Cell surface saccharides of Trypanosoma lewisi: I. polycation-induced cell agglutination and fine-structure cytochemistry
Open Access
- 1 December 1975
- journal article
- Published by The Company of Biologists in Journal of Cell Science
- Vol. 19 (3) , 621-644
- https://doi.org/10.1242/jcs.19.3.621
Abstract
Trypanosoma lewisi bloodstream and culture forms were agglutinated differentially with low concentrations of the cationic compounds: ruthenium red, ruthenium violet, Alcian blue chloride, 1-hexadecylpyridinium chloride, lanthanum chloride, and cationized ferritin. The bloodstream form trypanosomes gave the highest agglutination levels with each of the compounds tested. Ruthenium red was the most effective inducer of cell agglutination among the several cations used. Trypsin-treated bloodstream forms were agglutinated less in the presence of ruthenium red than untreated controls. Ruthenium red-induced cell agglutination also was lowered with chondroitin sulphate and dextran sulphate, but not with alpha-D-glucose, alpha-D-mannose or with several methyl glycosides. Treatment of the bloodstream trypanosomes with alpha-amylase, dextranase, or neuraminidase had little effect on agglutination levels obtained with ruthenium red. Fine-structure cytochemical staining with ruthenium red, ruthenium violet, and Alcian blue-lanthanum nitrate was used to ascertain the presence and distribution of presumptive carbohydrates in the trypanosome cell surface. The extracellular surface coat of the bloodstream forms stained densely with each of the polycationic dyes. Trypsin treatment removed the surface coat from bloodstream trypanosomes; however, the surface membranes of the organisms were stained densely with the several dyes. Similar surface-membrane staining was obtained with the cationic compounds and the culture forms, which lack a cell surface coat. Cationized ferrin was used at the fine-structure level to visualize the negative surface charge present in the cell surface coat and external membrane of the several trypanosome stages. Results obrained from the agglutination and cytochemistry experiments indicate that complex polysaccharides are present in the surface membranes and cell surface coat of T. lewisi bloodstream forms. Similar conclusions also pertain to the surface membranes of the T. lewisi culture from trypanosomes. The carbohydrates probably represent glycopeptide and glycoprotein structural components of the surface membrane of this organism.Keywords
This publication has 36 references indexed in Scilit:
- GlycoproteinsScientific American, 1974
- Role of surface alterations in cell transformation: the importance of proteases and surface proteinsCell, 1974
- Novel human serum protein from fibroblast plasma membraneNature, 1974
- Surface glycoproteins of mouse L cellsBiochemistry, 1974
- The Ultrastructure of Pathogenic FlagellatesPublished by Wiley ,1974
- The Cell Surface Membrane: Biochemical Aspects and Biophysical ProbesAnnual Review of Biochemistry, 1973
- ANIONIC SITES OF HUMAN ERYTHROCYTE MEMBRANESThe Journal of cell biology, 1973
- Use of cationized ferritin as a label of negative charges on cell surfacesJournal of Ultrastructure Research, 1972
- Ruthenium red and violet. III. Fine structure of the plasma membrane and extraneous coats in amoebae (A. proteus and chaos chaos)The Anatomical Record, 1971
- Morphological and Taxonomic Studies on Mammalian Trypanosomes. X. Revision of the SystematicsThe Journal of Protozoology, 1964