Abstract
The repeated administration of the antidepressant maprotiline to adult rats caused the formation of myeloid bodies in the liver. In situ and in the cell-free state they were shown by acid phosphatase cytochemistry to represent lysosomes. When cytoplasmic extracts of the livers of control and treated animals were subjected to velocity-centrifugation in shallow sucrose gradients, it was found that after drug treatment the peak activities of a series of acid hydrolases were (reversibly) displaced to lower sucrose densities. This behaviour was most likely related to the accumulation of phospholipid-rich material within the myeloid bodies. The subcellular distribution, the level in mitochondria-rich fractions, and some kinetic parameters of the various acid hydrolase activities were not appreciably altered by the medication. The diminished structure-linked latency of a number of acid hydrolases, the greater susceptibility to the influence of Triton X-100 and to a hypoosmotic environment, and the occurrence of structurally damaged particles indicated that the myeloid bodies are more fragile than the lysosomes of control livers.
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