Literature DB >> 528589

An unusual cell surface modification: a double plasma membrane.

N J Lane, J B Harrison.   

Abstract

The occurrence of an unusual double plasma membrane structure is reported; it has been studied in conventional thin sections, after lanthanum-impregnation and with freeze-fracturing. This modification of the plasmalemma is found where the luminal cell membrane (I membrane) of gut microvilli in the haematophagous insect, Rhodnius prolixus, is surrounded by a second, outer membrane (O membrane), the 2 separated from one another by a highly regular I-O space of about 10 nm. Lanthanum impregnation reveals the presence of columns inclined at an angle, within this I-O space; as in the continuous junctions which link the lateral borders of these cells, these columns may maintain the very precise I-O distance. From the outer microvillar membranes radiate short spoke-like fibrils or sheets which encounter another more extensive system of myelin-like sheets. Freeze-fracturing reveals that the spoke-like sheets and the other ones which lie like a tube, around and parallel to the microvilli, contain linear ridges composed of particles, lying at random within layers of the myelin-like material which also extends into the lumen of the gut. The microvillar membanes, both O and I, fracture into faces containing rows of either PF particles or EF pits arranged as spiral ridges or grooves around the sides and across the tip of each microbillus. These could be the insertion sites of one or both of the I-O columns and spoke-like sheets while the sheets could represent a variant of peritrophic membrane. The double membrane may be a cellular device to increase the strength of the microvillar layer in these blood-sucking animals, since the cell layer must withstand great pressure owing to a sudden massive extension of the gut during a blood meal.

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Year:  1979        PMID: 528589     DOI: 10.1242/jcs.39.1.355

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Cell Sci        ISSN: 0021-9533            Impact factor:   5.285


  8 in total

Review 1.  On the mechanisms involved in biological heme crystallization.

Authors:  Renata Stiebler; Juliana B R Correa Soares; Bruno L Timm; José Roberto Silva; Flavia B Mury; Marilvia Dansa-Petretski; Marcus F Oliveira
Journal:  J Bioenerg Biomembr       Date:  2011-02       Impact factor: 2.945

2.  An insight into the transcriptome of the digestive tract of the bloodsucking bug, Rhodnius prolixus.

Authors:  José M C Ribeiro; Fernando A Genta; Marcos H F Sorgine; Raquel Logullo; Rafael D Mesquita; Gabriela O Paiva-Silva; David Majerowicz; Marcelo Medeiros; Leonardo Koerich; Walter R Terra; Clélia Ferreira; André C Pimentel; Paulo M Bisch; Daniel C Leite; Michelle M P Diniz; João Lídio da S G V Junior; Manuela L Da Silva; Ricardo N Araujo; Ana Caroline P Gandara; Sébastien Brosson; Didier Salmon; Sabrina Bousbata; Natalia González-Caballero; Ariel Mariano Silber; Michele Alves-Bezerra; Katia C Gondim; Mário Alberto C Silva-Neto; Georgia C Atella; Helena Araujo; Felipe A Dias; Carla Polycarpo; Raquel J Vionette-Amaral; Patrícia Fampa; Ana Claudia A Melo; Aparecida S Tanaka; Carsten Balczun; José Henrique M Oliveira; Renata L S Gonçalves; Cristiano Lazoski; Rolando Rivera-Pomar; Luis Diambra; Günter A Schaub; Elói S Garcia; Patrícia Azambuja; Glória R C Braz; Pedro L Oliveira
Journal:  PLoS Negl Trop Dis       Date:  2014-01-09

3.  Double membrane-bounded intestinal microvilli in Oncopeltus fasciatus.

Authors:  R J Baerwald; J B Delcarpio
Journal:  Cell Tissue Res       Date:  1983       Impact factor: 5.249

4.  Perimicrovillar membrane assembly: the fate of phospholipids synthesised by the midgut of Rhodnius prolixus.

Authors:  Paula Rêgo Bittencourt-Cunha; Livia Silva-Cardoso; Giselle Almeida de Oliveira; José Roberto da Silva; Alan Barbosa da Silveira; George Eduardo Gabriel Kluck; Michele Souza-Lima; Katia Calp Gondim; Marilvia Dansa-Petretsky; Carlos Peres Silva; Hatisaburo Masuda; Mario Alberto Cardoso da Silva Neto; Georgia Correa Atella
Journal:  Mem Inst Oswaldo Cruz       Date:  2013-06       Impact factor: 2.743

Review 5.  Arthropods Under Pressure: Stress Responses and Immunity at the Pathogen-Vector Interface.

Authors:  Kristin L Rosche; Lindsay C Sidak-Loftis; Joanna Hurtado; Elizabeth A Fisk; Dana K Shaw
Journal:  Front Immunol       Date:  2021-02-15       Impact factor: 8.786

6.  Proteome of the Triatomine Digestive Tract: From Catalytic to Immune Pathways; Focusing on Annexin Expression.

Authors:  Marcia Gumiel; Debora Passos de Mattos; Cecília Stahl Vieira; Caroline Silva Moraes; Carlos José de Carvalho Moreira; Marcelo Salabert Gonzalez; André Teixeira-Ferreira; Mariana Waghabi; Patricia Azambuja; Nicolas Carels
Journal:  Front Mol Biosci       Date:  2020-12-09

7.  Unsaturated glycerophospholipids mediate heme crystallization: biological implications for hemozoin formation in the kissing bug Rhodnius prolixus.

Authors:  Renata Stiebler; David Majerowicz; Jens Knudsen; Katia C Gondim; David W Wright; Timothy J Egan; Marcus F Oliveira
Journal:  PLoS One       Date:  2014-02-26       Impact factor: 3.240

Review 8.  Ironing out the Details: Exploring the Role of Iron and Heme in Blood-Sucking Arthropods.

Authors:  Shavonn R Whiten; Heather Eggleston; Zach N Adelman
Journal:  Front Physiol       Date:  2018-01-17       Impact factor: 4.566

  8 in total

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