Structure of the novel membrane-coating material in proton-secreting epithelial cells and identification as an H+ATPase

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Abstract

Specialized proton-secreting cells known collectively as mitochondra-rich cells are found in a variety of transportin epithelia, including the kidney collecting duct (intercalated cells) and toad and turtle urinary bladders. These cells contain a population of characteristic tubulovesicles that are believed to be involved in the shuttling of proton pumps (H+ATPase) to and from the plasma membrane. These transporting vesicles have a dense, studlike material coating the cytoplasmic face of their limiting membranes and similar studs are also found beneath parts of the plasma membrane. We have recently shown that this membrane coat does not contain clathrin. The present study was performed to determine the structure of this coat in rapidly frozen and freeze-dried tissue, and to determine whether the coat contains a major membrane protein transported by these vesicles, a proton pumping H+ATPase. The structure of the coat was examined in proton-secreting, mitochondria-rich cells from toad urinary bladder epithelium by rapidly freezing portions of apical membrane and associated cytoplasm that were sheared away from the remainder of the cell using polylysine-coated coverslips. Regions of the underside of these apical membranes as large as 0.2 μm2 were decorated by studlike projections that were arranged into regular hexagonal arrays. Individual studs had a diameter of 9.5 nm and appeared to be composed of multiple subunits arranged around a central depression, possibly representing a channel. The studs had a density of ~16,800 per μm2 of membrane. Similar arrays of studs were also found on vesicles trapped in the residual band of cytoplasm that remained attached to the underside of the plasma membrane, but none were seen in adjacent granular cells. To determine whether these arrays of studs contained H+ATPase molecules, we examined a preparation of affinity-purified bovine medullary H+ATPase, using the same technique, after incorporation of the protein eluted from a monoclonal antibody affinity column into phospholipid liposomes. The affinity-purified protein was shown to be capable of ATP-dependent acidification. In such preparations, large paracrystalline arrays of studs identical in appearance to those seen in situ were found. The dimensions of the studs as well as the number per square micrometer of membrane were identical to those of toad bladder mitochondria-rich cells: 9.5 nm in diameter, 16,770 per μm2 of membrane. Finally, we used affinity-purified polyclonal antibodies against the 70- and 56-kD subunits of the protein for immunocytochemical localization in sections of tissue; the studcoated membrane regions in kidney intercalated cells were heavily labeled with protein A-gold. We conclude that the coat material associated with plasma membrane segments and with a population of transport vesicles in these proton-secreting epithelial cells contains protein subunits that are closely related to, or are an actual part of the cytoplasmic domain of the H+ATPase molecule.

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Brown, D., Gluck, S., & Hartwig, J. (1987). Structure of the novel membrane-coating material in proton-secreting epithelial cells and identification as an H+ATPase. Journal of Cell Biology, 105(4), 1637–1648. https://doi.org/10.1083/jcb.105.4.1637

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