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  3. Lectin binding patterns in two cultured endothelial cell types derived from bovine corpus luteum
 

Lectin binding patterns in two cultured endothelial cell types derived from bovine corpus luteum

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BORIS DOI
10.48350/46925
Publisher DOI
10.1007/BF01696152
PubMed ID
8852434
Description
Epithelial cells of different phenotypes derived from bovine corpus luteum have been studied intensively in our laboratory. In this study, specific lectin binding was examined for cells of type 1 and 3, which were defined as endothelial cells. In order to confirm differences in their glycocalyx at the light microscopic level, five biotinylated lectins were applied to postconfluent cultures which had been fixed with buffered paraformaldehyde or glutaraldehyde. Cells were not permeabilized with any detergent. Lectin binding was localized with a streptavidin-peroxidase complex which was visualized with two different techniques. The DAB technique detected peroxidase histochemically, while the immunogold technique used an anti-peroxidase gold complex together with silver amplification. Neither cell type 1 nor cell type 3 bound a particular lectin selectively, yet each cell type expressed a particular lectin binding pattern. With the DAB technique, diverse lectin binding patterns were seen, probably indicating either "outside" binding, i.e., a diffuse pattern, a lateral-cell-side pattern and a microvillus-like pattern, or "inside" binding, i.e., a diffuse pattern, and a granule-like pattern. With the immunogold technique, only "outside" binding was observed. In addition, the patterns of single cilia or of single circles were detected, the latter roughly representing 3-micron-sized binding sites for concanavalin A. When localizing them at the ultrastructural level, single circles corresponded with micron-sized discontinuities of the plasma membrane. Shedding vesicles were detected whose outer membrane was labelled with concanavalin A. Our results confirm the diversity of the two cell types under study. The "inside" lectin binding may be caused by way of transient plasma membrane openings and related to shedding of right-side out vesicles ("ectocytosis").
Date of Publication
1996-02
Publication Type
Article
Subject(s)
600 - Technology::610 - Medicine & health
Keyword(s)
Anatomy
•
Biochemistry (general)
•
Cell Biology
Language(s)
en
Contributor(s)
Herrmann, Gudrun
Institut für Anatomie
Missfelder, Hannah
Spanel-Borowski, Katharina
Additional Credits
Institut für Anatomie
Series
Histochemistry and cell biology
Publisher
Springer
ISSN
0948-6143
Access(Rights)
open.access
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