Distribution of ferritin receptors and coated pits on giant HeLa cells.

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RESUMO

HeLa cells bind horse spleen ferritin when the two are incubated at 0 degrees C. Since the majority of this bound ferritin is located in coated pits, we conclude that the ferritin binds to a specific receptor which takes part in an endocytic cycle. When substrate-attached and well-spread giant HeLa cells are briefly labelled at 0 degrees C with ferritin, ferritin particles are found to be concentrated towards the cell periphery, where they exist largely outside coated pits. This peripheral concentration is a property of circulating (and not just newly synthesized) receptors because it is not affected by prior incubation of giant cells in cycloheximide. However, coated pits are themselves roughly uniformly distributed over the surface of these cells. These results provide evidence that the membrane internalised by coated pits on these cells is returned to the cell surface at the leading edge of the cell. Because of this separation of the sites of endocytosis and exocytosis, a flow of membrane must occur across the cell surface. This flow is composed of lipid plus receptors. The implications of this for capping and for cell spreading are discussed.

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