Interleukin 1 beta is localized in the cytoplasmic ground substance but is largely absent from the Golgi apparatus and plasma membranes of stimulated human monocytes.
Open Access
- 1 February 1988
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Rockefeller University Press in The Journal of Experimental Medicine
- Vol. 167 (2), 389-407
- https://doi.org/10.1084/jem.167.2.389
Abstract
The subcellular location of IL-1 beta was determined using a postsectioning immunoelectron microscopic method on ultrathin frozen sections of human monocytes stimulated with LPS. This methodology permits access of antibody probes to all sectioned intracellular compartments, and their visualization at high resolution. Staining was performed with a rabbit antibody that specifically recognized amino acids 197-215 in the 33-kD IL-1 beta precursor molecule, followed by affinity-purified goat anti-rabbit IgG conjugated to 10 nm colloidal gold particles. Approximately 90% of the IL-1 beta antigens were localized in the ground substance of the cytoplasm at 4 or 20 h after activation, when both intracellular and extracellular accumulation of IL-1 beta was well underway. No significant IL-1 beta staining was observed on the outer cell membrane, nor within the lumens of the endoplasmic reticulum (ER), the Golgi apparatus, or secretory vesicles. In contrast, lysozyme was localized in the ER and dense secretory granules using these methods. Our results suggest that IL-1 beta is not anchored on the plasma membrane, and that its secretion occurs by a novel mechanism that does not use a secretory leader sequence, nor the classical secretory pathway involving the ER and Golgi apparatus.This publication has 39 references indexed in Scilit:
- The signal sequence of ovalbumin is located near the NH2 terminus.Journal of Biological Chemistry, 1982
- Fluorescence Microscopy: Reduced Photobleaching of Rhodamine and Fluorescein Protein Conjugates by n -Propyl GallateScience, 1982
- Variety in the level of gene control in eukaryotic cellsNature, 1982
- Relationship between production and release of lymphocyte-activating factor (interleukin 1) by murine macrophagesCellular Immunology, 1981
- The role of subcellular factors in pulmonary immune function: physicochemical characterization of two distinct species of lymphocyte-activating factor produced by rabbit alveolar macrophages.The Journal of Immunology, 1981
- Purification to apparent homogeneity of murine interleukin 1.The Journal of Immunology, 1981
- Immunochemistry on ultrathin frozen sectionsJournal of Molecular Histology, 1980
- The fibronexus: a transmembrane association of fibronectin-containing fibers and bundles of 5 nm microfilaments in hamster and human fibroblastsCell, 1979
- Intracellular Aspects of the Process of Protein SynthesisScience, 1975
- PERIODATE-LYSINE-PARAFORMALDEHYDE FIXATIVE A NEW FIXATIVE FOR IMMUNOELECTRON MICROSCOPYJournal of Histochemistry & Cytochemistry, 1974