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1.
Dipeptidyl peptidase IV is an exopeptidase found in the serum and in plasma membranes of most animal tissues. The role of this enzyme in cell-matrix interaction of BHK cells and hepatocytes grown on collagen-coated surfaces was investigated by three different approaches. 1) Glass surfaces were derivatized with bovine serum albumin which resulted in a cell-repulsing substratum. When it was further modified with Gly-Pro-Ala tripeptide, which is a substrate for dipeptidyl peptidase IV, BHK fibroblasts spread on it rapidly. The spreading could be inhibited by addition of free Gly-Pro-Ala or other substrates of the enzyme as well as by an inhibitor peptide Val-Pro-Leu. It was not influenced by tripeptides which were neither substrates nor inhibitors of dipeptidyl peptidase IV. 2) The addition of Gly-Pro-Ala to seeded cells slowed down the initial process of cell spreading on denatured collagen in the presence of fibronectin. The presence of both collagen and fibronectin was a necessary precondition for the spreading of cells in a manner sensitive to Gly-Pro-Ala. 3) Antiserum raised against mouse liver dipeptidyl peptidase IV added to the medium delayed the spreading of rat hepatocytes on denatured collagen in the presence of fibronectin in a manner similar to when Gly-Pro-Ala was added to the medium. These observations lead to the conclusion that plasma membrane dipeptidyl peptidase IV may be involved in the initial phase of fibronectin-mediated cell spreading on collagen.  相似文献   

2.
Dipeptidyl peptidase IV (DPP IV) is a cell surface glycoprotein which has been implicated in hepatocyte-extracellular matrix interactions [Hixson, DeLourdes, Ponce, Allison & Walborg (1984) Exp. Cell Res. 152, 402-414; Walborg, Tsuchida, Weeden, Thomas, Barrick, McEntire, Allison & Hixson (1985) Exp. Cell Res. 158, 509-518; Hanski, Huhle & Reutter (1985) Biol. Chem. Hoppe-Seyler 366, 1169-1176]. However, its proteolytic substrate(s) and/or binding protein(s) which mediate this influence have not been conclusively identified. Nitrocellulose binding assays using 125I-labelled DPP IV that was purified to homogeneity from rat hepatocytes revealed a direct interaction of DPP IV with fibronectin. Although fibronectin could mediate an indirect binding of DPP IV to collagen, no evidence was found for a direct binding of DPP IV to native or denatured Type I collagen. Fibronectin appeared to bind DPP IV at a site distinct from its exopeptidase substrate recognition site since protease inhibitors such as competitive peptide substrates and phenylmethanesulphonyl fluoride enhanced binding, possibly as a result of an altered conformation of DPP IV. To determine if fibronectin binding to DPP IV is involved in the interaction of fibronectin with the hepatocyte surface, the effect of various DPP IV inhibitors on 125I-fibronectin binding to isolated hepatocytes in suspension was examined. Kinetic studies revealed that inhibitors of DPP IV which enhanced fibronectin binding in vitro accelerated the initial binding of fibronectin to the cell surface where it was subsequently cross-linked (presumably by tissue transglutaminase) to as yet undefined components. Immunolocalization of fibronectin and DPP IV in normal rat liver sections showed that both proteins were present along the hepatocyte sinusoidal membrane. These observations, coupled with previous results showing that DPP IV is tightly bound to biomatrix isolated from rat liver (Hixson et al., 1984; Walborg et al., 1985), suggest that DPP IV binding to fibronectin may play a role in interactions of hepatocytes with extracellular matrix in vivo and possibly in matrix assembly.  相似文献   

3.
Dipeptidyl peptidase IV (DPP IV) is a serine exopeptidase expressed at high levels in rat kidney, liver and lung. We established eight monoclonal antibodies against partially purified DPP IV from rat liver plasma membranes. By means of a competitive dot blot assay with purified DPP IV, these antibodies were shown to recognize four different epitopes of the glycoprotein, designated A - D. The epitopes are located on the extracellular domain of DPP IV, as shown by papain digestion of liver plasma membranes. Treatment of DPP IV with neuraminidase and glycopeptide N-glycosidase F, as well as incubation of hepatocytes with the alpha-mannosidase I inhibitor deoxymannojirimycin, revealed that epitope A may be formed by a mannose-rich sugar chain and epitope D might represent a complex carbohydrate structure in the mature glycoprotein, while the epitopes B and C are formed by the protein moiety. Concanavalin A reduced the binding of monoclonal antibody to epitope A by 78%. Binding to epitope D was blocked by 73% with wheat germ lectin, and by more than 99% with sialic acid; epitopes B and C were unaffected by any of the lectins or sugars tested. The immunological cross-reactivity with DPP IV from Morris hepatoma 7777 was demonstrated with monoclonal antibodies against epitopes A-C. Epitope D was not recognized on hepatoma DPP IV. However, in addition to DPP IV, four hepatoma plasma membrane glycoproteins were precipitated by the monoclonal antibody against the epitope D, indicating that this epitope is not uniquely restricted to DPP IV.  相似文献   

4.
We have examined the interaction of adult rat hepatocytes in primary culture, to type IV collagen, fibronectin, and laminin, the major basement membrane proteins of normal rat liver. Culture substrata consisted of glass coverslips, which were covalently derivatized with individual purified basement membrane constituents at varying densities of protein. The attachment of freshly prepared hepatocytes was examined after incubation at 37 degrees C for 30 min as a function of the amount of protein on the coverslips. For each of the three types of substratum under study, distinct modes of cell attachment were observed, with the apparent affinity of hepatocytes for type IV collagen being three-fold greater than for fibronectin and ten-fold greater than for laminin. Cell attachment exhibited saturation on all substrata. Hepatocyte spreading was measured by scanning electron microscopy of cells incubated at 37 degrees for 2 h on similarly prepared coverslips. A five-fold greater surface density of type IV collagen was required for maximal spreading compared with attachment. For cells on fibronectin or laminin the maximal cell spreading reached on type IV collagen did not occur even at coverslip protein densities 10 to 20 times those providing for maximal cell attachment. A very similar qualitative pattern of cell proteins was secreted within a few hours of plating on the various substrata and further studies failed to reveal any evidence that attachment and spreading was mediated by endogenously produced matrix molecules.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

5.
A dipeptidyl aminopeptidase (DPP) was detected in plasma membranes from normal (3T3) and transformed (3T12) mouse fibroblasts. This enzyme was active in cleaving the prolyl bond in the synthetic dipeptide nitroanilide Gly-Pro-NH-Np, which is a specific substrate for DPP IV (Km 0.63 mM and Vmax 6.1 nmol/min per mg at pH 6.0 and 37 degrees C). However, it did not degrade Pro-NH-Np or other dipeptide nitroanilides such as Gly-Arg-NH-Np or Val-Ala-NH-Np. The enzyme was totally inhibited by di-isopropyl phosphorofluoridate (Pri2-P-F) and by phenylmethanesulphonyl fluoride, indicating a serine catalytic site for the proteinase. DPP IV is a glycoprotein that specifically recognized immobilized gelatin and type I collagen. Upon molecular exclusion chromatography, the proteinase exhibited an apparent Mr of 100,000. SDS/polyacrylamide-gel electrophoresis under non-reducing and reducing conditions revealed that the [3H]Pri2-P-protein was exclusively represented by a polypeptide of Mr 55,000. This suggested that DPP IV consists of two non-covalently linked 55,000-Mr subunits. Fibroblast adhesion to native or denatured collagen was significantly inhibited by the two dipeptide inhibitors of DPP IV, Gly-Pro-Ala and Ala-Pro-Gly, but not by the peptides Gly-Pro and Gly-Gly-Gly, which are not inhibitors of the proteinase. Moreover, preliminary fractionation of DPP IV by molecular exclusion chromatography and affinity chromatography indicated that this material was active in disrupting cell adhesion to collagens. Taken together, the above data suggest that a fibroblast membrane-associated collagen-binding glycoprotein, DPP IV, may play a role in cell attachment to collagen.  相似文献   

6.
The present paper demonstrates the terminal de- and reglycosylation of a rat hepatocyte plasma membrane glycoprotein, dipeptidyl peptidase IV (DPP IV). Cultured hepatocytes were used in pulse-chase experiments with [3H]L-fucose and [14C]N-acetyl-D-mannosamine as markers for terminal carbohydrates, [3H]D-mannose as marker of a core-sugar, and [35S]L-methionine for labeling the protein backbone. Membrane DPP IV was immunoprecipitated with a polyclonal antibody which bound selectively at 4 degrees C to the cell-surface glycoprotein. The times of maximal labeling of hepatocyte plasma membrane DPP IV were 6-9 min for [3H]L-fucose, 20 min for [3H]D-mannose, and 25 min for [35S]L-methionine. When antibodies were bound to cell-surface DPP IV at 4 degrees C, the immune complex remained stable for more than 1 h after rewarming to 37 degrees C, despite ongoing metabolic and membrane transport processes. This was shown by pulse labeling with [35S]L-methionine at 37 degrees C, followed by cooling to 4 degrees C, and addition of antibody against plasma membrane DPP IV. During rewarming, the radioactivity in the complex remained constant. In a similar experiment with [3H]L-fucose, the radioactivity in the immune complex declined rapidly, indicating a defucosylation of the plasma membrane glycoprotein. Using the same experimental design with [3H]D-mannose, the radioactivity in the immune complex remained constant, showing that the core-sugar D-mannose is not cleaved from the membrane glycoprotein. Terminal reglycosylation (refucosylation and resialylation) was demonstrated as follows. Hepatocytes were maintained at 37 degrees C in a medium supplemented with tunicamycin in order to block the de novo synthesis of N-glycosidically bound carbohydrate chains. At 4 degrees C the antibody against DPP IV bound only to cell surface glycoprotein. During the rewarming period at 37 degrees C, radioactivity from [3H]L-fucose and [14C]N-acetyl-D-mannosamine became incorporated into the immune complex. This indicates a fucosylation and sialylation of the glycoprotein originally present at the cell surface. The mechanisms whereby terminal de- and reglycosylation of plasma membrane glycoproteins may occur during membrane recycling are discussed.  相似文献   

7.
Dipeptidylpeptidase IV (DPP IV, CD26), a serine-type exo- and endopeptidase found in the cell surface membrane of many tissues, was employed as a model membrane glycoprotein to study the expression of sialoforms on cell surface glycoproteins. Native, enzymatically active DPP IV was purified from plasma membranes of kidney and liver by lectin affinity chromatography in conjunction with crown ether anion exchange chromatography. The enzyme was gradient-eluted in continuous fractions, all showing a single polypeptide band of about 100 kDa when separated by sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis (SDS-PAGE) under reducing, denaturing conditions. Analysis of the purified DPP IV by isoelectric focusing (IEF) showed that it consists of several polypeptides of different isoelectric points (IP) ranging from 5.5 to 7.0. In vitro- desialylation of the enzyme and subsequent isoelectric focusing revealed that the differences in isoelectric points were due to differences in the degree of sialylation. Differences in the degree of sialylation between the fractions were also demonstrated by SDS-PAGE under nonreducing and nondenaturing conditions. Increased sialylation of the enzyme as demonstrated by isoelectric focusing resulted in increased migration velocity in nonreducing and nondenaturing SDS-polyacrylamide gels. In vitro -desialylation of the enzyme and its resialylation confirmed that sialylation was responsible for this extraordinary migration behavior. The native enzyme was predominantly sialylated via alpha 2, 6-linkage, as shown by lectin affinity blotting employing Sambucus nigra agglutinin (SNA) and Maackia amurensis agglutinin (MAA). These findings demonstrate that a distinct membrane glycoprotein may exist in various sialoforms, distinguished from each other by a different number of sialic acid residues. Moreover, these sialoforms can be individually purified by crown ether anion exchange chromatography.  相似文献   

8.
《The Journal of cell biology》1990,111(5):2117-2127
We have identified an integral membrane glycoprotein in rat liver that mediates adhesion of cultured hepatocytes on fibronectin substrata. The protein was isolated by affinity chromatography of detergent extracts on wheat germ lectin-Agarose followed by chromatography of the WGA binding fraction on fibronectin-Sepharose. The glycoprotein (AGp110), eluted at high salt concentrations from the fibronectin column, has a molecular mass of 110 kD and a pI of 4.2. Binding of immobilized AGp110 to soluble rat plasma fibronectin required Ca2+ ions but was not inhibited by RGD peptides. Fab' fragments of immunoglobulins raised in rabbits against AGp110 reversed the spreading of primary hepatocytes attached onto fibronectin-coated substrata, but had no effect on cells spread on type IV collagen or laminin substrata. The effect of the antiserum on cell spreading was reversible. AGp110 was detected by immunofluorescence around the periphery of the ventral surface of substratum attached hepatocytes, and scattered on the dorsal surface. Immunohistochemical evidence and Western blotting of fractionated liver plasma membranes indicated a bile canalicular (apical) localization of AGp110 in the liver parenchyma. Expression of AGp110 is tissue specific: it was found mainly in liver, kidney, pancreas, and small intestine but was not detected in stomach, skeletal muscle, heart, and large intestine. AGp110 could be labeled by lactoperoxidase-catalyzed surface iodination of intact liver cells and, after phase partitioning of liver plasma membranes with the detergent Triton X-114, it was preferentially distributed in the hydrophobic phase. Treatment with glycosidases indicated extensive sialic acid substitution in at least 10 O-linked carbohydrate chains and 1-2 N-linked glycans. Immunological comparisons suggest that AGp110, the integrin fibronectin receptor and dipeptidyl peptidase IV, an enzyme involved in fibronectin-mediated adhesion of hepatocytes on collagen, are distinct proteins.  相似文献   

9.
The nonenzymatic glycation of basement membrane proteins, such as fibronectin and type IV collagen, occurs in diabetes mellitus. These proteins are nonenzymatically glycated in vivo and can also be nonenzymatically glycated in vitro. After 12 days of incubation at 37 degrees C with 500 mM glucose, purified samples of human plasma fibronectin and native type IV collagen showed a 13.0- and 4.2-fold increase, respectively, in glycated amino acid levels in comparison to control samples incubated in the absence of glucose. Gelatin (denatured calfskin collagen) was glycated 22.3-fold under the same conditions. Scatchard analyses were performed on the binding of radiolabeled fibronectin to gelatin or type IV collagen. It was found that there is a 3-fold reduction in the affinity of fibronectin to type IV collagen due to the nonenzymatic glycation of fibronectin. The dissociation constant (KD) for the binding of control fibronectin to type IV collagen was 9.6 X 10(-7) M while the KD for glycated fibronectin and type IV collagen was 2.9 X 10(-6) M. This was similar to the 2.7-fold reduction in the affinity of fibronectin for gelatin found as a result of the nonenzymatic glycation of fibronectin (KD of 4.5 X 10(-7) M for the interaction of control fibronectin with gelatin vs. KD of 1.2 X 10(-6) M for the interaction of nonenzymatically glycated fibronectin with gelatin). The molecular association of control fibronectin or its glycated counterpart with [3H]heparin was also determined. Scatchard analyses of this interaction showed no difference between control fibronectin and glycated fibronectin in [3H]heparin binding.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

10.
Attachment of cells to basement membrane collagen type IV   总被引:17,自引:8,他引:9       下载免费PDF全文
Of ten different cell lines examined, three showed distinct attachment and spreading on collagen IV substrates, and neither attachment nor spreading was enhanced by adding soluble laminin or fibronectin. This reaction was not inhibited by cycloheximide or antibodies to laminin, indicating a direct attachment to collagen IV without the need of mediator proteins. Cell-binding sites were localized to the major triple-helical domain of collagen IV and required an intact triple helical conformation for activity. Fibronectin showed preferential binding to denatured collagen IV necessary to mediate cell binding to the substrate. Fibronectin binding sites of collagen IV were mapped to unfolded structures of the major triple-helical domain and show a similar specificity to fibronectin-binding sites of collagen I. The data extend previous observations on biologically potential binding sites located in the triple helix of basement membrane collagen IV.  相似文献   

11.
Invasion of the basement membrane is believed to be a critical step in the metastatic process. Melanoma cells have been shown previously to bind distinct triple-helical regions within basement membrane (type IV) collagen. Additionally, tumor cell binding sites within type IV collagen contain glycosylated hydroxylysine residues. In the present study, we have utilized triple-helical models of the type IV collagen alpha1(IV)1263-1277 sequence to (a) determine the melanoma cell receptor for this ligand and (b) analyze the results of single-site glycosylation on melanoma cell recognition. Receptor identification was achieved by a combination of methods, including (a) cell adhesion and spreading assays using triple-helical alpha1(IV)1263-1277 and an Asp(1266)Abu variant, (b) inhibition of cell adhesion and spreading assays, and (c) triple-helical alpha1(IV)1263-1277 affinity chromatography with whole cell lysates and glycosaminoglycans. Triple-helical alpha1(IV)1263-1277 was bound by melanoma cell CD44/chondroitin sulfate proteoglycan receptors and not by the collagen-binding integrins or melanoma-associated proteoglycan. Melanoma cell adhesion to and spreading on the triple-helical alpha1(IV)1263-1277 sequence was then compared for glycosylated (replacement of Lys(1265) with Hyl(O-beta-d-galactopyranosyl)) versus non-glycosylated ligand. Glycosylation was found to strongly modulate both activities, as adhesion and spreading were dramatically decreased due to the presence of galactose. CD44/chondroitin sulfate proteoglycan did not bind to glycosylated alpha1(IV)1263-1277. Overall, this study (a) is the first demonstration of the prophylactic effects of glycosylation on tumor cell interaction with the basement membrane, (b) provides a rare example of an apparent unfavorable interaction between carbohydrates, and (c) suggests that sugars may mask "cryptic sites" accessible to tumor cells with cell surface or secreted glycosidase activities.  相似文献   

12.
Basement membrane protein BM-40, prepared from the mouse Engelbreth-Holm-Swarm tumor, was used in native, denatured and proteolytically processed form for binding to various extracellular matrix proteins. BM-40 and its derivatives were also characterized by CD spectroscopy, calcium binding and epitope analysis. Of several basement membrane proteins tested only collagen IV showed a distinct and calcium-dependent binding of BM-40 in an immobilized ligand assay. This interaction was specific as shown by a low activity of other collagen types (I, III, V, VI) in direct binding and competition assays. The binding was reduced or abolished by metal-ion-chelating or chaotropic agents, high salt and reduction of disulfide bonds in BM-40. Fragment studies indicated that domains III (alpha-helix) and/or IV (EF hand) of BM-40 possess the binding site(s) for collagen IV, while the N-terminal domains I and II provide the major antigenic determinants. A major BM-40-binding site on collagen IV was dependent on a triple-helical conformation and could be localized to a pepsin fragment from the central portion of the triple-helical domain, in agreement with electron microscopic visualization of BM-40--collagen-IV complexes.  相似文献   

13.
In order to study the molecular basis of platelet interaction with collagen IV of the basement membrane separating the arterial endothelium from the underlying subendothelial connective tissue, the possibility of presence of platelet membrane protein with affinity to type IV collagen was examined by subjecting the platelet membrane extract to affinity chromatography on collagen IV-sepharose. Urea (4 M) eluate was found to contain a protein with an apparent mol. wt of 68 kDa. The radioiodinated protein was isolated and used to test its specificity. By dot blot assay on nitrocellulose disks and solid-phase assays, the 68 kDa protein was found to bind with high affinity to collagen IV. Lack of significant binding to fibronectin and laminin when compared to albumin control indicated its high specificity for collagen. The radioiodinated protein was inserted into egg yolk lecithin liposomes. While these liposomes attached to microtitre plates coated with collagen IV, there was no significant binding to fibronectin or laminin coated wells, suggesting the membrane associated character of the protein as well as its specificity for collagen. These results indicate that presence of a 68 kDa protein in platelet membrane which interacts with very high specificity to collagen IV.  相似文献   

14.
Interaction of vitronectin with collagen   总被引:12,自引:0,他引:12  
Purified human plasma vitronectin was demonstrated to bind to type I collagen immobilized on plastic as measured by enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay and by binding of 125I-radiolabeled vitronectin to a collagen-coated plastic surface. Vitronectin did not bind to immobilized laminin, fibronectin, or albumin in these assays. Vitronectin showed similar interaction with all types of collagen (I, II, III, IV, V, and VI) tested. Collagen unfolded by heat treatment bound vitronectin less efficiently than native collagen. Vitronectin-coated colloidal gold particles bound to type I collagen fibrils as shown by electron microscopy. Salt concentrations higher than physiological interfered with the binding of vitronectin to collagen, suggesting an ionic interaction between the two proteins. Binding studies conducted in the presence of plasma showed that purified vitronectin added to plasma bound to immobilized collagen, whereas the endogenous plasma vitronectin bound to collagen less well. Although fibronectin did not interfere with the binding of vitronectin to native collagen, vitronectin inhibited the binding of fibronectin to collagen. These results show that vitronectin has a collagen-binding site(s) which, unlike that of fibronectin, preferentially recognizes triple-helical collagen and that the binding between vitronectin and collagen has characteristics compatible with the occurrence of such an interaction in vivo.  相似文献   

15.
As a preliminary to a study of the biogenesis of individual plasma membrane glycoproteins, the marker enzyme nucleotide pyrophosphatase (NPPase) and a major rat liver plasma membrane sialoprotein, subsequently found to be identical with the enzyme dipeptidyl peptidase IV (DPP IV), were purified 10,000- and 2,000-fold, respectively, from rat liver. Both were amphipathic proteins which formed defined micellar complexes with detergents and aggregated in their absence. Gel filtration, sucrose density gradient centrifugation, and polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis in the presence of sodium dodecyl sulfate showed the Triton X-100 complex of NPPase to contain a single 150,000-dalton peptide, while that of DPP IV was composed of two 120,000-dalton subunits; each complex also contained about 150,000-dalton Triton X-100. Trypsin cleaved the detergent complexes with release of major hydrophilic fragments which no longer bound detergent micelles; the accompanying change in peptide size was small for NPPase and undetectable for DPP IV, which also retained the dimer structure of its native form. DPP IV was the only major glycoprotein in rat liver plasma membrane which bound strongly to wheat germ agglutinin. Monospecific rabbit antibodies against NPPase and DPP IV precipitated the antigens without affecting their enzymatic activities.  相似文献   

16.
Interactions of basement membrane components   总被引:23,自引:0,他引:23  
The binding of laminin, type IV collagen, and heparan sulfate proteoglycan to each other was assessed. Laminin binds preferentially to native type IV (basement membrane) collagen over other collagens. A fragment of laminin (Mr 600 000) containing the three short chains (Mr 200 000) but lacking the long chain (Mr 400 000) showed the same affinity for type IV collagen as the intact protein. The heparan sulfate proteoglycan binds well to laminin and to type IV collagen. These studies show that laminin, type IV collagen and heparan sulfate proteoglycan interact with each other. Such interactions in situ may determine the structure of basement membranes.  相似文献   

17.
In this investigation, we have demonstrated that the renal brush-border membrane of Fischer 344 rats from the Japanese Charles River Inc. specifically lacks dipeptidyl peptidase IV (DPP IV) activity, whereas the renal brush-border membrane of Fischer 344 rats from three different sources within the United States possesses normal levels of DPP IV activity. Comparison of the brush-border proteins between Charles River (U.S.A.) Fischer 344 rats (DPP IV positive) and Japanese Charles River Fischer 344 rats (DPP IV negative) revealed that a protein band (Mr = 100,000), apparently identical with DPP IV, was absent in the membranes from Japanese Charles River Fischer 344 rats. We examined the handling of radiolabeled beta-casomorphin fragment 1-5 (Tyr-Pro-[3H]Phe-Pro-Gly), a specific substrate for DPP IV, in renal brush-border membrane vesicles isolated from DPP IV-positive and DPP IV-negative rats. Although the membrane vesicles from DPP IV-positive rats were able to hydrolyze the pentapeptide to di- and tripeptides with the subsequent active transport of these products via the H+ gradient-dependent peptide transport system, the membrane vesicles from DPP IV-negative rats failed to hydrolyze the pentapeptide and hence lacked the ability to transport the radiolabel actively from the parent peptide. The H+ gradient-dependent glycyl-sarcosine uptake and the Na+ gradient-dependent proline uptake, however, were normal in DPP IV-negative rats. Urine analysis revealed that the DPP IV-negative rats excreted proline- and hydroxyproline-containing peptides in significantly increased amounts in their urine compared with control rats. Furthermore, following intravenous administration of Tyr-Pro-Phe-Pro-NH2, a peptide that is exclusively hydrolyzed by DPP IV, urinary excretion of the peptide in the intact form was many-fold greater in DPP IV-negative rats than in control rats. These data provide conclusive evidence for the obligatory role of DPP IV in the renal handling of proline (and hydroxyproline)-containing peptides.  相似文献   

18.
The effect of collagen tripeptide fragment GER on the adhesion and spreading of mouse embryonic fibroblasts STO to different substrates (polystyrene plastic, poly-L-lysine, fibronectin, gelatin) has been studied. It was found that tripeptide GER was involved in fibroblast adhesion and spreading. The cell response depended both on the mode of tripeptide addition to culture medium and the substrate type. Coincubation of fibroblasts with tripeptide stimulated the cell attachment and spreading to untreated plastic and plastic coated with fibronectin or gelatin but did not change cell adhesion to immobilized poly-L-lysine. Preincubation of cells with tripeptide resulted in partial inhibition of fibroblast adhesion and spreading on fibronectin- and gelatin-coated substrata. It was shown that activation and inhibition of adhesive processes after tripeptide treating was higher on fibronectin than gelatin. The data obtained support the assumption about concerted action of tripeptide GER (activity was dependent both on the used concentration of the tripeptide and the mode of tripeptide addition to culture medium) and chemical characteristics of substrate (polymers of styrene and L-lysine, ECM proteins in native (fibronectin) or partly denatured (gelatin) form) on the cell adhesion and spreading. The main targets that GER peptide may affect during the formation of cell-substrate interactions are discussed.  相似文献   

19.
In plasma membrane glycoproteins the peripheral monosaccharides of the N-glycan side chains are degraded faster than the core oligosaccharides and the protein backbone. This intramolecular heterogenous turnover is a typical characteristic of membrane glycoproteins and is termed remodeling or reprocessing. The mechanism of the reprocessing has been shown first for dipeptidyl peptidase IV (DPP IV, CD26). However, it is still a question in which subcellular compartment the enzyme machinery for the reprocessing is located. Since lysosomes could be excluded, it has been proposed that the responsible glycosidases are located at the plasma membrane, in endosomes, or in the trans-Golgi network. The present study is concerned with the possible role of endosomes in this process of reprocessing. We transfected nonpolarized BHK cells with rat DPP IV cDNA. By establishing a fast and efficient method to purify endosomes, we could identify for the first time significant amounts of DPP IV in endosomes and we suggest therefore that endosomes are closely related with the regulation of reprocessing of plasma membrane glycoproteins.  相似文献   

20.
N-Glycosylation, biosynthesis and degradation of dipeptidylpeptidase IV (EC 3.4.14.5) (DPP IV) were comparatively studied in primary cultured rat hepatocytes and Morris hepatoma 7777 cells (MH 7777 cells). DPP IV had a molecular mass of 105 kDa in rat hepatocytes and of 103 kDa in MH 7777 cells as assessed by SDS/PAGE under reducing conditions. This difference in molecular mass was caused by differences in covalently attached N-glycans. DPP IV from hepatoma cells contained a higher proportion of N-glycans of the oligomannosidic or hybrid type and therefore migrated at a slightly lower molecular mass. In both cell types DPP IV was initially synthesized as a 97-kDa precursor which was completely susceptible to digestion with endo-beta-N-acetylglucosaminidase H converting the molecular mass to 84 kDa. The precursor was processed to the mature forms of DPP IV, glycosylated with N-glycans mainly of the complex type with a half-life of 20-25 min. The transit of newly synthesized DPP IV to the cell surface displayed identical or very similar kinetics in both cell types with the major portion of DPP IV appearing at the cell surface after 60 min. DPP IV molecules were very slowly degraded in hepatocytes as well as in hepatoma cells with half-lives of approximately 45 h. Inhibition of oligosaccharide processing with 1-deoxymannojirimycin led to the formation of DPP IV molecules containing N-glycans of the oligomannosidic type. This glycosylation variant was degraded with the same half-life as complex-type glycosylated DPP IV. By contrast, inhibition of N-glycosylation with tunicamycin resulted into rapid degradation of non-N-glycosylated DPP IV molecules in both cell types. Non-N-glycosylated DPP IV could not be detected at the cell surface indicating an intracellular proteolytic process soon after biosynthesis.  相似文献   

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