An affinity-purified, monospecific rabbit antibody against soluble human milk galactosyltransferase was used to localize the enzyme in HeLa cells by immunofluorescence and by the protein A-gold technique at the electron microscope level. Specific immunofluorescence was observed in a juxtanuclear cytoplasmic region which was identified, on immunostained thin sections of lowtemperature Lowicryl K4M-embedded HeLa cells, as Golgi apparatus. Label by gold particles was limited to two to three trans cisternae of the Golgi apparatus, indicating a compartmentalization of galactosyltransferase in the cisternal stack. Combination of preembedding thiamine pyrophosphatase cytochemistry with postembedding immunostaining for galactosyltransferase proved codistribution of the two enzymes. However, the acid phosphatase-positive, trans-most cisterna was negative for galactosyltransferase. The close topological association of both galactosyltransferase and thiamine pyrophosphatase (or nucleoside diphosphatase) suggests a concerted action of both enzymes in glycosylation. © 1982, Rockefeller University Press., All rights reserved.
CITATION STYLE
Roth, J., & Berger, E. G. (1982). Immunocytochemical localization of galactosyltransferase in hela cells: Codistribution with thiamine pyrophosphatase in trans-golgi cisternae. Journal of Cell Biology, 93(1), 223–229. https://doi.org/10.1083/jcb.93.1.223
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