AI Article Synopsis

  • The study involved analyzing the effects of conditioned medium from synchronized hepatocyte cultures, which was separated into light and heavy fractions through centrifugation, revealing different ganglioside compositions.
  • The synchronization of protein synthesis in hepatocytes was assessed, with findings suggesting that both the initial conditioned medium and its vesicular fraction contributed to cell synchronization even in cultures that were initially asynchronous.
  • GM1 monosialoganglioside, particularly when incorporated into liposomes, was found to be significantly more effective at promoting synchronized protein synthesis in hepatocytes than free GM1, demonstrating the enhanced role of lipid structures in cellular cooperation.

Article Abstract

The medium conditioned by dense, self-synchronized hepatocyte cultures was centrifuged at 150,000 g to obtain two fractions. The light fraction (supernatant fluid) contained ganglioside monomers and micelles, and the heavy fraction (pellet) contained gangliosides in the vesicles shed from the cell membrane. In the test populations of hepatocytes, the rhythm of protein synthesis was used as an indicator of cell synchronization resulting from their cooperative activity. Low-density hepatocyte cultures with asynchronous fluctuations of protein synthesis proved to be synchronized by both the initial conditioned medium and its vesicular fraction. Our previous studies have shown that this occurs under the effect of GM1 monosialoganglioside, which is released from cultured cells and accumulates in the conditioned medium. Liposomes consisting of GM1 and phosphatidylcholine from egg yolk (1:19 mol%), compared to free exogenous GM1, synchronized the rhythm of protein synthesis more effectively: synchronization was observed at a GM1 concentration in liposome suspension of only 0.0003 microM, compared to 0.06 microM and higher in the case of free GM1. Thus, GM1 as a component of membranes and monolayer lipid structures proved to be much more effective than free GM1 in promoting hepatocyte cooperation with respect to the rhythm of protein synthesis.

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