Isolation of Plant Plasma Membranes and Production of Inside-Out Vesicles
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The plant plasma membrane (PM) is the outermost membrane of the cell and constitutes the cell border across which nutrients
are imported and metabolic products exported. It is also the site for receptors recording the environment and the interphase
between the cell wall and the cytoskeleton. This makes the PM a key membrane for cell functioning and explains the great interest
in its characterization. However, as the PM only constitutes 5-20% of the total membranes of a plant cell, a strong demand
is placed on the isolation procedure to obtain pure PM. Furthermore, for studies on transport, there is a need for vesicles
of defined sidedness, i.e., PM preparations where the vesicles expose either the apoplastic side (right-side out vesicles)
or the cytoplasmic side (inside out vesicles) of the membrane to the medium. These vesicles should also be sealed to allow
gradients to build up across the membrane. In this chapter, we describe how the PM is separated from all intracellular membranes
resulting in a PM preparation with high yield and purity (1), and consisting of mainly sealed, right-side out vesicles (2). We also describe how these right-side out vesicles are everted to produce tightly sealed inside-out vesicles (3,4).
Affiliation(s): (2) Department of Plant Biochemistry, Lund University, Lund, Sweden
(3) Department of Plant Physiology, Lund University, Lund, Sweden
(3) Department of Plant Physiology, Lund University, Lund, Sweden
Series: Methods in Biotechnology | Volume: 11 | Pub. Date: Feb-21-2000 | Page Range: 159-166 | DOI: 10.1385/1-59259-028-4:159
Subject: Biotechnology
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