pubmed:abstractText |
Rat embryo fibroblasts cultured in the presence of monensin exhibited an inhibited uptake of horseradish peroxidase. The inhibition was detected after 3 h, after which time the cells became increasingly vacuolated; the concentration of monensin required to inhibit pinocytosis (0.4 microM for half-maximum inhibition at 18 h) was similar to that found by others to inhibit secretion. Both the exchange of 5'-nucleotidase between the membranes of cytoplasmic organelles and the cell surface and the internalization of anti-5'-nucleotidase bound to the cell surface were inhibited by approximately 90% in monensin-treated cells. The effects of monensin were reversible: cells cultured first with monensin, and then in fresh medium, exhibited control levels of horseradish peroxidase uptake, exchange of 5'-nucleotidase, and internalization of anti-5'-nucleotidase bound to the cell surface. After monensin treatment, the median density of both galactosyl transferase and 5'-nucleotidase increased from 1.128 to 1.148, and the median density of both N-acetyl-beta-glucosaminidase and horseradish peroxidase taken up by endocytosis decreased from 1.194 to 1.160. The results indicate that monensin is a reversible inhibitor of pinocytosis and, presumably, therefore, of membrane recycling. They suggest that the inhibition of membrane recycling occurs at a step other than the fusion of pinocytic vesicles with lysosomes and is perhaps a consequence of an effect of the ionophore on the Golgi complex.
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