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1.
Application of the laser-based technique of photon correlation spectroscopy to anin vitro study of the ionic stability and interaction kinetics of zymogen granules isolated from rat exocrine pancreas is described here. In addition the separation from pancreatic acinar cell cytosol of a factor which stabilizes isolated zymogen granules and inhibits cation-induced granule aggregation is outlined. The basis of this action and the significance of the cytosolic inhibitory factor in the regulation of granule mobility and exocytosisin vivo is discussed.  相似文献   

2.
In the process of secretion, the membrane of secretory granules is expected to change its elastic behavior. Elastic modulus of the membrane of zymogen granules, prepared from the rat pancreas acinar cell, was measured by an osmotic swelling method. The elastic modulus of the granule membrane at pCa 8 reduced from the maximal value of 230 dyn/cm at pH 6.0 to almost zero at pH 7.5. In a cytosol of an acinar cell, calcium ions play an important role as a second messenger in secretion. The elastic modulus of the granule membrane reduced in a sigmoidal fashion at pCa between 7.0 and 6.0. This range of pCa corresponds to a physiological rise of free Ca2+ concentrations in the cell cytosol when stimulated by external secretagogues. Reduction of the elastic modulus indicates that the state of the granule membrane switches to a more flexible one in which the granule is easy to appose to the cell plasma membrane and then swell as a final step of exocytosis.  相似文献   

3.
Purified preparations of pancreatic zymogen granules have the peculiar property of lysing instantaneously at neutral pH, a property clearly irreconcilable with the cytoplasmic pH of the acinar cell. Two important factors known for regulating the stability of secretory granules are calcium and pH. Fluorescence microscopy of acinar cells in the presence of weak bases showed that zymogen granules have an acidic pH. In vivo, abolition of the delta pH by NH4Cl did not induce any lysis of the granules. In vitro, with purified granules, an acidic intragranular pH was measured. This delta pH was produced by a Donnan potential. The importance for granule stability of keeping the intragranular pH acidic has been confirmed in vitro by addition of K+ and nigericin to the suspension medium. These conditions produced alkalinization of the granule matrix and caused instantaneous solubilization of the granules. Concentrations of 15 mM total, and 10 mM free calcium were measured in purified granules. The importance of intragranular Ca2+ was evaluated by means of the ionophore A23187 which induced calcium efflux and granule lysis. The lysis induced by the calcium ionophore was in direct relation with the calcium efflux, since addition of Ca2+ to the medium, at concentrations corresponding to that measured in the granule, relieved the effect. The role of calcium-binding sites on the cytoplasmic surface of the granules was investigated with Ca2+, EGTA, and La3+. Calcium did not have any damaging effects; EGTA induced a slight lysis, while lanthanum yielded a strong and spontaneous lysis at micromolar concentrations. In addition to calcium-binding sites, La3+ would bind to specific sites on the granule that would be directly coupled to maintenance of its stability. These findings suggest that the intragranular acidic pH and calcium are both important for the in vitro stability of the zymogen granule and that purified granules have lost, in the course of purification, some cytoplasmic factors that in vivo, control the permeability of the membrane to protons, and chloride more particularly. Calcium-binding sites and other specific sites probed with La3+, presumably on proteins at the surface of the granule, are also believed to have key roles in preserving the integrity of the membrane and the resulting stability of the granule.  相似文献   

4.
Chromogranin B (CgB, secretogranin I) is a secretory granule matrix protein expressed in a wide variety of endocrine cells and neurons. Here we generated transgenic mice expressing CgB under the control of the human cytomegalovirus promoter. Northern and immunoblot analyses, in situ hybridization and immunocytochemistry revealed that the exocrine pancreas was the tissue with the highest level of ectopic CgB expression. Upon subcellular fractionation of the exocrine pancreas, the distribution of CgB in the various fractions was indistinguishable from that of amylase, an endogenous constituent of zymogen granules. Immunogold electron microscopy of pancreatic acinar cells showed co-localization of CgB with zymogens in Golgi cisternae, condensing vacuoles/immature granules and mature zymogen granules; the ratio of immunoreactivity of CgB to zymogens being highest in condensing vacuoles/immature granules. CgB isolated from zymogen granules of the pancreas of the transgenic mice aggregated in a mildly acidic (pH 5.5) milieu in vitro, suggesting that low pH-induced aggregation contributed to the observed concentration of CgB in condensing vacuoles. Our results show that a neuroendocrine-regulated secretory protein can be sorted to exocrine secretory granules in vivo, and imply that a key feature of CgB sorting in the trans-Golgi network of neuroendocrine cells, i.e. its aggregation-mediated concentration in the course of immature secretory granule formation, also occurs in exocrine cells although secretory protein sorting in these cells is thought to occur largely in the course of secretory granule maturation.  相似文献   

5.
V Colomer  K Lal  T C Hoops    M J Rindler 《The EMBO journal》1994,13(16):3711-3719
The mechanisms for segregation of secretory and membrane proteins incorporated into storage granules from those transported constitutively have been thought to be conserved in diverse cell types, including exocrine and endocrine cells. However, GP2, the major protein of pancreatic zymogen granule membranes, in its native glycosyl phosphatidylinositol (GPI)-linked form, is incorporated into secretory granules when expressed in exocrine pancreatic AR42J cells, but not in the endocrine cells such as pituitary AtT20. To determine whether the protein moiety of GP2 contains the cell-type specific information for packaging into granules, a secretory form of GP2 (GP2-GPI-), with the GPI attachment site deleted, was generated and introduced into AR42J and AtT20 cells. Like native GP2, GP2-GPI- localized to the zymogen-like granules of AR42J cells and underwent regulated secretion. In AtT20 cells expressing GP2-GPI-, however, the protein was secreted by the constitutive pathway. Thus, a granule packaging signal is present in the luminal portion of GP2 that is functional only in the exocrine cells. However, this cell-type dependent sorting process is not limited to GP2 or membrane proteins. Amylase, a major content protein of pancreatic acinar and serous salivary gland granules, was also secreted exclusively by the constitutive pathway when expressed in AtT20 cells. The cell-type specific targeting of GP2 to granules correlated with its behavior in an in vitro aggregation assay where it co-aggregated more effectively with content proteins from pancreatic zymogen granules than with those from pituitary granules.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

6.
The effect of cAMP and PKC on zymogen granule exocytosis was investigated by simultaneously measuring cytosolic Ca2+ concentration ([Ca2+]c) and individual zymogen granule exocytosis in isolated mouse pancreatic acini. When acinar cells were stimulated with acetylcholine (ACh, 10 microM), exocytic events were detected through granule-attached apical membranes with [Ca2+]c rise. Application of secretin, forskolin (an adenylate cyclase activator), or PMA (a PKC activator) alone did not elicit any [Ca2+]c rise or zymogen granule exocytosis, but co-stimulation with ACh led to exocytosis in that the total number of secreted granules increased markedly without a significant difference in [Ca2+]c rises. When we evoked exocytosis by [Ca2+]c ramps, pretreatment with forskolin or PMA elicited exocytosis at lower [Ca2+]c levels. These results indicate that PKC or cAMP alone could not directly elicit zymogen granule exocytosis, but that they increase the total releasable pool by rendering zymogen granules more sensitive to Ca2+.  相似文献   

7.
We examined the role of glycosphingolipid- and cholesterol-enriched microdomains, or rafts, in the sorting of digestive enzymes into zymogen granules destined for apical secretion and in granule formation. Isolated membranes of zymogen granules from pancreatic acinar cells showed an enrichment in cholesterol and sphingomyelin and formed detergent-insoluble glycolipid-enriched complexes. These complexes floated to the lighter fractions of sucrose density gradients and contained the glycosylphosphatidylinositol (GPI)-anchored glycoprotein GP-2, the lectin ZG16p, and sulfated matrix proteoglycans. Morphological and pulse-chase studies with isolated pancreatic lobules revealed that after inhibition of GPI-anchor biosynthesis by mannosamine or the fungal metabolite YW 3548, granule formation was impaired leading to an accumulation of newly synthesized proteins in the Golgi apparatus and the rough endoplasmic reticulum. Furthermore, the membrane attachment of matrix proteoglycans was diminished. After cholesterol depletion or inhibition of glycosphingolipid synthesis by fumonisin B1, the formation of zymogen granules as well as the formation of detergent-insoluble complexes was reduced. In addition, cholesterol depletion led to constitutive secretion of newly synthesized proteins, e.g. amylase, indicating that zymogens were missorted. Together, these data provide first evidence that in polarized acinar cells of the exocrine pancreas GPI-anchored proteins, e.g. GP-2, and cholesterol-sphingolipid-enriched microdomains are required for granule formation as well as for regulated secretion of zymogens and may function as sorting platforms for secretory proteins destined for apical delivery.  相似文献   

8.
The majority of digestive enzymes in humans are produced in the pancreas where they are stored in zymogen granules before secretion into the intestine. GP2 is the major membrane protein present in zymogen granules of the exocrine pancreas. Numerous studies have shown that GP2 binds digestive enzymes such as amylase, thereby supporting a role in protein sorting to the zymogen granule. Other studies have suggested that GP2 is important in the formation of zymogen granules. A knock-out mouse was generated for GP2 to study the impact of the protein on pancreatic function. GP2-deficient mice displayed no gross signs of nutrient malab-sorption such as weight loss, growth retardation, or diarrhea. Zymogen granules in the GP2 knock-out mice appeared normal on electron microscopy and contained the normal complement of proteins excluding GP2. Primary cultures of pancreatic acini appropriately responded to secretagogue stimulation with the secretion of digestive enzymes. The course of experimentally induced pancreatitis was also examined in the knock-out mice because proteins known to associate with GP2 have been found to possess a protective role. When GP2 knock-out mice were subjected to two different models of pancreatitis, no major differences were detected. In conclusion, GP2 is not essential for pancreatic exocrine secretion or zymogen granule formation. It is unlikely that GP2 serves a major intracellular role within the pancreatic acinar cell and may be functionally active after it is secreted from the pancreas.  相似文献   

9.
The intracellular localization of pancreatic enzyme secretion-stimulating activity in rat pancreas was investigated. We found and purified a pancreatic enzyme secretion-stimulating peptide from rat bile/pancreatic juice. The peptide is trypsin-sensitive (showing temporary trypsin inhibitory activity), and it is hypothesized that it acts as a trypsin-sensitive mediator in the feedback regulation of diet-induced pancreatic enzyme secretion. The zymogen granule fraction was purified 5-fold by ultracentrifugation by the Percoll density gradient method. The purity of the zymogen granule fraction was determined from the specific amylase activity and electron microscopic morphology. The specific enzyme activities of amylase and trypsin and the trypsin inhibitory activity increased in parallel during the purification, and the pancreatic enzyme secretion-stimulating activity was also localized in the zymogen granule fraction. These results suggest that the pancreatic enzyme secretion-stimulating peptide originates from the acinar cells, and that it is secreted through exocytosis of zymogen granules into the small intestine, its ratio to trypsin thus remaining constant. This idea supports our hypothesis that the stimulating peptide acts as a mediator for the feedback regulation of pancreatic enzyme secretion by trypsin.  相似文献   

10.
Immunofluorescent studies showed that antibodies prepared against bovine milk sulfhydryl oxidase reacted with acinar cells of porcine and bovine pancreas. A close inspection of the specific location within bovine pancreatic cells revealed that the zymogen granules, themselves, bound the fluorescent antibody. Bovine pancreatic tissue was homogenized in 0.3 M sucrose, then separated into the zymogen granule fraction by differential centrifugation. The intact zymogen granules were immunofluorescent positive when incubated with antibodies to bovine milk sulfhydryl oxidase, and glutathione-oxidizing activity was detected under standard assay conditions. Pancreatic sulfhydryl oxidase was purified from the zymogen fraction by precipitation with 50% saturated ammonium sulfate, followed by Sepharose CL-6B column chromatography. Active fractions were pooled and subjected to covalent affinity chromatography on cysteinylsuccinamidopropyl-glass using 2 mM glutathione as eluant at 37 degrees C. The specific activity of bovine pancreatic sulfhydryl oxidase thus isolated was 10-20 units/mg protein using 0.8 mM glutathione as substrate. Ouchterlony double-diffusion studies showed that antibody directed against the purified bovine milk enzyme reacted identically with pancreatic sulfhydryl oxidase. The antibody also immunoprecipitated glutathione-oxidizing activity from crude pancreatic homogenates. Western blotting analysis indicated a 90,000 Mr antigen-reactive band in both bovine milk and pancreatic fractions while sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis revealed a single silver-staining protein with an apparent Mr 300,000. Thus, we believe that sulfhydryl oxidase may exist in an aggregated molecular form. Bovine pancreatic sulfhydryl oxidase catalyzes the oxidation of low-molecular-weight thiols such as glutathione, N-acetyl-L-cysteine, and glycylglycyl-L-cysteine, as well as that of a high-molecular-weight protein substrate, reductively denatured pancreatic ribonuclease A.  相似文献   

11.
Pathological activation of digestive zymogens within the pancreatic acinar cell initiates acute pancreatitis. Cytosolic events regulate this activation within intracellular compartments of unclear identity. In an in vivo model of acute pancreatitis, zymogen activation was detected in both zymogen granule-enriched and microsomal cellular fractions. To examine the mechanism of this activation in vitro, a reconstituted system was developed using pancreatic cytosol, a zymogen granule-enriched fraction, and a microsomal fraction. Addition of cytosol to either particulate fraction resulted in a prominent increase in both trypsin and chymotrypsin activities. The percentage of the pool of trypsinogen and chymotrypsinogen activated was about twofold and sixfold greater, respectively, in the microsomal than in the zymogen granule-enriched fraction. Activation of chymotrypsinogen but not trypsinogen was significantly enhanced by ATP (5 mM) but not by the inactive ATP analog AMP-PNP. The processing of procarboxypeptidase B to its mature form also demonstrated a requirement for ATP and cytosol. E64d, an inhibitor of cathepsin B, a thiol protease that can activate trypsin, completely inhibited trypsin activity but did not affect chymotrypsin activity or carboxypeptidase B generation. These studies demonstrate that both zymogen granule-enriched and microsomal fractions from the pancreas can support cytosol-dependent zymogen activation. A component of the activation of some zymogens, such as chymotrypsinogen and procarboxypeptidase, may depend on ATP but not on trypsin or cathepsin B.  相似文献   

12.
The aggregation and dispersity of isolated bovine adrenal secretory vesicles (chromaffin granules) were studied by intensity fluctuation spectroscopy. The degree of dispersity and the Z-average translational diffusion coefficients were calculated from the autocorrelation functions of the intensity fluctuations in lase light scattered from the granules in solution. Granules purified by sedimentation through 0.3 M sucrose/Ficoll/2H2O showed greater dispersity than granules purified by sedimentation through 1.6 M sucrose. By monitoring the scattered light intensity and the diffusion coefficients of the granules, many of the difficulties encountered in the interpretation of absorbance measurements were avoided. Measurements over a range of granule concentrations in sucrose solutions (10 mM HEPES, pH 7.0), indicated that aggregation of the granules occurred at concentrations above 150 μg protein/ml. At low granule concentrations (15–30 μg protein/ml) Ca2+-induced aggregation was detected at a threshold of 2–10 mM calcium.  相似文献   

13.
14.
Syncollin is a small protein that is abundantly expressed in pancreatic acinar cells and that is tightly associated with the lumenal side of the zymogen granule membrane. To shed light on the hitherto unknown function of syncollin, we have generated syncollin-deficient mice. The mice are viable and show a normal pancreatic morphology as well as normal release kinetics in response to secretagogue stimulation. Although syncollin is highly enriched in zymogen granules, no change was found in the overall protein content and in the levels of chymotrypsin, trypsin, and amylase. However, syncollin-deficient mice reacted to caerulein hyperstimulation with a more severe pancreatitis. Furthermore, the rates of both protein synthesis and intracellular transport of secretory proteins were reduced. We conclude that syncollin plays a role in maturation and/or concentration of zymogens in zymogen granules.  相似文献   

15.
To determine how low or high dose of caerulein, a cholecystokinin analogue influence pancreatic growth, doses of caerulein were selected which were submaximal (1 microgram/kg i.p.) and supramaximal (10 micrograms/kg i.p.) for enzyme protein secretion. Rats were injected every 8 h for 7 days with saline, low, or high dose of caerulein. The low dose of caerulein significantly increased pancreatic weight and content of DNA, protein, and digestive enzymes. The high dose caerulein group did not differ from control in these parameters of pancreatic growth. The number of zymogen granules was increased in both caerulein-treated groups. However, zymogen granules in the high dose group were atypical, appearing lucent or having a dense core with a lucent halo. These results indicate that caerulein has a biphasic effect on both enzyme secretion and the trophic response of acinar cells, and that the inhibitory effect of high dose of caerulein on pancreatic growth is accompanied by alterations in acinar cell morphology.  相似文献   

16.
The protein-A gold method using specific rabbit sera directed against pure human pancreatic chymotrypsinogen and carboxylic ester hydrolase was applied to locate these (pro)enzymes in human pancreatic acinar cells and intestinal Paneth cells. Quantitative evaluation of the labelling indicated that both (pro)enzymes are present in pancreatic acinar secretory granules. In Paneth cell secretory granules, only carboxylic ester hydrolase was present in significant amounts, although the labelling for this enzyme was less intense than that observed in pancreatic zymogen granules. The results obtained support the view that Paneth cells represent a "diffuse exocrine gland" scattered along the intestine, whose role is either to act as a substitute in the event of a deficient pancreas or to regulate the intestinal flora.  相似文献   

17.
Summary Subcellular structures of pancreatic acinar cells were examined at six evenly spaced time points in the 24-h period (light cycle: 06.00 h–18.00 h) in four Wistar male rats at each time point. At each sampling point, the area and circumference of acinar cell bodies and the area, number and circumference of their cytoplasmic organelles were measured using a semiautomatic computer system for morphometry and a point-counting method.The area, number and circumference-area ratio of the cytoplasmic organelles were subject to strong circadian variations, and the cellular area and circumference exhibited weak circadian variations. Variation pattern of the cytoplasmic organelles suggested an intracellular route for secretory proteins during a 24-h span. From the results it was possible to divide the 24-h period into three stages. 1. The resting or protein synthetic stage (00.00 h to 08.00h): the area of the rough surfaced endoplasmic reticulum (rER) was strongly increased, and that of zymogen granules was clearly decreased. 2. The granule accumulation stage (08.00h to 16.00h): the area of the rER was markedly decreased; that of zymogen granules was increased. 3. The secretion stage (16.00 h to 00.00): as a result of the release of zymogen granules from the acinar cell, the area of zymogen granules decreased, and that of the rER increased. The relationship between the area of the rER and zymogen granules varied in a reciprocal manner. Other cytoplasmic organelles, namely the Golgi complex, condensing vacuoles, mitochondria and lysosomes also varied prominently during the 24-h span, corresponding to variations in the rER and zymogen granules.  相似文献   

18.
The binding of concanavalin A to the plasmalemma of acinar carcinoma cells was characterized by electron microscopy utilizing horseradish peroxidase. Heavy labeling due to specific concanavalin A binding was detected on the plasmalemma of undifferentiated carcinoma cells lacking zymogen maturation, neoplastic cells of intermediate differentiation with only occasional zymogen granules, and highly differentiated acinar carcinoma cells containing numerous cytoplasmic zymogen granules. The plasmalemma of acinar carcinoma cells was also compared to the normal pancreatic acinar cell plasmalemma by measurement of specific 125I-labeled concanavalin A binding. Although only about one-third of pancreatic acinar carcinoma cells demonstrate mature zymogen differentiation, the acinar carcinoma had a full complement of normal plasmalemma receptors for 125I-labeled concanavalin A. It is concluded that, unlike normal pancreas, the presence of concanavalin A receptors on the plasmalemma of acinar carcinoma cells is not a specific membrane marker for differentiated cells containing zymogen granules.  相似文献   

19.
A protocol for isolating milligram quantities of highly purified zymogen granule membranes from calf pancreas was developed. The method provides a fivefold enriched zymogen granule fraction that is virtually free from major isodense contaminants, such as mitochondria and erythrocytes. Isolated granules are osmotically stable in isosmotic KCl buffers with half-lives between 90 and 120 min. They display specific ion permeabilities that can be demonstrated using ionophore probes to override intrinsic control mechanisms. A Cl- conductance, a Cl-/anion exchanger, and a K+ conductance are found in the zymogen granule membrane, as previously reported for rat pancreatic, rat parotid zymogen granules, and rabbit pepsinogen granules. Lysis of calf pancreatic secretory granules in hypotonic buffers and subsequent isolation of pure zymogen granule membranes yield about 5-10 mg membrane protein from approximately 1000 ml pancreas homogenate. The purified zymogen granule membranes are a putative candidate for the rapid identification and purification of epithelial Cl- channels and regulatory proteins, since they contain fewer proteins than plasma membranes.  相似文献   

20.
A characteristic of acute pancreatitis is the premature activation and retention of enzymes within the pancreatic acinar cell. Because ligands linked to cAMP production may prevent some forms of pancreatitis, we evaluated the effects of increased intracellular cAMP in the rat pancreatic acinar cell. Specifically, this study examined the effects of the cholinergic agonist carbachol and agents that increase cAMP [secretin and 8-bromoadenosine 3',5'-cyclic monophosphate (8-Br-cAMP)] on zymogen activation (trypsin and chymotrypsin), enzyme secretion, and cellular injury in isolated pancreatic acini. Although cAMP agonists affected the responses to physiological concentrations of carbachol (1 microM), their most prominent effects were observed with supraphysiological concentrations (1 mM). When secretin was added to 1 mM carbachol, there was a slight increase in zymogen activation, but no change in the secretion of amylase or chymotrypsin. Furthermore, coaddition of secretin increased parameters of cell injury (trypan blue exclusion, lactic dehydrogenase release, and morphological markers) compared with carbachol (1 mM) alone. Although directly increasing cellular cAMP by 8-Br-cAMP caused much greater zymogen activation than carbachol (1 mM) alone or with secretin, 8-Br-cAMP cotreatment reduced all parameters of injury to the level of unstimulated acini. Furthermore, 8-Br-cAMP dramatically enhanced the secretion of amylase and chymotrypsin from the acinar cell. This study demonstrates that increasing acinar cell cAMP can overcome the inhibition of enzyme secretion caused by high concentrations of carbachol and eliminate acinar cell injury.  相似文献   

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