Cell-type-related segregation of surface galactosyl-containing components at an early developmental stage in hemopoietic bone marrow cells in the rabbit.
Open Access
- 1 January 1983
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Rockefeller University Press in The Journal of cell biology
- Vol. 96 (1) , 184-190
- https://doi.org/10.1083/jcb.96.1.184
Abstract
The avidin-biotin complex was used for the selective ultrastructural labeling of terminal cell surface galactosyl residues. Rabbit bone marrow cells were treated with the enzyme galactose oxidase in the presence of biotin hydrazide. Subsequent treatment with ferritin-avidin conjugates enabled the electron microscopic visualization of terminal membrane-based galactose and/or N-acetylgalactosamine on these cells. All stages of erythroid development were characterized by high levels of exposed cell surface galactose, whereas all leukoid cells in the same preparations were virtually unlabeled by the above method. Modulations in the distribution of these surface determinants during differentiation and maturation of rabbit erythroid cells were found to concur in inverse fashion with respect to that of terminal sialic acids. Neuraminidase treatment, before the above labeling procedure, resulted in the exposure of additional galactosyl residues on the surface of all bone marrow cell types. The results indicate that a galactose-bearing glycoconjugate(s) may comprise an erythroid-specific membrane constituent of rabbit bone marrow cells. The high density of galactose on the surface of even the earliest erythroid precursors may eventually enable the identification and isolation of a stem cell, which already contains the erythroid-specific galactoconjugate(s). The results suggest that variations in the spectrum of cell surface carbohydrates may serve as recognition signals in the complex set of intercellular interactions which occur during the development and maturation of the erythrocyte. The occurrence of similar but species-specific variations in the complement of surface heterosaccharides during erythroid development of humans and other mammals supports this contention.This publication has 35 references indexed in Scilit:
- Immunoferitin analysis of membrane antigen density: A. young and old human blood cells B. developing erythroid cells and extruded erythroid nucleiEuropean Journal of Immunology, 1974
- The role of sialic acid in the determination of survival of rabbit erythrocytes in the circulationCarbohydrate Research, 1974
- Guest EditorialJNCI Journal of the National Cancer Institute, 1973
- Chemical Characterization and Surface Orientation of the Major Glycoprotein of the Human Erythrocyte MembraneProceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 1972
- On the expulsion of the erythroid nucleus and its phagocytosisThe Anatomical Record, 1972
- Comparative study of nuclear expulsion from the late erythroblast and cytokinesisExperimental Cell Research, 1970
- Carbohydrates in Cell SurfacesPublished by Elsevier ,1970
- REDUCTION IN SURFACE CHARGE AS AN EXPLANATION OF THE RECOGNITION BY MACROPHAGES OF NUCLEI EXPELLED FROM NORMOBLASTSThe Journal of cell biology, 1969
- THE EFFECT OF NEURAMINIDASE ON THE FATE OF TRANSFUSED LYMPHOCYTESThe Journal of Experimental Medicine, 1969
- Positive and negative colloidal iron as cell surface electron stains.1968