Endocytosis and breakdown of ribonuclease oligomers by sinusoidal rat liver cells in vivo. II. Effect of charge.
Biochim Biophys Acta
; 587(2): 299-311, 1979 Oct 04.
Article
em En
| MEDLINE
| ID: mdl-486553
Experiments presented in this paper suggest that sinusoidal rat liver cells recognize basic groups on proteins and that this recognition results in endocytosis of the proteins. Evidence for involvement of basic groups was obtained in two ways. Firstly, we changed the positively charged amino groups of the cross-linked ribonuclease molecules to neutral or negative by acetylation or succinylation, respectively. The modified proteins did not contain easily reducible disulfide bonds and they were not very sensitive to endoproteases, suggesting that they were not denatured by the acetylation procedures. Acetylation and succinylation reduced uptake of the injected cross-linked ribonuclease derivatives by liver and spleen and abolished their rapid clearance from plasma. In nephrectomized rats about 75% of the polymer, 36% of the acetylated polymer and 32% of the succinylated polymer were endocytosed by liver after 6 h. For the dimer fractions these values were 59%, 23% and 27%, respectively. Autoradiography and subcellular fractionation of liver 30 min post-injection localized the acetylated polymer in the lysosomal/microsomal fraction of sinusoidal liver cells, probably endothelial cells. Secondly, a positive correlation was found between binding of a number of ribonuclease derivatives to the cation exchanger SP-Sephadex G-25 and the rate of endocytosis by sinusoidal liver cells.
Buscar no Google
Base de dados:
MEDLINE
Assunto principal:
Ribonucleases
/
Endocitose
/
Fígado
Limite:
Animals
Idioma:
En
Ano de publicação:
1979
Tipo de documento:
Article