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1.
The hydrolysis of triglycerides in plasma lipoproteins is mediated by lipoprotein lipase (LPL) that is bound to vascular endothelial cells. The specific endothelial cell surface protein(s) with which LPL associates has not been characterized. To identify this LPL binding protein(s), radioiodinated cell surface proteins from cultured bovine aortic endothelial cells were chromatographed using bovine LPL-Sepharose. A single radioiodinated protein of apparent molecular mass 220 kDa was specifically retained by the gel and eluted with 0.4 M NaCl. A LPL-binding protein of similar size was obtained after metabolic labeling of the cellular proteoglycans with 35SO4, indicating that the 220-kDa protein is a proteoglycan. After heparitinase or nitrous acid treatments the molecular mass of the LPL-binding protein decreased to approximately 50 kDa, suggesting that it contains heparin sulfate chains. A 220-kDa protein from the basal cell surface was also identified using LPL-Sepharose chromatography. 125I-LPL was cross-linked to the endothelial cell surface using ethylene glycobis (succinimidylsuccinate). A single ligand-receptor complex, approximately 350 kDa, was obtained. Heparin and unlabeled LPL decreased the cross-linking of radioiodinated LPL to the cell surface receptor. To examine whether the receptor mediates the internalization of cross-linked 125I-LPL, cells containing 125I-LPL complexed to the surface were incubated at either 37 or at 4 degrees C. The amount of 125I-LPL internalized by the cells was 74% greater at 37 degrees C than at 4 degrees C. This suggested that LPL cross-linked to the receptor was internalized in a temperature-dependent manner. Thus, a 220-kDa heparan sulfate proteoglycan functions as an endothelial cell surface receptor for LPL.  相似文献   

2.
Lipoprotein lipase (LPL), synthesized by adipocytes and myocytes, must be transported to the luminal endothelial cell surface where it then interacts with circulating lipoproteins. The first step in this extracellular LPL transport pathway is LPL release from the surface of LPL-synthesizing cells. Because hydrolysis of triglyceride (TG)-rich lipoproteins releases LPL from the apical surface of endothelial cells, we hypothesized that the same substances dissociate LPL from adipocytes. 125I-LPL was bound to the surface of brown adipocytes (BFC-1 beta). LPL binding to the adipocyte surface was greater than to endothelial cell surfaces. Using low concentrations of heparin, more LPL was released from endothelial cells than BFC-1 beta, suggesting that the affinity of LPL binding to the adipocytes was greater than LPL affinity for endothelial cells. Greater than 3-fold more LPL was released from the cell surface when very low density lipoproteins (VLDL) were added to culture medium containing 3% bovine serum albumin. LPL remaining on the cell surface decreased with VLDL addition. Endogenously produced LPL activity was also released from the cells by VLDL. Low and high density lipoproteins did not release 125I-LPL or LPL activity from the adipocytes. To assess whether lipolysis was necessary for LPL release, BFC-1 beta were incubated with TG-rich lipoproteins from a patient with apoCII deficiency. The apoCII-deficient lipoproteins did not release LPL unless an exogenous source of apoCII was added. Apolipoproteins E and Cs and high molar ratios of oleic acid:bovine serum albumin did not release surface-associated LPL. Lysolecithin (25 and 100 microM), but not lecithin, monoglycerides, or diglycerides, released adipocyte surface LPL. Because lysolecithin also released LPL during a 4 degrees C incubation, cellular metabolic functions are not required for LPL dissociation from the cells. Lysolecithin also inhibited LPL binding to endothelial cells; however, this effect was abrogated by addition of bovine serum albumin. We hypothesize that lipolysis products from TG-rich lipoproteins release adipocyte surface LPL, which can then be transported to the luminal endothelial cell surface.  相似文献   

3.
Triglycerides in circulating plasma lipoproteins are hydrolyzed by lipoprotein lipase (LPL) which is thought to bind to proteoglycans on the luminal endothelial cell surface. Previous studies from this laboratory using LPL-Sepharose affinity chromatography identified a 220-kDa LPL binding proteoglycan. Using ligand blotting with 125I-LPL, we now report a 116-kDa LPL binding protein in plasma membrane preparations of endothelial cells. 125I-LPL binding to this protein was abolished by addition of unlabeled LPL. When the cell surface of endothelial cells was labeled with biotin, a 116-kDa protein was biotinylated. Furthermore, the biotinylated 116-kDa protein bound to LPL-Sepharose and eluted with 0.4 M NaCl suggesting that the 116-kDa LPL binding protein is present on the cell surface. When detergent extracts of endothelial cells were applied to LPL-Sepharose in the presence of 0.15 M NaCl, the 116-kDa, but not the 220-kDa, protein still bound to LPL-Sepharose. The 116-kDa protein was not labeled with 35SO4 and eluted from DEAE-cellulose prior to proteoglycans, suggesting that it is not a proteoglycan. However, a 116-kDa endothelial cell surface protein was metabolically labeled with [35S]methionine. This protein was dissociated from the cell surface by incubating cells with heparin (50 units/ml)-containing buffer. After heparin treatment of endothelial cells, LPL binding to and internalization by the cells decreased greater than 70% compared to control cells. These results suggest that endothelial cells synthesize a heparin-releasable, high affinity 116-kDa LPL binding protein. We postulate that this protein is associated with proteoglycans on luminal endothelial surfaces and mediates LPL binding, internalization, and recycling. We name this protein hrp (heparin-releasable protein)-116.  相似文献   

4.
Several laboratories have shown that when rats are fasted, the amount of lipoprotein lipase (LPL) at the vascular endothelium in heart (monitored as the amount released by heparin) increases severalfold without corresponding changes in the production of LPL. This suggests that there is a change in endothelial binding of LPL. To study this, (125)I-labeled bovine LPL was injected. The fraction that bound in the heart was more than twice as high in fasted than in fed rats, 4.3% compared with 1.9% of the injected dose. Refeeding reversed this in 5 h. When unlabeled LPL was injected before the tracer, the fraction of (125)I-LPL that bound in heart decreased, indicating that the binding was saturable. When isolated hearts were perfused at 4 degrees C with a single pass of labeled LPL, twice as much bound in hearts of fasted rats. We conclude that fasting causes a change in the vascular endothelium in heart such that its ability to bind LPL increases.  相似文献   

5.
Lipoprotein lipase (LPL), the major enzyme responsible for the hydrolysis of circulating lipoprotein triglyceride molecules, is synthesized in myocytes and adipocytes but functions while bound to heparan sulfate proteoglycans (HSPGs) on the luminal surface of vascular endothelial cells. This requires transfer of LPL from the abluminal side to the luminal side of endothelial cells. Studies were performed to investigate the mechanisms of LPL transcytosis using cultured monolayers of bovine aortic endothelial cells. We tested whether HSPGs and members of the low density lipoprotein (LDL) receptor superfamily were involved in transfer of LPL from the basolateral to the apical side of cultured endothelial cells. Heparinase/heparinitase treatment of the basolateral cell surface or addition of heparin to the basolateral medium decreased the movement of LPL. This suggested a requirement for HSPGs. To assess the role of receptors, we used either receptor-associated protein, the 39-kDa inhibitor of ligand binding to the LDL receptor-related protein and the very low density lipoprotein (VLDL) receptor, or specific receptor antibodies. Receptor-associated protein reduced (125)I-LPL and LPL activity transfer across the monolayers. When the basolateral surface of the cells was treated with antibodies, only anti-VLDL receptor antibodies inhibited transcytosis. Moreover, overexpression of the VLDL receptor using adenoviral-mediated gene transfer increased LPL transcytosis. Thus, movement of active LPL across endothelial cells involves both HSPGs and VLDL receptor.  相似文献   

6.
The fate of 125I-labeled heparin binding growth factor I (125I-HBGF-I) after binding to its cell surface receptor has been studied using murine lung capillary endothelial cells (LEII). Binding of 125I-HBGF-I to its receptor at 4 degrees C shows pH dependence with optimal binding at pH 6.5-7.5. The majority (approximately 80%) of 125I-HBGF-I bound to cells at 4 degrees C can be removed by washing with low pH medium, but rapidly becomes acid resistant upon shifting cells to 37 degrees C, with 50% of the 125I-HBGF-I becoming acid resistant after 20 minutes. Electrophoretic analysis of internalized 125I-HBGF-I shows that degradation begins approximately 2 hours after internalization with the appearance of two major labeled fragments of Mr 15,000 and Mr 10,000. Degradation of internalized 125I-HBGF-I is inhibited by the lysosomotropic agent chloroquine. These data suggest that cell-associated 125I-HBGF-I is rapidly internalized and directed to a lysosomal cellular compartment where it is slowly degraded.  相似文献   

7.
Bovine capillary endothelial (BCE) cells were incubated at 4 degrees C with 5 ng/ml 125I-basic fibroblast growth factor (bFGF) to equilibrate 125I-bFGF with high affinity cell surface receptors and low affinity matrix binding sites. 67% of the added 125I-bFGF bound to the matrix and 7% bound to receptors. The fate of bound bFGF was followed after cells were incubated in bFGF-free medium and were shifted to 37 degrees C to restore cell metabolism. 125I-bFGF bound to receptors decreased rapidly while the amount of 125I-bFGF bound to matrix was reduced more slowly. The rapid decrease in receptor-bound 125I-bFGF appeared to be due to a down-regulation of bFGF receptors; cells that had been treated for 5 h with bFGF had 60% fewer high affinity receptors than untreated cells. Despite the initial high level of 125I-bFGF binding to matrix, most of this 125I-bFGF was mobilized and metabolized by the cells. 125I-bFGF was internalized by the cells at 37 degrees C, leading to a constant accumulation of 125I-bFGF within the cell. Internalized bFGF was rapidly cleaved from an 18-kD form to a 16-kD form. The 16-kD form was more slowly degraded with a half-life of approximately 8 h. Degradation of internalized 125I-bFGF was inhibited by chloroquine, suggesting that the digestion occurred in a lysosomal compartment. The role of matrix binding sites in the internalization process was investigated. Binding to matrix sites seemed not to be directly involved in the internalization process, since addition of heparin at a concentration that blocked 95% of the binding to matrix had no effect on the initial rate of internalization of bFGF. BCE cells also released a substance that competed for the binding of bFGF to matrix but not to receptors. This substance bound to DEAE-cellulose and was sensitive to heparinase treatment, suggesting that it was a heparinlike molecule. Thus, heparinlike molecules produced by BCE cells can modulate the cellular interaction with bFGF. Matrix-associated heparinlike molecules bind bFGF which can later be metabolized by the cell, and secreted heparinlike molecules release bFGF from matrices.  相似文献   

8.
Binding and endocytosis of heparin by human endothelial cells in culture   总被引:8,自引:0,他引:8  
Binding of heparin and low molecular weight heparin fragments (CY 222, Mr range 1500-8000) to human vascular endothelial cells was studied. Primary culture of human umbilical vein endothelial cells and either 125I or 3H-labeled heparin or [125I]CY 222 were used. Slow, saturable and specific binding was found. No other tested glycosaminoglycan, excepting a highly sulfated heparan fraction, was able to compete for heparin binding. Two groups of binding sites for [3H]heparin could be distinguished: one with high affinity (Kd = 0.12 microM) and another with lower affinity (Kd = 1.37 microM) and a relative large capacity of binding (1.16 X 10(7) molecules/cell) was calculated. The Kd for unlabeled heparin, as calculated from competition experiments, was 0.23 microM. Much lower affinity was calculated for unlabeled low molecular weight heparin fragments CY 222 (Kd = 4.3 microM) from competition experiments with [125I]CY 222. The binding reversibility was only partial for unfractionated heparin. Even by chasing with unlabeled compound, a fraction of 25-30% was not dissociable from endothelial cells. This fraction was much lower if incubation was carried out at 4 degrees C. The addition of basic proteins (histones) to the incubation medium greatly enhanced the undissociable binding at 37 degrees C, but not at 4 degrees C. The undissociable fraction of heparin was not available to degradation by purified microbial heparinase. These results suggest that a fraction of bound heparin is internalized by the vascular endothelium.  相似文献   

9.
Chicken muscle AMP aminohydrolase is cleared from the circulation of chickens after intravenous injection of the purified enzyme with a half-life of 3-5 min (Husic, H.D., and Suelter, C.H. (1980) Biochem. Biophys. Res. Commun. 95, 228-235). The enzyme is not inactivated before clearance, the clearance is inhibited by sulfated polysaccharides, and the enzyme is cleared primarily by the spleen and the parenchymal cells of the liver where it is internalized and degraded in lysosomes (Husic, H.D., and Suelter, C.H. (1984) J. Biol. Chem. 259, 4359-4364). The binding of AMP aminohydrolase to hepatocyte monolayers in vitro at 4 degrees C is saturable with a dissociation constant of 11.3 X 10(-8) M; there are 2.6 X 10(6) AMP aminohydrolase binding sites/hepatocyte. The interaction of the enzyme with hepatocyte monolayers is inhibited by sulfated polysaccharides, effectors of its enzymatic activity and high salt concentrations; various monosaccharides had little effect on the binding of the enzyme to hepatocyte monolayers. Heparitinase treatment of hepatocyte monolayers abolished 77% of the binding of the enzyme. Heparin promotes the dissociation of 125I-labeled or [14C]sucrose-labeled enzyme bound to the cell surface; radioactivity which is not dissociated by heparin is assumed to be internalized at 37 degrees C. Low molecular weight 125I-labeled degradation products are released into the media with time when the 125I-labeled enzyme, bound to hepatocytes at 4 degrees C, is incubated at 37 degrees C; when [14C]sucrose-labeled enzyme is incubated with hepatocytes at 37 degrees C, low molecular weight 14C-labeled degradation products are not released into the media but instead accumulate in the cells. The half-life for internalization of the bound enzyme based on this rate of accumulation is 0.77 h. These results suggest that glycosaminoglycans are involved in the binding of AMP aminohydrolase to the hepatocyte cell surface and that the bound enzyme is internalized and degraded.  相似文献   

10.
Equilibrium-binding data of highly purified 125I-labeled avian lipoprotein lipase to cultured avian adipocytes demonstrate the presence of a class of high affinity binding sites. Analysis of the binding function yielded an association constant of 0.62 x 10(8)M-1 and a maximum binding capacity of 2.1 micrograms/60-mm dish. From a time course of dissociation of 125I-lipoprotein lipase from adipocytes at 4 degrees C, a dissociation rate constant of 6.1 x 10(-5)s-1 was obtained. Pretreatment of cells with heparinase and heparitinase resulted in a quantitative suppression of the high affinity binding component, establishing that lipoprotein lipase is bound to cell surface heparan sulfate proteoglycans. At 37 degrees C, cell surface-bound 125I-lipoprotein lipase is internalized and either degraded or recycled to the medium. The degradation rate constant for 125I-lipoprotein lipase was estimated to be 0.78 h-1. The degradation rate constant was reduced 6-fold when cells were exposed to 100 microM chloroquine, indicating that most of the degradation occurs within the lysosomal compartment. By using cells that had been pulsed with Trans35S-label for 1 h, it was demonstrated that acute treatment with endoglycosidases for up to 1 h resulted in a new lipoprotein lipase secretion rate which was 6-fold higher than that of control cells. Degradation of newly synthesized lipoprotein lipase was essentially blocked 30 min after the initiation of the chase. In other studies it was observed that there were no additive effects of chloroquine and either endoglycosidase or heparin treatment on total lipoprotein lipase levels (intracellular, cell surface, and medium) in adipocyte cultures. These experiments support the hypothesis that the release of lipoprotein lipase from its receptor prevents its internalization and degradation and enhances enzyme efflux from the adipocyte. A new model of lipoprotein lipase secretion in cultured adipocytes is proposed: Newly synthesized lipoprotein lipase is transported to the cell surface where it binds to specific heparan sulfate proteoglycan receptors. The enzyme is either released to the medium or internalized via the receptor, in which case the enzyme is degraded or recycled to the cell surface. Major determinants of enzyme efflux from the cell surface include the number and integrity of receptors, the association constant of the enzyme-receptor complex, and the presence in the medium of competing molecules with high affinity for lipoprotein lipase. In this model, modulation of lipoprotein lipase degradation rate may be a significant mechanism for acute regulation of enzyme efflux independent of changes in the rate of enzyme synthesis.  相似文献   

11.
We recently reported that the dissociation of internalized receptor-125I-asialo-orosomucoid (ASOR) complexes by isolated hepatocytes is a biphasic process; most complexes dissociate rapidly but 25-50% dissociate slowly (Oka, J. A., and Weigel, P. H. J. Biol. Chem. 258, 10253-10262). Cells were allowed to endocytose a pulse of surface-bound 125I-ASOR, and were washed and then incubated at 37 degrees C in the presence or absence of ethylene glycol bis(beta-aminoethyl ether)-N,N,N',N'-tetraacetic acid (EGTA). Without EGTA, very little intact ASOR appeared in the medium. With EGTA present, a large amount of intracellular ligand appeared undegraded in the medium in a time-dependent manner. N-Acetylgalactosamine, but not ASOR, in the medium also caused release of intact 125I-ASOR. Within 15 min, more than 50% and by completion at least 80% of the internalized ligand in the slow dissociation compartment was released into the medium. If cells containing internalized ligand were incubated at 37 degrees C for increasing times before the addition of EGTA, then progressively less ligand accumulated in the medium. Experiments at 18 degrees C, a temperature at which neither degradation nor slow dissociation occurred, demonstrated that in the presence of EGTA the intracellular free 125I-ASOR pool did not change. The amount of receptor-bound ligand in the slowly dissociating pool decreased and the amount of intact ligand in the medium increased by essentially equal amounts. The temperature dependence for the return of internal 125I-ASOR to the cell surface was similar to that for endocytosis, with a cut-off temperature of about 12 degrees C. We conclude that a normal part of the endocytic process involves the return of receptor-ligand complexes to the cell surface from an internal slowly dissociating pool. This might reflect either an obligatory step or a reversible statistically random step in the endocytic/recycling pathway.  相似文献   

12.
The sulfated glycosaminoglycan, heparin, was found to release 125I-labeled low density lipoprotein (125I-LDL) from its receptor site on the surface of normal human fibroblasts. Measurement of the amount of 125I-LDL released by heparin permitted the resolution of the total cellular uptake of 125I-LDL at 37 degrees C into two components: first, an initial rapid, high affinity binding of the lipoprotein to the surface receptor, from which the 125I-LDL could be released by heparin, and second, a slower process attributable to an endocytosis of the receptor-bound lipoprotein, which rendered it resistant to heparin release. At 4 degrees C the amount of heparin-releasable 125I-LDL was similar to that at 37 degrees C, but interiorization of the lipoprotein did not occur at the lower temperature. The physiologic importance of the cell surface LDL receptor was emphasized by the finding that mutant fibroblasts from a subject with homozygous Familial Hypercholesterolemia, which lack the ability to take up 125I-LDL at 37 degrees C, did not show cell surface binding of 125I-LDL, as measured by heparin release, at either 4 degrees C or 37 degrees C. Although heparin released 125I-LDL from its binding site, it did not release 3H-concanavalin A from its surface receptor, and conversely, alpha-methyl-D-mannopyranoside, which released 3H-concanavalin A, did not release surface-bound 125I-LDL. When added to the culture medium simultaneously with LDL, heparin prevented the binding of LDL to its receptor and hence prevented the LDL-mediated suppression of 3-hydroxy-3-methylglutaryl coenzyme A reductase activity. The uptake of LDL by fibroblasts is proposed as a model of receptor-mediated adsorptive endocytosis of macromolecules in human cells.  相似文献   

13.
We recently reported that megalin (gp330), an endocytic receptor found on the apical surface of thyroid cells, binds thyroglobulin (Tg) with high affinity in solid phase assays. Megalin-bound Tg was releasable by heparin. Here we show that Fisher rat thyroid (FRTL-5) cells, a differentiated rat thyroid cell line, can bind and endocytose Tg via megalin. We first demonstrated that FRTL-5 cells express megalin in a thyroid-stimulating hormone-dependent manner. Evidence of Tg binding to megalin on FRTL-5 cells and on an immortalized rat renal proximal tubule cell line (IRPT cells), was obtained by incubating the cells with 125I-Tg, followed by chemical cross-linking and immunoprecipitation of 125I-Tg with antibodies against megalin. To investigate cell binding further, we developed an assay in which cells were incubated with unlabeled Tg at 4 degrees C, followed by incubation with heparin, which released almost all of the cell-bound Tg into the medium. In solid phase experiments designed to illuminate the mechanism of heparin release, we demonstrated that Tg is a heparin-binding protein, as are several megalin ligands. The amount of Tg released by heparin from FRTL-5 and IRPT cells, measured by enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA), was markedly reduced by two megalin competitors, receptor-associated protein (RAP) and 1H2 (monoclonal antibody against megalin), indicating that much of the Tg released by heparin had been bound to megalin ( approximately 60-80%). The amount inhibited by RAP was considered to represent specific binding to megalin, which was saturable and of high affinity (Kd approximately 11.2 nM). Tg endocytosis by FRTL-5 and IRPT cells was demonstrated in experiments in which cells were incubated with unlabeled Tg at 37 degrees C, followed by heparin to remove cell-bound Tg. The amount of Tg internalized (measured by ELISA in the cell lysates) was reduced by RAP and 1H2, indicating that Tg endocytosis is partially mediated by megalin.  相似文献   

14.
Lipoprotein lipase (LPL) bound to the lumenal surface of vascular endothelial cells is responsible for the hydrolysis of triglycerides in plasma lipoproteins. Studies were performed to investigate whether human plasma lipoproteins and/or free fatty acids would release LPL which was bound to endothelial cells. Purified bovine milk LPL was incubated with cultured porcine aortic endothelial cells resulting in the association of enzyme activity with the cells. When the cells were then incubated with media containing chylomicrons or very low density lipoproteins (VLDL), a concentration-dependent decrease in the cell-associated LPL enzymatic activity was observed. In contrast, incubation with media containing low density lipoproteins or high density lipoproteins produced a much smaller decrease in the cell-associated enzymatic activity. The addition of increasing molar ratios of oleic acid:bovine serum albumin to the media also reduced enzyme activity associated with the endothelial cells. To determine whether the decrease in LPL activity was due to release of the enzyme from the cells or inactivation of the enzyme, studies were performed utilizing radioiodinated bovine LPL. Radiolabeled LPL protein was released from endothelial cells by chylomicrons, VLDL, and by free fatty acids (i.e. oleic acid bound to bovine serum albumin). The release of radiolabeled LPL by VLDL correlated with the generation of free fatty acids from the hydrolysis of VLDL triglyceride by LPL bound to the cells. Inhibition of LPL enzymatic activity by use of a specific monoclonal antibody, reduced the extent of release of 125I-LPL from the endothelial cells by the added VLDL. These results demonstrated that LPL enzymatic activity and protein were removed from endothelial cells by triglyceride-rich lipoproteins (chylomicrons and VLDL) and oleic acid. We postulate that similar mechanisms may be important in the regulation of LPL activity at the vascular endothelium.  相似文献   

15.
GH4C1 cells, a clonal strain of rat pituitary tumor cells, have high-affinity, functional receptors for the inhibitory hypothalamic peptide somatostatin (SRIF) and for epidermal growth factor (EGF). In this study we have examined the events that follow the initial binding of SRIF to its specific plasma membrane receptors in GH4C1 cells and have compared the processing of receptor-bound SRIF with that of EGF. When cells were incubated with [125I-Tyr1]SRIF at temperatures ranging from 4 to 37 degrees C, greater than 80% of the specifically bound peptide was removed by extraction with 0.2 M acetic acid, 0.5 M NaCl, pH 2.5. In contrast, the subcellular distribution of receptor-bound 125I-EGF was temperature dependent. Whereas greater than 95% of specifically bound 125I-EGF was removed by acid treatment after a 4 degrees C binding incubation, less than 10% was removed when the binding reaction was performed at 22 or 37 degrees C. In pulse-chase experiments, receptor-bound 125I-EGF was transferred from an acid-sensitive to an acid-resistant compartment with a half-time of 2 min at 37 degrees C. In contrast, the small amount of [125I-Tyr1]SRIF that was resistant to acid treatment did not increase during a 2-h chase incubation at 37 degrees C. Chromatographic analysis of the radioactivity released from cells during dissociation incubations at 37 degrees C showed that greater than 90% of prebound 125I-EGF was released as 125I-tyrosine, whereas prebound [125I-Tyr1]SRIF was released as a mixture of intact peptide (55%) and 125I-tyrosine (45%). Neither chloroquine (0.1 mM), ammonium chloride (20 mM), nor leupeptin (0.1 mg/ml) increased the amount of [125I-Tyr1]SRIF bound to cells at 37 degrees C. Furthermore, chloroquine and leupeptin did not alter the rate of dissociation or degradation of prebound [125I-Tyr1]SRIF. In contrast, these inhibitors increased the amount of cell-associated 125I-EGF during 37 degrees C binding incubations and decreased the subsequent rate of release of 125I-tyrosine. The results presented indicate that, as in other cell types, EGF underwent rapid receptor-mediated endocytosis in GH4C1 cells and was subsequently degraded in lysosomes. In contrast, SRIF remained at the cell surface for several hours although it elicits its biological effects within minutes. Furthermore, a constant fraction of the receptor-bound [125I-Tyr1]SRIF was degraded at the cell surface before dissociation. Therefore, after initial binding of [125I-Tyr1]SRIF and 125I-EGF to their specific membrane receptors, these peptides are processed very differently in GH4C1 cells.  相似文献   

16.
The fate of 125I-labeled transforming growth factor-beta (125I-TGF beta) after binding to its cells surface receptor has been investigated in BALB/c 3T3 mouse fibroblasts. Binding of 125I-TGF beta to cellular receptors at 4 degrees C is pH-sensitive, being markedly decreased at pH less than 6. Most (approximately 90%) of the 125I-TGF beta bound to cells at 4 degrees C can be removed by a brief treatment with acidic medium but is converted into an acid-resistant state rapidly after shifting the cells to 37 degrees C. Cell-bound 125I-TGF beta is degraded at 37 degrees C and the degradation products are released into the medium. The lysosomotropic bases chloroquine, methylamine, and ammonium and the carboxylic ionophore monensin inhibit the degradation and release of 125I-TGF beta from the cells. Cells allowed to accumulate 125I-TGF beta intracellularly by the action of chloroquine or monensin were treated with the bifunctional agent disuccinimidyl suberate in the presence of detergent Triton X-100; this treatment caused the cross-linking of internalized 125I-TGF beta with the 280-kilodalton TGF beta receptor component. Under conditions in which sustained binding and degradation of saturating 125I-TGF beta concentrations occurs, there is no marked decrease in the binding capacity of the cells even when protein synthesis is blocked with cycloheximide. These results indicate that after TGF beta binding the TGF beta:receptor complex becomes rapidly internalized and that TGF beta is directed towards lysosomes where it is degraded and released. However, the cell surface is replenished with TGF beta receptors recycled after internalization or supplied by a large intracellular pool.  相似文献   

17.
The vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF) family encompasses four polypeptides that result from alternative splicing of mRNA. We have previously demonstrated differences in the secretion pattern of these polypeptides. Stable cell lines expressing VEGFs were established in human embryonic kidney CEN4 cells. VEGF121, the shortest form, was secreted and freely soluble in tissue culture medium. VEGF189 was secreted, but was almost entirely bound to the cell surface or extracellular matrix. VEGF165 displayed an intermediary behavior. Suramin induced the release of VEGF189, permitting its characterization as a more basic protein with higher affinity for heparin than VEGF165 or VEGF121, but with similar endothelial cell mitogenic activity. Heparin, heparan sulfate, and heparinase all induced the release of VEGF165 and VEGF189, suggesting heparin-containing proteoglycans as candidate VEGF-binding sites. Finally, VEGF165 and VEGF189 were released from their bound states by treatment with plasmin. The released 34-kDa dimeric species are active as endothelial cell mitogens and as vascular permeability agents. We conclude that the bioavailability of VEGF may be regulated at the genetic level by alternative splicing that determines whether VEGF will be soluble or incorporated into a biological reservoir and also through proteolysis following plasminogen activation.  相似文献   

18.
Interaction of lipoprotein lipase with subendothelial extracellular matrix   总被引:2,自引:0,他引:2  
We have analyzed the binding of lipoprotein lipase (LPL) to the subendothelial extracellular matrix produced by cultured endothelial cells. Binding was linear up to a concentration of 0.5 microgram/ml (10 nM) enzyme used in this study, and equilibrium was achieved after 2 h of incubation with bovine 125I-LPL at 4 degrees C. Heparin and heparan sulfate effectively inhibited the binding of LPL to extracellular-matrix-coated plates; chondroitin sulfate had no effect, while high concentrations of dermatan sulfate or keratan sulfate inhibited binding of LPL to extracellular matrix by only 40%. Basic fibroblast growth factor (bFGF) did not affect LPL binding, while antithrombin-III (AT-III) caused up to a 50% inhibition of enzyme binding to extracellular matrix. alpha-Thrombin. 5.10(-6) M, and its esterolytically inactive derivative, DIP-alpha-thrombin, effectively inhibited binding of LPL to extracellular-matrix-coated plates. alpha-Thrombin was also able to release the extracellular-matrix-bound LPL in an active form. Extracellular-matrix-bound LPL detached into medium containing triolein emulsion and/or serum, and was catalytically active after being released. Extracellular-matrix-bound LPL lost 30% of its activity following incubation at 37 degrees C for 4 h. in contrast to soluble LPL which lost 75% of its activity. It is plausible to conclude from these data that in vivo the subendothelial basement membrane, similarly to extracellular matrix, sequesters and stabilizers LPL secreted into the subendothelial space by non-endothelial cells, and thus may play an important role in determining the route of LPL from its site of synthesis to its site of action.  相似文献   

19.
Lysosomotropic amines, such as chloroquine and methylamine, increase the intracellular accumulation of 125I-EGF by inhibiting lysosomal degradation. It has been shown previously that BALB/c-3T3 cells, prelabeled at 4 degrees C with 125I-EGF for 3 h and subsequently chased at 37 degrees C in the presence of chloroquine, internalized the surface bound 125I-EGF which was subsequently released into the extracellular medium in a high molecular weight form which co-migrated with native 125I-EGF. The secreted 125I-EGF rebound to the cells from which it was released more efficiently than does peptide in the extracellular media. We now show that when the BALB/c-3T3 cells were prelabeled at 37 degrees C for 2 h in the presence of chloroquine, the internalized 125I-EGF released into the medium was in a high molecular weight form which co-migrated with native 125I-EGF and did not rebind anymore efficiently than did peptide in the extracellular media. This lack of rebinding was not due to an alteration in the 125I-EGF molecule since it was still capable of rebinding to naive A431 cells, nor was it due to the exhaustion of EGF receptors on the BALB/c-3T3 cells. The inhibition of rebinding was observed only when the cells were treated with EGF in the presence of chloroquine, and was not due to a general down-regulation of membrane receptors. The differences between the rebinding of 125I-EGF at 4 degrees C and 37 degrees C suggest that EGF may be processed via different pathways in the cell.  相似文献   

20.
Lipoprotein lipase (LPL), the major lipolytic enzyme involved in the conversion of triglyceride-rich lipoproteins to remnants, was found to compete with binding of activated alpha 2-macroglobulin (alpha 2M*) to the low density lipoprotein receptor-related protein (LRP)/alpha 2-macroglobulin receptor. Bovine milk LPL displaced both 125I-labeled alpha 2M* and 39-kDa alpha 2M receptor-associated protein (RAP) from the surface of cultured mutant fibroblasts lacking LDL receptors with apparent KI values at 4 degrees C of 6.8 and 30 nM, respectively. Furthermore, LPL inhibited the cellular degradation of 125I-alpha 2M* at 37 degrees C. Because both alpha 2M* and RAP interact with LRP, these data suggest that LPL binds specifically to this receptor. This was further supported by observing that an immunoaffinity-isolated polyclonal antibody against LRP blocked cellular degradation of 125I-LPL in a dose-dependent manner. In addition, 125I-LPL bound to highly purified LRP in a solid-phase assay with a KD of 18 nM, and this binding could be partially displaced with alpha 2M* (KI = 7 nM) and RAP (KI = 3 nM). Taken together, these data establish that LPL binds with high affinity to LRP and undergoes LRP-mediated cellular uptake. The implication of these findings for lipoprotein catabolism in vivo may be important if LRP binding is preserved when LPL is attached to lipoproteins. If so, LPL might facilitate LRP-mediated clearance of lipoproteins.  相似文献   

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