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1.
Sulfation of fibrinogen was studied in a primary culture of rat hepatocytes. After cells were incubated with [35S]sulfate, 35S-labeled fibrinogen was obtained from the medium by immunoprecipitation and analyzed by sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis/fluorography. It was demonstrated that [35S]sulfate is exclusively incorporated into the gamma B chain, which is a minor variant form found in rat fibrinogen, in addition to a major gamma A chain. When the purified 35S-gamma B chain was digested with carboxypeptidase Y, the radioactivity was almost completely released from the protein, and the labeled product released was identified as tyrosine O-sulfate. Based on the available primary structure of the gamma B chain, the results suggest that sulfation occurs on the tyrosine residue at the second position from its COOH terminus. Pulse-chase experiments using both [3H]leucine and [35S]sulfate showed that 35S-labeled fibrinogen is secreted into the medium much faster than the 3H-labeled molecule. Incubation of cells with monensin, an inhibitor of Golgi function, strongly inhibited the sulfation of fibrinogen. In addition, in vitro sulfation experiments demonstrated that sulfotransferase activity is localized in the Golgi fraction. These results indicate that the sulfation of fibrinogen takes place in the Golgi complex, especially in the trans Golgi region, just before its secretion.  相似文献   

2.
Post-translational phosphorylation of proteodermatan sulfate   总被引:2,自引:0,他引:2  
In cultured human skin fibroblasts, the core protein of the small proteodermatan sulfate becomes phosphorylated post-translationally but before the glycosaminoglycan chains are synthesized. This phosphorylation can occur when the intracellular transport is inhibited by carbonyl cyanide m-chlorophenylhydrazone or when the attachment of asparagine-linked oligosaccharides is prevented by tunicamycin. Serine and glycosaminoglycan chains were identified as phosphorylation sites of secreted proteodermatan sulfate. Upon alkaline borohydride treatment and degradation by chondroitin ABC lyase, the main phosphorylated product co-chromatographed with an unsulfated 3H-labeled hexasaccharide prepared analogously from [3H]galactose/[35S]sulfate-labeled proteodermatan sulfate.  相似文献   

3.
Biosynthesis of proteodermatan sulfate in cultured human fibroblasts   总被引:18,自引:0,他引:18  
Biosynthesis and secretion of proteodermatan sulfate produced by cultured human skin fibroblasts were investigated employing immunological procedures. During an incubation period of 10 min in the presence of [3H]leucine, two core protein forms of Mr = 46,000 and 44,000, respectively, were synthesized. They were converted to mature proteodermatan sulfate with a half-time of approximately 12 min. Fifty per cent of total mature proteodermatan sulfate were found in the culture medium after a 35-min chase. Six to eight per cent remained associated with the cell layer after a chase of 6 h. In the presence of tunicamycin, fibroblasts synthesized a single core protein of Mr = 38,000 that was converted to mature proteodermatan sulfate and secreted with similar kinetics as the N-glycosylated species. Subtle differences in the molecular size of core proteins were noted when cell-associated and secreted proteodermatan sulfate were degraded with chondroitin ABC lyase, but core proteins free of N-linked oligosaccharides were identical. Labeling with [3H]mannose revealed that secreted proteodermatan sulfate contains two or three complex-type or two complex-type and one high-mannose-type N-linked oligosaccharide chains. The N-glycans are bound to a 21-kDa fragment of the core protein. After incubation in the presence of [3H]glucosamine, the [3H]galactosamine/[3H]glucosamine ratio was 3.76 and 3.30 for secreted and cell-associated proteodermatan sulfate, respectively. Evidence for the presence of O-linked oligosaccharides could not be obtained. Small amounts of core protein free of dermatan sulfate chains were secreted when the cultures were treated with p-nitrophenyl-beta-D-xyloside.  相似文献   

4.
Human skin fibroblast monolayer cultures from two normal men, three Type I diabetic men, and one Type I diabetic woman were incubated with [3H]glucosamine in the presence of diminished concentrations of sulfate. Although total synthesis of [3H]chondroitin/dermatan glycosaminoglycans varied somewhat between cell lines, glycosaminoglycan production was not affected within any line when sulfate levels were decreased from 0.3 mM to 0.06 mM to 0.01 mM to 0 added sulfate. Lowering of sulfate concentrations resulted in diminished sulfation of chondroitin/dermatan in a progressive manner, so that overall sulfation dropped to as low as 19% for one of the lines. Sulfation of chondroitin to form chondroitin 4-sulfate and chondroitin 6-sulfate was progressively and equally affected by decreasing the sulfate concentration in the culture medium. However, sulfation to form dermatan sulfate was preserved to a greater degree, so that the relative proportion of dermatan sulfate to chondroitin sulfate increased. Essentially all the nonsulfated residues were susceptible to chondroitin AC lyase, indicating that little epimerization of glucuronic acid residues to iduronic acid had occurred in the absence of sulfation. These results confirm the previously described dependency of glucuronic/iduronic epimerization on sulfation, and indicate that sulfation of the iduronic acid-containing disaccharide residues of dermatan can take place with sulfate concentrations lower than those needed for 6-sulfation and 4-sulfation of the glucuronic acid-containing disaccharide residues of chondroitin. There were considerable differences among the six fibroblast lines in susceptibility to low sulfate medium and in the proportion of chondroitin 6-sulfate, chondroitin 4-sulfate, and dermatan sulfate. However, there was no pattern of differences between normals and diabetics.  相似文献   

5.
Rat ovarian granulosa cells, isolated from immature female rats 48 h after stimulation with 5 IU of pregnant mare's serum gonadotropin, were maintained in culture. The effects of monensin, a monovalent cationic ionophore, on various aspects of proteoglycan metabolism were studied by metabolically labeling cultures with [35S]sulfate, [3H]glucosamine, or [3H]glucose. Monensin inhibited post-translational modification of both heparan sulfate (HS) proteoglycans and dermatan sulfate (DS) proteoglycans, resulting in decreased synthesis of completed proteoglycans [( 35S]sulfate incorporation decreased to 10% of control by 30 microM monensin, with an ED50 approximately 1 microM). Proteoglycans synthesized in the presence of monensin showed undersulfation of both DS and HS glycosaminoglycans and altered N-linked and O-linked oligosaccharides, suggesting that the processing of all sugar moieties is closely associated. Monensin caused a decrease in the endogenous sugar supply to the UDP-N-acetylhexosamine pool as indicated by an increased 3H incorporation into DS chains [( 3H]glucosamine as precursor) in spite of the decrease in glycosaminoglycan synthesis. Monensin reduced and delayed transport of both secretory and membrane-associated proteoglycans from the Golgi complex to the cell surface. It took 2-4 min for newly labeled proteoglycans to reach the main transport process inhibited by monensin. Monensin at 30 microM did not prevent internalization of cell surface 35S-labeled proteoglycans but almost completely inhibited their intracellular degradation to free [35S]sulfate (ED50 approximately 1 microM), resulting in intracellular accumulation of both DS and HS proteoglycans. Pulse-chase experiments demonstrated that one of the intracellular degradation pathways involving proteolysis of both DS and HS proteoglycans and limited endoglycosidic cleavage of HS continued to operate in the presence of monensin. These results suggest that the intracellular degradation of proteoglycans involve both acidic and nonacidic compartments with monensin inhibiting those processes that normally occur in such acidic compartments as endosomes or lysosomes by raising their pH.  相似文献   

6.
[3H,35S]Dermatan/chondroitin sulfate glycosaminoglycans produced during culture of fibroblasts in medium containing varying concentrations of sulfate were tested for their susceptibility to chondroitin ABC lyase and chondroitin AC lyase. Chondroitin ABC lyase completely degraded [3H]hexosamine-labeled and [35S] sulfate-labeled dermatan/chondroitin sulfate to disaccharides. Chondroitin AC lyase treatment of the labeled glycosaminoglycans produced different results. With this enzyme, dermatan/chondroitin sulfate formed at high concentrations of sulfate yielded small glycosaminoglycans and larger oligosaccharides but almost no disaccharide. This indicated that the dermatan/chondroitin sulfate co-polymer contained mostly iduronic acid with only an occasional glucuronic acid. As the medium sulfate concentration was progressively lowered, there was a concomitant increase in the susceptibility to degradation by chondroitin AC lyase. Thus, the labeled glycosaminoglycans formed at the lowest concentration of sulfate yielded small oligosaccharides including substantial amounts of disaccharide. The smaller chondroitin AC lyase-resistant [3H,35S]dermatan/chondroitin sulfate oligosaccharides were analyzed by gel filtration. Results indicated that, in general, the iduronic acid-containing disaccharide residues present in the undersulfated [3H,35S]glycosaminoglycan were sulfated, whereas the glucuronic acid-containing disaccharide residues were non-sulfated. This work confirms earlier reports that there is a relationship between epimerization and sulfation. Moreover, it demonstrates that medium sulfate concentration is critical in determining the proportions of dermatan to chondroitin (iduronic/glucuronic acid) produced by cultured cells.  相似文献   

7.
Proteoglycan (PG) metabolism by aortic smooth muscle cell cultures derived from atherosclerosis-susceptible White Carneau (WC) and -resistant Show Racer (SR) pigeons was compared using [35S]sodium sulfate and [3H]serine or [3H]glucosamine as labeling precursors. Chondroitin sulfate (CS) PG and dermatan sulfate (DS) PG were the major PG secreted into the medium by both cell types. Total PG production, whether measured by incorporation of radiolabel into either core protein or glycosaminoglycan chains, was consistently lower in WC compared to SR cultures at several time points. This difference was due in part to lower (30-37%) PG synthesis in WC cells, but degradation of newly synthesized PG was an important contributor. A pulse-chase study indicated that of the total radiolabeled PG present at time O, only 47% was present at 24 h in WC cultures compared to 88% in SR cultures. The large CS-PG appeared to be the primary target for degradation in WC cells, and this selective processing resulted in a higher DS-PG:CS-PG ratio in these cultures. Structural studies indicated similar core protein and glycosaminoglycan chain sizes within a PG type for both cell types. PG monomer composition differed, however, by a higher sulfation of WC CS-PG compared to SR CS-PG and by a disaccharide sulfation position favoring 6-sulfation in WC PG and 4-sulfation in SR PG.  相似文献   

8.
Effects of Monensin and Colchicine on Myelin Galactolipids   总被引:4,自引:4,他引:0  
Monensin and colchicine have been used in a variety of systems to disrupt functioning of the Golgi apparatus and transport of Golgi-derived vesicles to the plasma membrane. In this study the effects of monensin and colchicine on the synthesis of cerebroside and sulfatide and their appearance in myelin were examined to determine whether these myelin components are processed through the Golgi apparatus. Brain slices from rats 17 days old were incubated with [3H]galactose and [35S]-sulfate to label cerebroside and sulfatide. Myelin was isolated on sucrose density gradients. Fractions highly enriched in cerebroside and sulfatide were prepared from homogenates and myelin fractions by lipid extraction, alkaline methanolysis, and in some cases TLC. Monensin at 0.1 microM had no significant effect on synthesis of these galactolipids as measured by incorporation of [3H]-galactose into cerebroside or [35S]sulfate into sulfatide in homogenates. However, appearance of [35S]sulfatide in the myelin fraction was reduced to 49% of control, while appearance of [3H]cerebroside was not significantly reduced. Colchicine from 1 mM to 0.1 microM had effects similar to monensin, that is, appearance of [35S]sulfatide in myelin was depressed, but again [3H]cerebroside was not affected. Incorporation of [35S]sulfate into sulfatide in homogenate was 93% of control, while appearance of [35S]sulfatide in the myelin fraction was depressed to 58% of control. The inhibition of appearance of sulfatide in myelin by colchicine and monensin is consistent with the view that sulfation of cerebroside occurs in the Golgi and that sulfatide is transported via Golgi-derived vesicles to the forming myelin membrane.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

9.
D D Pittman  J H Wang  R J Kaufman 《Biochemistry》1992,31(13):3315-3325
Sulfated tyrosine residues within recombinant human factor VIII were identified by [35S]sulfate biosynthetic labeling of Chinese hamster ovary cells which express human recombinant factor VIII. Alkaline hydrolysis of purified [35S]sulfate-labeled factor VIII showed that greater than 95% of the [35S]sulfate was incorporated into tyrosine. [3H]Tyrosine and [35S]sulfate double labeling was used to quantify the presence of 6 mol of tyrosine sulfate per mole of factor VIII. Amino acid sequence analysis of thrombin and tryptic peptides isolated from [35S]sulfate-labeled factor VIII demonstrated tyrosine sulfate at residue 346 in the factor VIII heavy chain and at residues 1664 and 1680 in the factor VIII light chain. In addition, the carboxyl-terminal half of the A2 domain contained three tyrosine sulfate residues, likely at positions 718, 719, and 723. Interestingly, all sites of tyrosine sulfation border thrombin cleavage sites. The functional importance of tyrosine sulfation was examined by treatment of cells expressing factor VIII with sodium chlorate, a potent inhibitor of tyrosine sulfation. Increasing concentrations of sodium chlorate inhibited sulfate incorporation into factor VIII without affecting its synthesis and/or secretion. However, factor VIII secreted in the presence of sodium chlorate exhibited a 5-fold reduction in procoagulant activity, although the protein was susceptible to thrombin cleavage. These results suggest that tyrosine sulfation is required for full factor VIII activity and may affect the interaction of factor VIII with other components of the coagulation cascade.  相似文献   

10.
The biosynthesis of dermatan sulfate is a complex process that involves, inter alia, formation of L-iduronic acid residues by C5-epimerization of D-glucuronic acid residues already incorporated into the growing polymer. It has been shown previously that this reaction is promoted by the presence of the sulfate donor 3'-phosphoadenosine-5'-phosphosulfate. In the present investigation, the role of sulfation in the biosynthesis of L-iduronic acid-rich galactosaminoglycans was examined more closely by a study of the substrate specificities and kinetic properties of the sulfotransferases involved in dermatan sulfate biosynthesis. Comparison of the acceptor reactivities of oligosaccharides from chondroitin and dermatan, in an in vitro system containing microsomes from cultured human skin fibroblasts and 3'-phosphoadenosine-5'-phosphosulfate, showed that Km values for the dermatan fragments were substantially lower than those for their chondroitin counterparts. Calculation of Vmax values likewise showed that dermatan was the better substrate. Whereas dermatan incorporated [35S]sulfate exclusively at the C4 position of N-acetylgalactosamine residues, approximately equal amounts of radioactivity were found at the C4 and C6 positions in the labelled chondroitin. Under standard assay conditions, the 4-O-sulfation of dermatan proceeded about six times faster than the 4-O-sulfation of chondroitin. On the basis of these results, we propose that L-iduronic acids, formed in the course of the biosynthesis of dermatan sulfates, enhance sulfation of their adjacent N-acetylgalactosamine residues, and will thereby be locked in the L-ido configuration.  相似文献   

11.
Tyrosine O-sulfate ester in proteoglycans   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
Tyrosine O-sulfate residues were detected in the protein core of sulfated proteoglycans. When cultured skin fibroblasts and arterial smooth muscle cells were incubated in the presence of [35S]sulfate, dermatan sulfate proteoglycan and chondroitin sulfate proteoglycan isolated from the culture medium contained tyrosine [35S]sulfate ester which accounted for 0.03%-0.82% of total 35S radioactivity incorporated into the sulfated proteoglycans. This corresponds to a tyrosine sulfation of every second (fibroblasts) and every 10th (smooth muscle cells) dermatan sulfate proteoglycan molecule. [3H]Tyrosine labeling of fibroblast dermatan sulfate proteoglycan gave a similar stoichiometry. However, the relative proportion of tyrosine [35S]sulfate in proteoglycans from arterial tissue was about 10 times higher than in that from cultured arterial cells. Pulse chase experiments with [35S]sulfate revealed that tyrosine sulfation is a late event in the biosynthesis of dermatan sulfate proteoglycan from fibroblasts and occurs immediately prior to secretion. Cultured skin fibroblasts from a patient with a progeroid variant (Kresse et al. 1987, Am. J. Hum. Gen. 41, 436-453) which exhibit a partial deficiency to synthesize dermatan sulfate proteoglycan were shown to form and to secrete a tyrosine-sulfated but glycosaminoglycan-free protein core, thus confirming a selective and independent [35S]sulfate labeling of the protein core.  相似文献   

12.
Monensin was used to ascertain the location in the biosynthetic pathway where the 77,000-Mr membrane-bound subunit form of dopamine beta-hydroxylase is post-translationally converted to the 73,000-Mr soluble form. Treatment with low concentrations of monensin (less than or equal to 50 nM) completely depleted the cells of the norepinephrine and dopamine, had a small effect on protein synthesis, and enhanced post-translational processing of only dopamine beta-hydroxylase which was previously synthesized and presumably packaged into neurosecretory vesicles. At these low concentrations, exit from the Golgi apparatus did not appear to be blocked since stimulated secretion of a group of high molecular weight [35S]methionine-labeled proteins was not inhibited. Treatment with higher concentrations of monensin (200 nM) prevented the secretion of the [35S] methionine-labeled proteins normally released with a secretagogue, and also prevented the secretion of [3H] mannose-labeled proteins including dopamine beta-hydroxylase. Surprisingly, a group of lower molecular weight [35S]methionine-labeled proteins was now released from monensin-treated cells. Treatment with high concentrations of monensin (greater than or equal to 200 nM) appeared to block the secretory pathway prior to the packaging step, probably in the Golgi apparatus. If the proteins were packaged prior to monensin treatment, they were released upon stimulation with secretagogues. Monensin treatment (200 nM) enabled the post-translational processing of newly synthesized dopamine beta-hydroxylase, from the 77,000-Mr to the 73,000-Mr subunit form, to go to completion. The susceptibility of this 73,000-Mr subunit form to endoglycosidase H digestion was unaltered, suggesting that dopamine beta-hydroxylase from monensin-treated cells may have the same high mannose oligosaccharide content as native dopamine beta-hydroxylase. These experiments indicate that the post-translational processing of dopamine beta-hydroxylase occurs in the Golgi apparatus and may continue in immature granules prior to their acidification.  相似文献   

13.
Incubation of a microsomal fraction from murine mastocytoma, with UDP-[1-3H]GlcA, UDP-GlcNAc, and adenosine 3'-phosphate 5'-phosphosulfate (PAPS), yielded labeled, N-sulfated polysaccharides, in which most of the incorporated O-sulfate groups were located at C2 of L-iduronic acid and at C6 of D-glucosamine units. Analysis by anion-exchange high pressure liquid chromatography of disaccharides, generated by deaminative cleavage of these polysaccharides, revealed that, in addition, an appreciable portion of the -GlcNSO3-HexA-GlcNSO3- sequences in the intact polymers contained O-sulfated (at C2 or C3) D-glucuronic acid units. Calculations based on such compositional analysis of the N- and O-sulfated biosynthetic product, isolated by chromatography on DEAE-cellulose, showed that glucuronosyl 2/3-O-sulfate accounted for approximately 12% of the total incorporated O-sulfate groups. With [35S]PAPS (at a low total PAPS concentration) as an alternative source of label, the sulfated glucuronic acid residues were again detectable, albeit in much smaller amounts (1.8% of the total O-sulfate groups). Incorporation of label from UDP-[5-3H]GlcA was retained by the O-sulfated glucuronic acid units, thus demonstrating that these components had in fact been formed by sulfation of glucuronic acid residues and not by "back epimerization" of sulfated iduronic acid units. Structural analysis of polysaccharide intermediates at various stages of biosynthetic polymer modification, separated by ion-exchange chromatography, showed O-sulfation of glucuronic and iduronic acid units to appear simultaneously and before the 6-O-sulfation of glucosamine residues.  相似文献   

14.
We have reported that the monovalent ionophore monensin causes undersulfated chondroitin sulfate biosynthesis in cultured chondrocytes. In order to clarify the mechanism of this diminished sulfation, we have measured the rate of incorporation of sulfate into chondrocytes and assayed the cellular ATP levels. We have also measured sulfatase activity, the incorporation of 35SO4 into 3′-phosphoadenosine 5′-phospho[35S]sulfate and endogenous sulfotransferase activity in the cell-free extracts. We find that: (1) The incorporation of 35SO4 into the free sulfate pool in chondrocytes was not inhibited by monensin. (2) The ATP levels of monensin-treated chondrocytes were the same as control cells. (3) There was no sulfatase activity in both control and monensin-treated chondrocytes. (4) Enzymatic analyses revealed that 35SO4 incorporation into 3′-phosphoadenosine 5′-phospho[35S]sulfate and subsequent sulfotransferase activity were not inhibited in the presence of monensin. At present the most tenable hypothesis to account for monensin causing undersulfated chondroitin sulfate synthesis is that the ionophore impairs the access of proteoglycans to the sulfotransferases in the luminal walls of the Golgi structures.  相似文献   

15.
[35S]Sulfate incorporation was measured in populations of Chinese hamster ovary cells enriched for mitotics, early G1 cells, and interphase monolayers or suspensions. Incorporation was determined by biochemical analysis of extracts and quantitative autoradiography of thick sections. 90% of [35S]sulfate was incorporated into glycosaminoglycan (GAG). Incorporation was depressed fourfold in mitotics and stimulated by from two- to three-fold in early G1 cells relative to mixed interphase cells. GAG synthesis was maintained into late G2. Thus, the rate of GAG biosynthesis was correlated temporally with the detachment and reattachment of cells to substrate. Inhibitors of protein synthesis brought about the rapid arrest of GAG biosynthesis. However, xylosides, which bypass the requirement for core protein, did not bring oligosaccharide sulfation in mitotics to interphase levels. These observations indicate an inhibition of Golgi processing and are consistent with a generalized defect of membrane vesicle-mediated transport during mitosis.  相似文献   

16.
Hexuronyl C5-epimerases in alginate and glycosaminoglycan biosynthesis   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
The sugar residues in most polysaccharides are incorporated as their corresponding monomers during polymerization. Here we summarize the three known exceptions to this rule, involving the biosynthesis of alginate, and the glycosaminoglycans, heparin/heparan sulfate and dermatan sulfate. Alginate is synthesized by brown seaweeds and certain bacteria, while glycosaminoglycans are produced by most animal species. In all cases one of the incorporated sugar monomers are being C5-epimerized at the polymer level, from D-mannuronic acid to L-guluronic acid in alginate, and from D-glucuronic acid to L-iduronic acid in glycosaminoglycans. Alginate epimerization modulates the mechanical properties of seaweed tissues, whereas in bacteria it seems to serve a wide range of purposes. The conformational flexibility of iduronic acid units in glycosaminoglycans promotes apposition to, and thus functional interactions with a variety of proteins at cell surfaces and in the extracellular matrix. In the bacterium Azotobacter vinelandii the alginates are being epimerized at the cell surface or in the extracellular environment by a family of evolutionary strongly related modular type and Ca(2+)-dependent epimerases (AlgE1-7). Each of these enzymes introduces a specific distribution pattern of guluronic acid residues along the polymer chains, explaining the wide structural variability observed in alginates isolated from nature. Glycosaminoglycans are synthesized in the Golgi system, through a series of reactions that include the C5-epimerization reaction along with extensive sulfation of the polymers. The single, Ca(2+)-independent, epimerase in heparin/heparan sulfate biosynthesis and the Ca(2+)-dependent dermatan sulfate epimerase(s) also generate variable epimerization patterns, depending on other polymer-modification reactions. The alginate and heparin epimerases appear unrelated at the amino acid sequence level, and have probably evolved through independent evolutionary pathways; however, hydrophobic cluster analysis indicates limited similarity. Seaweed alginates are widely used in industry, while heparin is well established in the clinic as an anticoagulant.  相似文献   

17.
Although 2-O-sulfated L-iduronic acid (IdoA) residues have been known to occur in heparin, 2-O-sulfated D-glucuronic acid (GlcA) residues have been reported only recently (Bienkowski, M. J., and Conrad, H. E. (1985) J. Biol. Chem. 250, 356-365). Disaccharides prepared by cleavage of heparin and N-deacetylated chondroitin 6-sulfate with nitrous acid were used to demonstrate a new sulfatase that catalyzed the removal of the 2-O-sulfate substituents from GlcA but not IdoA residues. The deamination products were labeled by NaB3H4 reduction to give disaccharides from heparin and chondroitin sulfate which had reducing terminal 2,5-anhydro-D-mannitol ([3H]AManR) and 2,5-anhydro-D-talitol ([3H]ATalR) residues, respectively. IdoA(2-SO4)-[3H]AManR(6-SO4) from heparin and GlcA(2-SO4)-[3H]ATalR(6-SO4) from chondroitin sulfate were purified for use as substrates. GlcA(2-SO4)-[3H]AManR(6-SO4) was prepared by epimerization of IdoA(2-SO4)-[3H]AManR(6-SO4) with hydrazine at 100 degrees C. Lysosomal enzyme preparations from chick embryo chondrocytes and from two normal human fibroblast cell lines catalyzed the removal of the 2-O-SO4 substituent from the uronic acid residues of IdoA(2-SO4)-[3H]AManR(6-SO4), GlcA(2-SO4)-[3H] AManR(6-SO4), and GlcA(2-SO4)-[3H]ATalR(6-SO4). In contrast, a lysosomal enzyme preparation from a human fibroblast cell line deficient in idurono-2-sulfatase (Hunter's-syndrome), which had no activity on the IdoA(2-SO4)-[3H]AManR(6-SO4), converted GlcA(2-SO4)-[3H]AManR(6-SO4) to a mixture of GlcA-[3H] AManR(6-SO4) and [3H]AManR(6-SO4). This enzyme also converted GlcA(2-SO4)-[3H]ATalR(6-SO4) to a mixture of GlcA-[3H]ATalR(6-SO4) and [3H]ATalR(6-SO4). Digestion of both GlcA(2-SO4)-[3H]AManR(6-SO4) and GlcA(2-SO4)-[3H]ATalR(6-SO4) was inhibited by 35SO2-4 and was arrested at the monosulfated disaccharide stage by 1,4-saccharolactone. The glucurono-2-sulfatase exhibited a pH optimum of 4. The results indicate that there exists a separate sulfatase for the removal of sulfate substituents from C-2 of GlcA residues in glycosaminoglycans.  相似文献   

18.
The incorporation of [3H]leucine in vivo into very low density lipoproteins (VLDL) from the rat hepatic Golgi apparatus and serum was studied. A Golgi-rich fraction isolated on a discontinuous sucrose gradient between 0.5 and 1.1 M was found to contain VLDL having common antigenic determinants with serum VLDL. The incorporation of the [3H]leucine into the Golgi VLDL and serum VLDL suggested a precursor-product relationship. Analysis of the apoproteins of the Golgi VLDL by polacrylamide gel electrophoresis revealed protein bands with similar mobility to those of serum VLDL, except that the former contained virtually no rapidly migrating peptides with the mobility of serum apo-C-II and apo-C-III. The pattern of incorporation of the [3H]leucine into the apoproteins was similar in VLDL from Golgi apparatus and serum, except for the absence of radioactivity in the area of the gel of Golgi apo-VLDL corresponding to apo-C-II and apo-C-III. The radioactive amino acid was incorporated predominantly into the Golgi apo-VLDL bands with similar mobility to apo-B and an apoprotein or group of apoproteins containing the arginine-rich peptide of serum VLDL. In vitro incubation of the Golgi VLDL with [3H]leucine-labeled HDL resulted in the acquisition of a number of proteins, including the rapidly migrating proteins. Administration of colchicine prior to the injection of [3H]leucine resulted in the appearance of gel bands and radioactivity in the apo-C-II and apo-C-III areas of Golgi apo-VLDL, suggesting that these can be acquired if secretion of VLDL is slowed or inhibited. The hepatic Golgi apparatus was then divided into fractions of predominantly forming face (GF3) or secretory granules (GF1). After polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis of the apo-VLDL from GF, no visible bands or incorporation of [3H]leucine was found in the region of apo-C-II or apo-C-III. However VLDL from GF1, showed visible and radioactive bands in the apo-C-II and apo-C-III area although they represented a much smaller proportion of the total apoprotein than was found in the corresponding serum apo-VLDL. In the isolated perfused liver the percentage incorporation of [3H]leucine into the rapidly migrating apoproteins of Golgi VLDL was considerably less than that found in the corresponding apoproteins of perfusate VLDL, where circulating C lipoproteins are virtually absent. The data indicate that nascent VLDL begins to acquire the C-II and C-III apoproteins during its passage through the Golgi apparatus but that the main acquisition occurs during or after secretion into the space of Disse.  相似文献   

19.
The synthesis, processing, and secretion of lipophorin by the larval fat body of the southwestern corn borer, Diatraea grandiosella, was examined using in vitro techniques. Pulse-labeling of lipophorin with [35S]methionine showed that apolipophorin-I and -II were each synthesized and secreted from the fat body into Grace's medium with an intracellular transit time of about 45 min. Secretion of the apolipoproteins from the fat body became insensitive to the presence of monensin, which disrupts protein processing in the Golgi complex, at 30 min, indicating that most of the pulse-labeled apolipoprotein has transited the Golgi complex by this time. Three inhibitors of protein processing, carbonylcyanide m-chlorophenyl hydrazone, monensin, and brefeldin A, inhibited secretion of lipophorin into medium. Puromycin treatment did not appear to result in the secretion into the medium of lipophorin particles containing incomplete translation products of apolipophorin-I or -II. Incubation of fat bodies with [3H]oleate resulted in the secretion of lipophorin containing [3H]glycerides, a process that was inhibited by cycloheximide, puromycin, and monensin, indicating that apolipoprotein synthesis is required for secretion of [3H]glyceride on nascent lipophorin particles. In contrast, suramin, which has been shown to block the binding of lipophorin to plasma membrane receptors, inhibited the synthesis and secretion of lipophorin, but it did not appear to inhibit the transfer of [3H]lipid from the fat body to lipophorin. Inhibitors of protein synthesis and processing, therefore, can be used to distinguish between secretion of lipophorin-associated lipids and secretion of lipids mediated by the lipid-transfer particle outside the plasma membrane of the fat body.  相似文献   

20.
Effects of the sodium ionophore, monensin, were examined on the passage from neuronal cell body to axon of materials undergoing fast intracellular transport. In vitro exposure of bullfrog dorsal root ganglia to concentrations of drug less than 1.0 micron led to a dose-dependent depression in the amount of fast-transported [3H]leucine- or [3H]glycerol-labeled material appearing in the nerve trunk. Incorporation of either precursor was unaffected. Exposure of a desheathed nerve trunk to similar concentrations of monensin, while ganglia were incubated in drug-free medium, had no effect on transport. With [3H]fucose as precursor, fast transport of labeled glycoproteins was depressed to the same extent as with [3H]leucine; synthesis, again, was unaffected. By contrast, with [3H]galactose as precursor, an apparent reduction in transport of labeled glycoproteins was accounted for by a marked depression in incorporation. The inference from these findings, that monensin acts to block fast transport at the level of the Golgi apparatus, was supported by ultrastructural examination of the drug-treated neurons. An extensive and selective disruption of Golgi saccules was observed, accompanied by an accumulation of clumped smooth membranous cisternae. Quantitative analyses of 48 individual fast-transported protein species, after separation by two-dimensional gel electrophoresis, revealed that monensin depresses all proteins to a similar extent. These results indicate that passage through the Golgi apparatus is an obligatory step in the intracellular routing of materials destined for fast axonal transport.  相似文献   

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