960 resultados para Preembedding Immunoelectron Microscopy
Resumo:
The pathogenic fungus Paracoccidioides brasiliensis causes paracoccidioidomycosis, a pulmonary mycosis acquired by inhalation of fungal airborne propagules, which may disseminate to several organs and tissues, leading to a severe form of the disease. Adhesion to and invasion of host cells are essential steps involved in the infection and dissemination of pathogens. Furthermore, pathogens use their surface molecules to bind to host extracellular matrix components to establish infection. Here, we report the characterization of the glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate dehydrogenase (GAPDH) of P. brasiliensis as an adhesin, which can be related to fungus adhesion and invasion. The P. brasiliensis GAPDH was overexpressed in Escherichia coli, and polyclonal antibody against this protein was obtained. By immunoelectron microscopy and Western blot analysis, GAPDH was detected in the cytoplasm and the cell wall of the yeast phase of P. brasiliensis. The recombinant GAPDH was found to bind to fibronectin, laminin, and type I collagen in ligand far-Western blot assays. of special note, the treatment of P. brasiliensis yeast cells with anti-GAPDH polyclonal antibody and the incubation of pneumocytes with the recombinant protein promoted inhibition of adherence and internalization of P. brasiliensis to those in vitro-cultured cells. These observations indicate that the cell wall-associated form of the GAPDH in P. brasiliensis could be involved in mediating binding of fungal cells to fibronectin, type I collagen, and laminin, thus contributing to the adhesion of the microorganism to host tissues and to the dissemination of infection.
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The authors studied the distribution of Paracoccidioides brasiliensis antigen(s) in human skin and oral mucosa. In biopsies obtained from untreated patients showing the chronic form of the disease, the authors demonstrated the P. brasiliensis antigen using two polyclonal immune sera raised in rabbits, one against the exoantigens of P. brasiliensis and the other against a 43-kDa glycoprotein. Langerhans' cells were detected through double immunolabeling using an anti-S100 protein monoclonal antibody. Double labeling immunohistochemistry showed that both of the immune sera labeled the yeast cells in the center of the granuloma and those transmigrating through the epithelial layer equally well. Granulomas exhibited the P. brasiliensis antigen permeating cells, mainly at the periphery of the granulomatous inflammation. The P. brasiliensis antigen(s) accumulated in the macrophages but not in the Langerhans' cells. P. brasiliensis antigens, detected by antiserum against parasite exoantigens, were also deposited between basal keratinocytes, but not in the granular cells, in 47% of the biopsies. P. brasiliensis antigens, as assessed by immunoelectron microscopic techniques, are present in the cytoplasm of the yeast cells in the host tissues. Antigens are transported to the cell membrane and later excreted through the cell wall. Antigenic deposits are also seen at the fungus-host interface.
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Centrine sind Mitglieder einer hoch konservierten Überfamilie von Ca2+-bindenden Proteinen mit EF-Hand Motiven. Bislang sind vier Centrin-Isoformen bei Säugern beschrieben worden, die in diversen Zellen in der Regel mit Centriolen von Centrosomen oder Centrosomen-verwandten Strukturen assoziiert sind. Im Rahmen der vorliegenden Dissertation wurden die vier Centrin-Isoformen bezüglich der Expression in verschiedenen Geweben untersucht. Dabei lag der Hauptfokus auf Untersuchungen der Centrine in den Photorezeptorzellen der Retina. Analysen auf subzellulärer Ebene brachten Klarheit über die differenzielle Lokalisation der verschiedenen Isoformen in der Retina. Mit Hilfe von verschiedenen Methoden konnten Wechselwirkungspartner in der Retina identifiziert werden, die eine Rolle in der visuellen Signaltransduktionskaskade spielen. Dabei könnten Centrine einem Regelmechanismus angehören, der wichtige Translokationsprozesse dieser Proteine regelt. In den Photorezeptorzellen der Säugetierretina werden die vier Isoformen exprimiert, die in den Strukturen des Cilienapparates differenziell lokalisiert sind. Dabei beschränkt sich ihre Lokalisation entweder auf den Basalkörper (Centrin 4), auf das Verbindungscilium (Centrin 1) oder sie sind in beiden Strukturen zu finden (Centrin 2 und 3). In den nicht- Photorezeptorzellen der Retina sind die Isoformen Centrin 2 und 3 zudem an den Centriolen der Centrosomen lokalisiert. In der vorliegenden Arbeit wurde zum ersten Mal gezeigt, dass alle Centrin-Isoformen in ein und derselben Zelle, der Photorezeptorzelle, koexprimiert werden und dabei subzellulär kolokalisiert sind. Im Weiteren konnte die ubiquitäre Expression von Centrin 2 und 3 in allen untersuchten Geweben an Centrosomen bestätigt werden. Centrin 1 und 4 hingegen werden nur in Geweben mit Cilien-tragenden Zellen exprimiert. Die Funktion der Centrine wird nicht nur durch Bindung von Ca2+, sondern auch durch Phosphorylierungen reguliert. Alle Sequenzen der Centrine weisen diverse mögliche Phosphorylierungsstellen für unterschiedliche Proteinkinasen auf. Die Ergebnisse aller durchgeführten in vitro und ex vivo Phosphorylierungs „Assays“ zeigen eine licht-abhängige Phosphorylierung der Centrin-Isoformen in der Retina. Dabei war in der dunkel-adaptierten Retina die Phosphorylierung vor allem von Centrin 1 und 2 erhöht. Weiterführende Experimente mit Kinase-Inhibitoren wiesen darauf hin, dass vor allem die Proteinkinase CKII eine bedeutende Rolle bei der Centrin-Phosphorylierung in der Retina einnimmt. Centrine sind die ersten Cytoskelettkomponenten, deren Phosphorylierungsgrad lichtabhängig moduliert wird. Diese Ergebnisse weisen auf einen Signalweg, der zwischen der visuellen Signaltransduktionskaskade und der Regulation der Centrin-Aktivität vermittelt, hin. Bei der Suche nach Centrin-Bindungspartnern gelang mit Hilfe von Centrin 1 Blot „Overlay Assays“ der Durchbruch. Der neuartige Ansatz zeigte, dass ausschließlich Ca2+-aktiviertes Centrin 1 mit Proteinen aus der Retina interagierte. Nach der Identifikation eines 37 kDa-Proteins als die β-Untereinheit des visuellen G-Proteins Transducin wurden die Untersuchungen auf diesen Interaktionspartner fokussiert. Die Ergebnisse der hier durchgeführten biochemischen und biophysikalischen Protein-Protein Interaktionsexperimente zeigen insgesamt folgendes: ⇒ Alle vier Centrine interagieren mit Transducin, wobei Centrin 3 die geringste Affinität zu Transducin hat. ⇒ Die Assemblierung der Centrin•G-Protein-Komplexe ist strikt Ca2+-abhängig. ⇒ Die Centrine binden sowohl an das isolierte Gtβγ-Heterodimer als auch an den heterotrimeren Gt-holo-Proteinkomplex, nicht aber an Gtα. Die quantitativen immunoelektronenmikroskopischen Analysen zeigen im Weiteren, dass sich die Komplexe aus Transducin und Centrin 1 bis 3 wahrscheinlich in einer Subdomäne des Verbindungsciliums der Photorezeptorzellen ausbilden. Dabei dürfte die Ausbildung der Komplexe an der Regulation der lichtinduzierten Translokation von Transducin zwischen Innen- und Außensegment der Photorezeptorzellen beteiligt sein. Dieser Translokationsmechanismus wird als ein wichtiger Bestandteil der Langzeitadaption der Signaltransduktionskaskade der Säugerretina diskutiert. Der neuartige Regelmechanismus der molekularen Translokationen, in dem Centrine involviert sind, ist außergewöhnlich und dürfte über die speziellen Photorezeptorzellen hinaus von weit reichender Bedeutung sein.
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Intraflagellar transport (IFT) is required for the assembly and maintenance of cilia. In this study we analyzed the subcellular localization of IFT proteins in retinal cells by correlative high-resolution immunofluorescence and immunoelectron microscopy. The rod photoreceptor cell was used as a model system to analyze protein distribution in cilia. To date the expression of IFT proteins has been described in the ciliary region without deciphering the precise spatial and temporal subcellular localization of IFT proteins, which was the focus of my work. rnThe establishment of the pre-embedding immunoelectron method was an important first step for the present doctoral thesis. Results of this work reveal the differential localization of IFT20, IFT52, IFT57, IFT88, IFT140 in sub-ciliary compartments and also their presence in non-ciliary compartments of retinal photoreceptor cells. Furthermore, the localization of IFT20, IFT52 and IFT57 in dendritic processes of non-ciliated neurons indicates that IFT protein complexes also operate in non-ciliated cells and may participate in intracellular vesicle trafficking in eukaryotic cells in general.rnIn addition, we have investigated the involvement of IFT proteins in the ciliogenesis of vertebrate photoreceptor cilia. Electron microscopy analyses revealed six morphologically distinct stages. The first stages are characterized by electron dense centriolar satellites and a ciliary vesicle, while the formation of a ciliary shaft and of the light sensitive outer segment disks are features of the later stages. IFT proteins were expressed during all stages of photoreceptor cell development and found to be associated with the ciliary apparatus. In addition to the centriole and basal body IFT proteins are present in the photoreceptor cytoplasm, associated with centriolar satellites, post-Golgi vesicles and with the ciliary vesicle. Therewith the data provide an evidence for the involvement of IFT proteins during ciliogenesis, including the formation of the ciliary vesicle and the elongation of the primary cilium of photoreceptor cells. Moreover, the cytoplasmic localization of IFT proteins in the absence of a ciliary shaft in early stages of ciliogenesis indicates roles of IFT proteins beyond their well-established function for IFT in mature cilia and flagella. rn
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Lung stereology has a long and successful tradition. From mice to men, the application of new stereological methods at several levels (alveoli, parenchymal cells, organelles, proteins) has led to new insights into normal lung architecture, parenchymal remodelling in emphysema-like pathology, alveolar type II cell hyperplasia and hypertrophy and intracellular surfactant alterations as well as distribution of surfactant proteins. The Euler number of the network of alveolar openings, estimated using physical disectors at the light microscopic level, is an unbiased and direct estimate of alveolar number. Surfactant-producing alveolar type II cells can be counted and sampled for local size estimation with physical disectors at a high magnification light microscopic level. The number of their surfactant storage organelles, lamellar bodies, can be estimated using physical disectors at the EM level. By immunoelectron microscopy, surfactant protein distribution can be analysed with the relative labelling index. Together with the well-established classical stereological methods, these design-based methods now allow for a complete quantitative phenotype analysis in lung development and disease, including the structural characterization of gene-manipulated mice, at the light and electron microscopic level.
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RATIONALE: ABCA3 mutations are known to cause fatal surfactant deficiency. OBJECTIVE: We studied ABCA3 protein expression in full-term newborns with unexplained respiratory distress syndrome (URDS) as well as the relevance of ABCA3 mutations for surfactant homeostasis. METHODS: Lung tissue of infants with URDS was analyzed for the expression of ABCA3 in type II pneumocytes. Coding exons of the ABCA3 gene were sequenced. Surfactant protein expression was studied by immunohistochemistry, immunoelectron microscopy, and Western blotting. RESULTS: ABCA3 protein expression was found to be greatly reduced or absent in 10 of 14 infants with URDS. Direct sequencing revealed distinct ABCA3 mutations clustering within vulnerable domains of the ABCA3 protein. A strong expression of precursors of surfactant protein B (pro-SP-B) but only low levels and aggregates of mature surfactant protein B (SP-B) within electron-dense bodies in type II pneumocytes were found. Within the matrix of electron-dense bodies, we detected precursors of SP-C (pro-SP-C) and cathepsin D. SP-A was localized in small intracellular vesicles, but not in electron-dense bodies. SP-A and pro-SP-B were shown to accumulate in the intraalveolar space, whereas mature SP-B and SP-C were reduced or absent, respectively. CONCLUSION: Our data provide evidence that ABCA3 mutations are associated not only with a deficiency of ABCA3 but also with an abnormal processing and routing of SP-B and SP-C, leading to severe alterations of surfactant homeostasis and respiratory distress syndrome. To identify infants with hereditary ABCA3 deficiency, we suggest a combined diagnostic approach including immunohistochemical, ultrastructural, and mutation analysis.
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Pulmonary surfactant prevents alveolar collapse via reduction of surface tension. In contrast to human neonates, rats are born with saccular lungs. Therefore, rat lungs serve as a model for investigation of the surfactant system during postnatal alveolar formation. We hypothesized that this process is associated with characteristic structural and biochemical surfactant alterations. We aimed to discriminate changes related to alveolarization from those being either invariable or follow continuous patterns of postnatal changes. Secreted active (mainly tubular myelin (tm)) and inactive (unilamellar vesicles (ulv)) surfactant subtypes as well as intracellular surfactant (lamellar bodies (lb)) in type II pneumocytes (PNII) were quantified before (day (d) 1), during (d 7), at the end of alveolarization (d 14), and after completion of lung maturation (d 42) using electron microscopic methods supplemented by biochemical analyses (phospholipid quantification, immunoblotting for SP-A). Immunoelectron microscopy determined the localization of surfactant protein A (SP-A). (1) At d 1 secreted surfactant was increased relative to d 7-42 and then decreased significantly. (2) Air spaces of neonatal lungs comprised lower fractions of tm and increased ulv, which correlated with low SP-A concentrations in lung lavage fluid (LLF) and increased respiratory rates, respectively. (3) Alveolarization (d 7-14) was associated with decreasing PNII size although volume and sizes of Lb continuously increased. (4) The volume fractions of Lb correlated well with the pool sizes of phospholipids in lavaged lungs. Our study emphasizes differential patterns of developmental changes of the surfactant system relative to postnatal alveolarization.
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Adhesion is the first step in the pathogenesis of enterotoxigenic Escherichia coli infections. The genes encoding the most prevalent adhesion factors CFA/I, CS3 and CS6 were cloned into Vibrio cholerae strain CVD 103-HgR and expression of fimbriae was investigated in wildtype and recombinant strains by transmission electron microscopy in conjunction with immunolabelling and negative staining. Negative staining was effective in revealing CFA/I and CS3, but not CS6. Although morphology of fimbriae differed between wildtype and recombinant strains, corresponding surface antigens were recognized by specific antibodies. The present study provides evidence that ETEC-specific fimbriae can adequately be expressed in an attenuated V. cholerae vaccine strain and that immunoelectron microscopy is a critical tool to validate the surface expression of antigens in view of their possible suitability for recombinant vaccines.
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Thin and ultrathin cryosections of mouse cornea were labeled with affinity-purified antibodies directed against either laminin, its central segments (domain 1), the end of its long arm (domain 3), the end of one of its short arms (domain 4), nidogen, or low density heparan sulfate proteoglycan. All basement membrane proteins are detected by indirect immunofluorescence exclusively in the epithelial basement membrane, in Descemet's membrane, and in small amorphous plaques located in the stroma. Immunoelectron microscopy using the protein A-gold technique demonstrated laminin domain 1 and nidogen in a narrow segment of the lamina densa at the junction to the lamina lucida within the epithelial basement membrane. Domain 3 shows three preferred locations at both the cellular and stromal boundaries of the epithelial basement membrane and in its center. Domain 4 is located predominantly in the lamina lucida and the adjacent half of the lamina densa. The low density heparan sulfate proteoglycan is found all across the basement membrane showing a similar uniform distribution as with antibodies against the whole laminin molecule. In Descemet's membrane an even distribution was found with all these antibodies. It is concluded that within the epithelial basement membrane the center of the laminin molecule is located near the lamina densa/lamina lucida junction and that its long arm favors three major orientations. One is close to the cell surface indicating binding to a cell receptor, while the other two are directed to internal matrix structures. The apparent codistribution of laminin domain 1 and nidogen agrees with biochemical evidence that nidogen binds to this domain.
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In Halobacterium salinarum phototaxis is mediated by the visual pigment-like photoreceptors sensory rhodopsin I (SRI) and II (SRII). SRI is a receptor for attractant orange and repellent UV-blue light, and SRII is a receptor for repellent blue-green light, and transmit signals through the membrane-bound transducer proteins HtrI and HtrII, respectively. ^ The primary sequences of HtrI and HtrII predict 2 transmembrane helices (TM1 and TM2) followed by a hydrophilic cytoplasmic domain. HtrII shows an additional large periplasmic domain for chemotactic ligand binding. The cytoplasmic regions are homologous to the adaptation and signaling domains of eubacterial chemotaxis receptors and, like their eubacterial homologs, modulate the transfer of phosphate groups from the histidine protein kinase CheA to the response regulator CheY that in turn controls flagellar motor rotation and the cell's swimming behavior. HtrII and Htrl are dimeric proteins which were predicted to contain carboxylmethylation sites in a 4-helix bundle in their cytoplasmic regions, like eubacterial chemotaxis receptors. ^ The phototaxis transducers of H. salinarum have provided a model for studying receptor/tranducer interaction, adaptation in sensory systems, and the role of membrane molecular complexes in signal transduction. ^ Interaction between the transducer HtrI and the photoreceptor SRI was explored by creating six deletion constructs of HtrI, with progressively shorter cytoplasmic domains. This study confirmed a putative chaperone-like function of HtrI, facilitating membrane insertion or stability of the SRI protein, a phenomenon previously observed in the laboratory, and identified the smallest HtrI fragment containing interaction sites for both the chaperone-like function and SRI photocycle control. The active fragment consisted of the N-terminal 147 residues of the 536-residue HtrI protein, a portion of the molecule predicted to contain the two transmembrane helices and the first ∼20% of the cytoplasmic portion of the protein. ^ Phototaxis and chemotaxis sensory systems adapt to stimuli, thereby signaling only in response to changes in environmental conditions. Observations made in our and in other laboratories and homologies between the halobacterial transducers with the chemoreceptors of enteric bacteria anticipated a role for methylation in adaptation to chemo- and photostimuli. By site directed mutagenesis we identified the methylation sites to be the glutamate pairs E265–E266 in HtrI and E513–E514 in HtrII. Cells containing the unmethylatable transducers are still able to perform phototaxis and adapt to light stimuli. By pulse-chase analysis we found that methanol production from carboxylmethyl group hydrolysis occurs upon specific photo stimulation of unmethylatable HtrI and HtrII and is due to turnover of methyl groups on other transducers. We demonstrated that the turnover in wild-type H. salinarum cells that follows a positive stimulus is CheY-dependent. The CheY-feedback pathway does not require the stimulated transducer to be methylatable and operates globally on other transducers present in the cell. ^ Assembly of signaling molecules into architecturally defined complexes is considered essential in transmission of the signals. The spectroscopic characteristics of SRI were exploited to study the stoichiometric composition in the phototaxis complex SRI-HtrI. A molar ratio of 2.1 HtrI: 1 SRI was obtained, suggesting that only 1 SRI binding site is occupied on the HtrI homodimer. We used gold-immunoelectron microscopy and light fluorescence microscopy to investigate the structural organization and the distribution of other halobacterial transducers. We detected clusters of transducers, usually near the cell's poles, providing a ultrastructural basis for the global effects and intertransducer communication we observe. ^
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The pathophysiology of mucosal changes observed in infants with chronic protracted diarrhea is poorly understood. We report on two brothers suffering from a special form of sucrase isomaltase (SI) deficiency. The children presented with weight loss and dyspepsia after sucrose exposition. We performed an H respiration test, which showed a pathologic result in the younger brother. Analysis of the brush border enzyme activities showed low expression of lactase and SI. Immunoelectron microscopy of duodenal biopsies showed an isolated SI deficiency in a mosaic pattern [e.g., 42% (14%) crypt enterocytes and 64% (59%) villus enterocytes with decreased amounts of SI on microvilli], whereas lactase and aminopeptidase n (ApN) were present at the apical membrane of all cells in a normal range. The SI mosaic pattern of these patients shows that the enterocytes contain low amounts of SI on the apical membrane but express normal quantities of other disaccharidases. These findings suggest the existence of different clonal expressions or specific (posttranslational) mechanisms of postGolgi transportation for individual brush border enzymes. It remains unresolved whether the mosaic distribution is part of a normal maturation process or caused by a lack of an overall control mechanism in the expression of brush border hydrolases.
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The spirochete Treponema pallidum subsp. pallidum is the causative agent of syphilis, a sexually transmitted disease with an estimated 12 million new cases per year worldwide. There is no vaccine currently available for the prevention of syphilis. In the present study, the T. pallidum hypothetical protein TP0693 was examined to determine its cellular location, and its potential for use as a vaccine candidate and immunodiagnostic for syphilis. TP0693 was demonstrated to be strongly reactive with sera from rabbits infected experimentally with T. pallidum for >25 days. Results from proteinase K digestion, immunofluorescence and immunoelectron microscopy were consistent with outer surface localization of TP0693. Serum reactivity against TP0693 was detected in only 68% of syphilis patients, which does not support its use as an immunodiagnostic for syphilis. Immunization of rabbits with TP0693 or three other outer membrane candidates did not alter the course of lesion development atter T. pallidum inoculation. We also examined the T. pallidum proteome by two-dimensional gel electrophoresis coupled with mass spectrometry analysis and immunoblotting. This approach resulted in the identification of 95 unique polypeptides, several of which were reactive with sera from infected rabbits and syphilis patients. The analyses described here enabled us to identify antigens potentially useful as vaccine candidates or diagnostic markers, and may provide insight into host-pathogen interactions during T. pallidum infection. ^
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A small heat-shock protein (sHSP) that shows molecular chaperone activity in vitro was recently purified from mature chestnut (Castanea sativa) cotyledons. This protein, renamed here as CsHSP17.5, belongs to cytosolic class I, as revealed by cDNA sequencing and immunoelectron microscopy. Recombinant CsHSP17.5 was overexpressed in Escherichia coli to study its possible function under stress conditions. Upon transfer from 37°C to 50°C, a temperature known to cause cell autolysis, those cells that accumulated CsHSP17.5 showed improved viability compared with control cultures. Sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis analysis of cell lysates suggested that such a protective effect in vivo is due to the ability of recombinant sHSP to maintain soluble cytosolic proteins in their native conformation, with little substrate specificity. To test the recent hypothesis that sHSPs may be involved in protection against cold stress, we also studied the viability of recombinant cells at 4°C. Unlike the major heat-induced chaperone, GroEL/ES, the chestnut sHSP significantly enhanced cell survivability at this temperature. CsHSP17.5 thus represents an example of a HSP capable of protecting cells against both thermal extremes. Consistent with these findings, high-level induction of homologous transcripts was observed in vegetative tissues of chestnut plantlets exposed to either type of thermal stress but not salt stress
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Vaccinia virus (VV) produces two antigenically and structurally distinct infectious virions, intracellular mature virus (IMV) and extracellular enveloped virus (EEV). Here we have investigated the resistance of EEV and IMV to neutralization by complement in the absence of immune antibodies. When EEV is challenged with complement from the same species as the cells used to grow the virus, EEV is resistant to neutralization by complement, whereas IMV is not. EEV resistance was not a result of EEV protein B5R, despite its similarity to proteins of the regulators of complement activation (RCA) family, or to any of the other EEV proteins tested (A34R, A36R, and A56R gene products). EEV was sensitive to complement when the virus was grown in one species and challenged with complement from a different species, suggesting that complement resistance might be mediated by host RCA incorporated into the EEV outer envelope. This hypothesis was confirmed by several observations: (i) immunoblot analysis revealed that cellular membrane proteins CD46, CD55, CD59, CD71, CD81, and major histocompatibility complex class I antigen were detected in purified EEV but not IMV; (ii) immunoelectron microscopy revealed cellular RCA on the surface of EEV retained on the cell surface; and (iii) EEV derived from rat cells expressing the human RCA CD55 or CD55 and CD59 were more resistant to human complement than EEV derived from control rat cells that expressed neither CD55 nor CD59. These data justify further analysis of the roles of these (and possible other) cellular proteins in EEV biology.
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We have identified a mammalian protein called GIPC (for GAIP interacting protein, C terminus), which has a central PDZ domain and a C-terminal acyl carrier protein (ACP) domain. The PDZ domain of GIPC specifically interacts with RGS-GAIP, a GTPase-activating protein (GAP) for Gαi subunits recently localized on clathrin-coated vesicles. Analysis of deletion mutants indicated that the PDZ domain of GIPC specifically interacts with the C terminus of GAIP (11 amino acids) in the yeast two-hybrid system and glutathione S-transferase (GST)-GIPC pull-down assays, but GIPC does not interact with other members of the RGS (regulators of G protein signaling) family tested. This finding is in keeping with the fact that the C terminus of GAIP is unique and possesses a modified C-terminal PDZ-binding motif (SEA). By immunoblotting of membrane fractions prepared from HeLa cells, we found that there are two pools of GIPC–a soluble or cytosolic pool (70%) and a membrane-associated pool (30%). By immunofluorescence, endogenous and GFP-tagged GIPC show both a diffuse and punctate cytoplasmic distribution in HeLa cells reflecting, respectively, the existence of soluble and membrane-associated pools. By immunoelectron microscopy the membrane pool of GIPC is associated with clusters of vesicles located near the plasma membrane. These data provide direct evidence that the C terminus of a RGS protein is involved in interactions specific for a given RGS protein and implicates GAIP in regulation of additional functions besides its GAP activity. The location of GIPC together with its binding to GAIP suggest that GAIP and GIPC may be components of a G protein-coupled signaling complex involved in the regulation of vesicular trafficking. The presence of an ACP domain suggests a putative function for GIPC in the acylation of vesicle-bound proteins.