Abstract

Hepatocyte microtubules were studied during the translocation of lysosomes which follows partial hepatectomy. In hepatocytes of normal rat liver the lysosomes are seen mainly along the bile canaliculi. After partial hepatectomy, these lysosomes lose their pericanalicular arrangement and move towards large inclusions (‘protein droplets’) which result from the marked pinocytosis induced by the removal of about two-thirds of the liver mass. The lysosomes fuse with the inclusions, and by 4 h after partial hepatectomy most of the inclusions demonstrate acid phosphatase activity histochemically. Many microtubules are found in close proximity to the lysosomes. When the rats are treated with colchicine prior to the partial hepatectomy, events are markedly different. The lysosomes change their location but do not hit the cytoplasmic inclusions, and the inclusions remain negative for acid phosphatase activity even 4 h post-hepatectomy. Quantitative ultrastructural study shows that the volume density of microtubules in the hepatocytes decreases to one-third of that in control hepatocytes. This strongly suggests an involvement of microtubules in giving orientation to the translocation of hepatocyte lysosomes under these conditions.

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