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1.
SG (serglycin) PGs (proteoglycans) are strongly implicated in the assembly of MC (mast cell) granules. However, this notion has mainly been on the basis of studies of MCs of the connective tissue subtype, whereas the role of SG PG in mucosal MCs has not been explored. In the present study, we have addressed the latter issue by using mice with an inactivated SG gene. Bone marrow cells were differentiated in vitro into the mucosal MC phenotype, expressing the markers mMCP (mouse MC protease) -1 and -2. Biosynthetic labelling experiments performed on these cells revealed an approximately 80% reduction of 35SO4(2-) incorporation into PGs recovered from SG-/- cells as compared with SG+/+ counterparts, indicating that SG is the dominating cell-associated PG of mucosal MCs. Moreover, the absence of SG led to defective metachromatic staining of mucosal MCs, both in vivo and in the in vitro-derived mucosal MCs. Ultrastructural analysis showed that granules were present in similar numbers in SG+/+ and SG-/- cells, but that their morphology was markedly affected by the absence of SG, e.g. with electron-dense core formation only seen in SG+/+ granules. Analysis of the MC-specific proteases showed that mMCP-1 and mMCP-7 were completely independent of SG for storage, whereas mMCP-2 showed a partial dependence. In contrast, mMCP-4 and -6, and carboxypeptidase A were strongly dependent on SG for storage. Together, our data indicate that SG PG is of crucial importance for assembly of mature mucosal MC granules, but that the specific dependence on SG for storage varies between individual granule constituents.  相似文献   

2.
Lundequist A  Abrink M  Pejler G 《Biological chemistry》2006,387(10-11):1513-1519
The formation of active matrix metalloprotease-2 (MMP-2) requires the proteolytic processing of proMMP-2, a process that can occur through the formation of a ternary complex between proMMP-2, the tissue inhibitor of metalloprotease-2 and membrane type 1-MMP. However, other activation mechanisms have been suggested, and in this study we investigated whether mast cells (MCs) may play a role in the activation of proMMP-2. Murine peritoneal cells, a mixture of macrophages, lymphocytes and MCs, were cultured ex vivo. Addition of proMMP-2 to resting peritoneal cell cultures resulted in only slow conversion of proMMP-2 into the active enzyme. However, when MC degranulation was provoked using a calcium ionophore, proMMP-2 processing was markedly enhanced. When the peritoneal cell populations were depleted in MCs, proMMP-2 processing was abrogated, but was reconstituted when purified MCs were added to the depleted cultures. ProMMP-2 processing was sensitive to serine protease inhibitors, but not to inhibitors of other classes of proteases. Furthermore, proMMP-2 processing was completely abrogated in cells lacking serglycin, a proteoglycan that has previously been shown to mediate storage of a variety of MC serine proteases. Taken together, these results suggest a novel mode of proMMP-2 activation mediated by serglycin-dependent MC serine proteases.  相似文献   

3.
The purpose of the study was to investigate the rabies virus multiplication in Vero cell cultures performed on porous microcarriers, MCs (cellulose-Cytopore and gelatin-Cultispher G), which provide higher available surface area compared with solid (nonporous) MCs (DEAE-Cytodex 1). In a set of experiments performed at the same MC concentration (MCs per milliliter), cell densities regularly obtained in porous MC cultures were comparable, but almost twice as high as those in solid MC cultures. In addition, 41.1 +/- 3.9-, 35.2 +/- 2-, and 19.6 +/- 5.8-fold increases in cell concentration, relative to the initial cell number, along with maximum rabies virus titers of 6.3 +/- 0.3 x 10(4), 5 +/- 0.1 x 10(4), and 4.3 +/- 0.2 x 10(4) FFD(50)/mL were observed in Cytopore, Cultispher G, and Cytodex 1 MC cultures, respectively. When higher concentrations of MCs were employed, lower performances of virus production and MC-cell occupation (cells per MC or cells per square millimeter) were observed. Cell attachment to MCs was shown to be faster for Cytopore MCs and Cytodex 1 MCs than for Cultispher G MCs. Concerning the kinetics of cell multiplication on MCs, exponential cell growth, at similar specific cell growth rates, took place on Cytopore, Cultispher G, and Cytodex 1 MCs. In addition, cell densities as high as 2.1 +/- 0.2 x 10(6) cells/mL on Cytopore MCs, 1.8 +/- 0.1 x 10(6) cells/mL on Cultispher G MCs, and 1 +/- 0.3 x 10(6) cells/mL on Cytodex 1 MCs were regularly obtained in batch cultures. Optical as well as scanning and transmission electron microscopy studies carried out to analyze MC structure, MC cell occupation, and cell permissivity to virus infection demonstrated that there was uniform cell distribution in the external and internal areas of the MCs, suggesting an efficiency of virus synthesis. Our results indicate the usefulness of these supports for rabies virus antigen production, as well as possibilities for further optimization.  相似文献   

4.
Endothelial-derived proteoglycans are important regulators of the coagulation-pathway in vivo and our primary objective of this study was to determine whether chronic shear stress affected the synthesis, release, and activity of proteoglycans from bovine aortic endothelial cells (BAEC). BAEC were cultured under shear and proteoglycans were purified from BAEC conditioned media and analyzed using both anionic exchange and size exclusion chromatography. The overall amount of proteoglycans produced per cell was significantly greater for the high shear-treated samples compared to the low shear-treated samples indicating that the shear magnitude did impact cell responsiveness. While overall size and composition of the proteoglycans and glycosaminoglycan (GAG) side chains were not altered by shear, the relative proportion of the high and low molecular weight species was inversely related to shear and differed significantly from that found under static tissue culture conditions. Moreover, a unique proteoglycan peak was identified from low shear stress (5 +/- 2 dynes/cm(2)) conditioned media when compared to high shear conditions (23 +/- 8 dynes/cm(2)) via anionic exchange chromatography, suggesting that subtle changes in the GAG structures may impact activity of these molecules. In order to characterize whether these changes impacted proteoglycan function, we studied the effects of shear specific proteoglycans on the inhibition of thrombin-induced human platelet aggregation as well as on platelet-fibrin clot dynamics. Proteoglycans from high shear-treated samples were less effective inhibitors of both platelet aggregation and blood coagulation inhibition than proteoglycans from low shear-treated samples and both were less effective than proteoglycans isolated from static tissue culture samples. However, due to changes in the overall proteoglycan synthesis and release rate, the high and low shear-treated sample had essentially identical effects on these activities, suggesting that the cells were able to compensate for stress-induced proteoglycan changes. Our data suggests that shear stress, by altering proteoglycan synthesis and fine structure, may play a role in maintaining vascular hemodynamics and hemostasis.  相似文献   

5.
The mouse and human TPSB2 and TPSAB1 genes encode tetramer-forming tryptases stored in the secretory granules of mast cells (MCs) ionically bound to heparin-containing serglycin proteoglycans. In mice these genes encode mouse MC protease-6 (mMCP-6) and mMCP-7. The corresponding human genes encode a family of serine proteases that collectively are called hTryptase-β. We previously showed that the α chain of fibrinogen is a preferred substrate of mMCP-7. We now show that this plasma protein also is highly susceptible to degradation by hTryptase-β· and mMCP-6·heparin complexes and that Lys(575) is a preferred cleavage site in the protein α chain. Because cutaneous mouse MCs store substantial amounts of mMCP-6·heparin complexes in their secretory granules, the passive cutaneous anaphylaxis reaction was induced in the skin of mMCP-6(+)/mMCP-7(-) and mMCP-6(-)/mMCP-7(-) C57BL/6 mice. In support of the in vitro data, fibrin deposits were markedly increased in the skin of the double-deficient mice 6 h after IgE-sensitized animals were given the relevant antigen. Fibrinogen is a major constituent of the edema fluid that accumulates in tissues when MCs degranulate. Our discovery that mouse and human tetramer-forming tryptases destroy fibrinogen before this circulating protein can be converted to fibrin changes the paradigm of how MCs hinder fibrin deposition and blood coagulation internally. Because of the adverse consequences of fibrin deposits in tissues, our data explain why mice and humans lack a circulating protease inhibitor that rapidly inactivates MC tryptases and why mammals have two genes that encode tetramer-forming serine proteases that preferentially degrade fibrinogen.  相似文献   

6.
Glioblastoma multiforme (GBM) is the most common and malignant form of glioma with high mortality and no cure. Many human cancers maintain a complex inflammatory program triggering rapid recruitment of inflammatory cells, including mast cells (MCs), to the tumor site. However, the potential contribution of MCs in glioma has not been addressed previously. Here we report for the first time that MCs infiltrate KRas+Akt-induced gliomas, using the RCAS/TV-a system, where KRas and Akt are transduced by RCAS into the brains of neonatal Gtv-a- or Ntv-a transgenic mice lacking Ink4a or Arf. The most abundant MC infiltration was observed in high-grade gliomas of Arf-/- mice. MC accumulation could be localized to the vicinity of glioma-associated vessels but also within the tumor mass. Importantly, proliferating MCs were detected, suggesting that the MC accumulation was caused by local expansion of the MC population. In line with these findings, strong expression of stem cell factor (SCF), i.e. the main MC growth factor, was detected, in particular around tumor blood vessels. Further, glioma cells expressed the MC chemotaxin CXCL12 and MCs expressed the corresponding receptor, i.e. CXCR4, suggesting that MCs could be attracted to the tumor through the CXCL12/CXCR4 axis. Supporting a role for MCs in glioma, strong MC infiltration was detected in human glioma, where GBMs contained significantly higher MC numbers than grade II tumors did. Moreover, human GBMs were positive for CXCL12 and the infiltrating MCs were positive for CXCR4. In conclusion, we provide the first evidence for a role for MCs in glioma.  相似文献   

7.
It has been hypothesized that the dissolution of mast cell granules at the time of degranulation results from proteoglycan cleavage coupled to exocytosis. To address this hypothesis, we studied granule proteoglycan before and after exocytosis in dog mastocytoma cells, which solubilize granule contents during exocytosis. 35S-labeled proteoglycans were extracted from unstimulated whole cells and cell degranulation supernatant. Sequential anion-exchange and gel filtration chromatography, followed by specific glycosaminoglycan digestion, identified chondroitin sulfate and heparin glycosaminoglycan and proteoglycan in unstimulated cells and degranulated material alike. Glycosaminoglycan type and charge density in degranulation supernatant were unchanged compared with unstimulated cells. There was no decrease in proteoglycan size with cell activation and exocytosis. Thus, granule release and solubilization does not appear to require exocytosis-coupled degradation of granule proteoglycans. Release in association with high-m.w. proteoglycans may serve to limit rates of diffusion and activity of proteases and other mast cell mediators.  相似文献   

8.
It has recently been shown that serglycin is essential for maturation of mast cell secretory granules. However, serglycin is expressed also by other cell types, and in this study we addressed the role of serglycin in macrophages. Adherent cells were prepared from murine peritoneal cell populations and from spleens, and analyzed for proteoglycan synthesis by biosynthetic labeling with [35S]sulfate. Conditioned media from serglycin-/- peritoneal macrophages and adherent spleen cells displayed a 65-80% reduction of 35S-labeled proteoglycans, compared with corresponding material from serglycin+/+ cells, indicating that serglycin is the dominant secretory proteoglycan in macrophages of these origins. In contrast, the levels of intracellular proteoglycans were similar in serglycin+/+ and serglycin-/- cells, suggesting that serglycin is not stored intracellularly to a major extent in macrophages. This is in contrast to mast cells, in which serglycin is predominantly stored intracellularly. Transmission electron microscopy revealed that the absence of serglycin did not cause any major morphological effects on peritoneal macrophages, in contrast to dramatic defects in intracellular storage vesicles in peritoneal mast cells. Several secretory products were not found to be affected by the lack of serglycin. However, the secretion of tumor necrosis factor-alpha in response to lipopolysaccharide stimulation was markedly higher in serglycin-/- cultures than in those of serglycin+/+. The present report thus demonstrates that serglycin is the major proteoglycan secreted by peritoneal macrophages and suggests that the macrophage serglycin may have a role in regulating secretion of tumor necrosis factor-alpha.  相似文献   

9.

Background

Upon IgE-mediated activation, mast cells (MC) exocytose their cytoplasmic secretory granules and release a variety of bioactive substances that trigger inflammatory responses. Polyamines mediate numerous cellular and physiological functions. We report here that MCs express antizyme inhibitor 2 (AZIN2), an activator of polyamine biosynthesis, previously reported to be exclusively expressed in the brain and testis. We have investigated the intracellular localization of AZIN2 both in resting and activated MCs. In addition, we have examined the functional role of polyamines, downstream effectors of AZIN2, as potential regulators of MC activity.

Methodology/Principal Findings

Immunostainings show that AZIN2 is expressed in primary and neoplastic human and rodent MCs. We demonstrate that AZIN2 localizes in the Vamp-8 positive, serotonin-containing subset of MC granules, but not in tryptase-containing granules, as revealed by double immunofluorescence stainings. Furthermore, activation of MCs induces rapid upregulation of AZIN2 expression and its redistribution, suggesting a role for AZIN2 in secretory granule exocytosis. We also demonstrate that release of serotonin from activated MCs is polyamine-dependent whereas release of histamine and β-hexosaminidase is not, indicating a granule subtype-specific function for polyamines.

Conclusions/Significance

The study reports for the first time the expression of AZIN2 outside the brain and testis, and demonstrates the intracellular localization of endogenous AZIN2 in MCs. The granule subtype-specific expression and its induction after MC activation suggest a role for AZIN2 as a local, in situ regulator of polyamine biosynthesis in association with serotonin-containing granules of MCs. Furthermore, our data indicates a novel function for polyamines as selective regulators of serotonin release from MCs.  相似文献   

10.
Deficiency of the heparan sulfate biosynthesis enzyme N-deacetylase/N-sulfotransferase 1 (NDST1) in mice causes severely disturbed heparan sulfate biosynthesis in all organs, whereas lack of NDST2 only affects heparin biosynthesis in mast cells (MCs). To investigate the individual and combined roles of NDST1 and NDST2 during MC development, in vitro differentiated MCs derived from mouse embryos and embryonic stem cells, respectively, have been studied. Whereas MC development will not occur in the absence of both NDST1 and NDST2, lack of NDST2 alone results in the generation of defective MCs. Surprisingly, the relative amount of heparin produced in NDST1(+/-) and NDST1(-/-) MCs is higher (≈30%) than in control MCs where ≈95% of the (35)S-labeled glycosaminoglycans produced is chondroitin sulfate. Lowered expression of NDST1 also results in a higher sulfate content of the heparin synthesized and is accompanied by increased levels of stored MC proteases. A model of the GAGosome, a hypothetical Golgi enzyme complex, is used to explain the results.  相似文献   

11.
12.
The structure, biosynthesis, and metabolism of proteoglycans in the HL-60 human promyelocytes were studied by metabolic labeling in culture with [35S]sulfate, [3H]glucosamine, [3H]serine, and [3H]leucine. These cells synthesize a single predominant species of intracellular proteoglycan with an approximate molecular weight of 100,000. The cells contain about 1 microgram of proteoglycan/million cells. The proteoglycan is turned over within the cells in two apparent pools with half-lives of about 0.6 and 27 h, respectively. The fast pool represents secretion into medium in an apparently intact form, whereas the slow pool represents intracellular degradation to free chondroitin sulfate chains and smaller fragments. The proteoglycan contains a protein core with an apparent Mr on gel filtration and sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis of about 20,000-30,000. To the core protein are attached an average of six or seven chondroitin sulfate chains, each with an Mr of about 10,000. The chondroitin sulfate chains contain approximately 85% 4-sulfated and approximately 15% nonsulfated disaccharides. The chondroitin sulfate attachment region of the core protein is essentially resistant to trypsin and elastase, whereas the remainder of the protein core is readily degraded by proteases. The size of the chondroitin sulfate attachment region peptide generated by trypsin was estimated to be approximately 5 kDa. Based on the molecular size, distribution of amino acids, protease susceptibility, and the extent of O-glycosylation, we propose that the intracellular proteoglycan characterized in this study is the translation product of a proteoglycan gene reported to be present in these cells (Stevens, R.L., Avraham, S., Gartner, M.C., Bruns, G.A., Austen, K.E., and Weis, J.H. (1988) J. Biol. Chem. 263, 7287-7291).  相似文献   

13.
The synthesis of proteoglycans by human T lymphocytes   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
We have examined the proteoglycans produced by highly-purified cultures of human T-lymphocytes. The proteoglycans were metabolically labelled with [35S]sulphate and analysed in cellular and medium fractions using DEAE-cellulose chromatography, gel filtration and specific enzymatic and chemical degradations. The results showed that the T cells synthesized a relatively homogeneous, proteinase-resistant chondroitin 4-sulphate proteoglycan that accumulated in the culture medium during a 48 h incubation period. The cellular fraction contained a significant amount of free chondroitin sulphate chains that were not secreted into the medium. These polysaccharides were formed by intracellular degradation of proteoglycan in a chloroquine-sensitive process, indicating a requirement for an acidic environment. In contrast to chondroitin sulphate derived from proteoglycan, chondroitin sulphates synthesized on the exogenous primer, beta-D-xyloside, were mainly secreted by the cells. beta-D-Xylosides caused an 8-fold stimulation in the synthesis of chondroitin sulphate, but decreased the synthesis of proteoglycan by about 50%. These proteoglycans contained shorter chondroitin sulphate chains than their normal counterparts. The results indicate that although proteoglycans are mainly secretory components in human T-cell cultures, a specific metabolic step leads to the intracellular accumulation of free glycosaminoglycans. Separate functions are likely to be associated with the intracellular and secretory pools of chondroitin sulphate.  相似文献   

14.
Mast cells (MCs) are highly specialized immune cells present in mammals and in lower organisms that predate the development of adaptive immunity. The strong evolutionary pressure to retain MCs for >500 million years suggests critical roles for these cells in our survival. In support of this conclusion, no human has been identified to date that lacks MCs, despite the adverse roles of MCs in systemic anaphylaxis and varied inflammatory disorders. MCs express numerous lineage-restricted neutral proteases, and four members of the chromosome 17A3.3 family of tryptases are preferentially expressed in mouse MCs. The anatomical location of MCs at host-environment interfaces has raised the possibility that some of these enzymes are evolutionally conserved because they are needed for combating infectious organisms. Here we review recent insights into the structure and function of MC tryptases in inflammation and host defense against bacteria and other infectious organisms.  相似文献   

15.
The effects of 1,25-dihydroxyvitamin D3 (1,25-(OH)2D3), an active form of vitamin D3, on the metabolism of proteoglycans by an osteoblastic cell line MC3T3-E1 were studied. Cells metabolically labeled with [35S]sulfate and/or [3H]glucosamine synthesized large and small dermatan sulfate proteoglycans and heparan sulfate proteoglycan. The incorporation of [35S]sulfate into proteoglycans for 1 h was reduced by 1,25-(OH)2D3 in a dose-dependent manner with a maximum reduction of 40% obtained at 10(-8)M 1,25-(OH)2D3. This effect was observed for all the proteoglycans with the decrease for the large dermatan sulfate proteoglycan most prominent. Treatment with 1,25-(OH)2D3 did not influence the degree of sulfation nor the molecular size of the glycosaminoglycan chains. Thus, the change in the incorporation of [35S] sulfate reflects net change in the synthesis of proteoglycans. When cells were treated with beta-D-xyloside, 1,25-(OH)2D3 also inhibited net synthesis of dermatan sulfate glycosaminoglycan chains on this exogenous substrate suggesting that it decreases the capacity of the cells for glycosaminoglycan synthesis. The incorporation of [3H]glucosamine into hyaluronic acid was also inhibited up to 70% by 10(-8) M 1,25-(OH)2D3. Treatment with 24,25-dihydroxyvitamin D3 did not cause significant changes in the proteoglycan synthesis. Degradation of proteoglycans associated with the cell layer was enhanced by treatment with 1,25-(OH)2D3 at 10(-8) M. Proteoglycans exogenously added to the culture were also degraded with a cell-mediated process which was stimulated by treatment with 10(-8) M 1,25-(OH)2D3. These results demonstrate that 1,25-(OH)2D3 reduces the synthesis and stimulates the degradation of proteoglycans in osteoblastic cells in culture.  相似文献   

16.
A biochemical analysis has been carried out of metabolically labelled proteoglycans and glycosaminoglycans synthesized by a haemopoietic multipotential stem cell line, FDCP-mix. The only proteoglycan identified in these multipotential cells was a homogeneous component that contained chondroitin 4-sulphate chains (Mr approximately 10,000) arranged in close proximity in a proteinase-resistant domain of the protein core. Small quantities of free chondroitin 4-sulphate were also detected. Following a 48 h incubation with Na2 35SO4 the majority of the 35S-radiolabelled proteoglycans (approximately 80%) were associated with the cells, mainly in an intracellular compartment, and the remaining 20% were in the culture medium. Pulse-chase studies demonstrated two turnover pathways for the newly synthesized cellular proteoglycans. In the minor pathway, the proteoglycans were secreted rapidly into the medium without any discernable structural modification. In the major pathway the proteoglycans seemed to be transferred into a storage compartment from which the intact macromolecules were not secreted. Eventually, these proteoglycans were degraded to yield free polysaccharide chains and these chains were then released into the medium, but only at a relatively slow rate. There was very little intracellular degradation of chondroitin sulphate chains. The pathway to polysaccharide secretion was a slow stepwise process with a time-lag of about 5 h between proteoglycan synthesis and the appearance of free chondroitin sulphate and a second time-lag, also of about 5 h, before these chains began to be secreted. The existence of separate secretory pathways for proteoglycans and chondroitin sulphate chains is an interesting characteristic that seems to distinguish proteoglycan metabolism in primitive multipotent stem cells from related metabolic processes in mature haemopoietic cells.  相似文献   

17.
It has been previously shown that a single gene is used to encode the peptide core of the extracellular proteoglycan of rat L2 yolk sac tumor cells and the intracellular proteoglycan of rat basophilic leukemia (RBL)-1 cells. In order to determine if the predicted amino acid sequences of these proteoglycans are identical as well as to isolate a full length cDNA encoding a rat secretory granule proteoglycan, a cDNA library was prepared from RBL-1 cells and screened with the 165-base pair 5'----XmnI fragment of pPG-1, a partial cDNA which encodes the rat L2 cell proteoglycan peptide core. Based on the consensus nucleotide sequence of two full length RBL-1 cell-derived cDNAs, the 5' untranslated region of the mRNA that is expressed in RBL-1 cells is shorter than that expressed in the rat L2 cells although the coding regions of the mRNAs from the two cell types are identical. These findings indicate that the targeting of proteoglycans to an intracellular or extracellular compartment is a cell-specific event which is independent of the translated peptide core. Since the RBL-1 cell and the rat L2 cell proteoglycans have different types of glycosaminoglycans bound to them, it can also be concluded that the selection of the type of glycosaminoglycan that will be synthesized onto a peptide core is a cell-specific event which is not exclusively dependent on the translated peptide core. When the predicted amino acid sequence of the RBL-1 cell proteoglycan peptide core was compared to the predicted sequence of the homologous human molecule from HL-60 cells, 48% of the amino acids were identical. The N terminus was the most highly conserved area of the molecule. This region of the peptide core, which precedes the serine-glycine repeat region, is likely to be of critical importance for the biosynthesis and/or function of these proteoglycans. Analysis of 10 different mouse/hamster somatic cell hybrid lines with a SspI----3' fragment of the rat L2 cell cDNA revealed that, as in the human, the gene that encodes the mouse analogue of this peptide core resides on chromosome 10.  相似文献   

18.
In the absence of serglycin proteoglycans, connective tissue-type mast cells fail to assemble mature metachromatic secretory granules, and this is accompanied by a markedly reduced ability to store neutral proteases. However, the mechanisms behind these phenomena are not known. In this study, we addressed these issues by studying the functionality and morphology of secretory granules as well as the fate of the secretory granule proteases in bone marrow-derived mast cells from serglycin(+/+) and serglycin(-/-) mice. We show that functional secretory vesicles are formed in both the presence and absence of serglycin, but that dense core formation is defective in serglycin(-/-) mast cell granules. The low levels of mast cell proteases present in serglycin(-/-) cells had a granular location, as judged by immunohistochemistry, and were released following exposure to calcium ionophore, indicating that they were correctly targeted into secretory granules even in the absence of serglycin. In the absence of serglycin, the fates of the serglycin-dependent proteases differed, including preferential degradation, exocytosis or defective intracellular processing. In contrast, beta-hexosaminidase storage and release was not dependent on serglycin. Together, these findings indicate that the reduced amounts of neutral proteases in the absence of serglycin is not caused by missorting into the constitutive pathway of secretion, but rather that serglycin may be involved in the retention of the proteases after their entry into secretory vesicles.  相似文献   

19.
The distribution of heparan sulfate (HS) proteoglycans in clonal rat parathyroid cells is regulated by the extracellular Ca2+ concentration, which is a principal factor for parathyroid cell function (Takeuchi, Y., Sakaguchi, K., Yanagishita, M., Aurbach, G. D., and Hascall, V. C. (1990) J. Biol. Chem. 265, 13661-13668). Increasing the concentration of extracellular Ca2+ in the physiological range redistributes HS proteoglycans from the cell surface to an intracellular compartment. We have now examined effects of the extracellular Ca2+ concentration on the metabolism of the HS proteoglycans in detail using [35S]sulfate metabolic labeling-chase experiments. Two distinct metabolic pathways were demonstrated: (i) the intracellular generation of HS chains from HS proteoglycans in prelysosomal compartments followed by their release into the medium (pathway 1), and (ii) intracellular generation of HS oligosaccharides from HS chains in prelysosomal compartments, which are eventually degraded into free sulfate in lysosomes (pathway 2). The HS oligosaccharides were exclusively present within the cells, whereas HS chains were found primarily in the medium. The cells do not internalize either HS proteoglycans or HS chains from the medium. These observations indicate that these two degradation pathways are independent. In addition to these pathways, approximately 15% of the HS proteoglycans were released into the medium as a proteoglycan form. Treatment of cells with chloroquine, a lysosomotropic agent, did not affect generation of HS chains but inhibited conversion of HS chains to HS oligosaccharides or to free sulfate and resulted in the release of HS chains from the cells. The drug did not affect metabolic pathway 1. The extracellular Ca2+ concentration did not alter these intracellular degradation pathways for HS proteoglycans in the parathyroid cells. Thus, extracellular Ca2+ appears to regulate only the distribution of HS proteoglycans between the cell surface and intracellular compartments, and the process of cycling between these compartments when extracellular Ca2+ is low.  相似文献   

20.
Pulse-labelling of mouse mastocytoma cell cultures, established from ascites fluid, with inorganic [35S]sulphate for 1 h yielded labelled heparin proteoglycan containing polysaccharide chains of Mr 60,000-100,000. After chase incubation for 24 h most of the 35S appeared in intracellular polysaccharide fragments similar in size to commercially available heparin, Mr 5000-25,000, as indicated by gel chromatography. Products isolated from cultures after 6 h of chase incubation consisted of partially degraded free polysaccharide chains and, in addition, residual proteoglycans that were of smaller size than the proteoglycans initially pulse-labelled. The polysaccharide chains released by alkali treatment from the residual chase-incubated proteoglycans were of the same size as the chains derived from proteoglycans after 1 h of pulse labelling. These results suggest that the intracellular degradation of heparin proteoglycan to polysaccharide fragments is initiated by release of intact polysaccharide chains, probably by action of a peptidase, and is pursued through cleavage of these chains by an endoglycosidase. An endoglucuronidase with stringent substrate specificity [Thunberg, Bäckström, Wasteson, Ogren & Lindahl (1982) J. Biol. Chem. 257, 10278-10282] has previously been implicated in the latter step. Cultures of more purified mastocytoma cells (essentially devoid of macrophages) did not metabolize [35S]heparin proteoglycan to polysaccharide fragments, but instead accumulated free intact polysaccharide chains, i.e. the postulated intermediate of the complete degradation pathway. When such purified cells were co-cultured with adherent mouse peritoneal cells, presumably macrophages, formation of polysaccharide fragments was observed. It is tentatively proposed that the expression of endoglucuronidase activity by the mast cells depends on collaboration between these cells and macrophages.  相似文献   

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