The interaction of GM1 ganglioside with cholera toxin on membranes of cells

Cholera toxin (molecular weight 84kD) binds with high affinity (K<SUB>d =</SUB> 10 <SUP>-9</SUP>M) to GM<SUB>1</SUB> ganglioside on the outer surface of most eukaryotic cells before all or part of the molecule is internalised and activation of adenylate cyclase oc...

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Main Author: Fletcher, Marianne Elizabeth
Published: University of Edinburgh 1991
Subjects:
572
Online Access:http://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.650970
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spelling ndltd-bl.uk-oai-ethos.bl.uk-6509702018-04-04T03:17:58ZThe interaction of GM1 ganglioside with cholera toxin on membranes of cellsFletcher, Marianne Elizabeth1991Cholera toxin (molecular weight 84kD) binds with high affinity (K<SUB>d =</SUB> 10 <SUP>-9</SUP>M) to GM<SUB>1</SUB> ganglioside on the outer surface of most eukaryotic cells before all or part of the molecule is internalised and activation of adenylate cyclase occurs. The GM<SUB>1</SUB> ganglioside is believed to diffuse laterally on the cell surface. There is also evidence to suggest that cholera toxin requires multivalent binding to GM<SUB>1</SUB> before it can activate adenylate cyclase. The effect of cholera toxin binding on the lateral diffusion of GM<SUB>1</SUB> was examined using the Fluorescence Recovery after Photobleaching technique either with fluorescently labelled toxin or with inserted, fluorescently labelled GM<SUB>1</SUB> ganglioside. Both toxin-receptor complex and receptor alone showed the same percentage mobility (about 60-70%) on the surface of the NIH 3T3 cells (a fibroblast cell line) and both had a lateral diffusion coefficient of about 1 x 10<SUP>-9</SUP> cm<SUP>2</SUP>s<SUP>-1</SUP>. This result shows that bound toxin mobility does not differ from inserted ganglioside mobility. An interpretation of the results may be that GM<SUB>1</SUB> molecules were compartmentalised on the fibroblast cell surface into mobile and immobile areas. The involvement of non-coated invaginations in cholera toxin internalisation was confirmed by preliminary binding experiments with colloidal gold conjugated cholera toxin. The cholera toxin was also used as a probe to locate GM<SUB>1</SUB> intracellularly by the Post-Embedding Immunogold technique on mouse small intestine (target tissue for cholera toxin). A previously unreported, specific binding to the heterochromatin of the nucleus of mouse intestinal cell was discovered. The intracellular localisation of GM<SUB>1</SUB> has previously mainly been studied by cell fractionation studies which indicated that only a small amount of total cell ganglioside is found within the nucleus. This binding of cholera toxin to the nucleus was further investigated using biochemical binding studies which also appeared to indicate a specific binding site for the toxin within the nucleus which has not been fully characterised.572University of Edinburghhttp://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.650970http://hdl.handle.net/1842/26508Electronic Thesis or Dissertation
collection NDLTD
sources NDLTD
topic 572
spellingShingle 572
Fletcher, Marianne Elizabeth
The interaction of GM1 ganglioside with cholera toxin on membranes of cells
description Cholera toxin (molecular weight 84kD) binds with high affinity (K<SUB>d =</SUB> 10 <SUP>-9</SUP>M) to GM<SUB>1</SUB> ganglioside on the outer surface of most eukaryotic cells before all or part of the molecule is internalised and activation of adenylate cyclase occurs. The GM<SUB>1</SUB> ganglioside is believed to diffuse laterally on the cell surface. There is also evidence to suggest that cholera toxin requires multivalent binding to GM<SUB>1</SUB> before it can activate adenylate cyclase. The effect of cholera toxin binding on the lateral diffusion of GM<SUB>1</SUB> was examined using the Fluorescence Recovery after Photobleaching technique either with fluorescently labelled toxin or with inserted, fluorescently labelled GM<SUB>1</SUB> ganglioside. Both toxin-receptor complex and receptor alone showed the same percentage mobility (about 60-70%) on the surface of the NIH 3T3 cells (a fibroblast cell line) and both had a lateral diffusion coefficient of about 1 x 10<SUP>-9</SUP> cm<SUP>2</SUP>s<SUP>-1</SUP>. This result shows that bound toxin mobility does not differ from inserted ganglioside mobility. An interpretation of the results may be that GM<SUB>1</SUB> molecules were compartmentalised on the fibroblast cell surface into mobile and immobile areas. The involvement of non-coated invaginations in cholera toxin internalisation was confirmed by preliminary binding experiments with colloidal gold conjugated cholera toxin. The cholera toxin was also used as a probe to locate GM<SUB>1</SUB> intracellularly by the Post-Embedding Immunogold technique on mouse small intestine (target tissue for cholera toxin). A previously unreported, specific binding to the heterochromatin of the nucleus of mouse intestinal cell was discovered. The intracellular localisation of GM<SUB>1</SUB> has previously mainly been studied by cell fractionation studies which indicated that only a small amount of total cell ganglioside is found within the nucleus. This binding of cholera toxin to the nucleus was further investigated using biochemical binding studies which also appeared to indicate a specific binding site for the toxin within the nucleus which has not been fully characterised.
author Fletcher, Marianne Elizabeth
author_facet Fletcher, Marianne Elizabeth
author_sort Fletcher, Marianne Elizabeth
title The interaction of GM1 ganglioside with cholera toxin on membranes of cells
title_short The interaction of GM1 ganglioside with cholera toxin on membranes of cells
title_full The interaction of GM1 ganglioside with cholera toxin on membranes of cells
title_fullStr The interaction of GM1 ganglioside with cholera toxin on membranes of cells
title_full_unstemmed The interaction of GM1 ganglioside with cholera toxin on membranes of cells
title_sort interaction of gm1 ganglioside with cholera toxin on membranes of cells
publisher University of Edinburgh
publishDate 1991
url http://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.650970
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