ISSN:
1399-3054
Source:
Blackwell Publishing Journal Backfiles 1879-2005
Topics:
Biology
Notes:
Plasma membrane vesicles were isolated from shoots of light-grown wheat seedlings by preparative free-flow electrophoresis, aqueous polymer two-phase partition or both. Plasma membrane vesicles were identified from staining of thin sections prepared for electron microscopy with phosphotungstic acid at low pH. The orientation of the plasma membrane vesicles was determined from latency and trypsin sensitivity of K+ Mg2+ATPase and of glucan synthase II, and concanavalin A-peroxidase binding and membrane asymmetry visualized by electron microscopy. The K+Mg2+ATPase and of glucan synthase II activities of plasma membrane fractions isolated by two-phase partition were latent and trypsin resistant. The vesicles bound concanavalin A-peroxidase strongly and exhibited a cytoplasmic side-in morphology. These fractions of cytoplasmic side-in vesicles were less than 10% contaminated by cytoplasmic side-out vesicles. By free-flow electrophoresis, two populations of vesicles which stained with phosphotungstic acid at low pH, designated D and E, were obtained. The vesicle population with the lower electrophoretic mobility, fraction E, contained plasma membrane vesicles with properties similar to those of the plasma membrane vesicles obtained after two-phase partition. The phosphotungstic-reactive vesicles with greater electrophoretic mobility, fraction D, were concanavalin A unreactive with the cytoplasmic membrane leaflet outwards. Less than 50% of the K+Mg2+-ATPase activity of this fraction was latent and trypsin sensitive. The vesicles of fraction D appeared to be preferentially cytoplasmic side-out. The electrophoretic mobilities of cytoplasmic side-out (non-latent glucan synthase II activity) and cytoplasmic side-in (latent glncan synthase II activity) plasma membrane vesicles isolated from a frozen and thawed wheat plasma membrane fraction, corresponded with the mobilities of fraction D and E, respectively, again showing that the plasma membrane vesicles with the lesser electrophoretic mobility were cytoplasmic side-in. The cytoplasmic side-in and cytoplasmic side-out vesicles therefore showed opposite eletrophoretic mobilities compared with a previous free-flow electrophoretic separation of soybean plasma membranes. The majorities of the plasma membrane vesicles of both fractions D and E entered the upper phase upon two-phase partition with the phase composition used for purification of wheat plasma membranes. Thus, neither electrophoretic mobility nor phase partitioning characteristics can be used as the only criteria for assignment of vesicle orientation.
Type of Medium:
Electronic Resource
URL:
http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/j.1399-3054.1992.tb08774.x
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