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1-4 of 4
S C Stamatoglou
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Journal Articles
Journal:
Journal of Cell Biology
Journal of Cell Biology (1992) 116 (6): 1507–1515.
Published: 15 March 1992
Abstract
We have compared by immunocytochemistry and immunoblotting the expression and distribution of adhesion molecules participating in cell-matrix and cell-cell interactions during embryonic development and regeneration of rat liver. Fibronectin and the fibronectin receptor, integrin alpha 5 beta 1, were distributed pericellularly and expressed at a steady level during development from the 16th day of gestation and in neonate and adult liver. AGp110, a nonintegrin fibronectin receptor was first detected on the 17th day of gestation in a similar, nonpolarized distribution on parenchymal cell surfaces. At that stage of development haemopoiesis is at a peak in rat liver and fibronectin and receptors alpha 5 beta 1 and AGp110 were prominent on the surface of blood cell precursors. During the last 2 d of gestation (20th and 21st day) hepatocytes assembled around lumina. AGp110 was initially depolarized on the surface of these acinar cells but then confined to the lumen and to newly-formed bile canaliculi. At birth, a marked increase occurred in the canalicular expression of AGp110 and in the branching of the canalicular network. Simultaneously, there was enhanced expression of ZO-1, a protein component of tight junctions. On the second day postpartum, presence of AGp110 and of protein constituents of desmosomes and intermediate junctions, DGI and E-cadherin, respectively, was notably enhanced in cellular fractions insoluble in nonionic detergents, presumably signifying linkage of AGp110 with the cytoskeleton and assembly of desmosomal and intermediate junctions. During liver regeneration after partial hepatectomy, AGp110 remained confined to apical surfaces, indicating a preservation of basic polarity in parenchymal cells. A decrease in the extent and continuity of the canalicular network occurred in proliferating parenchyma, starting 24 h after resection in areas close to the terminal afferent blood supply of portal veins and spreading to the rest of the liver within the next 24 h. Distinct acinar structures, similar to the ones in prenatal liver, appeared at 72 h after hepatectomy. Restoration of the normal branching of the biliary tree commenced at 72 h. At 7 d postoperatively acinar formation declined and one-cell-thick hepatic plates, as in normal liver, were observed.
Journal Articles
Journal:
Journal of Cell Biology
Journal of Cell Biology (1990) 111 (5): 2117–2127.
Published: 01 November 1990
Abstract
We have identified an integral membrane glycoprotein in rat liver that mediates adhesion of cultured hepatocytes on fibronectin substrata. The protein was isolated by affinity chromatography of detergent extracts on wheat germ lectin-Agarose followed by chromatography of the WGA binding fraction on fibronectin-Sepharose. The glycoprotein (AGp110), eluted at high salt concentrations from the fibronectin column, has a molecular mass of 110 kD and a pI of 4.2. Binding of immobilized AGp110 to soluble rat plasma fibronectin required Ca2+ ions but was not inhibited by RGD peptides. Fab' fragments of immunoglobulins raised in rabbits against AGp110 reversed the spreading of primary hepatocytes attached onto fibronectin-coated substrata, but had no effect on cells spread on type IV collagen or laminin substrata. The effect of the antiserum on cell spreading was reversible. AGp110 was detected by immunofluorescence around the periphery of the ventral surface of substratum attached hepatocytes, and scattered on the dorsal surface. Immunohistochemical evidence and Western blotting of fractionated liver plasma membranes indicated a bile canalicular (apical) localization of AGp110 in the liver parenchyma. Expression of AGp110 is tissue specific: it was found mainly in liver, kidney, pancreas, and small intestine but was not detected in stomach, skeletal muscle, heart, and large intestine. AGp110 could be labeled by lactoperoxidase-catalyzed surface iodination of intact liver cells and, after phase partitioning of liver plasma membranes with the detergent Triton X-114, it was preferentially distributed in the hydrophobic phase. Treatment with glycosidases indicated extensive sialic acid substitution in at least 10 O-linked carbohydrate chains and 1-2 N-linked glycans. Immunological comparisons suggest that AGp110, the integrin fibronectin receptor and dipeptidyl peptidase IV, an enzyme involved in fibronectin-mediated adhesion of hepatocytes on collagen, are distinct proteins.
Journal Articles
Journal:
Journal of Cell Biology
Journal of Cell Biology (1987) 105 (5): 2417–2425.
Published: 01 November 1987
Abstract
Adult rat hepatocytes cultured on type IV collagen, fibronectin, or laminin and maintained in serum-free medium were examined by indirect immunofluorescence using polyclonal antibodies against extracellular matrix proteins. An extensive fibrillar matrix containing fibronectin and fibrin was detected in all hepatocyte cultures irrespective of the exogenous matrix substratum used to support cell adhesion. Fibrils radiated from the cell periphery and covered the entire culture substratum. In addition, thicker fibers or bundles of fibers were localized on top of hepatocytes. This matrix did not contain laminin or the major types of collagen found in the liver biomatrix (types I, III, and IV). Isolation of the fibrillar matrix and analysis on polyacrylamide gels under reducing conditions demonstrated a major 58-kD polypeptide, derived from beta-fibrinogen as indicated by immunoblotting and two-dimensional peptide mapping. Plasmin rapidly dissolved the matrix. Deposition of the fibrin matrix in hepatocyte cultures was arrested by hirudin, by specific heparin oligosaccharides that potentiate thrombin inhibition by antithrombin III, and by dermatan sulfate, an activator of heparin cofactor II-mediated inhibition of thrombin. The results indicate that hepatocytes in culture synthesize and activate coagulation zymogens. In the absence of inhibitory and fibrinolytic mechanisms, a fibrin clot is formed by the action of thrombin on fibrinogen. Fibronectin attaches to this fibrin clot but fails to elaborate a fibrillar matrix on its own in the presence of coagulation inhibitors.
Journal Articles
Journal:
Journal of Cell Biology
Journal of Cell Biology (1983) 96 (6): 1820–1823.
Published: 01 June 1983
Abstract
Heparan sulfate glycosaminoglycan, isolated from the cell surface of nonadhering murine myeloma cells (P3X63-Ag8653), does not bind to plasma fibronectin, but binds partially to collagen type I, as assayed by affinity chromatography with proteins immobilized on cyanogen bromide-activated Sepharose 4B. Identical results were obtained when myeloma heparan sulfate was cochromatographed, on the same fibronectin and collagen columns, with cell surface heparan sulfates collagen columns, with cell surface heparan sulfates from adhering Swiss mouse 3T3 and SV3T3 cells. These latter heparan sulfates do, however, bind to both fibronectin and collagen, as reported earlier (Stamatoglou, S.C., and J.M. Keller, 1981, Biochim. Biophys. Acta., 719:90-97). Cell adhesion assays established that hydrated collagen substrata can support myeloma cell attachment, but fibronectin cannot. Saturation of the heparan sulfate binding sites on the collagen substrata with heparan sulfate or heparin, prior to cell inoculation, abolished the ability to support cell adhesion, whereas chondroitin 4 sulfate, chondroitin 6 sulfate, and hyaluronic acid had no effect.