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Query: UNIPROT:P20645 (
mannose-6-phosphate receptor
)
320
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Menkes disease is a fatal neurodegenerative disorder of childhood due to the absence or dysfunction of a putative copper-transporting P-type ATPase encoded on the X chromosome. To elucidate the biosynthesis and subcellular localization of this protein, polyclonal antisera were generated against a bacterial fusion protein encoding the 4th to 6th copper-binding domains in the amino terminus of the human Menkes protein. RNA blot analysis revealed abundant Menkes gene expression in several cell lines, and immunoblotting studies utilizing this antiserum readily detected a 178-kDa protein in lysates from these cells. Pulse-chase studies indicate that this protein is synthesized as a single-chain polypeptide which is modified by N-linked glycosylation to a mature endoglycosidase H-resistant form. Sucrose gradient fractionation of HeLa cell lysates followed by immunoblotting of individual fractions with antibodies to proteins of known intracellular location identified the Menkes ATPase in fractions similar to those containing the cation-independent
mannose-6-phosphate receptor
. Consistent with this observation, confocal immunofluorescence studies of these same cells localized this protein to the trans-Golgi network and a vesicular compartment with no expression in the nucleus or on the plasma membrane. Taken together, these data provide a unique model of copper transport into the secretory pathway of mammalian cells which is compatible with clinical observations in affected patients and with recent data on homologous proteins identified in prokaryotes and yeast.
...
PMID:Biochemical characterization and intracellular localization of the Menkes disease protein. 894 55
There is little consensus on the nature of the storage compartment of the glucose transporter GLUT4, in non-stimulated cells of muscle and fat. More specifically, it is not known whether GLUT4 is localized to unique, specialized intracellular storage vesicles, or to vesicles that are part of the constitutive endosomal-lysosomal pathway. To address this question, we have investigated the localization of the endogenous GLUT4 in non-stimulated skeletal myotubes from the cell line C2, by immunofluorescence and immunoelectron microscopy. We have used a panel of antibodies to markers of the Golgi complex (alpha mannosidase II and giantin), of the trans-Golgi network (TGN38), of lysosomes (lgp110), and of early and late endosomes (transferrin receptor and
mannose-6-phosphate receptor
, respectively), to define the position of their subcellular compartments. By immunofluorescence, GLUT4 appears concentrated in the core of the myotubes. It is primarily found around the nuclei, in a pattern suggesting an association with the Golgi complex, which is further supported by colocalization with giantin and by immunogold electron microscopy. GLUT4 appears to be in the trans-most cisternae of the Golgi complex and in vesicles just beyond, i.e. in the structures that constitute the trans-Golgi network (TGN). In myotubes treated with brefeldin A, the immunofluorescence pattern of GLUT4 is modified, but it differs from both Golgi complex markers and TGN38. Instead, it resembles the pattern of the transferrin receptor, which forms long tubules. In untreated cells, double staining for GLUT4 and transferrin receptor by immunofluorescence shows similar but distinct patterns. Immunoelectron microscopy localizes transferrin receptor, detected by immunoperoxidase, to large vesicles, presumably endosomes, very close to the GLUT4-containing tubulo-vesicular elements. In brefeldin A-treated cells, a network of tubules of approximately 70 nm diameter, studded with varicosities, stains for both GLUT4 and transferrin receptor, suggesting that brefeldin A has caused fusion of the transferrin receptor and GLUT4-containing compartments. The results suggest that GLUT4 storage vesicles constitute a specialized compartment that is either a subset of the TGN, or is very closely linked to it. The link between GLUT4 vesicles and transferrin receptor containing endosomes, as revealed by brefeldin A, may be important for GLUT4 translocation in response to muscle stimulation.
...
PMID:GLUT4 in cultured skeletal myotubes is segregated from the transferrin receptor and stored in vesicles associated with TGN. 900 32
Chlamydia trachomatis, an obligate intracellular parasite and a major human pathogen, invades eukaryotic host cells and replicates within a membrane-bound compartment (termed the vacuole or inclusion) in the cytoplasm of the host cell. In this report, we describe in detail the characteristics of the vacuole throughout the chlamydial life cycle in terms of the endocytic pathway, as determined by epifluorescent and confocal immunofluorescence microscopy. By indirect immunofluorescence, the transferrin receptor (TfR), a component of early endosomes, and the cation-independent
mannose-6-phosphate receptor
(CI-M6PR), a component of late endosomes, were found in close association with the chlamydial vacuole as early as 4 h postinfection (hpi) and as late as 20 hpi. Fluorescein isothiocyanate (FITC)-labeled Tf was also found to colocalize with the vacuole at 4, 12, and 20 hpi, indicating that exogenously added ligands can be transported to the region of the vacuole. Antibodies to several different lysosomal proteins failed to label the chlamydial vacuole at any time point during the life cycle. Indirect immunofluorescence of cells infected with chlamydiae stained with an antibody to the trans-Golgi network (TGN) protein TGN38 demonstrated that in infected cells, the integrity and structure of the TGN was altered. The rates of Tf recycling in infected and uninfected cells were compared by fluorescence microscopy and quantitated with 125I-Tf. While the rate of FITC-Tf recycling from endocytic compartments in chlamydia-infected cells did not appear different from that of uninfected cells, a small pool of FITC-Tf that had accumulated adjacent to the chlamydial vacuole recycled at a slower rate. Quantitation of Tf recycling with 125I-Tf showed that Tf was recycled more slowly in infected cells than in uninfected cells. The altered distribution of several endocytic pathway markers and the slowed Tf recycling are consistent with the hypothesis that the chlamydial vacuole interacts with the endocytic pathway of the host. These results furthermore suggest that the chlamydial vacuole does not correspond to a canonical endocytic compartment but that it is a unique and dynamic organelle that shares several characteristics with recycling endosomes of the host cell. Interactions with the early and/or late endosomal compartments, in addition to the Golgi apparatus, may provide a source of membrane or nutrients for the replicating organisms.
...
PMID:Characterization of the Chlamydia trachomatis vacuole and its interaction with the host endocytic pathway in HeLa cells. 900 39
Polarized cells such as epithelial cells and neurons have distinct endosomal compartments associated with different plasma membrane domains. The endosomes of the neuronal cell body and the basolateral cytoplasm of epithelial cells are thought to perform cellular "housekeeping" functions such as the uptake of nutrients and metabolites, while the endosomes in the apical cytoplasm or axons are thought to be specialized for the sorting and transcytosis of cell type-specific ligands and receptors. However, it is not known if nonpolarized cells such as fibroblasts contain a specialized endosomal compartment analogous to the specialized endosomes found in neurons and epithelia. We have expressed a protein that is normally found in the apical early endosomes of developing intestinal epithelial cells in normal rat kidney fibroblasts. This apical endosomal marker, called endotubin, is targeted to early endosomes in transfected fibroblasts, and is present in peripheral as well as perinuclear endosomes. The peripheral endosomes that contain endotubin appear to exclude transferrin, fluid phase markers, and the
mannose-6-phosphate receptor
, although in the perinuclear region colocalization of endotubin and these markers is present. In addition, endotubin positive structures do not tubulate in response to brefeldin A and instead redistribute to a diffuse perinuclear location. Since this endosomal compartment has many of the characteristics of an apical or axonal endosomal compartment, our results indicate that nonpolarized cells also contain a specialized early endosomal compartment.
...
PMID:Targeting of an intestinal apical endosomal protein to endosomes in nonpolarized cells. 901 3
The kinetics of transport and the processing of procathepsin D (proCD), the precursor of a lysosomal aspartyl protease involved in tumor-cell proliferation and metastasis, were compared in normal and SV-40- or benzo[a]pyrene-transformed 3T3 mouse fibroblasts. Sorting of newly synthesized proCD in normal cells was almost complete within 3 hr, while in transformed cells a fraction of the precursor survives a long time. In both normal and transformed 3T3 cultures, secretion of proCD started at 3 hr of chase. However, in normal cells secretion of proCD remained constant between 3 and 24 hr of chase, while in transformed cells it increased along with the chase incubation. The efficiency of formation of the mannose-6-phosphate group on proCD varied among the 3 cell types, being minimal in benzo[a]pyrene-transformed 3T3 cells. Ammonium chloride, a drug known to disrupt the segregation and to enhance the secretion of lysosomal proenzymes, was 2-fold more effective in normal than in transformed 3T3 cells. Despite vacuolar alkalinization, about one third of proCD was segregated into the endosomal-lysosomal pathway in normal and in transformed 3T3 fibroblasts, indicating the existence in these cells of alternative,
mannose-6-phosphate receptor
-independent mechanisms for targeting proCD. Thus, while hypersecretion of proCD and reduced sensitivity to vacuolar alkalinization are common features of both transformed cell types, the mechanisms responsible for inefficient segregation of proCD may differ between virally and chemically transformed 3T3 cells.
...
PMID:Differential targeting and processing of procathepsin D in normal and transformed murine 3T3 fibroblasts. 903 33
The uptake of recombinant alpha-(L)-iduronidase into glial and neuronal cells, produced by retrovirally transduced NIH3T3 fibroblasts, was studied. We demonstrate that: (1) neuronal and glial cells take up alpha-(L)-iduronidase released into the medium by retrovirally transduced fibroblasts expressing high levels of alpha-(L)-iduronidase; (2) both glial and neuronal cells express the cation independent
mannose-6-phosphate receptor
responsible for lysosomal enzyme uptake; and (3) uptake of the lysosomal enzyme can be blocked by excess free mannose-6-phosphate, but not glucose-6-phosphate. Thus, various brain cells take up alpha-(L)-iduronidase, possibly through a cation independent
mannose-6-phosphate receptor
mediated pathway, and this uptake is higher in actively dividing or immature brain cells. Consequently, (1) neuronal metabolism ought to be capable of cross correction by enzyme provided by genetically engineered and transplanted cells provided by bone marrow transplantation (BMT); (2) that BMT could have a more beneficial effect on neurological function if performed as early as possible; and (3) given that the uptake mechanism of glial cells has a higher capacity, it might be easier to target diseases like the leukodystrophies in which lysosomal enzymes are needed in glial cells, compared to diseases where lysosomal enzymes ought to be delivered into neurons.
...
PMID:Uptake of alpha-(L)-iduronidase produced by retrovirally transduced fibroblasts into neuronal and glial cells in vitro. 906 97
The insulin-like growth factor type 2 receptor, also known as the cation independent
mannose-6-phosphate receptor
(Igf2r) is an imprinted gene, which is repressed on the paternally inherited allele in midgestation mouse embryos. We have used a LacZ reporter gene, targeted into the endogenous gene, to investigate the developmental timing, tissue specificity and stability of the repression of the paternal allele. The LacZ expression pattern in pre- and post-implantation embryos, confirmed that Igf2r shows monoallelic expression only after implantation. We show here, additionally, that Igf2r shows biallelic expression in all cells of the preimplantation embryo at E4.5, and, that monoallelic expression is clearly present in all tissues at E6.5, in the early post-implantation embryo. Imprinted expression is maintained in later embryonic development and no tissue was observed to escape imprinting up to E13.5 of development. Thus, for Igf2r, the onset of monoallelic expression occurs in all cells during the implantation period and paternal repression is maintained in all tissues of the late developing embryo.
...
PMID:Paternal repression of the imprinted mouse Igf2r locus occurs during implantation and is stable in all tissues of the post-implantation mouse embryo. 907 84
We characterized the Mycobacterium marinum phagosome by using a variety of endocytic markers to follow the path of the bacteria through a mouse macrophage cell line. Using a laser confocal microscope, we found that the majority of viable M. marinum cells were in nonacidic vacuoles that did not colocalize with the vacuolar proton ATPase (V-ATPase), the calcium-independent
mannose-6-phosphate receptor
(CI-M6PR), or cathepsin D. In contrast, heat-killed organisms and latex beads were in acidic vacuoles which contained the V-ATPase, the CI-M6PR, and cathepsin D. A population of vesicles that contained live M. marinum labeled with the lysosomal glycoprotein LAMP-1, but the percentage of vacuoles that labeled was lower than for heat-killed organisms or latex beads. When testing live and heat-killed Mycobacterium tuberculosis, we found levels of colocalization with LAMP- and cathepsin D comparable to those for the M. marinum isolate. We conclude that M. marinum, like M. tuberculosis, can circumvent the host endocytic pathway and reside in an intracellular compartment which is not acidic and does not fuse with lysosomes. In addition, we describe a system for sampling a large population of intracellular organisms by using a laser confocal microscope.
...
PMID:Differential trafficking of live and dead Mycobacterium marinum organisms in macrophages. 911 92
The pharmacological characteristics, localization and process of internalization of the insulin-like growth factor I and II receptors were studied in rat primary hippocampal cultured neurons grown under serum-free conditions. [125I]insulin-like growth factor-I binding was specific with an apparent affinity (Kd) of 0.1 nM and IC50 values of 0.1, 2.9 and 99.7 nM for insulin-like growth factor-I, insulin-like growth factor-II and insulin, respectively. The competition by insulin suggests the presence of genuine insulin-like growth factor-I receptors and not insulin-like growth factor binding proteins. In contrast, [125I]insulin-like growth factor-II binding showed a Kd of 0.1 nM and IC50 values of 0.2 and 20.5 nM for insulin-like growth factor-II and insulin-like growth factor-I while insulin was inactive, a well established characteristic of the insulin-like growth factor-II receptor. Using emulsion autoradiography, specific binding sites for [125I]insulin-like growth factor-I and -II were over the whole cultured neurons. The use of selective insulin-like growth factor-I and -II receptor antibodies further confirmed the existence of these receptors in rat hippocampal cultured neurons. To investigate the respective internalization profile of [125I]insulin-like growth factor-I and [125I]insulin-like growth factor-II receptor-ligand complexes in neurons, a technique of acid stripping was used. The apparent rate of endocytosis was found to be greater for the insulin-like growth factor-II than for the insulin-like growth factor-I receptor complexes. The internalization of [125I]insulin-like growth factor-I and [125I]insulin-like growth factor-II ligand-receptor complexes was confirmed using phenylarsine oxide which significantly blocked both internalization processes. In order to eliminate possible receptor recycling, monensin was used and shown to have no effect on the internalization of either ligand. Since the insulin-like growth factor-I receptor is coupled to tyrosine kinase activity, tyrphostin 47, a specific tyrosine kinase inhibitor. was used and shown to decrease [125I]insulin-like growth factor-I but not the [125I]insulin-like growth factor-II receptor internalization profile. Accordingly, insulin-like growth factor-I is apparently internalized mostly via the insulin-like growth factor-I tyrosine kinase type receptor, while insulin-like growth factor-II is not. The insulin-like growth factor-II receptor ligand complex is likely internalized via a pathway possibly related to mannose-phosphorylated residues as the insulin-like growth factor-II/
mannose-6-phosphate receptor
has been implicated in the intracellular targeting of lysosomal proteins containing glycosylated residues. Taken together, our results indicate that primary hippocampal cultured neurons represent a unique model for investigating the differential role and intracellular trafficking of both insulin-like growth factor-I and insulin-like growth factor-II receptor ligand complexes and their relevance to the respective functional role of these two-related trophic factors in the central nervous system.
...
PMID:Presence and differential internalization of two distinct insulin-like growth factor receptors in rat hippocampal neurons. 914 94
In cells specialized for secretory granule exocytosis, lysosomal hydrolases may enter the regulated secretory pathway. Using mouse pancreatic islets and the INS-1 beta-cell line as models, we have compared the itineraries of procathepsins L and B, two closely related members of the papain superfamily known to exhibit low and high affinity for mannose-6-phosphate receptors (MPRs), respectively. Interestingly, shortly after pulse labeling INS cells, a substantial fraction of both proenzymes exhibit regulated exocytosis. After several hours, much procathepsin L remains as precursor in a compartment that persists in its ability to undergo regulated exocytosis in parallel with insulin, while procathepsin B is efficiently converted to the mature form and can no longer be secreted. However, in islets from transgenic mice devoid of cation-dependent MPRs, the modest fraction of procathepsin B normally remaining within mature secretory granules is increased approximately fourfold. In normal mouse islets, immunoelectron microscopy established that both cathepsins are present in immature beta-granules, while immunolabeling for cathepsin L, but not B, persists in mature beta-granules. By contrast, in islets from normal male Sprague-Dawley rats, much of the proenzyme sorting appears to occur earlier, significantly diminishing the stimulus-dependent release of procathepsin B. Evidently, in the context of different systems,
MPR
-mediated sorting of lysosomal proenzymes occurs to a variable extent within the trans-Golgi network and is continued, as needed, within immature secretory granules. Lysosomal proenzymes that fail to be sorted at both sites remain as residents of mature secretory granules.
...
PMID:Differential sorting of lysosomal enzymes out of the regulated secretory pathway in pancreatic beta-cells. 915 67
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