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1.
After internalization of 125I-asialo-orosomucoid (ASOR) by isolated rat hepatocytes, ligand dissociates by two kinetically distinct pathways (Oka and Weigel, J. Biol. Chem. 257, 10,253, 1983). These slow and fast dissociation pathways correspond to two functionally different subpopulations of cell surface galactosyl receptors designated, respectively, State 1 and State 2 receptors. Freshly isolated cells or cells equilibrated below 24 degrees C express only State 1 receptors. Cells equilibrated at 37 degrees C express both State 1 and State 2 receptors. Ligand dissociation after internalization of surface-bound 125I-ASOR was measured using the permeabilizing detergent, digitonin. The slow dissociation pathway was mediated by State 1 receptors and was the only pathway expressed by cells which were freshly isolated or had been equilibrated at 24 degrees C. State 2 receptors are expressed at temperatures above about 20 degrees C, and both the fast and slow dissociation pathways occurred in cells equilibrated at 37 degrees C. State 2 receptors therefore mediate the rapid dissociation pathway. Dissociation and subsequent degradation of specifically bound ligand routed in either pathway were complete, respectively, within 3 and 6 hrs.  相似文献   

2.
In this study, we characterized and compared the ligand-independent loss of surface galactosyl (Gal) receptor activity on isolated rat hepatocytes treated with monensin, chloroquine, microtubule depolymerizing agents, or NaN3 and NaF at 37 degrees C. Freshly isolated hepatocytes exhibit predominately one subset of surface Gal receptors, termed State 1 receptors (Weigel, P. H., Clarke, B. L., and Oka, J. A. (1986) Biochem. Biophys. Res. Commun. 140, 43-50). During equilibration at 37 degrees C, these cells also express a second subset of Gal receptors at the surface, termed State 2 receptors, and routinely double their total surface Gal receptor activity. Following equilibration at 37 degrees C and then inhibitor treatment, hepatocytes bound 40-60% less 125I-asialoorosomucoid (ASOR) at 4 degrees C than did untreated cells. Treated cells maintained a basal nonmodulated level of surface receptor activity regardless of temperature, perturbant concentration, or incubation time. Loss of surface Gal receptor activity on cells treated with multiple inhibitors simultaneously or sequentially was not additive. Thus, all treatments affected the same subpopulation of surface Gal receptors. None of these inhibitors decreased surface State 1 Gal receptor activity, but all prevented the normal appearance of State 2 Gal receptors on freshly isolated cells during incubation at 37 degrees C. The endocytic capability of residual surface State 1 Gal receptors on inhibitor-treated cells varied depending on the inhibitor. Hepatocytes treated first at 24 degrees C or with colchicine at 37 degrees C internalized greater than 85% of surface-bound 125I-ASOR. In contrast, monensin- or chloroquine-treated cells internalized approximately 50% of surface-bound 125I-ASOR. Azide-treated cells internalized less than 20% of surface-bound 125I-ASOR. We conclude that only surface State 2 Gal receptor activity is sensitive to these various perturbants. State 1 Gal receptor activity is not modulated. These data are consistent with the conclusion that only State 2 Gal receptors constitutively recycle.  相似文献   

3.
Binding, endocytosis, and degradation of asialo-orosomucoid (ASOR) mediated by the galactosyl (Gal) receptor were examined in isolated rat hepatocytes in complete media supplemented with an osmolite. The specific binding of 125I-ASOR to cells at 4 degrees C was unaffected by up to 0.4 M sucrose or NaCl. Unlike sucrose or NaCl, mannitol stimulated 125I-ASOR binding at low concentrations but inhibited binding at higher concentrations. Continuous internalization at 37 degrees C, which requires receptor recycling, was completely blocked at 0.2 M sucrose or 0.15 M NaCl, corresponding in each case to a total osmolality of about 550 mmol/kg. This effect was reversed and endocytic function was restored by washing the cells, indicating that cell viability was unaffected. The rate of degradation of internalized 125I-ASOR was also inhibited by increasing sucrose concentrations. This inhibition is due to a block in the delivery of ligand to lysosomes and not an effect on degradation per se. In the presence of 0.2 M sucrose, the rate and extent of endocytosis of surface-bound 125I-ASOR were, respectively, 33.0 +/- 8.1% and 69.4 +/- 10.5% (n = 8) of the control without sucrose. Under these conditions, the dissociation of internalized receptor-ASOR complexes was completely inhibited. When sucrose was added, the effect on the endocytosis of surface-bound 125I-ASOR was virtually immediate. Previous studies showed that about 40% of the surface-bound 125I-ASOR which is internalized can return to the cell surface still bound to receptor (Weigel and Oka: J Biol Chem 259:1150, 1984). If 0.2 M sucrose was added after endocytosis occurred, 125I-ASOR still returned to the cell surface, although the rate and extent of return were inhibited by more than 50%. Interestingly, hyperosmolarity is the only treatment we have found which can reversibly inhibit, although only partially, the endocytosis of surface-bound 125I-ASOR.  相似文献   

4.
Continuous endocytosis of 125I-asialo-orosomucoid (ASOR) mediated by the galactosyl receptor in rat hepatocytes is a cyclic process. 125I-ASOR-receptor complexes are internalized, processed, and the ligand is degraded while the receptor is returned to the cell surface for reutilization. Since a true cycle has a thermodynamic requirement for the input of external energy, we examined the effects of changes in intracellular ATP levels on the function of the receptor cycle. Hepatocytes were depleted of ATP to various extents prior to endocytosis by incubating cells at 15 degrees C in the presence of 2 mM NaF and 0-20 mM NaN3. A luciferase-luciferin bioluminescence assay was used to quantitate the amount of cellular ATP. ATP-depleted cells were allowed to bind 125I-ASOR at 0 degrees C, washed through discontinuous Percoll gradients, and only viable cells were isolated and incubated at 37 degrees C to initiate a synchronous single round of endocytosis. The extent of internalization of this surface-bound 125I-ASOR was unaffected by an ATP depletion to less than 1% of the control level. The rate of internalization of surface-bound ligand was unaffected until the ATP levels decreased to 30% or less; at greater than 98% ATP depletion the initial rate decreased by a maximum of 55% and the kinetics became biphasic. In contrast, continuous endocytosis in the presence of excess ASOR was inhibited by only a 25% decline in cellular ATP content and demonstrated a very sharp threshold response to changing ATP levels. Continuous endocytosis, which requires receptor recycling, was completely inhibited when the total cellular ATP level decreased by only 40%. We conclude that the internalization phase of endocytosis is not dependent on ATP but that the processing and/or externalization phases of the complete receptor cycle are either directly or indirectly dependent on ATP and very sensitive to changes in cellular ATP content.  相似文献   

5.
We have investigated the effects of hyperosmolarity induced by sucrose on the fluid phase endocytosis of the fluorescent dye lucifer yellow CH (LY) and the endocytosis of 125I-asialo-orosomucoid (ASOR) by the galactosyl receptor system in isolated rat hepatocytes. Continuous uptake of LY by cells at 37 degrees C is biphasic, occurs for 3-4 h, and then plateaus. Permeabilized cells or crude membranes do not bind LY at 4 or 37 degrees C. Intact cells also do not accumulate LY at 4 degrees C. The rate and extent of LY accumulation are concentration- and energy-dependent, and internalized LY is released from permeabilized cells. Efflux of internalized LY from washed cells is also biphasic and occurs with halftimes of approximately 38 and 82 min. LY is taken up into vesicles throughout the cytoplasm and the perinuclear region with a distribution pattern typical of the endocytic pathway. LY, therefore, behaves as a fluid phase marker in hepatocytes. LY has no effect on the uptake of 125I-ASOR at 37 degrees C. The rate of LY uptake by cells in suspension is not affected for at least 30 min by up to 0.2 M sucrose. The rate of endocytosis of 125I-ASOR, however, is progressively inhibited by increasing the osmolality of the medium with sucrose (greater than 98% with 0.2 M sucrose; Oka and Weigel (1988) J. Cell. Biochem. 36, 169-183). Hyperosmolarity completely inhibits endocytosis of 125I-ASOR by the galactosyl receptor, whereas fluid phase endocytosis of LY is unaffected. Cultured hepatocytes contained about 100 coated pits/mm of apical membrane length as assessed by transmission electron microscopy. In the presence of 0.4 M sucrose, only 17 coated pits/mm of membrane were observed, an 83% decrease. Only a few percent of the total cellular fluid phase uptake in hepatocytes is due to the coated pit endocytic pathway. We conclude that the fluid phase and receptor-mediated endocytic processes must operate via two separate pathways.  相似文献   

6.
Monensin has been shown to inhibit the dissociation of internalized asialoorosomucoid (ASOR) from galactosyl (Gal) receptors in hepatocytes (Harford et al., J. Cell. Biol., 96:1824, 1983). Examination of the long-term kinetics of dissociation of a single round of surface-bound 125I-ASOR in the presence of monensin revealed, however, that dissociation resumed after a lag of 30-40 min. Dissociation proceeded slowly with apparent first order kinetics (k = 0.006-0.022 min-1) and reached a plateau after 4 h, both in freshly isolated cells in suspension and in cells cultured for 24 h. Only a portion of the ligand bound to surface Gal receptors was capable of dissociating. The degree of dissociation was correlated with the expression of a subpopulation of receptors we have recently designated as state 1 Gal receptors (Weigel et al., Biochem. Biophys. Res. Commun. 140:43, 1986). The recovery and dissociation of a portion of 125I-ASOR-receptor complexes after the lag period is not due to a depletion of monensin, since a second addition of the drug has no affect once dissociation resumes. Furthermore, as assessed by the accumulation of the fluorescent dye acridine orange, cells have not recovered the ability to acidify intracellular compartments during the time that dissociation occurs. The results support a model for the hepatic Gal receptor system, in which there are two functionally different receptor populations, recycling pathways, and ligand processing pathways. Monensin blocks dissociation of 125I-ASOR from receptors in the major pathway completely. In the minor pathway dissociation proceeds to completion only after a lag. In this minor pathway monensin appears to temporarily delay a maturation or translocation process that must occur prior to dissociation. We conclude that the observed dissociation in the presence of monensin cannot be mediated by low pH, or by pH or pNa gradients.  相似文献   

7.
We have shown that degradation of asialo-orosomucoid (ASOR) in isolated rat hepatocytes occurs by two different intracellular pathways [Clarke, Oka & Weigel (1987) J. Biol. Chem. 262, 17384-17392] mediated by two subpopulations of cell surface galactosyl (Gal) receptors, designated State 1 or State 2 receptors. In the present study, several inhibitors were tested for their effects on ligand degradation by the State 1 or State 2 pathway. Leupeptin, monensin and chloroquine completely inhibited degradation of 125I-labelled ASOR in both pathways. Dose-response studies showed, however, that the State 2 pathway was more sensitive to leupeptin or monensin than the State 1 pathway. No differences were observed with chloroquine. For example, the onset of inhibition in the State 2 and State 1 pathways occurred at about 0.05 and 0.3 microM-leupeptin respectively, a 6-fold difference. At 3.5 microM-monensin, 125I-ASOR degradation in the State 2 pathway was completely blocked, whereas degradation in the State 1 pathway was essentially unaffected. Colchicine was observed to give the largest differential sensitivity between the two pathways. The State 2 degradation pathway was about 30-fold more sensitive to colchicine than the State 1 pathway. Lumicolchicine had no affect. The onset of inhibition of the rate of 125I-ASOR degradation in the State 2 and State 1 pathways occurred at approximately 0.1 and 3.0 microM-colchicine respectively. At very high concentrations (greater than 0.1 mM), the State 1 pathway could be completely inhibited. We conclude that intracellular 125I-ASOR processing or delivery to degradative compartments in both the State 1 and State 2 Gal receptor pathways requires low pH. Ligand delivery to the degradative compartment does not require microtubules in the State 1 pathway, consistent with the very rapid onset of degradation in this pathway. The State 2 degradation pathway does require microtubules.  相似文献   

8.
Receptor-mediated uptake and degradation of 125I-asialoorosomucoid (ASOR) in human hepatoma HepG2 cells is inhibited by the lysosomotropic amines chloroquine and primaquine. In the absence of added ligand at 37 degrees C, these amines induce a rapid (t1/2 5.5-6 min) and reversible loss of cell surface 125I-ASOR binding sites as well as a rapid decrease in 125I-ASOR uptake and degradation. There is no effect of these amines on the binding of 125I-ASOR to the cell surface at 4 degrees C or on the rate of internalization of prebound 125I-ASOR. The loss of 125I-ASOR surface binding at 37 degrees C is not attributable to altered affinity of ligand-receptor binding. In the presence of added ligand at 37 degrees C, there is a more rapid (t1/2 2.5-3 min) loss of hepatoma cell surface receptors. In addition, the amines inhibit the rapid return of the internalized receptor to the cell surface. We examined the nature of this loss of 125I-ASOR surface binding sites by following the fate of receptor molecules after biosynthetic labeling and after cell surface iodination. At 37 degrees C, chloroquine and primaquine induce a loss of asialoglycoprotein receptor molecules from the hepatoma cell surface to an internal pool.  相似文献   

9.
D D McAbee  P H Weigel 《Biochemistry》1988,27(6):2061-2069
Isolated rat hepatocytes depleted of ATP with NaN3 without ligand lose galactosyl (Gal) receptors from the cell surface and accumulate inactive receptors within the cell [McAbee, D. D., & Weigel, P. H. (1987) J. Biol. Chem. 262, 1942-1945]. Here, we describe the kinetics of receptor redistribution and inactivation after ATP depletion with NaN3 and of receptor redistribution and reactivation after ATP recovery. Only intact cells (greater than 98% viable) isolated from Percoll gradients were assayed. Gal receptor activity and protein were measured by the binding of 125I-asialoorosomucoid (125I-ASOR) and 125I-anti-Gal receptor IgG (125I-IgGR), respectively, at 4 degrees C. Surface and total (surface and intracellular) cellular Gal receptors were measured in the absence or presence, respectively, of digitonin. Following ATP depletion, 60-70% of Gal receptor activity and protein were lost from cell surfaces with first-order kinetics (t1/2 = 6.5 min, k = 0.107 min-1) at an initial rate of 11,000 125I-ASOR binding sites cell-1 min-1. Lost cell-surface Gal receptors were transiently recovered still active inside the cell. After a short lag, total cellular receptor inactivation then proceeded with first-order kinetics (t1/2 = 13 min, k = 0.053 min-1) at an initial rate of 14,000 125I-ASOR binding sites cell-1 min-1. Up to half of all cellular Gal receptors were inactivated by 40 min. 125I-IgGR binding to NaN3-treated, permeable cells, however, was virtually constant. The distribution of total cellular receptors changed from 35% on the cell surface initially to 10% after 40 min of ATP depletion.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

10.
A combination of biochemistry and morphology was used to demonstrate that more than 95 percent of the isolated rat hepatocytes prepared by collagenase dissociation of rat livers retained the pathway for receptor-mediated endocytosis of asialoglycoproteins (ASGPs). Maximal specific binding of (125)I-asialoorosomucoid ((125)I-ASOR) to dissociated hepatocytes at 5 degrees C (at which temperature no internalization occurred) averaged 100,000-400,000 molecules per cell. Binding, uptake, and degredation of (125)I- ASOR at 37 degrees C occurred at a rate of 1 x 10(6) molecules per cell over 2 h. Light and electron microscopic autoradiography (LM- and EM-ARG) of (125)I-ASOR were used to visualize the surface binding sites at 5 degrees C and the intracellular pathway at 37 degrees C. In the EM-ARG experiments, ARG grains corresponding to (125)I-ASOR were distributed randomly over the cell surface at 5 degrees C but over time at 37 degrees C were concentrated in the lysosome region. Cytochemical detection of an ASOR-horseradish peroxidase conjugate (ASOR-HRP) at the ultrastructural level revealed that at 5 degrees C this specific ASGP tracer was concentrated in pits at the cell surface as well as diffusely distributed along the rest of the plasma membrane. Such a result indicates that redistribution of ASGP surface receptors had occurred. Because the number of surface binding sites of (125)I-ASOR varied among cell preparations, the effect of collagenase on (125)I-ASOR binding was examined. When collagenase-dissociated hepatocytes were re-exposed to collagenase at 37 degrees C, 10-50 percent of control binding was observed. However, by measuring the extent of (125)I-ASOR binding at 5 degrees C in the same cell population before and after collagenase dissociation, little reduction in the number of ASGP surface receptors was found. Therefore, the possibility that the time and temperature of the cell isolations allowed recovery of cell surface receptors following collagenase exposure was tested. Freshly isolated cells, dissociated cells that were re-exposed to collagenase, and perfused livers exposed to collagenase without a Ca(++)-free pre-perfusion, were found to bind 110-240 percent more(125)I-ASOR after 1 h at 37 degrees C that they did at 0 time. This recovery of surface ASGP binding activity occurred in the absence of significant protein synthesis (i.e., basal medium or 1 mM cycloheximide). Suspensions of isolated, unpolarized hepatocytes were placed in monolayer culture for 24 h and confluent cells were demonstrated to reestablish morphologically distinct plasma membrane regions analogous to bile canalicular, lateral, and sinusoidal surfaces in vivo. More than 95 percent of these cells maintained the capacity to bind, internalize, and degrade (125)I-ASOR at levels comparable to those of the freshly isolated population. ASOR-HRP (at 5 degrees C) was specifically bound to all plasma membrane surfaces of repolarized hepatocytes (cultured for 24 h) except those lining bile canalicular-like spaces. Thus, both isolated, unpolarized hepatocytes and cells cultured under conditions that promote morphological reestablishment of polarity maintain the pathway for receptor- mediated endocytosis of ASGPs.  相似文献   

11.
We studied the effect of hyperosmotic inhibition of the clathrin coated pit cycle on the monensin- and chloroquine-dependent loss of surface galactosyl (Gal) receptor activity on isolated rat hepatocytes. Cells treated for 60 min without ligand at 37 degrees C with 25 microM monensin or 300 microM chloroquine in normal medium (osmolality congruent to 275 mmol/kg) bound 40-60% less 125I-asialo-orosomucoid (ASOR) at 4 degrees C than untreated cells. Cells exposed to monensin or chloroquine retained progressively more surface Gal receptor activity, however, when the osmolality of the medium was increased above 400 mmol/kg (using sucrose as osmolite) 10 min prior to and during drug treatment. Cells pretreated for 10 min with hyperosmolal media (600 mmol/kg) alone internalized less than or equal to 10% of surface-bound 125I-ASOR. Thus, the ligand-independent loss of surface Gal receptor activity on monensin- and chloroquine-treated hepatocytes requires internalization of constitutively recycling receptors via a coated pit pathway.  相似文献   

12.
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   

13.
The asialoglycoprotein receptor has been identified on a continuous human hepatoma cell line, HepG2. This receptor requires Ca2+ for ligand binding and is specific for asialoglycoprotein. There are approximately 150,000 ligand molecules bound/cell at 4 degrees C. These receptors represent a homogeneous population of high affinity binding sites with Kd = 7 X 10(-9) M. From the rate of 125I-ASOR binding at 4 degrees C, kon was 0.95 X 10(6) M-1 min-1. Uptake of 125I-ASOR at 37 degrees C was approximately 0.02 pmol/min/10(6) cells.  相似文献   

14.
In the absence of ligand, sodium vanadate causes a time- and dose-dependent loss of up to approximately 50% of the surface galactosyl receptor (GalR) activity in rat hepatocytes at 37 degrees C. The effect on total (surface plus intracellular) GalR activity is also dependent on exposure time and vanadate concentration. At less than 1 mM, vanadate induces a transient decrease and then partial recovery of cell surface GalR activity. At greater than 3 mM vanadate, surface GalR activity decreases rapidly (t1/2 approximately 2 min). Lost surface activity is initially recovered in digitonin-permeabilized cells, indicating that active surface GalRs redistribute to the cell interior. However, an antibody assay for GalR protein showed that although surface activity decreased, there was no decrease in surface receptor protein. The active intracellular GalRs then slowly inactivate over 30-60 min. With 8 mM vanadate, the loss of both surface and total cellular GalR activity is more rapid and coincident; no lag is observed. Maximal activity loss, however, was still only approximately 50%. Again, no net change was seen in the distribution of GalR protein between the cell surface and the interior. These results indicate that vanadate causes active GalRs to move from the surface to the inside and be replaced by inactive receptors moving from the inside to the cell surface. The Gal receptor system is comprised of two functionally different receptor subpopulations that operate via two distinct intracellular pathways. Only the State 2 GalRs, which recycle constitutively, are sensitive to modulation by vanadate. Consistent with this, vanadate inhibits the endocytosis of 125I-asialoorosomucoid (ASOR) only partially. The rate of uptake and the steady state level of ASOR intracellular accumulation were maximally inhibited by 50 and 70%, respectively, at 0.2 mM vanadate. The rate and extent of degradation of 125I-ASOR were also inhibited by 50-70%. Residual ASOR uptake and degradation is accounted for by the minor vanadate-resistant State 1 Gal receptor pathway.  相似文献   

15.
We have developed conditions for studying the binding, uptake, degradation and transport of 125I-labelled IgG by yolk sac in vitro. Specific binding to tissue at 4 degrees C and to paraformaldehyde-treated tissue at 37 degrees C was time- and temperature-dependent and showed saturation kinetics (Kd,4 degrees C = 2.9 X 10(-6) M, Kd,37 degrees C = 5.3 X 10(-6) M). Uptake was studied at 37 degrees C using untreated tissue (K uptake = 13.3 X 10(-6) M) and was inhibited by preincubation with metabolic poisons but not with cycloheximide. Tissue that had been incubated with 125I-labelled IgG at 37 degrees C released radiolabelled degradation products and intact 125I-labelled IgG into the medium. Experiments with paraformaldehyde-treated and untreated tissue showed that release of intact 125I-labelled IgG was mostly the result of ligand dissociation from surface binding sites. However, more 125I-labelled IgG was released from untreated tissue than could be accounted for solely by loss of surface-bound ligand and the difference was presumed to reflect uptake, transport and exocytosis of 125I-labelled IgG. Degradation of 125I-labelled IgG was inhibited by leupeptin and lysosomotropic amines. These drugs had no detectable effect on 125I-labelled IgG release. The results suggest that degradation and transport of IgG are not intimately related and are consistent with a previously proposed model for IgG transport via coated vesicles which do not fuse with lysosomes and for non-selective uptake into another class of vesicle which does fuse with lysosomes.  相似文献   

16.
The binding of [125I]gastrin releasing peptide ([125I]GRP) to Swiss 3T3 cells at 37 degrees C increases rapidly, reaching a maximum after 30 min and decreasing afterwards. The decrease in cell-associated radioactivity at this temperature is accompanied by extensive degradation of the labelled peptide. At 4 degrees C equilibrium binding is achieved after 6 h and [125I]GRP degradation is markedly inhibited. Extraction of surface-bound ligand at low pH demonstrates that the iodinated peptide is internalized within minutes after addition to 3T3 cells at 37 degrees C. The rate of internalization is strikingly temperature-dependent and is virtually abolished at 4 degrees C. In addition, lysomotropic agents including chloroquine increase the cell-associated radioactivity in cells incubated with [125I]GRP. The binding of [125I]GRP to Swiss 3T3 cells was not affected by pretreatment for up to 24 h with either GRP or bombesin at mitogenic concentrations. Furthermore, pretreatment with GRP did not reduce the affinity labelling of a Mr 75,000-85,000 surface protein recently identified as a putative receptor for bombesin-like peptides. These results demonstrate that while peptides of the bombesin family are rapidly internalized and degraded by Swiss 3T3 cells, the cell surface receptors for these molecules are not down-regulated.  相似文献   

17.
The present method of quantitating soluble asialoglycoprotein (galactosyl) receptor activity relies on the selective precipitation of receptor-ligand complexes to allow separation from free ligand. To provide an alternative to selective precipitation procedures, a simple and rapid method to assay for detergent-solubilized galactosyl receptor activity has been developed which uses permeabilized, fixed cells as a source of immobilized solid-phase receptors. Isolated rat hepatocytes were treated with digitonin to make available the internal as well as the external receptors. The permeable cells were also treated with glutaraldehyde to prevent further protein loss during subsequent exposure to detergents such as Triton X-100. The permeable/fixed cells, which retained about 70% of their total 125I-asialo-orosomucoid (125I-ASOR)-binding activity, with 89% specific binding, were insoluble even in 0.5% Triton X-100 and were easily pelleted. The permeable/fixed cells can be prepared in advance and stored frozen for months. A detergent extract of receptor is mixed with a constant amount of both 125I-ASOR and permeable/fixed cells. Soluble active receptors compete with immobilized receptors on the treated cell for binding of the 125I-ASOR. The assay is reproducible, linear over a broad range of soluble receptor concentration, and can quantitate receptor activity from as few as 10(5) hepatocytes. A modified purification procedure for the rat hepatic galactosyl receptor using this competition assay is also described.  相似文献   

18.
Incubation of 3T3-L1 adipocytes with insulin at 37 degrees C resulted in a 2-fold increase in specific binding of transferrin to cell-surface receptors, as measured by a subsequent incubation of cells at 4 degrees C with 125I-transferrin. The insulin concentration required for half-maximal effect was 10 nM, and the half-time for insulin action was 40 s. By comparison, insulin stimulated hexose transport in 3T3-L1 adipocytes with a half-maximal effect at 8 nM and a half-time of 105 s. Scatchard analysis of 125I-transferrin binding to cells at 4 degrees C showed that the insulin-induced increase in transferrin receptor binding was due to an increase in the number of surface transferrin receptors. When cells were incubated for 2 h at 37 degrees C with 125I-transferrin to achieve steady-state binding and then exposed to insulin, there was a 1.7-fold increase in surface-bound transferrin (acid-sensitive) and a corresponding decrease in intracellularly bound transferrin (acid-insensitive). Thus, insulin elicits translocation of intracellular transferrin receptors to the plasma membrane. Concomitant with the 2-fold increase in surface receptors in response to insulin, there was a 2-fold increase in the rate of 59Fe3+ uptake from 59Fe3+-loaded transferrin. The rate of externalization of the intracellular 125I-transferrin-receptor complex at 37 degrees C was determined for basal and insulin-treated cells. Insulin increased the first-order rate constant for this process 1.7-fold. The effect of insulin on the rate of externalization is sufficient to account for the increase in surface transferrin receptors.  相似文献   

19.
A subpopulation of galactosyl receptors (GalRs) on isolated rat hepatocytes undergo a reversible inactivation and reactivation process during constitutive recycling (McAbee, D. D., and Weigel, P. H. (1988) Biochemistry 27, 2061-2069). Here, we report the reconstitution of this GalR inactivation in digitonin-permeabilized rat hepatocytes. Permeabilization of freshly isolated cells at 4 degrees C with 0.002% (w/v digitonin releases cytosol containing 35-40% of the total cellular protein, 10-15% of a lysosomal marker, and 5-10% of an early endosomal marker. Incubation of permeabilized cells with cytosol at 37 degrees C results in a time-dependent reduction of total 125I-asialoorosomucoid binding activity, which proceeds with first order kinetics (t 1/2 = 11.3 min). Only half of the total cellular GalRs are affected; maximal GalR activity loss, obtained by 30 min, is 50.5 +/- 9.5% (n = 21) of the control (4 degrees C) value. Increasing the digitonin concentration up to 0.055% does not increase the extent of inactivation. Permeabilized cells with reduced GalR activity were assessed for GalR protein content by Western blot analysis and by binding of anti-GalR antibody. The results show that the reduced 125I-asialoorosomucoid binding is due to GalR inactivation rather than receptor protein degradation. GalR inactivation does not occur in the absence of cytosol or in the presence of dialyzed cytosol. The cytosol also loses its GalR inactivating ability in the presence of an ATP-depleting system. GalR inactivation in the absence of cytosol is achieved by incubating permeabilized washed cells at 37 degrees C with ATP but not with ADP, AMP, or other NTPs. The rate and extent of inactivation are dependent on the ATP concentration. Half-maximal and maximal GalR inactivation are obtained at 0.3 and 3.0 mM ATP, respectively. In the presence of cytosol, permeabilized hepatocytes could replenish cytosolic ATP by oxidative phosphorylation. As a result, similar levels of GalR inactivation were obtained with 500-fold lower ATP concentrations. We conclude that ATP is the only cytosolic component necessary for GalR inactivation in permeabilized rat hepatocytes.  相似文献   

20.
G F Rush  D Alberts 《Life sciences》1987,40(7):679-685
Hepatocytes are known to bind and internalize a variety of small molecular weight proteins by a process known as receptor-mediated endocytosis (RME). The purpose of this investigation was to characterize the binding and uptake kinetics of a small protein known to be taken up by the liver by RME, epidermal growth factor (EGF), using suspensions of freshly isolated rat hepatocytes. Rat hepatocytes accumulated 125I-EGF (90 pM) in a temperature-dependent fashion. Isolated hepatocytes incubated at 37 degrees C with 125I-EGF began to release a TCA-soluble radiolabeled material into the incubation medium with a lag period of 20 min. EGF uptake by isolated hepatocytes was linear for only 60 seconds and displayed saturation kinetics (apparent Km of 4 nM and a Vmax of 105 fM/min/10(6) cells). Hepatocytes incubated at 4 degrees C bound, but did not internalize, EGF. Under these conditions, EGF binding was saturable at concentrations above 8 nM. A Scatchard analysis revealed that the average number of receptors per hepatocyte was 7.7 X 10(4) with a dissociation constant of 2.6 nM. These data demonstrate that freshly isolated hepatocytes are capable of binding, internalizing and metabolizing EGF and thus are a good model to study RME of small molecular weight proteins.  相似文献   

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