Abstract
Immunoelectron microscopical studies performed in healthy human neutrophils showed the presence of glycosyl-phosphatidylinositol (GPI)- linked CD67 in granules. The use of immunogold double-labeling of CD67 and lactoferrin (LF; as marker for specific granules) or CD67 and myeloperoxidase (MPO; as marker for azurophilic granules) showed that CD67 occurred only in the specific granules. Furthermore, flow cytometry showed that CD67 has a low level of expression on the plasma membrane of these cells. In paroxsymal nocturnal hemoglobinuria (PNH)- affected neutrophils, CD67 was not detected in any intracellular compartment by immunoelectron microscopy, and flow cytometry showed no CD67 on the plasma membrane. In earlier studies, FcRIII was found on the plasma membrane, in electron-lucent vesicles, and in the Golgi complex of healthy neutrophils, and in the Golgi complex of some of the PNH-affected neutrophils. Here we have studied FcRIII in PNH-affected cells of three other patients and found, by immunoelectron microscopy, that the receptor can not be detected in these cells. However, flow cytometry showed that FcRIII was not completely absent on the plasma membrane of the affected cells, but that the level of expression on these cells was low. Thus, PNH patients can differ from one another with respect to the occurrence of affected neutrophils that have a detectable level of FcRIII in the Golgi complex. In summary, these findings show not only that the expression of the two GPI-linked proteins, CD67 and FcRIII, is markedly lower on the plasma membrane, but also that neither occurred in any of the intracellular compartments of affected neutrophils of the PNH patients examined in this study.
This feature is available to Subscribers Only
Sign In or Create an Account Close Modal