Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://hdl.handle.net/2445/177025
Title: Cellubrevin is present in the basolateral endocytic compartment of hepatocytes and follows the transcytotic pathway after IgA internalization
Author: Calvo Ademuz, Maria
Pol i Sorolla, Albert
Lu, Albert
Ortega Alarcón, David
Pons Pons, Mónica
Blasi Cabús, Joan
Enrich Bastús, Carles
Keywords: Química
Immunoglobulina A
Fetge
Proteïnes de membrana
Chemistry
Immunoglobulin A
Liver
Membrane proteins
Issue Date: 17-Mar-2000
Publisher: American Society for Biochemistry and Molecular Biology
Abstract: The endocytic compartment of polarized cells is organized in basolateral and apical endosomes plus those endocytic structures specialized in recycling and transcytosis, which are still poorly characterized. The complexity of the various populations of endosomes has been demonstrated by the exquisite repertoire of endogenous proteins. In this study we examined the distribution of cellubrevin in the endocytic compartment of hepatocytes, since its intracellular location and function in polarized cells are largely unknown. Highly purified rat liver endosomes were isolated from estradiol-treated rats, and the early/sorting endosomal fraction was further subfractionated in a multistep sucrose density gradient, and studied. Analysis of dissected endosomal fractions showed that cellubrevin was located in early/sorting endosomes, with Rab4, annexins II and VI, and transferrin receptor, but in a specific subpopulation of these early endosomes with the same density range as pIgA and Raf-1. Interestingly, only in those isolated endosomal fractions, endosomes enriched in transcytotic structures (of livers loaded with IgA), the polymeric immunoglobulin receptor specifically co-immunoprecipitated with cellubrevin. In addition, confocal and immuno-electron microscopy identification of cellubrevin in tubular structures underneath the sinusoidal plasma membrane together with the re-organization of cellubrevin, in the endocytic compartment, after the IgA loading, strongly suggest the involvement of cellubrevin in the transcytosis of pIgA.
Note: Reproducció del document publicat a: https://doi.org/10.1074/jbc.275.11.7910
It is part of: Journal of Biological Chemistry, 2000, vol. 275, num. 11, p. 7910-7917
URI: http://hdl.handle.net/2445/177025
Related resource: https://doi.org/10.1074/jbc.275.11.7910
ISSN: 0021-9258
Appears in Collections:Articles publicats en revistes (Patologia i Terapèutica Experimental)
Articles publicats en revistes (IDIBAPS: Institut d'investigacions Biomèdiques August Pi i Sunyer)
Articles publicats en revistes (Biomedicina)

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