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Membrane differentiations of an absorptive epithelium covering embryonic trophotaeniae in a goodeid teleost

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Summary

The trophotaenial absorptive cells (TACs) in goodeid embryos facilitate nutrient absorption during prolonged periods of intraovarian gestation. In a study of membrane differentiations associated with solute and ligand transfer in the trophotaeniae of Xenotoca eiseni, embryos were incubated in vivo with cationized ferritin (CF) prior to freeze-cleaving. This exposure to high concentrations of an adsorptive ligand was meant to induce swelling of the endosomal compartment. Macromolecular trafficking in TACs occurs via an apical endocytic complex consisting of plasma membrane invaginations, a large population of small vesicles, uniformly thick apical tubules, and endosomes. Freeze-fracture replicas showed that the microvillar plasma membrane P-face of TACs was studded with intramembrane particles (IMPs) at a fairly high density, whereas that of the cell surface proper contained a distinctly lower density and the tubulovesicular endocytic pits contained almost no IMPs. The majority of small vesicles and apical tubules in a near surface position displayed P-fracture faces with only a few odd IMPs, indicating that membrane, shuttling between the apical plasma membrane and intracellular sorting organelles, obviously does not carry along many large-sized integral membrane proteins. The distended endosomal compartment had many P-face-associated particles primarily clustered into patches. Specializations of the lateral plasma membrane included 4–8 tight junctional strands, relatively large complements of gap junction proteins, and numerous plaques of desmosomal membrane particles. A system of lamellar cisternae underlay the lateral cell surface that was in continuity with the intraepithelial space by numerous tubular canals, giving rise to an intracellular amplification of the basolateral plasma membrane. Their outward openings appeared as tiny pits on the cytoplasmic faces of freeze-cleaved cell membrane. The density of IMPs on the P-faces of the surface plasma membrane was apparently lower than that on its invaginated lamellar complex. Hence, it is concluded that the mobility of integral membrane proteins in the plane of the membrane may be hampered in movement across the surface pores.

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Supported by the Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft (Schi 268/1-1)

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Schindler, J.F., de Vries, U. Membrane differentiations of an absorptive epithelium covering embryonic trophotaeniae in a goodeid teleost. Cell Tissue Res 259, 321–330 (1990). https://doi.org/10.1007/BF00318455

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