Abstract
Fractions enriched in secretory vesicles were obtained from lactating bovine mammary tissue by a straightforward procedure involving gentle homogenization and centrifugation in isotonic milk salt solution containing Ficoll. Secretory vesicle-rich fractions could also be obtained from lactating rat mammary gland by this procedure. With rats, yields of vesicles were substantially increased by administration of colchicine or thioglucose to animals several hours before sacrifice. Isolated fractions were enriched in lactose and consisted predominantly of 0.2–1.2 μm diameter vesicles, many of which contained casein micelles. Enzymatic, compositional and morphological examination revealed vesicle preparations to be largely free of contamination by rough endoplasmic reticulum, mitochondria, nuclei, peroxisomes and lysosomes. Specific activity of several marker enzymes of the secretory vesicle fraction were similar to, or intermediate between, Golgi apparatus and milk lipid globule membranes. Amounts of cholesterol and gangliosides in vesicle fractions approached levels found in plasma membranes. In distribution of major phospholipids, secretory vesicles were intermediate between Golgi apparatus and milk lipid globule membranes. The pattern of polypeptides of secretory vesicle membrane was qualitatively similar to that of Golgi apparatus membranes. While there were similarities between these polypeptide patterns and that of lipid globule membranes, the latter contained relatively more of certain polypeptides, particularly the internal coat-associated polypeptides of the globule membrane. These observations are discussed in relation to the endomembrane hypothesis and the origin of the membrane of milk lipid globules.
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