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  • Title: In vitro interaction of Zajdela ascites hepatoma cells with lipid vesicles.
    Author: van Renswoude AJ, Westenberg P, Scherphof GL.
    Journal: Biochim Biophys Acta; 1979 Nov 16; 558(1):22-40. PubMed ID: 497196.
    Abstract:
    We studied the in vitro interaction between Zajdela ascites hepatoma cells and small unilamellar vesicles, consisting of 14C-labeled phosphatidylacholine, cholesterol, and phosphatidylserine (molar ratio 5 : 4 : 1), containing high intravesicular concentrations of carboxyfluorescein or fluorescein isothiocyanate tagged dextran. The entrapped markers were found to be associated with the cells to a lesser degree than the vesicle membrane marker. This discrepancy, which is slightly less pronounced for fluorescein isothiocyanate tagged dextran than for carboxyfluorescein, increases with incubation time and decreases with increasing vesicle lipid concentration in the incubation mixture. Vesicle-plasma membrane exchange of the vesicle lipid marker could not entirely explain the observed discrepancy. It is tentatively concluded that the gap mainly arises from a selective loss of entrapped dyes from vesicles actually interacting with the cell surface. Both spectrofluorimetry and fluorescence microscopic observations, as well as the relative insensitivity of vesicle uptake towards the presence of metabolic inhibitors, exclude a major contribution of endocytosis as a vesicle uptake route. We therefore conclude that vesicles are primarily internalized by a vesicle-cell fusion-like process. The observed discrepancy in uptake between entrapped materials and vesicle lipid is discussed in terms of a two-site vesicle-cell surface interaction model.
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