calcimycin has been researched along with aminoethyldextran* in 1 studies
1 other study(ies) available for calcimycin and aminoethyldextran
Article | Year |
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An exocytotic mutant of Paramecium caudatum: membrane fusion without secretory contents release.
This is a detailed characterization of a secretory mutant incapable of releasing secretory contents despite normal exocytotic membrane fusion performance. Trichocyst non-discharge strain tnd1 of Paramecium caudatum and its wildtype (wt) both show a transient cortical [Ca2+]i increase and exocytotic membrane fusion in response to the polyamine secretagogue, aminoethyldextran (AED), or to caffeine. tnd1 cells frequently display spontaneous Ca2+ signals parallelled by spontaneous exocytotic membrane fusion. This remains undetected, unless the trichocyst matrix is shown to be freely accessible to the inert, non-membrane permeable fluorochrome, F2FITC, from the outside. In these tnd1 cells, spontaneous and AED- or caffeine-induced membrane fusion, always without contents expulsion by decondensation (i.e. several-fold stretching), is ascertained by electron microscopy. Exocytotic openings, with condensed trichocysts retained, may persist for hours without impairing cells. Trichocyst decondensation normally requires micromolar [Ca2+]e, but an increase to 10 mM has no effect on tnd1 trichocyst expansion in vivo or in vitro (when isolated and exposed to ionophore A23187 + Ca2+). Paracrystalline packing of the major secretory components (trichynins) does occur, despite incomplete proteolytic precursor processing (according to SDS-PAGE). However, 45Ca(2+)-binding by secretory components is considerably reduced--the likely cause of the non-discharge phenotype. Our findings imply significant untriggered membrane fusion in a system normally following the triggered pathway and clear separation of exocytotic membrane fusion from any later Ca(2+)-dependent steps of the secretory cycle. Topics: Animals; Caffeine; Calcimycin; Calcium; Dextrans; Exocytosis; Fluorescent Dyes; Ionophores; Membrane Fusion; Microscopy, Electron; Paramecium; Protozoan Proteins | 1998 |