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The Journal of Cell Biology, Vol 34, 251-263, Copyright © 1967 by Rockefeller University Press

ARTICLE

LIPID SYNTHESIS, INTRACELLULAR TRANSPORT, AND SECRETION

: II. Electron Microscopic Radioautographic Study of the Mouse Lactating Mammary Gland



Olga Stein 1 and Yechezkiel Stein 1

1 From the Department of Experimental Medicine and Cancer Research, The Hebrew University-Hadassah Medical School and Lipid Research Laboratory, the Department of Medicine B, the Hadassah University Hospital, Jerusalem, Israel

In the mammary glands of lactating albino mice injected intravenously with 9, 10-oleic acid-3H or 9, 10-palmitic acid-3H, it has been shown that the labeled fatty acids are incorporated into mammary gland glycerides. The labeled lipid in the mammary gland 1 min after injection was in esterified form (> 95%), and the radioautographic reaction was seen over the rough endoplasmic reticulum and over lipid droplets, both intracellular and intraluminal. At 10–60 min after injection, the silver grains were concentrated predominantly over lipid droplets. There was no concentration of radioactivity over the granules in the Golgi apparatus, at any time interval studied. These findings were interpreted to indicate that after esterification of the fatty acid into glycerides in the rough endoplasmic reticulum an in situ aggregation of lipid occurs, with acquisition of droplet form. The release of the lipid into the lumen proceeds directly and not through the Golgi apparatus, in contradistinction to the mode of secretion of casein in the mammary gland or of lipoprotein in the liver. The presence of strands of endoplasmic reticulum attached to intraluminal lipid droplets provides a structural counterpart to the milk microsomes described in ruminant milk.

Submitted on December 20, 1966


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