Abstract

About 25–35% of human T cells display the CDw60 ganglioside (9- O-acetyl-GD3) antigen at the cell surface [E.P. Rieber, in W. Knapp, B. Dörken, W.R. Gilks, E.P. Rieber, R.E. Schmidt, H. Stein, A.E.G.K. von dem Borne (Eds.), Leucocyte Typing IV, Oxford University, Oxford, 1989, p. 361.]. Other leucocytes do not express this antigen on the cell surface. This led us to investigate its presence by flow cytometry and immunoelectron microscopy (IEM). Flow cytometric analysis of isolated peripheral T cells showed 26% of the cell population to have the CDw60 antigen expressed on the cell surface whereas 74% did not. Similarly, IEM analysis of 262 random T cells by the preembedding immunogold labeling technique revealed CDw60 surface expression to be tetrapartite: (a) the majority of 63.7% of the T cells did not show any surface associated gold label; (b) 19.5% were of low CDw60 surface exposition, corresponding to a linear density of 0.05–2.0 gold markers per μm; (c) about 13.4% showed a medium surface exposition with a linear density of 2.1–4.5 gold markers per μm; and (d) a high exposition, ranging from 4.6 to 9.0 gold markers per μm, was seen at 3.4% of the T cells. From postembedding label experiments, which additionally make access to the antigen localized within the cytoplasm, it was found that nearly all T cells contained low levels of intracellular CDw60. Most of it was found to be associated with the cytoplasmic membrane or vesicles, derived from the Golgi. Immunogold conjugates associated with the cytoplasmic membrane showed a linear density up to 0.6 gold markers per μm. The asymmetric expression of the CDw60 antigen on human T cells and its occurrence in nearly all T cells suggests that its surface presentation is tightly regulated.

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