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Query: UNIPROT:P02794 (ferritin)
17,525 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Salivary gland striated duct cells play an important role in the modification of primary saliva by secretion and reabsorption of electrolytes, and secretion of glycoproteins. Recent observations have shown that in the rat parotid gland these cells are able to internalize exogenous proteins, e.g., horseradish peroxidase and ferritin, from the ductal lumen. In rats made diabetic by injection of streptozotocin, dense vacuoles and crystalloids are present in the apical cytoplasm of parotid striated duct cells. In this study we utilized electron microscopic immunocytochemistry to determine if these vacuoles and crystalloids contain acinar secretory proteins. At various times after induction of diabetes by streptozotocin (65 mg/kg), the parotid glands were fixed in a glutaraldehyde-formaldehyde mixture, postfixed in OsO4, and embedded in epoxy resin. Thin sections were immunolabeled with antibodies to protein B1 (Ball et al., 1988) and alpha-amylase (Baum et al., 1982) using a modification of the Protein A-gold technique (Bendayan and Duhr, 1986). With antibody to B1, label was localized in the secretory granules of acinar and intercalated duct cells of both normal and diabetic rats. In striated duct cells of diabetic rats, label was present over the electron-dense vacuoles but not over the crystalloids. Since crystalloids appear to form within the vacuoles, their lack of reactivity may indicate degradation of the internalized protein. The same distribution of label was found with antibody to amylase except for the intercalated duct granules, which were unlabeled in both control and diabetic animals. These results demonstrate that striated duct cells take up salivary proteins from the lumen and that the endocytosis of some secretory proteins from the saliva may be a significant function of these cells in certain pathological conditions.
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PMID:Endocytosis of parotid salivary proteins by striated duct cells in streptozotocin-diabetic rats. 297 65

A method using low concentrations of formaldehyde and dithiothreitol was applied to obtain 'right-side out' luminal plasmalemma-derived vesicles from bovine aortic endothelial cells (EC) in culture, and from human umbilical vein and bovine or porcine aortas perfused ex vivo with the vesiculation solution. Vesicle formation and shedding were examined by phase-contrast microscopy and by transmission (TEM) and scanning electron microscopy (SEM). Vesicles showed the characteristic trilaminar pattern of the unit membrane and did not contain cellular organelles. As detected in freeze-fracture preparations, vesicle membrane displayed intramembrane particles and filipin-detectable cholesterol. Like EC plasmalemma, vesicle surface was heavily stained by Ruthenium Red and bound under a normal pattern cationized ferritin and ferritin hydrazide. As indicated by lectin agglutination assays and by ultrastructural cytochemistry, vesicles maintained on their ectodomains glycoconjugates bearing monosaccharides such as N-acetyl-neuraminic acid, beta-N-acetylglucosamine and beta-D-galactose, and expressed 5'-nucleotidase activity. The electrophoretic profiles of externally disposed 125I-labelled polypeptides of vesicles were found to be similar to those of intact EC. Chemically-induced vesiculation appears as a suitable method to obtain EC plasmalemma for studying its composition and functions in various vascular beds.
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PMID:Endothelial cell plasma membrane obtained by chemically induced vesiculation. 359 39

A procedure has been developed for the immunoelectron microscopic localization of intracellular antigens on thin-sectioned tissues. The tissues were fixed in a periodate-lysine-paraformaldehyde solution or a formaldehyde-glutaraldehyde combination and embedded in the acrylate-methacrylate mixture, Lowicryl K4M (Polaron), which was polymerized under ultraviolet irradiation at -35 degrees C. Thin sections were mounted on gold grids, immunostained using an indirect method with ferritin-labeled antibodies, and, optionally, counterstained with osmium tetroxide and/or lead citrate and uranyl acetate. The procedure provided good morphologic preservation of the cell architecture in adult and embryonic heart, and skeletal and smooth muscle tissue, as well as nonmuscle cells. At the same time it retained the antigenicities of several contractile proteins, including myosin, tropomyosin, actin, and alpha-actinin. The method has advantages over en bloc staining techniques in that the problem of antibody penetration into the cells is eliminated and careful controls can be performed on adjacent sections. This technique will be useful for localizing, at the ultrastructural level, contractile and other selected proteins in a variety of muscle and non-muscle cells. Details of the new protocol and a description of the results of using antibody against the contractile protein, alpha-actinin, are given.
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PMID:Immunoelectron microscopic localization of alpha-actinin on Lowicryl-embedded thin-sectioned tissues. 388 38

A general method is described whereby an intracellular macromolecule can be specifically stained with its antibody conjugated to ferritin. In this method cells or cell organelles are fixed, embedded in bovine serum albumin cross-linked with glutaraldehyde or formaldehyde, and then sectioned. This procedure preserves antigenic determinants as well as the cellular ultrastructure. The application of the ferritin-antibody conjugate to the section produces specific staining of the exposed antigen.
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PMID:A general method for the specific staining of intracellular antigens with ferritin-antibody conjugates. 418 88

The efficiency of small enzyme-labeled tracers for the demonstration of intracellular antigen was investigated in tissues fixed with picric acid-formaldehyde. The influence of fixation on the immunological activity was tested in vitro by radial immunodiffusion. The experimental model consisted of newborn pig jejunum after absorption of ferritin from the intestinal lumen. Ferritin was located after 1 hr in vacuoles scattered in the cytoplasm of the absorptive cells and represented an easily recognizable intracellular antigen. After immunohistochemical treatments with antiferritin preparations, the distribution of labeling enzyme reaction product was examined by morphometry. The ratio of the labeled volume to the total volume of vacuoles containing ferritin indicated the degree of specific labeling of the antigen. In both direct and indirect methods, the degree of labeling was low when enzyme-labeled immunoglobulin G was the tracer. With antigen binding fragments (Fab), the labeling was significantly increased. In the indirect method, the degree of labeling was influenced by the first-step reagents. Onlywhen the serum titer was optimum was a high degree of labeling obtained. With antigen binding fragments or papain-digested serum the effect of the titer was negligible and maximum labeling was achieved. In both methods, with peroxidase as the labeling enzyme, a diffuse nonspecific deposition of reaction product was observed. This could be avoided by using cytochrome c instead.
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PMID:Ultrastructural localization of intracellular antigen using enzyme-labeled antibody fragments. 432 13

The sensitivity of detection of proteins by immunolabelling embedded and sectioned material depends upon retention of antigenicity during tissue processing. Losses in pea seed storage protein antigenicity have been assessed using a solid phase radioimmunoassay. Storage proteins adsorbed to wells of microtiter plates were treated with the various "tissue preparation" steps and reacted with 125I-antibodies to the storage proteins. The glutaraldehyde or formaldehyde fixation steps caused approximately 60% and 30% loss in antigenicity, respectively. With each subsequent preparative step, losses accumulate and following treatment with Spurr's epoxy resin reached approximately 85% and 90%, respectively. However, if Lowicryl K4M, a methacrylate-acrylate embedding medium was used, losses were retained at approximately 70% and 60%, respectively. These observations have been verified on sections of embedded material using two labelling procedures, with protein A-gold and ferritin as the markers.
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PMID:Post-embedding immunolabelling. Some effects of tissue preparation on the antigenicity of plant proteins. 618 29

Three methods are described for direct post-fracture, post-shadow labelling of individual classes of intramembrane particles (IMPs) in freeze-fracture replicas of biological membranes. The P-face IMPs corresponding to the acetylcholine receptor complexes (AChRs) of vertebrate neuroeffector junctions are identified by post-replication labelling with ferritin-antibody complexes and with neurotoxin-biotin-avidin-colloidal gold affinity ligands. (The freeze-etch nomenclature of Branton et al., 1975, is used in this report.) These post-shadow labelling techniques resemble conventional en bloc labelling techniques except that the labelling reagents must penetrate a thin but discontinuous layer of platinum superimposed on the molecules of interest. In the 'sectioned labelled-replica technique', the replicated and labelled tissues are stained, embedded in plastic and sectioned parallel to the replica-tissue interfaces. In the direct 'labelled-replica techniques', the replicated and labelled samples are freeze-dried or critical point dried, the labelled surfaces are stabilized by carbon coating, and the underlying tissues are dissolved, allowing the labelled-replicas to be examined as conventional freeze-fracture replicas. The unshadowed side of each AChR IMP is shown to retain sufficient biochemical information to permit both immunospecific and neurotoxin specific labelling despite formaldehyde fixation, freezing, fracturing, platinum shadowing, and thawing in aqueous media. A new mixed ferricyanide-osmium staining method reveals electron opaque structures spanning the membrane bilayer in the same size, number and distribution as the labelled IMPs. These experiments demonstrate the feasibility of identifying individual IMPs in freeze-fracture replicas and may allow the identification of specific membrane lesions in human disease.
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PMID:Labelled-replica techniques: post-shadow labelling of intramembrane particles in freeze-fracture replicas. 618 75

Fixation by periodate/lysine/paraformaldehyde, a method purported to cross-link specifically plasma membrane glycoproteins, was evaluated using Novikoff rat ascites hepatocellular carcinoma cells. Cells were treated with periodate/lysine, periodate/glycine, and periodate/lysine/paraformaldehyde and subsequently reduced with NaB3H4. The glycoproteins labeled with 3H were resolved by polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis in the presence of sodium dodecyl sulfate and visualized by fluorography. The effects of reactant concentrations on 3H-labeling of cellular components, cell viability, and cross-linkage of 3H-labeled proteins were examined. The effect of increasing the localized density of plasma membrane glycoproteins on the extent of cross-linkage by periodate and lysine was investigated using cells in which patching of the plasma membrane glycoproteins had been induced by ferritin-conjugated concanavalin A/rabbit antiferritin antiserum. Also investigated was the periodate-independent to mixtures of periodate and lysine or glycine. Results of these studies did not support a mechanism of cross-linking involving reaction between the free base lysin and aldehyde groups on periodate oxidized carbohydrate residues but suggested a complex interaction between periodate oxidized plasma membrane glycoproteins and polymeric complexes of lysine and formaldehyde.U
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PMID:Evaluation of periodate/lysine/paraformaldehyde fixation as a method for cross-linking plasma membrane glycoproteins. 626 47

An isolated perfused liver system was used to study the distribution of asialoglycoprotein (ASGP) binding sites on rat hepatocyte cell surfaces. The number of surface receptors was quantitated by monitoring clearance of 125I-labeled ligands from the perfusate medium under two conditions that blocked their internalization: low temperature (less than 5 degrees C) or brief formaldehyde fixation. The cell surface distribution of binding sites was visualized in the electron microscope with either asialoorosomucoid covalently coupled to horseradish peroxidase (ASOR-HRP) or lactosaminated ferritin (Lac-Fer), both of which were bound with similar kinetics and to similar extents as ASOR itself. At low temperature or after prefixation, ASGP binding sites were present over much of the sinusoidal cell surface, but were concentrated most heavily over coated pits. Quantitation of ligand distribution at 4 degrees C with Lac-Fer gave an approximately 70-fold greater density of ferritin particles over coated membrane than over uncoated regions. We obtained no evidence for gradual movement of ASGP receptors into or out of coated pits within the time-course of our experiments. Finally, the number and distribution of cell surface binding sites was unaffected by previous exposure to ASOR or by inhibition of endocytic vesicle-lysosome fusion and ASOR degradation at 16 degrees C.
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PMID:Galactose-specific recognition system of mammalian liver: receptor distribution on the hepatocyte cell surface. 627 Jan 58

The surface anionic site distribution on membranes of a monoclonal antibody-producing hybridoma cell line, and its two parental cells: normal spleen cells of immunized BALB/c mice and cells from a mouse myeloma line (NS-1), were investigated with the aid of the cationized ferritin (CF) labelling method, following glutaraldehyde/formaldehyde fixation of cells. The patch-like CF distribution on the hybridoma cells is similar to that of the NS-1 myeloma cells, but distinct from the even and continuous CF distribution of the immunized and nonimmunized normal spleen lymphocytes. The similarity in the formation of patch-like CF heaps, both on myeloma and hybrid cells is discussed in respect to the surface charge characteristic determined by cell fusion.
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PMID:Distribution of surface anionic sites on mouse hybrid myelomas. 662 23


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