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The Journal of Cell Biology, Vol 41, 357-377, Copyright © 1969 by Rockefeller University Press

ARTICLE

HETEROGENEOUS DISTRIBUTION OF ENZYMES IN SUBMICROSOMAL MEMBRANE FRAGMENTS



Peter R. Dallman 1, Gustav Dallner 1, Anders Bergstrand 1, and Lars Ernster 1

1 From the Institute of Biochemistry, University of Stockholm, and the Department of Pathology, Sabbatsberg Hospital, Karolinska Institutet, Stockholm, Sweden.

Dr. Dallman's present address is Department of Pediatrics, University of California Medical Center, San Francisco, California 94122

Microsomal membranes are postulated to contain either a homogeneous arrangement of individual enzymes or groupings of functionally related enzymes. In the present study we attempt to distinguish between these hypotheses in subfractions of rough microsomes from rat liver. After sonication, the individual vesicles that make up the rough-membrane fraction average less than 1/100 of their previous mass. The vesicles in the sonicated suspension are fractionated roughly according to size on a continuous sucrose gradient. Enzyme activity or concentration in fractions of the gradient is expressed on a phospholipid basis. Fractions containing primarily small vesicles differ from those containing larger vesicles in a manner suggesting a certain degree of separation of NADH-linked from NADPH-linked enzymes. NADH-ferricyanide reductase, NADH-cytochrome c reductase and cytochrome b5 are most concentrated within the large vesicles in the lowest third of the gradient. In contrast, NADPH-cytochrome c reductase and cytochrome P-450 are found in highest concentration in the small vesicles that make up the upper third of the gradient. The results suggest a nonrandom distribution of these two enzyme groups in the membranes of the endoplasmic reticulum.

Submitted on September 17, 1968
Revised on November 14, 1968


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