Amphibian yolk platelet ultrastructure visualized by freeze-etching


Autoria(s): Leonard, R; Deamer, DW; Armstrong, P
Cobertura

1 - 24

Data(s)

01/01/1972

Resumo

Amphibian yolk platelets are composed of lipoprotein subunits arranged in an ordered crystalline structure. Freeze-etch electron microscopy of isolated Xenopus platelets provides a direct view of the structure of the crystal and aids the interpretation of fracture phenomena in lipoprotein systems. A study has been made both of fracture faces and of faces produced by fracturing and etching following partial dissolution of platelets in electrolyte solutions. In freeze-etch replicas, main body crystals appear to be composed of dimers. Rectangular and semihexagonal patterns are seen in fracture faces. Rectangular patterns are seen also in faces produced by partial dissolution and revealed by fracturing and etching. Dissolution faces with possible semihexagonal patterns are distinct but infrequent. Based on this evidence, a new closest-packing model of platelet structure is proposed using lipovitellin dimers as building blocks, with one molecule of the second major protein component, phosvitin, associated with each monomer of the lipovitellin dimer. © 1972 Academic Press, Inc.

Formato

application/pdf

Identificador

qt4zm959xk

http://www.escholarship.org/uc/item/4zm959xk

Idioma(s)

english

Publicador

eScholarship, University of California

Direitos

public

Fonte

Leonard, R; Deamer, DW; & Armstrong, P. (1972). Amphibian yolk platelet ultrastructure visualized by freeze-etching. Journal of Ultrasructure Research, 40(1-2), 1 - 24. doi: 10.1016/S0022-5320(72)80019-4. UC Davis: Retrieved from: http://www.escholarship.org/uc/item/4zm959xk

Tipo

article