scholarly journals Post-embedding colloidal gold immunolocalization of laminin to the lamina rara interna, lamina densa, and lamina rara externa of renal glomerular basement membranes.

1986 ◽  
Vol 34 (7) ◽  
pp. 847-853 ◽  
Author(s):  
D R Abrahamson

Ultrastructural distribution of laminin within renal glomerular (GBM) and tubular basement membranes (TBM) was investigated using post-embedding immunolocalization with colloidal gold. Rat kidneys were fixed with 4% formaldehyde and embedded at 4 degrees C in Lowicryl K4M medium. Thin sections were then sequentially treated with affinity-purified rabbit anti-laminin IgG and anti-rabbit IgG conjugated to 10 nm diameter colloidal gold. Gold bound specifically to the GBM and TBM with particle densities of 690/micron2 and 731/micron2, respectively. In the GBM, the number of gold particles bound/micron2 of lamina densa greater than lamina rara externa greater than lamina rara interna. Closely similar binding patterns were found when kidneys were fixed with 0.5% glutaraldehyde plus 3% formaldehyde and embedded at 60 degrees C in L.R. White resin, but slightly less gold bound to sections overall than that seen with formaldehyde alone and Lowicryl. Taken together, these results illustrate that anti-laminin IgG, whether applied to fixed sections in vitro or introduced in vivo, bound to the lamina rara interna, lamina densa, and lamina rara externa of the GBM and throughout the TBM.

1986 ◽  
Vol 103 (6) ◽  
pp. 2489-2498 ◽  
Author(s):  
D R Abrahamson ◽  
E W Perry

Tannic acid in glutaraldehyde fixatives greatly enhanced the visualization of two developmentally and morphologically distinct stages in glomerular basement membrane (GBM) formation in newborn rat kidneys. First, in early stage glomeruli, double basement membranes between endothelial cells and podocytes were present and, in certain areas, appeared to be fusing. Second, in maturing stage glomeruli, elaborate loops and outpockets of basement membrane projected into epithelial, but not endothelial, sides of capillary walls. When Lowicryl thin sections from newborn rat kidneys were sequentially labeled with rabbit anti-laminin IgG and anti-rabbit IgG-colloidal gold, gold bound across the full width of all GBMs, including double basement membranes and outpockets. The same distribution was obtained when sections from rats that received intravenous injections of rabbit anti-laminin IgG 1 h before fixation were labeled directly with anti-rabbit IgG-colloidal gold. When kidneys were fixed 4 d after anti-laminin IgG injection, however, loops beneath the podocytes in maturing glomeruli were usually unlabeled and lengths of unlabeled GBM were interspersed with labeled lengths. In additional experiments, rabbit anti-laminin IgG was intravenously injected into newborn rats and, 4-14 d later, rats were re-injected with sheep anti-laminin IgG. Sections were then doubly labeled with anti-rabbit and anti-sheep IgG coupled to 10 and 5 nm colloidal gold, respectively. Sheep IgG occurred alone in outpockets of maturing glomeruli and also in lengths of GBM flanked by lengths containing rabbit IgG. These results indicate that, after fusion of double basement membranes, new segments of GBM appear beneath developing podocytes and are subsequently spliced into existing GBM. This splicing provides the additional GBM necessary for expanding glomerular capillaries.


1992 ◽  
Vol 40 (10) ◽  
pp. 1465-1470 ◽  
Author(s):  
D W Marshak

The goal of this study was to develop an alternative to silver intensification for visualizing small colloidal gold particles by light and electron microscopy. The isolated goldfish retina was labeled with rabbit antiserum to tyrosine hydroxylase and 1-nm colloidal gold-conjugated goat anti-rabbit IgG. The gold particles were enlarged by toning with gold chloride, followed by reduction in oxalic acid. Dopaminergic interplexiform cells were clearly visible by light microscopy and, in lightly-fixed material treated with detergent, they were labeled in their entirety. Labeling was qualitatively similar, although less extensive, in material fixed and processed for electron microscopy. The labeled processes were apparent in ultra-thin sections viewed at low magnification, but the gold-toned particles were not so large that they obscured subcellular structures. The procedure apparently had no deleterious effects on the tissue, since the ultrastructural preservation was comparable to that seen with other pre-embedding immunolabeling methods. The technique was simple, reliable and, since the gold solutions were so dilute, relatively inexpensive.


Author(s):  
Conly L. Rieder ◽  
S. Bowser ◽  
R. Nowogrodzki ◽  
K. Ross ◽  
G. Sluder

Eggs have long been a favorite material for studying the mechanism of karyokinesis in-vivo and in-vitro. They can be obtained in great numbers and, when fertilized, divide synchronously over many cell cycles. However, they are not considered to be a practical system for ultrastructural studies on the mitotic apparatus (MA) for several reasons, the most obvious of which is that sectioning them is a formidable task: over 1000 ultra-thin sections need to be cut from a single 80-100 μm diameter egg and of these sections only a small percentage will contain the area or structure of interest. Thus it is difficult and time consuming to obtain reliable ultrastructural data concerning the MA of eggs; and when it is obtained it is necessarily based on a small sample size.We have recently developed a procedure which will facilitate many studies concerned with the ultrastructure of the MA in eggs. It is based on the availability of biological HVEM's and on the observation that 0.25 μm thick serial sections can be screened at high resolution for content (after mounting on slot grids and staining with uranyl and lead) by phase contrast light microscopy (LM; Figs 1-2).


1996 ◽  
Vol 313 (3) ◽  
pp. 745-752 ◽  
Author(s):  
Françoise LEVAVASSEUR ◽  
Jocelyne LIÉTARD ◽  
Kohei OGAWA ◽  
Nathalie THÉRET ◽  
Peter D. BURBELO ◽  
...  

Laminin γ1 chain is present in all basement membranes and is expressed at high levels in various diseases, such as hepatic fibrosis. We have identified cis- and trans-acting elements involved in the regulation of this gene in normal rat liver, as well as in hepatocyte primary cultures and hepatoma cell lines. Northern-blot analyses showed that laminin γ1 mRNA was barely detectable in freshly isolated hepatocytes and expressed at high levels in hepatocyte primary cultures, as early as 4 h after liver dissociation. Actinomycin D and cycloheximide treatment in vivo and in vitro indicated that laminin γ1 overexpression in cultured hepatocytes was under the control of transcriptional mechanisms. Transfection of deletion mutants of the 5´ flanking region of murine LAMC1 gene in hepatoma cells that constitutively express laminin γ1 indicated that regulatory elements were located between -594 bp and -94 bp. This segment included GC- and CTC-containing motifs. Gel-shift analyses showed that two complexes were resolved with different affinity for the CTC sequence depending on the location of the GC box. The pattern of complex formation with nuclear factors from freshly isolated and cultured hepatocytes was different from that obtained with total liver and similar to that with hepatoma cells. Southwestern analysis indicated that several polypeptides bound the CTC-rich sequence. Affinity chromatography demonstrated that a Mr 60000 polypeptide was a major protein binding to the CTC motif. This polypeptide is probably involved in the transcriptional activation of various proto-oncogenes and extracellular matrix genes that are expressed at high levels in both hepatoma cells and early hepatocyte cultures.


2003 ◽  
Vol 51 (1) ◽  
pp. 69-79 ◽  
Author(s):  
Marco Piludu ◽  
Sean A. Rayment ◽  
Bing Liu ◽  
Gwynneth D. Offner ◽  
Frank G. Oppenheim ◽  
...  

The human salivary mucins MG1 and MG2 are well characterized biochemically and functionally. However, there is disagreement regarding their cellular and glandular sources. The aim of this study was to define the localization and distribution of these two mucins in human salivary glands using a postembedding immunogold labeling method. Normal salivary glands obtained at surgery were fixed in 3% paraformaldehyde-0.1% glutaraldehyde and embedded in Lowicryl K4M or LR Gold resin. Thin sections were labeled with rabbit antibodies to MG1 or to an N-terminal synthetic peptide of MG2, followed by gold-labeled goat anti-rabbit IgG. The granules of all mucous cells of the submandibular and sublingual glands were intensely reactive with anti-MG1. No reaction was detected in serous cells. With anti-MG2, the granules of both mucous and serous cells showed reactivity. The labeling was variable in both cell types, with mucous cells exhibiting a stronger reaction in some glands and serous cells in others. In serous granules, the electron-lucent regions were more reactive than the dense cores. Intercalated duct cells near the acini displayed both MG1 and MG2 reactivity in their apical granules. In addition, the basal and lateral membranes of intercalated duct cells were labeled with anti-MG2. These results confirm those of earlier studies on MG1 localization in mucous cells and suggest that MG2 is produced by both mucous and serous cells. They also indicate differences in protein expression patterns among salivary serous cells.


2004 ◽  
Vol 287 (4) ◽  
pp. L867-L878 ◽  
Author(s):  
Kai Heckel ◽  
Rainer Kiefmann ◽  
Martina Dörger ◽  
Mechthild Stoeckelhuber ◽  
Alwin E. Goetz

Permeability of the endothelial barrier to large molecules plays a pivotal role in the manifestation of early acute lung injury. We present a novel and sensitive technique that brings microanatomical visualization and quantification of microvascular permeability in line. White New Zealand rabbits were anesthetized and ventilated mechanically. Rabbit serum albumin (RSA) was labeled with colloidal gold particles. We quantified macromolecular leakage of gold-labeled RSA and thickening of the gas exchange distance by electron microscopy, taking into account morphology of microvessels. The control group receiving a saline solution represented a normal gas exchange barrier without extravasation of gold-labeled albumin. Infusion of lipopolysaccharide (LPS) resulted in a significant displacement of gold-labeled albumin into pulmonary cells, the lung interstitium, and even the alveolar space. Correspondingly, intravital fluorescence microscopy and digital image analysis indicated thickening of width of alveolar septa. The findings were accompanied by a deterioration of alveolo-arterial oxygen difference, whereas wet/dry ratio and albumin concentration in the bronchoalveolar lavage fluid failed to detect that early stage of pulmonary edema. Inhibition of the nuclear enzyme poly(ADP-ribose) synthetase by 3-aminobenzamide prevented LPS-induced microvascular injury. To summarize: colloidal gold particles visualized by standard electron microscopy are a new and very sensitive in vivo marker of microvascular permeability in early acute lung injury. This technique enabling detailed microanatomical and quantitative pathophysiological characterization of edema formation can form the basis for evaluating novel treatment strategies against acute lung injury.


1988 ◽  
Vol 36 (1) ◽  
pp. 107-109 ◽  
Author(s):  
S Yokota

Effect of particle size on labeling intensity in protein A-gold immunocytochemistry was studied. Catalase labeling of rat liver peroxisomes was used as a labeling model. Ultra-thin sections of Lowicryl K4M-embedded rat liver were stained for catalase with protein A-gold (pAg) probes. Five different sizes of colloidal gold probes, from 5 nm to 38 nm in diameter, were prepared. Labeling intensity decreased as the particle size of the pAg probes increased. The highest labeling was obtained by the 5-nm pAg probe and the lowest by the 38-nm pAg probe. Quantitative analysis also showed that labeling density was inversely proportional to the size of gold particles. The results suggest that the pAg probe with small gold particles has high sensitivity.


1981 ◽  
Vol 28 (2) ◽  
pp. 239-242 ◽  
Author(s):  
JONATHAN D. BERMAN ◽  
THOMAS B. FIORETTI ◽  
DENNIS M. DWYER
Keyword(s):  

2002 ◽  
Vol 68 (11) ◽  
pp. 5718-5727 ◽  
Author(s):  
Li-Wei Lee ◽  
Ching-Hsun Chiou ◽  
John E. Linz

ABSTRACT The activities of two enzymes, a 168-kDa protein and a 40-kDa protein, OmtA, purified from the filamentous fungus Aspergillus parasiticus were reported to convert the aflatoxin pathway intermediate sterigmatocystin to O-methylsterigmatocystin in vitro. Our initial goal was to determine if OmtA is necessary and sufficient to catalyze this reaction in vivo and if this reaction is necessary for aflatoxin synthesis. We generated A. parasiticus omtA-null mutant LW1432 and a maltose binding protein-OmtA fusion protein expressed in Escherichia coli. Enzyme activity analysis of OmtA fusion protein in vitro confirmed the reported catalytic function of OmtA. Feeding studies conducted with LW1432 demonstrated a critical role for OmtA, and the reaction catalyzed by this enzyme in aflatoxin synthesis in vivo. Because of a close regulatory link between aflatoxin synthesis and asexual sporulation (conidiation), we hypothesized a spatial and temporal association between OmtA expression and conidiospore development. We developed a novel time-dependent colony fractionation protocol to analyze the accumulation and distribution of OmtA in fungal colonies grown on a solid medium that supports both toxin synthesis and conidiation. OmtA-specific polyclonal antibodies were purified by affinity chromatography using an LW1432 protein extract. OmtA was not detected in 24-h-old colonies but was detected in 48-h-old colonies using Western blot analysis; the protein accumulated in all fractions of a 72-h-old colony, including cells (0 to 24 h) in which little conidiophore development was observed. OmtA in older fractions of the colony (24 to 72 h) was partly degraded. Fluorescence-based immunohistochemical analysis conducted on thin sections of paraffin-embedded fungal cells from time-fractionated fungal colonies demonstrated that OmtA is evenly distributed among different cell types and is not concentrated in conidiophores. These data suggest that OmtA is present in newly formed fungal tissue and then is proteolytically cleaved as cells in that section of the colony age.


2010 ◽  
Vol 22 (1) ◽  
pp. 318
Author(s):  
T. A. L. Brevini ◽  
G. Pennarossa ◽  
A. Vanelli ◽  
G. Tettamanti ◽  
L. Bogliolo ◽  
...  

Mature oocytes can be activated in vitro, leading to the generation of parthenotes that will develop in culture forming blastocysts morphologically indistinguishable from those derived from fertilized eggs. Parthenotes have been used as a source of pluripotent cells that show the traditional features associated with their biparental counterpart: expression of totipotency markers, telomerase activity, embryoid body formation, in vitro differentiation and, in most cases, teratoma formation. However, many aspects still need to be elucidated and, in particular, little attention has been paid to the inci- dence of aneuploidy in these cells. Limited data available for parthenotes derived from different mammalian species indicate a high rate of aneuploidy, whichis consideredtobecaused by the lackofthe paternal contribution, because alterations of the centrosome are knowntolead to multipolar spindles that, in turn, cause aneuploid cells. In this study, we analyzed the rate of aneuploidy and centriole distribution (as a marker of centrosome anomalies) in pluripotent cell lines (pSC) previously derived in our laboratory from pig parthenogenetic embryos and in primary fibroblast cultures and sections obtained from sheep parthenogenetic fetuses (n = 3) that reached 24 days of development in vivo. This protocol was chosen to separate the effect related tooocyte activation from those of the procedures used to derive pSC lines. Centriole number and distribution were assessed both by immunocy- tochemical analysis using an anti-centrin-1 antibody (1 : 200, Abcam, Cambridge, UK) and an appropriate secondary antibody, and by ultrastructural evaluation of thin sections, using a Jeol 1010 EX electron microscope (Jeol, Tokyo, Japan). Karyotyping was performed on mitotically active cells. Metaphases were fully karyotyped under a Leica HC microscope (Wetzlar, Germany). Images were then captured with a Leica DC250 digital camera and cells karyotyped using the Leica CW4000 Karyo software. The results obtained indicate that cell lines of parthenogenetic origin have, in all examined cases, an incidence of aneuploidy significantly higher than that of their respective controls. In particular, although the diploid configuration represented the modal value, the majority of the cells displayed a consistently lower number of chromosomes, between <1N (hypohaploid) and >1N to <2N (hypodiploid).This resultis possibly related toa lossofchromosomes during the mitotic process.Ahigher incidence ofmultiple centrioles was also detected, suggesting that aneuploidy may be related to the lack of paternal contribution that results in abnormal centrosome formation, incorrect control of the process of spindle rearrangement, and consequent chromosomal malsegregation.Abnormal segregation and multicentriolar distribution were not limited to parthenogenetic cell lines but was observed in parthenotes as well, indicating that culture artifacts are unlikely to be the cause. PUR 2007, PUR 2008.


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