4.4 Article

Cell surface events during resealing visualized by scanning-electron microscopy

Journal

CELL AND TISSUE RESEARCH
Volume 304, Issue 1, Pages 141-146

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s004410000286

Keywords

plasma membrane; disruption; resealing; vesicle; fusion; patch; sea urchin; Lytechinus pictus; Stronglyocentratus purpuratus

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The function of exocytosis during plasma membrane resealing might be to facilitate the flow of surface lipid over the disruption site and/or to add defect-spanning patches of internal membrane across it. Scanning-electron-microscopic visualization of large plasma membrane disruptions in sea urchin eggs is here used to distinguish between these two possibilities. Disruptions were induced by shear stress in the presence and absence of resealing-permissive levels of external Ca2+, and the eggs were fixed at various intervals thereafter for microscopic processing. In eggs fixed immediately (<1 s) after shearing in the absence of Ca2+, a condition which pre vents resealing, disruption sites were filled with a uniform population of spherical vesicles (1 mum in diameter). In eggs fixed immediately after shearing at a resealing-permissive level of Ca2+, disruption sites were filled with a highly heterogeneous population of enlarged vesicles, some being more than 10 mum in diameter and many having irregular profiles and/or appearing to be joined to one another. In eggs fixed 2 s or 5 s post-shearing, the continuity of these large vesicles with one another and the surface membrane began to obscure individual vesicle identities. Single apertures of discontinuity over disruption sites, the predicted morphology of a flow-based resealing mechanism, were not observed at any time point (1-5 s) during the interval required for completion of resealing. These observations provide strong confirmation that patching of large disruptions mediates their resealing.

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