Literature DB >> 23099641

Apical vacuole formation by gastric parietal cells in primary culture: effect of low extracellular Ca2+.

Stephanie L Nakada1, James M Crothers, Terry E Machen, John G Forte.   

Abstract

In primary culture, the gastric parietal cell's deeply invaginated apical membrane, seen in microscopy by phalloidin binding to F-actin (concentrated in microvilli and a subapical web), is engulfed into the cell, separated from the basolateral membrane (which then becomes the complete plasma membrane), and converted, from a lacy interconnected system of canaliculi, into several separate vacuoles. In this study, vacuolar morphology was achieved by 71% of parietal cells 8 h after typical collagenase digestion of rabbit gastric mucosa, but the tight-junctional protein zonula occludens-1 (ZO-1) was completely delocalized after ∼2 h, when cells were ready for culturing. Use of low-Ca(2+) medium (4 mM EGTA) to release cells quickly from gastric glands yielded parietal cells in which ZO-1 was seen in a small spot or ring, a localization quickly lost if these cells were then cultured in normal Ca(2+) but remaining up to 20 h if they were cultured in low Ca(2+). The cells in low Ca(2+) mostly retained, at 20 h, an intermediate morphology of many bulbous canalicular expansions ("prevacuoles"), seemingly with narrow interconnections. Histamine stimulation of 20-h cells with intermediate morphology caused colocalization of proton-pumping H-K-ATPase with canaliculi and prevacuoles but little swelling of those structures, consistent with a remaining apical pore through which secreted acid could escape. Apparent canalicular interconnections, lack of stimulated swelling, and lingering ZO-1 staining indicate inhibition of membrane fission processes that separate apical from basolateral membrane and vacuoles from each other, suggesting an important role for extracellular Ca(2+) in these, and possibly other, endocytotic processes.

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Year:  2012        PMID: 23099641      PMCID: PMC3532493          DOI: 10.1152/ajpcell.00244.2012

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Am J Physiol Cell Physiol        ISSN: 0363-6143            Impact factor:   4.249


  38 in total

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  3 in total

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Authors:  James M Crothers; John G Forte; Terry E Machen
Journal:  Am J Physiol Gastrointest Liver Physiol       Date:  2016-02-04       Impact factor: 4.052

2.  Gastric Acid Secretion from Parietal Cells Is Mediated by a Ca2+ Efflux Channel in the Tubulovesicle.

Authors:  Nirakar Sahoo; Mingxue Gu; Xiaoli Zhang; Neel Raval; Junsheng Yang; Michael Bekier; Raul Calvo; Samarjit Patnaik; Wuyang Wang; Greyson King; Mohammad Samie; Qiong Gao; Sasmita Sahoo; Sinju Sundaresan; Theresa M Keeley; Yanzhuang Wang; Juan Marugan; Marc Ferrer; Linda C Samuelson; Juanita L Merchant; Haoxing Xu
Journal:  Dev Cell       Date:  2017-05-08       Impact factor: 12.270

3.  Myosin IIB and F-actin control apical vacuolar morphology and histamine-induced trafficking of H-K-ATPase-containing tubulovesicles in gastric parietal cells.

Authors:  Paramasivam Natarajan; James M Crothers; Jared E Rosen; Stephanie L Nakada; Milap Rakholia; Curtis T Okamoto; John G Forte; Terry E Machen
Journal:  Am J Physiol Gastrointest Liver Physiol       Date:  2014-02-27       Impact factor: 4.052

  3 in total

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