The endomembrane requirement for cell surface repair

PL McNeil, K Miyake, SS Vogel - Proceedings of the …, 2003 - National Acad Sciences
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 2003National Acad Sciences
The capacity to reseal a plasma membrane disruption rapidly is required for cell survival in
many physiological environments. Intracellular membrane (endomembrane) is thought to
play a central role in the rapid resealing response. We here directly compare the resealing
response of a cell that lacks endomembrane, the red blood cell, with that of several
nucleated cells possessing an abundant endomembrane compartment. RBC membrane
disruptions inflicted by a mode-locked Ti: sapphire laser, even those initially smaller than …
The capacity to reseal a plasma membrane disruption rapidly is required for cell survival in many physiological environments. Intracellular membrane (endomembrane) is thought to play a central role in the rapid resealing response. We here directly compare the resealing response of a cell that lacks endomembrane, the red blood cell, with that of several nucleated cells possessing an abundant endomembrane compartment. RBC membrane disruptions inflicted by a mode-locked Ti:sapphire laser, even those initially smaller than hemoglobin, failed to reseal rapidly. By contrast, much larger laser-induced disruptions made in sea urchin eggs, fibroblasts, and neurons exhibited rapid, Ca2+-dependent resealing. We conclude that rapid resealing is not mediated by simple physiochemical mechanisms; endomembrane is required.
National Acad Sciences