4 resultados para relative spectrum distribution (RSD)
em National Center for Biotechnology Information - NCBI
Resumo:
To investigate the distribution of lipids through the Golgi complex, we analyzed the envelopes of several viruses that assemble in different subcompartments of the Golgi, as well as subcellular fractions. Our results indicate that each Golgi subcompartment has a distinct phospholipid composition due mainly to differences in the relative amounts of semilysobisphosphatidic acid (SLBPA), sphingomyelin, phosphatidylserine, and phosphatidylinositol. Interestingly, SLBPA is enriched in the adjacent Golgi networks compared with the Golgi stack, and this enrichment varies with cell type. The heterogeneous distribution of SLBPA through the Golgi complex suggests it may play an important role in the structure and/or function of this organelle.
Resumo:
Three phospholipase Ds (PLDs; EC 3.1.4.4) have been cloned from Arabidopsis, and they exhibit two distinct types of activities: polyphosphoinositide-requiring PLDβ and PLDγ, and polyphosphoinositide-independent PLDα. In subcellular fractions of Arabidopsis leaves, PLDα and PLDγ were both present in the plasma membrane, intracellular membranes, mitochondria, and clathrin-coated vesicles, but their relative levels differed in these fractions. In addition, PLDγ was detected in the nuclear fraction. In contrast, PLDβ was not detectable in any of the subcellular fractions. PLDα activity was higher in the metabolically more active organs such as flowers, siliques, and roots than in dry seeds and mature leaves, whereas the polyphosphoinositide-dependent PLD activity was greater in older, senescing leaves than in other organs. PLDβ mRNA accumulated at a lower level than the PLDα and PLDγ transcripts in most organs, and the expression pattern of the PLDβ mRNA also differed from that of PLDα and PLDγ in different organs. Collectively, these data demonstrated that PLDα, PLDβ, and PLDγ have different patterns of subcellular distribution and tissue expression in Arabidopsis. The present study also provides evidence for the presence of an additional PLD that is structurally more closely related to PLDγ than to the other two PLDs.
Resumo:
We report a previously unappreciated property of the signals that target organelle-specific proteins to their subcellular sites of action. Such targeting sequences are shown to be polymorphic. We discovered this polymorphism when we cloned the mitochondrial manganese-containing superoxide dismutase from cell lines of normal individuals and patients with genetic diseases of premature aging and compared their sequences to each other and to those previously reported. The polymorphism consists of a single nucleotide change in the region of the DNA that encodes the signal sequence such that either an alanine or valine is present. Subsequently, eight cell lines were analyzed and all three possible combinations of the two signal sequences were observed. Such signal sequence polymorphisms could result in diseases of distribution, where essential proteins are not properly targeted, thereby leading to absolute or relative deficiencies of critical enzymes within specific cellular compartments. Progeria and related syndromes may be diseases of distribution.
Resumo:
Adult Schistosoma mansoni blood flukes reside in the mesenteric veins of their vertebrate hosts, where they absorb immense quantities of glucose through their tegument by facilitated diffusion. Previously, we obtained S. mansoni cDNAs encoding facilitated-diffusion schistosome glucose transporter proteins 1 and 4 (SGTP1 and SGTP4) and localized SGTP1 to the basal membranes of the tegument and the underlying muscle. In this study, we characterize the expression and localization of SGTP4 during the schistosome life cycle. Antibodies specific to SGTP4 appear to stain only the double-bilayer, apical membranes of the adult parasite tegument, revealing an asymmetric distribution relative to the basal transporter SGTP1. On living worms, SGTP4 is available to surface biotinylation, suggesting that it is exposed at the hose-parasite interface. SGTP4 is detected shortly after the transformation of free-living, infectious cercariae into schistosomula and coincides with the appearance of the double membrane. Within 15 min after transformation, anti-SGTP4 staining produces a bright, patchy distribution at the surface of schistosomula, which becomes contiguous over the entire surface of the schistosomula by 24 hr after transformation. SGTP4 is not detected in earlier developmental stages (eggs, sporocysts, and cercariae) that do not possess the specialized double membrane. Thus, SGTP4 appears to be expressed only in the mammalian stages of the parasite's life cycle and specifically localized within the host-interactive, apical membranes of the tegument.