| Literature DB >> 3733886 |
J Swanson, B Yirinec, E Burke, A Bushnell, S C Silverstein.
Abstract
J774.2 macrophages cultured in medium containing 10 mg/ml sucrose accumulate the sugar by pinocytosis and become highly vacuolated, due to the sugar's osmotic effect within the vacuolar compartment. When such cells are incubated in medium containing 0.5 mg/ml invertase, the enzyme reaches the sucrose vacuoles by pinocytosis, then cleaves the sugar to more permeant monosaccharides. Within 4 hours, the vacuoles shrink to smaller, phase-dense organelles (Cohn and Ehrenreich, 1969, J. Exp. Med., 129:201). We have used this reversible expansion of the lysosomal compartment to address two questions: (1) Does the increased size of the lysosomal compartment affect pinocytic accumulation of solute, and (2) what is the fate of the vacuolar membrane and its soluble content during invertase-induced vacuole shrinkage? Using lucifer yellow (LY) as a probe for pinocytic fluid influx and efflux, we found that vacuolated cells accumulated 30-50% less LY than controls and returned to higher rates of pinocytosis after invertase-induced vacuole shrinkage. A similar reduction in LY accumulation was achieved after feeding cells latex beads to increase the size of the lysosomal compartment. Thus, treatments that increased the size of the lysosomal compartment reduced solute accumulation via pinocytosis. A dramatic shrinkage of LY-containing sucrose vacuoles followed pinocytosis of invertase. Despite this reduction in size of the LY-containing vacuoles, the overall rate of LY efflux did not increase significantly during invertase-induced vacuole collapse. Electron microscopy revealed that during shrinkage, the excess vacuolar membrane was compressed into whorled membranous organelles (residual bodies), with fluid markers (colloidal gold and, by inference, LY) trapped inside. The trapping of LY inside lysosomes as J774.2 macrophages returned to their normal dimensions indicates that nearly all of the surplus membrane contents were removed from circulation as well.Entities:
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Year: 1986 PMID: 3733886 DOI: 10.1002/jcp.1041280209
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Cell Physiol ISSN: 0021-9541 Impact factor: 6.384