A simple method for antigen retrieval in tissue sections and cell cultures is described. Because many antibodies recognize denatured proteins on western blots, but are poorly reactive by immunocytochemistry, the effect of applying sodium dodecyl sulfate (SDS) to cryostat sections of tissues and to cell cultures prior to immunostaining was examined. In many cases, a 5-min pretreatment with 1% SDS produced a dramatic increase in staining intensity by indirect immunofluorescence. Among the antibodies tested that showed a positive effect of SDS were an anti-Na/K-ATPase monoclonal antibody, an anti-AE1/2 anion exchanger polyclonal antipeptide antibody, a monoclonal anti-caveolin antibody, and an anti-rab4 monoclonal antibody. In other cases, including antibodies against gp330, aquaporin 1, and aquaporin 2, no effect of SDS was detected. The results show that SDS treatment can be used as a simple method of antigen retrieval in cryostat sections and on cultured cells. In some cases, antigens were not detectable without pretreatment with SDS.
Fluid movement across epithelia lining portions of the male reproductive tract is important for modulating the luminal environment in which sperm mature and reside, and for increasing sperm concentration. Some regions of the male reproductive tract express aquaporin (AQP) 1 and/or AQP2, but these transmembrane water channels are not detectable in the epididymis. Therefore, we used a specific antibody to map the cellular distribution of another AQP, AQP9 (which is permeable to water and to some solutes), in the male reproductive tract. AQP9 is enriched on the apical (but not basolateral) membrane of nonciliated cells in the efferent duct and principal cells of the epididymis (rat and human) and vas deferens, where it could play a role in fluid reabsorption. Western blotting revealed a strong 30-kDa band in brush-border membrane vesicles isolated from the epididymis. AQP9 is also expressed in epithelial cells of the prostate and coagulating gland where fluid transport across the epithelium is important for secretory activity. However, it was undetectable in the seminal vesicle, suggesting that an alternative fluid transport pathway may be present in this tissue. Intracellular vesicles in epithelial cells along the reproductive tract were generally poorly stained for AQP9. Furthermore, the apical membrane distribution of AQP9 was unaffected by microtubule disruption. These data suggest that AQP9 is a constitutively inserted apical membrane protein and that its cell-surface expression is not acutely regulated by vesicular trafficking. AQP9 was detectable in the epididymis and vas deferens of 1-wk postnatal rats, but its expression was comparable with adult rats only after 3--4 wk. AQP9 could provide a route via which apical fluid and solute transport occurs in several regions of the male reproductive tract. The heterogeneous and segment-specific expression of AQP9 and other aquaporins along the male reproductive tract shown in this and in our previous studies suggests that fluid reabsorption and secretion in these tissues could be locally modulated by physiological regulation of AQP expression and/or function.
In kidney epithelial cells, a variety of physiological processes are dependent on the active recycling of membrane proteins between intracellular vesicles and the cell surface. Although clathrin-mediated endocytosis occurs in several renal cell types, endocytosis can also occur by non-clathrin-coated vesicles, including pinocytotic structures known as caveolae that contain a novel coat protein, caveolin. Exo- and endocytosis of a vacuolar H+-ATPase in intercalated cells also occurs via specialized "coated" vesicles that do not contain clathrin. The aim of this study was to localize caveolin in the kidney and, in addition, to determine whether it could be a component of the H+-ATPase recycling process. Using an antibody against the alpha- and beta-isoforms of caveolin-1, our immunocytochemical data show a marked heterogeneity in the cellular expression of this isoform of caveolin in kidney. In contrast, caveolin-3 was not detectable in renal epithelial cells. Caveolin-1 was abundant in endothelial cells and smooth muscle cells and was present in the parietal cells of Bowman's capsule. Distal tubule cells, connecting tubule cells, and collecting duct principal cells exhibited marked punctate basolateral staining, corresponding to the presence of caveolae detected by electron microscopy, whereas all intercalated cells were negative in both cortex and medulla. These data indicate that although caveolin-1 may participate in basolateral events in some kidney epithelial cell types, it does not appear to be involved in the regulated recycling of H+-ATPase in intercalated cells. Therefore, these cells recycle H+-ATPase by a mechanism that involves neither clathrin nor caveolin-1.
Active proton secretion and bicarbonate reabsorption by epithelial cells of the mammalian excurrent duct system maintains an acidic luminal pH that is involved in creating a suitable environment for sperm maturation and storage. Both an apical Na/H exchanger and an apical H+ ATPase have been implicated in luminal acidification. The H+ ATPase is located in apical and/or narrow cells in the caput epididymidis, and clear cells in the corpus and cauda epididymidis. As a step toward understanding the acute and chronic regulation of luminal acidification in excurrent ducts, we have followed the appearance of H+ ATPase-rich cells in rat epididymis during postnatal development, using antibodies to subunits of the H+ ATPase. In addition, we performed double staining with antibodies against carbonic anhydrase type II (CAII). H+ ATPase-rich cells were already detectable 2 weeks after birth in all regions of the epididymis, and reached maximum numbers after 3-4 weeks. CAII-rich cells followed a similar developmental pattern. In adult rats, the number of H+ ATPase/CAII-positive cells in the cauda was on average more than double the number in the caput epididymidis, although considerable intertubule variability was seen in both regions. Double immunostaining showed that CAII and H+ ATPase were colocalized in the same cells in the caput and cauda, but H+ ATPase-rich cells in the corpus contained low levels of CAII. These results demonstrate that differentiated subpopulations of proton-secreting epithelial cells appear early during epididymal development, and that the induction of H+ ATPase in these cells occurs prior to sexual maturation.
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