| Literature DB >> 10471396 |
L Campbell1, A J Hollins, A Al-Eid, G R Newman, C von Ruhland, M Gumbleton.
Abstract
Caveolae are omega-shaped invaginations of the plasmalemma possessing a cytoplasmic membrane protein coat of caveolin. Caveolae are present in the in vivo alveolar epithelial type I (ATI) lung cell, but absent in its progenitor, the alveolar epithelial type II (ATII) cell. In primary culture ATII cells grown on a plastic substratum acquire with time an ATI-"like" phenotype. We demonstrate that freshly isolated rat ATII cells lack caveolae and expression of caveolin-1 (a critical caveolae structural protein). As the ATII cells acquire an ATI-like phenotype in primary culture caveolin-1 expression increases, with caveolin-1 signal at 192 h postseeding up to 50-fold greater than at 60 h; caveolae were morphologically evident only after 132 h. When maintaining the differentiated ATII phenotype with time, i.e., culture upon collagen with an apical interface of air, a temporal increase in caveolin-1 expression was not observed, with only very faint signals evident even at 192 h postseeding; at no time did these cultures display caveolae. In late primary ATII cultures caveolin-1 expression and caveolae biogenesis occur as a function of in vitro transformation from the ATII to the ATI-like phenotype. The results have broad implications for the in vitro study of the role of caveolae and caveolin in alveolar epithelial cell biology. Copyright 1999 Academic Press.Entities:
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Year: 1999 PMID: 10471396 DOI: 10.1006/bbrc.1999.1280
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Biochem Biophys Res Commun ISSN: 0006-291X Impact factor: 3.575