Abstract

In a previous work, resting and acid-secreting rabbit gastric mucosa were freeze-fractured and shadowed at 45 degrees with Pt-C. The shadow widths of proteic particles of tubulovesicle and canaliculus membranes were measured and compared. It was concluded that the frequency distributions of widths are significantly different in resting and secreting membranes and that each distribution accounts for several subpopulations of homogeneous particles. In the present study, an attempt is made to describe the experimental distributions as a mixture of those of two major proteins, say A and B and their aggregates (AA, AB and BB). The modelling, although simple, gave a very satisfactory statistical fit between observed and computed distributions. The comparison of parameters calculated from histamine and ranitidine experimental data further improves the fits and finally, component A accounts for 69% of the particles. Most replica of A particles are heart-shaped and the median shadow widths are 6.1 and 6.8 nm in canaliculus and tubulovesicles respectively. The component B accounts for 31% of the particles. They mainly appear as small barrels and the median shadow widths are 8.8 and 10.3 nm in canaliculus and tubulovesicles respectively. According to calculated parameters and observed particle replica, the onset of secretion does not change the relative ratio of proteins but changes their shapes. Component A should be the (H+,K+)-ATPase whereas debate on the identity of B is wide open.

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