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Studies in vivo and in vitro on the uptake and degradation of soluble collagen alpha 1(I) chains in rat liver endothelial and Kupffer cells.
Authors:B Smedsr?d  S Johansson  H Pertoft
Abstract:Intravenously administered 125I-labelled monomeric alpha 1 chains (125I-alpha 1) of collagen type I were rapidly cleared and degraded by the liver of rats. Isolation of the liver cells after injection of the label revealed that the uptake per liver endothelial cell equalled the uptake per Kupffer cell, whereas the amount taken up per hepatocyte was negligible. The uptake of 125I-alpha 1 in cultured cells was 10 times higher per liver endothelial cell than per Kupffer cell. The ligand was efficiently degraded by cultures of both cell types. However, spent medium from cultures of Kupffer cells, unlike that from cultures of other cells, contained gelatinolytic activity which degraded 125I-alpha 1. The presence of hyaluronic acid, chondroitin sulphate or mannose/N-acetylglucosamine-terminal glycoproteins, which are endocytosed by the liver endothelial cells via specific receptors, did not interfere with binding, uptake or degradation of 125I-alpha 1 by these cells. Unlabelled alpha 1 and heat-denatured collagen inhibited the binding to a much greater extent than did native collagen. The presence of fibronectin or F(ab')2 fragments of anti-fibronectin antibodies did not affect the interaction of the liver endothelial cells, or of other types of liver cells, with 125I-alpha 1. The accumulation of fluorescein-labelled heat-denatured collagen in vesicles of cultured liver endothelial cells is evidence that the protein is internalized. Moreover, chloroquine, 5-dimethylaminonaphthalene-1-sulphonylcadaverine (dansylcadaverine), monensin and cytochalasin B, which impede one or more steps of the endocytic process, inhibited the uptake of 125I-alpha 1 by the liver endothelial cells. Leupeptin, an inhibitor of cathepsin B and 'collagenolytic cathepsins', inhibited the intralysosomal degradation of 125I-alpha 1, but had no effect on the rate of uptake of the ligand. The current data are interpreted as follows. (1) The ability of the liver endothelial cells and the Kupffer cells to sequester circulating 125I-alpha 1 efficiently may indicate a physiological pathway for the breakdown of connective-tissue collagen. (2) The liver endothelial cells express receptors that specifically recognize and mediate the endocytosis of collagen alpha 1(I) monomers. (3) The receptors also recognize denatured collagen (gelatin). (4) Fibronectin is not involved in the binding of alpha 1 to the receptors. (5) Degradation occurs intralysosomally by leupeptin-inhibitable cathepsins.
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