Membrane-bound and fluid-phase macromolecules enter separate prelysosomal compartments in absorptive cells of suckling rat ileum.
Open Access
- 1 September 1984
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Rockefeller University Press in The Journal of cell biology
- Vol. 99 (3), 909-917
- https://doi.org/10.1083/jcb.99.3.909
Abstract
The absorptive cell of the suckling rat ileum is specialized for the uptake and digestion of milk macromolecules from the intestinal lumen. The apical cytoplasm contains an extensive tubulocisternal system, a variety of vesicles and multivesicular bodies (MVB), and a giant phagolysosomal vacuole where digestion is completed. To determine if sorting of membrane-bound and fluid-phase macromolecules occurs in this elaborate endocytic system, we infused adsorptive and soluble tracers into ligated intestinal loops in vivo and examined their fates. Lysosomal compartments were identified by acid phosphatase histochemistry. Native ferritin and two ferritin-lectin conjugates that do not bind to ileal membranes (Con A, UEAI) served as soluble tracers. Horseradish peroxidase binds to ileal membranes and thus was not useful as a fluid-phase tracer in this system. Cationized ferritin and a lectin that binds to terminal B-D-galactosyl sites on ileal membranes (Ricinus communis agglutinin [RCAI]-ferritin) were used as tracer ligands. All tracers entered the wide apical invaginations of the luminal cell surface and were transported intracellularly. Membrane-bound tracers were found in coated pits and vesicles, and throughout the tubulocisternal system (where cationized ferritin is released from the membrane) and later, in large clear vesicles and MVB. In contrast, fluid-phase tracers appeared within 5 min in vesicles of various sizes and were not transported through the tubulocisternae, rather, they were concentrated in a separate population of vesicles of increasing size that contained amorphous dense material. Large clear vesicles, large dense vesicles, and MVB eventually fused with the giant supranuclear vacuole. Acid phosphatase activity was present in MVB and in the giant vacuole but was not present in most large vesicles or in the tubulocisternae. These results demonstrate that membrane-bound and soluble protein are transported to a common lysosomal destination via separate intracellular routes involving several distinct prelysosomal compartments.Keywords
This publication has 40 references indexed in Scilit:
- Weak bases and ionophores rapidly and reversibly raise the pH of endocytic vesicles in cultured mouse fibroblasts.The Journal of cell biology, 1982
- Rapid acidification of endocytic vesicles containing α2-macroglobulinCell, 1982
- Cell surface distribution and intracellular fate of asialoglycoproteins: a morphological and biochemical study of isolated rat hepatocytes and monolayer culturesThe Journal of cell biology, 1982
- Receptor‐Mediated Transport of IgG Across the Intestinal Epithelium of the Neonatal RatPublished by Wiley ,1982
- Adsorptive endocytosis of Semliki Forest virusJournal of Molecular Biology, 1980
- A cytological study of intestinal absorption in the suckling ratJournal of Anatomy, 1969
- MEMBRANE MODIFICATIONS IN THE APICAL ENDOCYTIC COMPLEX OF ILEAL EPITHELIAL CELLSThe Journal of cell biology, 1968
- The uptake of ferritin by ileal absorptive cells in suckling rats. an electron microscope studyJournal of Anatomy, 1968
- THF EARLY STAGES OF ABSORPTION OF INJECTED HORSERADISH PEROXIDASE IN THE PROXIMAL TUBULES OF MOUSE KIDNEY: ULTRASTRUCTURAL CYTOCHEMISTRY BY A NEW TECHNIQUEJournal of Histochemistry & Cytochemistry, 1966
- The Ingestion of Proteins and Colloidal Materials by Columnar Absorptive Cells of the Small Intestine in Suckling Rats and MiceThe Journal of cell biology, 1959