Abstract

Previous freeze-fracture experiments using either glutaraldehyde-fixed and cryoprotected specimens or unfixed rapid-frozen samples led to the proposal that cylindrical strands of the tight junction (TJ) observed in freeze-fracture preparations are inverted cylindrical micelles made up of membrane lipids and, possibly, membrane proteins. However, no one has yet been able to directly label the structural fibrils of the TJ. To test the hypothesis that TJ strands observed on freeze-fracture preparations are composed at least partially of lipids, we have combined the phospholipase A2-gold and the fracture-label techniques for localization of phospholipids. Phospholipase A2, purified from bee venom, was adsorbed on gold particles and used for specific labeling of its substrate. Phospholipase A2-colloidal gold (PLA2-CG) complex was applied to freeze-fractured preparations of rat exocrine pancreatic cells and testicular Sertoli cells, both of which are known to have extensive TJ complexes on their plasma membranes. Fracture-label replicas of exocrine pancreatic cells revealed specific association of gold particles with TJ fibrils on the protoplasmic fracture-face of the plasma membrane. The majority of these gold particles were observed either directly on the top of the TJ fibrils or adjacent to these cylindrical structures. A high density of PLA2-CG labeling was also observed over the complementary exoplasmic fracture-face of the TJ complex. This intimate association of PLA2-CG labeling with the TJ is particularly evident in the Sertoli cell plasma membrane, where rows of gold particles were observed to be superimposed on parallel arrays of cylindrical strands of the TJ complex. The present findings provide direct cytochemical evidence to support the hypothesis that cylindrical TJ strands observed in freeze-fracture preparations contain phospholipids.

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