THE ORIGIN OF THE ZYMOGEN GRANULE MEMBRANE OF THE PANCREATIC ACINAR CELL AS EXAMINED BY ULTRASTRUCTURAL CYTO-CHEMISTRY OF ACID-PHOSPHATASE, THIAMINE PYROPHOSPHATASE, AND ATP-DIPHOSPHOHYDROLASE ACTIVITIES

  • 1 January 1983
    • journal article
    • research article
    • Vol. 29  (2) , 218-225
Abstract
Cytochemical distributions of acid phosphatase, thiamine pyrophosphatase and ATP-diphosphohydrolase activities were examined on thin sections of rat pancreas and on isolated zymogen-granule membranes. Acid phosphatase was found in the rigid lamellae separated from the Golgi stacked cisternae, in condensing vacuoles and in the trans-saccules of Golgi apparatus; it was not detected in purified zymogen-granule membranes. Thiamine pyrophosphatase was detected in trans-saccules of the Golgi apparatus, in purified zymogen-granule membranes and in the plasmalemma of the acinar cell. It was absent in condensing vacuoles. The ATP-diphosphohydrolase activity has a distribution similar to thiamine pyrophosphatase. These observations illustrate the similarity between the trans-saccules of the Golgi apparatus and the membrane of mature zymogen granules and the disparity between the latter membrane and the membrane of the condensing vacuole. The condensing vacuole might not be the immediate precursor of the zymogen granule as commonly assumed. An alternative possibility would be that condensing vacuoles would fuse with the trans-saccule (transition) of the Golgi apparatus which in turn would form mature zymogen granules.

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