Maximum activity was detectable after sonication. Identical latency was observed in microsomes prepared by gel filtration and in those prepared by high-speed centrifugation. PDI activity was latent in all particulate subcellular fractions, but not latent in the high-speed supernatant. When all fractions were sonicated to expose total PDI activity, PDI was found at highest specific activity in the microsomal fraction and co-distributed with marker enzymes of the endoplasmic reticulum. Washing of microsomes under various conditions that removed peripheral proteins and, in some cases, bound ribosomes did not remove significant quantities of PDI, nor did it affect the latency of PDI activity. Treatment of microsomes with proteinases, under conditions where the permeability barrier of the microsomal vesicles was maintained intact, did not inactivate PDI significantly or affect its latency. PDI was very readily solubilized from microsomal vesicles by low concentrations of detergents, which removed only a fraction of the total microsomal protein. In all these respects, PDI resembled nucleoside diphosphatase, a marker peripheral protein of the luminal surface of the endoplasmic reticulum, and differed from NADPH: cytochrome c reductase, a marker integral protein exposed at the cytoplasmic surface of the membrane. The data are compatible with a model in which PDI is loosely associated with the luminal surface of the endoplasmic reticulum, a location consistent with the proposed physiological role of the enzyme as catalyst of formation of native disulphide bonds in nascent and newly synthesized secretory proteins.


1980 ◽  
Vol 43 (1) ◽  
pp. 269-277
Author(s):  
J.C. Richardson ◽  
A.H. Maddy

Nuclear envelopes are separated into pore-lamina and membrane sub-fractions by extraction in 2.0% Triton X-100 followed by pelleting of the pore-laminae. The polypeptides of these subfractions are then compared with those from isolated rough endoplasmic reticulum. The dispositions of individual polypeptides in the cytoplasmic surface of nuclear envelopes and rought endoplasmic reticulum were studied by lactoperoxidase-catalysed iodination. These studies show that although the nuclear membranes exhibit several homologies with the Triton-soluble polypeptides of the rough endoplasmic reticulum the relative proportion of individual polypeptides within the two systems are very largely different. The cytoplasmic surfaces of the 2 membrane systems show only 2 obvious homologies at 105 000 and 15 000 mol. wt and the overall impression is that, at least in rat liver, the outer nuclear membrane is very substantially differentiated from rough endoplasmic reticulum. It is concluded that the nuclear membranes may not be regarded as a mere continuum of the endoplasmic reticulum, but should be seen as a highly specialized membrane system in their own right.


1983 ◽  
Vol 213 (1) ◽  
pp. 99-105 ◽  
Author(s):  
S R Wilson ◽  
M D Houslay

Dithiothreitol led to the activation and solubilization of the cyclic nucleotide phosphodiesterase activities associated with the smooth and various rough subfractions of rat liver endoplasmic reticulum. The activity in each of the subfractions exhibited somewhat different time courses, and sensitivities to dithiothreitol concentration, in respect of their solubilization and activation. Both activation and solubilization by dithiothreitol could be blocked by either thiol proteinase inhibitors or excess bovine serum albumin. Freeze-thaw solubilization was not blocked by the thiol proteinase inhibitor antipain and did not lead to the activation of the enzyme. After dithiothreitol-induced solubilization, all of the enzymes exhibited non-linear Lineweaver-Burk plots indicative of apparent negative co-operativity. In contrast, after freeze-thaw solubilization the enzyme in the smooth-endoplasmic-reticulum-plus-Golgi fraction still obeys Michaelis kinetics, as does the membrane-bound enzyme. It is possible to mimic the action of dithiothreitol in solubilizing and activating the enzyme by limited proteolysis with trypsin. Triton X-100 is highly efficient at solubilizing these enzymes, yet has little effect on their activities. Charged detergents exhibit highly selective effects on the enzymes as regards their solubilization and activity expressed.


1981 ◽  
Vol 29 (11) ◽  
pp. 1263-1272 ◽  
Author(s):  
H Shio ◽  
P B Lazarow

The theoretical advantages of electron microscopic cytochemistry were utilized to look for evidence of possible connections between peroxisomes and the endoplasmic reticulum in rat liver. Established cytochemical procedures for catalase (peroxisomes) and glucose-6-phosphatase (endoplasmic reticulum) were carried out, and evidence was sought of diffusion of reaction products between the organelles. No such diffusion was observed: lead phosphate was found in the endoplasmic reticulum and in the nuclear envelope but not in peroxisomes; oxidized diaminobenzidine (DAB) was seen only in peroxisomes. In addition, both types of cytochemistry were carried out on the same tissue. The two kinds of reaction product could be distinguished by virtue of their different electron opacities. No mixing of the two reaction products was observed. These results do not support the hypothesis that peroxisomes and endoplasmic reticulum may be connected; rather, they support the idea that the two organelles exist as separate cellular compartments.


The male gamete of Equisetum is the largest and structurally most complex of those so far known in living pteridophytes. The ultrastructure of the mature gametes, is described with particular reference to the influence of the multilayered structure (MLS) on its form. In Equisetum this organelle comprises a band of over 300 microtubules, underlain along its anterior edge by a lamellar strip, 15-20 µm in length, and forming a sinistral spiral of 2 1/2 gyres. The tubules extend from the strip, at an angle of about 40°, to form a broad sheath around the twisted pyriform nucleus located in the posterior half of the cell. From the anterior tip of the lamellar strip to the posterior end of the nucleus the gamete completes a helix of 3 1/2 gyres, traversed throughout by the microtubular band. As a result of growth of this band during spermatid metamorphosis, and the 40° angle between the elates of the lamellar strip and the microtubules, the strip is displaced anteriorly and laterally relative to the nucleus. In the mature gamete, although the strip and the nucleus remain interconnected by the microtubular band, only the posterior half of the strip lies directly above the anterior third of the nucleus. The precise interrelationship between nucleus and MLS is illustrated by reconstructions which display the spermatozoids as they would appear if uncoiled. The 80-120 flagella are inserted outside that part of the micro tubular band lying anterior to the nucleus. Their basal bodies retain the proximal cartwheel and stellate transition regions found already in spermatids, but in the mature gametes they are invested with collars of osmiophilic material. The axonemes depart at 10° tangentially from the helix and extend backwards parallel with the tubules of the microtubular band. In consequence of the overlapping gyres of the helix the flagella lie in a spiral groove, similar to that found in cycad spermatozoids. From this groove the plasma membrane closely follows the external surface of the microtubular band. Contrasting with other archegoniates, maximal structural differentiation of the MLS is found in the mature spermatozoid. Flat-bottomed keels are present on the microtubules overlying the lamellar strip in which three distinct strata can be recognized. The two outer, consisting of alternating plates of electron-opaque and electron- transparent material, are separated by a continuous electron-opaque sheet. The innermost stratum comprises a continuous layer of finely granular material. Overlying the external anterior rim of the microtubular band is an osmiophilic crest. This retains the regularly banded substructure found in spermatids, but in mature spermatozoids is far more prominent than at any other time during spermatogenesis. It contains an electron-transparent lumen and is continuous with both the anterior ends of the microtubules and the anteriormost lamellar plates. Between the inner gyres of the MLS the crest is confluent with extensive sheets of smooth endoplasmic reticulum. Underlying the lamellar strip is a spiral mitochondrion with prominent dilated cristae. The central cytoplasm contains at least 100 pleomorphic mitochondria, together with from 15 to 25 amyloplasts and a few microbodies. In the nucleus, in addition to condensed chromatin, are several spherical electron-opaque bodies and aggregations of membrane-bound vesicles. Structures identical in appearance with the former also occur in the cytoplasm, and it is suggested that they may be nuclear in origin, as are similar bodies in animal spermatogenesis. The vesicles may represent portions of redundant nuclear envelope whose extrusion into the cytoplasm was prevented by the ensheathing microtubular band. Pores are still present in the nuclear envelope, where this is not invested by the band. The mature spermatozoids are liberated from antheridia within mucilaginous sacs bounded by fibrillar cell wall material, thought to contain lipid droplets promoting their dispersal when in contact with water. On escaping from the sacs the spermatozoids elongate slightly, and profiles of disrupted flagella are frequently encountered. Occasionally the microtubular band ensheathing the posterior part of the nucleus also becomes disorganized. There is no evidence of the utilization of amyloplast starch as an energy source during motility, and, in contrast to ferns and bryophytes, there is no sequestration of the central cytoplasm by the swimming spermatozoids.


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