Publication | Closed Access
The ‘primitive’ microaerophile Giardia intestinalis (syn. lamblia, duodenalis) has specialized membranes with electron transport and membrane-potential-generating functions
35
Citations
38
References
2002
Year
G. IntestinalisMolecular BiologyCytoskeletonDigestive TractCellular PhysiologyUnicellular OrganismMembrane TransportProkaryotic SystemProtistMembrane-potential-generating FunctionsElectron TransportMembrane BiologyMembrane SystemTetrazolium FluorogenBiologyMitochondria-containing FlagellateNatural SciencesMicrobiologyCellular StructureGut BarrierMedicine
Here it is shown that the flagellated protozoon Giardia intestinalis, commonly regarded as an early branching eukaryote because of its lack of mitochondria, has membraneous structures that partition the cationic, membrane-potential-sensitive fluorophore rhodamine 123. This organism also reduces a tetrazolium fluorogen at discrete plasma-membrane-associated sites. That these functions occur in distinctive specialized membrane systems supports the growing evidence that G. intestinalis may not be primitive, but is derived from an aerobic, mitochondria-containing flagellate.
| Year | Citations | |
|---|---|---|
Page 1
Page 1