Abstract

Using both conventional and laser confocal fluorescence microscopy, the intracellular distribution of galectin-1 in HeLa cells was analyzed and compared with the localization of previously documented markers of the nucleus and cytoplasm. The Sm epitopes of the small nuclear ribonucleoprotein complexes (snRNPs) and the non-snRNP splicing factor SC35 yielded only nuclear staining. On the other hand, the enzyme lactate dehydrogenase was cytoplasmic. In contrast to these patterns in which nuclear versus cytoplasmic localizations appeared to be mutually exclusive, galectin-1, as well as galectin-3, yielded simultaneous nuclear and cytoplasmic staining. Confocal microscopy showed galectin-1 fluorescence throughout most of the sections from the top of the cell to the bottom. Through the middle sections, as the plane of focus cuts through the nucleus, there was definite fluorescence staining in the nuclear compartment. This nuclear localization was critically dependent on the type of detergent used to permeabilize the cell: cells treated with saponin or digitonin yielded exclusively cytoplasmic staining while Triton X-100-treated cells showed nuclear as well as cytoplasmic labeling. Finally, double-immunofluorescence analysis showed that, within the nucleoplasm, the following pairs of nuclear antigens could be colocalized in certain speckled structures: (a) SC35 versus Sm; (b) galectin-1 versus Sm; (c) galectin-3 versus Sm; and (d) galectin-1 versus galectin-3. These results establish the presence of galectin-1 in the nuclei of HeLa cells, a conclusion consistent with the identification of the protein in nuclear extracts of the same cells and with its documentation as a factor in pre-mRNA splicing.

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