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1.
The biosynthesis and proteolytic processing of lysosomal cathepsin L was studied using in vitro translation system and in vivo pulse-chase analysis with [35S]methionine and [32P]phosphate in primary cultures of rat hepatocytes. Messenger RNA prepared from membrane-bound but not free polysomes directed the synthesis of a primary translation product of an immunoprecipitable 37.5-kDa cathepsin L in vitro. The 37.5-kDa form was converted to the 39-kDa form when translated in the presence of dog pancreas microsomes. During pulse-chase experiments with [35S]methionine in cultured rat hepatocytes, cathepsin L was first synthesized as a 39-kDa protein, presumably the proform, after a short time of labeling, and was subsequently processed into the mature forms of 30 and 25 kDa in the cell. On the other hand, considerable amounts of the proenzyme were found to be secreted into the culture medium without further proteolytic processing during the chase. The precursor and mature enzymes were N-glycosylated with high-mannose-type oligosaccharides, and the proenzyme molecule contained phosphorylated oligosaccharides. The effects of tunicamycin and chloroquine were also investigated. In the presence of tunicamycin, a 36-kDa unglycosylated polypeptide appeared in the cell and this protein was exclusively secreted from the cells without undergoing proteolytic processing. These results suggest that cathepsin L is initially synthesized on membrane-bound polysomes as a 37.5-kDa prepropeptide and that the cotranslational cleavage of the 1.5-kDa signal peptide and the core glycosylation convert the precursor to the 39-kDa proform, which is subsequently processed to the mature form during biosynthesis. Thus, the biosynthesis and secretion of lysosomal cathepsin L in rat hepatocytes seem to be analogous to those of the major excreted protein of transformed mouse fibroblasts [S. Gal, M. C. Willingham, and M. M. Gottesman (1985) J. Cell Biol. 100, 535-544] and the mouse cysteine proteinase of activated macrophages [D.A. Portnoy, A. H. Erickson, J. Kochan, J. V. Ravetch, and J. C. Unkeless (1986) J. Biol. Chem. 261, 14697-14703].  相似文献   

2.
Subcultured rat fibroblasts secreted a cathepsin L precursor when maintained for 24 h in serum-free medium containing 20 mM ammonium ions. The precursor was identified by immunoblotting after sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis using polyclonal antibodies to cathepsin L. The molecular mass of the precursor was found to be approximately 39 kDa, which confirms the result originally reported by Y. Nishimura et al. (1988, Arch. Biochem. Biophys. 263, 107-116). Treatment of the precursor containing medium with cathepsin D at pH values ranging from 3.5 to 5.5 caused a limited cleavage of the precursor molecule. The resultant polypeptides are an unstable intermediate form with Mr 35,000 and a stable single chain form of cathepsin L showing a Mr about 32,500. The cathepsin D-mediated conversion was strongly accelerated by Hg2+ ions. A further proteolytic cleavage of the 32.5-kDa polypeptide has not been observed. The enzymatic activity toward Z-Phe-Arg-NHMec at pH 5.5 increased during the conversion, indicating that active cathepsin L was formed from an inactive precursor molecule.  相似文献   

3.
4.
IL-8 is produced by various cells, and the NH2-terminal amino acid sequence of IL-8 displays heterogeneity among cell types. The mature form of IL-8 has 72 amino acids (72IL-8), while a precursor form (77IL-8) of IL-8 has five additional amino acids to the 72IL-8 NH2-terminal. However, it has been unclear how IL-8 is processed to yield the mature form. In this study, converting enzyme was purified as a single 31-kDa band on silver-stained polyacrylamide gel from 160 l of cultured fibroblast supernatant by sequential chromatography. NH2-terminal amino acid sequence analysis revealed a sequence, EAPRSVDWRE, which was identified as a partial sequence of cathepsin L. Polyclonal antibodies raised against cathepsin L recognized the purified converting enzyme on Western blot. Moreover, human hepatic cathepsin L cleaved 77IL-8 between Arg5 and Ser6, which is the same cleavage site as the putative converting enzyme, resulting in 72IL-8 formation. These data indicate that the converting enzyme of the partially purified fraction of the human fibroblast culture supernatant was cathepsin L. Furthermore, 72IL-8 was sevenfold more potent than 77IL-8 in a neutrophil chemotaxis assay. These results show that cathepsin L is secreted from human fibroblasts in response to external stimuli and plays an important role in IL-8 processing in inflammatory sites.  相似文献   

5.
An inactive precursor form of proteinase A (PrA) transits through the early secretory pathway before final vacuolar delivery. We used gene fusions between the gene coding for PrA (PEP4) and the gene coding for the secretory enzyme invertase (SUC2) to identify vacuolar protein-sorting information in the PrA precursor. We found that the 76-amino-acid preprosegment of PrA contains at least two sorting signals: an amino-terminal signal peptide that is cleaved from the protein at the level of the endoplasmic reticulum followed by the prosegment which functions as a vacuolar protein-sorting signal. PrA-invertase hybrid proteins that carried this sequence information were accurately sorted to the yeast vacuole as determined by cell fractionation and immunolocalization studies. Hybrid proteins lacking all or a portion of the PrA prosegment were secreted from the cell. Our gene fusion data together with an analysis of the wild-type PrA protein indicated that N-linked carbohydrate modifications are not required for vacuolar sorting of this protein. Furthermore, results obtained with a set of deletion mutations constructed in the PrA prosegment indicated that this sequence also contributes to proper folding of this polypeptide into a stable transit-competent molecule.  相似文献   

6.
We have studied the structure, biosynthesis, intracellular routing, and vacuolar localization of carboxypeptidase ysCS in the yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae. Nondenaturing polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis revealed two forms of carboxypeptidase yscS with different electrophoretic mobility. Antibodies specific for carboxypeptidase yscS recognized two glycoproteins of 77- and 74-kDa apparent molecular mass which differ by one N-linked carbohydrate residue. Both observations suggest that carboxypeptidase yscS exists in two catalytically active forms. The enzyme was found to be synthesized as two active high molecular mass precursor forms which are converted to the mature forms with a half-time of 20 min. The mature forms of carboxypeptidase yscS appeared soluble in the vacuolar lumen, while the precursor proteins accumulated tightly associated with the vacuolar membrane. The single hydrophobic domain present at the N terminus is believed to be responsible for the membrane association of the precursor molecules. Double mutants defective in proteinase yscA and proteinase yscB synthesize solely the carboxypeptidase yscS precursor forms. Correct proteolytic cleavage of the precursor forms was performed using purified proteinase yscB in vitro. Sec61, sec18, and sec7 mutants, conditionally defective in the secretory pathway, accumulate carboxypeptidase yscS precursor protein. Thus the carboxypeptidase yscS precursor molecules are delivered to the vacuole in a membrane bound form via the secretory pathway. After assembly into the vacuolar membrane, proteinase yscB presumably cleaves the precursor molecules to release soluble carboxypeptidase yscS forms into the lumen of the vacuole. The proposed mechanism is different from the delivery mechanism found for the other soluble vacuolar hydrolases in yeast.  相似文献   

7.
Abstract: Cathepsin E is a major nonlysosomal, intracellular aspartic proteinase that localizes in various cellular compartments such as the plasma membrane, endosome-like organelles, and the endoplasmic reticulum (ER). To learn the segregation mechanisms of cathepsin E into its appropriate cellular destinations, the present studies were initiated to define the biosynthesis, processing, and intracellular localization as well as the site of proteolytic maturation of the enzyme in primary cultures of rat brain microglia. Immunohistochemical and immunoblot analyses revealed that cathepsin E was the most abundant in microglia among various brain cell types, where the enzyme existed predominantly as the mature enzyme. Immunoelectron microscopy studies showed the presence of the enzyme predominantly in the endosome-like vacuoles and partly in the vesicles located in the trans-Golgi area and the lumen of ER. In the primary cultured microglial cells labeled with [35S]methionine, >95% of labeled cathepsin E were represented by a 46-kDa polypeptide (reduced form) after a 30-min pulse. Most of it was proteolytically processed via a 44-kDa intermediate to a 42-kDa mature form within 4 h of chase. This processing was completely inhibited by bafilomycin A1, a specific inhibitor of vacuolar-type H+-ATPase. Brefeldin A, a blocker for the traffic of secretory proteins from the ER to the Golgi complex, also inhibited the processing of procathepsin E and enhanced its degradation. Procathepsin E, after pulse-labeling, showed complete susceptibility to endoglycosidase H, whereas the mature enzyme almost acquired resistance to endoglycosidases H as well as F. The present studies provide the first evidence that cathepsin E in microglia is first synthesized as the inactive precursor bearing high-mannose oligosaccharides and processed to the active mature enzyme with complex-type oligosaccharides via the intermediate form and that the final proteolytic maturation step occurs in endosome-like acidic compartments.  相似文献   

8.
9.
Purification and tissue distribution of rat cathepsin L   总被引:5,自引:0,他引:5  
Cathepsin L was purified to apparent homogeneity from rat kidney. The molecular weight of the enzyme was estimated to be 30,000, but part of the enzyme was found to consist of two polypeptide chains of Mr 25,000 and 5,000. Antibody against rat kidney cathepsin L did not cross-react with rat cathepsin B or H and detected only cathepsin L in crude rat tissue preparations on immunoblotted sheets. The concentrations of cathepsin L in various rat tissues and peripheral blood cells of rats were determined by a sensitive immunoassay, in which the minimum detectable amount of cathepsin L was 20 pg/assay. The concentration of cathepsin L was found to be highest in the kidneys, where it was more than 3 times higher than in the liver, spleen, lungs, and brain. Nervous tissues, especially the cerebellar cortex, also contained fairly high concentrations of cathepsin L, but the heart, skeletal muscle, and gastrointestinal tract contained low concentrations, as did peripheral blood cells. The cathepsin L content of macrophages was 20% of that of cathepsin B. The concentrations of cathepsin L in lymphocytes, neutrophils, and erythrocytes were 10%, 20%, and less than 0.2%, respectively, of those in resident macrophages.  相似文献   

10.
Previous purification and characterization of the yeast vacuolar proton-translocating ATPase (H(+)-ATPase) have indicated that it is a multisubunit complex consisting of both integral and peripheral membrane subunits (Uchida, E., Ohsumi, Y., and Anraku, Y. (1985) J. Biol. Chem. 260, 1090-1095; Kane, P. M., Yamashiro, C. T., and Stevens, T. H. (1989) J. Biol. Chem. 264, 19236-19244). We have obtained monoclonal antibodies recognizing the 42- and 100-kDa polypeptides that were co-purified with vacuolar ATPase activity. Using these antibodies we provide further evidence that the 42-kDa polypeptide, a peripheral membrane protein, and the 100-kDa polypeptide, an integral membrane protein, are genuine subunits of the yeast vacuolar H(+)-ATPase. The synthesis, assembly, and targeting of three of the peripheral subunits (the 69-, 60-, and 42-kDa subunits) and two of the integral membrane subunits (the 100- and 17-kDa subunits) were examined in mutant yeast cells containing chromosomal deletions in the TFP1, VAT2, or VMA3 genes, which encode the 69-, 60-, and 17-kDa subunits, respectively. The steady-state levels of the various subunits in whole cell lysates and purified vacuolar membranes were assessed by Western blotting, and the intracellular localization of the 60- and 100-kDa subunits was also examined by immunofluorescence microscopy. The results suggest that the assembly and/or the vacuolar targeting of the peripheral subunits of the yeast vacuolar H(+)-ATPase depend on the presence of all three of the 69-, 60-, and 17-kDa subunits. The 100-kDa subunit can be transported to the vacuole independently of the peripheral membrane subunits as long as the 17-kDa subunit is present; but in the absence of the 17-kDa subunit, the 100-kDa subunit appears to be both unstable and incompetent for transport to the vacuole.  相似文献   

11.
Cathepsin B, a lysosomal cysteine protease, is synthesized as a glycoprotein with two N-linked oligosaccharide chains, one of which is in the propeptide region while the other is in the mature region. When cultured rat hepatocytes were labeled with [(32)P]phosphate, (32)P-labeled cathepsin B was immunoprecipitated only in the proform from cell lysates and medium. Either Endo H or alkaline phosphatase treatment of (32)P-labeled procathepsin B demonstrated the acquisition of a mannose 6-phosphate (Man 6-P) residue on high mannose type oligosaccharides. To identify the site of phosphorylation, immunoisolated (35)S- or (32)P-labeled procathepsin B was incubated with purified lysosomal cathepsin D, since cathepsin D cleaves 48 amino acid residues from the N-terminus of procathepsin B, in which one N-linked oligosaccharide chain was also included [Kawabata, T. et al. (1993) J. Biochem. 113, 389-394]. Treatment of intracellular (35)S-labeled procathepsin B with a molecular mass of 39-kDa with cathepsin D resulted in the production of the 31-kDa intermediate form, but the (32)P-label incorporated into procathepsin B disappeared after treatment with cathepsin D. These results indicate that the phosphorylation of procathepsin B is restricted to an oligosaccharide chain present in the propeptide region. Interestingly, cathepsin B sorting to lysosomes was not inhibited by NH(4)Cl treatment and about 90% of the intracellular procathepsin B initially phosphorylated was secreted into the medium without being dephosphorylated intracellularly, and did not bind significantly to cation-independent-Man 6-P receptor, suggesting the failure of Man 6-P-dependent transport of procathepsin B to lysosomes. Additionally, about 50% of the newly synthesized (35)S-labeled cathepsin B was retained in the cells in mature forms consisting of a 29-kDa single chain form and a 24-kDa two chain form, while part of the procathepsin B was associated with membranes in a Man 6-P-independent manner. Taken together, these results show that in rat hepatocytes, cathepsin B is targeted to lysosomes by an alternative mechanism(s) other than the Man 6-P-dependent pathway.  相似文献   

12.
PCR was used to isolate a carboxypeptidase Y (CPY) homolog gene from the fission yeast Schizosaccharomyces pombe. The cloned S. pombe cpy1+ gene has a single open reading frame, which encodes 950 amino acids with one potential N-glycosylation site. It appears to be synthesized as an inactive pre-pro protein that likely undergoes processing following translocation into appropriate intracellular organelles. The C-terminal mature region is highly conserved in other serine carboxypeptidases. In contrast, the N-terminal pro region containing the vacuolar sorting signal in CPY from Saccharomyces cerevisiae shows fewer identical residues. The pro region contains two unusual repeating sequences; repeating sequence I consists of seven contiguous repeating segments of 13 amino acids each, and repeating sequence II consists of seven contiguous repeating segments of 9 amino acids each. Pulse-chase radiolabeling analysis revealed that Cpy1p was initially synthesized in a 110-kDa pro-precursor form and via the 51-kDa single-polypeptide-chain intermediate form which has had its pro segment removed is finally converted to a heterodimer, the mature form, which is detected as a 32-kDa protein on sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis under reducing conditions. Like S. cerevisiae CPY, S. pombe Cpy1p does not require the N-linked oligosaccharide moiety for vacuolar delivery. To investigate the vacuolar sorting signal of S. pombe Cpy1p, we have constructed cpy1+-SUC2 gene fusions that direct the synthesis of hybrid proteins consisting of N-terminal segments of various lengths of S. pombe Cpy1p fused to the secreted enzyme S. cerevisiae invertase. The N-terminal 478 amino acids of Cpy1 are sufficient to direct delivery of a Cpy1-Inv hybrid protein to the vacuole. These results showed that the pro peptide of Cpy1 contains the putative vacuolar sorting signal.  相似文献   

13.
We have investigated the vacuolar delivery of alpha-mannosidase, a marker enzyme of the vacuolar membrane in the yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae, and found that the enzyme has several unique characteristics in its biosynthesis and vacuolar delivery. alpha-Mannosidase has no typical signal sequence (Yoshihisa, T., and Anraku, Y. (1989) Biochem. Biophys. Res. Commun. 163, 908-915) but is located on the inner surface of the vacuolar membrane. The enzyme is synthesized as a 107-kDa polypeptide and converted to a 73-kDa polypeptide. Although the conversion depends on a vacuolar processing protease, proteinase A, it is much slower (t1/2 = 10 h) than the proteinase A-dependent processing of other vacuolar proteins. None of Asn-X-Thr/Ser sites on the 107-kDa alpha-mannosidase or on two alpha-mannosidase-invertase fusion proteins that are localized inside the vacuole receives N-linked oligosaccharide, whereas those sites on a carboxypeptidase Y-alpha-mannosidase fusion protein are N-glycosylated. The newly synthesized alpha-mannosidase is normally delivered to the vacuole and converted to the 73-kDa polypeptide even when the secretory pathway is blocked by a subset of sec mutations. These characteristics are different from those of other vacuolar proteins targeted to the vacuole via the secretory pathway. We conclude that alpha-mannosidase is delivered to the vacuole in a novel pathway separate from the secretory pathway.  相似文献   

14.
VAM7 gene function has shown to be required for proper morphogenesis of the vacuole in yeast. The DNA fragments that complemented the defective vacuolar morphology of the vam7-1 mutation were isolated from a yeast genomic library. An overlapping 2.5-kilobase BglII-HindIII region was found to be sufficient for complementation of the vam7-1 phenotype. This fragment was integrated at the chromosomal VAM7 locus, indicating that it contained an authentic VAM7 gene. On nucleotide sequencing of the VAM7 gene, an open reading frame of 948 base pairs, coding for a hydrophilic polypeptide of 316 amino acid residues, was identified. The deduced amino acid sequence of the carboxyl-terminal region of the VAM7 gene product has heptad repeats and shows potential ability to form a coiled-coil structure. Disruption of VAM7 was not lethal; cells with a disrupted VAM7 gene did not, however, have a prominent large vacuoles but rather numerous small compartments that accumulated the histochemical marker molecule of the vacuolar compartment. They contained mature forms of the vacuolar marker proteins carboxypeptidase Y and vacuolar glycoprotein vgp72. A mutant with both vam7 and vam5 null mutations was constructed and shown to have neither vacuolar structures stained with ade-related fluorochrome nor mature forms of vacuolar marker proteins. These findings suggested that the VAM7 gene product functions in the process of morphogenic assembly of the vacuolar compartment but is not involved in the protein sorting and delivery to the vacuole.  相似文献   

15.
Transfection of the human cathepsin K cDNA into CHO cells results in the expression of mature catalytically active 27-kDa protein and in cells secreting the 39-kDa proenzyme form. Monensin, which neutralizes the pH of acidic organelles, was found to inhibit intracellular processing of the proenzyme and to stimulate its secretion into the culture medium. Brefeldin A caused alterations in immunofluorescence staining consistent with interference of lysosomal targeting and inhibited both intracellular processing and secretion of cathepsin K. Inhibition of glycosylation by tunicamycin also abolished cathepsin K maturation. Furthermore, the processing of the proenzyme to the mature form was abolished by a single mutation of the terminal Met(329) to Ala. The triple mutation of Ser(325), Pro(327), and Met(329) (all to Ala) inhibited both maturation and secretion, using either transient or stable expression systems. The results indicate that intracellular maturation and secretion of cathepsin K can be affected differentially by various treatments and by mutations of the C-terminal end of the protein. These results are consistent with the involvement of both the secreted proenzyme and the intracellularly processed enzyme in cathepsin K-mediated processes.  相似文献   

16.
Organelle acidification plays a demonstrable role in intracellular protein processing, transport, and sorting in animal cells. We investigated the relationship between acidification and protein sorting in yeast by treating yeast cells with ammonium chloride and found that this lysosomotropic agent caused the mislocalization of a substantial fraction of the newly synthesized vacuolar (lysosomal) enzyme proteinase A (PrA) to the cell surface. We have also determined that a subset of the vpl mutants, which are deficient in sorting of vacuolar proteins (Rothman, J. H., and T. H. Stevens. 1986. Cell. 47:1041-1051; Rothman, J. H., I. Howald, and T. H. Stevens. EMBO [Eur. Mol. Biol. Organ.] J. In press), failed to accumulate the lysosomotropic fluorescent dye quinacrine within their vacuoles, mimicking the phenotype of wild-type cells treated with ammonium. The acidification defect of vpl3 and vpl6 mutants correlated with a marked deficiency in vacuolar ATPase activity, diminished levels of two immunoreactive subunits of the protontranslocating ATPase (H+-ATPase) in purified vacuolar membranes, and accumulation of the intracellular portion of PrA as the precursor species. Therefore, some of the VPL genes are required for the normal function of the yeast vacuolar H+-ATPase complex and may encode either subunits of the enzyme or components required for its assembly and targeting. Collectively, these findings implicate a critical role for acidification in vacuolar protein sorting and zymogen activation in yeast, and suggest that components of the yeast vacuolar acidification system may be identified by examining mutants defective in sorting of vacuolar proteins.  相似文献   

17.
The vacuole of the yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae contains a proton-translocating ATPase that acidifies the vacuolar lumen and generates a pH gradient across the vacuole membrane. We have investigated the role of compartment acidification of the vacuolar system in the sorting of vacuolar proteins. Strains with chromosomal disruptions of the genes encoding the A, B, or c subunit of the vacuolar ATPase are unable to acidify their vacuoles. These vat mutant strains accumulate and secrete precursor forms of the soluble vacuolar hydrolases carboxypeptidase Y and proteinase A. The kinetics of secretion suggests that missorting occurs in the Golgi complex or in post-Golgi vesicles. The presence of mature forms of the vacuolar proteins within the cell indicates that vat mutations do not cause defects in zymogen processing. Precursor forms of the membrane-associated vacuolar hydrolase alkaline phosphatase are also accumulated in vat mutant cells but to a lesser extent, suggesting that sorting of vacuolar membrane proteins is less sensitive to changes in the lumenal pH. A similar type of missorting defect can be induced in wild-type cells at pH 7.5. These results indicate that acidification of the vacuolar system is important for efficient sorting of proteins to the vacuole.  相似文献   

18.
Biosynthesis of cathepsin B in cultured normal and I-cell fibroblasts   总被引:2,自引:0,他引:2  
Biosynthesis and processing of cathepsin B in cultured human skin fibroblasts were investigated using immunological procedures. Upon metabolic labeling with [35S]methionine for 10 min, a precursor form with Mr 44,500 was identified. During an 80-min chase, about 50% of it was converted to an Mr 46,000 form. Further processing yielded mature forms with Mr 33,000 and 27,000, in a final quantitative ratio of about 3:1. Processing of cathepsin B was inhibited by leupeptin, which led to an accumulation of the Mr 33,000 polypeptide. The Mr 33,000 form appeared to be the most active form and showed a half-time of about 12 h. About 5% of newly synthesized enzyme was secreted as precursor, being detectable extracellularly already after 40 min. NH4Cl enhanced the secretion of the precursor about 20-fold. The precursor and the 33-kDa form contained phosphorylated N-linked oligosaccharides. Cleavage by peptide N-glycosidase F or biosynthesis in the presence of tunicamycin yielded a precursor with Mr 39,000. Evidence of a mannose 6-phosphate-dependent transport of cathepsin B in fibroblasts was obtained on the basis of the following results: (i) cathepsin B precursor from NH4Cl-stimulated secretions was internalized in a mannose 6-phosphate inhibitable manner, and (ii) I-cell fibroblasts secreted more than 95% of newly synthesized cathepsin B precursor. In conclusion, cathepsin B from human skin fibroblasts shows an analogous biosynthetic behavior as other lysosomal enzymes.  相似文献   

19.
By indirect immunofluorescence and immunogold electron microscopy with an antibody that recognizes specifically the two forms of native mature rat cathepsin B (31 kDa and 5:25 kDa) but not the proenzyme, we detected cathepsin B not only in lysosomes of adult rat exocrine pancreatic cells but also in the trans Golgi condensing vacuoles, the zymogen granules and the pancreatic juice in the intralobular ducts. In contrast, immunocytochemistry with an antibody specific for rat cathepsin D showed the latter to be present in the same cells only in lysosomal compartments as expected. The same pattern of labeling with these two antibodies was found in the first zymogen granules to form in 17-day-old fetal rat pancreas. Counts of the extent of immunogold labeling of cathepsin B in the adult exocrine cells showed that the concentration of the enzyme was only two-fold higher in the lysosomal compartments than in the zymogen granules. To confirm these observations, rat pancreatic postnuclear supernatant (PNS), a fraction enriched in zymogen granules and rat pancreatic juice obtained by catheterization of the pancreatic duct, were subjected to 2D gel electrophoresis followed by immunoblotting with the cathepsin B antibody. All three samples contained a 31 kDa protein recognized by the antibody with a pI of about 4.5, the single chain mature form of cathepsin B. We then radiolabeled pancreatic PNS and zymogen granule fractions with benzyloxycarbonyl-Tyr[125I]-Ala-CHN2, an affinity label that covalently binds to the active sites of mature forms of both cathepsin B and cathepsin L. In both PNS and zymogen granule fractions this reagent labeled cathepsin B. Immunoprecipitation experiments showed that the antibody to cathepsin B recognized specifically both the single chain and the double chain mature forms of cathepsin B in the native state. Finally, Northern blots with a cDNA of rat cathepsin B showed that the concentration of cathepsin B mRNA in total pancreatic RNA increased following in vivo stimulation of the exocrine pancreatic cells with optimal doses of cerulein, a cholecystokinin analogue. We conclude that significant amounts of mature cathepsin B are secreted from exocrine pancreatic cells via the apical regulated exocytotic pathway, and we discuss this in terms of models for sorting of proteins to the cores of dense cored secretory granules.  相似文献   

20.
P K Herman  J H Stack    S D Emr 《The EMBO journal》1991,10(13):4049-4060
The yeast VPS15 gene encodes a novel protein kinase homolog that is required for the sorting of soluble hydrolases to the yeast vacuole. In this study, we extend our previous mutational analysis of the VPS15 gene and show that alterations of specific Gps15p residues, that are highly conserved among all protein kinase molecules, result in the biological inactivation of Vps15p. Furthermore, we demonstrate here that short C-terminal deletions of Vps15p result in a temperature-conditional defect in vacuolar protein sorting. Immediately following the temperature shift, soluble vacuolar hydrolases, such as carboxypeptidase Y and proteinase A, accumulate as Golgi-modified precursors within a saturable intracellular compartment distinct from the vacuole. This vacuolar protein sorting block is efficiently reversed when mutant cells are shifted back to the permissive temperature; the accumulated precursors are rapidly processed to their mature forms indicating that they have been delivered to the vacuole. This rapid and efficient reversal suggests that the accumulated vacuolar protein precursors were present within a normal transport intermediate in the vacuolar protein sorting pathway. In addition, this protein delivery block shows specificity for soluble vacuolar enzymes as the membrane protein, alkaline phosphatase, is efficiently delivered to the vacuole at the non-permissive temperature. Interestingly, the C-terminal Vps15p truncations are not phosphorylated in vivo suggesting that the phosphorylation of Vps15p may be critical for its biological activity at elevated temperatures. The rapid onset and high degree of specificity of the vacuolar protein delivery block in these mutants suggests that the primary role of Vps15p is to regulate the sorting of soluble hydrolases to the yeast vacuolar compartment.  相似文献   

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