An ultradian oscillation of protein synthesis was detected by synchronization of metabolic activity in rat hepatocyte cultures. This oscillation occurs in dense cultures in fresh medium, but not in sparse ones. Metabolic synchronization of sparse cultures, however, was initiated by conditioned medium or addition of 0.3-0.5 microm of a mixture of bovine brain gangliosides to fresh culture medium along with either 0.06-0.2 microm GM1 or 0.1-0.2 microm GDIa. GTIb and GDIb did not produce oscillations, nor did human liver ganglioside GM3. High expression of GM1 ganglioside determinants in hepatocytes maintained in the conditioned medium purified polyclonal antibodies to GM1 was coupled with protein synthetic oscillatory activity, i.e. metabolic synchronization. Incubation of dense cultures with GM1-antibodies for 24 h decreased the amplitude of these oscillations. In sparse cultures maintained in fresh medium where protein synthesis showed no oscillatory pattern, GM1 expression was low.
The distribution of GM1 and GM3 gangliosides in human brain development between gestational week (g.w.) 6 and 15 was demonstrated by an immunocytochemical approach using polyclonal anti-GM1 and anti-GM3 antibodies. The first appearance of GM1- and GM3-positive cells was recorded as early as in g.w.6. Both antibodies labeled the cells in the ventricular zone of the telencephalic wall, with radially oriented fibers toward the pial surface, which represent radial glia cells with glia fibers. The intensive GM3 immunoreactivity was also exhibited in proliferating cells in the ventricular zone between g.w.6 and 12. During the period from g.w. 12 to 15, characterized by a rapid multiplication of neurons and glia cells, an increased number of GM1- and GM3-positive cells was observed. Prominent GM1 ganglioside staining was observed at the surface of the cell bodies in the ventricular zone. Besides surface labeling in migrating cells, GM1 immunoreactivity was identified inside the soma in the regions of cortical plate and subplate. GM1 immunoreactivity was more pronounced on the membrane of neuronal cells migrating along radial glia fibers, especially at the contact site between neuronal and glial cells. The GM3 ganglioside was localized mostly inside the soma, showing a granular immunoreactivity pattern. Our observations confirm the presence of GM1 and GM3 gangliosides in neuronal and glial cells in early human brain development. The involvement, especially of GM1 ganglioside in glia-neuronal contacts during migration of neuroblasts to their final destination, as well as the presence of GM3 ganglioside in proliferative cells in the ventricular zone of the telencephalic wall was also recorded.
Ultradian protein synthesis rhythm was used as a marker of cell cooperation in synchronous dense and non-synchronous sparse hepatocyte cultures. Phenylephrine (2 microM, 2 min), an alpha (1)-adrenoreceptor agonist, which exerts [Ca(2+)](cyt)elevation from intracellular stores, affected protein synthesis rhythm in sparse cultures, i.e. initiated cooperative activity of the cells. The same effect was produced by 2,5-di(tertiary-butyl)-1,4-benzohydroquinone (10 microM, 2 min), which increases [Ca(2+)](cyt)by a non-receptor pathway. Pretreatment of dense cultures with the intracellular calcium chelator, 1,2-bis (2-aminophenoxy) ethane-N,N,N',N'- tetraacetic acid (acetoxymethyl) ester (BAPTA-AM) at 10-20 microM for, 30-60 min resulted in loss of the rhythm of protein synthesis, i.e. loss of cooperative activity between the cells. The medium conditioned by control dense cultures initiated rhythm in sparse cultures, whereas the conditioned medium of cultures pretreated with BAPTA-AM did not. [Ca(2+)](cyt)increase is known to occur with monosialoganglioside GM1 treatment. By ELISA estimation, the GM1 content in 3 h conditioned medium was similar in control dense cultures to that in cultures pretreated with BAPTA-AM. Bearing in mind data on the Ca(2+)-dependence of vesicle formation and shedding, the conditioned medium was separated by 150000 g centrifugation to supernatant containing monomers and micelles, and a pellet containing vesicular form of gangliosides. Only the latter initiated cooperative activity of the cells of sparse cultures. These cultures were also synchronized by GM1-containing liposomes at lower concentrations than added free GM1, 0.0003 and 0.06 microM respectively. Thus, GM1 and calcium are both involved in cell-cell synchronization. Activation of gangliosides, including GM1 and elevation of [Ca(2+)](cyt,)is known to lead to changes of protein kinase activity and protein phosphorylation resulting in modulation of oscillations in protein metabolism.
Immunohistochemical examination showed that sections of intimal atherosclerotic plaques contained cells and cell clusters as well as areas of extracellular matrix specifically stained with antibodies against ganglioside GM3. No immunohistochemical staining was observed in areas bordering the plaques where there was no histological evidence of atherosclerosis. To determine whether the ganglioside GM3 deposits in the intimal plaques derived directly from plasma or were synthesised by intimal cells. intimal plaque and plasma LDL were assayed for ganglioside GM3 fatty acid composition. This assay showed that more than 50% of the fatty acids of GM3 isolated from both atherosclerotic and normal intima are either minor fatty acids or those absent from LDL GM3. We conclude that the GM3 deposits present in intimal plaque arise in intimal cells and do not derive from plasma LDL.
Pretreatment of hepatocyte cultures with 1 microM d-l-threo-1-phenyl-2-hexadecanoylamino-3-pyrrolidino-1-propanol-HCL (PPPP) for 24 h decreased the ganglioside GM1 content of the cells by approximately 50% and that of the conditioned medium by 90%. No rhythm in the rate of protein synthesis was detected in dense cultures pretreated with PPPP, but was observed in control dense cultures. Conditioned medium from control dense cultures induced synchrony in sparse cultures, which were non-synchronous in their own medium. In contrast, conditioned medium from dense cultures pretreated with PPPP did not synchronize sparse cultures. Since protein synthesis rhythm is a marker of cell synchronization, i.e. their co-operative activity, then non-oscillatory behavior means loss of cell co-operation. The protein synthesis rhythm was restored 24 h after hepatocytes were transferred to PPPP-free medium. Restoration was more rapid when 0.9 microM gangliosides (standard mixture from bovine brain) were added to the medium just after the withdrawal of PPPP. These novel results concerning the loss of rhythm of protein synthesis in low GM1 ganglioside medium support the conclusion that ganglioside is implicated in the regulation of cell co-operative activity.
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