Abstract
A dog kidney epithelial cell line (MDCK), grown in monolayer, displayed in vitro an asymmetric localization of surface proteins. Aminopeptidase (EC 3.4.11.2) was found only in the apical face whereas Na+,K+-ATPase (EC 3.6.1.3) was found in the basolateral faces. These 2 faces are delineated by the junctional complex at which close cell-cell contact occurs. .alpha.-Actinin, a protein associated with plasma membranes, was concentrated near the region of cell-cell contact. When membrane proteins in the apical surface were crosslinked and subsequently removed from the surface by endocytosis, crosslinked antigens reappeared in the apical face at the region of cell-cell contact. Antigens that were not crosslinked were also (re)inserted in the same region. This process was not affected by cycloheximide, presumably because a large pool of apical membrane proteins (observed in small cytoplasmic vesicles) was used to replace the endocytosed antigens. The region containing the junctional complex may be involved in guiding apical membrane proteins to their final location.

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