scholarly journals ON THE THICKNESS OF THE UNIT MEMBRANE

1963 ◽  
Vol 17 (2) ◽  
pp. 413-421 ◽  
Author(s):  
Toshiyuki Yamamoto

Peak-to-peak distances between two dense lines of the unit membranes of cell organelles were measured on electron micrographs. These distances were compared with corresponding measurements on the plasma membrane and assigned a percentage value. The comparison between organelle and plasma membrane was always carried out with the same negative, in order to exclude as far as possible errors due to differences in focus or other causes. It was revealed by this study that the membranous structures of the cell can be classified into two groups, one thicker and one thinner. Unit membranes of the thicker group (synaptic vesicles, vesicles and capsules of multivesicular bodies, Golgi vesicles) were not significantly different in thickness from the plasma membrane. Unit membranes of the thinner group (mitochondria, nuclear membranes, Golgi lamellae, endoplasmic reticulum), however, were between 85 and 90 per cent of the thickness of the plasma membrane.

1981 ◽  
Vol 59 (5) ◽  
pp. 908-928 ◽  
Author(s):  
Martha J. Powell ◽  
Charles E. Bracker ◽  
David J. Sternshein

The cytological events involved in the transformation of vegetative hyphae of the zygomycete Gilbertella persicaria (Eddy) Hesseltine into chlamydospores were studied with light and electron microscopy. Thirty hours after sporangiospores were inoculated into YPG broth, swellings appeared along the aseptate hyphae. Later, septa, traversed by plasmodesmata, delimited each end of the hyphal swellings and compartmentalized these hyphal regions as they differentiated into chlamydospores. Nonswollen regions adjacent to chlamydospores remained as isthmuses. Two additional wall layers appeared within the vegetative wall of the developing chlamydospores. An alveolate, electron-dense wall formed first, and then an electron-transparent layer containing concentrically oriented fibers formed between this layer and the plasma membrane. Rather than a mere condensation of cytoplasm, development and maturation of the multinucleate chlamydospores involved extensive cytoplasmic changes such as an increase in reserve products, lipid and glycogen, an increase and then disappearance of vacuoles, and the breakdown of many mitochondria. Underlying the plasma membrane during chlamydospore wall formation were endoplasmic reticulum, multivesicular bodies, vesicles with fibrillar contents, vesicles with electron-transparent contents, and cisternal rings containing the Golgi apparatus marker enzyme, thiamine pyrophosphatase. Acid phosphatase activity was localized cytochemically in a cisterna which enclosed mitochondria and in vacuoles which contained membrane fragments. Tightly packed membrane whorls and single membrane bounded sacs with finely granular matrices surrounding vacuoles were unique during chlamydospore development. Microbodies were rare in the mature chlamydospore, but endoplasmic reticulum was closely associated with lipid globules. As chlamydospores developed, the cytoplasm in the isthmus became highly vacuolated, lipid globules were closely associated with vacuoles, mitochondria were broken down in vacuoles, unusual membrane configurations appeared, and eventually the membranes degenerated. Unlike chlamydospores, walls of the isthmus did not thicken, but irregularly shaped appositions containing numerous channels formed at intervals on the inside of these walls. The pattern of cytoplasmic transformations during chlamydospore development is similar to events leading to the formation of zygospores and sporangiospores.


1976 ◽  
Vol 21 (3) ◽  
pp. 437-448
Author(s):  
A.S. Breathnach ◽  
M. Gross ◽  
B. Martin ◽  
C. Stolinski

Fixed (glutaraldehyde, 3%) and unfixed specimens of rat buccal epithelium, striated muscle, and liver, were cryoprotected with glycerol, freeze-fractured, and replicated without sublimation. A comparison of fracture faces of general plasma membranes, nuclear membranes, mitochondrial membranes, and membranes of rough endoplasmic reticulum revealed no significant differences as between fixed and unfixed material. Apart from some membranes of liver endoplasmic reticulum, there was no evidence of aggregation or redistribution of intramembranous particles in the unfixed material. The results demonstrate that chemical prefixation of tissues for freeze-fracture is not always necessary, or even desirable, and that glycerol may not be as deeply or directly implicated in particle aggregation as previously thought. Fixation with glutaraldehyde alters the cleaving behaviour of plasma membrane at desmosomes and tight junctions, but not at gap junctions.


1976 ◽  
Vol 68 (3) ◽  
pp. 775-781 ◽  
Author(s):  
B Tandler ◽  
J H Poulsen

The release of mucus from acinar cells of the cat submandibular gland was examined by electron microscopy. The limiting membrane of mucous droplets fuses with the luminal plasma membrane to form a five-layered contact. This is converted to a three-layered membrane (unit membrane) by avulsion of the plasmalemma. Attenuation and rupture of this membranous barrier permits the contents of the mucous droplets to flow into the lumen.


Author(s):  
Alex B. Novikoff

This presentation will highlight cytochemical studies that have illuminated some aspects of structure and function of the endoplasmic reticulum (ER); these have been reviewed recently (1, 2). Phosphatase (Pase) cytochemistry has led to the formulation of new questions regarding secretory mechanisms in a number of endocrine and exocrine cells; it has also made the status of GERL as a distinct organelle considerably firmer. 3,31-diaminobenzidine (DAB) cytochemistry has revealed the presence of an organelle apparently ubiquitous in mammalian cells, the anucleoid peroxisomes(microperoxisomes). DAB cytochemistry has been utilized recently by Gonatas et al. (3) to demonstrate that internalized plasma membrane is transported to GERL.Our initial use of Pase cytochemistry to visualize cell organelles included nucleoside diphosphatase (NDPase), thiamine pyrophosphatase (TPPase), and acid Pase (AcPase). NDPase hydrolyzes the diphosphates of inosine, uridine, and guanosine but not cytidine or adenine diphosphates. Since the work of Yamasaku and Hayaishi (4) we have used TPPase and NDPase interchangeably.


1965 ◽  
Vol 43 (11) ◽  
pp. 1329-1333 ◽  
Author(s):  
M. S. Manocha

The fine structure in the carpophore of the mushroom, Agaricus campestris, was studied with the electron microscope. The stipe consists of two types of cells (i) fundamental and (ii) long and thread-like. The pileus contains only the first type. The tramal cells of the gills are more elongated than broad, regularly arranged, and rich in cytoplasmic contents. The cross wall of the hyphal cells shows a conspicuous pore apparatus with dark septal swellings encased in the plasma membrane. The nuclear membranes are differentiated early during nuclear division and are highly alveolated around the interphase nucleus. In the maturing basidium, the mitochondria increase in number by division of pre-existing ones, and thus become small with few cristae. Numerous vacuoles appear in the upper portion of the basidium. Oil globules are also produced in the mature basidium but were not observed during the early stages of development of the basidium or in any other part of the carpophore. The young basidium has food reserve which is granular in nature. The basidiospore contains numerous large oil globules, few mitochondria, scanty endoplasmic reticulum, and a wall of three well-defined layers.


2005 ◽  
Vol 280 (16) ◽  
pp. 16377-16382 ◽  
Author(s):  
Sepehr Dadsetan ◽  
Vyacheslav Shishkin ◽  
Alla F. Fomina

Stimulation of T cell receptor in lymphocytes enhances Ca2+signaling and accelerates membrane trafficking. The relationships between these processes are not well understood. We employed membrane-impermeable lipid marker FM1–43 to explore membrane trafficking upon mobilization of intracellular Ca2+in Jurkat T cells. We established that liberation of intracellular Ca2+with T cell receptor agonist phytohemagglutinin P or with Ca2+-mobilizing agents ionomycin or thapsigargin induced accumulation of FM1–43 within the lumen of the endoplasmic reticulum (ER), nuclear envelope (NE), and Golgi. FM1–43 loading into ER-NE and Golgi was not mediated via the cytosol because other organelles such as mitochondria and multivesicular bodies located in close proximity to the FM1–43-containing ER were free of dye. Intralumenal FM1–43 accumulation was observed even when Ca2+signaling in the cytosol was abolished by the removal of extracellular Ca2+. Our findings strongly suggest that release of intracellular Ca2+may create continuity between the extracellular leaflet of the plasma membrane and the lumenal membrane leaflet of the ER by a mechanism that does not require global cytosolic Ca2+elevation.


2020 ◽  
Vol 21 (15) ◽  
pp. 5376
Author(s):  
Sofia Dimou ◽  
George Diallinas

Eukaryotic plasma membrane (PM) transporters face critical challenges that are not widely present in prokaryotes. The two most important issues are proper subcellular traffic and targeting to the PM, and regulated endocytosis in response to physiological, developmental, or stress signals. Sorting of transporters from their site of synthesis, the endoplasmic reticulum (ER), to the PM has been long thought, but not formally shown, to occur via the conventional Golgi-dependent vesicular secretory pathway. Endocytosis of specific eukaryotic transporters has been studied more systematically and shown to involve ubiquitination, internalization, and sorting to early endosomes, followed by turnover in the multivesicular bodies (MVB)/lysosomes/vacuole system. In specific cases, internalized transporters have been shown to recycle back to the PM. However, the mechanisms of transporter forward trafficking and turnover have been overturned recently through systematic work in the model fungus Aspergillus nidulans. In this review, we present evidence that shows that transporter traffic to the PM takes place through Golgi bypass and transporter endocytosis operates via a mechanism that is distinct from that of recycling membrane cargoes essential for fungal growth. We discuss these findings in relation to adaptation to challenges imposed by cell polarity in fungi as well as in other eukaryotes and provide a rationale of why transporters and possibly other housekeeping membrane proteins ‘avoid’ routes of polar trafficking.


1976 ◽  
Vol 22 (2) ◽  
pp. 435-453
Author(s):  
N.J. Lane ◽  
L.S. Swales

In addition to demonstrating synaptic vesicles, staining with the zinc-iodide-osmium tetroxide (ZIO) method reveals the presence of positively reacting GERL membranes in association with the Golgi complex and lysosomes in the nerve cell bodies within ganglia from the locust Schistocerca gregaria and the gastropod molluscs, Limnaea stagnalis and Helix aspersa. A positive response to ZIO occurs in certain Golgi vesicles and saccules, in GERL (Golgi-endoplasmic-reticulum-lysosomes), in multivesicular bodies as well as residual bodies and in small vesicles and cisternae of axonal smooth endoplasmic reticllum (ER). The interrelationships between these organelles are considered in view of the similarity of the ZIO localization to phosphatase-rich sites in the neuronal perikarya and with respect to the possibility that components of the synaptic vesicles are formed in the Golgi region of the cell and migrate via the axonal smooth ER to the synaptic regions.


Author(s):  
M.F. Lalli ◽  
L. Hermo ◽  
Y. Clermont

The Leydig cells of the rat testis which are involved in testosterone production contain an abundance of smooth endoplasmic reticulum and mitochondria (Figs. 2,6). These cells also possess many peroxisomes, lysosomes and multivesicular bodies (MVB's). On the cell surface, the plasma membrane contains numerous short microvilli, small invaginations and large plasmalemmal folds which appear to engulf extracellular fluid. There are also many large dilated vacuoles adjacent to the cell surface. The purpose of the present study is to determine if these cells show endocytic activity and to differentiate by various cytochemical means lysosomal elements from peroxisomes.To identify lysosomes, tissue chopper sections of 2% glutaraldehyde-fixed testes (containing 2.5% dextran) were incubated in media containing thiamine monophosphate as a substrate (Lalli, 1983) to demonstrate the presence of acid phosphatase or in media containing P-nitrocatechol sulfate for the demonstration of arylsulfatase (Hopsu-Havu et al., 1967).


Author(s):  
S.R. Allegra

The respective roles of the ribo somes, endoplasmic reticulum, Golgi apparatus and perhaps nucleus in the synthesis and maturation of melanosomes is still the subject of some controversy. While the early melanosomes (premelanosomes) have been frequently demonstrated to originate as Golgi vesicles, it is undeniable that these structures can be formed in cells in which Golgi system is not found. This report was prompted by the findings in an essentially amelanotic human cellular blue nevus (melanocytoma) of two distinct lines of melanocytes one of which was devoid of any trace of Golgi apparatus while the other had normal complement of this organelle.


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