Cargando…

THE DISTRIBUTION OF THE WATER-SOLUBLE INORGANIC ORTHOPHOSPHATE IONS WITHIN THE CELL: ACCUMULATION IN THE NUCLEUS : Electron Probe Microanalysis

Lead acetate treatment of unfixed cells immobilizes the intracellular water-soluble, inorganic orthophosphate ions as microcrystalline lead hydroxyapatite precipitates (see reference 1). These precipitates have been analyzed with the electron microprobe. A much higher concentration of phosphorus has...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Libanati, Cesar M., Tandler, Carlos J.
Formato: Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: The Rockefeller University Press 1969
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2107709/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/5801427
_version_ 1782138856669184000
author Libanati, Cesar M.
Tandler, Carlos J.
author_facet Libanati, Cesar M.
Tandler, Carlos J.
author_sort Libanati, Cesar M.
collection PubMed
description Lead acetate treatment of unfixed cells immobilizes the intracellular water-soluble, inorganic orthophosphate ions as microcrystalline lead hydroxyapatite precipitates (see reference 1). These precipitates have been analyzed with the electron microprobe. A much higher concentration of phosphorus has been found in the nucleoli of maize root tip cells fixed in lead acetate-glutaraldehyde (organic phosphorus plus inorganic orthophosphate), as compared to the nucleoli of roots fixed in glutaraldehyde alone (organic phosphorus). The concentration of the inorganic orthophosphate pool in these nucleoli is three to five times as high as the concentration of the macromolecular organic phosphate. Since nearly all of the latter is in RNA, the concentration of inorganic phosphate in the nucleolus is calculated to be roughly 0.5–0.8 M. About 30%—and up to 50%—of the total cellular inorganic phosphate is accumulated in the nucleolus since the mean concentration per cell is about 10(-2) M. In the extranucleolar part of the nucleus the mean concentration was estimated by densitometry to be roughly six times less than in the nucleolus (⩽ 0.1 M), and appears more concentrated in the nucleoplasm than in the condensed chromatin. While there is no direct evidence for the concentration in the cytoplasm, it certainly must be much lower than the mean cellular level (i.e., < 10(-2) M) since the nucleus is about 10% of the total cell volume. The implications of this compartmentation in the intact cell are discussed in connection with (A) the availability of orthophosphate ions for the cytoplasm in those processes in which these ions affect the rate of enzymatic reactions, and (B) protein nucleic acid interactions within the nucleus and nucleolus.
format Text
id pubmed-2107709
institution National Center for Biotechnology Information
language English
publishDate 1969
publisher The Rockefeller University Press
record_format MEDLINE/PubMed
spelling pubmed-21077092008-05-01 THE DISTRIBUTION OF THE WATER-SOLUBLE INORGANIC ORTHOPHOSPHATE IONS WITHIN THE CELL: ACCUMULATION IN THE NUCLEUS : Electron Probe Microanalysis Libanati, Cesar M. Tandler, Carlos J. J Cell Biol Article Lead acetate treatment of unfixed cells immobilizes the intracellular water-soluble, inorganic orthophosphate ions as microcrystalline lead hydroxyapatite precipitates (see reference 1). These precipitates have been analyzed with the electron microprobe. A much higher concentration of phosphorus has been found in the nucleoli of maize root tip cells fixed in lead acetate-glutaraldehyde (organic phosphorus plus inorganic orthophosphate), as compared to the nucleoli of roots fixed in glutaraldehyde alone (organic phosphorus). The concentration of the inorganic orthophosphate pool in these nucleoli is three to five times as high as the concentration of the macromolecular organic phosphate. Since nearly all of the latter is in RNA, the concentration of inorganic phosphate in the nucleolus is calculated to be roughly 0.5–0.8 M. About 30%—and up to 50%—of the total cellular inorganic phosphate is accumulated in the nucleolus since the mean concentration per cell is about 10(-2) M. In the extranucleolar part of the nucleus the mean concentration was estimated by densitometry to be roughly six times less than in the nucleolus (⩽ 0.1 M), and appears more concentrated in the nucleoplasm than in the condensed chromatin. While there is no direct evidence for the concentration in the cytoplasm, it certainly must be much lower than the mean cellular level (i.e., < 10(-2) M) since the nucleus is about 10% of the total cell volume. The implications of this compartmentation in the intact cell are discussed in connection with (A) the availability of orthophosphate ions for the cytoplasm in those processes in which these ions affect the rate of enzymatic reactions, and (B) protein nucleic acid interactions within the nucleus and nucleolus. The Rockefeller University Press 1969-09-01 /pmc/articles/PMC2107709/ /pubmed/5801427 Text en Copyright © 1969 by The Rockefeller University Press. This article is distributed under the terms of an Attribution–Noncommercial–Share Alike–No Mirror Sites license for the first six months after the publication date (see http://www.rupress.org/terms). After six months it is available under a Creative Commons License (Attribution–Noncommercial–Share Alike 4.0 Unported license, as described at http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-sa/4.0/).
spellingShingle Article
Libanati, Cesar M.
Tandler, Carlos J.
THE DISTRIBUTION OF THE WATER-SOLUBLE INORGANIC ORTHOPHOSPHATE IONS WITHIN THE CELL: ACCUMULATION IN THE NUCLEUS : Electron Probe Microanalysis
title THE DISTRIBUTION OF THE WATER-SOLUBLE INORGANIC ORTHOPHOSPHATE IONS WITHIN THE CELL: ACCUMULATION IN THE NUCLEUS : Electron Probe Microanalysis
title_full THE DISTRIBUTION OF THE WATER-SOLUBLE INORGANIC ORTHOPHOSPHATE IONS WITHIN THE CELL: ACCUMULATION IN THE NUCLEUS : Electron Probe Microanalysis
title_fullStr THE DISTRIBUTION OF THE WATER-SOLUBLE INORGANIC ORTHOPHOSPHATE IONS WITHIN THE CELL: ACCUMULATION IN THE NUCLEUS : Electron Probe Microanalysis
title_full_unstemmed THE DISTRIBUTION OF THE WATER-SOLUBLE INORGANIC ORTHOPHOSPHATE IONS WITHIN THE CELL: ACCUMULATION IN THE NUCLEUS : Electron Probe Microanalysis
title_short THE DISTRIBUTION OF THE WATER-SOLUBLE INORGANIC ORTHOPHOSPHATE IONS WITHIN THE CELL: ACCUMULATION IN THE NUCLEUS : Electron Probe Microanalysis
title_sort distribution of the water-soluble inorganic orthophosphate ions within the cell: accumulation in the nucleus : electron probe microanalysis
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2107709/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/5801427
work_keys_str_mv AT libanaticesarm thedistributionofthewatersolubleinorganicorthophosphateionswithinthecellaccumulationinthenucleuselectronprobemicroanalysis
AT tandlercarlosj thedistributionofthewatersolubleinorganicorthophosphateionswithinthecellaccumulationinthenucleuselectronprobemicroanalysis
AT libanaticesarm distributionofthewatersolubleinorganicorthophosphateionswithinthecellaccumulationinthenucleuselectronprobemicroanalysis
AT tandlercarlosj distributionofthewatersolubleinorganicorthophosphateionswithinthecellaccumulationinthenucleuselectronprobemicroanalysis